|
News
Shifting Gears Downward
Slowing Passenger
Demand and Shrinking Freight Markets
Geneva – The International Air Transport Association
(IATA) announced traffic results for August. While passenger demand was
up 4.5% over the previous August, this represents a significant slowing
from the 6.0% recorded in July. The decline in freight markets accelerated.
The 3.8% contraction in freight markets recorded in August was more than
double the pace of July’s 1.8% decline.
"The industry has shifted gears downward. The pace of
growth in passenger markets has dipped and the freight business is now
shrinking at a faster pace. With business and consumer confidence
continuing to slump globally there is not a lot of optimism for improved
conditions any time soon," said Tony Tyler, IATA’s Director General and
CEO.
Comparisons of July to August more clearly indicate the
slowdown. The total passenger market fell by 1.6% in August compared to
July. International markets declined by 1.8%, while already weak domestic
markets shrank by 1.0%. The total cargo market fell by 1.3%.
Passenger load factors were high at 81.4%, almost as high
as in July. While this is close to historically high levels reflecting
the industry’s ability to efficiently allocate capacity, it too showed
weakness—falling by 1.3% compared to July.
|
August 2011
vs. August 2010
|
RPK
Growth
|
ASK
Growth
|
PLF
|
FTK
Growth
|
AFT
Growth
|
|
International
|
6.2%
|
6.6%
|
81.2
|
-3.5%
|
2.4%
|
|
Domestic
|
1.5%
|
1.3%
|
81.6
|
-5.7%
|
-1.8%
|
|
Total
Market
|
4.5%
|
4.6%
|
81.4
|
-3.8%
|
1.5%
|
|
YTD
2011 vs. YTD 2010
|
RPK
Growth
|
ASK
Growth
|
PLF
|
FTK
Growth
|
AFTK
Growth
|
|
International
|
7.6%
|
8.8%
|
77.7
|
0.7%
|
6.4%
|
|
Domestic
|
3.6%
|
2.5%
|
79.3
|
-2.9%
|
0.3%
|
|
Total
Market
|
6.1%
|
6.5%
|
78.2
|
0.2%
|
5.0%
|
International
International passenger demand was up 6.2% in August compared to the
previous year. However, when compared to July, demand contracted by 1.8%.
- European
airlines achieved the strongest growth in international
passenger traffic in August with a 7.9% increase, just slightly
below a capacity expansion of 8.2%. Although domestic economies and
leisure travel are weak, strong exports have led to increased
business travel on international markets. Load factors of 83.9% were
at historically high levels. While the August growth was the
strongest in the industry, it should be noted that this is below the
10.6% demand expansion reported for the first eight months of the
year indicating that markets are softening.
- Middle
Eastern carriers recorded the second highest demand
growth at 6.7%, behind capacity expansion of 7.6%, leaving load
factors down at 76.2%.
- North
American carriers reported the weakest performance
with growth of just 2.9%, which was partly a result of equally slow
growth in capacity. This is a sharp downturn from stronger growth
earlier in the year, as reflected in the 5.6% year-to-date demand
expansion. The region’s carriers posted the highest load factor at
86.1%.
- Asia-Pacific
carriers reported 5.3% demand growth for August,
slightly below a 5.6% capacity expansion. This is slightly better
than the year-to-date growth of 4.4%, reflecting the recovery in
Japanese international travel. Load factors of 78.9% were below the
industry average of 81.2%.
- Latin
American carriers reported 5.6% growth for August,
behind their 7.1% capacity expansion. This is well below the 10.9%
demand growth recorded over the first eight months of the year. Load
factors stood at 76.9%.
- African
carriers reported 5.2% demand growth against a capacity
expansion of 6.3%. The continent’s carriers had the lowest load
factor at 70.0%.
Domestic
Year-to-date domestic demand is up 3.6% on 2010. However,
domestic demand in August shrank by 1.0% compared to July, which brought
the August 2011 growth rate down to 1.5%.
- The largest
source of weakness in absolute terms was the 0.3% fall in the US
compared to the previous year. US domestic travel accounts for about
half of all domestic travel.
- Japanese
domestic demand was down 12.4% compared to the previous August.
Traffic was up strongly in August and has now recovered to within 9%
of pre-earthquake and tsunami levels.
- Chinese
domestic travel demand was up only 2.8% on the previous August.
While positive, it is well below the double digit growth seen in
2009 and for much of 2010.
- India
recorded demand growth of 19.7%, the top performer among domestic
markets, followed by Brazil. Combined these markets represent 3% of
worldwide air travel limiting the impact of their strong performance
on the global industry.
Freight (Domestic + International)
Global freight markets are showing clear signs of decline.
Compared to the same month in the previous year, the decline accelerated
to -3.8% in August following the 1.8% drop recorded in July.
- During the
second half of 2010, weakness in air freight represented a loss of
market share to other transport modes. In 2011 air freight reflected
the lack of growth in overall world trade volumes. This latest
decline shows a further deterioration in global economic conditions.
- The decline
has been most prominent in the largest markets. North American
carriers reported a 7.0% fall in cargo volume for August (compared
to the previous year), followed by carriers in Asia-Pacific (-5.4%)
and Europe (-1.8%).
- Operators
in Africa (+2.2%), Latin America (+5.4%) and the Middle East (+3.7%)
remained positive.
- Overall,
utilization on freight markets has declined 4 percentage points
since the second quarter of 2010. Coupled with falling volumes this
makes the freight business a very difficult market in which to
sustain profitability.
The Bottom Line
August traffic results are in line with expectations for a
decline in profitability heading into 2012. Airlines are expected to see
total industry profits fall from $6.9 billion in 2011 to $4.9 billion.
Historically, the airline industry has delivered collective losses when
GDP growth (measured using current exchange rates) falls below 2.0%. GDP
growth has fallen from 3.9% in 2010, to an expected 2.5% this year and
2.4% is projected for 2012.
"Airlines are bracing for tough times ahead. Economic
uncertainty owing to the European sovereign debt crisis and the growing
likelihood of a protracted period of slow growth in developed economies
mean the industry will be even more focused on reducing costs and
improving efficiency. To ensure that airlines can continue to catalyze
economic activity, we need governments to review the often onerous tax
burden that they place on aviation," said Tyler.
Last week the UK government decided to reduce long-haul
Air Passenger Duty (APD) for Northern Ireland to short-haul levels. "APD
is the biggest tax that we face anywhere in the world. Reducing APD for
Northern Ireland is a clear recognition of the economic damage that it
does. But why stop with Northern Ireland? The competitiveness of the
entire UK transport sector is suffering. As a priority, the same
reduction must now be made for the whole of the UK, for the benefit of
the UK. This would provide a much needed boost to the UK economy,
businesses and travellers with more competitive connectivity," said
Tyler.
View August traffic results
- IATA -
For more information, please contact:
Corporate Communications
Tel: +41 22 770 2967
Email: corpcomms@iata.org
Notes for Editors:
- IATA
(International Air Transport Association) represents some 230
airlines comprising 93% of scheduled international air traffic.
- You can
follow us at http://twitter.com/iata2press for
news specially catered for the media.
- Domestic
Markets: Domestic RPKs account for about 40% of the
total market. It is most important for North American Airlines as it
is about 65% of their operations. In Latin America, domestic travel
accounts for 47% of operations, primarily due to the large Brazilian
market. For Asia-Pacific carriers, the large markets in India, China
and Japan mean that domestic travel accounts for 41% of the region’s
operations. It is less important for Europe and most of Africa where
domestic travel represents just 10% of operations. And it is
negligible Middle Eastern carriers for whom domestic travel
represents just 5% of operations.
- Explanation
of measurement terms:
- RPK:
Revenue Passenger Kilometers measures actual passenger traffic
- ASK:
Available Seat Kilometers measures available passenger capacity
- PLF:
Passenger Load Factor is % of ASKs used. In comparison of 2011 to
2010, PLF indicates point differential between the periods compared
- FTK:
Freight Tonne Kilometers measures actual freight traffic
- AFTK:
Available Freight Tonne Kilometers measures available total freight
capacity
- FLF:
Freight Load Factor is % of AFTKs used
- IATA statistics
cover international and domestic scheduled air traffic for IATA
member and non-member airlines.
- All figures
are provisional and represent total reporting at time of publication
plus estimates for missing data. Historic figures may be
revised.
- Total
passenger traffic market shares by region of carriers in terms of
RPK are: Europe 30.2%, Asia-Pacific 27.4%, North America 28.2%,
Middle East 7.1%, Latin America 4.8%, Africa 2.3%.
- Total
freight traffic market shares by region of carriers in terms of FTK
are: Asia-Pacific 41.4%, Europe 21.7%, North America 22.7%, Middle
East 10.0%, Latin America 3.0%, Africa 1.1%.
|