(Recasts, adds detail, background, analyst comment)
LONDON, July 24 (Reuters) - British Airways-owner
International Airlines Group said American Express
would pay it 750 million pounds ($955 million) to renew their
partnership, providing a welcome boost to the airline's finances
at a time when it is burning through cash.
Since lockdowns have eased, flying has restarted, but
pressure remains on airline companies like IAG because travel is
still at less than half of pre-pandemic levels due to ongoing
restrictions for some destinations and consumer worries.
IAG's finances have been strained by the pandemic, leading
to media speculation that it could need to raise new equity. It
said at the end of April that it had 10 billion euros ($11.6
billion) of liquidity and it was burning through 200 million
euros a week.
The 750 million pound boost from the partnership deal
announced on Friday could give it more breathing space.
Goodbody analysts said in a note that the news was positive,
giving the company, whose liquidity could have fallen to around
4 billion euros since its last update, another month's worth of
cash burn.
Shares in IAG were down 1.7% at 205 pence, in line with the
FTSE 100 index. IAG's shares have lost 67% of their value so far
in 2020.
IAG said that the multi-year renewal agreement with American
Express would extend the commercial partnership with the
payments company, and that American Express was paying IAG to
pre-purchase Avios points, which members of rewards programmes
can use to buy flights.
The airline group, which also owns Iberia, Vueling and Aer
Lingus, is due to report second quarter results on July 31.
($1 = 0.7849 pounds)
($1 = 0.8610 euros)
(Reporting by Sarah Young in London and Samantha Machado in
Bengaluru;
Editing by Vinay Dwivedi and Emelia Sithole-Matarise)