Lufthansa warns of threat to its $10 billion bailout
deal
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[June 17, 2020] By
Ilona Wissenbach
FRANKFURT (Reuters) - German airline
Lufthansa <LHAG.DE> warned on Wednesday that it might need to apply for
protection from creditors if its state-backed bailout deal failed to win
sufficient support at a shareholder vote on June 25.
Its statement came after German billionaire Heinz Hermann Thiele
criticised the 9 billion euro ($10.1 billion) bailout, saying he had
raised his stake in Lufthansa to over 15% and hoped alternative options
could be explored.
In an interview with the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (FAZ) newspaper,
Lufthansa's biggest shareholder said he was not satisfied with the deal
that gives the German government a 20% stake in Lufthansa and two seats
on its supervisory board.
Like the rest of the airline sector, Lufthansa has been hard hit by what
is expected to be a protracted travel slump due to the coronavirus
pandemic, forcing it to seek the bailout.
Lufthansa said its executive board expected the attendance at its June
25 virtual general meeting to vote on the deal to be under 50%, which
would mean two-thirds of those present would need to vote in favour.
"The board considers it possible that the stabilisation package could
fail to achieve the two-thirds majority of votes cast," it said.
Lufthansa said it might possibly have to apply for protective shield
proceedings under insolvency law a few days after the meeting if no
other solution is found immediately.
Under German protective shield proceedings, a company's management
remains in charge and gets up to three months to come up with a survival
plan.
German Finance Minister Olaf Scholz said after Thiele's comments that he
was not worried the deal could collapse and he was "very pleased" with
the agreement, urging shareholders to approve it.
Thiele, who is honorary chairman of Knorr-Bremse <KBX.DE>, declined to
comment on Lufthansa's statement, a spokeswoman for the German brake
manufacturer said.
Lufthansa shares were up 1.3% at 1115 GMT after it was disclosed that
Thiele now had a 15.5% stake.
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A woman wearing a protective mask walks past a Lufthansa logo at the
airport in Frankfurt, Germany, March 22, 2020, as the spread of the
coronavirus disease (COVID-19) continues. REUTERS/Kai Pfaffenbach
'COMPLETELY IRRESPONSIBLE'
"The German government has taken a high-risk bet. Its wish for the
government to take a direct stake in Lufthansa is putting the jobs of
hundreds of thousands of Lufthansa employees at risk. It's completely
irresponsible," said Michael Theurer, a senior member of the opposition
Free Democrats (FDP).
Vanessa Golz, who covers Lufthansa for investment fund Deka, which owns
0.9% of the airline, said there was no question it needed a bailout and
time was pressing.
"If the position of the shareholders can be improved, this is to be
welcomed, but with a sense of proportion. The task now is to draw up a
future concept for a 'new Lufthansa' as quickly as possible. Otherwise
there are only losers: Lufthansa employees, the taxpayer and the
shareholders," she said.
Lufthansa shareholders must register to attend the virtual shareholder
meeting by June 20 and if more than 50% attend, a simple majority would
suffice, the airline said.
As of June 4, 85% of Lufthansa's shareholders were based in Germany.
Thiele, who declined to tell FAZ whether he would vote against the deal,
said an indirect government participation via German state-owned
development bank KfW could be an alternative to an outright stake.
Under the deal, the government could raise its stake to 25% plus one
share in the event of a takeover attempt and the airline must transfer
up to 24 takeoff and landing slots in Frankfurt and Munich to rivals.
With many of its planes grounded because of the pandemic, Lufthansa said
on Monday it was seeking to strike agreements with worker
representatives by June 22 on how to make job cuts equivalent to 22,000
full-time positions.
(Reporting by Michelle Martin in Berlin, Ilona Wissenbach in Frankfurt
and Joern Poltz in Munich; Editing by Keith Weir and David Clarke)
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