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The $40 billion jet buying spree - IndiGo's big bet

By Tommy Wilkes and Tim Hepher

NEW DELHI/PARIS (Reuters) - Almost four years ago a handful of people gathered in Airbus sales chief John Leahy's spacious country house outside Toulouse and argued long into the evening over curry and cigars.

Last weekend they met up again at a Parisian hotel for more haggling, with breaks taken at a nearby cafe where the informality of old business friendships mingled with hard-nosed negotiations typical of the aircraft industry.

The sum total of money discussed over these meals? About $40 billion at catalogue prices, and the bill was for 430 jets, all sold to the same Indian airline -- IndiGo, the low-cost carrier which has grown to become the country's biggest airline in eight years of operating.

Represented according to insiders by co-founder Rakesh Gangwal and President Aditya Ghosh, IndiGo has now made aircraft industry history twice in four years -- each time by placing record orders for Airbus planes, including last Wednesday's announcement that it will buy 250 A320neo jets.

The largest order in India's aviation history is IndiGo's most aggressive bet yet that Indian air travel is on the cusp of a huge expansion, and that the model that made it the nation's only profitable carrier will keep working as competition intensifies.

"IndiGo is showing us the level of confidence it has in its own sustainability, in the long-term growth of aviation and in the future performance of the Indian economy," said Harsh Vardhan, chairman at Delhi-based Starair Consulting.

Airline industry executives are hoping India's weak economy will rebound under new Prime Minister Narendra Modi and that the government will press for cuts to jet fuel tax and build more airports, slashing costs and opening up new markets.

Higher disposable incomes, an expanding middle class and rapid urbanisation have made India one of the world's fastest-growing domestic aviation markets, where passenger numbers are expected to grow by more than 75 percent in the next six years to exceed 217 million.

According to Airbus executive vice-president and the president of its India operations Kiran Rao, optimism about growth in Indian aircraft demand is rising.

But few airlines have translated that optimism into new orders on the scale of IndiGo's since most are losing money.

"People are too focused on India’s negatives. IndiGo is aware of the challenges and it is adept at steering itself around them. That is how it became India's largest carrier," said one source familiar with the airline's thinking.

"There is, however, a great deal of optimism about the future within the airline and that comes right from the top."

Ghosh told Reuters last week India was a "highly underpenetrated market" and that a lot of the new planes would be for growth rather than replacing older aircraft.

STAYING IN PROFIT

Despite more Indians flying, fierce competition and high costs have left airlines including SpiceJet , Jet Airways and state-run Air India losing cash fast. The sector will lose up to $1.4 billion more this financial year, according to consultancy CAPA.

Privately held, IndiGo does not disclose its full accounts but is the only major Indian carrier which says it is profitable. It reported a sixfold rise in net profit to 7.87 billion rupees ($128 million) in the 2012-13 financial year, and has since expanded its market share to about 32 percent.

Founded in 2006 by travel entrepreneur Rahul Bhatia and Gangwal, a former chief executive of U.S. Airways and an old hand in executing game-changing aircraft orders, IndiGo has relied almost entirely on the sale and leaseback model to fuel its growth.

IndiGo buys a single line of planes in bulk at discounts, and then sells them to leasing companies around the time they are delivered, leasing the planes back and retiring the aircraft within six years to avoid depreciation and maintenance costs.

This keeps capital costs low and its balance sheet light, and is a strategy some analysts say hands it up-front cash to meet operating costs and tips it into profitability as rivals succumb to losses.

"IndiGo is also a good customer and in a good cashflow position, which means that there is little chance of default. In India IndiGo is probably the best customer for lessors," said one person familiar with the leasing negotiations.

IndiGo denies that the sale and leaseback model is the reason it makes money, and instead points to an advertising budget which is less than 1 percent of revenues, the fast turnaround of its fleet and its high level of seat sales as a proportion of capacity compared with its rivals.

The airline says it will also stick to the standard low-cost operator's strategy of flying a single type of narrowbody plane within India and to a handful of overseas destinations.

COMPETITION AND AMBITION

IndiGo's ascent is not without its risks, however.

An end to the era of cheap borrowing to finance its plane orders would raise its costs, and should India's fragile economic recovery wilt IndiGo would be left facing delivery of 250 Airbus planes from 2018 that it would struggle to fill.

Increased competition in a notoriously cut-throat Indian market plagued by overcapacity could throw up the biggest hurdle to IndiGo's ambitions, analysts say.

Once-profitable airlines like Jet, which went from market leader in the 1990s to today's sprawling international carrier, have turned loss-making in the last two years as fares fell faster than they could cut costs.

Meanwhile Malaysia-based budget carrier AirAsia launched its first Indian flight in June, bringing in an airline which manages to operate with one of the lowest unit costs per kilometre flown in the industry. AirAsia India did not respond to requests for comment on IndiGo.

"The biggest risk for IndiGo is how the competition behaves, whether AirAsia and others respond more aggressively now," said Starair's Vardhan.


The $40 billion jet buying spree - IndiGo's big bet| Reuters
 
With this deal,
Indigo will have more aircrafts than rest of the airlines in South Asia combined. Infact this deal could Boast Indigo's Market share from 32% at present to 55% by 2020, not to mention the fact that It will have the second biggest Airwing after IAF in South asia, :D
 
good....shows that indian economy is rebounding
 
I share the optimism, however not much importance should be given to this deal:

- Indigo's business model relies heavily on 'lease buy back', this was one of the major reasons it claims to have avoided loss in past few years even when almost every entity in sky was flying in red. In simpler words Indigo sells the aircraft as soon as it acquires it, pockets the premium (as there is wait period for these NEO babies) and then leases the aircraft back into service. I won't get into detailed long term advantages/disadvantages of this practice though it is obvious that leasing an aircraft will be costlier in long term but in short term it boosts your books 'artificially' enabling company to even show a profit.

- Indigo or Interglobe pvt ltd is placing itself for an IPO. Rumours have been floating for long regarding this but because of the general gloom in the sector chances of positive response to such an offering were very less. However with the new government and energy in the sector Indigo is planning to use it by placing itself as the leading aviation company of the future.

- What better way to market your company as a leader -> make grandiose future plans. Thence all these orders which makes no sense as of now. Other possibility is that maybe another major player is all about to go down under (Spicejet- Mr Maran has one foot in tihar already) and Indigo is preparing to assimilate its market share as well but that won't be the story of India's growth, will it now? Also if Spicejet does bows out, Tata and Air Asia will be in much better position to capture its share, Tata being epitome of reliability in Indian markets and the Air Asia being global leader of low cost carriers.

- This brought back the memories of Kingfisher saga for me. If only buying huge number of swanky aircrafts would have been enough we would have never seen the demise of 'good times' but sadly it is not. Aviation industry does not need major players it requires major course correction on the policy level unless that happens no growth will happen and Indigo will also crash once it goes public along with their hard earned money and dreams. Worst part is all the aviation companies also know it as is evident from the cautious expansionism exercised by TATA and Air Asia, however few players entered the market (in the days of licence raj and crony capitalism) to just roll over after making a profit for original owners, we have seen that happening in case of Kingfisher, Jet airways (now works like a feeder for Etihad) and so on. Indigo is in a hurry, it is trying to create a hype about growing aviation sector, offload shares in the market which gullible people will lap up like they did in case of Kingfisher and then wash off their hands just like Mallya.

- Also what people don't realize is that domestic market in India is not for A-320's but smaller, cheaper aircrafts like Atr, Q-400 etc you cant expect to make profits by using your new billion dollar aircraft on still developing routes like delhi-lucknow, mumbai-bhopal. But since you can't make profit selling those cheaper aircrafts as soon as you acquire them, Indigo orders for 400 A320s.

Holy Sh!t i digressed majorly ! To summarize Yes aviation has a huge potential to grow in India but stay away from shares of any airlines in near future no matter how lucrative the offer sounds. ;)
 
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