Auctioning Off A State-Owned Airline Not Easy Task
With
less than a week to go before final offers are due, Italy is said
to be doing its best to prevent a collapse of the sale of its
national airline, Alitalia. The only real contender is small
domestic carrier Air One... and it is actively trying to raise the
funds it is bidding with.
The carrier is currently worth about $1.5 billion by stock
market value. One option would be for Rome, which holds 49.9
percent, to bring in banks to prop up the sale of the carrier. But
that only postpones the problem, according to one senior European
airline executive.
"You see this all the time with state-owned airlines," said
Frost & Sullivan aviation consultant Diogenis Papiomytis.
"Bidders are interested in the beginning because Alitalia has a
strong brand name and a good network, but once you see its books
and how it's run -- you can't get away from the unions and the
political interventionism. All of this can deter any bidder from
going forward."
According to Reuters, analysts are saying with time growing
short for final bid submission, the country's center-left
government can't really afford a failure as it wrestles with unions
on issues such as pension reforms.
Air One's annual revenues of little more than $827 million just
barely matches Alitalia's losses. The carrier is reportedly talking
with banks Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena , Nomura and Morgan
Stanley, a source told Reuters. Air One declined comment to the
news agency.
Air One does have the backing of Italy's top retail bank, Intesa
Sanpaolo in its bid. Intesa's chairman, Giovanni Bazoli, is a pal
of Prime Minister Romano Prodi. He denies he has received any
political pressure.
If the sale collapses, Alitalia says it can keep operations
going for about a year, but more cash will soon be needed. Italy
would then find itself between the proverbial rock and hard
place.
If the country lets the airline go bust, it risks strikes and
layoffs among some 20,000 workers. On the other hand, if it
supplies the needed cash to keep the carrier going, it risks the
anger of rival airlines, not to mention the European
Commission.
As ANN has reported, low-fare
carrier Ryanair has already filed suit against the EC for what its
calls illegal "injections" of money into large carriers such as
Alitalia.
Air France KLM, Alitalia's long-time commercial partner, isn't
interested unless the company is turned around and major changes
are made.
American buyout fund MatlinPatterson re-entered its bid last
month, after Russian carrier Aeroflot theirs. But no one is really
expecting MatlinPatterson to submit a final offer by the July 23
deadline, according to Reuters.
"We do not see Alitalia making a profit in any of the next three
years," J.P. Morgan analysts said. "If no change in ownership
occurs, this group will face a liquidity crisis in due course, in
our view."

"Alitalia is not exactly a beautiful wife that can find a
wonderful prince," said Oliviero Baccelli at Bocconi University's
transport economics research center. "We are at the same point we
were several months ago, perhaps much worse."
Gee... any takers?