ADVERTISEMENT

Pakistan To Sell 100% Stake In Pakistan International Airlines To Bidders

The Pakistani federal government is selling 100% shares because all four bidders wanted the government to have no role in PIA after the deal, privatisation commission officials said.

<div class="paragraphs"><p> The federal government is selling 100% shares because all four bidders wanted the government to have no role in PIA after the deal, privatisation commission officials said. (Image Source:&nbsp;Philip Myrtorp on Unsplash)</p></div>
The federal government is selling 100% shares because all four bidders wanted the government to have no role in PIA after the deal, privatisation commission officials said. (Image Source: Philip Myrtorp on Unsplash)
Show Quick Read
Summary is AI Generated. Newsroom Reviewed

Pakistan has decided to sell its entire 100% stake in Pakistan International Airlines after bidders sought complete managerial control with no government role post-privatisation, local media reported on Wednesday.

Bidding is scheduled for Dec. 23 and will initially be for 75% shares of the loss-making national flag-carrier, with the winning bidder given an option to acquire the remaining 25% within a month after bidding at a 12% premium. 

The extra 12% price is charged as the buyer is allowed to delay payment for one year instead of instant payment.

The government will receive only 7.5% of the bid amount in cash, while 92.5% will be reinvested directly into PIA to support revival, officials told The Express Tribune newspaper.

The federal government is selling 100% shares because all four bidders wanted the government to have no role in PIA after the deal, privatisation commission officials said.

Major business groups like Lucky Cement Consortium, Arif Habib Consortium, Fauji Foundation-owned Fauji Fertiliser and Air Blue are bidding for PIA.

Advisor to the Prime Minister on privatisation Muhammad Ali confirmed the decision, saying all bidders wanted at least 75% shareholding for ease of decision-making, while some demanded 100% ownership.

The government’s larger objective is to revive PIA and take it back to its past glory, Ali said, adding, "This requires heavy investment for fleet revamping, acquisition of planes."

Earlier, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif had indicated plans to sell only a 60% stake, but the move failed to attract serious buyers in 2024.

To improve attractiveness, the government parked PkR 654 billion of PIA’s debt in a holding company, while PIA now has positive equity of PkR 30 billion, privatisation officials said.

This year, PIA will get PkR 34.7 billion from the budget to pay debt, pensions and medical expenses.

Even after removing major debt, the new owners will still have to pay PkR26 billion in taxes and airport charges.

PIA owns 34 aircraft, of which only 18 are airworthy, but holds valuable landing slots and air service agreements with 97 countries, making it a key asset for bidders.

The government has promised support, legal protection, and indemnity against some liabilities to attract buyers.

Opinion
Air India Flight To Amsterdam Lands Back In Delhi, Show Tracking Websites; Technical Snag Suspected
OUR NEWSLETTERS
By signing up you agree to the Terms & Conditions of NDTV Profit