Indian carriers, including Jet, have seen their profits hurt by the world’s highest jet-fuel taxes and a price war worsened by the entry of low-cost, no-frills airlines such as IndiGo and SpiceJet Ltd. that offered dirt-cheap fares with lower overheads.
Foreign carriers from Malaysia’s low-cost AirAsia Group Bhd. to Singapore Airlines Ltd. and Jet’s minority shareholder Etihad, have all learnt how hard it is to make money in Indian skies.
Air India, the state carrier, has been propped up on bailouts from the exchequer for years. AirAsia, which entered in 2014 with a vow to break even in four months, is still nowhere close to its goal. Vistara, Singapore Air’s joint venture with the Tata Group that started in 2015, has yet to make any money. SpiceJet had almost collapsed in 2014.