HDC's Asiana Acquisition Delayed to H2 amid Pandemic | Be Korea-savvy

HDC’s Asiana Acquisition Delayed to H2 amid Pandemic


This file photo shows HDC's company logo and Asiana Airlines' planes at a local airport. (Yonhap)

This file photo shows HDC’s company logo and Asiana Airlines’ planes at a local airport. (Yonhap)

SEOUL, June 26 (Korea Bizwire)HDC Hyundai Development Co.’s planned acquisition of Asiana Airlines Inc. has been delayed to the second half due to the new coronavirus’ impact on the airline industry, industry sources said Friday.

In December, the HDC-Mirae Asset Daewoo consortium signed a deal to acquire the country’s second-biggest airline from Kumho Asiana Group, with a plan to complete the acquisition by June 27.

Early this month, Asiana’s main creditor Korea Development Bank (KDB) demanded that the HDC-led consortium notify the state lender of its intent to complete the deal by the initially scheduled date.

In response, HDC called for renegotiations with Asiana creditors over the acquisition terms, describing the ongoing virus crisis as a “never expected and very negative factor” that will affect its planned acquisition of Asiana Airlines.

HDC also cited snowballing debts of the airline as another reason for renegotiations, noting that debts are “damaging the acquisition value of the carrier.”

Asiana’s debts jumped by 4.5 trillion won from July last year to March this year, and its debt-to-equity ratio skyrocketed by 16,126 percent during the same period.

HDC has demanded renegotiations with the KDB through written documents, but the policy bank asked the company to hold face-to-face talks. The two sides have yet to set the date for renegotiations.

“We once again sent a letter to HDC last week to ask the company to have a face-to-face meeting to discuss the renegotiations. But we haven’t received any response from the company yet,” a KDB spokesman said over the phone.

On Thursday, KDB Chairman Lee Dong-gull and HDC Chairman Chung Mong-gyu met to discuss the acquisition, the KDB spokesman said without elaborating.

Lee reportedly persuaded Chung to make a decision to acquire Asiana and said the KDB will provide a wide range of financial support to help HDC ride out the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.

HDC has reiterated its plan to acquire Asiana, dismissing speculation that it may have difficulties in taking over the company due to the economic fallout from the coronavirus outbreak.

A large model airplane in the lobby of Asiana Airlines' headquarters in Gangseo Ward, western Seoul. (Yonhap)

A large model airplane in the lobby of Asiana Airlines’ headquarters in Gangseo Ward, western Seoul. (Yonhap)

Regulators in the United States, China, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Turkey and South Korea approved HDC’s planned takeover of Asiana. Russia is the only remaining country that is still reviewing the integration.

HDC and Kumho Asiana Group will have six more months to close the deal by Dec. 27 as HDC has to receive approval from all countries to which it flies, the KDB spokesman said.

The HDC consortium signed the deal to acquire a 30.77 percent stake in Asiana from Kumho Industrial Co., a construction unit of Kumho Asiana Group, as well as new Asiana shares to be issued and Asiana’s six affiliates, for 2.5 trillion won (US$2.2 billion).

Asiana has suspended most of its flights on international routes as more than 180 countries have strengthened entry restrictions amid virus fears this year.

As a result, its net losses for the January-March quarter deepened to 683.26 billion won from 89.18 billion won a year earlier.

To help Asiana stay afloat, the country’s two state lenders — the KDB and the Export-Import Bank of Korea — plan to inject a combined 1.7 trillion won into Asiana.

Last year, the two banks extended a total of 1.6 trillion won to the cash-strapped carrier.

In its latest self-help plans, Asiana has had all of its 10,500 employees take unpaid leave for 15 days a month since April until business circumstances normalize.

Asiana’s executives have also agreed to forgo 60 percent of their wages, though no specific time frame was given for how long the pay cuts will remain in effect.

(Yonhap)

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