Russia offers to buy out jetliner fleet from foreign leasing firms

 

Bloomberg

Russia offered to compensate owners of jets commandeered by the country, a bid to smooth relations with leasing companies that stand to lose billions of dollars on rented aircraft they can’t get back.
Authorities in Moscow are seeking ways to legally get round sanctions requiring international firms to recall the planes, Transport Minister Vitaly Savelyev said. Options include payments or an outright purchase of the jets, he said.
Lessors have so far been unwilling to negotiate on the matter, according to Savelyev. That’s most likely because any financial accord with Russian airlines would appear to present a clear breach of the sanctions.
“We are not losing hope but we are not giving them back, because that would mean to leave oneself without aviation,” Savelyev said.
Leasing firms doing business in Russia have demanded the return of hundreds of Airbus SE and Boeing Co planes to comply with economic sanctions imposed by the European Union and US in response to the invasion of Ukraine.
Under EU rules, they have until March 28 to cancel contracts, but have no way of repossessing the aircraft after Russia moved to keep them within its borders.
AerCap Holdings NV, the world’s biggest lessor with more than 150 planes in Russia, traded 2.8% higher in New York. Still, it’s down 12% from the last trading day before the invasion.
Lessors stand to lose as much as $10 billion as the value of their fleet in Russia declines. The purchase offer would ease the impact and give Russian airlines a potential pathway for re-establishing business ties after the crisis passes. But moving forward would put foreign lessors at risk of being penalised by authorities in the US, EU or other jurisdictions.
Russia has moved almost 800 aircraft to the local register, according to Savelyev. Bermuda and Ireland, where many of them have been registered, have suspended the airworthiness certificates of planes tied to Russia. The minister said 78 have been “lost” after being seized overseas.

Leave a Reply

Send this to a friend