A Boeing 737 aircraft operated by SpiceJet approaches to land at Chhatrapati Shivaji International Airport in Mumbai. SpiceJet is planning to order new planes after co-founder Ajay Singh rescued the company from the verge of shutdown last year.

Bloomberg
Dubai



Indian budget carrier SpiceJet Ltd, which has surged more than 280% this year, said it’s received interest from Gulf airlines looking to acquire a stake.
“Some of the Gulf airlines have expressed an interest in SpiceJet as we have come back into the market, but this is not the right time to be diluting the equity,” chairman Ajay Singh said in Dubai yesterday, without naming the companies. “There is some dialogue which is ongoing and we continue to explore other types of relationships we could have,” he said, adding now isn’t the right time to sell a stake as the shares remain undervalued.
Gulf carriers including Abu Dhabi-based Etihad Airways and Qatar Airways have acquired stakes in airlines to quickly expand their networks. Etihad has stakes in eight companies, while Qatar Airways said earlier this month that it was interested in boosting its 10% holding in British Airways parent International Consolidated Airlines Group and taking up to 49% of Indian budget carrier IndiGo.
SpiceJet is planning to order new planes after co-founder Singh rescued the company from the verge of shutdown last year. After reporting a profit for the past three quarters, the airline is planning to finalise an order for over 150 single-aisle jets from either Boeing Co or Airbus Group during the current financial year, which ends March 31, Singh said. The company is also planning an additional order of up to 50 regional jets and is in talks with suppliers including Bombardier Inc, he said.
“Spicejet is generating enough cash internally to sustain those orders,” said Singh. “If we need to raise any money to fund those orders, which looks unlikely at this time, there are enough unutilised credit lines available to us.”
New aircraft would be used to open new routes and increase the frequency of flights to existing destinations, he said. SpiceJet currently has 25 Boeing 737 jets, two Airbus planes, and 14 Bombardier aircraft and flies to 40 destinations, including the Maldives, Dubai and Sri Lanka and 34 domestic locations.