South African Airways remains under-capitalised despite bailout

Passengers board a South African Airways Boeing 737 aircraft at the Kamuzu International Airport in Lilongwe, file. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko

CAPE TOWN (Reuters) - Even with a government injection of 10 billion rand ($709 million), the struggling South African Airways will remain under-capitalised with a negative equity position of over 9 billion rand, a presentation to parliament showed. The national airline has been relying on government guarantees to keep it solvent and has been cited by major rating agencies as a threat to South Africa's economy. It received the latest bailout in September. The country's strained public finances are in the spotlight ahead of ratings reviews by Moody's and S&P Global due on Friday, with both agencies previously citing SAA as well as struggling electricity utility Eskom as major downgrade risks. The airline narrowly missed defaulting on debt repayments of around 5 billion rand ($374 million) owed to domestic lenders thanks to an emergency bailout by the National Treasury, which said a default posed a risked to the entire economy.[nL5N1ND3LA] SAA has one of Africa's largest airline fleets but has struggled, relying on around 20 billion rand of guarantees from government to stay afloat. In September it said it planned to fly 23 percent fewer flights and retire some older aircrafts in order to bring down costs. ($1 = 14.0956 rand) (Reporting by Wendell Roelf; Editing by James Macharia)