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Airlines risk extinction as india refuses to rescue billionair­es

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MUMBAI: With US two-cent airfares, high fuel costs and taxes, India’s aviation market already was one of the toughest around. The coronaviru­s pandemic could be the final straw for some of the country’s airlines.

Indian carriers need as much as Us$2.5bil to keep flying, CAPA Centre for Aviation in Sydney says, and that may only last to the end of this year if they’re lucky. Airlines suffered a total collapse in demand from March 25 to late May as India banned commercial passenger flights as part of its virus lockdown.

Government­s in Europe, the United States and elsewhere have provided Us$123bil to support airlines through the Covid-19 crisis.

But Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s administra­tion, facing a widening fiscal deficit, hasn’t doled out funds to individual industries or airlines backed by private businesses and, in some cases, billionair­es.

The country’s airlines need significan­t investment or one or more will fail, according to Satyendra Pandey, an independen­t consultant and former head of strategy at Go Airlines India Ltd. That puts them on track to follow the likes of Flybe Group Plc in the UK, Virgin Australia Holdings Ltd and Latam Airlines Group SA in Chile into administra­tion or collapse.

“Airlines with weak balance sheets and inadequate collateral have survived by withholdin­g payments to suppliers for two months and counting,” Pandey said.

The Indian aviation market was challengin­g enough before the pandemic as crushing fare wars and high costs took their toll.

There were two major collapses in the last decade: Jet Airways India Ltd, the country’s oldest private-sector carrier, and Kingfisher Airlines Ltd, which was owned by Vijay Mallya. Air India Ltd has been limping along under a mountain of debt for years searching for a buyer.

In addition to Indian states imposing levies of as much as 30% on jet fuel, a weakening rupee adds to the pain. The currency has fallen nearly 10% against the dollar over the past year, the weakest in Asia, which hurts Indian airlines as their costs are mostly dollar-denominate­d.

“We haven’t given a financial bailout package, but that doesn’t mean the government has not been helping the aviation sector,” said Pradeep Singh Kharola, the top bureaucrat in India’s aviation ministry.

“The help can be in various ways.” While Kharola cited the announceme­nt to open up the nation’s airspace as part of a Us$277bil virus-related stimulus package, the measure had first been proposed in 2013.

Another decision to reform plane-repair facilities was announced in 2016, and a plan is in the works to privatise more airports.

Without immediate government support, any cash infusion would need to come from tycoon owners, CAPA’S South Asia chief executive Officer Kapil Kaul said on Bloomberg Television.

Tata Group, India’s biggest conglomera­te, owns majority stakes in Vistara and Airasia India Pvt Ltd, while Wadia Group -- a family business empire – owns Goair. Billionair­es Rahul Bhatia and Rakesh Gangwal own Indigo.

But wealthy backers don’t guarantee salvation, as Jet and Kingfisher show.

Two senior bankers who approve loans to large companies, including airlines, said there’s little desire to lend to them without a government backstop, adding that there is now a big gap between carriers’ revenues and expenses. Cash flows have almost dried up, but the airlines still need to pay salaries, maintain airlines and cover outgoings, the bankers said.

Spicejet Ltd, Air India and Vistara had cash ratios of less than one – a key gauge of liquidity – the latest annual figures compiled by Bloomberg show. The low ratios indicate that their cash and cash equivalent­s are not enough to cover their current liabilitie­s.

Indigo and Vistara announced additional pay-related measures on Tuesday to prune costs.

Close to three million jobs in aviation and related industries could be lost in India this year because of the pandemic, as well as more than Us$11bil in revenue, according to the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n.

India is one of the worst-affected countries, with more than half a million confirmed virus cases and 16,475 deaths.

Even after some domestic routes reopened in late May, planes were flying only about half full in the first week back, according to data shared by the country’s aviation regulator. The fixed costs of maintainin­g grounded planes and meeting financial obligation­s to banks, oil companies, lessors and staff make it even harder for weaker carriers to stay afloat.

Vistara, a joint venture between Tata Group and Singapore Airlines Ltd, said it is working to lower or defer operating expenditur­e and avoiding discretion­ary expenses. It also reduced staff costs to save jobs. Spicejet said it is confident of emerging stronger after the crisis and has adequate cash flow. The listed carrier, whose market value has more than halved this year, hasn’t cut jobs.

Representa­tives at Indigo, Goair and Airasia India didn’t respond to requests for comment.

Also at stake are orders with Boeing Co and Airbus SE. Indigo, operated by Interglobe Aviation Ltd, is the world’s biggest customer for Airbus’s best-selling A320neo-family of jets, while Goair also has ordered 144 of them. Spicejet is one of the biggest buyers of Boeing’s now-grounded 737 Max jets, with as many as 205 on order.

“The growth of airline capacity in India far outstrippe­d demand at economic prices, placing the viability of fleet plans and entire carriers in doubt,” said Robert Mann, New Yorkbased head of aviation consultanc­y R.W. Mann & Co.

“Covid will accelerate the reduction of capacity, in a number of cases by extinguish­ing airlines.”

 ?? — Bloomberg ?? Extinguish­ing airlines: Indian carriers need as much as Us$2.5bil to keep flying and that may only last to the end of this year if they’re lucky.
— Bloomberg Extinguish­ing airlines: Indian carriers need as much as Us$2.5bil to keep flying and that may only last to the end of this year if they’re lucky.

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