Sharechat Logo

National calls on govt to "come clean" on Qantas deal

By NZPA

Thursday 18th July 2002

Text too small?
National Party leader Bill English today called on the Government to "come clean" on its plans for Air New Zealand.

Speculation is mounting that Qantas has already done a deal with Air NZ to buy a 25 percent stake off the Government, subject to next week's election result.

"Last week a team of senior Qantas executives, headed by general manager of airline strategy and network Paul Edwards, spent time in the offices of Bell Gully. If they were not doing due diligence, what were they doing?" Mr English said at the launch of National's transport policy in Auckland this morning.

Mr English said the Government owed New Zealand taxpayers an explanation as to what was going on.

"Selling Air NZ to Qantas would marginalise Air NZ to become a regional airline, a minor player in the trans-Tasman and international markets. It will mean higher prices and less services as we lose competition."

A spokesperson for Finance Minister Michael Cullen today dismissed Mr English's calls, saying the Government was not party to any talks between Air NZ and Qantas.

"The Government has made it very clear that it intends to maintain majority ownership of Air NZ for the foreseeable future," the spokesperson told NZPA.

The Government would consider selling a cornerstone minority shareholding to another airline, including Qantas, if Air NZ recommended it, but the deal would need to be approved by Air NZ's board first.

"The procedure has to be that anyone wanting to buy a stake would go to the Air NZ board and negotiate with them. When those negotiations reach finality, the Air NZ board would come to the Government with a formal recommendation. That hasn't happened yet," the spokesperson said.

Air NZ chief executive Ralph Norris last weekend added fuel to speculation that a deal was imminent, saying there were "obvious benefits that may accrue from a well thought out arrangement between the two airlines".

One analyst spoken to by the Dominion Post said Dr Cullen was a keen supporter of the Qantas proposal.

Investment banker Lloyd Morrison, in an e-mail to about 300 sharebrokers this week, said his inquiries indicated that Dr Cullen and Air NZ chairman John Palmer were the driving force behind a Qantas deal.

Mr Morrison's company, Morrison and Co, manages utilities investor Infratil, which owns 66 percent of Wellington International Airport and would stand to lose money if Air NZ and Qantas worked together.

Any deal would have to be approved by competition regulators on both sides of the Tasman -- a process that could take months.

In the meantime, Qantas has applied for a New Zealand air operating certificate and is recruiting seven senior managers for its New Zealand subsidiary Jetconnect.

Qantas spokesperson Michael Sharp said yesterday the Australian carrier remained committed to New Zealand.

Talks between the two carriers were continuing.

"We are in discussions and there is nothing to add at this stage."

  General Finance Advertising    

Comments from our readers

No comments yet

Add your comment:
Your name:
Your email:
Not displayed to the public
Comment:
Comments to Sharechat go through an approval process. Comments which are defamatory, abusive or in some way deemed inappropriate will not be approved. It is allowable to use some form of non-de-plume for your name, however we recommend real email addresses are used. Comments from free email addresses such as Gmail, Yahoo, Hotmail, etc may not be approved.

Related News:

Air NZ plans to raise stake in Virgin Australia to 25.9 percent after gaining approvals
Air NZ keeps balance sheet plump, holds back on dividends as fleet renewal looms
Air New Zealand plans to close Auckland maintenance facility, cut 180 jobs, union says
Air NZ's Safe Air unit cuts 84 jobs in Blenheim as contracts end
Air NZ agrees to settle cartel case, expects earnings at upper end of guidance
Air NZ lifts stake in Virgin Australia to 23 percent , may creep up to 26 percent
Air NZ backs down on challenge to cargo suit against regulator
Air New Zealand reviews Japan flights as decline in yen makes travel more expensive
Ex-Foodstuffs boss Carter to head up Air NZ board
Air NZ shares jump 5.6 percent as airline flags annual earnings to more than double