Pakistan’s bid to denationalise its struggling nationwide airline, Pakistan Worldwide Airways (PIA), confronted a major setback when the only bidder, Blue World Metropolis, a real-estate growth agency, provided a mere PKR 10 billion (₹30.25 crore) for a 60% stake. This supply fell drastically wanting the federal government’s minimal expectation of PKR 85 billion, established by the administration below former Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, in response to a PTI report.
The bidding occasion, held at an upscale resort in Islamabad and broadcast dwell on PTV, underscored the federal government’s urgency to unload loss-making state enterprises, a situation tied to Pakistan’s latest $7 billion settlement with the Worldwide Financial Fund (IMF). Regardless of six entities being shortlisted for the sale again in June, solely Blue World Metropolis proceeded to the ultimate bidding stage.
The Privatisation Fee has since requested the bidder to lift its supply to satisfy the minimal value. Nevertheless, Saad Nazir, Chairman of Blue World Metropolis, responded with a lukewarm endorsement, stating, “We want the federal government all the most effective in the event that they don’t need to settle for our bid.” Nazir hinted at potential curiosity from Chinese language and Turkish buyers with aviation expertise, ought to the bid transfer ahead.
Pakistan’s authorities had aimed to promote between 51% and 100% of its stake in PIA, which has been burdened with mounting debt and operational inefficiencies. The airline’s property, together with plane and operational routes, are valued at roughly PKR 152 billion. Nevertheless, its workforce—over 7,100 workers, together with round 2,400 daily-wage staff—presents a substantial problem for potential buyers, lots of whom would wish to commit vital assets to show PIA worthwhile.
Complicating the matter additional, PIA has confronted ongoing challenges akin to a European Union ban imposed in 2020, after it was revealed that a number of pilots held counterfeit licenses, barring the airline from European airspace. Mixed with a quickly ageing fleet and a historical past of economic losses, PIA’s sale seems more and more unsure, underscoring the broader challenges Pakistan faces in overhauling state-owned enterprises amidst fiscal pressures.