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Wednesday 13 March 2013

International Lease Finance Corp (AIG.N) urged India to release six passenger Jets from Kingfisher AirlinesLtd




The head of Aircraft finance giant International Lease Finance Corp (AIG.N) urged India on Wednesday to release six passenger jets held "hostage" by a bureaucratic dispute after struggling Kingfisher Airlines(KING.NS) failed to pay for them.

ILFC had warned in January that a failure to return leased airplanes to their true owners when airlines cannot pay their bills could put the country's aviation growth at risk by scaring off funding.

According to Los Angeles-based ILFC, the Delhi High Court ruled last month that ILFC could have access to its aircraft to ensure they can be refurbished and maintained.











But ILFC Chief Executive Henri Courpron told Reuters that the situation on the ground remained unresolved.

"We have made legal and political progress but people are not following instructions from the government," Courpron said in a telephone interview. "We have to stop this hostage situation."

He did not say which Indian authorities or people he held responsible for failing to apply the court's decision.

Ultimately, ILFC wants to fly the Airbus(EAD.PA) aircraft out of India to allow them to be used by other operators. But that would require the consent of Indian authorities.


For now, the planes are sitting idle in Delhi, Mumbai and Chennai.

Kingfisher's financial difficulties have left the airline's fleet grounded since October.

Germany's DVB Bank(DVBG.F) said in December it had sued India's aviation regulator and Kingfisher to have two planes it financed for the troubled carrier de-registered, a possible first step toward recouping its funds.

The two disputes are seen as an important test of an international agreement known as the Cape Town convention, designed to make it more attractive for leasing companies to invest by duplicating repossession rights available in the United States when airlines default on lease payments.

Courpron said he expected the sale of a majority of ILFC to a Chinese consortium by its owner, U.S. insurer AIG, to go ahead as planned in the second quarter, dismissing doubts expressed by some delegates at a Florida aviation conference that it would.

About 38 percent of the audience at an industry panel predicted in a straw poll that the Chinese sale would not go ahead, but Courpron said ILFC was solely focused on it. (Reporting by Tim Hepher and Karen Jacobs; Editing by Alwyn Scott and Dan Grebler)









Saturday 9 March 2013

Aim High. Plan a TakeOff.



Get going. 

Move forward. 

Aim High. 

Plan a TakeOff. 

Don't just sit on the runway and hope someone will come along and push the Airplane. 

It simply won't happen. 

Change your attitude and gain some altitude.

 Believe me, you'll love it up here.




















It's another Beautiful Day!



It's another Day. It's another Beautiful Day! Life is a matter of perspective. 



No matter what the weather, no matter what the situation we are in, 

if we have the right perspective in life, life will always Be Beautiful~❤~ 




Wednesday 6 March 2013

Dr Vijay Mallya may use his wealth to save Kingfisher Airlines Ltd.




He owns one of the world's most expensive yachts, a Formula One team and one of India's biggest premier league cricket teams. The net worth of liquor baron Vijay Mallya and his family has almost doubled to more than Rs 8,000 crore since UK drinks giant Diageo Plc picked up a controlling stake in United Spirits Ltd last November.

But the man dubbed the "King of Good Times" is still having a hard time bailing out his grounded Kingfisher Airlines. 

Business Today's research shows the net worth of Mallya and his family has leapt by Rs 3,500 crore in the past year to Rs 8,296 crore, while the Kingfisher Airlines stock has plunged to about Rs 11 from Rs 30 last year, wiping out almost two-thirds of investor wealth. 

The stock of the UB Group's flagship company, United Spirits Ltd, has jumped to about Rs 1,800 from Rs 685 in February last year, pushing up the value of shares held by Mallya, his family and his investment arms by Rs 2,200 crore. The share price of another UB company, United Breweries, has also risen above Rs 680 from about Rs 410 in February last year.

This increased the value of shares held by Mallya, his family and his investment firms by Rs 1,400 crore.

Dr Mallya has been talking to investors for months to sell a stake in the debt-ridden Kingfisher and raise funds to revive the Airline which has not flown since October. But so far, he has made little headway, and the airline is nowhere close to taking off again any time soon.

Kingfisher is saddled with a debt of more than Rs 13,000 crore and lenders are now moving to recover their loans. The core group of a consortium of 17 banks led by State Bank of India (SBI) has decided to recall loans worth over Rs 7,000 crore because the airline's promoters have so far not infused fresh funds.

The loan recall is a demand for immediate repayment or else the lenders can take control of any Kingfisher assets they hold as collateral.

We will quickly proceed on the recovery process," says SBI Deputy Managing Director Shyamal Acharya.

Kingfisher has pledged several assets as collateral against the loans. They include the Kingfisher brand, prime properties in Mumbai and Goa, and shares of UB Group companies United Spirits and Mangalore Chemicals & Fertilizers. National Stock Exchange filings show 90 per cent of the promoter's 36 per cent holding were pledged as of December-end.

But experts say bankers and creditors such as airports and oil companies may have a tough time recovering even part of their dues. The banks have written off the airline brand which audit and consultancy firm Grant Thornton valued at Rs 3,000 crore in 2010 because they think it has little value under the circumstances.

Grant Thorton's valuation was based on the assumption that the airline would turn around with an infusion of funds. "Banks recall loans if a business ceases to be a going concern and stops operations altogether," says former Federal Bank Chairman M. Venugopalan.





The lenders have threatened to sell the shares of United Spirits and Mangalore Chemicals & Fertilizers put up as collateral. But one banker says selling the shares in the open market is not a practical solution as it would drive down the stock price.

Acharya says the consortium owns shares worth about Rs 500 crore in the two companies. UB Group officials are talking to banks about transferring the shares to Diageo through off-market transactions.

"The banks explicitly support the transaction with Diageo and will work with us in finding an orderly method of disposal of some of the pledged shares to Diageo if appropriate," says a UB spokesperson. Last month, the management paid a month's salary to some employees, but that may not be enough. The Airports Authority of India has taken steps to recover its dues from the troubled carrier. It has seized control of some planes parked at its airports and refused to allow lessors to retrieve them until the carrier pays airport dues of Rs 390 crore. "The banks and the government have done all they could, but there are no positive signs visible from the Kingfisher management to restart the airline," says Minister of State for Civil Aviation K.C. Venugopal.

Last month, the main stakeholder in Kingfisher, United Breweries (Holdings) Ltd, sought shareholder approval to more than double its loan limit to the airline to Rs 750 crore and slash investments to Rs 750 crore from Rs 1,200 crore. While markets gave the thumbs-up to the proposal, analysts say the move suggests the promoters prefer supporting the airline with debt rather than equity because they have little faith in its profitability. "If and when the airline goes under, UB (Holdings) too will cave in under the weight of the airline debt," says Kishore Ostwal, head of CNI Research in Mumbai.

Some media reports said Dr Mallya may refer the ailing Airline to the Board for Industrial and Financial Reconstruction (BIFR), the government agency charged with turning around sick companies. Kingfisher is saddled with accumulated losses of about Rs 10,000 crore. But BIFR officials say the board does not consider non-industrial companies for rehabilitation. Either way, Kingfisher's turbulent patch is far from over.

Kingfisher Airlines's Chairman Dr Vijay Mallya To meet FM
Mr P Chidambaram soon

Dr Vijay Mallya is coming to meet the Finance Minister

Dr Vijay Mallya is coming to meet the Finance Minister tomorrow," sources told PTI.

Mallya had met Law Minister Ashwani Kumar last month to discuss ways to deal with the problems facing his airline.

The scheduled meeting with Chidambaram comes against the backdrop of Kingfisher's lenders last month deciding to start the process to recover dues of over Rs 7,500 crore.

The beleaguered airline has dues towards payment of service tax, income tax, as also Provident Fund of employees and dues of the oil companies.

Besides, it has to pay huge amounts to the lessors of its aircraft and service providers like the Airports Authority of India.








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