Login
Register Forgot password
Coinjar

EasyJet’s £5.7bn Apollo Takeover: What It Means for UK Investors

Ruby Layram 13th Jul 2026 No Comments

EasyJet has agreed to be bought by US private equity giant Apollo Global Management in a £5.7 billion deal worth £7.15 a share, trumping a rival offer from Castlelake. The news sent easyJet shares up around 15% in a single morning. If you hold easyJet shares, or you’re simply wondering what a “takeover” actually means for your money, here’s what’s happened and what to do next.

What’s Happened? EasyJet’s Bidding War Explained

Apollo’s cash offer of £7.15 per share values easyJet at about £5.7 billion, beating an earlier £6.90-a-share bid from rival buyout firm Castlelake.

That price is an 81% premium over the £3.94 easyJet shares were trading at on 28 May, the last trading day before Castlelake’s interest became public. Apollo has also proposed a “stub equity” option, letting some shareholders roll their existing shares into the new private company instead of taking cash, so they can keep some exposure to easyJet’s future.

Apollo has promised to keep the easyJet name by extending its licensing deal with easyGroup, founder Sir Stelios Haji-Ioannou’s company, which still owns around 15% of the airline. T

he deal isn’t final. Castlelake has until 3 August to decide whether to counter-bid or walk away, and Apollo faces a deadline of 7 August, and it still needs regulatory approval.

Why Did EasyJet Shares Jump 15%?

When a company receives a takeover bid, its share price usually moves towards the offer price.

That’s because the market is pricing in the probability that the deal completes, if you could buy shares today and be fairly confident of receiving £7.15 each once the deal closes, that’s an attractive trade. Shares often don’t jump all the way to the offer price straight away, the gap reflects the market’s uncertainty about whether the deal will actually go through, get topped by a higher bid, or fall apart entirely.

This is a useful moment to understand two things: a “bid” is an offer to buy a company, and a “premium” is how much higher that offer is than the share price before the news broke.

A big premium, like easyJet’s 81%, is often a sign the target company’s board sees real value being offered, or that a bidding war has driven the price up.

What a Takeover Means If You Own the Shares

If you already hold easyJet shares and the deal completes, you’ll typically be paid the agreed price in cash for each share you own (here, £7.15), or you may be offered the stub equity alternative if you’d rather stay invested in the company’s future under private ownership.

Once a takeover completes, the company is usually delisted from the stock exchange, so you won’t be able to buy or sell easyJet shares on the open market any more.

Until then, the price can still move around as the market reacts to news, a higher counter-bid would likely push the price up further, while any sign the deal is wobbling could see it fall back.

What Should Beginner Investors Do Now?

  1. Don’t rush to react. If you hold easyJet shares, there’s no need to do anything immediately, the deal has months left to run before it’s finalised, and your broker or platform will notify you of any action required.
  2. Check for corporate action notices. Your investment platform should email you (or show an alert in-app) when there’s a decision to make, such as choosing between the cash offer and the stub equity option. Keep an eye on your inbox and app notifications.
  3. Weigh cash versus stub equity carefully. Cash is certain; stub equity means betting on Apollo’s ability to grow the business privately, with much less visibility than you get from a listed company. If you’re unsure, this is a good moment to speak to a regulated financial adviser.
  4. Resist chasing the bounce. If you don’t already own the shares, remember the price has already jumped to reflect the expected deal value, there’s limited extra upside unless a fresh bidding war breaks out, and real risk if the deal collapses and the price drops back.
  5. Use it as a diversification check-up. Takeovers are a reminder of single-stock risk, however well things turn out here, having too much money in any one company (good news or bad) can swing your whole portfolio. If easyJet made up a big chunk of your holdings, this might be a nudge to spread your investments more broadly.

How Takeovers Could Affect Your Portfolio

Takeovers happen fairly regularly on the London Stock Exchange, and they’re not something to fear, they’re just part of how markets work.

For beginners, the easiest way to reduce the impact of any single company being bought, delisted, or hitting trouble is to hold a diversified mix of shares or funds rather than concentrating on a handful of individual stocks.

A low-cost index fund or ETF spreads your money across hundreds of companies automatically, so no single takeover, good or bad, makes or breaks your portfolio.

This article is for general information and educational purposes only and does not constitute regulated financial advice. Investments can go down as well as up, and you may get back less than you put in. If you’re unsure what to do with existing shareholdings, consider speaking to a regulated financial adviser before making decisions.



IG

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Jasmine Birtles

Your money-making expert. Financial journalist, TV and radio personality.

Jasmine Birtles

Send this to a friend