Business

Concorde successor’ Reaction Engines’ rescue deal close to take-off

A British hypersonic aviation pioneer is this weekend closing in on a £20m rescue deal that will see a Gulf-based sovereign fund becoming its biggest shareholder.

Sky News has learnt that Reaction Engines is racing to finalise a two-part financing that will include leading shareholders extending loans to the company before providing a further equity injection.

City sources said on Saturday that if completed, the UAE state-backed Strategic Development Fund (SDF) would lead the fundraising and become Reaction Engines’ biggest shareholder.

The SDF would not, however, own a majority stake, said one.

The government would need to approve the deal under the National Security and Investment Act because of the advanced technology that Reaction Engines is involved in developing, the source added.

Dubbed a successor to Concorde, the supersonic passenger jet which disappeared from service more than 20 years ago, Reaction Engines is developing engine technology aimed at powering aircraft to Mach 25 – or 19,000 miles per hour – outside the Earth’s atmosphere.

The company has been facing a cash crunch for several months.

More from Business

Sources said that Rolls-Royce Holdings, the FTSE-100 aerospace group, would not participate in the rescue deal, although they said that BAE Systems, another of Reaction Engines’ existing investors, could commit a small sum.

The company and its advisers are also in talks with several new investors about participating in the financing.

People close to the process cautioned that a deal had yet to be signed, with SDF scheduled to take the proposed transaction to its investment committee this week, they said.

If the first tranche of new money is not forthcoming within the next couple of weeks, Reaction Engines would have no choice but to file for insolvency.

PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC), the accountancy firm, has been put on standby to act as administrator if the quest for new funding fails.

A number of City investors have in recent weeks slashed the value of their stakes in the business amid doubts about its survival.

According to its most recent update to shareholders, it grew its commercial revenues by more than 400% last year and is understood to have a strong pipeline of contract and R&D opportunities.

One industry source said the application of Reaction Engines’ cooling technology across a range of existing and in-development military aircraft had the potential to unlock significant short-term and long-term revenues for the company.

They added that the company had also seen interest in its technology for use in hydrogen and battery powered zero-emission commercial flight technologies.

In January last year, Reaction Engines announced that it had raised £40m of additional equity, taking the total sum it had banked from investors to roughly £150m.

Founded in 1989, the company is chaired by Philip Dunne, a former defence minister.

Reaction Engines’ ability to attract interest and funding from some of the world’s biggest aerospace companies underlined the excitement it has galvanised among both strategic and financial investors.

However, it remains lossmaking and during the summer Mr Dunne said its financial performance last year had “not been in line with our forecasts”.

Warning that Reaction Engines would also be lossmaking this year, he added: “Although the company has a successful track record of raising capital it is clear market conditions are tougher than when we last raised new equity in 2022.”

Mr Dunne added in his update to shareholders that the company’s workforce had been cut earlier this year, with its leadership structure simplified.

This weekend, Reaction Engines declined to comment.

Articles You May Like

Two police officers charged with sexual assault of woman
Pizza Hut UK hunts buyer amid Budget tax hike crisis
Streeting accused of ‘crossing the line’ over public opposition to assisted dying
Elon Musk’s SpaceX Falcon 9 Successfully Launches THE ISRO GSAT-20 Satellite
Trump is unlikely to take Biden’s advice on China – and it could change the world