Selangor Journal
Air Asia planes prepare for take off at Don Mueang International Airport in Bangkok, Thailand, on June 29, 2016. — Picture by REUTERS

AirAsia X to stave off liquidation with US$15 billion (RM62 billion) debt restructure

KUALA LUMPUR, Oct 7 — Budget airline AirAsia X Bhd (AAX), the long-haul arm of AirAsia Group Bhd, said it has proposed restructuring US$15.3 billion (RM63.6 billion) of debt and reducing its share capital by 90 per cent to continue as a going concern.

AAX said it has severe liquidity constraints and, with no return to normalcy in sight, “imminent default of contractual commitments will precipitate a potential liquidation.”

Group-wide debt restructuring and renegotiation of financial obligations, as well as updating its business model, are pre-requisites to raising fresh equity and debt, which will be required to restart the airline, it said late on Tuesday.

In early Wednesday trade, AAX’s share price fell 10 per cent to 4.5 sen.

The group, hard hit by the Covid-19 pandemic as closed borders left most of its planes grounded for months, is seeking to reconstitute RM63.6 billion (US$15.3 billion) of debt into a principal amount of RM200 million and for the balance to be waived.

AAX also proposed reducing issued share capital by 90 per cent and consolidating every 10 existing ordinary shares into one share.

AAX’s announcement comes days after Malaysia Airlines said it had reached out to lessors, creditors and suppliers for urgent restructuring due to the pandemic.

The national carrier’s holding firm Malaysia Aviation Group told lessors it will likely be unable to make payments owed after November unless it receives more money from state fund Khazanah Nasional Bhd, Reuters reported Friday.

“(AAX’s) creditors could potentially come to an agreement on the terms but they would have to be content with recovering a minute fraction of their capital,” MIDF Research said in a client note on Wednesday.

The airline said unaudited records at June 30 showed it had a shareholder equity deficit of RM960 million. Liabilities of RM3.38 billion exceeded assets of RM1.39 billion.

It has appointed board member Lim Kian Onn, a chartered accountant and former banker, as deputy chairman to lead the restructuring.

AAX said its revised business plan involves overhauling its route network, fleet size, cost base and workforce to become a leaner and more sustainable business.

— Reuters

 

 

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