Business Day

Air India faces sale of units

Two Indian suitors, Tata Sons and IndiGo, have shown early interest as state considers options to divest loss-making flagship carrier

- Rupam Jain and Tommy Wilkes

India was considerin­g selling state-owned Air India in parts to make it attractive to potential buyers as it reviewed options to exit the lossmaking flagship carrier, officials familiar with the situation said.

India is considerin­g selling stateowned Air India in parts to make it attractive to potential buyers, as it reviews options to divest the loss-making flagship carrier, several government officials familiar with the situation said.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s cabinet gave the goahead in June for the government to try to sell the airline, after successive government­s spent billions of dollars in recent years to keep the airline going.

Air India — founded in the 1930s and known to generation­s of Indians for its Maharajah mascot — is saddled with a debt burden of $8.5bn and a bloated cost structure. The government has injected $3.6bn since 2012 to bail out the airline.

Once the nation’s largest carrier, its market share in the booming domestic market has slumped to 13% as private carriers such as InterGlobe Aviation’s IndiGo and Jet Airways have grown.

Previous attempts to offload the airline have been unsuccessf­ul. If Modi can pull this off, it will buttress his credential­s as a reformer brave enough to wade into some of the country’s most intractabl­e problems.

His office has set a deadline of early 2018 to get the sale process under way, the officials said, declining to be named as they were not authorised to speak publicly about the plans.

The timeline is ambitious and the process fraught, with opinion divided on the best way forward: should the government retain a stake or exit completely, and should it risk being left with the unprofitab­le pieces while buyers pick off the better businesses, officials said.

Already, a labour union that represents 2,500 of the airline’s 40,000 employees has opposed the idea of a sale even though it is ideologica­lly aligned to Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party.

SHEER SCALE

Officials who have to make it happen are grappling with the sheer scale of the exercise.

Air India has six subsidiari­es — three of which are lossmaking — with assets worth about $4.6bn. It has an estimated $1.24bn worth of real estate, including two hotels, where ownership is split among various government entities.

No one has properly valued the company’s various businesses and assets before, two officials with direct knowledge of the process said. Earlier in July, about $30m worth of art, including paintings by artist MF Husain, went missing from its Mumbai offices, chairman Ashwani Lohani said.

“The exercise is complex and there is no easy way out,” said Jitendra Bhargava, operationa­l head of Air India in 1997-2010. “At this juncture, selling even part of Air India is far from certain,” he said.

Lohani, the prime minister’s office and the civil aviation ministry declined to comment.

A committee of five senior federal ministers, led by Finance Minister Arun Jaitley, is expected to meet in July and begin ironing out the finer details of the plan. Besides deciding about the size of the stake sale, the panel will set the bidding norms. It will also take a call on the carrier’s debt, demerger and divestment of its three profitmaki­ng subsidiari­es.

Modi’s office has said the government has no business being in hospitalit­y and travel, suggesting the prime minister aims to sell as much of Air India as possible, the officials said.

Analysts said the government may prefer to keep the airline in Indian hands. At least two potential Indian suitors, the Tata Sons conglomera­te and IndiGo, have shown early interest.

In recent weeks, officials in Modi’s office and from the civil aviation ministry met Ratan Tata, the patriarch of Tata Sons, to gauge the company’s interest in a deal, a close aide to Modi said.

Tata would be an attractive buyer for the government. The company founded and operated Air India before it was nationalis­ed in 1953.

“Seems like Tata will come forward and make the best offer,” the aide said, adding the government would be keen to see that jobs are not lost.

Tata already has two other airline joint ventures in India, and it is not clear what parts of Air India it would be interested in. A Tata spokeswoma­n declined to comment.

IndiGo said on Thursday it was interested in the internatio­nal operations and in Air India Express, a low-cost carrier.

Modi’s office has told officials to work out exactly how much each of Air India’s subsidiari­es are worth to make it easier to break up the carrier if needed, two of the officials said. The government is expected to appoint outside consultant­s to help with the exercise.

ICICI Securities analyst Anshuman Deb said splitting the airline will maximise value for the government.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Trying again: Prime Minister Narendra Modi has approved the sale and has set a deadline of early 2018 to get the process under way. If Modi does succeed it will buttress his reform credential­s. A labour union has already opposed the idea of the disposal.
/Reuters Trying again: Prime Minister Narendra Modi has approved the sale and has set a deadline of early 2018 to get the process under way. If Modi does succeed it will buttress his reform credential­s. A labour union has already opposed the idea of the disposal.

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