Tony Tayler |
Geneva)
- The International Air Transport Association (IATA) announced an
upward revision to its industry financial outlook. For 2012 airlines
are expected to return a profit of $6.7 billion (up from the $4.1
billion forecast in October). This is expected to improve slightly to
$8.4 billion in 2013 (marginally better than the $7.5 billion
forecast in October). Industry net post-tax margin, however, will
remain weak at 1.0% in 2012 and 1.3% in 2013.
2012
Improved
prospects for 2012 are being driven by strong airline performance in
the second and third quarters. Despite high fuel prices and a slowing
world economy, airline profits and cash flows held up at levels
similar to 2006 when oil prices were about $45/barrel lower and world
economic growth was 4.0%.
Historically,
when GDP growth has fallen below 2% the airline industry has returned
a collective loss. “With GDP growth close to the ‘stall speed’
of 2.0% and oil at $109.5/barrel we expected much weaker performance.
But airlines have adjusted to this difficult environment through
improving efficiency and restructuring. That is protecting cash flows
against weak economic growth and high fuel prices,” said Tony
Tyler, IATA’s Director General and CEO.
The
improved performance is most evident in large airlines for which
Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation and Amortization
(EBITDA) averaged between 10% and 15% of revenue in the third quarter
of the year. “It’s a diverging picture. Economies of scale are
helping larger airlines to cope much better with the difficult
environment than small and medium-sized carriers which continue to
struggle,” said Tyler.
Overall
performance has been positively impacted by strong passenger traffic
growth (5.3%) and a 3.0% improvement in yields. Despite the slowing
world economy business travel was supported by more robust
international trade in goods and service. This contributed to a
positive picture for both passenger volumes and yields. In
sharp contrast, cargo markets have contracted by 2.0% and cargo
yields are down 2.0% on 2011 levels. Although world trade is still
expanding, the pattern of economic growth – concentrated in the
emerging markets – has favored ocean over air freight.
The
slight relief in oil prices (at $109.5/barrel, down from $110/barrel
in the October forecast) did not translate into relief on the fuel
price. Moving in the opposite direction, because of a widening of
refinery margins, jet fuel costs are expected to average
$129.5/barrel which is a $1.8/barrel increase on the previous
forecast.
IATA
emphasizes that despite the improved prospects, overall the industry
remains weak:
- The $6.7 billion expected net profit is a fall from the $8.8 billion that the industry made in 2011.
- The 1.0% net profit margin is well below the 7-8% needed to recover the industry’s cost of capital.
Improved industry performance
Changes
to industry structure are contributing to the improved airline
financial performance seen since the second quarter. In the difficult
business environment of the past year airlines have been seeking to
lower costs and improve yields through restructuring. Recent
alliances and joint ventures have enabled economies of scale as well
as offering more choice for passengers. A sharp fall in the number of
new entrants, due to the lack of funding for start-ups, and a number
of airline bankruptcies have also contributed to an improved industry
structure which has allowed airlines to share efficiency gains
between improved service for passengers and better returns for
investors.
Regional Performance
North
American carriers are expected to end 2012 with a collective net
profit of $2.4 billion. That is stronger than the $1.7 billion profit
of 2011, largely on the back of much improved asset utilization as a
result of recent industry consolidation. The Earnings Before Interest
and Taxes (EBIT) margin of 3.4% is the strongest among regions.
European
carriers are
expected to breakeven. That is $400 million worse than 2011
performance, but $1.2 billion better than the October forecast
largely attributable to the results of efficiency programs and
stronger traffic growth which drove improved results in the second
and third quarter. While this is the largest contributor to the
upgraded outlook for 2012, it is important to note that the
continent’s carriers remain in the weakest financial position. EBIT
margins are expected to be 0.6% and with expected breakeven
performance Europe stands with Africa as the only two regions not
delivering profit.
Asia-Pacific
carriers are
expected to post a net profit of $3.0 billion (+$700 million on the
October forecast). The region will deliver the largest aggregate
profit among the regions while the EBIT margin of 2.9% ranks second
behind North America. It is important to note that the region’s
carriers will see the largest absolute fall in profits compared to
2011 when Asia-Pacific airlines returned a profit of $5.4 billion.
The region is under pressure from weak cargo markets and slower
economic growth in China.
Middle
East airlines are
expected to post a profit of $800 million (+ $100 million on the
October outlook). That is slightly below the $1 billion that Middle
East carriers made in 2011. While the region is maintaining strong
growth with long-haul connection traffic, its performance has been
weakened by the Arab spring and lingering instability.
The
outlook for Latin
American airlines is
unchanged at $400 million. Along with North America, it is the only
region to see an improvement on 2011 when the region’s carriers
posted a profit of $300 million. This is partly driven by the
region’s more robust trade and economies and partly by the
consolidation that has started to reverse the losses seen in Brazil.
African
airlines are
expected to end the year at breakeven—unchanged from the previous
forecast and from 2011. While the continent’s economy is expanding
rapidly, its carriers are suffering from strong competition on
long-haul routes, high cost structures and a regulatory regime that
inhibits the development of intra-Africa links.
2013
“Prospects
for 2013 will be largely unchanged from 2012. Net profits are
expected to rise to $8.4 billion leaving the industry with a 1.3% net
profit margin. It is good that we are moving in the right direction,
but the year ahead is shaping up to be another tough one for the
industry,” said Tyler.
Forecast Drivers
GDP:
The largest driver of industry prospects is global economic growth.
This is expected to strengthen only slightly to 2.3% in 2013.
Passenger:
Passenger demand in 2013 is expected to grow by 4.5% (below the 5.3%
forecast for 2012). Yields are expected to deteriorate by 0.2%,
largely in response to lower fuel costs.
Cargo:
Cargo demand is expected to increase by 1.4% (not enough to make up
for the 2.0% decline in 2012). The mismatch between growth rates for
passenger and cargo demand tends to lead to cargo capacity in excess
of demand and yields falling by 1.5%.
Fuel:
Oil prices are expected to moderate slightly to $104/barrel (down
$5.5/barrel from 2012). The premium paid for jet fuel refining,
however, will result in a smaller drop in jet fuel prices to
$124.3/barrel (down $5.2 from 2012).
Regional Performance
North
American airlines are
expected to post a combined net profit of $3.4 billion—the largest
absolute profit among the regions, and a $1.0 billion improvement on
2012. The EBIT margin will grow to 3.8% (up from 3.4% in 2012). The
US economy is forecast to be the strongest growing among the
developed economies and further benefits are expected from earlier
consolidation.
European
airlines are
expected to have a second consecutive year at breakeven. The EBIT
margin will also remain unchanged from 2012 at 0.6%. The continuing
uncertainty in the European economy, high taxes and inefficient
infrastructure continue to plague the industry in Europe.
Asia-Pacific
airlines are
expected to see net profits grow by $200 million to $3.2 billion in
2013. While this is the second highest absolute profit among the
regions, EBIT margins for Asia Pacific airlines are expects to grow
significantly to 4.7% (the strongest among the regions). Economies in
this region remain the most dynamic and the deterioration in cargo
markets is expected to come to an end in 2013.
Middle
East airlines are
expected to see profits rise by $300 million to $1.1 billion and EBIT
margins improve to 3.0%. Airlines in this region are forecast to
continue to expand their share of international markets.
Latin
American airlines will
see net profits rise by $300 million to $700 million for an EBIT
margin of 3.1%. Strong trade flows and robust growth in this region
support revenues and improvements continue from consolidation in
Brazil.
African
airlines are
expected to post a third consecutive year of breakeven performance
with an EBIT margin of 0.1%. Economic growth and trade flows
are robust but airlines performance remains uneven.
Risks
Macro-economic,
geopolitical and policy risks to the outlook remain high and largely
negative.
The Euro-zone crisis is far from solved. While liquidity is returning to the market there is no economic growth. The US economy is growing, but the threat of the fiscal cliff has not been eliminated. China is expected to pursue accelerated growth, but there is a threat that the banking and real-estate bubbles could burst.
The Euro-zone crisis is far from solved. While liquidity is returning to the market there is no economic growth. The US economy is growing, but the threat of the fiscal cliff has not been eliminated. China is expected to pursue accelerated growth, but there is a threat that the banking and real-estate bubbles could burst.
Geopolitical
difficulties between China and Japan and with Iran are persisting.
Meanwhile,
policy risks also persist. “We need to make sure that cash strapped
governments understand aviation is a catalyst for economic growth and
ensure that light touch regulation does not become a license for
infrastructure providers to let costs get out of control. We will
also maintain pressure on governments for important infrastructure
improvements—including the Single European Sky so that hard-won
cost efficiencies are not lost to battles with congestion,” said
Tyler.
www.iata.org/pressroom/