The Pak Banker

EasyJet grounds fleet as pandemic pushes airlines to the brink

- LONDON -AFP

British budget airline easyJet has grounded its fleet of 344 planes and has no clear idea when it might resume flights, it said on Monday, highlighti­ng the strain on airlines trying to survive the coronaviru­s pandemic. EasyJet said it would lay off its 4,000 UK-based cabin crew for two months, meaning they won't work from April 1 but will get 80% of their average pay under a state job retention scheme.

The global health crisis has brought European air travel to a standstill, leaving airlines with no revenue and facing a struggle for survival. Small British airline Loganair, for example, said on Monday that it would seek state support.

Shares in easyJet lost as much as 10% in early trading on Monday, having halved in value over the last month. The airline now has a market capitalisa­tion of about 2.3 billion pounds ($2.9 billion). Its shares were down 5% at 0937 GMT. "We think the group has enough liquidity to manage a short suspension of European air travel but if the disruption proves prolonged, or the recovery is sluggish, easyJet could be in real trouble," said Hargreaves Landsdown analyst William Ryder. EasyJet was under additional pressure from its biggest shareholde­r, Stelios Haji-Ioannou, who along with his family owns about a third of its shares.

In a letter to easyJet's chairman on Sunday, Haji-Ioannou said it must cancel or renegotiat­e a 4.5 billion pound order for 107 Airbus planes because the extra aircraft would just destroy shareholde­r value. EasyJet said it was trying to reduce payments, including those on aircraft, and would respond to the letter privately.

The airline said it was focused on short-term liquidity, including removing costs from the business and working with suppliers to defer and reduce payments where possible. It said grounding its fleet removed significan­t costs and that it was continuing to talk to UK pilots union BALPA over a potential deal with pilots.

"We are working tirelessly to ensure that easyJet continues to be well positioned to overcome the challenges of coronaviru­s," easyJet CEO Johan Lundgren said in a statement.

Haji-Ioannou has told the airline to try to raise money from shareholde­rs, and offered to participat­e himself. Management could face disruption if it does not address his worries over the Airbus order, which is due to be paid between 2020 and 2023, as he has threatened a rolling general meetings to try to remove board members.

For easyJet cabin crew looking for something to do, Britain's National Health Service has asked them to volunteer at hospitals being set up to cope with the thousands of coronaviru­s patients expected in the coming weeks. Crew have first aid training and security clearance, making them ideal candidates.

EasyJet said it was focused on using UK government measures already announced to help its finances during the coronaviru­s crisis and has no plans to ask for any bespoke support.

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