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JAT's inter-city bus service
Belgrade - Niš, 1980s

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State yet to issue corona aid to Air Serbia

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The Serbian Minister for Construction, Transport and Infrastructure, Zorana Mihajlović, has said the state is yet to issue aid to Air Serbia to cover the losses incurred during the ongoing coronavirus pandemic but noted it would do so after Air Serbia completes talks with its partners. “Even though we have approved it, we still haven’t issued any financial aid to Air Serbia. The carrier is in talks with its partners. Once those are complete, we will, of course, as the state do our part. There is no doubt that we will help, as it is being done around the world. The EU itself is suggesting for governments to help their national carriers”, Ms Mihajlović said, without specifying the amount that would be provided to the airline.

The Serbian government had previously said it would offer wide-ranging support for its national carrier. The Minister for Finance, Siniša Mali, noted it would assist Air Serbia with the repayment of two loans, valued 52.9 million US dollars and 63 million dollars, labelling the airline as being of national interest. The company will see the first of the two loans mature this month. Mr Mali said, “We are negotiating with the creditors. While I can’t reveal the contents of those talks, I can say that we will certainly help Air Serbia. We are working towards resolving this problem together with our partners at Etihad Airways”.

For its part, Air Serbia has said it was developing several business scenarios for the coming years but noted it was difficult to make concrete plans when travel conditions are unknown and constantly changing. The company is undertaking a number of cost saving measures in order to alleviate the effects of the Covid-19 pandemic, including rationalising its fleet and renegotiating aircraft leasing terms. It launched a program entitled “Deliver” back in March, aimed at reducing capital investments and services which are not of vital importance for the company. “This continues to significantly contribute to the company’s liquidity. Furthermore, the company has used the suspension of slot rules in Europe and the United States, as well as its primary markets, to secure the same slots for 2021”, Air Serbia said. The Serbian carrier has secured credit lines from commercial banks up until December 31 and has deferred deposit requests from several airports. Based on its financial report, Air Serbia was the beneficiary of 19.7 million euros in donations last year.

September 25, 2020
Air Serbia Covid-19 Feature serbia
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Comments

  1. Anonymous09:02

    I'm wondering how many hundreds of millions of euros this aid will amount to.

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    1. Anonymous09:05

      Probably less than what some smaller and less useful airlines got.

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    2. Anonymous09:24

      Absolutely everyone is getting it. Even LCCs.

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    3. Anonymous09:28

      Most airlines got aid in the form of loans which will have to be paid back. Not direct financial assistance.

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    4. Anonymous09:32

      @9.24 Wizz Air and easyjet are receiving aid?

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    5. Anonymous09:39

      Easy jet has received a £600 million coronavirus loan from UK Treasury and Bank.

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    6. Anonymous09:43

      Well like I said they are receiving loans. Quite different from what Air Serbia will get.

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    7. Anonymous09:45

      Do you really believe that OU will repay its "loan"? Sure.

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    8. Anonymous09:46

      Non-EU Airlines among which is JU didn't get loans because they don't have to my friend. You are competing frogs to grandmothers.

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    9. Anonymous10:37

      The UK loans are based on credit rating, any company (not only airlines) could get it, if they are investment-graded. Your typical basket-case national airline isn't.

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  2. Anonymous09:05

    If they are operating normally without aid it means that their revenue streams aren't that bad at the moment

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    1. Anonymous09:06

      Who knows how much the government gave them but they don't count it as aid. Probably hidden subsidies.

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    2. Anonymous09:15

      Good, as long as they keep uninterrupted operations.

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    3. Anonymous09:35

      If the banks were willing to issue them credit lines, then it means there finances are in good shape.

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    4. Anonymous09:53

      True. If they were able to secure credit lines it means banks are generally satisfied with their finances and ability to pay off debt, contrary to what people write in the comments here.

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    5. Anonymous10:43

      It could also be the case that the government is acting as a guarantor for the loans.

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  3. Anonymous09:10

    Good to see the airline is taking some concrete action with its finances.

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  4. Anonymous09:10

    I'm interested to see what all this will mean for the Air Serbia-Etihad partnership.

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    1. Anonymous09:17

      I'm guessing the outcome of that is what the government is waiting for too.

      "The carrier is in talks with its partners."

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    2. Anonymous09:21

      I'm still hoping it won't get nationalised.

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    3. Anonymous09:42

      For now, it seems Etihad is staying.

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    4. Anonymous09:43

      The government said that will depend on whether EY covers part of the corona losses.

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    5. Anonymous09:47

      You can't nationalise something that's already national.

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  5. Anonymous09:21

    I fear much more state involvement in the airline after this is over.

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  6. Anonymous09:22

    They deserve this aid.

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    1. Anonymous09:23

      Why?

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    2. Anonymous09:25

      They brought people stuck around the world home free of charge throughout the lockdowns and brought essential cargo to the country on a daily basis. Reason enough.

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  7. Anonymous09:23

    Now is the best time to change planes. I am sure it was never cheaper to acquire planes then at the moment.

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    1. Anonymous09:34

      From what money?

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    2. Anonymous09:35

      Let me remind you that they can't repay the Etihad Partners loan.

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    3. Anonymous09:38

      Now would be the time for market consolidation, perhaps for some airline to merge in the region or form partnerships. But this is the Balkans so that would be a miracle.

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    4. Anonymous10:38

      I don't see many mergers happening at the moment. Airlines with good balance sheets will just bet on smaller airlines collapsing, so they can take the market without much competition.

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  8. Anonymous09:23

    Considering how many airlines are getting state aid it makes sense.

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  9. Anonymous09:24

    My guess is the government will invest 100 million in Air Serbia.

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    1. Anonymous09:27

      Double or triple more of that.

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    2. Anonymous09:47

      +1000

      At least half a million to secure funding until March 2021. Don't forget they have a debt to pay.

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    3. Anonymous09:47

      You are really not realistic. 300, 400 mil? LOOL

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    4. Anonymous09:52

      Do you mean half a million or half a billion? @anon 9.47

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    5. Anonymous10:18

      Half a billion at least if not 650 million. The airline needs this cash badly.

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    6. Anonymous10:41

      I believe it will be between 650 and 988,74 million

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    7. Anonymous10:57

      Not sure if about 1 billion, but at least half a billion for sure. BT doesn't have that high debt compared to JU nor do its aircraft require high maintenance costs but the EC approved a €250 million aid:

      https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/en/ip_20_1274

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    8. Anonymous11:11

      Talking about BT

      https://news.err.ee/979989/air-baltic-continues-to-make-losses-but-still-flies-on

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    9. Anonymous12:37

      Anon 10:57
      But JU did not ordered 50 aircraft in past 7 years and it did not replace all older aircraft in the fleet wit brand new ones. And BT has 5 mil. passengers while JU 2.8 million.

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    10. Anonymous16:53

      These are really massive amounts we are talking about.

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    11. Anonymous16:54

      People are really forgetting 1 thing when they discuss aid. They say as if the Serbian government will cover the entire value of both loans which is simply not true.

      First the government said that talks are being held with the creditors and Etihad. It is likely that Etihad will cover some of the loan. Also the loan is being renegotiated. That means a certain amount may be reduced and payments might be deffered.

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    12. Anonymous17:40

      Exactly. Let's see what the outcome of the talks with EA partners is.

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    13. Anonymous17:44

      So despite Etihad said no, Serbian Goverment will negotiate with them until they say yes?

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    14. Reply
  10. Anonymous09:27

    Good luck Air Serbia!

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    1. Anonymous17:41

      They are lucky they have the government on their side.

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  11. Anonymous09:34

    Very bleak times ahead. That's for sure.

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    1. Anonymous09:41

      They will pull through this.

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  12. Anonymous09:41

    It's going to be a difficult year.

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    1. Anonymous09:42

      You don't say...

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    2. Anonymous09:47

      Winter is coming...

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    3. Anonymous09:51

      lol

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    4. Anonymous09:52

      That was my line dude... Lol

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  13. Anonymous09:47

    If EU companies can get possibility to receive money why not Air Serbia?


    ReplyDelete
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    1. Anonymous09:52

      But they will have to repay that money.

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    2. Anonymous10:38

      You must be kidding.

      I am really currious to see how OU will repay 33 mil EUR they got before pandemic (dec 2019+jan 2020) + huge Government help for this year.

      Fairy tales.

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    3. Anonymous12:40

      Case by case. Depends what is deal like. LH got 9 billion from goverment for 20 % of shares. But LH will need to give back money to gov while gov will exit from shareholding position.

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    4. Anonymous17:05

      I doubt OS can repay it's aid.

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    5. Anonymous17:45

      It can because it is 100% owned by LH.

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    6. Anonymous17:54

      But OU isn't.

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    7. Anonymous22:18

      Probably it will, but in period of like 10 years probably. Depends what is aid like and what EU thinks its legal.

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  14. Anonymous09:56

    Ouch

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  15. Bel Cielo 10:04

    I'm just wondering for how long some airlines will be considered as national interest! This is getting so outdated!

    ReplyDelete
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    1. Anonymous10:13

      But they are...

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    2. Anonymous10:40

      More countries have national airlines than own their food supply chain. Which do you think is more important for everyday life?

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    3. Anonymous12:51

      Maybe countries do not own food shops, but they own some food factories.

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  16. Anonymous10:13

    JU will be ok in the long run.

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  17. Anonymous10:14

    Have the salaries of pilots and crew that are working in Air Serbia be effected?

    ReplyDelete
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    1. Anonymous10:14

      And are there any plans to reduce the workforce?

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  18. Anonymous10:14

    The travel restrictions must be having a big impact on their bottom line unfortunately.

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    1. Anonymous10:20

      It's having a big impact on every single airline in the world...

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    2. Anonymous17:39

      Few airlines have most of their core markets banning their primary passengers from entry.

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  19. Anonymous10:14

    Good luck to every Ex-Yu-Airline in this crisis! Hopefully everybody will survive this!

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    1. Anonymous17:39

      They will. But I don't think the problem will be surviving this initial period. I think problems will come up in 3-5 years, in the aftermath of corona.

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  20. Anonymous10:34

    in the west they need official gov statements for this here we do it secretely or we dont report it at all and put it down in the year report

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    1. Anonymous16:52

      Really? Has Alitalia paid off any state aid it received in the last 15 years?

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  21. Anonymous10:39

    Good news are that JU is extending charter season! Well done!

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    1. Anonymous16:51

      They are?

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    2. Anonymous16:52

      ^ Yes

      https://www.exyuaviation.com/2020/09/air-serbia-extends-charter-operations.html

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    3. Anonymous16:58

      Oh I missed that. Good news. Thank you.

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    4. Anonymous17:38

      It's no surprise that their manager said the other day in the article here that leisure travellers were returning to the skies first.

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  22. Petar Čelik10:48

    - it looks like53+63= 116mil USD will probably be restructured, and will be a long term problem in years to come

    - we all know that JU cannot create cash flow to finance the return of these loans, so it would be nice for government to pay these while everyone has a COVID excuse for subsidies, but:
    a) is there money in the budget for this? probably no
    b) saudis surely wont pay, so will the serbian stake in the airline increase and by how much? also, it would be fun to see which magician in Big4 would be willing to sign this evaluation.
    this is a big question in future shareholder relations. company requires constant subsidies, but 49% owner doesn't bother to give 1 cent

    so unless problems with EY are solved and money is found in the budget can will just be kicked down the road for our 2025 government to deal with

    - also, current 2020 missing cash is probably something like ~50mil USD

    - plus you will need something like 20mil USD to shove in JU yearly (

    ==========================

    problems when not treated are becoming monsters

    ReplyDelete
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    1. Anonymous11:04

      Saudis?

      It can't be true....

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    2. Anonymous13:13

      Those questions for Air Serbia, why not ask their Head of sales while at it?

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  23. Anonymous16:55

    This is more than expected and the losses will be seen by all airliners.

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  24. Anonymous16:55

    Wasn't the government talking about adding an extra plane supposedly for long haul flights? What happened to that.

    ReplyDelete
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    1. Anonymous17:35

      Well let's wait and see.

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    2. Anonymous17:48

      It was just one more episode of "Jatovanje" where goverment thinks they know something about the aviation but actually they have no clue. Maybe someone remebers that lady from ministry who said for the news how JU should continue JFK route to Mexico City.

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    3. Anonymous18:49

      ¿Does the current Serbia-US agreement allow fifth freedom flights JFK-MEX?

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    4. Anonymous20:53

      Why not?

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    5. Anonymous00:20

      Yes it does

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    6. Anonymous00:21

      @17.48 It was the lady that quoted in this article :D

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  25. Anonymous16:57

    The measures the airline has taken seem to be good. It is still flying a relatively respectable network of 30 destinations from BEG, it has managed to secure better slots for next year, reduce airport costs, respond quickly to any new market opportunity (OSL) and increase flights as soon as circumstances permit (Montenegro, Switzerland, Cyprus). On top of that, like we saw in trip reports, they have not eliminated on board service. So all in all I would say good for them.

    ReplyDelete
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    1. Anonymous17:35

      +1

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    2. Anonymous17:57

      Don't forget the success they have in JFK these days!

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  26. Anonymous20:52

    Good archive photo.

    ReplyDelete
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