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Regulator raises competitio­n concerns on Qantas

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SYDNEY: Australia’s competitio­n regulator say that Qantas Airways Ltd’s proposed purchase of the remainder of charter operator Alliance Aviation Services Ltd for A$610.8mil (Us$423mil or Rm1.9bil) raised concerns.

“We are concerned that this proposed acquisitio­n is likely to substantia­lly lessen competitio­n for air transport services to and from regional and remote areas in Queensland and Western Australia for corporate customers,” Australian Competitio­n and Consumer Commission (ACCC) chair Gina Cass-gottlieb said in a statement.

Alliance shares slumped 6.5% in early trading following her comments. A final decision is expected in November, the ACCC said.

Qantas has owned 20% of Alliance since 2019 but buying the remaining 80% would give it a dominant share of flying for resources industry customers, a market in which it competes against Virgin Australia and Cobham’s National Jet Express, soon to be owned by Regional Express Holdings Ltd .

Many mining and oil and gas companies in Australia staff their operations using a fly-in and fly-out (FIFO) model rather than permanentl­y basing their employees at remote sites, making flying a lucrative business for airlines.

Qantas has offered Alliance investors A$4.75 (RM14.7) a share for the remainder of the company in an all-stock deal.

Alliance shares had closed at A$3.55 (RM11) on Wednesday, indicating investor scepticism that the regulator would approve the transactio­n.

Qantas Group executive of associated airlines and services John Gissing said yesterday the airline would continue to work with the regulator to ensure any competitio­n concerns were addressed.

Alliance represents only around 2% of total aviation industry capacity but it supplies around 30% of charter services, followed by Qantas with 23% and Virgin at 22%, Qantas said in a statement.

A Virgin Australia spokespers­on said Qantas’ proposed acquisitio­n had serious implicatio­ns for competitio­n in Australian aviation and consumers would be impacted if competitio­n was reduced.

Virgin and Alliance have had an agreement allowing them to jointly bid for FIFO business since 2017.

The ACCC initially proposed to deny that deal on competitio­n grounds but approved it in a final decision after comments from market participan­ts. Alliance also operates 14 jets on regional routes on behalf of Qantas and four for Virgin. — Reuters

 ?? ?? Dodgy deal: Qantas planes are seen on the tarmac of Melbourne Internatio­nal Airport. The airline has offered Alliance investors A$4.75 (RM14.7) a share for the remainder of the company in an all-stock deal. — Reuters
Dodgy deal: Qantas planes are seen on the tarmac of Melbourne Internatio­nal Airport. The airline has offered Alliance investors A$4.75 (RM14.7) a share for the remainder of the company in an all-stock deal. — Reuters

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