Modi's divestment plans hit rough waters with Air India

Centre had announced a plan in March to divest a 76 per cent stake in Air India and offload about $5.1 billion of its debt.

Update: 2018-05-31 19:26 GMT
The privatisation of loss-making Air India has hit a roadblock at the starting line-up itself.

New Delhi: India’s offer to sell a stake in Air India failed to draw a single bid by the Thursday deadline, underlining the challenges it faces in fixing the debt-laden state carrier and meeting a broader target of stake sales in government-held firms.

Centre had announced a plan in March to divest a 76 per cent stake in Air India and offload about $5.1 billion of its debt.

The ministry of civil aviation said on Twitter on Thursday evening that it had received no bids, adding its next move on the stake sale would be decided “appropriately”.

Selling the state carrier had been seen as key to Modi’s plans to divest assets and help keep the fiscal deficit at 3.3 percent of GDP, a goal already under pressure from giveaways to farmers and other welfare benefits ahead of a national election in 2019.

Renu Kohli, a Delhi-based independent economist, said the government would now need to step up elsewhere to meet its divestment target. “Relative to what we are seeing this year ... uncertainty in the financial markets, aggravated distress among banks and rising interest rates and oil prices, it does not seem like a very supportive time for people to come and buy such an asset,” Kohli said, adding that Air India needed large investment.

The government may look to raise a record Rs 1 lakh crore  from the sale of state assets in the current fiscal year that started on April 1, and Air India was expected to be a significant contributor.

While the government had not set any minimum price, sources had told Reuters the sale could have fetched between Rs 80 billion and Rs 100 billion.

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