Eastern Eye (UK)

Singapore Airlines to take 25 per cent stake in Air India

TATA JOINT VENTURE VISTARA TO BE MERGED WITH NATIONAL CARRIER

-

SINGAPORE AIRLINES announced on Tuesday (29) it will take a 25 per cent stake in Air India, streamlini­ng its aviation partnershi­p with Tata Group as the industrial behemoth works to revive the beleaguere­d national carrier’s fortunes.

Air India was in January returned to the ownership of its founders at Tata, a family-owned conglomera­te with interests ranging from tea to steel, after decades as a monumental drain on the public purse.

Tata and Singapore Airlines already jointly own Vistara, a full-service carrier that has nearly 10 per cent of India’s domestic market, with a respective 51-49 per cent share.

Both companies said they had agreed on a deal to fold Vistara into Air India by March 2024, with Singapore Airlines taking a 25.1 per cent stake in the merged carrier in exchange for an equity injection of `20.6 billion (£209 million/ $250m).

“The merger of Vistara and Air India is an important milestone in our journey to make Air India a truly world-class airline,” N Chandrasek­aran, chairman of holding company Tata Sons, said in a statement.

“We are excited with the opportunit­y of creating a strong Air India which would offer both full-service and low-cost services across domestic and internatio­nal routes,” he added.

The merged Air India will have a fleet of 218 aircraft, making it the country’s second-largest domestic airline after IndiGo.

Air India is already India’s largest internatio­nal carrier, but its domestic market share stood at only 8.6 per cent in September, the most recent month for which data is available.

Tata bought back the flag carrier for $2.4 bn (£2bn) in January after 69 years under state ownership, with the government writing off three-quarters of its `615bn debt.

Since then, Tata has imposed sweeping changes including the appointmen­t of Campbell Wilson - the former head of Singapore Airlines’ low-cost subsidiary Scoot – as Air India’s first foreign chief executive.

Air India aims to take 30 per cent of India’s domestic market share in the next five years, while rapidly expanding its fleet to cover more internatio­nal routes.

“With this merger, we have an opportunit­y to deepen our relationsh­ip with Tata and participat­e directly in an exciting new growth phase in India’s aviation market,” Singapore Airlines chief executive Goh Choon Phong said in a statement.

India is the world’s third-largest aviation market and is projected by Airbus to grow at 6.2 per cent annually over the next two decades.

 ?? ?? REVIVAL PATH: Air India’s domestic market share stood at 8.6 per cent in September
REVIVAL PATH: Air India’s domestic market share stood at 8.6 per cent in September

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom