Jeddah forum proposes new ways to protect KSA trade interests    |    Oil market well-balanced    |    China*s 2012 external financial assets up by 9%    |    ABB set to buy solar firm Power-One for $1bn    |    Oman seeks consolidation in financial sector    |    KL Conference on Islamic Finance 2013    |    Al Baraka Banking Group net income up 11 per cent to $235 million    |    Ihsanoglu Canvasses for Fund on Interaction with foreign Media For The Benefit Of the Muslim World    |    IMF: Recession keeps Italy*s banks at risk    |    Gulf banks* profit up 14.9%    |    Iraq to ship oil to Egypt next April    |    World Bank ready to work with new BRICS bank    |    World Bank ready to work with new BRICS bank    |    Kuwait- S&P upgrades Gulf Bank*s long-term credit rtg to BBB+    |    Kuwait- S&P upgrades Gulf Bank*s long-term credit rtg to BBB+    |    Japanese Cabinet Oks USD139.4b provisional budget    |    EU energy deficit up    |    Bilateral Agreements to complement RTAs    |    Iraqi oil exported to Jordan    |    2nd Arab – Turkish Banking Forum
        
Kuwait*s cabinet backs new law to privatize airline

 image

Kuwait's cabinet approved an amended draft law on Sunday paving the way for the privatization of Kuwait Airways within three years, state-run news agency KUNA reported, after restructuring at the troubled carrier delayed the original plan.

Kuwait's parliament first approved a plan to privatize the loss-making Kuwait Airways Corp (KAC) in 2008, but the process has been repeatedly held up. The committee responsible for the privatization last delayed the plan in October, saying the company would concentrate on restructuring first.

Under the new draft law, which still needs to be approved by the National Assembly, the government still plans to offer a 35 percent stake in the airline to companies on the country's stock exchange and to "specialized" local or international firms, KUNA said.

This auction should happen within the next three years; it quoted Communications Minister Salem al-Athaina as saying.
The stake would go to the highest bidder and the shares would not be allowed to be traded for three years, it said.

The carrier will change its name to Kuwait Airways Company and be a shareholding firm "which would consequently own all assets and properties of KAC," KUNA said.

The government will retain a 20 percent stake, as previously planned, while 5 percent will be distributed to KAC employees "equally and for free," the agency said.

A further 40 percent will be allotted in the same way to citizens registered with the Public Authority for Civil Information, the Kuwaiti body that issues civil identity cards.

They would not be allowed to trade the shares for one year.
The original plan had proposed selling a 40 percent stake to the public. It had also envisioned a price of around $282 million for the 35 percent stake offered to a long-term investor, seen by some analysts as too high. The KUNA story did not give any price estimates.

KAC employees that did not want to work for the new company or be reassigned to the government would be offered a three-year salary pay-off, KUNA said.

Islamic Chamber of Commerce and Industry - الغرفة الأسلامية للتجارة و الصناعة
© 2006 / 2009 All rights reserved