British Airways owner IAG has emerged as the preferred bidder to take over bankrupt Austrian airline Niki, German news agency DPA reported Thursday.

‘In the search for a solution for the insolvent Air Berlin subsidiary, Niki, everything is pointing to a sale to British Airways parent IAG,’ DPA wrote, without revealing its sources.

Niki's insolvency administrator Lucas Floether earlier announced that creditors had agreed to begin final talks with a chosen bidder.

He did not identify the bidder, but IAG -- which also owns Spanish carrier Iberia -- was widely reported to be one of four parties in the running to snap up all or parts of the holiday carrier.

Floether has previously said he wanted a deal to be clinched before the end of the month given Niki's urgent need for fresh funding.

IAG declined to comment when contacted by AFP.

Niki, the Austrian unit of failed Air Berlin, was forced to stop flying on December 14 after Lufthansa dropped plans to buy it because of EU competition concerns.

One of the four bidders for Niki, Austrian former Formula One champion Niki Lauda, told reporters his bid to re-acquire the airline he founded in 2003 had failed.

‘I'm no longer in the race,’ he told Austrian media, predicting that the airline would be dismantled.

‘A sale abroad, as now seems likely, means a break-up (of the airline). This is a tragedy,’ he said.

Germany's Tuifly and Thomas Cook's German subsidiary Condor were understood to be the other two parties interested in scooping up Niki, which employs some 1,000 people.

Niki, whose fleet of around 20 planes served resorts in southern Europe and north Africa, opened insolvency proceedings on December 13 after German giant Lufthansa unexpectedly withdrew its purchase offer.

Niki ceased flying the next day, stranding thousands of passengers.

Lufthansa dropped its interest in acquiring Niki along with large parts of parent company Air Berlin after EU regulators expressed their concerns.

Last Thursday, the European Commission approved Lufthansa's more modest bid to acquire the operations of Air Berlin's LGW unit, comprising some 30 leased aircraft and 800 employees.

While 2017 has been a bruising year for some European airlines -- after the collapse of Air Berlin and Monarch Airlines in the UK, and as Alitalia in Italy went into administration -- IAG has bucked the trend.

The Anglo-Spanish group, owner also of Aer Lingus and budget airline Vueling, has said it expects underlying operating profit to hit 3.0 billion euros ($3.5 billion) in 2017, a 20-percent jump on the year before, thanks to rising demand and falling costs.

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