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TUI receives third billion-euro package

December 2, 2020

The third financial aid package for pandemic-crippled TUI has prompted opposition calls that the German travel giant also fulfil climate and job safeguards. Already built in, says Berlin, are bans on management bonuses.

The TUI logo on a sign at a travel agency. Undated file photo.
Image: Alexandra Schuler/dpa/picture alliance

German travel giant, TUI, said it has secured its third aid package for this year, worth €1.8 billion ($2.2 billion), in a rescue mix involving by the German government, banks and private investors.

TUI, based in Hanover and listed on the London Stock Exchange, which last year took 23 million people on holiday, said the latest package should provide it with "sufficient liquidity reserves" until the 2021 northern hemisphere summer holiday season, now that "first reports of vaccine successes" had emerged.

The funds gave TUI "security to look ahead and to prepare the group strategically and structurally for the time after the pandemic," said chief executive Fritz Joussen, insisting that before the pandemic it was a "very healthy company."

Read more:   Coronavirus: TUI rents out remote workspaces in holiday destinations

"The measures decided today are important," said a German Economy Ministry spokesman, "because the company was profitable before the coronavirus crisis."

The ministry added, however, that the deal included bans on management bonuses and dividends.

Wednesday's package included a state guarantee of €400 million, a "silent" ministry convertible stake worth €420 million, a €200 million credit line from the federal KfW bank and capital boosts from investors and banks put at €509 million.

The ministry's silent participation portion is still subject to approval from the European Commission, under the EU's state-aid rules.

Attach climate strictures, urge Greens

Already, during the pandemic, other travel giants like Lufthansa and the FTI Group have received subsidies from the ministry's economy stabilization fund, another potential factor in Wednesday's bailout for TUI.

Read more:  German aviation giant Lufthansa reports €2 billion loss in third quarter

In Berlin, the opposition Greens budget lawmaker Sven-Christian Kindler called on Chancellor Angela Merkel's coalition government to also subject TUI to strict rules on climate and job protection.

"The federal government must not repeat the same mistakes it made with the Lufthansa rescue deal," said Kindler, referring to a bailout in June.

TUI says it is normally "active" in more than 100 countries, employs more than 70,000 personnel, runs 400 hotels, 17 cruise ships and 150 aircraft.

In March TUI received an initial pandemic credit of €1.8 billion and in August an additional €1.2 billion stabilization package agreed with the government.

The capital boosts announced on Wednesday, Reuters reported, would see a TUI share price adjustment, followed by a rights issue, subject to shareholders signing off on this in January.

The capital hike was being organized by Bank of America, Barclays, Citi and Deutsche Bank, it reported. 

ipj/msh (Reuters, dpa, AFP)

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