logo
PIA sell-off: Fauji Fertilizer, Air Blue, and 3 consortiums submit Statements of Qualification

PIA sell-off: Fauji Fertilizer, Air Blue, and 3 consortiums submit Statements of Qualification

As Pakistan government proceeds with a fresh attempt to privatise the Pakistan International Airlines (PIA), Fauji Fertilizer, Air Blue, and 3 consortiums have submitted the Statements of Qualification (SOQs), showing their interest in acquiring a stake in the national carrier.
The development comes as the deadline to submit SoQs for having 51% to 100% share capital of the Pakistan International Airlines Corporation Limited (PIACL) ended on Thursday.
The Privatisation Commission (PC) received Expressions of Interest (EOI) from eight interested parties and five of them submitted SOQs by the deadline.
The five interested parties include:
Consortium comprising Lucky Cement Limited, Hub Power Holdings Limited, Kohat Cement Company Limited and Metro Ventures (Private) Limited Consortium comprising of Arif Habib Corporation Limited, Fatima Fertilizer Company Limited, City Schools (Private) Limited and Lake City Holdings (Private) Limited Fauji Fertilizer Company Limited Air Blue Consortium comprising Augment Securities & Investments (Private) Limited and Serene Air (Private) Limited, Bahria Foundation, Mega C&S Holding, Equitas Capital LLC
'The SOQs submitted by the parties will be evaluated by the Privatisation Commission against the prequalification criteria and the prequalified parties will proceed to the next stage where they will be given access to the virtual data room to undertake buy-side due diligence,' the PC said.
The government restarted the PIA sale process with fresh EOI call in April this year, marking a renewed effort to offload its stake in the national carrier. It first set June 3 as deadline for EOI submission, but later extended it till June 19, with all terms and conditions remaining the same.
It has been seeking to sell a 51-100% stake in the debt-ridden carrier, to raise funds and reform cash-draining state-owned enterprises (SOEs) as envisaged under a $7 billion International Monetary Fund programme (IMF).
The government failed in the first attempt to privatise the PIA last year after receiving a single offer, well below the asking price of more than $300 million.
Blue World City consortium refused to match the minimum expectation of the Privatisation Commission of Rs85.03 billion and stuck to its original offer of Rs10 billion for a 60% stake in the PIA, ending the bidding process of the national flag carrier's privatisation.
With its plan to privatise a number of entities, the government has missed a modest target of collecting Rs30 billion through privatisation proceeds in the outgoing financial year 2024-25.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Pakistan salaried class rejects govt's claim of giving relief in income tax
Pakistan salaried class rejects govt's claim of giving relief in income tax

Business Recorder

time3 hours ago

  • Business Recorder

Pakistan salaried class rejects govt's claim of giving relief in income tax

Representatives of the Salaried Class Alliance of Pakistan (SCAP) said on Thursday the government had done a 'number juggling' and given almost no relief in income tax to the salaried individuals in the budget proposals for the fiscal year 2025-26. In a press conference at the Karachi Press Club on Thursday, they pointed out that the tax authorities have targeted to collect Rs540 billion in income tax from employees working in regulated sectors in FY26, compared to Rs550 billion to be received in the outgoing FY25. 'The Rs10 billion relief to the entire working class nationwide is a so-called relief. This is number juggling,' said Bilal Farooq Rizvi, a member of the SCAP. 'We reject the government's claim of relief to the salaried class people (in the budget 2025-26),' he said. According to the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) reports, the income tax collection from salaried class people would be Rs550 billion in FY25, higher by Rs112 billion compared to FBR's set target for the outgoing year. Numbers speak: Sindh agriculturalists spend more on vehicle registration, pay less in income tax According to the budget proposals for FY26, the tax rate for those earning Rs600,001 to Rs1.2 million has been slashed to 2.5% from 5%. Individuals earning between Rs1.2 million and Rs2.2 million will pay 11%, down from 15%, along with a drop in the fixed tax component from Rs30,000 to Rs6,000. For the Rs2.2 million to Rs3.2 million bracket, the rate has been reduced to 23% from 25%, and the fixed tax lowered from Rs180,000 to Rs116,000. For those earning above Rs3.2 million annually, the rates remain unchanged. The 30% tax on incomes up to Rs4.1 million and 35% for those earning more continues. However, fixed taxes for the two slabs have been reduced to Rs346,000 and Rs616,000 from Rs430,000 and Rs700,000 respectively. A slight relief has also been provided in the form of a 1 percentage point cut in the surcharge, down to 9% from 10% for individuals earning more than Rs10 million a year. Adeel Khan, another SCAP member, claimed 'the income tax collection from salaried people has jumped 7 to 8-time in the past 3 to 4-year, increasing to Rs550 billion in FY25 compared to Rs70-80 billion a few years ago.' Budget 2025-26: Pakistan govt offers tax relief to salaried class, but representatives unhappy The government has targeted salaried class people to achieve the FBR tax collection target of Rs14.1 trillion in FY26, 'as it knows this is the soft target and they will not restore to violent protests and sit-ins and will neither block roads like political parties and shopkeepers do to get their demands accepted,' he added. Khan said the government provided a meager relief of a maximum of Rs7,000 a month in income tax to the people appearing in middle income groups, reducing their monthly tax burden to merely 'Rs493,000 a month in FY26 from Rs500,000 a month paid in FY25'. The employees working in the formal sectors were given a minimum relief of only Rs20,000 a month in income tax to the people falling in the middle income brackets. 'The provided so-called relief is no relief. This would make almost no difference in our lives,' he said. SCAP member Iesha Fazal said, 'The provided relief is insignificant. This is tantamount to playing with the salaried class people. This is a joke. We reject it'. They appealed to the authorities concerned to reduce the income tax rates by at least 2.5% for all the taxable slabs, including the individuals falling in the upper income brackets. The government can still make changes in its proposals, as the Parliament is yet to give its official nod to the proposed budget and Finance Bill 2025. 'Pakistan salaried class paid 5 times more taxes than exporters, retailers in outgoing FY25' Another SCAP member Rizwan Hussain said they would file a case in a court of law to get the due relief in income tax if the government approved the proposed tax rates as it was in the Finance Bills 2025. He reiterated SCAP's old demand of removing the super tax completely, which the government reduced by 1% to 9% in the budget proposals for FY26. Hussain also demanded relief in taxes on investment in mutual funds and similar investment products FY26.

PIA sell-off: Fauji Fertilizer, Air Blue, and 3 consortiums submit Statements of Qualification
PIA sell-off: Fauji Fertilizer, Air Blue, and 3 consortiums submit Statements of Qualification

Business Recorder

time6 hours ago

  • Business Recorder

PIA sell-off: Fauji Fertilizer, Air Blue, and 3 consortiums submit Statements of Qualification

As Pakistan government proceeds with a fresh attempt to privatise the Pakistan International Airlines (PIA), Fauji Fertilizer, Air Blue, and 3 consortiums have submitted the Statements of Qualification (SOQs), showing their interest in acquiring a stake in the national carrier. The development comes as the deadline to submit SoQs for having 51% to 100% share capital of the Pakistan International Airlines Corporation Limited (PIACL) ended on Thursday. The Privatisation Commission (PC) received Expressions of Interest (EOI) from eight interested parties and five of them submitted SOQs by the deadline. The five interested parties include: Consortium comprising Lucky Cement Limited, Hub Power Holdings Limited, Kohat Cement Company Limited and Metro Ventures (Private) Limited Consortium comprising of Arif Habib Corporation Limited, Fatima Fertilizer Company Limited, City Schools (Private) Limited and Lake City Holdings (Private) Limited Fauji Fertilizer Company Limited Air Blue Consortium comprising Augment Securities & Investments (Private) Limited and Serene Air (Private) Limited, Bahria Foundation, Mega C&S Holding, Equitas Capital LLC 'The SOQs submitted by the parties will be evaluated by the Privatisation Commission against the prequalification criteria and the prequalified parties will proceed to the next stage where they will be given access to the virtual data room to undertake buy-side due diligence,' the PC said. The government restarted the PIA sale process with fresh EOI call in April this year, marking a renewed effort to offload its stake in the national carrier. It first set June 3 as deadline for EOI submission, but later extended it till June 19, with all terms and conditions remaining the same. It has been seeking to sell a 51-100% stake in the debt-ridden carrier, to raise funds and reform cash-draining state-owned enterprises (SOEs) as envisaged under a $7 billion International Monetary Fund programme (IMF). The government failed in the first attempt to privatise the PIA last year after receiving a single offer, well below the asking price of more than $300 million. Blue World City consortium refused to match the minimum expectation of the Privatisation Commission of Rs85.03 billion and stuck to its original offer of Rs10 billion for a 60% stake in the PIA, ending the bidding process of the national flag carrier's privatisation. With its plan to privatise a number of entities, the government has missed a modest target of collecting Rs30 billion through privatisation proceeds in the outgoing financial year 2024-25.

Airblue, Gerry's Group among bidders for PIA as EoI deadline ends today: Bloomberg
Airblue, Gerry's Group among bidders for PIA as EoI deadline ends today: Bloomberg

Business Recorder

time11 hours ago

  • Business Recorder

Airblue, Gerry's Group among bidders for PIA as EoI deadline ends today: Bloomberg

The sale of Pakistan International Airlines (PIA), the national flag carrier, has drawn interest from several parties, including Airblue Ltd. and travel conglomerate Gerry's Group, reported Bloomberg on Thursday. As per the report, Airblue Managing Director Aslam Chaudhary and Gerry's Group Managing Director Akram Wali Muhammad both confirmed their plans to participate in the sale of a 51% to 100% stake in PIA. Moreover, prominent businessmen Muhammad Ali Tabba and Arif Habib have formed separate consortia to bid for the airline. Habib told Bloomberg that he has teamed up with Fatima Fertilizer Ltd., Lake City and The City School. Meanwhile, Yunus Brothers Group, another prominent business conglomerate of Pakistan, is bidding in a consortium including Mega Group, Kohat Cement Co. and Metro Group, Bloomberg said. The deadline for submitting Expressions of Interest (EoI) for up to a 100% stake in PIA is today (Thursday). The government has extended the deadline to submit an Expression of Interest (EoI) for the acquisition of Pakistan International Airlines Corporation Limited (PIACL) until June 19, 2025, from the earlier deadline of June 3, with all terms and conditions remaining the same. PIACL, a public limited company, is the flag carrier airline of Pakistan. The Government of Pakistan (GOP), through PIA Holding Company Limited, owns approximately 96% of the issued capital of PIA. The government has been seeking to sell a 51-100% stake in the debt-ridden carrier to raise funds and reform cash-draining, state-owned enterprises (SOEs) as envisaged under a $7 billion International Monetary Fund programme (IMF). It failed in the first attempt to privatise the PIA last year after receiving a single offer, well below the asking price of more than $300 million. Blue World City consortium refused to match the minimum expectation of the Privatisation Commission of Rs85.03 billion and stuck to its original offer of Rs10 billion for a 60% stake in the PIA, ending the bidding process of the national flag carrier's privatisation. Days ago, Fauji Fertilizer Company Limited (FFC), one of Pakistan's largest fertiliser manufacturers, formally expressed interest in acquiring shares of PIA.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store