Friday, January 15, 2010

DTN News: Financial News TODAY January 15, 2010 ~ JAL Draws On Emergency Funds As Bankruptcy Looms

DTN News: Financial News TODAY January 15, 2010 ~ JAL Draws On Emergency Funds As Bankruptcy Looms *Source: DTN News / Reuters By Mariko Katsumura and Nathan Layne (NSI News Source Info) TOKYO, Japan - January 15, 2010: Japan Airlines Corp (Tokyo:9205.T - News) moved a step closer to bankruptcy on Friday by drawing down $1.6 billion in emergency funding and with the prime minister set to decide when the carrier will start a state-led restructuring. JAL, Asia's largest airline by revenues but with a market value that has collapsed to below that of budget carrier Skymark Airlines (Tokyo:9204.T - News), will file for bankruptcy protection as early as Tuesday, sources have told Reuters, as part of a restructuring being crafted by a state-backed turnaround fund. Transport Minister Seiji Maehara said he would meet Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama on Friday to set "X day," a term widely used by media and bankers working on JAL's restructuring to refer to when it will file for bankruptcy. "We are doing everything possible to reduce anxiety and ensure that X-day will not cause any confusion," Maehara told reporters. JAL, mired in losses and weighed down by about $16 billion in debt, applied in October to the Enterprise Turnaround Initiative Corp of Japan (ETIC), a fund that can draw on government-backed funding to bail out ailing firms. The ETIC is expected to make an official decision next week to support the carrier with public money after it files for what could rank as Japan's sixth-largest bankruptcy. JAL announced on Friday it had procured 145 billion yen ($1.6 billion) in funds remaining from a 200 billion yen credit line provided by the state-owned Development Bank of Japan, indicating it was building up emergency cash. "We are preparing so we can make the necessary outlays when needed," JAL spokesman Satoru Tanaka said. Japan Airlines International, which handles domestic and overseas flights, and JAL Capital, which raises operational funds, are among the units that will also file for bankruptcy and be part of the bailout, a source with knowledge of the matter said. JAL declined to comment. "We expect at least the group's three core companies -- JAL, JAL International and JAL Capital -- to file for bankruptcy protection under the government-led rehabilitation scheme," said Minoru Nakano, an official at bankruptcy research firm Teikoku Databank. "It's also possible that some other restructuring measures will be announced for other smaller units at the same time." Shares of JAL closed down 1 yen at 7 yen, giving it a market value of about $210 million. The stock has lost about $1.8 billion this week amid growing expectations it will file for bankruptcy and be delisted from the Tokyo exchange. The ETIC plans to put about 300 billion yen in fresh capital into JAL after it files for bankruptcy. Its banks, which include the country's top private lenders, have been asked forgive about 350 billion yen in debts, sources have said. JAL's restructuring will include cutting some 15,000 jobs, or roughly a third of its work force, eliminating two dozen more routes and halving the number of subsidiaries through streamlining and asset sales, a source said. The overhaul will be led by Kazuo Inamori, the 77-year old founder of electronics maker Kyocera Corp (Tokyo:6971.T - News), who agreed on Wednesday to replace current chief executive Haruka Nishimatsu. Hilton Worldwide said on Friday that it would take over the management of a JAL hotel in located in Fukuoka in southwestern Japan. Hilton said it would spend $20 million to refurbish the hotel, one of Japan's largest with more than 1,000 rooms. (Additional reporting by Yuko Inoue; Editing by Michael Watson)

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