You don’t have to look far to see the state of Jet Airways today. The sorry situation of the airline is reflected quite starkly in the quality of the annual report. I vividly remember how thick and glossy the document used to be in the 1990s. It’s now reduced to a slim volume with a rag-like feel. In a nutshell, that’s Jet today.
The ground situation is nothing short of a horror story. The airline’s outstanding to employees and vendors — oil companies, Airports Authority of India, maintenance contractors, lessors and other suppliers — crossed Rs120 billion, a figure the airline spokesperson denied. Losses have been mounting and the debt on its books although reduced is still quite high. The August salary for pilots and engineers came in dribs and drabs and 25 per cent of the September salary came on October 27. The senior management team hasn't been fully paid either, dues are piling up and a handful of executives have quit. Jet Airways has been through several ups and downs in its 25 year history but never have things looked as grim as now.
Goyal's paranoia about competition often led him into bizarre situations. I remember watching him smiling beatifically into the camera, arms around arch-rival Vijay Mallya in a golf cart at an aviation event in Hyderabad back in 2007-08. The duo worked on several hare-brained alliances to unite against low-cost carriers.
One would have thought Goyal’s fortunes would improve after Kingfisher made its own set of follies and folded up in 2012-13. Unfortunately for him by then the Indian airspace was quite a different animal and was largely out of his grasp. In addition, his past mistakes had caught up with him and the price of those had to be paid.
For the last several years, Jet Airways has been trying to restructure with no success. Off and on when the airline would be on the brink of closure, Goyal would tap his rich friends in Mumbai to bail him out. Funds would trickle in in fits and starts. In 2013, Goyal managed to sell 24 per cent stake to Etihad for a price of US $379 million, which is more than the airline's total market capitalisation today.
For the first time in decades, Goyal seems to be in an irretrievable corner. Unless he pulls the proverbial rabbit out of his hat or reveals an unexpected ace of spades, the airline he built from scratch — many refer to it as “his baby” — may slip out of his grasp. Those close to Goyal from the start are convinced that Jet can manage without him but they aren’t sure it’s vice versa.