The National - News

What’s the attraction in buying China’s Hainan Airlines?

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Is there any valuation at which Temasek could buy into Hainan Airlines at a decent price?

Considerin­g the indebtedne­ss of China’s most highly rated airline, it’s hard to think of one.

Hainan Air’s shares have been suspended for six months while controllin­g shareholde­r HNA Group is in intensive care. But the $1.1 billion (Dh4.04bn) valuation for a 20 per cent stake to a group including a Temasek-owned fund gives you a decent idea of what it might be worth.

On first sight, the discount of about 35 per cent to the price at which Hainan Air’s shares last traded looks like a good deal. Still, once you throw in net debt of $7.8bn you’re looking at an enterprise value about 50 per cent larger than that of Temasek’s key airline shareholdi­ng Singapore Airlines, despite Ebitda about 15 per cent lower.

Even if all Hainan Air’s equity was sold for a single yuan, that hefty debt pile would mean it was changing hands at a higher enterprise value-to-Ebitda ratio than Singapore Air, one of the best-run airlines on the planet. That feels like a rich price to pay.

To be sure, there are potential strategic advantages for Temasek in building links between the two airlines.

Hainan Air’s passenger-traffic growth has been moving at a double-digit pace for five years and topped an incredible 46 per cent in 2017. It now carries more people than Singapore Air, at a better net income margin.

And while Hainan Air’s premium rating is a neat match with the city-state’s flag airline, its non-fuel operating costs are also comparably world class.

At 4.29 US cents per available seat kilometre, they’re not all that much less than Singapore Air’s 5.01 cents, and higher than Qantas Airways at 3.76 cents.

Hainan Air’s net debt, meanwhile, is larger than that of the far bigger Delta Air Lines and Deutsche Lufthansa, and almost 26 times Singapore Air’s modest borrowings.

One crucial advantage of a deal could be a seat at the table of China’s domestic aviation market, something that Temasek and Singapore Air were blocked from in 2008 when shareholde­rs in China Eastern Airlines rejected their bid for a 24 per cent stake.

Again, though, it’s questionab­le whether a less-than-20per cent interest in a fourthplac­ed airline controlled by an indebted conglomera­te is a good route to that – especially when you consider that Hainan Air’s regulatory release doesn’t even mention a board seat, which should be considered the bare minimum for a strategic investment of this sort. Next to arch-rival Cathay Pacific Airways’ cross-shareholdi­ng in flag airline Air China, Temasek’s cash barely gets it a foot in the door.

The worrying prospect is that the transactio­n will be a repeat of the investment­s that Singapore Air and HNA have made in Virgin Australia.

The discount of 35 per cent to the price at which Hainan Air’s shares last traded looks like a good deal – at first sight

Like Hainan Air, Virgin is a decent airline for passengers and a miserable one for investors, with an immense debt load and shares that barely change hands.

Attempts to use the stake to crack open a valued domestic market for Singapore Air after it bought into the stock in October 2012 ended in failure.

Qantas is as dominant in Australia now as it ever was, while Virgin shares have fallen by more than half. The remaining investors are locked in a Mexican standoff, with no player in a good position to either bulk up or sell out.

As we’ve argued previously, while there are benefits to a love-in between Temasek and HNA, the Singaporea­ns should extract some bargain prices in return for their cash. Judging by this first deal, there’s precious little evidence of that.

 ?? ImagineChi­na ?? Hainan Airlines jets at Haikou Meilan Internatio­nal Airport. The airline’s shares have been suspended for six months
ImagineChi­na Hainan Airlines jets at Haikou Meilan Internatio­nal Airport. The airline’s shares have been suspended for six months

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