VietJet plans
bond sale to finance Airbus orders
An employee walks up a ramp toward a VietJet Air aircraft, operated
by VietJet Aviation Joint Stock Co., at
VietJet Aviation Joint Stock Co.,
The
company will raise $200 million to $300 million as early as the second
quarter and has not decided whether to do it overseas or domestically,
Managing Director Luu Duc Khanh said in an interview in
VietJet,
which featured dancing flight attendants clad in bikinis on an inaugural
route, wants to tap into the growing market of first-time and young air
travelers, pitting it against other low-cost carriers such as AirAsia Bhd.
and Bangkok Airways Co. The bond sale proceeds will help fund the 100 A320
aircraft on order from Airbus SAS, costing about $9 billion, and development
of training and maintenance facilities.
“Our
company mission is to give everybody an opportunity to fly,” Khanh said.
“People often think a low-cost airline would be low quality. We want to
change that. A cheap ticket doesn’t mean poor service.”
The
closely held company posted its second profitable year in 2014, “well above”
the target laid out by shareholders, Khanh said. The airline forecasts
revenue of 13.8 trillion dong this year, compared with 8.1 trillion dong in
2014.
The
Hanoi-based carrier set up VietJet Air Cargo Co. in November and will lease
two cargo planes this year to meet rising domestic demand, Khanh said. Air
cargo transport rose 18 percent to 905,000 tons of goods in
IPO plan
VietJet
wants to raise about $800 million this year from the corporate bonds
issuance, the public offering and loans, Khanh said. He said last May that
the company aims to raise $500 million in its public debut.
“It’s a
good time for us to sell bonds as borrowing costs are now reasonable in the
international markets and Vietnam’s credit rating has improved,” Khanh said.
The
company now plans to hold its IPO in the fourth quarter, he said. VietJet’s
IPO would follow Vietnam Airlines lackluster stake sale last year in which it
raised $51 million selling a 3.5 percent stake.
The
benchmark stock index rose 0.4 percent as of 10:28 a.m. in
Market gains
The
airline served about 6 million passengers last year, a doubling from 2013,
Khanh said. It expects passenger numbers to rise as much as 70 percent this
year with new routes to
According
to CAPA-Center for
Aviation’s data, state-owned Vietnam Airlines Corp., leads at 54 percent of
domestic capacity, giving it the largest domestic market share among the main
flag carriers in
Competing
in the international market is VietJet’s biggest challenge, Brendan Sobie,
chief analyst for CAPA-Center for
Aviation in
“Their
brand is unknown outside
VietJet
has delayed plans to start flying to
First-time flyers
For
now, VietJet is gaining market share by winning over first-time flyers who
would otherwise travel to domestic destinations by car or train, said Khanh.
At least 30 percent of passengers are first-time flyers, he said. The airline
makes sure fares can compete with rail services, he said. A flight between
The
company has had to teach new travelers flying etiquette, as in
On
VietJet, passengers are instructed to use airsickness bags to dispose of used
chewing gum as part of the security instructions before takeoff. Many new
travelers don’t lock lavatory doors and flight attendants are trained to direct
traffic flow in and out of bathrooms to avoid mishaps, he said.
The
company has appealed to young travelers with unusual in-flight entertainment.
It was fined $1,000 by the Vietnamese government for the stunt with
bikini-clad flight attendants because it hadn’t received prior approval,
Khanh said.
“If our
clients tell us they want more bikini shows in the air, we’ll give it to
them,” Khanh said. “We want to be the affordable, fun airline.”
Bloomberg
|
Thứ Hai, 26 tháng 1, 2015
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