Deccan Chronicle

Govt weighs selling Air India without debt burden

- SIDDHARTHA SINGH & ANURAG KOTOKY

India is proposing to drop a condition that the winning bidder for Air India will have to take on $3.3 billion of aircraft debt, people with knowledge of the matter said, as the government struggles to sell the loss-making carrier kept afloat by taxpayerfu­nded bailouts.

The Centre is being advised to drop the rule on concern it will deter buyers, the people said, asking not to be identified. A group of bureaucrat­s has vetted the plan, and under the new propositio­n, potential buyers will be allowed to bid on the enterprise value and not on the entity value, the people said.

A renewed attempt to sell Air India, which hasn't made money since 2007, has been hurt by the pandemic, forcing the government to keep extending a deadline to bid. The offer, announced in January, was sweetened to pass on only the debt related to plane purchases to the new owner. The airline had $8.4 billion in total debt at the end of March, 2019 and posted a loss of $1.2 billion that year -- its highest ever.

Despite the losses, the airline has some lucrative assets which include prized slots at London's choked Heathrow airport, a fleet of more than 100 planes and thousands of trained pilots and crew. The airline will have to shut down if it can't find a buyer, aviation minister Hardeep Singh Puri told the parliament last year.

The new proposal sweetens the deal.

A spokesman for the aviation ministry referred queries to the Department of Investment and Public Asset Management, a unit of the finance ministry. A finance ministry spokesman wasn't immediatel­y available for comment.

At least two previous attempts to sell the airline -- once about two decades ago and another in 2018--have flopped. In 2001, Singapore Airlines Ltd. dropped its bid for a stake in Air India, citing political opposition as one of the reasons. The Southeast Asian carrier was seeking a 40 per cent stake with India's Tata Group.

Potential buyers this time have requested the government to extend the deadline to submit initial bids due to the coronaviru­s pandemic, the government said last month. Tata SIA Airlines Ltd., which operates under the brand Vistara, is evaluating a possible bid, its chairman Bhaskar Bhat said earlier this year.

IndiGo, India's biggest airline that's operated by InterGlobe Aviation Ltd., showed interest in Air India's internatio­nal operations and low-cost carrier Air India Express in a previous offer to sale, but it pulled out saying the no-frills airline is unable to buy and turn around Air India's operations in their entirety.

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