French government cuts Air France KLM stake

The French government is to sell almost half its stake in Air France KLM in a deal set to raise at least €700 million, sources…

The French government is to sell almost half its stake in Air France KLM in a deal set to raise at least €700 million, sources said.

The sale will leave the French government with around a quarter of the former state carrier whose takeover of Dutch airline KLM earlier this year made it the world's largest airline by sales.

A French finance ministry spokesman confirmed the government was to sell part of its stake but declined to give details, saying a statement would be issued later today.

But word of the deal spread through financial markets as banks began unloading shares on behalf of the French state.

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Investment banks Société Générale and ABN MRO were placing with institutional investors 49.48 million shares, or about 18.4 per cent of the company, banking sources said. And a French government source said it was selling around half of its current stake of 44 per cent.

At yesterday's closing stock price of €14.54 the sale of the 49.48 million shares would be worth over €719 million.

Speculation about a cut in the French state's stake has been increasing since the newly merged airline posted strong second-quarter results last month. The government's stake in Air France fell to 44.7 per cent from some 54 per cent at the time of the KLM merger in May.