Business 168: Business rescue stalked SA businesses in 2020

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Companies such as Comair, Edcon and Phumelela have emerged with restructured operations from business rescue proceedings. Meanwhile, SAA and SA Express are still troubled.

Survival was the preoccupation of businesses in 2020 as they tried to stay afloat through the economic storm brought on by Covid-19. Even before today’s crisis, the operating environment for businesses in SA was difficult: the economy and consumer spending were troubled, and burdensome regulations made it difficult for businesses to remain in business.

Then came the Covid-19 pandemic and resultant lockdown, which made an already fraught situation worse. In this environment, some businesses didn’t survive the lockdown while others looked to business rescue for a fighting chance. Business rescue is an essential mechanism for financially distressed businesses to rehabilitate their affairs. The objective is to enable a business to continue operating while being restructured, cutting costs and saving some jobs in the process.

Comair’s business rescue process has largely been successful; it attracted new private investors who pumped R500-million in the business and R600-million in operational costs were cut. Comair resumed domestic flights on 1 December and expects to add regional flights in February or March 2021.It has been more than a year since SAA, a state-owned airline, was placed under business rescue.

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