Things you don't hear about from the company, from the 1/16 TBJ:
For 20 years, the corporate hangar belonging to SAS Institute has housed company jets near the general aviation terminal at Raleigh-Durham International Airport.
But amid a lease expiration and the company’s ongoing IPO preparation, that’s changing. The Cary analytics firm confirms it’s shifted its aviation assets to a newly-created LLC, Innovation Air, a SAS-affiliated company.
SAS spokeswoman Shannon Heath said the move is “part of our general efforts to streamline SAS’ operations for future readiness.” And she said that could include an IPO.
In 2021, CEO Jim Goodnight said the firm would be taking “the appropriate steps to prepare our business for entry into the public markets." The initial goal was to be ready by 2024 – though SAS has since clarified that it’s not a hard and fast deadline, as SAS is waiting for the right market conditions.
Right now, SAS’ fleet consists of four aircraft:
2011 Dassault Aviati Falcon 2000 LX AC
2009 Dassault Falcon 900EX AC
2006 Dassault Falcon 900EX AC
2001 Boeing Business Jet 737-7BC NG AC
The aircraft will all fall under the umbrella of the new LLC.
Raleigh attorney Jim Verdonik said these kinds of corporate asset shifts are not uncommon. Putting corporate planes under an LLC limits liability to the parent company, he said. And for companies preparing to go public, there could be other reasons. For example, the Securities and Exchange Commission might require disclosure of flight expenses as compensation, Verdonik said.
These kinds of corporate shifts are also common before mergers and acquisitions, as a potential new owner might not want aviation assets to come along with a deal. Heath, in an email, said M&A is not on the table, echoing statements Goodnight made three years ago that SAS is "not up for sale."
In SAS’ case, there aren’t any plans to stop flying, according to a board memo tied to an upcoming meeting of the Raleigh-Durham Airport Authority Board, the governing body over RDU.
SAS built its 36,500-square-foot corporate hangar in 2004, entering into a 20-year ground lease agreement with the RDU Airport Authority. Following the lease expiration, ownership of the facility was to transition to the Airport Authority.
SAS, however, wants to continue flying out of the facility through its own lease deal with Innovation Air.
A new lease deal – which will be voted on at the airport’s regular board meeting Thursday, includes an initial 10-year term, but two five year extensions can be requested by the tenant.
Right now, SAS pays ground rent of about $33,000 a year for its hangar. Under the new agreement, Innovation Air will be invoiced nearly $779,000 in fixed rent for the operation - including everything from parking to offices to the the aircraft apron and hangar. The fixed rental rates will increase 3 percent each year unless RDU decides to perform a new appraisal.
Innovation Air, which lists an address on SAS’ Cary campus, was incorporated in 2022. Its business registration paperwork lists Patricia Dowty and David Keim as company officials. Dowty is SAS’ chief corporate services officer and Keim is general counsel at SAS.
As for SAS, the hangar shift is one of multiple changes the company has made to streamline in recent months. Last year, the firm put some of the buildings at its headquarters campus up for sublease – a first for the company. SAS also confirmed layoffs impacting about 1 percent of its headcount in 2023 and closed some of its international offices, shifting its sales strategy.