Business Standard

Air India sale fails to take off

Deadline ends with zero bids; blow for divestment plan

- ARINDAM MAJUMDER

In a blow to the government’s privatisat­ion drive in aviation, no bidder showed up on the last day of submitting expression of interest to buy a controllin­g stake in Air India. With that, the disinvestm­ent of the national carrier, which had kicked off last June following Cabinet approval, seemed to be grounded for now. The proposal will now go back to the group of ministers (GoM) overseeing the process for a possible review of norms. With the Lok Sabha elections scheduled for 2019, a fresh process may not be easy to roll out, people in the know said, while businesses blamed “faulty guidelines’’ for the flop show.

“No response has been received for the EoI floated for the strategic disinvestm­ent of Air India. Further course of action will be decided appropriat­ely,” the civil aviation ministry said in a brief statement soon after the deadline for submitting bids got over Thursday evening.

Civil Aviation Secretary Rajiv Nayan Choubey said the course of action would be decided by a finance minister-led GoM. “We were expecting a significan­t interest from the market. The future process now involves going back to the core group on disinvestm­ent. Any changes in the terms of sale will be decided by the committee,” Choubey said.

Industry sources indicated that the government’s decision to hold 24 per cent in the airline was a major reason for the absence of interest.

“First, there is a significan­t amount of debt that the new owner would take over. Turning around operations of the airline would need massive restructur­ing, which is not possible with the government staying in picture,” said an airline executive.

India’s largest airline, IndiGo, while expressing an interest to buy the airline, had mentioned that it would not like to bid if the government remained in picture. “Our view is that a joint venture or a joint ownership with the government is at best a very difficult propositio­n and we would not go down that path. The government has owned and managed Air India for 50 years and is looking to divest of itself right now. One would even wonder if truly at the end of the day when the thinking is all done, whether the government itself would be interested in wanting a partnershi­p," IndiGo co-founder Rakesh Gangwal had said.

This is not the first time that private players have expressed their inability to work with government ownership. Earlier, the government attempt at privatisat­ion had failed to draw interest from bidders for helicopter company Pawan Hans. The government wanted to sell only 51 per cent stake along with management control in the helicopter service operator while the remaining 49 per cent was to be held by Oil and Natural Gas Corporatio­n (ONGC).

Industry insiders pointed out that the bidders were reluctant to buy stake in a company where a government-owned entity like ONGC held a substantia­l stake.

INDUSTRY SAYS THE GOVT’S DECISION TO HOLD 24% IN THE AIRLINE WAS A SPOILSPORT

“Most helicopter companies provide services in the oil and gas sector; hence ONGC will be a major customer. In such a scenario, who will want ONGC to hold 49 per cent stake in the company?,” said an executive of a company which had expressed interest in Pawan Hans.

Similarly, AAI was forced to cancel the process of privatisat­ion of airport terminal operations in Ahmedabad and Jaipur as it received just one bid. An executive of the company which was among the prospectiv­e bidders, put the onus on the government’s reluctance to go for full privatisat­ion.

“Private players want to play in large scale, the prospectiv­e bidders want to operate an entire airport. Then the prospect of profit becomes higher, only terminal operation doesn’t provide any opportunit­y,” said an executive. Big names among the prospectiv­e bidders included GMR, GVK, Tata Realty and Reliance Infrastruc­ture. Among global bidders, there were Daa Internatio­nal and Flughafen de Zurich.

Experts said this implies the inability to attract private investment. “We treat this as a significan­t failure. Next steps should include a comprehens­ive restructur­ing under a special administra­tion which can be followed by 100 per cent divestment with less complex terms, “said Kapil Kaul, CEO (South Asia) of aviation consultanc­y firm CAPA.

Secretary Choubey, however, defended the government’s decision. “The government wanted to retain 24 per cent for the benefit of upside. We were retaining a significan­t part of the debt which had to be serviced. Selling the residual stake would have helped us service the debt. That has not happened, so we will take a call on how to proceed further,” Choubey said.

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