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South Korea to safeguard competition after Korean Air, Asiana merger

South Korea will support smaller sized airlines and display market competitiveness after dominant carrier Korean Air completed a $1.3 billion acquisition of Asiana Airlines on Thursday to create one of Asia's most significant providers.

Korean Air got a 63.88% stake in the nation's. second-largest airline, making it a subsidiary three years later. than Asiana had actually initially anticipated.

The enlarged Korean Air group could account for simply over. half of South Korea's passenger capability, and would become the. world's 12th-largest airline company by international capacity, a. Reuters analysis of airline information from Cirium and OAG programs.

It would rank alongside China's top 3 state-owned. providers as one of the Asia-Pacific region's largest by profits,. according to 2023 financial outcomes.

South Korea's transportation ministry unveiled measures on. Wednesday to boost competitiveness in the domestic aviation. industry, such as extra medium- and long-haul traffic. rights for affordable carriers, the Yonhap news firm stated.

By March, the Fair Trade Commission (FTC) plans to set up. a panel to monitor Korean Air's compliance with conditions. attached to the merger's approval, which it settled on. Wednesday.

The conditions include a pledge by Korean Air not to let. seat numbers fall below 90% of 2019 levels on essential routes, an FTC. file revealed.

Korean Air stated there would not be personnel layoffs.

The combined organisation jobs natural staff development. through service growth, with employees in overlapping. functions being reassigned within the organisation, it stated in. a statement.

The acquisition was obstructed by competition concerns. Korean. Air needed to make substantial concessions around the world,. including handing paths to other airline companies and selling Asiana's. cargo operations, in order to complete the deal.

It is the longest-ever merger of airline companies to be finished,. and was first announced in Nov. 2020 to save debt-laden. Asiana, which was coming to grips with a plunge in need during the. COVID-19 pandemic.

Asiana will be run as a subsidiary for as much as 2 years. before incorporating into one airline company that retains the Korean Air. name, however with brand-new branding.

Korean Air will likewise create a single low-priced provider and. its integration method consists of spreading out flight schedules. on overlapping paths, including brand-new destinations and more security. investments, it stated.

A plan to combine the two airlines' frequent leaflet programmes. will be sent to the FTC by June 2025 for evaluation, Korean Air. stated, including that the merger would reinforce its competitive. position internationally.

The airline company stated the deal intends to improve the capabilities and. network reach of Incheon International Airport, the world's. fourth-busiest for global flights and fifth-busiest for. cargo, which competes with Asian centers Hong Kong and Singapore.

Airline company debt consolidation is rarer in Asia than in Europe, which. has actually seen a wave of mergers in the last twenty years, and in North. America where regulators fear the industry is too concentrated.

Asiana will hold a remarkable basic meeting of. investors on Jan. 16 to select new board directors chosen. by Korean Air.

(source: Reuters)