MUMBAI: Indian airline Go First, which filed for bankruptcy on Tuesday, owes financial creditors 65.21 billion Indian rupees ($798 million), its bankruptcy filing showed.
As of April 30, Go First Air had not defaulted on any of these dues, it said in the filing, which was seen by Reuters.
“However, considering the present financial situation of the corporate applicant, defaults to financial creditors would be imminent,” the filing said. Lenders were not aware of the airline’s plans to file for voluntary insolvency and will meet soon to take stock of the situation, said two people familiar with the matter.
They spoke on condition of anonymity as they are not allowed to speak to the media.
The filing lists Central Bank of India Ltd, Bank of Baroda Ltd, IDBI Bank Ltd, Axis Bank Ltd and Deutsche Bank among Go First’s financial creditors.
The Central Bank of India and Bank of Baroda have an exposure of 13 billion rupees, respectively under a consortium loan, while IDBI Bank has a smaller exposure of 500 million, the filing showed.
An official at Central Bank of India said the bank’s total exposure to the airline is 20 billion rupees.
The person spoke on condition of anonymity as they are not allowed to speak to the media.
Kenya Airways posts worst-ever loss
In the case of Axis Bank, the airline has a letter of sanction of credit, the filing said, without specifying whether this credit has been availed.
Shares of Central Bank of India were down 4.14% as of 9.35 a.m. IST, while those of Bank of Baroda were down 2.4%. IDBI Bank was down 1.4% and Axis Bank dropped 0.5%. The benchmark BSE Sensex was down 0.4%.
Deutsche Bank declined to comment.
Emails sent to the other banks were not immediately answered.
Go First has also borrowed 12.92 billion rupees under the government’s emergency credit scheme introduced during the Covid crisis.
As part of the scheme, the government guarantees loans given out by banks to the company.
The airline’s total liabilities to all creditors stand at 114.63 billion rupees, the filing shows. This includes dues to banks, financial institutions, vendors and aircraft lessors.
“Currently, the assets of the company are not sufficient to meet its liabilities,” the airline said in the filing. The company has defaulted on payments to operational creditors, including 12.02 billion rupees to vendors and 26.60 billion rupees to aircraft lessors.
It has received notices from lessors for termination of aircraft lease agreements and some have started actions against the company to ground or repossess aircraft, the filing said.
Six lessors have also invoked letters of credit issued to them by lenders, it said.
Comments
Comments are closed.