This Article is From Apr 10, 2018

Who Wants Air India? After IndiGo, Jet Airways Says "Not Me"

Air India ran losses for nearly a decade after a botched merger in 2007 and has debts of around $7.67 billion according to government figures.

Who Wants Air India? After IndiGo, Jet Airways Says 'Not Me'

Not participating in the process: Jet Airways' in statement about withdrawing from Air India bid

Highlights

  • Jet Airways ruled out a bid for debt-laden carrier Air India
  • Rival IndiGo also pulled out of race to acquire Air India's operations
  • Air India has slowly lost market share to low-cost private players
Mumbai: Jet Airways on Tuesday became the latest major airline to rule out a bid for debt-laden national carrier Air India in a new blow to the government's privatisation plans.

The announcement came just days after rival IndiGo pulled out of the race to acquire Air India's operations meaning the government now has no clear front-runner in the sale campaign.

"We welcome the government move to privatise Air India. It is a bold step,"  Jet Airways' deputy chief executive, Amit Agarwal said in a statement emailed to AFP.

"However, considering the terms of offer in the information memorandum and based on our review, we are not participating in the process," he added.

Once India's monopoly airline, Air India has slowly lost market share to new low-cost private players in one of the world's fastest-growing airline markets.

Air India ran losses for nearly a decade after a botched merger in 2007 and has debts of around $7.67 billion according to government figures.

It has received $5.8 billion in bailout funds from the government but needs even more working capital to turn it around, experts say.

The government recently said it wanted to sell a 76 percent chunk of the struggling carrier.

It released bid documents on what would be one of the country's highest-profile asset sales in decades showing it wants the prospective buyer to take on all of Air India's operations.

IndiGo, the country's largest airline, withdrew on Friday, saying it was interested only in Air India's international routes and not its domestic operations.

India is the world's fastest-growing passenger airline industry, expanding at an annual rate of around 20 percent. 

About 100 million Indians took to the skies in 2016 and airlines have embarked on huge purchases of new jets in expectation of new growth.
 
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