Thomas Cook’s Condor gets $420m lifeline from Germany

Bloomberg

German airline Condor’s request for emergency financing was granted by Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government in a bid to get the tourist carrier through the winter after the demise of UK parent Thomas Cook Group Plc.
The bridging loan worth 380 million euros ($420 million) must be approved by the European Commission and will be valid for six months, according to the airline, which has around 5,000 employees.
Some 240,000 tourists are currently relying on Condor to get back to Germany from vacation, according to Germany’s Economy Ministry.
The government is in “constructive talks” with the EU executive on the loan, the ministry said in a statement, adding that Condor should also be protected from Thomas Cook’s creditors.
The Commission said its in “close and constructive contacts with the German authorities.”
“We are a healthy company, and the liquidity we generated has in the past been buried at the parent company,” Condor Chief Executive Officer Ralf Teckentrup told reporters. “This bridge loan will take us through the coming winter. In summer, an airline like us needs no such bridge loan.”
Thomas Cook filed for liquidation in the UK, though some profitable parts of the group are still fighting for survival.
German Brands
The company’s German tour operator — with brands including Neckermann, Bucher and Oeger — filed for insolvency on Wednesday to separate itself from liabilities associated
with the liquidation of the parent, a prerequisite for a court-led restructuring.
The units are profitable and still have a chance to continue in business, the operator said, adding that a court will appoint an expert to restructure them.
Zurich Insurance Group AG is the provider of insolvency insurance for the German business and will pay for hotels
and flights as customers are repatriated, travel association DRV said.
Meanwhile, Thomas Cook’s Nordic Ving unit said that it and airline Thomas Cook Airlines Scandinavia are not included in the parent’s bankruptcy and continue operations as an independent company. That also applies to other Nordic entities in the Thomas Cook Northern Europe unit, such as Spies, Tjareborg and Globetrotter, Ving said.
Condor operates 59 of the group’s more than 100 aircraft, and Teckentrup said he is hopeful the unit can find a new home. The bridge loan will protect “many” of the jobs at
Condor, Economy Minister Peter Altmaier told reporters in Berlin.
“Condor is a profitable company, so our decision is based solely on its business, and not on political criteria,” Altmaier said.
The German state of Hesse, where Condor has its headquarter, said it will take on 50 percent of the risk that the federal government is assuming by providing a state guarantee of 190 million euros.
Air Berlin, once Germany’s second-largest airline, was liquidated in 2017 despite the government stepping in to help with a bridge loan of 150 million euros. The airline’s administrators said his month that the loan had been paid back in full.

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