Why Tony Fernandes wanted to take AirAsia private


airasia-boss-tony

Sources say AirAsia has also been in talks with lessors, including cash-rich Chinese companies, to sell a stake in its leasing subsidiary.

(Free Malaysia Today) – AirAsia founder Tan Sri Tony Fernandes began talks with bankers to take Asia’s No. 1 budget airline private after a plunge in its stock price put US$200mil worth of loans borrowed against AirAsia’s shares at risk, people familiar with the situation told Reuters.

The Malaysian entrepreneur and his business partner Datuk Kamarudin Meranun, respectively group CEO and chairman of AirAsia Bhd, borrowed the money against their 19 per cent indirect holding in AirAsia from Credit Suisse and CIMB to help fund private ventures, people familiar with the situation said.

A fall in AirAsia’s share price though has led to a breach of the loans’ collateral terms, according to two sources, and is one reason why the two businessmen have begun talks for a possible management-led buyout.

Fernandes and Kamarudin did not reply to emails sent by Reuters or phone calls made to them. A Malaysia-based spokeswoman at AirAsia declined comment.

The existence of the loans, which has not been publicly disclosed as the transaction is private, shows how the future of the airline, a key client of Airbus in Asia, is tied to the other investments of its founders.

Two sources with knowledge of the situation said the loans were taken to help finance the 2011 purchase by Fernandes’ holding company, Tune Group, of English football club Queens Park Rangers and to build up the Caterham Formula One team, two ventures which have subsequently struggled. Share-backed loans, common among Asian tycoons, require a large amount of collateral as they are subject to stock market volatility.

It was not clear if Fernandes and his partners had been formally asked by the lenders to immediately provide more cash.

There is no evidence Fernandes and Kamarudin, who have built a business empire with a value that exceeds the worth of the share-backed loans, would be unable to repay the money, although some of their wealth is tied up in sports and other private ventures.

One source familiar with the situation said Fernandes would still be able to have a significant stake in AirAsia even after a privatisation and continue to lead it.

A Hong Kong-based spokesman at Credit Suisse declined to comment. A CIMB spokeswoman did not respond to requests for comment.

In June, research firm GMT Research said AirAsia used transactions with its associate companies to inflate earnings and said it needed to be recapitalised, triggering a sell-off in the carrier’s shares that by late August had shrunk the value of the founders’ stake to around US$100mil.

READ MORE HERE

 



Comments
Loading...