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More trouble for Alitalia

Alitalia seeks bankruptcy measure

Troubled Italian airline Alitalia has applied for bankruptcy protection as it tries to agree a deal to ensure its long-term survival.

The carrier has sought court protection from its creditors, effectively declaring itself insolvent.

An administrator will be appointed to handle the process, with flights continuing while the firm plans a radical overhaul of its operations.

Losing 2m euros (£1.6m) a day, Alitalia has survived on a 300m-euro state loan.

Plans are being drawn up to split the carrier into two and to sell a stake in a new entity to a foreign airline.

Guaranteeing the airline’s future will depend on securing fresh investment and persuading its unions to accept large job cuts.

Both Air France KLM and Lufthansa have expressed interest in investing in any new entity which emerges from the current business.

Earlier on Friday, Corrado Passera, head of the airline’s financial advisers Intesa Sanpaolo, confirmed that Alitalia’s board was drawing up a request to seek bankruptcy protection.

The move will give the firm breathing space to reach agreement on how the business can proceed.

The government adopted new measures on Thursday aimed at speeding up bankruptcy proceedings, widely interpreted as a signal that Alitalia was set for such a course of action.

Future plans for the carrier would see it divided in half, with its loss-making operations remaining under bankruptcy protection and potentially being liquidated.

Profitable short-haul routes would be separated into a new business, controlled by a consortium of Italian investors including budget airline Air One which would effectively be merged with Alitalia.

Italian media have speculated that the new firm will employ 7,000 fewer staff than Alitalia’s current 19,000 strong workforce and operate flights to about 50 fewer destinations.

Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi has made Alitalia’s continued ownership by Italian interests a precondition of any rescue deal.

However, experts have said the airline – of which the government owns 49% – can only survive in the future as part of some European alliance.

Previous attempts to sell the business to a foreign airline have foundered over union concerns about job losses and unease over the severity of the airline’s financial problems.

The airline’s perilous position was put into perspective by Roberto Colaninno, appointed to take charge of the new entity that emerges from the restructuring.

“No one can buy Alitalia in the state it’s in,” he told La Repubblica newspaper.

“With all respect, I am not Merlin the magician. The business is toast. It doesn’t exist any more. There’s nothing left.”

Alitalia has been crippled in recent years by strategic indecision, poor industrial relations and soaring fuel costs.

Its shares were suspended earlier this summer while the firm has delayed the release of its 2007 accounts.

It’s been in tourmoil for a while, perhaps this is IT :rolleyes:

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By: swerve - 31st August 2008 at 00:47

Let’s see . . . . Silvio Berlusconi returns to power vowing to save Alitalia, which is broke. Lends it 300 million euros, which keep it going just long enough to file for protection from its creditors under the new bankruptcy law hurriedly passed by Silvio Berlusconis new government, immediately after it comes into force.

No, obviously there can’t be any connection. How could you think such a thing? :diablo:

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By: tenthije - 30th August 2008 at 23:39

Hmmmm, me wonders what prompted the re-write in Italian bankruptcy law. Surely there would not be a connection?

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By: rdc1000 - 29th August 2008 at 23:04

Alitalia files to enter administration
Graham Dunn, London (29Aug08, 18:16 GMT, 92 words)

Cash-strapped Italian national carrier Alitalia has confirmed it is to file to enter extraodinary administration under the country’s recently amended bankruptcy protection laws.

The move was widely expected after the Italian cabinet yesterday approved changes to the country’s administration legislation covering large companies in crisis. Italy has been working on putting together a group of Italian investors which is expected to bid for the profitable part of Alitalia’s business.

In a brief statement issued following a board meeting today, the SkyTeam carrier confirms it has requested admission to the extraodinary administration procedure.

Source: Air Transport Intelligence news

And a bit more..

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/7588475.stm

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