Israel's El Al Airlines agrees to repay state's COVID loan by year end
						
		 
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		 [September 12, 2022]  By 
		Steven Scheer 
		 
		JERUSALEM (Reuters) - El Al Israel Airlines 
		plans to repay a $45 million loan that it took from the government 
		during the COVID-19 pandemic by the end of the year, under a deal 
		reached between the airline and Finance Ministry, they said on Sunday. 
		 
		The loan was part of a government package to help the airline weather 
		the crisis, in which Israel's borders were closed to foreign tourists 
		for nearly two years, sending revenue and profit at Israel's flag 
		carrier tumbling. 
		 
		The ministry and El Al said the loan repayment would be two years ahead 
		of schedule, but as part of the deal, El Al's planned $62 million share 
		offering would be delayed until April 2023, while the state will advance 
		El Al security payments of $20 million by Dec. 20. 
		 
		El Al, which has reported losses for four years and racked up debt to 
		renew its fleet, laid off 1,900 employees - nearly one-third of its 
		staff - as part of a recovery plan mandated by the government to receive 
		a $210 million aid package at the height of the pandemic. 
		 
		
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			The Israeli flag carrier El Al's airliner carrying Israeli and U.S. 
			delegates lands at Abu Dhabi International Airport, United Arab 
			Emirates August 31, 2020. WAM/Handout via REUTERS. 
            
			
			  
The loan repayment will eliminate or ease a host of spending restrictions on El 
Al and will allow it to update its route network, add staff, lease new aircraft, 
invest in working capital and developing new income channels, it said.  
 
El Al will still not be allowed to pay dividends or buy back its own shares 
until 2028. 
 
"I am sure that the move will lead to improving El Al's ability to grow and deal 
with a competitive market and changing reality," said chief executive Dina Ben 
Tal Ganancia. 
 
(Reporting by Steven Scheer;Editing by Elaine Hardcastle) 
				 
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