Bloomberg
AirAsia Group Bhd shares slumped nearly 18% when trading resumed following a suspension that came as auditor Ernst & Young said the carrier’s ability to continue as a going concern may be in “significant doubt.â€
The budget airline pared its loss to 12% as of 2:47 pm local time on July 08.
In a statement to the Kuala Lumpur stock exchange, Ernst & Young said AirAsia’s current liabilities already exceeded its current assets by 1.84 billion ringgit ($430 million) at the end of 2019, a year when it posted a 283 million ringgit net loss. That was before the coronavirus crisis, which has further hit the carrier’s financial performance and cash flow.
The slump in air travel and poor financial performance “indicate existence of material
uncertainties that may cast
significant doubt on the Group’s and the Company’s ability to continue as a going concern,†Ernst & Young said in its unqualified audit opinion statement.
Covid-19 plunged the aviation industry globally into crisis as border controls and health concerns vaporised demand for air travel.
AirAsia reported a record quarterly loss of 803.8 million ringgit. It wasn’t until late March and the end of the quarter that the budget airline
suspended flights. “This is by far the biggest challenge we have faced since we began in 2001,†AirAsia’s Chief Executive Officer Tony Fernandes said in a statement.
He said the carrier is in talks for joint-ventures and collaborations that may result in additional investment, and it has also applied for bank loans and is weighing proposals to raise capital. Last month, South Korean conglomerate SK Group said it was reviewing a proposal to buy a small stake in
the airline. In May, AirAsia sent a memo to Malaysian banks seeking to borrow 1 billion ringgit, people familiar with the matter said at the time.
AirAsia said in an exchange filing on Wednesday that Ernst & Young’s statement and a decline in shareholder equity triggered the criteria for a so-called Practice Note 17, which applies to financially distressed companies.
However, the airline won’t be classified as PN17 as the Malaysian exchange suspended application of the status from April through June next year as part of relief measures in light of the coronavirus pandemic.
AirAsia needs at least 2 billion ringgit this year to stay afloat, according to K Ajith, an aviation analyst at UOB Kay Hian in Singapore. “There’s not a lot of options, and the best one could be the government stepping in but seeking a rights offering by the company in exchange,†he said.