Ailing Japan Airlines to receive emergency loans
TOKYO, Japan – Japan Airlines said yesterday it obtained government approval to receive up to US$1.1 billion in emergency loans aimed at preventing the money-losing company from grounding flights.
JAL signed an agreement with the state-run Development Bank of Japan after receiving government approval, a company official said on condition of anonymity, citing policy.
Asia’s largest airline has pressed for a government bailout and mulled over massive job cuts and other restructuring steps to avoid collapse. JAL shares tumbled 8.4 per cent to a record low yesterday amid worries over a possible bankruptcy.
The bridge loans are aimed at helping JAL to stay in business until a state-backed rehabilitation body determines full turnaround plans for
the airline.
The airline yesterday also signed a loan arrangement for an undisclosed amount with the Development Bank of Japan for “funds necessary for continuance of our flight operations”, according to the official.
It also obtained government approval for separate loans of 25 billion yen (US$282.2 million) for necessary aircraft imports.
Struggling JAL booked US$1.5 billion in losses in the first half of the fiscal year, and faces interest-bearing debt totalling nearly US$10 billion.
JAL has teetered for years, hammered by surging fuel prices, global competition and an image problem caused by a series of safety lapses. It
had been losing Japanese customers to its local rival All Nippon Airways.
Last week, Delta Air Lines and its alliance partners said a billion-dollar offer was on the table to lure JAL from its affiliation with American Airlines.
JAL President Haruka Nishimatsu has said he will make a decision on the offer by the end of the year.