Jet Airways to seek investor Etihad’s approval to swap debt for shares
Economy

Jet Airways to seek investor Etihad’s approval to swap debt for shares

Jet Airways has been in talks with Etihad Airways for weeks to work out a revival plan but no common ground has been reached yet.

   
A Jet Airways India Ltd. aircraft prepares to land at Chhatrapati Shivaji International Airport in Mumbai

Jet Airways grounded most of its fleet this past week due to defaulting on payments to lessors | Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg

Jet Airways has been in talks with Etihad Airways for weeks to work out a revival plan but no common ground has been reached yet.

New Delhi: Jet Airways India Ltd. is seeking the approval of shareholders to convert loans into equity as the ailing carrier saddled with $1.1 billion of debt negotiates a rescue deal with its lenders and partner Etihad Airways PJSC.

India’s biggest full-service carrier has called an extraordinary general meeting on Feb. 21 in Mumbai, during which it will also seek consent for lenders to appoint company directors and boost its capital, according to a filing Monday. The airline, 24 percent owned by Etihad, didn’t say whether the three sides have reached an agreement over the terms of the rescue.

Jet Airways, Etihad and lenders have been in talks for weeks to work out a revival plan, although no commonly agreed proposal was presented to the government, a ministry official said Jan. 25 in New Delhi. The Mumbai-based carrier has struggled with low fares in an increasingly competitive market, losing money in all but two of the past 11 years.

Lenders led by State Bank of India, the country’s biggest lender by assets, have sought 35 billion rupees ($492 million) of investment from founder Naresh Goyal and Etihad before they can revamp its debt, people with knowledge of the matter said earlier this month. Jet Airways said Jan. 16 it was considering “various options on the debt-equity mix.”

Shares of the airline fell 3.3 percent to 244.80 rupees in Mumbai, their lowest level in more than two weeks. They have dropped 67 percent in the past 12 months. – Bloomberg


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