CEO Tony Fernandez seeks to join the world’s big carriers
AirAsia, the Malaysia-based budget carrier with the black leather
seats and the perky flight attendants, appears on course to join the
world’s big air carriers, expanding aggressively across the region, with
plans to buy hundreds of new aircraft.
The carrier hopes to raise US$150-200 million in an IPO slated for
the Jakarta Stock Exchange in the fourth quarter of this year, company
officials say, underwritten by CIMB-Indonesia and Credit Suisse.
Earlier this month AirAsia announced that its Malaysian parent is
purchasing a record 300 Airbus Industrie A320 neo jets for a reported
$27 billion, the largest ever airline order -- until it was superseded
Wednesday when American Airlines announced it is buying 460 single-aisle
aircraft from both Airbus Industrie and Boeing for US$38 billion.
Nonetheless, the AirAsia order vaults the carrier well up the order of
the world’s airlines.
The world’s largest airline by fleet size is Delta, with 744 planes, followed by United, with 712, and Lufthansa, with 710.
A spokesman said that “at least” 175 planes are to be added to the
current Asia fleet by 2015, nearly tripling current capacity. AirAsia
Indonesia earlier said that it expects local passenger numbers to grow
15 percent this year.
Southeast Asia “is as big as Europe,” AirAsia’s Indonesia CEO, Dharmadi
said while en route to a Tokyo press conference. “So [CEO Tony
Fernandez] thinks we need 500 aircraft. If we do that, there is no
reason we would not be No.1 in Asia.”
The airline's Indonesian unit has posted rapid growth in the budget
sector and is looking forward to further expansion, according to
Dharmadi, who was head of operations for Garuda Indonesia before joining
AirAsia three years ago.
“We are now No. 1 in passengers carried on international routes out of
Indonesia," he said, citing traffic to Malaysia and Kuala Lumpur from
Jakarta, Bali, Medan, Surabaya and Bandung. The local carrier reported
this month that it had flown 2.35 million passengers in the first half
of the year, up 28 percent on the same period in 2010. Total passenger
numbers for last year were in turn up 13 per cent on 2009.
AirAsia will soon open a major regional headquarters in Jakarta to serve as the company's head office.
“It will be the central office for investors to communicate with the company and for relations with Asean,” Dharmadi said.
The planned 2015 launch of the Asean “open skies” policy is a major
reason for the opening of a Jakarta office, which will also be able to
lobby Asean directly for the continued loosening of previously
restricted Southeast Asian markets.
Launched by Fernandez and three partners in 2002 as a regional no-frills
carrier with just two aircraft, the carrier is closely modeled on
Richard Branson's Virgin brand and the US budget carrier Southwest
Airlines. In 2010 it carried its100 millionth passenger.
The airline's current fleet is 93 planes flying regionally for three
related companies, all of which are incorporated as joint ventures in
their home markets - Malaysia, Indonesia and Thailand. A fourth partner,
AirAsia Philippines, will start flying in September with Vietnam
expected to follow closely behind.
In addition to the regional business, a budget long-haul service,
AirAsia X, has flights to Europe, Japan and Korea from its Kuala Lumpur
hub. That company is a joint venture between Fernandez and Branson.

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