From the BBC:
“Cornonavirus: Crisis-hit Virgin
Atlantic files for bankruptcy”
Virgin Atlantic has filed for
bankruptcy in the US as the global aviation industry feels the impact of the
coronavirus pandemic. The UK-based airline is seeking protection under chapter
15 of the US bankruptcy code, which allows a foreign debtor to shield assets in
the country. It is the second Virgin-branded airline to struggle this year.
Virgin Australia went into administration in April. Meanwhile, Virgin
Australia's new owner Bain Capital is set to cut 3,000 jobs. Virgin Atlantic's
US bankruptcy court filing said it had negotiated a deal with stakeholders
"for a consensual recapitalization" that will get debt off its
balance sheet and "immediately position it for sustainable long-term
growth". The move comes less than a month after the company said it had
agreed a rescue deal worth £1.2bn ($1.6bn) to secure its future beyond the
coronavirus crisis. Under that plan Richard Branson's Virgin Group injected
£200m, with additional funds provided by investors and creditors. The
billionaire Virgin boss had a request for UK government money rejected, leaving
the airline in a race against time to secure new investment. The US filing is
tied to a separate action filed in a British court, where Virgin Atlantic
obtained approval on Tuesday to convene meetings of affected creditors to vote
on the plan on 25 August. In May, Virgin Atlantic, which is 51% owned by Virgin
Group and 49% by US airline Delta, announced that it would cut more than 3,000
jobs in the UK and close its operation at Gatwick airport.
Virgin Australia cuts Meanwhile, Virgin Australia's new owner,
the US private equity group Bain Capital, said it will cut 3,000 jobs, which is
about a third of the airline's employees. The turnaround plan for Australia's
second largest airline will also see it retire the budget brand Tigerair. "Working
with Bain Capital, we will accelerate our plan to deliver a strong future in a
challenging domestic and global aviation market," Virgin Australia's chief
executive Paul Scurrah said. In April, Virgin Australia went into voluntary
administration, making it Australia's first big corporate casualty of the
coronavirus pandemic. The following month it was bought by Bain Capital, which
said it supported the airline's current management team and its turnaround plan
for the business. Bain also promised a "significant injection of
capital" that would help Virgin Australia recapitalise and retain
thousands of jobs. Carriers around the world are struggling as they deal with
the severe plunge in air travel caused by the coronavirus pandemic. The
International Air Transport Association warned in June that the slump will
drive airline losses of more than $84bn (£64bn) this year.
^ I feel bad they were a good
airline - especially their Premium Economy Service - which was a separate cabin
unlike most airlines. We flew on them 4 times roundtrip and were willing to
deal with the hell-hole chaos that is London-Heathrow even when we weren't
going to the UK for our trip (like to Kuwait and Croatia.) ^
https://www.bbc.com/news/business-53659844
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