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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.

  • Judge says:

    This is ridiculous. Airlines are in trouble because of government imposed restrictions. It’s not like the situation with the banks in 2008, where the problems were largely of their own making. Therefore coordinated government action is required internationally to support otherwise healthy airlines.

    • Will says:

      Agreed. Aim should be to exit them all from this in the same situation they entered it as far as is possible

    • Bagoly says:

      Exactly.
      If the governments had not put restrictions on travel, airline bookings would be down, but still substantial, and people would be getting Covid faster (although not necessarily more of them in the long-term)
      So the governments are the cause.
      Admittedly the UK government has not banned foreigners visiting in the same way that other governments have done, but governments as a whole took the decisions.

  • Steve says:

    I thought the credit card not releasing cash thing was being addressed by the government Rob, not just for airlines either?

  • southlondonphil says:

    The Chancellor’s stern response is in part as a result of the speed with which Branson stuck his begging bowl out (again, so soon after the Flybe fiasco!), and easyJet merrily throwing cash reserves away in dividends to their shareholders RIGHT IN THE MIDDLE of a crisis.

    They’re saying “Help will be made available, but only AFTER you take seriously your executive and managerial responsibilities to keep your company afloat” – which seems perfectly fair IMO

  • matthew goodwin says:

    So Rob, do you think we should be considering to exchange Virgin airmiles now into other schemes? im sitting on 0.3m and would hate to lose them should Virgin get into further financial difficulties (purely selfish I know!).

    • Aleks says:

      +1 – I’m in the same boat and not sure what to do or what to transfer them to!

    • Marcw says:

      Rob is never going to say “transfer out / get rid off your Virgin miles” – because it will be very damaging to Virgin if everyone transfers out their miles. If Virgin collapses he will just say “I didn’t see this coming”.

      • Rhys says:

        Rob hasn’t transferred his personal miles out 🙂

        • marcw says:

          How do you know he is telling the truth?

          • Doug M says:

            What’s the point of a question if you don’t believe the answer.

          • Rob says:

            What am I meant to do with 4 million Hilton points?! 2m Virgin miles is 4 x family holidays in Upper Class which is more manageable.

      • Rob says:

        If there was a way of preserving 100% of your value then I’d suggest it. However, it’s not for me to recommend that people deliberately destroy 50% of the value of their miles (albeit that they are avoiding a potential 100% wipe out).

        • Harry T says:

          @Rob do you think VS will go bust? Asking for complete conjecture here.

          • Rob says:

            Virgin will have to give the keys to the Government within a few weeks, and if the Government doesn’t want the keys it will go bust, yes. There is no alternative. The only potential saving grace is that Delta just got bailed out by the US Government so it may be able to put some money into Virgin. The rules could easily ban this, however, and Delta may be happy to pick up Virgin’s Heathrow slots from receivership. It may even have taken security on the slots as part of its investment to guarantee it would get them.

  • Terri says:

    Hi, what about a longer range Jan 21 club avios 2 for 1 booking costing £1200 in taxes. Although Im expecting we will be travelling by then ( hope anyway) do you think a refund of taxes is at risk if BA goes under?

    • Shoestring says:

      worst case scenario, you’d lose everything

      why not wait a while to think about it? (unless you think the online cancellation workaround might get stopped & you’d have to spend hours waiting on the phone)

      or if you are worried/ want certainty, cancel using the workaround, all you’d lose would be the £35 each

      • Shoestring says:

        if you paid on a *credit* card, you’d have Section 75 protection which might reassure you a bit

        • Terri says:

          I paid on the BA Amex. Can someone help me out with the workaround link? Thanks

  • Nickinkent says:

    I totally agree with the Government. BA sold its heart some years ago to the City and Investors and took down a great company in the process to make a weak one for consumers. I do feel for the employees, but the fact they can claim like other businesses to keep employees on there books should be strong enough assistance. You can’t have your cake and eat it BA. You chased market dominance and expansion and investor payouts verses customer service and employee engagement. Now turn to the investors to help, as you clearly helped them.

  • NuthyD says:

    Just last week where you not pointing out that Easyjet was in a much better financial position than IAG?

  • Darko says:

    This is completely in line with “f**k business” philosophy

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