Business Standard

Goyal, Etihad must salvage Jet: Lenders

- ABHIJIT LELE & PTI

Lenders to cash-strapped Jet Airways on Thursday asked two key stakeholde­rs — Naresh Goyal and Etihad — to promptly pitch in with their contributi­on to salvage the situation. The decision to provide emergency funds to the ailing airline will be taken collective­ly and not on a standalone basis, said lenders.

“We have made our stand clear. We (lenders) are supporting the arrangemen­t (resolution). Let us see the response from other stakeholde­rs. We will accordingl­y take a call,” said Dinabandhu Mohapatra, managing director (MD) and chief executive officer (CEO), Bank of India (BOI), on the sidelines of a banking seminar organised by the IBA.

Sunil Mehta, MD & CEO of Punjab National Bank, said lenders were going (on decision to lend further to Jet Airways) collective­ly. The resolution will come with the participat­ion of the stakeholde­rs, he added.

On the emergency funding to the loss-making carrier, the BOI chief said lenders had made it clear that all stakeholde­rs should pitch in. Two senior executives of the other two public sector banks said time was running out. The situation is looking grim as more and more Boeing 737 MAX 8s are being grounded. The resolution plan has to be put to work this month itself.

Jet has a debt of over ~8,000 crore and needs to make repayments of up to ~1,700 crore by the end of March. The airline has, however, already defaulted on repayments on external commercial borrowings due to paucity of funds. The acute liquidity crunch has forced it to ground aircraft, shut down stations, and delay salary payments to its pilots and engineers along with other senior staff. It has been looking at various ways to raise funds. Last month, shareholde­rs of Jet Airways approved conversion of loans into shares and other proposals. On February 14, the Jet board approved a bank-led provisiona­l resolution plan, whereby lenders would become the largest shareholde­rs in the airline.

Following approval from shareholde­rs, a part of the debt would be converted into 114 million shares at a price of ~1 apiece, according to the Reserve Bank of India norms.

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