According to date compiled by IATA, global
airline traffic results for April 2012 show that total passenger
demand rose 6.1% while freight demand was 4.2% down on April 2011.
Despite continuing economic weakness in some
parts of the world, demand for air travel continues to grow. The
6.1% overall growth recorded for April is above the 20-year trend.
Strong demand for air travel with limited capacity expansion
pushed load factors to 79.3% which is a record high for an April
load factor.
The 4.2% contraction in air freight
markets compared to April 2011 is somewhat misleading however. Air freight
markets slumped sharply in the first half of 2011 and bottomed out
towards the end of the year. Various distortions and
month-to-month volatility have marked the industry performance
since the beginning of 2012. However, April cargo levels stood at
about 2% higher than in November 2011. About 80% of this
improvement has been captured by Middle Eastern airlines. Air
freight for the Asia Pacific, European and North American carriers
has continued to show weakness.
“It’s a volatile
and risky world. Airlines are being cautious managing through the
uncertainty. Overall passenger demand was up 6.1% in April and
capacity increases were held back to 3.8%. There are signs that
cargo has bottomed out. Amid the many distortions that have marked
the first four months of the year, it is possible to identify the
start of a growth trend in cargo for some parts of the world. But
economic uncertainty in Europe makes it very difficult to be
optimistic in the near to medium-term,” said Tony Tyler, IATA’s
Director General and CEO.
International Passenger
Markets
International air travel rose 7.4% in April
compared to the year-ago period, outstripping a capacity expansion
of 4.3%. April load factors stood at 79.1%, up 2.3 percentage
points from April 2011.
European airlines recorded
passenger demand growth of 5.9%. This is below the 7.4% global
average and is significantly lower than the 8.7% growth recorded
in March. Demand was, however, stronger than the 3.4% capacity
expansion which pushed load factors to 80.7%. While this is a
relatively strong performance compared to previous-year levels,
since the beginning of the year, there has been a declining trend.
April, for example, saw traffic contract by 0.3% compared to
March - despite the Easter holiday period being in mid-April.
Asia Pacific carriers also experienced strong growth
of 9.3% against a capacity expansion of 4.6%. Load factors stood
at 78.1%. The strong performance is exaggerated by the comparison
to April 2011 when Asia Pacific markets were particularly weak in the aftermath of the Japanese earthquake and tsunami. Removing the
impact of the event, the region’s growth is estimated to be about
6%.
North American airlines saw passenger demand
expand by 1.6% in April compared to the previous year. This is the
weakest demand growth among all regions and represents a weakening
from the 5.3% year-on-year growth recorded in March. However, the
trend in North American travel is still positive since the end of
2011, as US economic conditions and particularly consumer
confidence has improved. North American carriers were also the
only region to cut capacity (by an almost equal 1.5%). This
allowed the region’s carriers to post the strongest load factors
at 80.8%.
Middle East airlines’ traffic growth has
started to pick up pace again, recording a 16.0% gain in passenger
demand for April, after having softened in the second half of
2011. Although this is a fall from the 20.9% growth recorded in
March, the March result was distorted by the impacts of the Arab
Spring in 2011. Furthermore, demand did grow faster than the 12.7%
capacity expansion in April and load factors remained high at
78.3%.
Latin American carriers experienced a 9.0%
expansion in international demand in April compared to the same
month in 2011. Despite some potential for economic slowdown,
growth has been solid enough in the region’s economies to sustain
strong demand for passenger travel. This outpaced the capacity
expansion of 5.3% and bucked expectations of a slowdown in the region due to weakening economic conditions. Load factors stood at
78.6%.
African airlines reported a 7.0% increase
in demand. It was the only region where capacity expansion (8.5%)
outpaced demand growth. Load factors were the weakest at 65.9%.
Domestic Passenger Markets
Domestic markets
grew at about half the rate of international markets, just 3.9%.
Load factors of 79.7% were slightly higher than on international
routes (79.1%).
Japan experienced the strongest
traffic growth, up 27.8% year-on-year. This, however, reflects the
devastating impact on year-ago traffic of the natural disasters of
March 2011. While the market has significantly recovered, domestic
traffic levels remain 8% below pre-earthquake and tsunami levels.
Load factors of 57% are the lowest among major domestic markets.
China’s domestic demand reflected the slowdown seen more
broadly across the Chinese economy. The 6.3% growth recorded in
April was the lowest recorded since early 2011 and well behind the
10.1% growth reported in March. The result reflects the slowdown
seen in the economy more widely. Load factors of 82.2%,
nonetheless, were high.
US domestic markets grew by 1.0%
in April while capacity contracted by 0.7%. Load factors were the
highest at 83.6%.
Passenger demand in Brazil grew by
just 2.0%, below the 4.5% capacity expansion. Load factors stood
at 70.2%.
India traffic rose by 8.6% year-on-year,
ahead of the 1.7% capacity expansion. Load factors stood at 75.3%.
Air Freight (Domestic and International)
Air freight markets, while weak, are now showing some signs
of expansion after bottoming out toward the end of 2011.
Asia Pacific carriers saw a 7.3% decline in demand in April, well
ahead of capacity cuts of 4.1%. This reflects weakening exports from China. European airlines saw a 4.9% fall in cargo traffic
compared to the year before, despite having cut capacity by 0.2%. North American carriers showed a 6.4% drop in demand with a 2.9%
cut in capacity. Latin American carriers recorded a 3.6% fall in
demand even though capacity expanded by 8.8% compared to April
2011.
Middle Eastern carriers were the bright spot in
cargo with a 14.5% increase in demand. But this was behind a 15.1%
increase in capacity. African carriers showed a 6.1% increase in
demand, behind a 9.0% increase in capacity.
Outlook
“The growth in passenger markets is
encouraging. But it comes against an environment of continuing
high oil prices and growing economic uncertainty. So translating
the stronger demand into profits will be difficult,” said Tyler.
With the exception of Africa, all markets saw capacity
expansion at levels below the expansion in demand.
“In the face of
economic uncertainty, many airline managements will be going back
to first principles—careful capacity management, cost control and
conserving cash. This will be the order of the day until some
clarity comes to the global economic outlook. Of course the
uncertainty impacts the whole value chain. We are all in this
together. Airlines will be particularly looking to their industry
partners to share the imperative on cost control,” Tyler added.
IATA will update its industry financial outlook on 11
June 2012 at the Association’s Annual General Meeting to be held
in Beijing, China from 10-12 June 2012.
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