IATAs figures for June 2013 show a 1.2%
year-on-year expansion in global air freight demand.
Although
weak, this is an improvement when compared to the 0.9%
year-on-year demand growth recorded in May and the 0.1% growth
realized over the first half of the year.
While previously the global economic trend has
been defined by robust emerging economies and stagnant growth in developed markets, the strongest improvements in business
confidence are now occurring in some developed economies. Nevertheless, overall business confidence, which is a key
indicator for air freight, continues to be weak.
From May
to June, global freight volumes increased by 0.8%. A quarter of
that improvement was captured by European airlines which saw a
0.9% improvement in demand compared to May, and 2.6% up compared
to June 2012. In contrast, Asia Pacific carriers (the biggest
players in global air freight) and North American airlines
recorded year-on-year declines of 1.8% and 1.2% respectively.
"Its too early to tell if June was a positive turning point
after 18 months of stagnation. Air freight volumes are at their highest since mid-2011, but that good news needs to be tempered
with a dose of reality. The global economic environment remains
weak, and the basis for the acceleration of air cargo growth in
June appears to be fragile," said Tony Tyler, IATAs Director
General and CEO.
Earlier this month IATA released the July
edition of its Airline Business Confidence Index which showed
nearly 58% of respondents expecting freight volumes to increase
over the next year. Despite this, a much greater percentage of respondents (72.2%) expect no change in weak cargo yields despite
their expected increase in demand over the same period. The
macro-economic trend remains challenging. Recent declines in
global export orders do not bode well for trade growth.
Regions
Asia Pacific demand continued
to be weak with volumes contracting 1.8% compared to June 2012 and
by 2.3% over the first six months of the year. This is the weakest
performance among the regions and reflects the broad impact of the
slowing Chinese economic expansion.
By contrast, European
carriers grew freight volumes by 2.6% compared to June 2012.
Although the Eurozone remains in recession, there are some signs
of stability. For example, manufacturing activity contracted at
its slowest pace in 16 months, easing pressure on key economies
such as Italy, Spain and France. Moreover an improvement in
consumer confidence is likely to support demand for the sale of
light-weight high-value goods that are typically shipped by air.
North American airlines reported a 1.2% contraction
year-on-year for June and a 1.6% fall over the first six months of
2013 compared to the same period in 2012. The US economy looks to
have slowed in the second quarter. Business activity continues to
expand; however at a slower pace than in previous months.
Middle Eastern airlines saw a continued robust expansion of demand
with freight volumes growing by 12.7% year-on-year. The consistent
high growth in recent years, as the regions carriers take
advantage of the geographical position of the Middle East, has led
to a substantial increase in its share of world air freight.
Latin American airlines experienced a 7.0% growth in cargo
volumes compared to June 2012. This is almost double the year to
date trend of 3.7% growth. Latin-American exports have been
growing faster than any other region in recent months,
underpinning this stronger performance.
African airlines
recorded relatively slower growth in June, up 2.4% on June 2012.
This lags the year to date trend of 4.3%, which is the second best
of all regions. With economic growth in some key African markets
looking strong, demand for high-value light weight consumer goods
should rise, helping air freight volumes in the months to come.
IATA,
Freight,
Cargo
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