New Delhi: Overseas investors, which have been trimming their holdings in Kingfisher Airlines in the past three quarters, have increased their stake marginally in the cash-strapped carrier during the March quarter, according to data available with bourses.
An analysis of shareholding patterns of airlines showed that Foreign Institutional Investors (FIIs) have increased their stakes both in Kingfisher and Jet Airways in three months ended March 2012.
However, the shareholding pattern of SpiceJet was not available.

Overseas investors have increased their stake marginally in the cash-strapped carrier during the March quarter.
FIIs have been reducing their exposure over the past few quarters in Kingfisher Airlines, which is grappling with severe cash crunch amid large scale flight cancellations.
According to data available with the stock exchanges, FII holdings in the Vijay Mallya-led airline have climbed to 0.71 per cent at the end of March quarter 2011 from 0.5 per cent in the preceding three months.
Their stake in Kingfisher had stood at 2.11 per cent in the September quarter and 3.02 per cent in June 2011 quarter.
Jet Airways the country's largest carrier in terms of passenger carriage also witnessed an increase in FII stake at 6.72 per cent during the quarter under review, compared to 5.42 per cent in the three months to December, 2011.
In the September quarter, FII ownership in Jet Airways was 4.67 per cent.
Market analysts attributed increase in FII holdings in the airlines stocks to Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee's proposal in the Union Budget in March to allow local airlines to raise working capital through external commercial borrowings (ECBs).
Overseas investors are also hopeful the government could soon allow foreign carriers to invest in local airlines.
However, in the past few quarters, airline stocks in general have become less attractive. Marketmen have attributed this to high operational costs due to a surge in fuel prices and the rupee depreciation.
The scrips of the two airline firms were trading with gains in a positive market today.
In the afternoon trade, Kingfisher Airlines was up 0.96 per cent to trade at Rs 15.85 on the BSE and Jet Airways was quoting at Rs 337.35 apiece, with a gain of 1.43 per cent.
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Kingfisher Airlines is an airline based in Bangalore, India. It operates more than 400 flights a day and has a network of 77 destinations, with regional and long-haul international services.
Its main bases are Bengaluru International Airport, ...
Jet Airways is an airline based in Mumbai, India. It is India's second largest international airline after Air India and along with its subsidiary, Jetlite, the second largest domestic airline in India. It operates over 400 daily flights to 6 ...
SpiceJet is a low-cost airline based in New Delhi, India. It began service in May 2005 and by 2008, it was India's second-largest low-cost airline in terms of market share.[1] SpiceJet was voted as the best low-cost airline in South Asia and ...

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