SYDNEY- The International Air Transport Association (IATA)
announced global passenger traffic results for May showing that air travel
continued to expand at a healthy rate. Growth was led by emerging markets.
Compared to the year-ago period, overall demand rose 5.6%, while capacity
climbed 5.2% pushing the load factor up 0.3 percentage points to 78.1%.
“Global economic performance remains a concern; however,
demand for air travel continues to expand. The primary driver is growing demand
for connectivity to emerging markets. The business environment has also
improved compared to mid-2012 with some indications of easing weakness in the
Eurozone. It’s still a tough environment, but there are some reasons for
optimism in the second half of the year,” said Tony Tyler, IATA’s Director
General and CEO.
May 2013 vs. May 2012
|
RPK Growth
|
ASK Growth
|
PLF
|
International
|
5.7%
|
5.6%
|
77.0
|
Domestic
|
5.6%
|
4.5%
|
79.9
|
Total Market
|
5.6%
|
5.2%
|
78.1
|
YTD 2013 vs. YTD 2012
|
RPK Growth
|
ASK Growth
|
PLF
|
International
|
4.5%
|
3.6%
|
77.9
|
Domestic
|
4.0%
|
3.1%
|
79.2
|
Total Market
|
4.3%
|
3.4%
|
78.4
|
International
Passenger Markets
May international passenger demand rose 5.7% compared to the
year-ago period, with capacity up 5.6%. Load factor was flat at 77.0%. The
strongest growth occurred in the emerging markets of Africa, Latin America and
the Middle East .
European carriers recorded 5.6% growth on international
services compared to May 2012. The underlying growth trend has also picked up,
suggesting that improving consumer and business confidence in Europe
could be supporting stronger growth in air travel demand. Capacity growth of
4.4% meant that load factor climbed 0.9% percentage points to 79.1%, the second
highest among the regions.
Asia-Pacific airlines’ international traffic rose 3.7% in
May compared to the year-ago period but this was more than offset by a 5.5%
rise in capacity with the result that load factor slipped 1.3 percentage points
to 74.1%. The softness in demand is consistent with falls in business
confidence in major Asian economies as well as a slowdown in trade growth
momentum. In particular GDP growth in China did not meet expectations in
the first quarter and business confidence has slipped to levels indicating
contraction in manufacturing activity.
North American airlines’ international traffic climbed 3.0%
in May versus May 2012. This was the slowest rise among the regions but with
capacity up just 1.7%, load factor rose 1.1 percentage points to 83.4%, the
highest for any region. The May growth was almost double the year-to-date
growth of 1.6% but the underlying economic picture is less positive. US manufacturing
activity slowed for the third consecutive month in May. Moreover, trade volumes
look even weaker than the global trend.
African airlines’ traffic climbed 9.8% in May, second
highest among the regions. In addition to responding to expanding trade
volumes, African carriers are also benefitting from a sustained increase in
trade through developing links to Asia and the Middle East, as well as from
strong GDP growth in local economies, particularly in Western
Africa . Capacity rose 7.4% in May, raising load factor 1.4
percentage points to 66.2%.
Latin American carriers’ saw demand rise 7.9% compared to
May 2012, while capacity climbed 8.9%, depressing the load factor 0.7
percentage points to 77.4%. The outlook for air travel in the region appears to
be solid with trade volumes experiencing strong expansion in the second
quarter.
Domestic Passenger Markets
Domestic demand rose 5.6% compared to May 2012 with all
markets recording growth, an improvement on the April year-over-year result of
3.6%. Growth was driven primarily by markets in Asia, particularly China . Capacity
rose 4.5% and load factor was 79.9%, up 0.9 percentage points.
Indian domestic traffic rose 3.5% against a 0.3 decline in
capacity that caused load factor to rise 3.0 percentage points to 81.6%. The
May result is a rebound on April, when the market had contracted. In fact,
there has been substantial volatility in growth rates over recent months.
Reductions in domestic fares had resulted in stronger demand in March and
possibly again now in May, but this trend has not been consistent and when
coupled with a weak economic backdrop, a growth trend is difficult to
establish.
Australian domestic demand increased 2.3% in May versus a
year-ago, but a 5.0% rise in capacity meant that load factor slipped 1.9
percentage points to 74.1%. After solid growth throughout 2012 (above 5%), the
growth trend for Australia
domestic air travel has slowed in 2013. Economic growth in 2013 is projected to
slow on the previous year, and consumer spending is expected to decline,
eroding some of the demand base for air travel.
The Bottom Line
Demand for air travel
continues to be strong despite less-than-robust economic indicators in some key
markets, a further demonstration of the importance of air transport. But that
importance does not carry through to the bottom line. This year airlines are
expected to make $12.7 billion profits. On $711 billion in revenues, that’s a
1.8% net profit margin, or around $4 profit for every passenger. “The average
profit per passenger is just enough to buy a sandwich in most parts of the
world. Aviation will have to do much better than that in order to attract the
$4-5 trillion in capital investment that will be needed over the next 20 years
to meet the demands for aviation-enabled connectivity,” said Tyler .
A recent IATA study supported by analysis from
McKinsey & Company shows that in the 2004-2011 period airline investors
would have earned $17 billion more annually by taking their capital and
investing it in bonds and equities of similar risk. “We need to find ways to
improve returns for investors. It will require fresh thinking across the
aviation value chain and from governments as well,” said Tyler