News Content
S Africa considers selling state assets to fund unprofitable flagcarrier
SOUTH Africa is evaluating assets it could sell to pay for the ZAR2.2 billion (US$169.5 million) bailout of unprofitable carrier South African Airways, Finance Minister Malusi Gigaba said in letter to parliament.
The government's decision to settle a debt owed by the airline to Standard Chartered Plc mustn't affect the balance of this year's budget, Mr Gigaba said in the note to Baleka Mbete, speaker of the National Assembly. Further details will be provided in October, he said. The plan was first reported by Business Day newspaper, which said a 39 per cent stake in phone company Telkom SA SOC Ltd was among the assets being considered for a disposal, Bloomberg reported.
South Africa's economic downturn, the downgrading of the country's foreign-currency debt and a "rapid deterioration" of SAA's cash flow triggered the need for "urgent action" regarding the airline, Mr Gigaba said. The bailout prevented SAA from defaulting on the loan, which would have led to cross defaults of almost ZAR14.6 billion of other debt, he said.
A disposal of a state-owned shares in a company such as Telkom would echo a 2015 decision to sell a ZAR28.7 billion stake in wireless carrier Vodacom Group Ltd to raise funds for state utility Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd, which was struggling financially amid a nationwide electricity shortage. The buyer in that case was the Public Investment Corp, Africa's biggest money manager, which is also owned by the state.
The government's stake in Telkom, South Africa's biggest landline operator, is worth about ZAR13.5 billion. "Telkom cannot comment on shareholder related activities," spokesman Gugulethu Maqetuka said in an emailed request for comment.
SAA hasn't made a profit since 2011 and has previously survived on ZAR19.1 billion of state-backed guarantees. According to Mr Gigabai's letter, ZAR18.6 billion of that has been used.
The airline has been without a permanent chief executive officer since 2015 and the cabinet is considering Vodacom executive Vuyani Jarana for the role, a person familiar with the matter has said.
The government's decision to settle a debt owed by the airline to Standard Chartered Plc mustn't affect the balance of this year's budget, Mr Gigaba said in the note to Baleka Mbete, speaker of the National Assembly. Further details will be provided in October, he said. The plan was first reported by Business Day newspaper, which said a 39 per cent stake in phone company Telkom SA SOC Ltd was among the assets being considered for a disposal, Bloomberg reported.
South Africa's economic downturn, the downgrading of the country's foreign-currency debt and a "rapid deterioration" of SAA's cash flow triggered the need for "urgent action" regarding the airline, Mr Gigaba said. The bailout prevented SAA from defaulting on the loan, which would have led to cross defaults of almost ZAR14.6 billion of other debt, he said.
A disposal of a state-owned shares in a company such as Telkom would echo a 2015 decision to sell a ZAR28.7 billion stake in wireless carrier Vodacom Group Ltd to raise funds for state utility Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd, which was struggling financially amid a nationwide electricity shortage. The buyer in that case was the Public Investment Corp, Africa's biggest money manager, which is also owned by the state.
The government's stake in Telkom, South Africa's biggest landline operator, is worth about ZAR13.5 billion. "Telkom cannot comment on shareholder related activities," spokesman Gugulethu Maqetuka said in an emailed request for comment.
SAA hasn't made a profit since 2011 and has previously survived on ZAR19.1 billion of state-backed guarantees. According to Mr Gigabai's letter, ZAR18.6 billion of that has been used.
The airline has been without a permanent chief executive officer since 2015 and the cabinet is considering Vodacom executive Vuyani Jarana for the role, a person familiar with the matter has said.
Latest News
- For the first time, tianjin Port realized the whole process of dock operati...
- From January to August, piracy incidents in Asia increased by 38%!The situa...
- Quasi-conference TSA closes as role redundant in mega merger world
- Singapore says TPP, born again as CPTPP, is now headed for adoption
- Antwerp posts 5th record year with boxes up 4.3pc to 10 million TEU
- Savannah lifts record 4 million TEU in '17 as it deepens port