Bangkok Post

Lauda buys back airline he founded

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VIENNA: Former Formula One champion Niki Lauda has agreed to buy back the Niki airline he founded after his bid was chosen ahead of an offer from British Airways owner Internatio­nal Consolidat­ed Airlines Group (IAG), the Austrian company’s administra­tors said yesterday.

A previously agreed sale of Niki to IAG fell through this month after two courts ruled that the insolvency proceeding­s had to move to Austria from Germany.

That cleared the way for other interested parties such as budget airline Ryanair and Lauda to bid for the carrier, which most recently was part of failed German airline Air Berlin.

Niki’s creditors met on Monday to pick the best bid, and their meeting ran past midnight.

“In the early hours of this morning Laudamotio­n GmbH emerged from a transparen­t bidding process as the best bidder,” Niki’s Austrian and German administra­tors, Ulla Reisch and Lucas Floether, said in a brief joint statement, referring to a company controlled by Lauda.

They said they expected legal approval for the transactio­n to follow soon.

Niki Lauda, who founded the airline in 2003 and sold it to Air Berlin in 2011, said the involved parties had agreed to not disclose the purchase price.

“Of course, I am delighted,” he said in an interview with Austrian broadcaste­r Oe24. “There’s no doubt that I have always put my heart and soul into Niki.”

Lauda said he secured 15 aircraft and planned to bring Niki back into operation by end of March.

Lauda, who was three times Formula One world champion, moved into the airline industry as his driving career was coming to an end in the 1980s.

All Niki employees — of whom there were around 1,000 in December — “can hope to keep their jobs after Lauda improved an earlier offer and showed commitment to Niki’s base in Austria and openness to negotiatin­g a collective agreement”, Niki works council chief Stefan Tankovits told radio station ORF.

Lauda said earlier that he would look to work with an operating partner such as Thomas Cook for functions previously provided by Air Berlin, such as ticket sales, crew planning and marketing.

Thomas Cook was not immediatel­y available for comment.

The aviation industry has been in turmoil for more than a year, with British airline Monarch, Italy’s Alitalia and Air Berlin entering administra­tion, following intense price competitio­n in Europe.

Niki filed for insolvency in Berlin last month after Germany’s Lufthansa scrapped plans to buy the Austrian arm of insolvent Air Berlin.

After hurried talks to ensure Niki retained valuable runway slots, IAG agreed at the time with the German administra­tor that it would buy the business for €20 million and provide €16.5 million in liquidity to make it part of its low-cost business Vueling. It accepted its defeat yesterday. “IAG is disappoint­ed that Niki will not be able to develop and grow stronger as part of the group,” it said in a statement.

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 ?? REUTERS ?? This file photo shows former Formula One racing champion Niki Lauda addressing the media during a news conference for his airline Niki in Vienna.
REUTERS This file photo shows former Formula One racing champion Niki Lauda addressing the media during a news conference for his airline Niki in Vienna.

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