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Indian Airlines May Ground 150 Planes, Report Losses Due To Covid-19: CAPA

CAPA India said that most airlines would have to shrink their operations regardless of fiscal concessions. 

An airport employee walks below a Boeing Co. 787 Dreamliner aircraft, operated by Air India. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)
An airport employee walks below a Boeing Co. 787 Dreamliner aircraft, operated by Air India. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)

All Indian airlines will report significant losses in the first quarter of this year and may initially ground around 150 planes as the shock from the coronavirus pandemic will be "far deeper and much longer", according to a report.

Aviation advisory firm Centre for Pacific Aviation India on Wednesday said even before Covid-19 appeared on the scene, most Indian carriers already had very strained balance sheets and almost no liquidity.

"This latest shock will once again expose the vulnerability of India's aviation system as happened during the fuel price spike in 2008. But on that occasion, the shock was short-lived, even if its impact reverberated for several years. This time, the shock itself will be far deeper and much longer," it said in a report.

In the wake of a significant reduction in services, the report said Indian carriers might initially ground around 150 aircraft, and the number is expected to increase as more domestic operations are curtailed over the coming weeks. "If the decline in traffic continues to be severe, the majority of the fleet could be grounded by April," it noted.

As per CAPA India, all Indian airlines will report significant losses in the first quarter even with oil prices at around $30 per barrel. "At an industry level, consolidated losses are estimated to be in the range of $500-600 million for the quarter (excluding Air India). However, these are very preliminary estimates and are subject to a further downward revision."

"In the absence of serious and meaningful government intervention, such an outcome could lead to several Indian airlines shutting down operations by May or June due to a lack of cash," it said. Further, the report flagged the possibility of retrenchments in the domestic airlines' industry.

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Reduced scale of operations could impact the requirement for around 30 percent of airline staff and up to 50 percent of ground handing staff. For the first couple of months, this could potentially be handled through mandatory leave and leave-without-pay initiatives for 1-2 months. But should the situation continue beyond a few weeks, it would quickly result in short-term retrenchment, it added.

In case the severity of the coronavirus outbreak increases, CAPA India said that regardless of any fiscal concessions and support that the government might offer, most airlines would have to shrink their operations, and the more vulnerable carriers may shutdown.