Asiana Airlines, Sale Ultimately Fails... First Company Supported by Kian Fund 100 Days After Launch (Comprehensive)
Industrial Bank and Creditors Prepare Plan B... Contract Termination Notice Soon
If 2 Trillion Won Injected into Kian Fund, Government's Stake Nears Half
[Asia Economy Reporter Jo Gang-wook] The 10-month-long sale process of Asiana Airlines has ultimately ended in a 'no deal,' making it inevitable for the Industrial Stabilization Fund to be injected into Asiana Airlines, whose financial soundness has deteriorated. The creditors, including KDB Industrial Bank, plan to promptly activate 'Plan B,' which places Asiana Airlines under creditor management, and decide on injecting at least around 2 trillion KRW from the Industrial Stabilization Fund. With the failure of the Asiana Airlines sale, it will become the first company to receive support from the Industrial Stabilization Fund, which has been in a 'business suspension' state for 100 days since its launch.
According to the financial sector on the 4th, the creditors have begun preparations to activate Plan B following the sale failure. Even after the final negotiation between Lee Dong-gul, chairman of KDB Industrial Bank, and Chung Mong-gyu, chairman of HDC Hyundai Development Company, HDC Hyundai Construction & Engineering insisted on a re-inspection, leading the creditors to judge that HDC Hyundai Construction & Engineering has no intention to acquire and plan to notify contract termination soon.
Accordingly, if the deal is finally canceled, Asiana Airlines will move under creditor management, and the government is expected to support Asiana Airlines with the Industrial Stabilization Fund. The amount and method of support will be decided by the Fund Operation Deliberation Committee, and the creditors are understood to be considering injecting around 2 trillion KRW from the fund.
As of the first half of this year, Asiana Airlines' total liabilities amounted to 11.5459 trillion KRW, with a debt ratio reaching 2366.1%. The short-term borrowings the company must repay within the next year exceed 2 trillion KRW. The current credit rating is 'BBB-' (under review for uncertainty), the lowest investment grade, which was maintained assuming HDC Hyundai Construction & Engineering's acquisition. Therefore, if the rating drops by just one notch, the asset-backed securities (ABS) trigger based on sales will be activated, requiring immediate repayment of 700 billion KRW. Since the sale failure has become certain, additional support is unavoidable.
Previously, KDB Industrial Bank and the Export-Import Bank of Korea supported Asiana with a total of 1.6 trillion KRW in April last year. This included the purchase of 500 billion KRW worth of perpetual bonds issued by Asiana. Then, in April this year, an additional 1.7 trillion KRW was provided, including the purchase of 300 billion KRW in perpetual bonds. These are convertible bonds, and KDB Industrial Bank and the Export-Import Bank disclosed in early July that they hold 93,991,174 shares and 37,051,827 shares of Asiana Airlines convertible bonds (CB), respectively. Upon conversion to stock, they will secure 26.53% and 10.46% ownership stakes, respectively. The total holding stake is 36.9%, surpassing Kumho Industrial (30.7%), the current major shareholder of Asiana. If 2 trillion KRW from the Industrial Stabilization Fund is injected, the government will acquire about 200 billion KRW worth of Asiana Airlines shares, approximately 10% of the support amount, bringing the total holding stake close to half.
A representative of the Fund Operation Deliberation Committee said, "At the meeting on the 3rd, we established an emergency plan in preparation for the sale failure," adding, "If a deal break is declared to prevent market turmoil, the Industrial Stabilization Fund will be immediately injected." They also added, "The injection scale will be approximately 2 trillion KRW."
Meanwhile, the 40 trillion KRW Industrial Stabilization Fund, which marks its 100th day since launch today, has yet to receive any support applications from large corporations. Although the supported industries were expanded from two to nine, the fund suffered a 'box office flop' reputation, prompting the government to hastily launch a program in early last month to provide a total of 5.5 trillion KRW in funds to period industry partner companies. There are over 2,000 target companies, and the financial situation of partner companies is severe. The government feared early depletion of funds, but the first loan to partner companies was only made on the 31st of the same month. Ultimately, the title of the first large corporation to receive fund support goes to Asiana Airlines, whose sale failed.
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A financial sector official said, "The fact that Asiana Airlines became the first recipient of the Industrial Stabilization Fund due to the failed sale reflects the situation where taxpayers' money was prepared but not properly utilized," adding, "It is necessary to adjust conditions such as lowering interest rates and relaxing the ratio of convertible bonds (CB) and bonds with warrants (BW)."
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