The most consequential decision in the final week of Spirit Airlines' 34-year history was not made in a White House briefing room or at a Department of Transportation hearing. It was made in a creditor conference call.
On the call were the major bondholders of Spirit Aviation Holdings — including Ken Griffin's Citadel and Ares Management Corp. — and the question on the table was whether to accept the rescue terms the Trump administration had put forward.
The proposal: a $500 million federal injection that would give the U.S. government a 90% equity stake in the reorganized carrier, with the Pentagon agreeing to use Spirit's excess capacity to move troops and cargo for the escalating Middle East conflict.
The creditors said no. By Friday, the deadline had passed. By Saturday morning on May 2, 2026, Spirit had ceased operations and 17,000 workers were unemployed.
The story of Spirit's collapse is usually told as an antitrust story — the 2024 JetBlue merger block, Judge William Young's "failing firm" ruling. Those are real factors. But the proximate cause of the May 2 liquidation was a private-sector decision by a small set of creditors who concluded that liquidating Spirit's assets would recover more for them than reorganizing the company would.
The analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 stocks. Get them here FREE.
Spirit Airlines (SAVE) ceased operations on May 2, 2026, after creditors rejected a $500 million federal rescue package that would have given the U.S. government 90% equity stake and utilized the airline’s fleet for Pentagon troop and cargo transport.
Citadel and Ares Management, as senior creditors, rejected the reorganization because liquidating Spirit’s assets would recover more value than accepting subordinated equity, resulting in 17,000 job losses and regional economic damage.
The analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks. Get them here FREE.
The plan was unusual. It was not a Treasury loan or a tax holiday — it was direct federal equity, taking a 90% stake in a publicly traded airline. The closest precedent is the 1979 Chrysler bailout, which involved loan guarantees rather than majority ownership.
The Pentagon piece was novel: with U.S.-Israeli operations against Iran intensifying, Spirit's narrowbody Airbus fleet — A320neo and A321neo aircraft averaging just 5.5 years old — would have been repurposed for troop and cargo transport. President Trump reportedly pushed for the deal personally.
Citadel and Ares had absorbed losses through Spirit's August 2025 Chapter 11 process. The rescue package's terms would have layered new federal equity above their existing senior claims — converting their position into something materially worse. For these creditors, the math was clean: a liquidation would let them recover Spirit's narrowbody fleet, among the most liquid airline assets in a global market still wrestling with OEM delivery delays. AerCap, the largest Spirit lessor, had already negotiated $150 million in aircraft recoveries during the 2025 bankruptcy. Senior creditors are not in the business of accepting subordination.
Inside the GOP, the bailout did not have the support it needed. Sean Duffy opposed federal equity in a private airline as a matter of principle. Senators Ted Cruz and Mike Lee voiced strong opposition to "taxpayer-funded bailouts for failing private enterprises." This in-party opposition gave Treasury and DOT lawyers no clean political path. It also surfaced a substantive split inside the party about industrial policy — one that, until now, had not been on opposite sides of the same fight over a single deal.
The market reaction confirmed what creditors had calculated. JetBlue rose 7.4% on the day of the liquidation. Frontier rose 8.8%. Bank of America analysts called the outcome a "net positive" for the surviving carriers' structural health. The asset-recovery story for Spirit's fleet, primarily owned by lessors holding 76% of its airframes, has played out cleanly — without the fire-sale dynamics that typically accompany chaotic airline collapses.
Three things are now true that were not before. Federal rescue packages structured as equity-with-priority over senior creditors will face creditor blocking power in any future case. Republican opposition to industrial-policy bailouts has been tested in a high-stakes case and held. And the costs Trump tried to prevent — 17,000 lost jobs, the regional economic concentration in Fort Lauderdale, Orlando, Las Vegas, Detroit — are now being paid by the people he was trying to protect.
It is hard to identify a single decision-maker in this chain whose individual logic was wrong. The collective outcome is that none of them got what they wanted — except Citadel and Ares Management, who walked out of the conference call with the same senior position they walked in with.
This analyst's 2025 picks are up 106% on average. He just named his top 10 stocks to buy in 2026. Get them here FREE.