CAPE TOWN (Reuters) - South Africa's Treasury is considering a 13 billion
rand ($972 million) bailout to keep South African Airways (SAA) [SAA.UL] going
as it battles a cash crunch, Finance Minister Malusi Gigaba said on Friday.
The airline runs one of Africa's biggest fleets but is close to
bankruptcy after years of
operational losses. It received state funds in July
to help repay debts and also about 20 billion rand in government guarantees to
keep it solvent.
Bankruptcy would hurt an economy that slid into recession in March.
Credit ratings agencies say SAA should be reformed and cite the cost of
propping it up as a threat to the rating of Africa's most industrialized
economy, which S&P Global Ratings and Fitch have downgraded to
"junk".
"We are in discussions about that (a bailout) and at the medium term
budget statement in October I will make the necessary announcement,"
Gigaba told Talk Radio 702.
Gigaba later told a parliamentary finance committee he would consider all
financing options including a proposal from SAA to source 6 billion rand from
the Public Investment Corporation (PIC), which oversees state employee
retirement funds and has more than 1.8 trillion rand under management.
SAA executives later told the committee it would face a liquidity crisis
if it does not receive the 13 billion rand injection to meet debt obligations
and cover operating costs.
The airline said in a financial plan presented to the committee it was
not generating enough cash but would turn a profit by 2019 on an EBITDA basis.
It said debt maturities had been extended to September.
"Cash flows generated by SAA are not sufficient to cover the
operations of the business," an executive summary of SAA's corporate plan
showed.
The airline is hampered by unprofitable routes and older, less fuel-efficient
plans. Gigaba said a turnaround strategy should be pursued
"aggressively". The state would not privatize SAA or sell its stake
in Telkom (TKGJ.J) to fund bailouts of struggling state firms, he said.
The government holds a 39.3 percent stake in Telkom, while PIC holds
another 11.4 percent.
The Treasury was negotiating with SAA lenders to defer debt repayments of
around 7 billion rand ($524 million) due in September, he said.
The Treasury says if SAA fails to meet its debt obligations it could hurt
the government's wider guarantee framework. Many of South Africa's 300-odd
state-owned firms drain state coffers.
The Treasury said on Thursday it appointed Vodacom Group (VODJ.J)
executive Vuyani Jarana as SAA's chief executive. He is the first permanent
leader at SAA for two years.
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