Monday, 13 August 2012

Kingfisher Posts Another Quarterly Loss

Kingfisher Airlines, which used to be India's second biggest carrier but is now struggling with crushing debt, has posted another quarterly loss and shed no light on any potential funding lifeline.
Kingfisher, controlled by drinks baron Vijay Mallya, is the biggest victim of turbulence in the Indian aviation industry, which has struggled under high state taxes on jet fuel, high airport charges, below-cost fares and an uncertain regulatory environment.
Kingfisher, which has never made a profit since its founding in 2005, lost INR6.51 billion rupees (USD$117.7 million) in April-June, compared with a loss of INR2.64 billion a year earlier.
The fortunes of Kingfisher, saddled with USD$1.4 billion in debt, hang on its ability to raise funds soon. It needs at least USD$500 million immediately to keep operating, according to the Centre for Asia Pacific Aviation consultancy.
It has long hoped that a government proposal to let foreign carriers take a maximum 49 percent stake in domestic airlines will be made law, providing it with a potential lifeline. That proposal is stalled by complicated coalition government politics and there is no clarity on when or even if it will be implemented.
No foreign airline has publicly shown any interest in picking up a stake in Kingfisher.
TOUGH SKIES
State taxes of up to 30 percent make jet fuel about 50 percent costlier in India than the global average. Fuel constitutes about half of an airline's total costs.
In India, airport charges are also high, and New Delhi airport has been termed the world's costliest by the International Air Transport Association.
To add to those woes, Mallya has failed to pay Kingfisher's pilots or crew for months and has regularly faced employee ire over salaries, leading to cancellations of flights.
According to media, Mallya on Thursday told his employees they were free to quit if they believed the actions they were taking to protest against the non-payment of salary were correct.
Mallya, who is a member of parliament, has said that several local and foreign investors were interested in investing in Kingfisher but no money has appeared.
Indian carriers lost about USD$2 billion in the financial year that ended in March and are reeling under a combined debt load of USD$20 billion. Privately held IndiGo was the only airline that made money last year.
However, Kingfisher's woes have proven to be a boon to relatively healthier players such as Jet Airways and No. 2 budget carrier SpiceJet, which posted surprise quarterly profits last week, indicating the worst may be over for them.
(Reuters)

Kingfisher Airlines Airbus A320

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