SkyEurope explained

Airline:SkyEurope
Fleet Size:13[1]
Destinations:30
Iata:NE
Icao:ESK
Callsign:RELAX
Founded:November 2001
Commenced:13 February 2002
Ceased:1 September 2009
Headquarters:Bratislava, Slovakia
Key People:Nick Manoudakis (acting CEO) & Jason Bitter (ex-CEO)
Bases:Bratislava Airport
Ruzyně Airport
Vienna International Airport
Website:https://skyeurope.es

SkyEurope Airlines was a low-cost airline headquartered in Bratislava,[2] [3] with its main base at Bratislava Airport (BTS) in Bratislava, Slovakia, and another base in Prague. The carrier filed for bankruptcy on 31 August 2009 and suspended all flights on 1 September 2009.[4] The airline operated short-haul scheduled and charter passenger services.

On 22 June 2009, the airline announced it had been granted creditor protection while it restructured its debts.[5] However, this did not protect the airline from announcing bankruptcy on 31 August 2009 and cancelling all flights immediately.[6]

History

Foundation

SkyEurope was established in November 2001 and started operations on 13 February 2002 (domestic flight Bratislava-Kosice operated with 30 seat turboprop Embraer 120 ER Brasília). It was founded by Alain Skowronek (Chairman) and Christian Mandl (Chief Executive) and financed by EBRD, ABN AMRO and EU funds. Although some criticized the decision to base an airline in Bratislava, Mandl saw the effect that the low-cost carriers were having in Western Europe and envisioned it going a step further with a low-cost carrier in a low cost country. Mandl and Skowronek were aware of the catchment area of Bratislava Airport with the airport being located within a one-hour drive of Vienna, Brno and Győr and a catchment area of four countries (Austria, Hungary, the Czech Republic and Slovakia).[7]

Growth

On 27 September 2005, the airline went public on the Vienna and Warsaw stock exchanges. The initial public offering price was 6 EUR, valuing the company at 120 million euro.[8] The IPO on the Vienna and Warsaw stock exchanges was the first by a central European low-cost carrier and the first by any Slovak company.[9] In the following weeks, share price decreased to 5 EUR/share. On 10 November 2005, investment bank CA-IB, member of HVB Group, issued a buy recommendation with target price 6.5 EUR. The bank assumed that first-mover advantage, a term often used during the previous dot-com bubble,[10] would "provide competitive edge".[11]

In 2006, SkyEurope announced it would cut ticket prices to minus 10 koruna, claiming to become the first airline that pays people for flying with it.[12] The advertised negative price did not include fees charged to the passenger.[13] 2007 marked a year of growth and change for SkyEurope. The airline opened a base at Vienna International Airport in March 2007, placing two new 737-700s operating sixteen routes.[14] In October 2007, SkyEurope closed its hubs in Kraków and Budapest, thus reallocating its aircraft to the hubs in Prague[15] and Vienna.[16]

In 2008, SkyEurope entered into a partnership with České dráhy creating the CD Sky alliance whereby SkyEurope tickets would be sold for a fixed price at railway stations in Brno and Prague.[17] In October – December 2008 SkyEurope transported 726,656 passengers, bringing the 12-month passenger total to 3.577 million.[18] Its major Central European competitor Wizz Air claims to have carried 5.8 million passengers in 2008.[19]

Demise

On 29 January 2009, MFD reported the airline cancelled hundreds of already booked flights from Prague.[20] [21]

The loss-making airline was seeking a new ownership structure with additional capital.[22] [23] The airline owed €25 million as a bridge loan to hedge fund York Global Finance II, due on 15 July 2009.[24]

On 8 January 2009, leasing company GECAS ordered SkyEurope to return six Boeing aircraft due to financial problems.[25] On 23 June 2009, SkyEurope went into administration having been granted protection from its creditors by the district court in Bratislava.[26] On 11 August 2009, SkyEurope was not allowed to fly into Vienna International Airport due to unpaid landing fees. Flights were handled at Bratislava Airport instead. SkyEurope filed opening of bankruptcy proceedings on 31 August 2009.[27] All flights were suspended with immediate effect on 1 September 2009.[28]

Due to passengers being stranded, Irish airline Ryanair announced on 1 September 2009 that they had launched rescue fares from Bratislava to Alicante, Barcelona (Girona), Brussels (Charleroi), Rome (Ciampino), Liverpool and London (Stansted). Flights were bookable until 20 September 2009 and certain flights till 17 December 2009. All flights were sold at a price of €25, one way, taxes and charges included.[29] Malév Hungarian Airlines also accepted people holding SkyEurope tickets on their flights for a discounted price. Malév was offering one-way travel options to a total of 12 cities for all those who held a SkyEurope air ticket and were unable to board their flight because of the bankruptcy proceedings launched against the company. The one-way air tickets were priced from €49.[30] Wizz Air also announced rescue flights for passengers stranded at Prague to Amsterdam, Bari, Bourgas, Brussels, Copenhagen, London (Luton), Milan (Bergamo), Naples, Paris (Orly), Rome (Fiumicino), Thessaloniki and Venice (Treviso) and from Bratislava to Rome. Flights were bookable until 15 September 2009 with certain flights available till 26 March 2010 for a total fee of €30 one way.[31] Also Blue Air offered some rescue flights for passengers stranded in Bucharest to Vienna. The extra fee was €60.[32]

Corporate affairs

Overview

The company never made a profit. At the end of March 2009, it had negative equity with liabilities two times higher than assets. Shares fell from its IPO level of 6 euro per share to a mere 20 cents per share at the end of January 2009.[33] On 30 September 2008, SkyEurope had overdue debt one million EUR on social insurance of its employees.[34] The overdue debt gradually increased to €3.1 million at the end of June 2009.[35] At 31 March, SkyEurope was in technical default on its loan from Bank of Scotland.[36]

According to released Preliminary results for FY 2008, "material uncertainties exist regarding the ability of SkyEurope Holding to continue as going concern".[37] The company failed to publish audited results for financial year 2008 on 30 January 2009, management stated it expected the statements to be published by 17 February 2009 at the latest.[38] On 17 February, SkyEurope announced further postponement, its management expected the audited results to be published by 15 March.[39] On 15 March, SkyEurope announced a third postponement, its management expected the audited results for FY 2008 to be published by 15 April.[40]

In June 2009, in an effort to avoid bankruptcy, SkyEurope announced a restructuring of the company and received bankruptcy protection from the Slovak courts (valid in the whole European Union). However, this failed and on 1 September 2009, the airline went into bankruptcy. In March 2010 liabilities were estimated up to 180 million Euro and assets less than 6 million Euro (including 0,5 million of cash).[41]

Before the IPO, the largest shareholders were East Capital funds (16.72), EBRD (16.03), Christian Mandl (8.53), Peter Struhár (8.31), Alain Skowronek (8.19), DWS funds (7.79), GLG funds (7.17), Griffin funds (7.04), Euroventures Danube (6.68) and Foundation (6.39). Other investors held the remaining 7.15 share.[42]

Management

The company's last CEO (acting) was Nick Manoudakis, who replaced Jason Bitter. Members of the Supervisory board were its Chairman Iordanis Karatzas (since 1 October 2006), Jeremy Blank (since 1 October 2006), Christophe Aurand (since 1 October 2006, works as CEO of York UK Advisors), Hans Källenius (re-elected 30 March 2007, represents minority shareholders) and Josef In-Albon (since 30 March 2007).[43]

Business figures

Selected financial results of SkyEurope Holding AG! Million EUR !! FY 2004 !! FY 2005 !! FY 2006 !! FY 2007 !! FY 2008 !! X/08-III/09
Operating revenues53 113 159 236 260 85
Operating expenses(66) (146) (214) (257) (316) (111)
Operating profit (EBIT)(13) (34) (55) (21) (56) (27)
Net profit after tax(10) (29) (57) (24) (59) (32)
Assets22 84 117 150 113 94
Equity0.1 34 16 (3) (61) (98)
Liabilities22 50 101 152 174 192
Cash and equivalents9 46 42 12 1 0.5
Market capitalisationn/a 102 82 103 19 6
Selected indicators!   !! FY 2004 !! FY 2005 !! FY 2006 !! FY 2007 !! FY 2008 !! X/08-III/09
Passengers (thousands)745 1,728 2,561 3,312 3,761 1,249
Revenues per passenger (EUR)71 65 62 71 69 68
Load factor (RPK/ASK in %)78.9 77.7 75.6 82.8 76.4 71.5
Monthly passenger traffic (thousands)[44] !   !! Oct !! Nov !! Dec !! Jan !! Feb !! Mar !!Apr !! May !! Jun !! Jul !! Aug !! Sept
FY 2008305 284 269 227 255 308 280 333 344 387 415 355
FY 2009274 220 233 174 161 188 203 208 214 243    
index-10% -23% -13% -24% -37% -39% -28% -38% -38% -37%    

Destinations

SkyEurope operated 44 routes to 30 destinations in 17 countries.

Fleet

Last fleet

The SkyEurope fleet consisted of the following aircraft at that time of closure (as of 1 September 2009):[45]

SkyEurope fleet
AircraftIn fleetOrdersNotes
Boeing 737-3007 - 3 leased from Air Slovakia
Boeing 737-5002 -
Boeing 737-700410
Total1310

Fleet development

In 2005 SkyEurope and Boeing finalized the order for four Boeing Next-Generation 737-700s worth US$220 million. The order includes purchase rights for up to 16 additional airplanes. This order followedSkyEurope's order with leasing company GECAS for 12 Boeing Next-Generation 737s.[46]

In April 2007, SkyEurope purchased an additional five jets. SkyEurope had an option to order six more jets at the price set in a 2005 deal with Boeing to buy as many as 32 planes by 2011.[47]

At the end of FY 2008, SkyEurope had agreements with GECAS and Dubai Aerospace Enterprise for the operating lease of twelve Boeing 737 aircraft. At 30 September 2008, the Company failed to comply with stipulated financial covenants, such as liquidity and net worth thresholds. As a result, an event of default would allow lessors to terminate the leases with immediate effect and either claim damages and/or require immediate redelivery of the aircraft. On 24 November 2008, SkyEurope received a default notice from GECAS, as a result of late lease payments.[48] On 9 January 2009, GECAS terminated the lease of six aircraft and ordered SkyEurope to immediately return the 737s. On that day, several SkyEurope flights were delayed up to seven hours.[49] Three additional aircraft were returned to the lessor on 5 January 2009.

The airline operated four Boeing 737-700s aircraft,[50] [51] two ex-FlyLal Boeing 737-500 aircraft (on dry-lease from Avia Asset Management), two ex-United Boeing 737-300 and two Air Slovakia Boeing 737-300 (both on dry-lease). SkyEurope also used other airlines for its flights, mainly Air Slovakia,[52] and Travel Service Airlines.[53]

In-flight services

SkyEurope had a buy on board programme, SkyEurope Delights; in that programme, food was sold.[54]

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Victoria . Moores . SkyEurope scrabbles to replace repossessed 737 fleet . 28 January 2009 . Flightglobal . 31 January 2009 .
  2. "General contacts." SkyEurope. 22 August 2006. Retrieved on 3 March 2010. "HEADQUARTERS SkyEurope Airlines, a. s." and "Ivanská cesta 26 P.O.Box 24 820 01 Bratislava 21 Slovakia"
  3. http://www.supernavigator.sk/clients/navigator2.php?id=12017484&ref=http://www.skyeurope.com Map
  4. News: UPDATE 1-Slovak-based airline SkyEurope files for bankruptcy. 31 August 2009. Reuters.
  5. http://www.sofiaecho.com/2009/06/22/739529_low-fare-airline-skyeurope-granted-creditor-protection Low-fare airline SkyEurope granted creditor protection
  6. Web site: SkyEurope je mŕtvy, jeho klienti sú odkázaní na konkurenciu. Petit Press . a.s..
  7. News: Christopher . Condon . SkyEurope: A Slovak Air Attack . 9 September 2002 . https://web.archive.org/web/20021001181640/http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/02_36/b3798108.htm . dead . 1 October 2002 . BusinessWeek . 29 January 2008 .
  8. Web site: SkyEurope Holding AG . 29 January 2008 . German .
  9. News: Robert . Anderson . SkyEurope Set For €100m IPO . 15 September 2005 . Financial Times . 29 January 2008 .
  10. Tiffany Ya-de Wong, Move Over, First Mover, Stanford University, 4 June 2003, available online
  11. Thomas Paul, Marcin Jabłczyński, Low-cost carrier conquers CEE sky, CA-IB initial coverage, 10 November 2005, published on SkyEurope website
  12. News: SkyEurope Says it Will Pay People to Fly With Them . 29 October 2006 . USA Today . 29 January 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080222223107/https://www.usatoday.com/travel/flights/2006-10-19-skyeurope-minusfare_x.htm . 2008-02-22.
  13. News: Adéla . Vopěnková . SkyEurope: Waiting in the wings . 7 January 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20081031081050/http://www.cbw.cz/en/skyeurope:-waiting-in-the-wings/6547.html . 2008-10-31 . Czech Business Weekly.
  14. News: Slovakia's SkyEurope Airlines to Fly from Vienna Next Year . 19 December 2006 . International Herald Tribune . 29 January 2008 .
  15. News: Martina . Marečková . Discount carrier SkyEurope Lands in Prague . 20 February 2006 . Czech Business Weekly . 29 January 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080619004356/http://www.cbw.cz/en/discount-carrier-skyeurope-lands-in-prague-/2371.html . 19 June 2008.
  16. News: SkyEurope to Close Bases at Krakow and Budapest from 28 October . 3 September 2007 . https://web.archive.org/web/20081208025503/http://www.forbes.com/markets/feeds/afx/2007/09/03/afx4076072.html . dead . 8 December 2008 . Forbes . 29 January 2008 .
  17. News: Czech Railways to Sell SkyEurope Tickets at Stations . 24 January 2008 . Prague Daily Monitor . 25 January 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080129030133/http://www.praguemonitor.com/en/258/czech_business/17588/ . 29 January 2008.
  18. Passenger Traffic reports published monthly on skyeurope.com
  19. News: Robert . Mueller . Wizz Air aims to double fleet by 2011 . 19 February 2009 . . 20 February 2009 .
  20. Jan Sůra, SkyEurope obmění svoji flotilu, část letů ruší kvůli malé poptávce, MF DNES 28 January 2009
  21. News: Czech Press Agency . CK Fischer a Senator Travel končí spolupráci se SkyEurope . 19 March 2009 . Finanční noviny . 19 March 2008 . Czech.
  22. News: Hedi . Schneid . Luftfahrt: SkyEurope ringt um frisches Geld . 1 December 2008 . Die Presse . 10 December 2008 . German.
  23. News: Alistair . Osborne . SkyEurope seeks €30m to keep it flying this winter . 23 September 2008 . Telegraph . 22 February 2009 .
  24. Web site: EANS-Adhoc: SkyEurope Holding AG announces the further extension of York loans, postponement of the publication of its annual financial statements.
  25. News: Victoria . Moores . GECAS terminates lease on six SkyEurope aircraft . 9 January 2009 . Flightglobal . 11 January 2009 .
  26. News: Kevin . Done . SkyEurope in administration . 23 June 2009 .
  27. News: SkyEurope Holding AG: Suspension of all flights, Filing for Opening of Bankruptcy Proceedings of SkyEurope Airlines a.s. . 31 August 2009 . Wiener Börse AG .
  28. News: Airline losses 'hit $1bn a month'. 1 September 2009. news.bbc.co.uk.
  29. Web site: Ryanair – SkyEurope Rescue flights.
  30. Web site: Malév . www.malev.com . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090907223336/http://www.malev.com/companyinformation/pressreleases/article?Content=/Root/MalevContents/En/company-information/pressreleases/press-releases/2009/9/sky-malev . 2009-09-07.
  31. Web site: Wizz Air – SkyEurope Rescue flights.
  32. Web site: Oferte speciale - Blue Air – Smart Flying.
  33. http://en.wienerborse.at/ Vienna Stock Exchange
  34. News: Katarína . Ragáčová . Sky Europe prišla o lietadlá . 9 January 2009 . . 12 January 2008 . Slovak.
  35. Sociálna poisťovňa, Overdue insurance payments, exactly SKK 29 845 282 at the end of September 2008, SKK 49 651 856 at the end of December 2008, €2,355,595.94 at the end of March 2009 and €3,135,316.94 at the end of June 2009
  36. Report of the First Half (H1) of FY 2009, available on skyeurope.com
  37. Preliminary results for FY 2008, page 18, pdf available on skyeurope.com
  38. http://www.ots.at/presseaussendung.php?schluessel=OTE_20090130_OTE0015&ch=wirtschaft Delay of publication of SkyEurope Holding AG´s annual financial statements
  39. Centre for Asia Pacific Aviation – Peanuts!, SkyEurope Holding AG further postpones release of annual financial statements, 19 February 2009
  40. http://ots.euroadhoc.com/irmeldung.php?schluessel=OTA_20090315_OTA0004&ag=OTA Euroadhoc.com
  41. Web site: SkyEurope debt: 180 million Euro. SME.sk. 1 March 2010. Slovak.
  42. [Wiener Börse]
  43. Annual Report 2007
  44. Passenger Traffic reports, published monthly on skyeurope.com
  45. Web site: CH-Aviation – Airline News, Fleet Lists & More.
  46. News: Boeing and SkyEurope Airlines Finalize Contract for Four Next-Generation 737s . 19 June 2005 . Boeing . 29 January 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20071230020540/http://www.boeing.com/commercial/news/2005/q3/nr_050720g.html . 30 December 2007.
  47. News: Sean . Carney . Slovak Budget Airline SkyEurope Orders 5 More Boeing Jets . 12 April 2007 . Market Watch . 29 January 2008 .
  48. Preliminary results for FY 2008, page 19, pdf available on skyeurope.com
  49. Jan Sůra, SkyEurope přišly o deset letadel, lety mají zpoždění, Mladá fronta DNES, 10 January 2009, front page
  50. Czech Press Agency (ČTK), SkyEurope letos plánují pořízení tří nových letadel, 14 January 2009, http://www.financninoviny.cz/zpravodajstvi/index_view.php?id=354884
  51. Hospodárske noviny, SkyEurope má už len štyri lietadlá, 26 January 2009
  52. [Agence France-Presse]
  53. http://www.spectator.sk/articles/view/34697/10/skyeurope_sales_down_reports_paper.html SkyEurope sales down, reports paper
  54. "SkyEurope Delights." SkyEurope. Retrieved on 1 September 2009.