Foreign assets of bankrupt Russian airline VIM-Avia's owners arrested

Foreign assets of bankrupt Russian airline VIM-Avia's owners arrested
Assets belonging to the owner of the bankrupt Russian airline VIM-Avia, have been arrested in Ireland while most of the company's planes have been repossessed / wikimedia Commons
By bne IntelliNews November 2, 2017

The High Court of Ireland has arrested foreign assets of Rashid Mursekayev, the owner of the bankrupt Russian airline VIM-Avia, at a request from a creditor, another Russian airline Volga-Dnerp, Vedomosti reported on November 2.

The arrested assets include three leasing companies, Fastway Leasing, Avion Leasing and City Leasing, which are all registered in Ireland.

The debt Volga-Dnepr is trying to collect from Mursekayev, who left Russia in late September after VIM-Avia went bust, amounts to €4mn.

Mursekayev, who owns VIM-Avia with his wife Svetlana, left Russia after a criminal investigation was opened into the controversial bankruptcy of VIM-Avia, which prosecutors say may have been intentional and left thousands of passengers stuck at airports abroad.

The investigators said they suspect that VIM-Avia's management signed deals in 2016-2017 that were "obviously unprofitable for the company", and that they siphoned assets abroad while ordering accountants to cook the books to conceal the mounting debts to creditors.

On October 30, the licence of VIM-Avia was suspended. Under Russian law, the licence must be renewed within three months, or it will be permanently revoked.

Russia's tenth largest airline, VIM-Avia, went bust in mid-September. Its prospects look grim as leasing companies have repossessed most of its aircraft and the airline can't access its own aircraft until it repays debts to Domodedovo airport. As of late September, VIM-Avia's total outstanding debts amounted to RUB10.8bn.

The transport ministry also instructed the Russian federal air transport agency (Rosaviatsiya) to look into a rescue plan for the air carrier, proposed by Boris Karlov, managing director of the investment fund Aurora Investments on October 26. Karlov's proposal stipulates that VIM-Avia dramatically cuts the number of aircraft it operates from 29 to nine, focussing on three key destinations, Far East, China and Central Asia, which would improve the air carrier's seat occupancy rate from 69% to 75% and give it an Ebitdar of 26% on revenue of around RUB15bn.

As bankruptcies are on the rise in Russia, the failing VIM-Avia has drawn a lot of attention and even led to a public chastising of the responsible ministers by President Vladimir Putin, who is widely expected to stand for re-election next spring.

In October, there were reports that Russia's flagship state-run carrier Aeroflot could finance the operations of VIM-Avia, paying RUB1.8bn ($310mn) to keep the company afloat. Aeroflot's fees, collected as trans-Siberian flyover royalties paid by other airlines, are to be spent on VIM-Avia.

 

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