Summary
- Higher fuel prices present the biggest threat to its margins in the short term.
- Taxpayers face a heavier burden of keeping the loss-making national carrier aloft after the government agreed to guarantee it loans provided by local and foreign lenders to the tune of Sh75 billion.
- The Nairobi Securities Exchange-listed firm last year converted loans worth Sh50 billion from the government and local banks by issuing the creditors with shares.
Kenya Airways narrowed its net losses by
28.8 per cent to Sh4 billion in the half year ended June, but the
improved performance was not enough to stop the airline from sinking
back into negative capital position.
The national
carrier’s cost-cutting measures paid dividends as “other costs” dropped
41.3 per cent to Sh2.9 billion while revenue rose 3.1 per cent to Sh52.1
billion in the six months.
The airline, however,
dropped back into negative equity of Sh3.8 billion, indicating the need
for additional capital injection to soften the impact of its continued
losses.
Biggest threat
The airline says higher fuel prices present the biggest threat to its margins in the short term.
“I
just recall that when I started working for KQ, which was June 1 last
year, the barrel was at $52. I just opened my phone now it's $75.99,
which means $76, so just imagine this bigger cost has just grown like
this over the last 12 months,” said KQ CEO Sebastian Mikosz after the
release of the half-year figures yesterday.
“This is why the board has approved refreshed and a little
reorganised hedging policy and as an airline we will start hedging soon
and building our hedging position to protect our cash flow and to
protect us against what seems to be not only an African problem but a
worldwide industry problem.”
Taxpayers face a heavier
burden of keeping the loss-making national carrier aloft after the
government agreed to guarantee it loans provided by local and foreign
lenders to the tune of Sh75 billion.
The Nairobi Securities Exchange-listed firm last year converted
loans worth Sh50 billion from the government and local banks by issuing
the creditors with shares.
Restructuring
The
capital restructuring saw the company’s net worth improve from a
negative Sh44.9 billion in March 2017 to a positive Sh470 million in
December 2017.
KQ’s ability to pay short-term
obligations is also in question after current liabilities exceeded
current assets by Sh32.2 billion in the review period.
The wipeout of shareholder funds revives bankruptcy risks that the company had warned investors about.
“The
effect will be to bolster balance sheet equity and capital structure
sustainability with overall shareholder book equity becoming positive
from the current negative position,” the airline said ahead of the
debt-to-equity conversion transactions.
Plans to have the inaugural KQ flight from Nairobi to New York are in high gear, which could boost the airline’s top line.
Jomo
Kenyatta International Airport has now achieved the Last Point of
Departure Status, which allows it to facilitate direct flights between
the two destinations. The first flight is scheduled to depart on October
28.
Sh100bn bailout
Analysts
at Standard Investment Bank (SIB) had in 2015 estimated that KQ needed a
bailout of up to Sh100 billion in the wake of its Sh25.7 billion net
loss for the year ended March 2015 when it first sank into a negative
net worth of Sh5.9 billion.
The Treasury, KQ’s single-largest shareholder with a 48.9 per cent equity, faces the puzzle of keeping the airline aloft.
The
government last year converted some Sh27.2 billion of its loans to the
national carrier into shares, with 11 local banks, including KCB and
Equity, also making similar deals valued at Sh22.7 billion.
The
State also offered guarantees of Sh52.5 billion to the Export-Import
Bank of the United States of America, which funded the airline’s
acquisition of several aircraft including the Boeing 787s.
Guarantee
A
separate guarantee of up to Sh22.5 billion was offered to the local
banks, which agreed to provide new loans of Sh17.5 billion to KQ.
The
banks have already provided a total of Sh4.3 billion in new loans and
which will be paid by the government should the airline default as it
did on their original unsecured debt.
Government
bureaucrats have also proposed a merger between the airline and the
Kenya Airports Authority (KAA) to help the two share costs.
KQ’s
continued losses underline the poor economics of the aviation business,
with its chairman Michael Joseph acknowledging that the airline should
not be run on the basis of making profits but delivering wider strategic
goals, including boosting tourism and Nairobi’s status as a regional
business hub.
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