Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Air Transport Industry…

The International Air Transport Association (IATA) announced a revised outlook for the global air transport industry with losses of $4.7 billion in 2009. This is significantly worse than IATA’s December forecast for a US$2.5 billion loss in 2009, reflecting the rapid deterioration of the global economic conditions.
The association, which represents some 230 airlines, comprising about 93% of global scheduled air traffic, said demand was expected to fall sharply with passenger traffic expected to contract by 5.7% over the year. Cargo demand for was expected to decline by 13%.
Both estimates are significantly worse than the December forecast of a 3% drop in passenger demand and a 5% fall in cargo demand. With airlines unable to take capacity out at a rate to match falling demand, yields for 2009 are expected to drop by 4.3%.
Asia-Pacific carriers will continue be the hardest hit and post losses of $1.7 billion. In China, while carriers have been stimulating demand domestically, international demand was expected to contract between 5% and 10%.
North American carriers are expected to deliver the best performance in 2009 after making capacity cuts early in the cycle and from not being tied into higher fuel hedging contracts. As a result, those carriers are expected to post a $100 million profit, despite facing a forecast 7.5% fall in demand.
Middle Eastern carriers, despite the only region to face increased demand of 1.2%, will record a $900 million loss, slightly worst than the $800 million last year, due to carriers expanding capacity at faster rates than demand.
In Europe, demand was expected to fall 6.5%. IATA didn't expect capacity cuts to be sufficient and expected carriers to post a combined $1 billion loss. Losses for African carriers are expected to widen to $600 million from $100 million last year as they lose market share to competitors on long-haul routes.

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