MUMBAI/NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India’s Jet Airways Ltd will be forced to shut down as soon as Wednesday if it does not get emergency funding from its lenders, two sources familiar with the situation said.
Bankers and an Indian government official said lenders are scrambling to secure funds to keep the once-dominant Indian airline, whose shares earlier slumped to their lowest levels since August 2015, flying.
Another source said that Jet’s board authorized its chief executive Vinay Dube to go back to its main lender State Bank of India (SBI) one last time to ask for emergency funds.
“If we don’t get funds today, the airline will have to shut down immediately,” a senior company source told Reuters.
Jet, which did not respond to requests for comment, saw its shares fall by as much as 18.5 percent on Tuesday after Indian media reports that its management had advised the airline’s board to temporarily suspend operations.
Indian business channel BTVI said that Jet’s board had authorized Dube to seek a minimum of 4 billion rupees ($58 million) in interim funding, and to ground the struggling airline if no funds materialized.
ET Now reported that the Export–Import Bank of the United States (EXIM) had recalled all loans to Jet and was seeking to repossess all the planes it funded.
EXIM did not respond to a request for comment.
Jet, which has around $1.2 billion in bank debt, has been teetering for weeks after failing to receive a stop-gap loan of about $217 million as part of a rescue deal in late March.
Jet, which also owes lessors, suppliers, pilots and oil companies, has been hemorrhaging planes in recent weeks as its lessors have scrambled to de-register and take back planes even as Jet’s lenders have sought expressions of interest from investors interested in turning it around.
BANKS SCRAMBLING
Jet’s creditors, led by SBI, want a new investor to acquire a stake of up to 75 percent and initial expressions of interest were submitted last week.
“Lenders are committed to a revival plan for Jet Airways,” Punjab National Bank’s Managing Director Sunil Mehta said. “SBI is working on the emergency funding, everything is under discussion, nothing is finalised.”
Mehta’s comments come after Jet informed all employees in a letter on Monday it was extending a suspension of international flights until Thursday due to a lack of funds.
Separately, an Indian government official said that funding was likely to come through and that the banks were not looking to take Jet to bankruptcy court.
Jet has some seven operational planes, one of its senior pilots told Reuters on Monday. A year ago it had more than 120 operating, but it has been hit by competition from low-cost carriers such as IndiGo and SpiceJet, along with high oil prices, fuel taxes and a weak rupee.
India’s civil aviation regulator disclosed on Tuesday that lessors have sought to de-register another seven Jet aircraft.
Once de-registered, lessors are free to take a plane out of the country and lease it to other airlines. More than two dozen Jet-operated planes have been de-registered this month, and Jet has been forced to ground dozens more over unpaid dues.
As of 1415 GMT on Tuesday, Jet listed on its website roughly three dozen flights that it plans to operate on Wednesday.
Jet shares closed 8.1 percent lower at 240.50 rupees.
Reporting by Tanvi Mehta in Mumbai and Aditi Shah in Shanghai; Additional reporting by Chandini Monnappa in Bengaluru and Tim Hepher in Paris and Jamie Freed in Singapore; Writing by Euan Rocha; Editing by Rashmi Aich, Muralikumar Anantharaman and Alexander Smith
Our Standards:The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.