I wrote about Sydney Airport here. Funnily enough various news source aggregators (such as Wikio) filed the article about a financial crash landing with real airplane crashes. Bronte Capital must have got a few perplexed visitors.
That said – my original post is pretty convincing on the notion that if air traffic in Sydney falls over any sustained period the airport will default.
I have no idea how sharply air-traffic will fall here. Air traffic is one of the most consistent of all variables. It just rises. The reason of course is that the cost of flying in real terms has fallen for decades. When I was a kid people who flew from Sydney to London were regarded with some awe – they were the “jet set”. Now they are “cattle class”. To fly to London cost AUD2000 and average household income was about AUD10000. It costs less in nominal terms to fly to London now...
But if the recent trend in oil prices is permanent and continuing the era of ever-rising air-traffic volumes is over. We will again refer to people who fly long-haul as the jet-set.
There is some listed subordinate debt in Sydney Airport – the so called SKIES (see my last post). Beyond that are a AUD3.7 billion of medium term notes of which AUD2.9 billion is drawn and AUD884 million of inflation indexed bonds with two maturities (2020 and 2030). My sting: all these instruments are insured by Ambac and MBIA.
I see the advert: Bond insurer – selling airport in glitzy long-haul destination.
If oil goes to $400 they will take a loss on this. But otherwise it should be fine.
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