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Lufthansa eyes Thomas Cook’s Condor with buyout offer
Lufthansa logo is pictured during a pilots strike of German flagship carrier Lufthansa at Munichs airport March 18, 2015. u00e2u20acu201d Reuters pic

FRANKFURT AM MAIN, May 7 — European airline giant Lufthansa said today it had offered to buy carrier Condor from British parent company Thomas Cook, opening a new chapter in its fast-paced growth through buyouts.

"We have made a non-binding offer for Condor, with the option of extending it to all Thomas Cook airlines,” a spokesperson told AFP.

Today was the deadline set by Thomas Cook for possible buyers to declare their interest in Germany-based Condor and Thomas Cook Airlines, which flies from the UK and Scandinavian countries.

The group announced a possible sale in whole or in part in February as part of a "strategic review”.

Struggling with financial woes, the tourism group hopes to use income from a selloff to fund new investments in its hotels and in digitisation.

The carriers boast 103 planes and carried 20 million passengers in 2018, delivering an operating profit of £129 million (RM700.8 million) even as the Thomas Cook group as a whole made a loss.

Condor’s fleet could be especially appealing to Lufthansa chiefs as they look to build up long-haul routes at no-frills subsidiary Eurowings.

But within Europe, Lufthansa has already faced competition concerns from the European Commission over its acquisition-driven growth.

Brussels put limits on its buyout of parts of Air Berlin after the former homegrown rival went bankrupt in 2017.

Lufthansa has also bolted on smaller carriers like Brussels Airlines or Germany-based LGW in recent years.

Shares in Lufthansa were down 1.7 per cent around 1230 in Frankfurt (1030 GMT) at 20.48 euros, while Thomas Cook gained 11.7 per cent in London at 24 pence. — AFP

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