KBRA Affirms BB- Issuer Rating With Stable Outlook for Vista Global Holding Limited and Subsequently Converts the Rating to Unpublished
26 Feb 2026 | New York
KBRA affirms its BB- issuer rating, with a Stable Outlook, for Vista Global Holding Limited (Vista Global). Additionally, KBRA is converting the rating for Vista Global to unpublished from published.
Vista Global, headquartered in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, is the holding company of a global business aviation platform that offers flights through its membership programs and on-demand charter options, utilizing either its fleet or those of its partners. Vista Global operates a dedicated fleet of 206 aircraft, including ultra-long-range, large cabin, super-mid cabin, midsize cabin, and light jets.
Key Credit Considerations
The issuer rating reflects Vista’s strong market position in global business aviation, supported by its scaled, diversified platform and differentiated subscription-led access model. Vista is among the largest operators globally by hours flown and represents approximately 5% of total private aviation traffic, benefiting from a broad international footprint and multichannel offering anchored by its contracted Program product. The company’s continued shift toward higher-quality contracted flying is credit supportive, with Program mix reaching the company’s long-term target of 70% of on-fleet hours via Program in Q3 2025. This mix shift, together with improving fleet utilization (approaching 1,000 hours per aircraft on an annualized basis in 2025), supports revenue visibility and partially mitigates cyclicality relative to purely transactional charter operators.
The rating also incorporates Vista’s disciplined pivot away from acquisition-led growth toward organic execution, including fleet simplification and utilization-led capacity expansion. Vista’s capital intensity has moderated meaningfully, with fleet-related capex predominantly maintenance-oriented and limited near-term growth capex commitments, which supports free cash flow generation and balance sheet flexibility. Vista’s medium-term orderbook also provides incremental capacity visibility: In February 2026, the company placed a major Bombardier Challenger 3500 order for up to 160 aircraft (40 firm orders plus 120 options). Of the 40 firm orders, 20 are firm commitments by Vista and another 20 are firm commitments from common-controlled entities, with an average of four deliveries per year for Vista through 2031. Deliveries are expected to start in Q4 2026 and extend over the next decade. While largely back-end-loaded and highly flexible given the option structure, the order supports longer-term fleet renewal and scalable growth capacity without implying a near-term step-up in fleet size. While 2025 profitability was temporarily pressured by elevated operating costs, trailing EBITDAR remained broadly stable versus the prior year, indicating that yield discipline and contracted mix have largely offset cost headwinds at the operating level.
Financial flexibility is supported by continued access to diversified funding channels and active liability management. In 2025, Vista strengthened its capital structure through a $600 million equity investment and a $700 million term loan B, extending maturities and supporting deleveraging, while maintaining a manageable near-term maturity profile with the next material corporate maturities in 2027. Credit metrics are consistent with the rating level. Cash flow measures have been stable, translating to modest improvement in leverage as debt declined. Fixed charge coverage remains moderate, reflecting the still-elevated leverage profile and fixed cost burden.
The rating remains constrained by the cyclical nature of business aviation demand and the competitive, fragmented charter market, execution risk associated with sustaining utilization gains while normalizing maintenance and crew cost inflation, relatively modest liquidity compared with the company’s scale, and private ownership considerations, including the potential for cash leakage.
Rating Sensitivities
The Stable Outlook reflects our expectation that Vista will maintain a broadly stable credit profile over the next 12 to 18 months, supported by continued Program penetration and utilization-led efficiency gains. We expect Program mix to continue to trend towards the target, underpinning revenue visibility and cash flow generation. Profitability and credit metrics should be stable to modestly improving, contingent on management’s ability to contain maintenance and labor cost pressures, sustain utilization gains, and maintain disciplined capital allocation and liquidity.
An upgrade could occur if Vista demonstrates sustained improvement in operating performance and balance sheet strength, including debt/EBITDAR sustained below 4.0x, fixed charge coverage sustained above 2.0x, and improved liquidity and financial policy discipline (including limited shareholder distributions) supported by consistent free cash flow generation and continued progress on utilization and cost normalization.
A downgrade could occur if Vista experiences sustained deterioration in earnings and/or a reversal in deleveraging, including debt/EBITDAR sustained above 6.0x and/or fixed charge coverage below 1.0x, weakened liquidity or reduced capital markets access, or negative financial policy actions such as larger shareholder distributions or debt-funded expansion. Downside pressure could also result from material operational disruptions (maintenance/crewing constraints), a sharp demand downturn in core markets, or adverse regulatory/cost shocks that cannot be passed through.