Rediff.com« Back to articlePrint this article

Process of selling Air India's Mumbai headquarters starts

July 12, 2018 15:56 IST

Built in 1974, the building could fetch anywhere between Rs 1,000 crore to Rs 1,500 crore, based on current real estate prices

The iconic Air India building at Mumbai’s Nariman Point would soon have a new owner in the Jawaharlal Nehru Port Trust, with the financial advisors in the ministries of shipping and civil aviation beginning the process of appointing private evaluator for the takeover.

 

“The evaluation process will take a month or two, following which the building would be bought by JNPT,” Shipping Minister Nitin Gadkari told Business Standard. The exercise is being undertaken after the proposed stake sale of the national carrier failed to attract investors.

The 23-storey building at Nariman Point is the national carrier’s headquarters and is prime real estate that is expected to fetch high valuation.

Built in 1974, the building could fetch anywhere between Rs 1,000 crore to Rs 1,500 crore, based on current real estate prices, according to experts.

JNPT reported annual profit of Rs 1,300 crore in 2017-18 and had Rs 4,700 crore cash at the end of March 2017.

The joint secretaries and financial advisors in the ministries of shipping and civil aviation have been entrusted with the job of appointing an evaluator. According to a senior official in the ministry of shipping, an evaluator would be finalised in the next 10 days.

The evaluator would then submit the report to the respective financial advisors, following which the financial evaluation process for the building would commence.

Air India’s debt burden is estimated to be more than Rs 50,000 crore.

In March, the civil aviation ministry had informed the Lok Sabha that the airline had mopped up Rs 543 crore till then from monetisation of its assets, which included properties in prime locations such as Mumbai, Chennai and Mauritius.

The ministry had also said the carrier collected Rs 291 crore as lease rental from the Nariman Point headquarters between 2012-13 and January 2018.

In-principle approval for taking over the building has already been received by the JNPT, the country’s largest container port that handles around 55 per cent of the total container cargo.

Photograph: courtesy, Indianhilbilly/Wikimedia Commons

Megha Manchanda & Aditi Divekar in New Delhi
Source: source image