Bangkok Post

Capital A to combine AirAsia and AirAsia X

- JAMIE FREED

Malaysia’s Capital A would combine its AirAsia budget airline business with long-haul offshoot AirAsia X as part of a corporate restructur­ing designed to shed its status as a financiall­y-distressed firm, CEO Tony Fernandes said.

Capital A will retain the digital, logistics and aviation services businesses, while AirAsia X will be renamed AirAsia Aviation and be led by long-time executive Bo Lingam under the plan.

Capital A hopes to submit to Bursa Malaysia Securities for approval in February.

Capital A, which racked up losses during the pandemic, was in January classified as a ‘Practice Note 17’, or PN17, company by the Malaysian bourse, a tag given to financiall­y distressed firms.

PN17 companies may be de-listed if they fail to regularise their finances within a set time frame.

AirAsia X is also classified as PN17, but in an interview with Reuters yesterday, Fernandes said under the restructur­ing plan, both listed companies would emerge from that status by July 2023.

Capital A investors will receive an inspecie distributi­on in the former AirAsia X, giving them exposure to a pure airline business with multiple brands.

“From what looked like a very sick airline, we’ve saved it,” Fernandes said of AirAsia, which grounded most of its fleet during the pandemic. “We are refloating it and listing it as an independen­t listed vehicle.”

The AirAsia Aviation business would raise capital, possibly in tandem with a dual listing in the United States or elsewhere in Asia, he said, and pursue growth opportunit­ies like setting up new airlines in places such as Vietnam and Cambodia.

Capital A, in turn, could look to list its aviation services business, including maintenanc­e and catering, in Singapore where rivals like Singapore Technologi­es Engineerin­g and SATS could serve as comparable companies, Fernandes added.

“AirAsia expects to have 140 planes out of its fleet of 205 back in service by the end of the year, down from an August estimate of 160, as it faces maintenanc­e capacity bottleneck­s after more than two years of groundings,’’ he said.

Capital A will release its third-quarter financial results today.

Its shares have fallen 25% since the start of the year, underperfo­rming rivals with stronger balance sheets such as Singapore Airlines and Cathay Pacific Airways, which have posted gains of 9% and 21%, respective­ly.

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