Thursday, February 14, 2019

Ashwani Lohani back at ailing Air India: Is disinvestment now a distant dream?

A quiet game of musical chairs seems to have been played at the ministry of civil aviation recently. A day before his retirement on January 31, RN Choubey, civil aviation secretary, publicly praised the efforts of Pradeep Singh Kharola in improving Air India’s functional parameters and its financials.

At that time, Kharola was the chairman and managing director (CMD) of Air India. Choubey quoted an almost 20 percent topline growth in the nine months between April and December of 2018-19 at Air India to say that Kharola was doing a fine job under difficult circumstances at the loss-making airline.

Remember, Air India is expected to post an almost Rs 15 crore daily average loss for 2017-18 (Its results for FY18 have still not been declared and this figure has been taken from data put out by the Public Enterprises Survey). Not just 2017-18, the airline has been posting losses each year since the erstwhile Air India and Indian Airlines merged to form the present entity.

Here’s another way to put the loss figure for 2017-18 in perspective: Air India was the second highest loss-making central public sector undertaking (CPSE) among 339 such units in the country last fiscal. Only BSNL made more losses than Air India and the airline accounted for almost 17 percent of the combined losses of all CPSEs in 2017-18.

Anyway, a week after Choubey's praise of Kharola, the latter was handpicked by the government to succeed Choubey as the secretary of civil aviation. Whether his leadership of Air India played a part in getting him to become the top civil servant in the civil aviation ministry is anybody's guess.

Now, as the government began a search for Kharola’s successor, there were unconfirmed reports that coal industry veteran Rajiv Ranjan Mishra was being sounded out, but that he was reluctant to take up this position. Air India officials now say that Mishra was never in the running and no official appointment order was issued.
Be that as it may, the government yesterday decided to bring back former CMD Ashwani Lohani from retirement, for a second stint at the national carrier, succeeding Kharola. Lohani has been appointed as the Air India CMD for one year and is expected to take charge this afternoon. The biggest takeaway from this appointment: the government may well be signalling its weakening resolve in disinvesting Air India by bringing back Lohani.

It is well known that Lohani, who has lead several public sector undertakings and turned some of them around, has been against any move by the government to exit Air India. In fact, Lohani has said on more than one occasion that if the debt on Air India's books were to the substantially reduced, he would be able to turn around the loss-making airline. He has also repeatedly indicated that he is against the very idea of disinvestment.

A person close to Lohani said today that he would be happier turning around the airline than agreeing to any disinvestment. Well, now that the government has already decided to take away almost Rs 30,000 crore of debt from Air India's books and park it into a special purpose vehicle (SPV), Lohani's wish may have already been granted. Debt has been more than halved and about Rs 25,000 crore now remains with the airline.
14/02/19 Sindhu Bhattacharya/CNBC TV18
To Read the News in full at Source, Click the Headline

0 comments:

Post a Comment