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Decision On Funding To Jet Airways To Be On Collective Basis, Says PNB

Jet Airways had earlier clarified that it has not received any fresh loan from PNB.

Flights operated by Jet Airways India Ltd. at Chhatrapati Shivaji International Airport in Mumbai, India. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)
Flights operated by Jet Airways India Ltd. at Chhatrapati Shivaji International Airport in Mumbai, India. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)

State-run Punjab National Bank said any decision to provide emergency funds to cash-strapped Jet Airways (India) Ltd. will be taken collectively by the lenders and not on a standalone basis.

The assertion comes in the backdrop of media reports that PNB had approved Rs 2,050 crore of emergency funding to Jet Airways, for which lenders are considering a resolution plan under “Project Sashakt”.

In a filing to the exchanges, Jet Airways had earlier clarified it has not received any fresh loan from PNB.

“No, we are going (on decision to lend further to Jet Airways) collectively. The resolution will come with the participation of the stakeholders and we are working on it,” the bank's Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer Sunil Mehta told reporters when asked whether the lender was considering fresh funds to the loss-making carrier on a standalone basis.

Mehta was speaking on the sidelines of the Ficci-IBA event in Mumbai.

Any emergency funding to Jet Airways will be part of the resolution package, he said.

Mehta said the resolution plan for the airline is under deliberation at the joint lender forum and the lead banker, State Bank of India, is in discussion with various stakeholders.

Bank of India's MD and CEO Dinabandhu Mohapatra, who was also present at the event, said bankers are supporting the resolution plan for the airline.

“Unless you support, there will be destruction of value. We have to protect the value and the airline,” Mohapatra told reporters.

Jet Airways has a debt of over Rs 8,000 crore and needs to make repayments of up to Rs 1,700 crore by the end of March.

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The airline has, however, already defaulted on repayments on external commercial borrowings due to the paucity of funds.

The acute liquidity crunch has forced it to ground aircraft, shut down stations and delay salary payments to its pilots and engineers along with other senior staff.

It has been looking at various ways to raise funds.

On March 8, Jet Airways chairman Naresh Goyal wrote to Etihad Airways Group CEO Tony Douglas seeking an urgent funding of Rs 750 crore under an MoU signed between various stakeholders.

Etihad Board, however, has reportedly not taken a final decision on the pact.

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