India's Go First lenders to challenge move that could let lessors reclaim planes - sources

Lenders of grounded Indian airline Go First plan to legally challenge the aviation watchdog's interpretation to retrospectively apply changes to bankruptcy law that could allow lessors to reclaim planes, according to four people with direct knowledge. India last month tweaked its laws to exclude leased aircraft from assets that are frozen during bankruptcy proceedings. With lessors of Go First up in arms about not managing to get their planes back, the Directorate General of Civil Aviation, in a court filing, said the law changes will apply restrospectively, indicating relief for the lessors. But lenders of Go, to whom the airline owes $783m, fear the value of the grounded airline will deteriorate further if planes are released, diminishing interest from potential bidders and putting recovery of their funds at risk, the sources said. They plan to tell a Delhi High Court judge the bankruptcy law changes should apply prospectively, not retrospectively, since Go was already under bankruptcy protection when the law was amended, the sources said. "Without the planes, the value of the airline will deteriorate. The amended law seems to have deterred bidders already," said one banker at a state-run bank with exposure to the airline. The Delhi court is set to hear the ongoing dispute between lessors and Go First next on Friday. The lenders' plea, if allowed by court, would be a setback for lessors and mean more than 50 Airbus planes of Go First would continue to be grounded in India.<br/>
Reuters
https://www.reuters.com/business/aerospace-defense/indias-go-first-lenders-challenge-move-that-could-let-lessors-reclaim-planes-2023-11-09/
11/10/23