Virgin Australia's creditors will meet for the first time as potential buyers eye up the debt-laden carrier after it entered voluntary administration last week.
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At least 11 suitors are currently circling as administrators look for a deal to save the beleaguered airliner.
It is estimated nearly $7 billion is owed to Virgin's more than 12,000 creditors.
Administrators Deloitte have retained Houlihan Lokey to advise them on restructuring the company and are hoping to pin down a buyer within the next three months.
More than 10 parties have already expressed interest in Australia's second airline, including Melbourne-based BHG Capital and US private equity firms Apollo Global Management and Oaktree Capital Management.
Shares in Virgin lost nearly 44 per cent of their value in 2020 and were priced at just 8.6 cents per share when the airline suspended trading on the ASX on April 14.
It stood down 8,000 staff last month to try and stay afloat but went into freefall on the back of strict coronavirus travel bans.
The federal government has repeatedly rejected calls from unions and Labor to buy a stake in the beleaguered airline, with senior ministers instead pressuring Virgin's major shareholders to step in.
The company is 90 per cent foreign owned with Singapore Airlines, Etihad Airways and Chinese conglomerates HNA Group and Hanshan owning 80 per cent between them while Richard Branson's Virgin Group still owns 10 per cent.
More than 15,000 jobs are at risk should a decision be made to carve off assets to service the airline's debts.
However, Deloitte partner Vaughan Strawbridge has previously indicated he wants to sell Virgin as a going concern.
Mr Strawbridge is set to host the first meeting with Virgin's creditors on Thursday.
AAP