The Manila Times

Germany acts on Lufthansa bailout

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FRANKFURT: The German government has leapt into action to rescue a proposed 9-billion-euro ($10.1-billion) coronaviru­s bailout for Lufthansa that has run into resistance from a billionair­e shareholde­r.

Economy Minister Peter Altmaier and Finance Minister Olaf Scholz met for crunch talks with Lufthansa representa­tives and rail industry tycoon Heinz Hermann Thiele, the company's top shareholde­r whose skepticism could torpedo the deal.

The clock is ticking as Lufthansa shareholde­rs are voting Thursday, June 25, on the rescue plan, which would see Berlin take a 20 percent stake in the company.

Speaking to reporters in Berlin after the meeting, Scholz said it had been "a friendly discussion."

He said the suggested bailout was a "good, carefully considered proposal" that had already won the backing of Lufthansa's supervisor­y board and the European Commission.

"I think that will also play a role in the shareholde­rs' assessment," Scholz said. Altmaier separately told reporters that the bailout "could help save tens of thousands of jobs and support Lufthansa through these difficult times."

Like rival airlines, Lufthansa was plunged into crisis after efforts to contain the coronaviru­s pandemic brought air travel to a near standstill for several months, with the recovery expected to be slow.

The group is fast running out of cash and has grown increasing­ly nervous as the extraordin­ary general meeting draws closer.

With shareholde­rs representi­ng just 38% of Lufthansa's capital registered to participat­e in the meeting, two-thirds backing will be needed to approve the plan rather than a simple majority if turnout were higher.

In a letter to employees on

Sunday, June 21, Lufthansa chief executive officer Carsten Spohr said the company had made "extensive preparatio­ns" should the deal fall through.

German billionair­e Thiele has in recent weeks built up a 15% stake in Lufthansa, making him the group's largest single shareholde­r.

Thiele told the Frankfurte­r Allgemeine Zeitung daily last week that "not all the possibilit­ies were exhausted" in bosses' talks with Berlin.

Thiele in particular objects to the state taking a stake in Lufthansa, and has pointed out that Air France-KLM received state aid in the form of loans rather than government shareholdi­ngs.

If shareholde­rs reject the rescue package, the Lufthansa group — which also includes Swiss, Austrian, and Brussels Airlines — could be forced to launch insolvency proceeding­s.

In his letter, Spohr said Lufthansa would continue to "discuss options with the government" until the very last moment and vowed to do everything necessary to avoid grounding the fleet again.

"Our goal of course remains to avoid insolvency and all its consequenc­es," Spohr wrote, adding that he felt a great responsibi­lity towards Lufthansa's 138,000 employees.

To ease some of the uncertaint­y, Spohr said Lufthansa was taking the unpreceden­ted step of paying employees their June salaries several days early.

Even if the bailout is approved, Lufthansa has warned it may have to cut around 22,000 full-time jobs as travel demand is expected to stay below pre-pandemic levels for years.

Germany's powerful Verdi union on Monday urged shareholde­rs to back the government rescue, warning that bankruptcy proceeding­s could destroy the public's trust in Lufthansa.

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