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Etihad calls off Niki-TUIfly venture as Air Berlin revamp plan stalls

Etihad calls off Niki-TUIfly venture as Air Berlin revamp plan stalls

June 08, 2017 | 11:17 PM
Etihad, which is still seeking a permanent successor for former chief executive officer James Hogan, is said to be close to hiring banks to advise on options for the Air Berlin stake
Etihad Aviation Group abruptly ended months of negotiations with TUI AG’s German airline TUIfly to develop a joint venture with Austrian carrier Niki, dismantling a project meant to trim operations of affiliate Air Berlin to a viable level.“The goal of the talks between the two companies was to form a strong European leisure airline,” Sebastian Ebel, the executive in charge of TUI operations in German-speaking countries and Poland, said in a statement. “However, Niki is no longer available for a joint venture.”Niki is Air Berlin’s leisure-flight division, and Abu Dhabi-based Etihad paid Germany’s second-largest carrier €300mn ($337mn) in December and January to shift the unit’s operations into the venture with TUIfly. The step was part of a strategy to scale back Air Berlin’s fleet by about half and position the ailing carrier as a pure network airline. As part of that reduction, Air Berlin has already leased 38 narrow-body planes to larger German rival Deutsche Lufthansa.The move may be a prelude for Etihad to sell its 29% stake in Air Berlin as the Gulf carrier rethinks its European holdings after Italian partner Alitalia went into insolvency administration. Etihad, which is still seeking a permanent successor for former chief executive officer James Hogan, is close to hiring banks to advise on options for the Air Berlin stake, including a sale, people familiar said last month. TUIfly’s management told employees yesterday in a letter obtained by Bloomberg that Etihad seems to be seeking prospects for Air Berlin including Niki. Etihad, confirming the breakup of talks, said in a statement that Niki will operate as a separate leisure brand of Air Berlin. The carrier declined to comment further, and Air Berlin also declined to comment.TUI said it will continue developing TUIfly’s long-term prospects, while the Hanover, Germany-based travel company remains open for a partnership or the formation of joint ventures that may help cut airline-industry capacity in the country. Such a move will “make great strategic sense,” it said.
June 08, 2017 | 11:17 PM