e60694553fwp.htm
Continental
Airlines, Inc.
2009-1
EETC Investor Presentation
Issuer
Free Writing Prospectus
Filed pursuant to Rule 433(d)
Registration No.
333-158781
The
issuer has filed a registration statement (including a prospectus) with
the
SEC for
the offering to which this communication relates. Before you invest,
you
should
read the prospectus in that registration statement and other documents
the
issuer has filed with the SEC for more complete information about the
issuer
and
this offering. You may get these documents for free by visiting EDGAR on
the
SEC Web
site at www.sec.gov. Alternatively, the issuer, any underwriter or any
dealer
participating in the offering will arrange to send you the prospectus if
you
request
it by calling 1-212-761-5344 (institutional investors)
Continental
Airlines 2009-1 EETC
• Continental
Airlines (“Continental”) is offering $389,687,000 of Pass Through
Certificates,
Series 2009-1
• One
class of Pass Through Certificates: Class A
• The
proceeds from the offering will be used by Continental to:
– Finance
the purchase of 5 new Boeing 737-900ER aircraft to be selected by
Continental
from a pool of 7 Boeing 737-900ER aircraft scheduled for delivery in
3Q
2009
– Refinance
the following 12 aircraft originally delivered new to Continental in
1998-1999:
• 4
Boeing 737-700s
• 3
Boeing 737-800s
• 2
Boeing 757-200s
• 3
Boeing 777-200ERs
• Joint
Structuring Agents: Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs
• Joint
Bookrunners: Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs and Calyon
2009-1
EETC Structural Summary
Principal
Amount
Expected
Ratings
Initial and Highest
LTV(1)(2)
Interest
Rate
Initial Average
Life
Regular Distribution
Dates
Final Expected
Distribution Date
Final Maturity
Date
Section 1110
Protection
Liquidity
Facility
Depositary
$389,687,000
Baa2
/ A-
54.0%
Fixed,
semi-annual, 30/360 day count
5.9
years
January
8 and July 8, commencing January 8, 2010
July
8, 2016
January
8, 2018
Yes
3
semi-annual interest payments
Funds
raised will be held in escrow with the
Depositary
and withdrawn from time to time to
purchase
Equipment Notes as the aircraft are
financed
Notes:
1.
Calculated as of January 8, 2010, the first Regular Distribution Date, assuming
the financings of all 17 aircraft are completed prior to such date
2.
Highest LTV on underlying Equipment Notes is 55.0%
Key
Structural Elements
• Single
Class A tranche being offered. Continental has the right to issue a
single
additional subordinated tranche in the future
• Single
waterfall with clear priority of Class A principal and interest
payments
over
the subordinated tranche if subsequently issued
• Core
aircraft types to Continental’s fleet operations
• Cross-collateralization
and cross-default of all aircraft
Collateral
Summary
Notes:
1. The
currently owned aircraft are subject to existing security interests. Such
security interests are scheduled to be discharged prior to October 2009, and
each currently
owned aircraft will be available for financing under this
Offering once such existing security interest with respect to such aircraft has
been discharged
2. The
lesser of the mean and median values as appraised by AISI, BK Associates and
Morten Beyer & Agnew (Maintenance Adjusted Base Value in the case of the
Currently
Owned Aircraft and standard Base Value in the case of the New
Aircraft)
Diverse
Collateral Pool
• The
collateral pool benefits from diversification of aircraft types
• 68%
Narrowbody / 32% Widebody Mix(1)
CAL
2009-1 Collateral Mix
Distribution of
Appraised Value(1)
737-800
11.6%
777-200ER
31.9%
737-700
12.3%
737-900ER
37.3%
757-200
6.9%
Note:
1. The
percentages were calculated assuming the first 5 Boeing 737-900ER aircraft of
the 7 from which Continental may choose from are financed
hereunder
Aircraft
Appraisals
• Continental
has obtained Base Value Desktop Appraisals from three
appraisers
(AISI, BK Associates and Morten Beyer & Agnew)
• Maintenance
Adjusted Base Value for the currently owned aircraft
• Base
Value for the new aircraft
• Maintenance
Adjusted Base Value includes adjustments from the mid-time,
mid-life
baseline to account for the actual maintenance status of the
aircraft
• Appraisers
looked at specific maintenance records of each of the currently
owned
aircraft
• Provides
a more precise valuation of a given aircraft than Base Value
• Aggregate
aircraft appraised value of $720,626,667(1)
• Appraisals
available in the Preliminary Prospectus Supplement
• Appraisals
indicate collateral cushion of 45.9% - 52.2% over the life of the
bond(2)
Notes:
1.
Aggregate aircraft appraised value of the 12 currently owned aircraft and the
first 5 Boeing 737-900ER aircraft. Appraised value is the lesser of the average
and median values
of each aircraft as appraised by three appraisers. An
appraisal is only an estimate of value and should not be relied upon as a
measure of realizable value
2. The
percentages were calculated assuming the first 5 Boeing 737-900ER aircraft of
the 7 from which Continental may choose from are financed
hereunder
Collateral
Overview
Boeing
737-NG Family
• World’s
all-time best selling family of narrowbody commercial aircraft
• B737-800
is the best selling model within the 737 family
#1
in terms of order book (3,137) and #2 in terms of operators (104)
• B737-700
is the second best selling model within the 737-NG family
#2
in terms of order book (1,979)
• Introduced
in 2007, B737-900ER is the newest member of the 737 family
Offers
the lowest seat-mile costs of any narrowbody aircraft in production
Source:
The Boeing Company, Morten Beyer & Agnew Future Aircraft Values - January
2009, BK Associates
Collateral
Overview
Boeing
757-200
• The
only aircraft type currently operated by all six U.S. legacy
carriers
• Offers
the lowest seat-mile costs in its capacity and range class
• Currently
has no direct replacement and values have stabilized in recent
years
as U.S. airlines have retained the type and retro-fitted it with winglets
to
improve
range performance to expand both domestic and international
operations
Increasingly
being used on long-haul routes connecting smaller cities which
would
be uneconomical to serve using widebody aircraft
• Long
term value retention is supported by the development of freighter
conversion
programs and by the potential acquisition by air carriers based in
developing
nations
Source:
SH&E, Morten Beyer & Agnew
Collateral
Overview
Boeing
777-200ER
• The
most popular widebody aircraft in service and a staple of the trans-
Atlantic
and trans-Pacific fleets of many operators
• Second
best selling widebody family in Boeing history and fourth best selling
aircraft
in Boeing history(1)
• Strong
potential for freighter conversion, which can extend the life of the
aircraft
and support residual values
• Availability
is limited with most surplus aircraft now absorbed. In the medium
term,
the 777-200ER is well-positioned with a broad operator and distribution
base
Source:
The Boeing Company, SH&E, BK Associates
Note:
1.
Excludes MD-80
The following is a transcript of the
oral comments of Thomas F. Cahill, Jr., which comments were accompanied by the
foregoing slide presentation. The captions below correspond to the
title of the slide that was presented during the comments below the
caption. Such comments and slide presentation were posted on www.netroadshow.com
on June 16, 2009.
1. Investor
Presentation
Good
morning everyone. My name is Tom Cahill. I am managing
director of Morgan Stanley. On behalf of Continental, Morgan Stanley,
Goldman Sachs and Calyon Securities I’d like to welcome you to this net roadshow
presentation for the Continental Airlines 2009-1 EETC investor
presentation.
2. Disclaimer
Before we
begin, I do need to read off a SEC disclaimer. The issuer has filed a
registration statement including a prospectus with the SEC for the offering to
which this communication relates. Before you invest you should read
the prospectus in that registration statement and other documents the issuer has
filed with the SEC for more complete information about the issuer and this
offering. You may get these documents for free by visiting EDGAR on
the SEC website at www.sec.gov. Alternatively
the issuer, any underwriter or any dealer participating in this offering will
arrange to send you the prospectus if you request it by calling Morgan Stanley
at 212-761-5334.
3. 2009-1
EETC
Okay to
begin I’d like to talk a little about this transaction, the Continental Airlines
2009-1 EETC. Continental is offering $389.6 million of pass through
certificates. This will be a single class, the class A only, and the
proceeds of this security will be used by Continental to finance five new Boeing
737-900 ER aircraft to be selected out of a pool of seven that will be scheduled
for delivery during the third quarter of this year, as well as to refinance 12
aircraft broken down by four Boeing 737-700s, three Boeing 737-800s, two Boeing
757-200s and three Boeing 777-200 ERs all in Continental’s existing
fleet. The joint structuring agents for this transaction are Morgan
Stanley and Goldman Sachs, and the bookrunners for this transaction are Morgan
Stanley, Goldman Sachs and Calyon.
4. 2009-1
EETC Structural
All right
kicking this off for the EETC structural summary. The principal
amount is $389.6 million. The expected ratings are Baa2 and A- from
Moody’s and S&P, respectively. We’ll have a maximum LTV of
54%. The interest rate will be fixed rate and semi-annual
convention. It has an initial average life of 5.9 years and will have
regular distribution dates of January 8 and July 8 commencing this coming
January 8, 2010. The expected final distribution date is July 8,
2016, corresponding to a seven year final, and will have a legal final maturity
date of
January
8, 2018. All of the aircraft will be benefiting from Section 1110
protection, and there will be a liquidity facility for 18 months or three
semi-annual interest payments. Initially, the proceeds of this
transaction will be placed with a depositary, which will be held in escrow until
the aircraft are unencumbered or delivered by the manufacturer.
5. Key
Structural Elements
I’d like
to draw your attention to a couple of key structural elements. This
transaction is going to consist of a single offering a Class A tranche
alone. Continental does have the right to issue an additional
subordinated tranche in the future. As in some of the recent EETCs
this will have a single waterfall and there will be a clear priority in this
transaction for the Class A principal and interest payments that will be senior
to any subsequent subordinated tranche issuance. All of these
aircraft are core to Continental and its fleet operations, and this transaction
will have both cross-collateralization and cross-default on all of the aircraft
from day one, which is particularly important and represents an enhancement over
previous transactions that have been issued.
6. Collateral
Summary
I draw
your attention next to the collateral summary. As you can see on this
page we’ve laid out for each of the aircraft not only the type, the registration
number, what the delivery month was and for those aircraft that are already in
Continental Airlines’ fleet, which EETC transaction they currently reside and
the respective appraised values. In particular of the 12 aircraft
that are in Continental’s fleet, two were financed in other transactions and are
currently available and the remaining ten are part of the 98-1, the 99-1 or the
99-2 EETC transactions. In each of those transactions these
particular aircraft were deliberately financed with shorter than normal tenors
so that the company could take advantage of a favorable yield curve at that time
and this transaction is now the normal refinancing of these aircraft to bring
that to equalization to what the previous financings were. In fact I
would note that for all of these aircraft in this transaction the maturity date
of this transaction is inside of the maturity date for those three other
transactions.
7. Diverse
Collateral Pool
For the
next page we talk about the collateral pool. As you can see by this
pie chart this pool represents a diverse collateral pool that represents 68%
narrowbody and 32% widebody mix. And the actual percentages for their
different respective aircraft types ranges from a 6.9% for the 757-200s to 37.3%
for the 737-900ERs.
8. Aircraft
Appraisals
As in all
EETC transactions Continental has obtained three desk top appraisals from AISI,
BK Associates and Morten Beyer & Agnew. These are maintenance
adjusted base values for the currently owned aircraft and base values for the
new aircraft. Maintenance adjusted base values include an adjustment
from the mid-time, mid-life baseline to account for the actual maintenance
status of the aircraft. What that means specifically is that the
appraisers looked at the specific maintenance records of each of the currently
owned aircraft and then made adjustments in order
to
provide a more precise valuation of the given aircraft than just the standard
base value appraisal. The aggregate aircraft appraised value is
$720.6 million and the specific appraisals are available in the prospectus
supplement. These appraisals indicate there is a collateral cushion
of approximately 46 to 52% over the life of this transaction.
9. Boeing
737-NG Family
Now I’d
like to make a couple comments on the aircraft specifically. The
Boeing 737 Next Gen family is basically the worlds all time best selling
aircraft and narrowbody commercial aircraft. The 737-800 specifically
is the best selling model within this family, represents the number one in terms
of order books with 3,137 units and number two in terms of operators with 104
operators. 737-700 is the second best selling model within the family
and is number two in the terms of the order book with 1,979
units. Introduced in 2007, the 737-900 ER is the newest member of the
737 family and it offers the lowest seat mile costs of any narrowbody aircraft
in production.
10. Boeing
757-200
Turning
to the 757-200, this is the only aircraft type currently operated by all six
U.S. legacy carriers and it offers the lowest seat mile costs in its capacity
class. While there is currently no direct replacement and values have
stabilized in recent years as U.S. airlines have retained the type and
retro-fitted with winglets to improve range performance to expand both domestic
and international operations, it’s increasingly being used on long haul routes
connecting smaller cities which would be uneconomical to serve using widebody
aircraft. Longer term the value is retained in this aircraft is
supported by the development of freighter conversion programs and by the
potential acquisition by air carriers based in developing nations.
11. Boeing
777-200ER
With
regard to the Boeing 777-200ER this is the most popular widebody aircraft in
service and a staple of the trans-Atlantic and trans-Pacific fleets of many
operators. It is the second best widebody family in Boeing’s history
and the fourth best selling aircraft in Boeing’s history. There is a
strong potential for freighter conversion, which can extend the life of the
aircraft and support residual values. The availability is limited
with most surplus aircraft now absorbed. In the medium term the
777-200ER is well positioned with a broad operator and a distribution
base.
12. Conclusion
And with
that on behalf of Continental, Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs and Calyon
Securities, I’d like to bring this presentation to a close. Again I
would ask you to the extent that you have any supplemental questions or need any
other information please contact your respective salesperson and they’ll be more
than happy to help you. Thank you.