Roadmap to revive PIA
Arif Habib also outlined his roadmap for reviving PIA, informing that the airline’s entire fleet of 34 aircraft would be serviceable by September 2026. Currently, only 17 of PIA’s aircraft are operational, he added.
His consortium, which completed the acquisition of a 75percent stake in PIA for Rs 135 billion ($482 million), will assume control in April 2026 and immediately begin implementing a comprehensive turnaround strategy.
The privatisation marks Pakistan’s most significant sale of a state-owned enterprise in years, as the cash-strapped government moves to shed loss-making entities that have drained the national treasury.
Arif Habib, who revolutionised Pakistan’s stock market four decades ago, brings a track record of successful modernisation to what many consider an impossible task.
His involvement with PIA began in 2016 when he was elected to the airline’s board, witnessing firsthand the carrier’s deterioration.
“PIA’s problems had been building for years,” Habib explained. “The airline accumulated massive debts as successive governments provided annual loan guarantees, allowing borrowing to spiral out of control. Heavy interest payments compounded the problem, creating a cycle of increasing liabilities.”
An initial privatisation attempt failed due to management system issues and unfavourable economic conditions. However, recent improvements in Pakistan’s economic outlook—including reduced interest rates, rupee appreciation against the dollar, and controlled oil prices—created a more favourable environment for the sale, he added.