State-owned carrier Air India understated losses - V. Kurian

Reuters  |  NEW DELHI 

By Aditi Shah

(Reuters) - India's state-owned airline understated its operating losses by nearly $1 billion over three fiscal years to March 2015, the federal auditor said in a report, highlighting the carrier's financial distress.

Repeated calls to an spokesman and an email seeking comment went unanswered.

did not make certain provisions required under accounting standards and valued some assets differently, resulting in the understatement, the Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) of said.

"We have found that they have not made provisions which they should have made in terms of standard accounting procedures," senior official, V. Kurian, told reporters on Friday.

Losses were understated by $219 million in the year to end-March 2013, $445 million in the year to end-March 2014 and $299 million in the year to end-March 2015, the report said.

was bailed out in 2012 with $6.3 billion of government funding, after years of ceding market share to younger, low-cost rivals.

Its market share in 2016 was 14.6 percent while market leader IndiGo Airlines, owned by InterGlobe Aviation, had a 39.3 percent share, government data showed.

The airline has also breached loan limits set under the government restructuring plan "due to failure in generating projected revenue, mainly on account of non-achievement of asset monetisation target (and an) increase in staff costs," the said.

The report, which the government will use to evaluate India's progress in restructuring, said the airline's short-term rose to 145.51 billion rupees ($2.2 billion) as of March 31, four times its limit.

The report said the airline should monetise more of its assets faster to reduce its debt burden and speed up the leasing of narrow-body aircraft to improve its performance.

($1 = 66.5700 Indian rupees)

(Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman/Ruth Pitchford)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

State-owned carrier Air India understated losses - V. Kurian

NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India's state-owned airline Air India understated its operating losses by nearly $1 billion over three fiscal years to March 2015, the federal auditor said in a report, highlighting the carrier's financial distress.

By Aditi Shah

(Reuters) - India's state-owned airline understated its operating losses by nearly $1 billion over three fiscal years to March 2015, the federal auditor said in a report, highlighting the carrier's financial distress.

Repeated calls to an spokesman and an email seeking comment went unanswered.

did not make certain provisions required under accounting standards and valued some assets differently, resulting in the understatement, the Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) of said.

"We have found that they have not made provisions which they should have made in terms of standard accounting procedures," senior official, V. Kurian, told reporters on Friday.

Losses were understated by $219 million in the year to end-March 2013, $445 million in the year to end-March 2014 and $299 million in the year to end-March 2015, the report said.

was bailed out in 2012 with $6.3 billion of government funding, after years of ceding market share to younger, low-cost rivals.

Its market share in 2016 was 14.6 percent while market leader IndiGo Airlines, owned by InterGlobe Aviation, had a 39.3 percent share, government data showed.

The airline has also breached loan limits set under the government restructuring plan "due to failure in generating projected revenue, mainly on account of non-achievement of asset monetisation target (and an) increase in staff costs," the said.

The report, which the government will use to evaluate India's progress in restructuring, said the airline's short-term rose to 145.51 billion rupees ($2.2 billion) as of March 31, four times its limit.

The report said the airline should monetise more of its assets faster to reduce its debt burden and speed up the leasing of narrow-body aircraft to improve its performance.

($1 = 66.5700 Indian rupees)

(Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman/Ruth Pitchford)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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