Niki Lauda preparing bid for Air Berlin's Niki unit

Reuters  |  MONZA, Italy 

MONZA, (Reuters) - Former motor racing driver Lauda is working on a bid to buy back the subsidiary of insolvent airline Berlin, he told on Sunday.

Berlin, Germany's second-largest airline, filed for bankruptcy protection last month after shareholder Etihad Airways withdrew funding following years of losses.

Now the carrier is to be carved up, most likely among several buyers, with about 140 leased aircraft and valuable take-off and landing slots in Germany up for grabs.

"I am preparing a plan to bid for which has to go in there by the end of the week. But I have not decided yet under what conditions I will do it," Lauda told on the sidelines of the Italian Grand Prix in Monza.

Bidders for the assets must submit offers by a Sept. 15 deadline, and a decision could come on Sept. 21, three days before the German national election.

Lauda said he had started looking at Niki's accounts, with more documents due to come on Monday and Tuesday before he can take a final decision.

German airline has government backing to take over large parts of Britain's easyJet and Thomas Cook's Condor are also seen as likely bidders.

The carrier is being kept in the thanks to a 150 million euro ($178 million) government loan, which government officials say will last the airline for up to three months.

(Reporting by Alan Baldwin, writing by Emma Thomasson; Editing by Susan Fenton)

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

First Published: Sun, September 03 2017. 17:54 IST