Japan Airlines files for bankruptcy
JAL's move to file for bankruptcy protection is one of the country's biggest-ever corporate failures [AFP]
A state-backed corporate turnaround agency said on Tuesday that it received confirmation from the carrier that it had applied for protection from creditors.
The move paves the way for a major government-backed restructuring of the airline, cutting thousands of jobs, closing routes and selling off aircraft as it tries of offload debts estimated at more than $22bn.
In a statement late on Tuesday JAL said its flight operations would not be interrupted as a result of the bankruptcy filing.
The Japanese government has said also that it will do all it can to make sure Asia's largest airline by sales keeps flying.
"The government wants to continue to support JAL to ensure its continued stable and safe operations," Seiji Maehara, the Japanese transport minister, said early on Tuesday ahead of the bankruptcy filing.
Stock plunge
Worries over JAL's future have seen its stock price plunge in recent days, losing more than 90 per cent of its value.
JAL's woes
Japan Airlines was founded in 1951, expanding quickly with Japan's post-war economic recovery and was privatised in 1987.
But it soon became the victim of its own ambitions, and when Japan's property and stock bubble of the 1980s burst it exposed the airline's risky investments in foreign resorts and hotels.
In 1985 the crash of JAL 747 on a domestic flight to Osaka killing 520 people raised questions over the airline's safety.
More recently JAL has been hit by growing pension and payroll costs, and saddled with a sprawling network of unprofitable domestic routes that it has been politically obligated to maintain.
Adding to its troubles, passenger traffic has slowed amid the global economic downturn, swine flu fears, and competition from rival carriers.
By early Tuesday shares in the airline were trading at a record low of just $0.04 as investors jumped ship ahead of the expected bankruptcy.
That left JAL's market value at just $120m, well below the price of just one new Boeing 787 jet.
"The new DPJ government has publicly said that it would tackle the issue of JAL's continuing problems head on and that's what it's done.
"The government providing $3.3bn of emergency funding immediately.
"Emergency loans being made available of up to $6.6bn and that's on top of vast lines of credit that the government had been providing just to keep it running."
Following the bankruptcy proceedings, the restructuring of the airline will be led by a new chief executive – Kazuo Inamori, one of Japan's richest entrepreneurs.
Inamori founded the Kyocera electronics group, as well as Japan's number two mobile phone network, KDDI.
However, he has no experience in the airline industry.
The restructuring plan calls for about 15,600 job cuts, or a third of JAL's workforce, and will require the airline to halve the number of its subsidiaries which span everything from hotels to credit cards.
In turn the government-backed Enterprise Turnaround Initiative Corp will invest about $3.3bn in the carrier, while JAL's main lenders have been asked to write off about $3.8bn in liabilities.
Despite JAL's financial woes, however, the airline remains a prized asset for foreign airlines because of its extensive access to Asian routes.
Recently the Skyteam airline alliance led by Delta airlines has been involved in a fierce tug-of-war trying to woo JAL away from its current membership in the One World group, led by American Airlines and British Airways.
Delta and its Skyteam partners have offered $1bn, including $500m in cash, to lure JAL away from One World.
At the same time American and its partners say they are ready to inject $1.4bn in cash into the Japanese airline, up from a previous $1.1bn offer.
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NEW YORK - BATTERED financial giant Citigroup said on Tuesday it suffered a net loss of US$7.6 billion (S$10.6 billion) in the fourth quarter of 2009, resulting in a full year loss of $1.6 billion.
Citigroup said its fourth quarter revenues were $5.4 billion, or $15.5 billion excluding a repayment of a government bailout loan, down from $20.4 billion in the prior quarter. The quarterly result amounted to a loss of 33 cents a share, in line with forecast by Wall Street analysts.
Citigroup, which is the last of the major money-center banks operating in the shadow of a US government bailout, last month repaid some $20 billion to the authorities. It repurchased preferred shares from a US Treasury investment in the company through the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP), a massive $700 billion effort to stabilise the financial system. But the government still holds a major stake in Citi from having converted some of its investment to common shares.
Citigroup said provision for loan losses in the fourth quarter was $8.2 billion, down 36 per cent from the prior year and 10 per cent from the previous quarter. Chief executive Vikram Pandit said a series of steps were taken to get the 'house in order', citing improved capital strength, reduction in company size and staff, refocused business strategy and overhauling risk management that cut costs by over $13 billion annually.
'As we enter 2010, we are strongly capitalised, significantly more efficient, and are executing on a clear strategy that is focused on clients,' he said.
Mr Pandit said that in the near term, the company would continue to focus on 'sustainable profitability and growth, and supporting the global economic recovery.' John Gerspach, Citigroup's chief financial officer, said although the company remained cautious and continued to monitor the future impacts of its 'loss mitigation' efforts, there were 'indications that credit may be stabilizing or improving, particularly in Asia and Latin America.' -- AFP
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