The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Fernandes casts other work aside

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SINGAPORE: AirAsia Bhd chief executive Tan Sri Tony Fernandes has told staff and analysts he will spend more time working on the budget airline and put his other business and sporting interests to one side, after a report questionin­g the company’s accounts sent its share price tumbling.

The chief executive has said his other work will take a back seat as he focuses on repairing the financial damage done to Asia’s largest low cost airline, according to analysts and two AirAsia executives who spoke to Reuters on condition on anonymity.

Analysts covering the airline say Fernandes told them that he, and his long-term business partner Kamarudin Meranun, would become more hands on.

“Tony told us in a conference call last week that he and Kamarudin will take a back seat to everything else and focus on AirAsia,” said Mohsin Aziz, a Maybank Investment Bank analyst in Kuala Lumpur.

“He’s back, and he’s getting more involved in many of the decisions,” added one executive.

AirAsia, Fernandes and Kamarudin did not respond to a request for comments.

Fernandes, one of Asia’s best known corporate leaders, has built a sprawling business empire over the past decade that includes English football club Queens Park Rangers, a hotel chain and an insurance business.

That has led to concerns among some AirAsia staff that he was spending too much time away from the airline just as it was expanding in Japan and India and facing an increasing­ly competitiv­e landscape in Southeast Asia.

AirAsia is the worst-performing airline globally out of mid and large-cap stocks so far this year, its share price falling losing more than 40 percent to give the carrier a market value of RM4.5 billion.

Some executives said he delegated most of the running of the company to the heads of the group’s individual airlines and that he was in the office less-and-less.

Worries about his absences were exacerbate­d after a June 10 report by little known GMT Research said AirAsia uses related-party transactio­ns with loss-making associate carriers to boost its earnings. AirAsia shares are down 24 pct since the report was published.

The report has caused investors to question whether AirAsia is too reliant on its associates - semi-independen­t airlines in countries around Asia that share its branding and pay it fees to lease planes - given they owe increasing­ly large increasing amounts of money to the parent company.

Fernandes refuted GMT’s report at the Paris Airshow last week, saying AirAsia has a solid balance sheet and business plan. He is now working increasing­ly hard behind the scenes to put the finishing touches on a turnaround plan for the group’s beleaguere­d Indonesian and Philippine associates, according to staff members.

“He’s telling people that AirAsia is a small company without deep pockets or a savior, and that everyone needs to pull together and work harder to prove that the report is wrong,” said the executive.

Last week the company said it expects its Indonesia unit to break even and its Philippine business to have returned to profitabil­ity by the end of this year.

Since 2007, Fernandes and Kamarudin have launched a chain of budget hotels, a mobile phone group, a school and ventured into financial services through their holding company Tune Group.

Last year Fernandes sold Caterham Formula One team, after owning it for five years. He remains chairman of loss-making Queens Park Rangers, which has problems of its own after it was demoted from England’s top league and is being scrutinize­d by The Football League over whether its accounts breached the sport’s “Financial Fair Play” rules.

However his biggest challenge is the tough business terrain facing AirAsia, that was worsened by the crash of an Airbus Group (AIR.PA) A320 jet oper- ated by the Indonesian affiliate that killed 162 people late in December.

The crash led to a drop in the number of passengers for the group’s Indonesia unit and it scaled back marketing activities out of respect for the victims.

Stronger competitio­n from the likes of Qantas Airways Ltd (QAN. AX) unit Jetstar, Indonesia’s unlisted Lion Air, and Singapore Airlines (SIAL.SI) subsidiari­es Tigerair (TAHL.SI) and Scoot contribute­d to losses in fourthquar­ter 2014, the first since 2008, though the carrier returned to profit this year.

Still, analysts say Fernandes is the best person to turn the airline around and that its strong route network and brand recognitio­n mean its long-term prospects remain healthy.

“It may look ugly now and there are some challenges to overcome but AirAsia will get through the current turbulence,” said Brendan Sobie, a Singaporeb­ased analyst with aviation consultanc­y CAPA.

“Its position in the Southeast Asia market remains strong and the envy of competitor­s.” – Reuters

 ??  ?? Tan Sri Tony Fernandes
Tan Sri Tony Fernandes

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