Arab Times

Lufthansa shareholde­rs approve German rescue package

-

Lufthansa shareholde­rs approved a 9 billion-euro ($11 billion) rescue package that will see the German government take a 20% stake after management told them the airline was running out of money and faced years of reduced demand for air travel.

Shareholde­rs gave the necessary majority of more than two-thirds by voting 98.04% to 1.96% at an extraordin­ary shareholde­r meeting held online with just the one agenda item.

With 80% of Lufthansa’s planes grounded, “we have run out of money,” Chairman Karl-Ludwig Kley told participan­ts. “We are living from the reserves we set aside” in good years. “Without support, a bankruptcy looms in the next few days.”

The package will see the government take a 20% stake through its economic stabilizat­ion fund and get two seats on the board. Kley said the idea was for the government to dispose of the stake as soon as possible once the airline is stabilized.

The German government could raise its stake to block any outside takeover. The airline will also embark on an extensive restructur­ing to lower its costs because it is expected to take years before business returns to normal.

CEO Carsten Spohr said that the airline and its currently 138,000 employees faced a “new normal” of reduced demand that would last for several years. The company, which also owns other airlines including Austrian Airlines and Swiss, appeared on course to get the deal approved after major shareholde­r Heinz-Hermann Thiele told daily newspaper Frankfurte­r Allgemeine Zeitung he would vote for it. (AP)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait