Business Standard

Air India stake sale: 14 firms in race to assist govt

- ARINDAM MAJUMDER

As many as 14 companies have expressed an interest to collaborat­e with the government in the role of transactio­n and legal advisors for the divestment of national carrier Air India.

The Department of Investment and Public Asset Management (DIPAM) had earlier invited expression­s of interest for appointing transactio­n advisors and law firms in assisting the strategic sale of the carrier. The mammoth deal includes an operating fleet of 142 aircraft comprising 65 A-320 aircraft, 15 B777 aircraft, 24 787 aircraft, 23 737-800 aircraft, 11 ATRs, and four B747 aircraft.

Among the investment brokerages that bid for the role of transactio­n advisor are KPMG, EY, Rothschild & Co, BNP Paribas, ICICI Securities, and Edelweiss Financial Services. Top law firms interested in giving legal advice to the government included Hammurabi & Solomon Partners, Cyril Amarchand Mangaldas, Shardul Amarchand Mangaldas, Crawford Bayley & Co, Luthra & Luthra, ALMT Legal, and Trilegal. These firms will make a presentati­on before the DIPAM on Friday. October 23 was the last date for submitting the bids.

“Advisory fee for the process is going to be high, but this is one deal that would give you global recognitio­n. I believe the bids to be low as no one will bid aggressive­ly,” a government official said on Thursday.

Apart from the main company, five of Air India’s subsidiari­es and a joint venture firm have been included in the strategic sale plan. These are its low-cost airline Air India Express Limited; ground-handling arm Air India Air Transport Service Limited; maintenanc­e, repair and overhaul subsidiary Air India Engineerin­g Services; regional connectivi­ty operator Airline Allied Service; and Hotel Corporatio­n of India. Air India has an equal joint venture with Singapore Air Transport Services for ground-handling activities at Delhi, Mumbai, Bengaluru, Thiruvanan­thapuram, and Mangaluru.

A government-appointed Group of Ministers is looking into the treatment of Air India’s unsustaina­ble debt, hiving off of certain assets to a shell company, demerger and strategic disinvestm­ent of three profit-making subsidiari­es, among other aspects.

For the process, DIPAM has strict norms of eligibilit­y, the condition that the bidder should have handled a transactio­n of at least ~4,000 crore during April 1, 2012, and June 30, 2017. The disinvestm­ent process’ next stage would begin after the transactio­n advisor reads the market and assists the government to form the bid. The bid would lay down the norms of the sale and eligibilit­y condition of the bidder.

Until now, InterGlobe Aviation-run IndiGo has shown interest to buy the internatio­nal business of Air India and its subsidiary Air India Express.

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