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Pierre Karl Péladeau dangles offer for Transat if Air Canada deal can’t take off

Pierre Karl Péladeau, who says he owns about 1.6 per cent of the outstanding shares of Air Transat's parent company, says he plans to vote against the $18 per share offer by Canada's largest airline, saying it is "contrary to the public interest.". Graham Hughes/The Canadian Press

The head of Quebec telecommunications giant Quebecor Inc. is dangling a potential offer for Transat A.T. if the tour operator’s shareholders or regulatory authorities block Air Canada’s $720-million offer.

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Pierre Karl Péladeau, who says he owns about 1.6 per cent of the outstanding shares of Air Transat’s parent company, says he plans to vote against the $18 per share offer by Canada’s largest airline, saying it is “contrary to the public interest.”

READ MORE: Air Canada raises Transat purchase offer, secures support of largest stakeholder

A vote Friday must secure the support from at least two-thirds of Transat shareholders.

Péladeau says in a news release that the deal goes against “the best interests of (Transat AT), its employees, Quebec consumers and the Quebec economy” since Air Canada would control 60 per cent of the market, an unacceptably high level that would hurt competition.

READ MORE: Blocking Air Transat sale to Air Canada: Group Mach offers $14 per share in bid

The businessman and former politician says he has “gathered around him strong and established partners of international renown” in order to submit a possible proposal he says would be fair, without mentioning a price.

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Transat’s largest shareholder with a 19.3 per cent stake, Letko, Brosseau and Associates, says it would support Air Canada’s offer, after earlier rejecting it when the bid was $13 per share.

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