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Government to UK aviation industry: Drop Dead

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Following a number of days of talks with British Airways, Virgin Atlantic, easyJet and representatives from UK airports, the Government has refused to provide a package of financial support for the UK aviation sector.

According to reports, a letter was sent by the Chancellor of the Exchequer this afternoon which made it clear that there would be no industry-wide package of measures.

Government to UK aviation industry - drop dead

The Government did say, however, that it would be prepared to talk to airports or airlines “as a last resort” when they would otherwise need to appoint an administrator.  There would be no discussions until companies were at the brink and had exhausted all other options for raising finance.

The letter implies that any deal would involve the Government taking partial or full control of the airline or airport involved through the acquisition of newly issued shares and would not involve any Government loans.

Whether of not the Government chose to save any particular business would depend on:

“whether the business makes a material contribution to the economic activity of the UK, the importance of maintaining a thriving competitive aviation sector in the UK to deliver connectivity and the equitable and fair treatment across businesses in the sector”

Here is the full text (click to enlarge):

Rishi Sunak letter to aviation sectorand

Government letter to aviation sector

The reference to ‘maintaining a thriving competitive aviation sector’ looks like a signal to Virgin Atlantic that the Government is willing to take it over if required.  There had been some speculation that Virgin Atlantic could be sacrificed as long as British Airways was protected.

The Government stated that airlines and airports are already benefitting from the ability to reclaim up to £2,500 per month of the salary of furloughed workers.  There was also an implication that the Government may soon allow non-investment grade companies to access pots of state funding which may benefit the weaker players in the sector.

In terms of airports, Karen Dee, chief executive of the Airport Operators Association, said in a statement:

“After having publicly announced a support package for airports and airlines, we’re surprised by where we find ourselves today. Our industry will now have to fight on its own to protect its workforce and its future”

In terms of ‘what does this mean for me’, I would say that in no circumstances now should you accept a credit voucher from British Airways, Virgin Atlantic or easyJet.  Insist on cash.  It is an unnecessary risk if you have an option.

Now that the Government had made it clear that no financial support will be available, it is unlikely that banks will be queuing up to provide loans to the sector.  The credit card companies are also unlikely to release the funds they are refusing to pass over for flights booked in the future.

In the case of IAG and easyJet, it would be virtually impossible for them to issue new shares in the market at this time – although both have enough reserves to keep going for 3-4 months.

The Sunday Times said last week that British Airways was losing €200m per week so, assuming IAG as a whole is losing €400m per week, their €9 billion of liquidity is good for another 3-4 months.

For more information on this, click this Google search link and visit the Financial Times story at the top.  Doing this gets you over the FT paywall.  The Sky News version is here.

Comments (206)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • AndyGWP says:

    You have mentioned credit vouchers for cancelled flights, but what are your thoughts on the impact of this on booked flights?

    • Rob says:

      If the flights happen, via a new shareholder but the same brand, and you paid cash I reckon you would be ok.

      • JP_MCO says:

        What about if you have confirmed booking with points?

        • SimonW says:

          Ditto. How would they treat Avios bookings ??

        • Rob says:

          Who knows?

          • Mark says:

            I’ve just booked some flights this evening for a redemption I was planning early next year. Went for the 50p taxes and fees option, even though the original plan was maximum cash component as for the route in question (LHR-IST one way) that gets much better value for the avios. At 1p each maximum cash component is effectively £159.00 CE. At minimum cash component is is £235.50.

            I figured that I didn’t have much to lose… Either they won’t be honoured in which case I doubt I’d still have the avios anyway, or they will. Hopefully I’ll have the opportunity nearer the time to switch to a larger cash component.

            Obviously if there is still availability then under normal circumstances I could rebook and cancel the original booking (and presumably just lose 50p); not sure if an existing booking can be amended in that way.

      • Genghis says:

        Section 75 for credit card cos for consequential loss?

        • Shoestring says:

          good job I switched to credit card only for flights, lesson learned after the strikes last year where we didn’t actually get caught, the worst I suffered was I bought 3x £25 Ryanair flights as contingency that didn’t end up getting used

          no man should face a wife like mine if she suggested buying the 3x £25 contingency flights, I said no and the BA flights had actually been strike cancelled 🙂

  • Travel Strong says:

    Fast forward to Sep: If I have a LHR-SLC Delta flight (and delta booking ref and etix numbers) booked with VS, using VS miles – will Delta honour the flight if it all went wrong at VS?

  • Simon Spanswick says:

    This also calls into question the value of Avios for those who hold them. Will they be wiped out? Any thoughts, Rob?

    • J says:

      If IAG go bust you almost certainly lose your Avios. Will they go bust? You can ask Rob or Mystic Meg but who knows for sure? Interestingly IAG shares finished 6.8% up today. I personally can’t see airlines which are in usual circumstances successful going under… but just my opinion. If you attach a value to your avios and see them as an investment, do your own research and reading and make your own mind up – we’re in uncertain times and nobody can predict exactly what will happen.

      • Paul Pogba says:

        Up 6.6% isn’t great when your peers were up by a lot more: AAL 35.8%, AF 13.7%, DAL 21.1%, LH 13.7%, UAL 25.7%

    • Ken says:

      What ? A taxpayer bailout for Avios holders. Are you mad ?

  • JamesR says:

    If Virgin have rebooked me on BA for later in the year (I have the BA ref and it’s on my Exec club account.. yet I cant see a ticket number yet) I’m assuming if Virgin go bust my flight wont be affected?

    And secondly if BA went bust would my travel insurance cover the flight based on the original booking date (long before all this mess) or would they perhaps invalidate it due to the flight being rebooked on BA only a week or two ago?

  • rams1981 says:

    time to drop virgin miles? What are people’s plans?

    • thehornets says:

      Apart from my outstanding redemption bookings for August, I’ve cashed all mine in for Hilton points.

      That said, I generally don’t redeem them for premium redemptions and, in most cases, I can buy equivalent tickets at roughly the same outlay. My acquisition cost of them is relatively low (mostly work-funded business travel).

      Each to their own.👍

      • WillPS says:

        Is there a way one can do this without calling the (3 hour wait) helpline? I’ve texted the messaging service but the reply that came back was more or less “we won’t help you unless you’re travelling imminently”.

        • Genghis says:

          Wait for a response. It’ll come.

          • Will says:

            Cheers for the advice. True enough I got a response around midnight to say they’d done it and to wait 30 days.

        • Nate1309 says:

          took me a few days wait via text but worked out in the end. I transferred all my virgin miles to HH. “only” 70k miles, so small fry to most here i suspect.
          What do do with my 400k avios is the question.

  • Steven says:

    Would you say the same for KLM? Thanks

    • Mikeact says:

      What do you mean? This is about BA and Virgin for goodness sake. I suggest you post a detailed question on Flyertalk…the Flying Blue forum.

  • BSI1978 says:

    Somewhat strange headline title I thought……

  • Bootlace says:

    Errr….. Ford ended up offering NYC a federal loan two months later.

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