Reuters
Kenya Airways planes are seen parked at the Jomo
Kenyatta International airport near Kenya's capital Nairobi, April 28,
2016 [Photo, Reuters]
NAIROBI, KENYA: By taking back full control of Kenya
Airways, lawmakers are banking on
Kenya’s ability to replicate the
profitable example of Ethiopia’s state-owned flag carrier Ethiopian
Airlines.
The global precedents are not reassuring.
Government takeovers rarely transform loss-making airlines, analysts
say. And Kenya Airways faces two major hurdles: competition from
regional rivals and potential government interference.
Parliament voted last week to renationalise the loss-making airline,
which is labouring under a mountain of debt and has had three changes of
chief executive in the past five years as it struggles to compete with
regional rivals.
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Kenya
plans to form an aviation holding company with a healthier balance
sheet by combining the airline with a planned national aviation college
and profit-making assets such as the main international airport and
airports authority.
But some experts believe such a move may only compound the airline’s
problems, opening it up to political interference without a clear
strategic direction - although the government says it will allow the
airline to be run like a private company.
“The future risk is government micro-management of the airline, which
never works,” said airline consultant Nick Fadugba, chief executive of
African Aviation Services, an organisation that promotes development of
the sector in Africa.
The Kenyan carrier, which is 48.9 percent government-owned and 7.8
percent held by Air France-KLM, was once held up as a model of
successful privatisation.
It sank into losses in 2014 after making costly aircraft purchases,
which coincided with a slump in tourist and business travel to Kenya
blamed on a spate of attacks by Somalia-based Islamist militants.
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“They
didn’t really expand with sufficient capital; that really put them into
a bit of trouble,” said Eric Musau, head of research at Standard
Investment Bank in Nairobi.
LONG-TERM STRATEGY
Debt restructuring narrowed its pretax losses for last year to 7.59
billion shillings from 9.44 billion, but did not pull the company back
into the black.
The airline’s frequent change of CEO has hobbled its ability to form a
long-term strategy. In May, current boss Sebastian Mikosz said he would
leave at the end of the year, citing personal reasons.
Kenyan Airways is operating in a tough market. The International Air
Transport Association projects African airlines will post a combined
Sh10.3 trillion (USD100 million) loss in 2019, even as the global
industry generates a profit of Sh2.9 trillion (USD 28 billion).
SEE ALSO :Man sues KQ for missing flight
“The
Kenyan government has sort of run out of options,” said Phil Seymour,
chief executive of IBA Group, a Surrey-based aviation consultancy.
“Kenya Airways’ fortunes have declined both on business traffic and
tourists.”
Renationalisation, Seymour said, is a “last resort type of move”.
The airline faces stiff competition, not just from major players like
Emirates and Turkish Airlines. Both Uganda and Tanzania have poured cash
into their flag carriers in the past three years, joining countries
such as Rwanda and Togo which have also ramped up investment.
Ethiopian Airlines is the biggest regional threat. Sub-Saharan Africa’s
only major profitable state-owned airline has been snapping up stakes in
smaller carriers around the continent in a bid to become the dominant
pan-African airline.
It now flies to more than 120 destinations, compared with Kenya Airways’
56. It has grown about 25 percent a year since 2010 and made a net
Sh23.9 billion (USD 233 million) in the 2017-18 fiscal year.
SEE ALSO :Lawmakers want State to takeover KQ in revival plan
“It’s
not who owns the airline that determines the success or failure of an
African airline. It’s how they are run,” said Zemedeneh Negatu, chairman
of the U.S.-based investment firm Fairfax, which focuses on Africa.
The Kenyan carrier will need to decide whether to focus its strategy on
growth within Africa or on long-haul routes, analysts said.
Zemedeneh, whose firm has advised Uganda and Rwanda on their national
carriers, said Kenya Airways should partner with its Ethiopian rival to
take on big international carriers that control at least 80% of traffic
in and out of the continent.
One of Kenya’s main competitors on these routes is Dutch carrier KLM,
which is also an equity partner, Fadugba said. What that relationship
will look like in future remains to be seen.
“We’ll have to see what happens and what form the nationalization takes.
We don’t exactly know yet whether it will happen through a new share
issue or a more direct operation,” Air France-KLM Finance Director
Frederic Gagey said.
“As far as Air France-KLM is concerned, we continue to consider Kenya
Airways as an important partner, particularly on those routes between
the group’s two hubs and East Africa,” Gagey added.
HUGE LOSSES
Renationalising a failing airline has had mixed results depending in part on the level of government interference.
“Over the last 20 to 25 years, for most national airlines the move has
been to privatisation and not nationalisation,” Seymour said.
“Governments are moving away from nationalisation, as national airlines
tend to be inefficient.”
Before Kenyan Airways was privatised in 1996, it made huge losses and
needed annual cash injections from the government. Senior officials
running late for international flights would sometimes delay take-off by
hours.
The government now intends to run the airline like a private business,
said Esther Koimett, principal secretary at Kenya’s transport ministry.
“If we can put in place a proper governance structure that ensures that
it can be managed independently and professionally, then we should be
able to make it work,” she said.
But some analysts are not convinced.
Kwame Owino, chief executive of the Institute of Economic Affairs in
Kenya, pointed to the poor track record of state-owned entities such as
the Kerio Valley Development Authority and Kenya Pipeline Co - both of
whose heads are facing corruption charges.
“I doubt that they will turn the airline around,” Owino said.
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