Global freight tonne kilometers increased just 0.8% in May compared to a year ago. Capacity, however, increased by 2.1% causing load factors to fall to 44.9% - their lowest level since the post crisis recovery. As about 60% of global air cargo utilizes capacity in the belly of passenger aircraft, managing capacity at a time when growth in air travel is outpacing that of cargo is particularly challenging.
The stall in cargo markets appears to be the result of a recent softening in growth in developing economies, including
“It is getting harder to find optimistic signs for air cargo growth. The
May 2013
vs. May 2012
|
FTK Growth
|
AFTK Growth
|
FLF
|
International
|
0.8%
|
2.3%
|
48.4
|
Domestic
|
0.6%
|
1.7%
|
30.8
|
Total Market
|
0.8%
|
2.1%
|
44.9
|
YTD 2013 vs. YTD 2012
|
FTK Growth
|
AFTK Growth
|
FLF
|
International
|
-0.5%
|
0.4%
|
49.0
|
Domestic
|
1.8%
|
1.2%
|
30.3
|
Total Market
|
-0.2%
|
0.6%
|
45.2
|
Regional analysis in detail
Europe and particularly the Middle East were the
standout year-on-year performers, but poor performance in Asia-Pacific and North America dragged growth down.
· Asia-Pacific carriers had a difficult month.
Volumes fell 0.5% compared to May 2012, while capacity grew 0.3%, further
depressing load factors. Asia-Pacific freight volumes have slipped 2.5% for the
year to date, and growth in the Chinese economy is below expectations. Economic
growth in Japan ,
however, is looking positive.
· European carriers grew 1.0% year-on-year, the
second-best growth of any region. However the trend in recent months has been
little or no growth. The pace of economic decline in the Eurozone has slowed,
and business confidence, while still negative, recorded a 15-month high in May.
It is hoped that this improvement will ease the downward pressure on trade
volumes and air freight demand in coming months.
· North
American carriers
posted a 1.2% decline in demand for air cargo, and capacity grew very slightly
(0.1%). Demand for cargo shipments from the US
to Europe is still soft, and unlike the carriers in the Middle East and Africa , North American carriers are unable to buck the
weak global trend.
· Middle
Eastern carriers
grew 9.7% compared to May 2012. For the year to date, air cargo demand in the
region has grown 10.9%. In addition to their aggressive hub strategy at the
crossroads of East and West, and the growth of routes out of Africa to China , the
Gulf-based carriers have also been air freighting goods that have arrived by
sea. In addition new routes from the Gulf to Japan are set to benefit from an
upswing in Japanese exports.
· Latin
American carriers’
cargo volumes fell 0.1%, a disappointing figure after a good performance for
the year to May of 3.1%. The weakness could reflect softening confidence
indicators in the Brazilian economy, but overall export performance in Latin
America is strong, so future months should see a return to solid growth.
· African carriers grew just 0.2% in May, but
the underlying growth trend is positive. Parts of Africa
have some of the fastest-growing economies in the world, driving demand for
high-value consumer goods. Growth on routes connected to the Middle East and Asia has more than offset the decline in demand for
African goods from European markets.