Business

Lufthansa back in private hands as govt sells rescue stake

Germany has disposed of its 20% holding in airline for RM40.5 billion

Updated 3 years ago · Published on 14 Sep 2022 7:30PM

Lufthansa back in private hands as govt sells rescue stake
The German government has sold the stake it took in Lufthansa as part of a rescue package at the peak of the Covid-19 pandemic, and booked a healthy profit in the process. – Reuters pic, September 14, 2022

BERLIN – Lufthansa said today the German state had sold the stake it took in the airline as part of a rescue package at the peak of the Covid-19 pandemic, and booked a healthy profit in the process.

In the spring of 2020, borders were shutting worldwide, forcing airlines everywhere to ground planes and put staff put on forced leave.

To save Lufthansa from bankruptcy, the German government took a 20% stake in the group under a €9-billion (RM40.5 billion) state aid package.

Under the deal, the government agreed to sell the stake by October 2023.

But with the airline’s finances stabilising as travel resumed, Berlin was able to start selling its holdings as early as November last year.

Lufthansa said the remaining 6.2% of the share capital was sold yesterday.

“This brings the stabilisation of Lufthansa to a successful conclusion,” said Carsten Spohr, its CEO.

“The stabilisation of Lufthansa was successful, and is also paying off financially for the German government and thus for the taxpayer,” he added.

The state paid €306 million for the stake and sold it for €1.07 billion – a profit of €760 million.

“With this gratifying balance, the Economic Stabilisation Fund’s participation comes to an end and the company is once again in private hands,” said Jutta Doenges, who ran the fund.

Lufthansa in August reported its first net profit since the pandemic, booking €259 million in earnings for the second quarter as it benefited from pent-up demand for travel.

The group – which includes Eurowings, Austrian, Swiss and Brussels Airlines – made huge net losses of €6.7 billion in 2020 and €2.2 billion in 2021 as the pandemic shut down large parts of the airline industry. – AFP, September 14, 2022

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