Hungarian airline Malev said it doesn't have the financing tokeep going, hours after the government took preparatory steps to restructure the loss-making carrier and protect it from bankruptcy proceedings.
The announcement follows a European Commission ruling early this month that forced the carrier to repay state aid worth hundreds of millions of dollars received from 2007 to 2010, the equivalent of its entire 2010 revenue.
"At today's board meeting, chief executive Lorant Limburger informed the board that, despite the continuous improvement in commercial results, the financing of operations has become unsustainable as of the end of January, and it is unresolved," Malev said today.
The airline, which accounts for 40 per cent of annual turnover at Budapest's international airport, said it had managed to agree with US firm ILFC on the continued lease of its fleet, which comprises 22 passenger aircraft.
Malev's management must draw up a liquidity management plan by the end of this week, the airline said, renewing a plea for government help to resolve the situation.
After failed privatisation attempts, Hungary in 2010 bought back all but a 5 per cent stake in the carrier, which employs 2,600 people.
"The board ... asked the owner to do all it can to resolve the situation, while conceding that the (January EU Commission) ruling makes the government's room for manoeuvre very limited," Malev said in a statement.
Earlier today a government decree, signed by prime minister Viktor Orban, designated Malev as a strategically important company, preventing creditors from launching bankruptcy proceedings.
The decree also allows a government body to run any liquidation procedure started against Malev and handle its assets.
In a January 9th ruling, the EU Commission listed various forms of state financing for Malev between 2007 and 2010, which it said the airline would not have been able to obtain from the market on the terms granted by the Hungarian authorities.
The airline posted a loss of 24.6 billion Hungarian forints ($110 million) in 2010, but early this month forecast a significant improvement in operating results this year on the back of higher revenue and by filling more seats on its planes.
Reuters