Airlines drawn-out retreat from GDSs is over ... or is it?

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A historic event took place on the other side of the pond over the summer, and the exclamation point should come next month. The event? Amadeus airline owners -- Air France, Iberia and Lufthansa -- completed a $5.4 billion deal with two European buyout firms and relinquished their control of the company.

So, for the first time since airlines began creating GDS companies, Amadeus, Sabre, Worldspan and Galileo are not controlled by airlines. Unlike the other GDSs, however, airlines still hold a substantial minority stake in Amadeus.

The three airlines deal to take Amadeus private and to cede majority ownership to a company created by BC Partners and Cinven essentially is complete, although Amadeus stock has not yet been delisted.

When the process is complete and the stock is delisted -- probably in October -- Amadeus will be a private company controlled by Amadelux Investments, an entity owned 50-50 by BC Partners and Cinven.

The airlines release of control over GDS businesses has been under way since 2000, when American spun off the remainder of its holdings in Sabre. As for Amadeus, reporters (myself included) have spent careers speculating about acquisitions, mergers and other marriages involving the Madrid-based technology company.

So, now that an Amadeus transaction actually has taken place, what is its significance?

Well, the buyout was certainly a way for Air France, Iberia and Lufthansa to make a bunch of euros fast. BC Partners and Cinven are hoping to do likewise, of course, after holding the company a few years to get a big return on investment, as is the wont of leveraged buyout firms.

And, for Amadeus, where no wholesale management housecleaning is expected, the company is expected to continue with its current strategic bent as a supplier of information technology and airline solutions around the globe.

So, lets recap a bit.

The two buyout firms paid stockholders 7.35 euros (about $9.11) per Class A share -- a premium of about 49.4% on Aug. 17, when the stock closed at 4.92 euros (about $6.10). Air France said the transaction brought it about $1 billion in cash and a capital gain of some $705 million in the second quarter.

Air France, the third-largest airline in terms of international passengers, maintained its 23.3% stake in Amadeus.

Iberia cashed in, as well, reducing its minority ownership in Amadeus from 18.3% to 11.7%. Lufthansa, meanwhile, increased its equity in Amadeus from about 5% to 11.7%, matching Iberias.

So, with the transaction complete, Amadelux Investments has a 53.3% majority stake in Amadeus and voting control, and the three airlines own about 46.7%. Previously, the airlines also owned 46.7% of Class A shares, but wielded about 85% of the voting rights.

Amadeus, the largest GDS company in terms of revenue, bookings and locations, is expected to continue its tilt toward the IT and e-commerce businesses.

In that regard, the 16-member Star Alliance and Amadeus announced a deal last week in which Amadeus will create a common technology platform for the alliance, weaning members passenger service systems off legacy technologies.

Lufthansa and United are the first in line to move to the new platform, which would accommodate schedules, availability, inventory, reservations, fare quotes and ticketing, the Star Alliance said. Lufthansa is scheduled to begin implementation in the second half of 2006, while the timing of Uniteds migration has not been established.

Amadeus is big in the airline IT business, with its Amadeus Altea IT solutions product being used by 150 airlines for reservations and 25 for inventory management. And, Amadeus IT business is growing much faster than its agency distribution business, a trend that is expected to continue under the new owners.

In the second quarter, Amadeus non-booking-related revenue [which takes in much of its IT/airline business], increased 33.1% to some $422 million. During the same period, its revenue related to booking fees, a much larger business, increased 10.8% to $1.1 billion.

Meanwhile, with its part ownership of online travel agency Opodo, Amadeus will emphasize e-commerce, as well. In the second quarter, Amadeus e-commerce bookings grew 41.5% to 15.4 million. Traditional bookings jumped 7.3% to 100.1 million.

With the long-awaited buyout finally done, this leaves us scribes with the job of speculating about the next GDS marriage. So, Worldspan, any suitors?

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