PARIS (Reuters) – Shares in Air France-KLM
Lufthansa was up 7% in Frankfurt after a German minister said it would need to be supported, while Air France-KLM was 3.5% higher at 0829 GMT as investors digested a 7 billion euro ($7.6 billion) French state loan package announced late on Friday.
Lufthansa, which warned last week it had cash to survive just weeks unaided amid a global air travel shutdown, is in talks over a state aid package worth about 10 billion euros, sources have said.
On Monday German Transport Minister Andreas Scheuer said he backed support for the carrier.
Announcing the Air France-KLM loans, with another 2-4 billion euros to follow from the Dutch government, the Franco-Dutch group said it expected to raise new equity in the next year, with France likely to participate.
Paris is also preparing to guarantee another 5 billion euros in loans to Renault
(Reporting by Laurence Frost; Editing by Jan Harvey)