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KUALA
LUMPUR • Low-cost carrier AirAsia yesterday signed its first-ever
Islamic financing agreement to fund the purchase of six A320-200
aircraft in a deal worth some $230m.
The
deal with the Malaysian subsidiary of the Kuwait Finance House (KFHMB)
will see AirAsia hedging against interest rate and currency
fluctuations by using two Islamic financing instruments. AirAsia’s
deputy chief executive officer Kamarudin Meranun said the carrier had
been using a combination of commercial and export credit agency loans
to fund acquisitions, but was looking further afield for financing
options. “Having a combination of financing structures would give us a much broader option going forward,” Kamarudin said. “We would also like to promote Islamic finance and Islamic financing products,” he added. Under
the terms, the Kuwaiti government-controlled Kuwait Finance House will
be the lead arranger along with a Malaysian bank for financing the six
planes over a period of 12 years, a joint statement said. “The
total facility which will be syndicated out is $230m or thereabouts,”
KFHMB’s treasury director Mohamed Iqbal Mohamed Iqbal said at a joint
press conference with AirAsia. The
Islamic financing will swap a floating interest rate over the 12-year
loan period for a pegged one, and also hedge against currency
fluctuations between the ringgit and the US dollar, bringing financial
certainty to the carrier, he said. “It is actually making sure that we know the quantum that we will be paying,” Kamarudin said. The
six aircraft are part of a first order of 33 A320s from Airbus, to be
delivered by December 2007. The airline has placed an order for 100 in
total, with an option for 30 more as it expands its domestic network in
Malaysia and its ventures in Thailand and Indonesia become more
successful. Kamarudin
said AirAsia would look at a combination of commercial and credit
agency loans, Islamic financing and ringgit loans to fund its further
A320 purchases. KFHMB
officials said the finance house had developed the Islamic hedging
mechanisms, the first seen in Malaysia, specially for AirAsia but it
hoped to offer the instruments to other Asian carriers. |