BA owner IAG to buy insolvent Austrian holiday airline Niki

FAN Editor
Empty Niki check-in counters are seen at Vienna International Airport in Schwechat
Empty Niki check-in counters are seen at Vienna International Airport in Schwechat, Austria December 14, 2017. REUTERS/Heinz-Peter Bader

December 29, 2017

FRANKFURT (Reuters) – British Airways’ owner IAG <ICAG.L> said on Friday it would buy Niki, Air Berlin’s <AB1.DE> insolvent Austrian holiday airline, for 20 million euros ($24.01 million) and provide additional liquidity to the company of up to 16.5 million euros.

The sale to IAG, which had been in exclusive talks for the airline, is the final chapter in the demise of Air Berlin, the No. 2 German air carrier that previously owned Niki and filed for insolvency earlier this year.

IAG said Niki would become part of its low-cost carrier Vueling and be incorporated in Austria, employing 740 former Niki employees. Assets include 15 A320 aircraft and slots at airports including Vienna, Dusseldorf, Munich, Palma and Zurich.

“Niki was the most financially viable part of Air Berlin and its focus on leisure travel means it’s a great fit with Vueling,” said IAG’s chief executive, Willie Walsh.

Niki filed for insolvency earlier this month after Germany’s Lufthansa <LHAG.DE> backed out of a deal to buy its assets on competition concerns, grounding the fleet and stranding thousands of passengers.

Niki’s administrators had been racing to find a buyer for its assets before it loses its takeoff and landing slots, its most attractive asset.

The former Formula One champion Niki Lauda founded the airline in 2003. It was fully acquired by Air Berlin at the end of 2011, according to the company’s website, but kept the name.

Lauda made a bid to repurchase Niki, along with several others, but eventually lost out to IAG.

Air Berlin, beloved among Germans for its flights to the holiday island Mallorca and for the chocolate hearts it gave out after each flight, filed for administration in August. A government loan kept its planes in the air during negotiations on breaking it up.

Air Berlin agreed to sell a large part of its airline assets to Lufthansa. It also clinched a deal with Britain’s easyJet <EZJ.L> for some operations at Berlin Tegel.

(Reporting by Tom Sims; Editing by Larry King)

Free America Network Articles

Leave a Reply

Next Post

US eyes increased pumping from biggest federal water project

SAN FRANCISCO –  The Trump administration said Friday it will look at revving up water deliveries to farmers from California’s Central Valley Project, the largest federal water project in the United States, in what environmental groups called a threat to protections for struggling native salmon and other endangered species. Continue […]

You May Like