The Citizen (KZN)

Gordhan’s bid for SAA questioned

RESCUE PLAN: CIVIL SERVANT PENSIONS TARGETED

- Moneyweb Rescue plan adopted in July

State’s resolve to save airline is clear, but where the money will come from is a little less so.

Government will in the coming week sort out where to find the more than R10 billion needed for the restructur­ing of South African Airways (SAA) and start of the “new” SAA, according to Public Enterprise­s Minister Pravin Gordhan.

Gordhan told Bloomberg that government’s commitment is clear, and that meetings in the coming week will resolve “the money issue”.

This comes after his department said on Friday that money will be reprioriti­sed in Finance Minister Tito Mboweni’s adjustment budget next month and the hole will in the meantime be plugged with loans.

Whether Mboweni has agreed to any provisions in the adjustment budget is however unclear.

National Treasury did not respond to questions in this regard and several commentato­rs are convinced the public commitment was made without approval from Treasury.

Mboweni has in the past expressed his view that SAA should be closed.

A lack of support from Mboweni could result in a repeat of the events in February, when the SAA business rescue practition­ers (BRPs) had to go back to the drawing board after Mboweni failed to allocate the expected funds in his main budget.

As a result, they were considerin­g the winding down of SAA, but Gordhan started a parallel process with unions that was later incorporat­ed in the business rescue plan and provides for generous retrenchme­nt packages and the retention of only 1 000 of the current 4 600 staff members.

The plan was adopted by creditors in July and required more than R10 billion in funding for, among other things, the severance packages, payment of creditors and the start-up capital for the “new” SAA.

Government committed to “mobilise” the funding, but this has not yet materialis­ed, despite the best efforts of the BRPs.

At a creditors’ meeting on Friday, BRPs Siviwe Dongwana and Les Matuson said the airline has no money left and they are considerin­g winding it down or applying for liquidatio­n.

Dongwana told creditors they had received a letter from the department of public enterprise­s right before the meeting repeating its commitment to provide the necessary funding. He said the BRPs would, in the coming week, engage with government on the timing of the promised funds.

Moneyweb has however learnt that it was co-signed by Gordhan and Mboweni, but does not go as far as making commitment­s regarding the Medium-Term Budget Policy Statement next month.

According to BRP spokespers­on Louise Brugman, SAA now needs money in the bank, and Dongwana and Matuson are currently considerin­g the pros and cons of a wind-down or liquidatio­n so they will be in a position to advise creditors this week should the funds not materialis­e.

However, the department in its statement on Friday stated emphatical­ly that SAA will not be liquidated.

According to Bloomberg it is trying to get short-term loans from the Developmen­t Bank of Southern African and the Public Investment Corporatio­n (PIC), which manages the investment­s of the Government Employees Pension Fund.

The PIC has been under considerab­le scrutiny in the recent past for making dubious investment decisions and already has large exposure to struggling state-owned enterprise­s, further investment­s in which could result in a serious backlash.

The department has so far had no success in securing further loans for SAA’s rescue plan, and any bridging finance it succeeds in obtaining now could be extremely expensive.

 ?? Picture: Reuters ?? COMMITTED. Public Enterprise­s Minister Pravin Gordhan’s department seems to have given themselves until late next month to find funding and is hoping banks will provide the money that SAA needs.
Picture: Reuters COMMITTED. Public Enterprise­s Minister Pravin Gordhan’s department seems to have given themselves until late next month to find funding and is hoping banks will provide the money that SAA needs.

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