Bloomberg
AirAsia X Bhd’s debt-restructuring proposal received more than 95% support from creditors in meetings as the debt-laden budget carrier tries to stay afloat.
The airline received full support from two classes of creditors on its proposed debt restructuring and 97.6% from the third group, it said in
separate statements to the Malaysian stock exchange. AirAsia X needed at least 75% support from each class of creditors, which include Airbus SE, BOC Aviation Ltd and Rolls-Royce Holdings Plc.
As part of the deal, Airbus has agreed to reduce AirAsia X’s orders to 15 A330neos and 20 A321XRLs, an AirAsia X spokesperson said. The airline was the world’s biggest customer for the wide-body A330neo, with 78 on order, according to the French planemaker’s website. It also had an order for 30 of the narrow-body A321XRL jets.
Shares of AirAsia X jumped as much as 33%. Airbus said in a statement that this is “another example of how we have worked with customers to find solutions to adapt to the impact of the pandemic.â€
AirAsia X, part of AirAsia Group Bhd, Southeast Asia’s second-biggest low-cost carrier, embarked on the restructuring last year as Covid-19 wiped out travel demand and thousands of planes were grounded globally. With the creditor agreement, which will take the airline’s gearing levels to zero and allow it to start with a clean slate, AirAsia X is betting its financials will improve as countries in Asia start to reopen to travel.
AirAsia X recently offered to pay creditors 0.5% of the more than $8 billion total debt they’re owed and terminate all existing contracts. That would help it avoid a delisting from the Malaysian stock exchange after being officially categorised as a financially distressed company.
The carrier was declared financially distressed late last month after its auditor Ernst & Young issued a disclaimer of opinion about its financial results for the 18-month period ended in June. The accounting firm cited threats that cast “significant doubt†on AirAsia X continuing as a going concern. AirAsia X said it has a year to recast its finances.
The airline was already struggling before the pandemic, posting losses for six out of seven quarters through December 2019. It reported a net loss of 24.6 billion ringgit ($5.9 billion) for the three months ended on June 30, with sales of 72.3 million ringgit.