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WITH NATIONAL CARRIER IN THE BAG, TATAS EYE INDIAN AVIATION’S BIGGEST MERGER

Acquisitio­n of the airline has brought a large portfolio of aviation entities to the conglomera­te

- BY JOHN BENNY Staff Reporter

reports have emerged stating that the company has been working on a plan to combine its joint venture with Singapore Airlines — Vistara — along with Air India, and AirAsia India.

Knowing the Tata Group and their expertise, I’m sure they’d be able to pull it off but there are a lot of ifs and buts to this.”

Tata Sons’ successful $2.4 billion bid for debt-laden Air India is the first step in the conglomera­te’s plans to become a major aviation player in the region.

Tata Sons will be the new owner of the national carrier, the Indian government announced on Friday, finally bringing to end privatisat­ion efforts that began in 2018.

Air India, with a fleet of 117 aircraft, has around 1,500 pilots and 2,000 engineers. “Under Tata Sons, the carrier will be a formidable player — the takeover will be good for industry as the government will not have to keep pumping money into an airline burdened with debt,” said Ashwini Phadnis, a Delhibased aviation journalist.

Under the terms of the agreement, Tata is expected to absorb Rs153 billion (Dh7.48 billion) of the airline’s more than Rs615 billion ($8.2 billion or Dh30.2 billion) debt burden. The excess amount in the bid, leftover after acquiring this debt, will be the amount payable by the company in cash, which is around Rs27 billion (Dh1.32 billion). This debt amounts to 24.8 per cent of Air India’s total debt.

Tata’s ambitions do not just end here — reports have emerged stating that the company has been working on a plan to combine its joint venture with Singapore Airlines — Vistara — along with Air India, and AirAsia India. “It makes little sense for them to have two full-service airlines compete with each other in their portfolio,” said Vinamra Longani, head of operations for Sarin & Co, an Indian law firm specialisi­ng in aircraft leasing and finance. “Singapore Airlines and Tata together have wanted to jointly own Air India before and if they are able to convince SA to come on board in what shape and form it remains to be seen,” said Longani.

For now, the government is selling Tata 100 per cent of its stake in the state-owned national airline, including Air India’s 100 per cent shareholdi­ng in AI Express Ltd and 50 per cent in Air India SATS Airport Services Private Ltd. “Should they decide to combine all these airlines into one entity, it is going to go down in history books as one of the most successful mergers in the aviation industry,” said Longani. “Knowing the Tata Group and their expertise, I’m sure they’d be able to pull it off but there are a lot of ifs and buts to this.”

Vinamra Longani | Head of operations for Sarin & Co,

Better service

The change in management definitely bodes well for the millions of passengers that rely on the airline to make internatio­nal trips. “This means better in-flight offering — the cabins need refurbishi­ng and the service needs to be brought to today’s standards,” said Longani. “All of that is going to change, and that’s definitely a plus for passengers and for the sector.”

Long hard road

An initial sale attempt by the government in 2018 failed to attract any bidders. The successful sale of the loss-making national flag carrier is seen as a major government victory considerin­g the burden on taxpayers.

The airline, which carried about 18 million domestic passengers in 2019, has suffered from overly bureaucrat­ic management and political interferen­ce as privately-owned low-cost carriers gained market share.

In fact, Ajay Singh, the head of one of India’s largest lowcost airlines was among the bidders for Air India. He had reportedly offered Rs151 billion (Dh7.38 billion) in his private capacity to acquire the national carrier. “I am confident that the Tata Group will restore the glory of Air India and make all of India proud,” said Singh in a statement.

“I would also like to congratula­te the government on the successful disinvestm­ent of Air India — they ran a transparen­t and flexible process and gave new impetus to India’s disinvestm­ent programme.”

Merger not needed

“Whether you like it or not, culturally there are five airlines in the mix — Air India, Air India Express, Indian Airlines, Vistara and Air Asia India,” said Manoj Chacko, executive vice-president at WNS Global Services, in a LinkedIn post. “Except for attempting synergies at the back end, the companies should be given clear area to focus on and then permitted to flourish as independen­t brands,” said Chacko.

According to Chacko, this is how Tata’s portfolio could look like post the acquisitio­n:

1 Air India: It will become a long-haul internatio­nal carrier, competing with the likes of Emirates and British Airways. Vistara’s Boeing 787s will be folded into this fleet.

2 Air India Express: Air India’s low-cost unit will inherit Air Asia India’s routes and will compete in the domestic as well as internatio­nal short-haul market with airlines such as SpiceJet, Indigo, Air Arabia, and flydubai.

3 Vistara: It will be the main domestic airline and capture the fullservic­e market with an all A320 fleet. Vistara, which will fly Air India’s domestic routes, will focus on consolidat­ing the market once dominated by Jet Airways and Kingfisher Airlines.

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 ?? Bloomberg ?? ■
A Vistara jet in New Delhi. Vistara is a joint venture of the Tata Group and Singapore Airlines.
Bloomberg ■ A Vistara jet in New Delhi. Vistara is a joint venture of the Tata Group and Singapore Airlines.
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The Air India building in Mumbai. The change in management definitely bodes well for millions of passengers.
AFP ■ The Air India building in Mumbai. The change in management definitely bodes well for millions of passengers.

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