Bloomberg
The Italian government is readying 350 million euros ($390 million) in bridge financing for bankrupt airline Alitalia SpA, seeking to keep the carrier flying as it scrambles to find bidders for a last-ditch rescue.
The financing, due to cover six months of operations, was finalised in a cabinet decree document seen by Bloomberg.
The companies leading the bid to bail out Alitalia reaffirmed their willingness to acquire the bankrupt airline but said more work is needed before they can make a
binding offer. The bridge financing was earlier reported by Radiocor.
Ferrovie dello Stato Italiane and the Benetton family’s Atlantia SpA said more details were needed on governance, shareholders and management of the carrier. Delta Air Lines Inc has reaffirmed its intention to invest 100 million euros in Alitalia, though the Italian carrier’s administrators are seeking a stronger commitment from the US company, according to newspaper Corriere della Sera.
State-appointed administrators have been running Alitalia since 2017 after former shareholder Etihad Airways pulled the plug on funding and workers rejected a 2
billion-euro recapitalisation plan including 1,600 job cuts from a workforce of 12,500.
Germany’s Deutsche Lufthansa AG may be stepping up its bid for a role in the rescue, newspapers including la Repubblica reported. The German company could take on the financial burden of Alitalia’s change in airline alliance and might reconsider its prior position of ruling out an equity stake in the Italian carrier, Repubblica said. Job cuts under the Lufthansa option might fall to around 2,500 under a revised proposal.