AirAsia X assures recovery for lessors in restructuring plan

  • 2/22/2021
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The new proposal for lessors is a key step as the airline looks to win creditors’ approval for its restructuring KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysian long-haul budget airline AirAsia X Bhd (AAX) has proposed a separate restructuring program for its aircraft lessors that aims to tackle their concerns, citing chance to recover rental losses, a document seen by Reuters shows. The airline, an affiliate of AirAsia Group, has for months been trying to reconstitute 64.15 billion ringgit ($15.89 billion) of debt into 200 million ringgit of debt. More than a dozen creditors, mostly lessors, had intervened in court to challenge a proposal that would have meant a haircut for them of 99.7 percent. The new proposal for lessors is a key step as the airline looks to win creditors’ approval for its restructuring. The proposal seeks to address lessors’ concerns about their forward commercial agreements and the viability of the airline’s business after recapitalization, according to the document, which comprises slides describing the plan. Under the revised proposal, AAX said lessors are expected to recover at least 60 percent of what they are owed. A person familiar with the matter said the earlier descriptions of the debt haircut were inaccurate as they “excluded returns from ongoing leases,” referring to recovery of rental losses and outstanding debt. AAX urged lessors to agree to a “pre-packaged lock-up” deal to expedite the restructuring process. The person, who declined to be named because of the sensitivity of the matter, said the airline wanted to lock in terms of the deal with lessors before convening a creditors meeting to vote on the restructuring. “(The revised terms) balances the needs of creditors and new investors without compromising the financial viability of the business plan,” AAX said in the slides. AAX did not immediately respond to a request seeking confirmation of the proposal. The revised restructuring plan comes as the Kuala Lumpur High Court on Friday allowed AAX to convene creditor meetings and vote on its restructuring plan, the Edge Financial Daily reported. The Edge also reported that the court has separated the airline’s creditors into three categories: Airport operator Malaysia Airports Holdings Bhd, planemaker Airbus SE and other creditors. The aircraft lessors, for whom AAX has proposed the new plan, will fall in the last category. The split could give lessors a bigger say in the talks, as Airbus otherwise accounts for most of the debt AAX wants to restructure.

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