Business Standard

Vistara gets ~20 bn fund infusion

Tatas, Singapore Airlines make largest investment in JV

- ANEESH PHADNIS

Tata Sons and Singapore Airlines have pumped ~20 billion into Vistara as the airline charts its expansion plan.

This is the largest single dose of equity infusion into the joint venture (JV) since its launch in

January 2015. It will help Vistara finance its $3.1 billion (around ~220 billion) aircraft order.

The airline’s board passed a resolution for issuing capital in

August. Fresh shares were issued to the two promoters earlier this month, filings with the corporate affairs ministry show.

The investment signals the Tata group's ambition to propel its aviation business. This comes amid firming of its control in AirAsia India and talks with Jet Airways to buy a stake in the latter.

Vistara plans to induct 56 aircraft between 2019 and 2023. It has placed a firm order for 13 Airbus A320neos and six Boeing 787-9 planes. Nearly 37 A320neos will also be taken on lease.

The fund infusion will help in pre-delivery payments to Airbus and Boeing. It will also help its plans of internatio­nal expansion, sources said. At present, the airline has 22 Airbus A320s and deliveries of new planes will begin next April.

Vistara did not comment on the fund infusion. With this infusion, Tatas and Singapore Airlines have invested over ~38 billion in equity into the JV to date.

Aided by cost control and 57 per cent revenue growth, Vistara has seen a 16.8 per cent decline in net loss in 2017-18 (FY18), from ~5.18 billion in the previous year to ~4.31 billion. Total revenue for FY18 was ~22.28 billion. In the last financial year, Vistara launched two new destinatio­ns - Ranchi and Chennai - and resumed services to Varanasi.

"Vistara invests in shortterm and long-term initiative­s to be more cost-competitiv­e. We have digitised some of our internal processes and leveraged technology. Our new aircraft order, with deliveries starting from next year, comprises fuel-efficient aircraft. We will continue to keep a close watch on our expenses as we expand our wings," the airline said.

Internatio­nal operations will boost profitabil­ity as it will earn more in foreign exchange, but plans remain stuck as the civil aviation ministry is yet to grant approval. The airline had applied for an approval in June. The government is going slow on its proposal because of the ongoing corruption probe on AirAsia India.

In an earlier interactio­n, the airline's Chief Executive Officer Leslie Thng said the aircraft order would provide a fillip for profitable operations, as it would enable the airline to make its network denser and operate on more profitable internatio­nal routes.

"We will use the A320 and A321 to boost our domestic network as well as to launch internatio­nal destinatio­ns from Delhi. The Boeing 787 Dreamliner­s will be used on the medium- and long-haul internatio­nal routes," Thng said in July.

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