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		Strike-hit airline SAS files for U.S. bankruptcy protection
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		 [July 05, 2022]  By 
		Anna Ringstrom and Stine Jacobsen 
 STOCKHOLM (Reuters) -Scandinavian airline 
		SAS has filed for bankruptcy protection in the United States to help 
		accelerate restructuring plans, it said on Tuesday, warning strike 
		action by pilots had impacted its financial position and liquidity.
 
 Wage talks between SAS and its pilots collapsed on Monday, triggering a 
		strike that adds to travel chaos across Europe as the peak summer 
		vacation period begins.
 
 That accelerated the airline's decision to file for Chapter 11 
		bankruptcy protection in the United States, the airline's Chief 
		Executive Anko van der Werff said.
 
 "We are confident that this process will enable us to become a stronger 
		and even better airline for our customers, and a much healthier business 
		partner in the years to come," he told a news conference.
 
 Due to the strike, he said, "the date has been brought forward, because 
		the company now needs to be prepared against further liquidity loss".
 
 The work stoppage could cost SAS nearly 100 million Swedish crowns ($10 
		million) per day, a Sydbank analyst calculated, potentially erasing up 
		to half of the airline's cash flow in the initial four to five weeks 
		alone in a worst-case scenario.
 
		
		 
		The company said in a statement it would continue to serve its customers 
		throughout the bankruptcy process, although the pilot strike is 
		grounding roughly half the airline's flights, affecting some 30,000 
		passengers per day. 
 Data from flight tracking website FlightAware showed 232 SAS flights - 
		77% of those scheduled - had been cancelled on Tuesday, while Oslo's 
		Gardermoen airport, one of SAS' hubs, had the world’s highest 
		cancellation rate on the day.
 
 SAS, whose biggest owners are the Swedish and the Danish states, said 
		the purpose of the filing with a U.S. federal court was to accelerate a 
		restructuring plan announced in February.
 
 "Through this process, SAS aims to reach agreements with key 
		stakeholders, restructure the company's debt obligations, reconfigure 
		its aircraft fleet, and emerge with a significant capital injection," 
		SAS said in a statement.
 
 It expects to complete the Chapter 11 process in nine to 12 months, it 
		added. SAS shares, which can be traded as normal during the bankruptcy 
		protection proceedings, were down 9.4% at 0832 GMT.
 
 SLASHING COSTS
 
 During the pandemic, other non-U.S. airlines including Avianca, 
		Aeromexico and Philippine Airlines have used the Chapter 11 process to 
		renegotiate contracts with key suppliers like aircraft lessors while 
		continuing to operate.
 
		
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			View of SAS Airbus A321 and A320neo aircraft at Kastrup Airport 
			parked on the tarmac, after pilots of Scandinavian Airlines went on 
			strike, in Kastrup, Denmark July 4, 2022. TT News Agency/Johan 
			Nilsson via REUTERS 
            
			 
Rival Norwegian Air emerged from bankruptcy protection involving courts in 
Dublin and Oslo last year.
 "It doesn't mean anything for the normal operations. They are trying to repair 
the motor while driving," Sydbank analyst Jacob Pedersen told Reuters of the SAS 
filing.
 
"This is happening because SAS hasn't been able to accomplish the changes 
through negotiations."
 SAS needs to attract new investors and has said that in order to do that it must 
slash costs across the company, including for staff and for leased planes that 
stand idle because of closed Russian airspace and a slow recovery in Asia.
 
 The airline said on Tuesday its assessment was that its cash balance of 7.8 
billion Swedish crowns was sufficient to meet its business obligations in the 
near term.
 
 It said discussions with lenders regarding another $700 million of financing to 
support its operations during the restructuring were "well advanced".
 
 It added however that the strike "has a negative impact on the liquidity and 
financial position of the company and, if prolonged, such impact could become 
material".
 
 Sweden's government has said no to injecting more cash into the carrier, while 
Copenhagen has said it may do so on the condition SAS is able attract new 
investors.
 
 Danish Finance Minister Nicolai Wammen said he had noted SAS' decision to file 
for bankruptcy protection, but did not elaborate further.
 
 Nordnet analyst Per Hansen said the application showed SAS needs a fresh start 
and that it thinks the strike will drag on.
 
 "Chapter 11 protection comes early," he said. "Management and the board want to 
make it absolutely clear for all stakeholders that the situation is very 
serious."
 
 ($1 = 10.3216 Swedish crowns)
 
 (Additional reporting by Johan Ahlander in Stockholm, Essi Lehto in Helsinki, 
Agata Rybska in Gdansk, Jamie Freed in Sydney; Writing by Niklas Pollard; 
Editing by Kim Coghill and Jan Harvey)
 
 
				 
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