Hungary’s Malev will be missed

Budapest airport

(Beyondbricks) One week ago, when Attila Kozsik heard the news that Malev, the Hungarian flag carrier, had grounded all planes, he knew it meant problems.

Kozsik is chief financial officer at Crnogorska Komercijalna Banka, Montenegro’s largest commercial bank, based in Podgorica. It is also a subsidiary of OTP, the Hungarian bank that has been expanding its reach in the region in the past decade. For him, losing Malev also meant losing the only carrier offering direct flights between Podgorica and Budapest.

“We are definitely not happy about this. Of course, we can find alternative routes, but those will either take longer, or be more expensive, or both,” he told beyondbrics.

The industry’s response to the collapse of Malev has been spectacular: a dozen or so airlines have announced new routes, increased services or said they will use larger aircraft on existing services. The list includes Lufthansa, Air Berlin, Aegean, Wizz Air, Smart Wings and, most notably, Ryanair – which on Thursday said it would allocate three aircraft in Budapest by the end of next week and another two in March.

Ryanair expects some 2.4m passengers on its Budapest flights this year. This, together with expansion of Wizz Air, which expects to roughly double its volumes of 1.2m in 2011, means the two airlines alone look set to fill the void purely in passenger numbers formerly carried by Malev – which managed 3.2m last year.

But the problem for Kozsik is that, despite this rapid and robust response, the new airlines have either cherry picked popular, well-trafficked routes, or pioneered others, mostly to cities in western Europe.

None appear to have considered replicating Malev’s strategy of developing feeder routes to cities like Chisinau, the capital of Moldova, Tirana, in Albania, or the handful of cities Malev served in former Yugoslavia including Sarajevo, Belgrade, Skopje and Pristina.

“This has implications for Budapest as a centre for doing business in the region. Several Hungarian businesses, such as OTP Bank, Mol [the energy group] and Magyar Telekom have subsidiaries in the Balkans. Without direct flights, managing these companies will become more difficult,” Mihaly Hardy, spokeman for Budapest Airport, told beyondbrics.

And not just Hungarian companies, says Chris Bennett, the Budapest-based director for Europa Capital Emerging Europe, a property development company.

“From my point of view this is a real bugger, as Malev provided most of the flights to Bucharest and Sofia – my most frequent destinations – and most other Romanian and Balkan destinations,” Bennett says.

Jozsef Varadi, chief executive of Wizz Air, has specifically (and repeatedly) excluded picking up such routes several times in the past week. “We are not, nor will we be another Malev. Our business model is entirely different,” he told a press conference on Tuesday.

“These are low intensity routes, often suitable for smaller, perhaps 30-seat planes [rather than the larger jets operated by the low-cost carriers],” said Hardy at Budapest Airport.

True, Bucharest and Sofia are being picked up by some discount carriers, but at a cost in quality.

“Malev was much more reliable and flexible than Ryanair. My impression was also that they had more space. I hate not having a seat assigned to me and so on. And when I fly to London, I want to fly to a proper airport and not Luton!” Bennett says.

As a regional centre, Budapest, he argues, “really is the best place to live. All the main cities are about one hour’s flight from here. The alternatives of low cost airlines or flights via Vienna are just not attractive.”

The Hungarian government insists it is still seeking to establish a new flag carrier, but “with every passing day, as new carriers come in, the chances are getting less and less,” says Hardy.

“I think there are about 20-25 former Malev routes that will never be re-established, such as to the Balkans, and also Tripoli and Beirut,” he says.

Bennet is particularly glum regarding the effects on Budapest: “I think it will be another nail in Hungary’s coffin, at least for the time being, as Malev did make this a good place to base oneself for the region.”

source: blogs.ft.com/beyond-brics

Jön a Malév felszámolása

Napokon belül elrendelheti a bíróság a Malév felszámolását, ha döntés születik a légitársaság fizetésképtelenségéről – közölte Varga Jenő, a működését február 3-án beszüntető cég rendkívüli vagyonfelügyelője az MTI-vel.

A felszámolás előkészületeiről elmondta: a bíróság meghallgatja a vagyonfelügyelőt, a kezdeményező hitelezőt és az adóst, utána mondhatja ki a felszámolást.

Varga Jenő hangsúlyozta: a felszámolásban a cél az összes vagyonelem értékesítése a hitelezők minél teljesebb mértékű kielégítése érdekében, stratégiailag kiemelt vállalkozás esetében egyúttal az, hogy lehetőleg működőképesen kerüljenek értékesítésre a vagyonelemek.

Közölte: arra, hogy meghívásos pályázaton vagy nyilvános eljárásban értékesítenek vagyonelemeket, csak azok felmérését követően lehet választ adni. A jelenlegi különleges eljárásban a csődtörvény a szokásosnál jóval nagyobb mozgásteret ad a felszámolónak ennek eldöntésében – tette hozzá.

A felszámolási eljárásban a kielégítési sorrend a szokásos: először például a munkavállalók juttatásait kell kifizetni, ezt követően a garanciával rendelkező hitelezőket és csak a sor végén a részvényeseket, tulajdoni hányaduk arányában. A Malév kisebbségi, 5 százalékos tulajdonosa a Vnyesekonombank, az orosz hitelintézet korábban finanszírozta is a légitársaságot.
A felszámolásban a kielégítés mértékét még nem lehet megmondani, arról csak a tevékenység számviteli lezárása és a felszámolási körbe vonható vagyon felmérése után lehet nyilatkozni – hangsúlyozta Varga Jenő.

A Malév összes kötelezettsége február elsején meghaladta a 120 milliárd forintot, beleértve a kisebbségi tulajdonos, az orosz Vnyesekonombank 120 millió euró követelését.
A kötelezettségekből összesen 25 millió euró a lejárt szállítói tartozás, ebből a Liszt Ferenc Nemzetközi Repülőteret üzemeltető Budapest Airportnak 14 millió euróval tartozik a Malév.
A Malév vagyonából a vezérigazgató gazdasági döntése és a vagyonfelügyelő engedélye alapján lehet értékesíteni. Ilyen eddig nem történt, kevés az eladható vagyonelem – fűzte hozzá Varga Jenő. Mint mondta, “a Malév eszközértéke elenyésző a kötelezettségeihez képest”. A leányvállalatokat a vagyonfelügyelet és a felszámolás nem érinti.

Varga Jenő lehetségesnek nevezte egy új nemzeti légitársaság létrehozását. A magántulajdonú társaság finanszírozását úgy kell megteremteni, hogy összeegyeztethető legyen a piaci működéssel – tette hozzá.

Úgy vélte, hogy több hónap kell egy, a Malév méreteinél kisebb légitársaság alapításához. Az idő múlásával egyre nehezebb létrehozni egy ilyen légitársaságot, és “az idő múlása már évekkel ezelőtt elkezdődött” – jegyezte meg a vagyonfelügyelő.

A Malév márkanévről elmondta: az az MNV Zrt. egyik leányvállalata, a Malév Vagyonkezelő Kft. tulajdonában van. A Malév Zrt. jelenleg szerződés alapján használja a márkanevet, ezért annak értékesítéséről nem dönthet.

 MTI

Malév Refund Procedures

We’ve been covering news related to Malév Hungarian Airlines since they have ceased flying and are terminating business.

Malév Refund Procedures

The following procedures were provided by Malév in a written statement.

To obtain a refund, Malév requests you send your claim for refund of costs to malev@malev.com by e-mail or via post to the following address:

Malév Hungarian Airlines
1476 Budapest, Postafiók 79
Hungary
 

Malév requests you attach to the claim copies of all documents relevant to your travel.  In a statement, Malév has indicated they will only be able to assess claims when in possession of all documents.  Keep your original documents in a safe place.

In the statement from Malév, they request you proceed as follows to obtain a refund of your airfare:

  • if you paid by bank card or through PayPal (online, travel agency, Malév ticketing office), we suggest that you contact your bank to ask about the refund options;
  • if you purchased your ticket in a travel agency for cash or by bank transfer, you should submit your refund claim to the travel agency by 2 March;
  • if you purchased a package holiday including the air ticket in a travel agency, please speak to the travel agency about a refund;
  • if you purchased your air ticket in a Malév office, for cash or by bank transfer, please submit your refund claim to malev@malev.com or to the following address:1476 Budapest, Postafiók 79.  A decision on reimbursement of claims is expected to be handled within the impending bankruptcy procedure and in compliance with the provisions of effective laws;
  • in the case of tickets issued for Malév flights by any other airline, please approach the airline that sold the ticket;
  • if you paid for taxes and charges on a Malév frequent flyer ticket by bank card, we suggest that you contact your bank to ask about the refund options;
  • if you paid for taxes and charges on a Malév frequent flyer ticket by bank transfer, please submit your refund claim to malev@malev.com or to the following address: 1476 Budapest, Postafiók 79.  A decision on reimbursement of claims is expected to be handled within the impending bankruptcy procedure and in compliance with the provisions of effective laws;
  • if you purchased a ticket for another airline using Malév frequent flyer points, please approach the airline in question;
  • if you are travelling on a Malév air ticket issued for the flight of another airline, please submit your refund claim to malev@malev.com or to the following address: 1476 Budapest, Postafiók 79.  A decision on reimbursement of claims is expected to be handled within the impending bankruptcy procedure and in compliance with the provisions of effective laws;

If you have any further questions, please call the Malév Contact Center:

  • From Hungary: 06-40-21-21-21
  • Abroad: +36-1-802-11-11

In conclusion, we know many people have had travel plans impacted by Malev’s shutdown.  If we obtain further information or official statements from Malev, we will publish the details here

Tickets Purchased by Credit Card

Malév has released a statement with procedures to follow to receive a refund, however, if you purchased your tickets from Malév using a major credit card – Visa, MasterCard, American Express – we suggest you contact your credit card issuer to dispute the charge for services not rendered.  It appears refund claims filed with Malév will be subject to the bankruptcy court and laws in Hungary.

Call your credit card issuer and inquire as to what your options are.  The first person you speak with may not be familiar with all consumer protection rules.

Major credit cards such as Visa have procedures in place which allow for what is called a “charge back” when a merchant goes out of business and/or services are not rendered.  Consumer protection policies and credit card rules will vary depending on what country your card is issued in.

It’s suggested you look into rules which govern credit card transactions in your country as well as consumer protection laws.  It may be a good idea to dispute the charge both over the phone and in writing with the bank which issued your credit card and request the transaction is charged-back to Malév.  Look for the correspondence address on your credit card statement.

If you made the purchase with Malév via PayPal, file a dispute with PayPal.

We’ve been covering news related to Malév Hungarian Airlines since they have ceased flying and are terminating business.

If you are not protected by Malév, we suggest you obtain new tickets immediately if you wish to travel.  Other carriers, including Budapest based Wizz Air and Ryanair and other oneworld carriers, are providing special fares to Malév passengers.

 

A Wizz Air 10 új helyre repül majd

Újabb kapacitásbővítéseket jelentett be kedden a Wizz Air. A légitársaság Budapestről tíz új útvonalat indít és a tervezett 5 helyett 6 gépet állomásoztat majd Budapesten – jelentette be Váradi József, a társaság vezérigazgatója.

A pénteken bejelentett új, bukaresti célállomás mellett további 9 új úticélt jelentett be Budapestről mai sajtótájékoztatóján a Wizz Air, reagálva a Malév leállása miatt kialakult piaci helyzetre. A társaság 2012 tavaszától a jelenlegi heti 67 járat helyett 148 járatot üzemeltet majd. Az új célállomások között szerepel Bukarest mellett Szófia, Varsó, Kolozsvár, Malaga, Larnaca, Theszaloniki, Heraklion, Rodosz és Zakhyntos.

A jelenlegi háromról nem 5, hanem 6 gépesre fejleszti fel budapesti flottáját a Wizz Air, amellyel a tervek szerint 2,3 millió utast szállíthat el egy év alatt a légitársaság. Ez már közel áll ahhoz az utasforgalomhoz, amit a Malév produkált az utóbbi években. A Wizz Air 300 millió eurós beruházást hajt végre Magyarországon és körülbelül 2400 új munkahelyet teremt.

Malev frequent flyer program also terminated

Dear Frequent Flyer Passenger!

 

Malév Hungarian Airlines regrets to inform you that:

-       Malév’s Duna Club frequent flyer program has been terminated. For Duna Club members the collection and redeeming of frequent flyer points on other airlines’ flights have also been terminated.

-       The redeemed onward/return bonus tickets for the Malév flights are not valid any longer. Who has already began the bonus trip and has a valid return ticket until 29 February 2012 according to the 5/2012. (I.31.) government decree may be entitled for the refund of the cost of his return ticket (see the above communication).

-       The Malév and Millenium lounges operating at Liszt Ferenc International airport cannot welcome any longer passengers holding Duna Clubcards, also these cards are not valid any longer in the lounges abroad.

-       About the travel with bonus tickets issued for other airlines’ flights please contact the respective airlines.

-       The Citibank-Malév credit cards are still valid as credit cards (see Citibank’s communication). Since theDuna Clubprogram has been terminated collection of points is no longer possible.

If you have any further questions, please call the Malév Contact Center.

-          From Hungary: 06-40-21-21-21

-          Abroad: +36-1-802-11-11

 

<malev.com>

Malév-utasoknak a tervezett utazást magunknak kell intézniük

Hardy Mihály, a Budapest Airport Zrt. kommunikációs igazgatója szerint vasárnap délelőtt körülbelül 200-300, délután 2000 utasa lenne a pénteken leállított Malévnak. A kommunikációs igazgató elmondta, hogy vasárnap 43 érkező és 51 induló Malév járatot töröltek. Mint megjegyezte, a mostani téli időszak egyébként is viszonylag alacsony forgalommal telik. Hardy Mihály emlékeztetett arra, hogy a kormányrendelet szerint a pénteki leállást követően három napig segítik kártalanítással az utasokat.

Róna Márta, a Malév szóvivője az MTI kérdésére elmondta, hogy a Malév-utasoknak a tervezett utazást magunknak kell intézniük, így nem tudni, hogy miként rendeződött vagy rendeződik annak a 7200 utasnak a helyzete, akit a légitársaság leállása közvetlenül érintett.

Közlése szerint az utastájékoztatást a Malév tovább erősítette azzal, hogy a honlapon közzétettek mellett az ügyfélszolgálati telefonon már a bejelentkezést követően magnetofonról adnak részletes információt a teendőkről.

A szóvivő azt is elmondta, hogy mindössze három repülőgépet nem szállítottak még vissza az amerikai International Lease Finance Corporation (ILFC) lízingcég írországi központjába. Az egyik a Tel Avivban rekedt Boeing 737-es repülőgép, a másik kettő pedig a Liszt Ferenc Nemzetközi Repülőtéren hangárban van javítás miatt.

http://hvg.hu/itthon/20120205_malev_csod_ferihegy

Már nincs Malév utas a reptéren

Mindössze két Malév-utas érkezett vasárnap délelőtt a Liszt Ferenc Nemzetközi Repülőtérre a jegyét visszaváltani, a tranzitban viszont már egy sem tartózkodik.

Délelőtt 200-300, délután 2000 utasa lenne a pénteken leállított Malévnak, vasárnap 43 érkező és 51 induló Malév járatot töröltek  – közölte Hardy Mihály, a repülőteret üzemeltető Budapest Airport Zrt. kommunikációs igazgatója vasárnap. Hardy emlékeztetett rá, hogy a kormányrendelet szerint a pénteki leállást követően három napig segítik kártalanítással az utasokat.

Róna Márta, a Malév szóvivője az MTI kérdésére elmondta, hogy a Malév-utasoknak a tervezett utazást magunknak kell intézniük, így nem tudni, hogy miként rendeződött vagy rendeződik annak a 7.200 utasnak a helyzete, akit a légitársaság leállása közvetlenül érintett. A Malévnak erre már nincs ráhatása – tette hozzá. Közlése szerint az utastájékoztatást a Malév tovább erősítette azzal, hogy a honlapon közzétettek mellett az ügyfélszolgálati telefonon már a bejelentkezést követően magnetofonról adnak részletes információt a teendőkről.

A szóvivő azt is elmondta, hogy mindössze három repülőgépet nem szállítottak még vissza az amerikai International Lease Finance Corporation (ILFC) lízingcég írországi központjába. Az egyik a Tel Avivban rekedt Boeing 737-es repülőgép, a másik kettő pedig a Liszt Ferenc Nemzetközi Repülőtéren hangárban van javítás miatt.

A Malév pénteken hajnalban jelentette be, hogy 66 év üzemelés után nem indít több járatot, a légitársaság leáll, miután nem volt elég likviditása arra, hogy a megrendült bizalmú kiszolgálóknak előre fizessen ki nagy összegeket. Összesen 7 200 pénteki utas már nem tudott Malév-géppel utazni, számukra több légitársaság is kedvezményes árú jegyeket ajánlott. A légitársaságnál hamarosan csoportos létszámleépítéssel válnak meg a dolgozók nagy többségétől.

(MTI/index)

Malév telefonszámok tudakozó

MALÉV

Cím: 1097 Budapest, Könyves K. krt. 12-14.

e-mail: centrum@malev.hu

weboldal: www.malev.hu

Vezérigazgatóság

Cím: 1097 Budapest, Könyves K. krt. 12-14. (Lurdy-ház)

Telefon: 1/235-3535

Malév Ügyfélszolgálati Centrum

Cím: 1132 Budapest, Váci út 26.

Központi szám: 1/235-3222

Törzsutas: 1/235-3580

Jegyeladás: 1/235-3888

Telefonos helyfoglalás 0 – 24 óráig

Kék szám: 40/21-21-21, 1/235-3888

Helyfoglalás, járatinformáció: 40/21-21-21, 1/235-3888

Malév-iroda, Ferihegyi repülőtér 2/A

Telefon: 1/296-9696

Nyitva tartás: 05.00 – 23.00 óráig

Kár és panasz bejelentése

Poggyászkár: 1/235-3506, 1/235-3507

Egyéb panaszügyek: 1/235-3519

Hungary’s Malev Folds as Euro Crisis Claims Second Carrier

Updates: with Ryanair, Wizz, EasyJet, Air Berlin plans to target Malev’s former market starting in ninth paragraph.

(Bloomberg) — Malev Zrt., the state-owned Hungarian airline founded in 1946, ceased flying after the government withdrew financing, becoming the second victim of European austerity measures in a week after the collapse of Spanair SA.

Malev, which has debts of 60 billion forint ($270 million), halted flights at 6 a.m. local time, with police guarding its ticket booth at Budapest’s main Liszt Ferenc airport as hundreds of passengers milled around seeking to rebook or get a refund.

“What we fretted about the most and what we’ve done the most to avert has come to pass,” Chief Executive Officer Lorant Limburger said in a statement, adding that Malev’s cash-flow became “untenable” after service providers “lost faith” and a European Commission ruling hindered further state support.

Governments are becoming reluctant to prop up airlines as Europe’s debt crisis forces the region’s deepest cost cuts in a generation. Barcelona-based Spanair ceased flying Jan. 27 after failed bid talks prompted Catalonia to halt funding, and Sweden, Ireland, Portugal, Poland and the Czech Republic are also seeking to reduce state support for carriers.

Ryanair Ramp-up

“Grounding Malev is painful,” Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban said today after the airline’s board ordered it to fold. “We’ve tried to push it along and keep it flying as long as we could, but this is the end. We can’t keep this going on without the risk of losing the aircraft that are abroad.”

While a profitable flag carrier should be part of Hungary’s “national economy,” a replacement will be set up only with the backing of private money, Orban said on MR1 radio, and given the economic crisis, “investors aren’t bustling on the market.”

Chris Tarry, an independent analyst in London, said Hungary needs to decide whether it can count on carriers such as Ryanair Holdings Plc to provide transport links vital to the economy.

“There’s a lot of competition in Budapest, but if you rely on a non-local carrier they can always take their aircraft away,” said Tarry, who has covered airlines for almost 30 years.

Ryanair said today it will bring forward plans to serve Budapest from March to Feb. 17 and make the city a base for four Boeing Co. 737 jets and 2,000 workers, not just a destination, serving 31 routes, versus a prior target of five, to target 2 million people a year. Malev had 3.2 million customers in 2011.

‘Catastrophe’

Passengers and staff at Liszt Ferenc airport, which changed its name from Ferihegy last year to honor composer Franz Liszt, said the collapse of Malev would damage Hungary’s reputation and might affect people’s willingness to visit or do business there.

“This is a catastrophe,” said Hajnalka Gundert, a 37-year- old nurse who had aimed to fly to London, where she’s moving for a better-paid job in a nursing home, one of 7,200 people with a Malev ticket for today. The carrier’s demise is “one more sign that we need to leave to have a better future,” she said.

Spanair became the first scheduled mainline European carrier to collapse since the last recession after Qatar Airways Ltd., the No. 2 Middle Eastern carrier, halted bid talks and the Catalonia government indicated it would no longer supply funds.

The airline, founded in 1986, was Spain’s fourth-biggest by passenger numbers, carrying almost 13 million in 2011. Cirrus Airlines, an operator of regional aircraft based in Saabruecken, Germany, ceased flights on Jan. 23, according to its website.

Commission Blow

Budapest-based Malev, a member of the Oneworld airline alliance that includes British Airways, reported a loss of 24.6 billion forint in 2010, the latest year for which results are available, little changed from its deficit in 2009.

The company’s plight worsened on Jan. 9 when the European Commission ruled that it should return the equivalent of $390 million in “unlawful aid” paid by the government from 2007 to 2010, saying it would have struggled to raise cash from a private investor. Malev borrowed 5 billion forint in December and received 8.5 billion forint in budget funds in August.

The collapse comes as Hungary seeks to revive bailout talks with the International Monetary Fund and European Union to quell investor concern about its ability to service the highest debt level among the trading bloc’s eastern members. Orban, the premier, sought aid in November as the forint fell to a record low and the country’s credit grade was cut to junk at Standard & Poor’s, Moody’s Investors Service and Fitch Ratings.

Forint Impact

Malev was among Hungary’s top 30 earners of export revenue, getting the majority of sales abroad, a white paper from Dec. 5 said. It served 45 cities and contributed 40 percent of revenue at Liszt Ferenc, in which Hochtief AG has a 50 percent stake.

The grounding may force the state to pay about 1.5 billion euros ($2 billion) as a one-off obligation to the airport’s operators, according to the paper, which cited a privatization contract. The payment could “add to the overhang coming from EU/IMF talks and may result in short-term weakening of the forint and a decline in share prices,” said Akos Kuti, an analyst at Equilor Befektetesi Zrt. in Budapest.

Malev’s bankruptcy trustee will announce job cuts shortly, the MTI news service said, without citing anyone. The collapse may cut the number of visitors flying to Budapest by 50 percent, threatening tourism jobs, Akos Niklai, vice president of the Hungarian Hotel and Restaurant Association, said by telephone.

Malev was already effectively operating in bankruptcy protection, having been declared a “strategically important company” on Jan. 30, shielding it from creditors.

Wizz Boost

Earnings have been squeezed by rivals including Budapest- based budget operator Wizz Air Ltd., which is offering stranded passengers one-way “discounted” flights for 9,900 forint, or $45, and will invest 25 billion forint to expand capacity. EasyJet Plc, Europe’s second-biggest discount carrier, which serves Hungary from London, Paris and Berlin, offered a 60-euro ($79) rescue fee, and Air Berlin Plc, the No. 3, announced a 49- euro rescue and will commence daily Berlin-Budapest flights.

Today’s grounding ends a two-decade search for a viable partner since Malev was transformed into a joint stock company in 1992 following the collapse of communism.

The last recession led to the failure of a takeover by Russian entrepreneur Boris Abramovich, and Hungary was compelled to renationalize Malev, taking a 95 percent stake in 2010. As recently as this week, Chairman Janos Berenyi said it was “not impossible” that talks with Hainan Airlines Co. parent HNA Group could be revived. The Chinese company said yesterday it was “willing to restart negotiations on a possible bid.”

–With assistance from Edith Balazs and Andras Gergely in Budapest and Steve Rothwell in London. Editors: Chris Jasper, Chad Thomas.

To contact the reporters on this story: Zoltan Simon in Budapest at zsimon@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Chad Thomas at cthomas16@bloomberg.net; Balazs Penz at bpenz@bloomberg.net

Malev Says Airline ‘Unviable,’ Hungary May Not Be Able to Help

Jan. 30 (Bloomberg) — Malev Zrt., Hungary’s state-owned airline, said financing for the carrier is untenable and that the government may not be able to help because of European Union competition rules.

“Despite the continually improving commercial results, the financing of activities had become unviable and was unresolved from the end of January,” Chief Executive Officer Lorant Limburger told Malev’s board today, according to a statement on the carrier’s website. Board Chairman Janos Berenyi asked Malev’s management to present a “liquidity plan for the immediate future” by the end of the week.

Hungary’s government today granted Malev the status of “strategically extraordinarily important company,” which may assist a reorganization and maintain an airline with Budapest as its base, the Development Ministry said in an e-mailed response to questions from Bloomberg News. The action can be used to shield the company from bankruptcy proceedings that may be initiated by creditors.

A European Union ruling on Jan. 9 ordered Malev to repay “unlawful aid” the government gave the carrier from 2007 to 2010. That gives Hungary “extremely limited” options for helping Malev, the airline said today.

European governments seeking cost reductions to weather the region’s debt crisis are becoming reluctant to save airlines. Spanair SA failed on Jan. 28 after Qatar Air halted bid talks and the Catalonia regional government in Spain indicated it wouldn’t continue to supply money. State investors in Sweden, Ireland and Portugal are among those who are seeking to reduce direct support to carriers.

A buyer is being sought for Malev after the state took a 95 percent stake to replace Russian bank Vnesheconombank as controlling shareholder when a previous privatization failed. Hungary is in “advanced” talks with potential European investors after China’s Hainan Airlines quit talks, the government said Dec. 5, before the EU ruling.

ILFC Holdings Inc., an aircraft leasing company based in Los Angeles, has agreed to keep providing the planes used by Malev, the carrier said today.

–With assistance from Zoltan Simon in Budapest. Editors: David Risser, Zoltan Simon

To contact the reporter on this story: Andras Gergely in Budapest at agergely@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Gavin Serkin at gserkin@bloomberg.net