Cathay Pacific and Dragonair’s combined traffic
figures for January 2009 show an increase in the number of passengers
carried compared to the same month in 2008, partly as a result of the
Chinese New Year peak period, together with another substantial fall in
cargo and mail tonnage.
In January, Cathay Pacific and Dragonair between
them carried a total of 2,092,669 passengers – a rise of 2.4% on
the same month in 2008 - while the load factor fell by 2.8
percentage points to 79.5%. This compares to a 4.7% rise in
passenger capacity, measured in available seat kilometres (ASKs),
for the month.
The two airlines carried a total of 101,154
tonnes of cargo and mail last month, down 26% on January 2008,
while capacity, measured in available cargo/mail tonne kilometres,
fell by 15.9%. The cargo and mail load factor dropped by 4.5
percentage points to 59.1%.
Cathay Pacific General Manager
Revenue Management Tom Owen said, “Our passenger numbers grew in
January, a result of the Chinese New Year peak falling
one month earlier than in 2008, promotional activities,
as well as more capacity being available to sell. The
continuing slump in premium cabin demand was partially
offset by a stronger leisure performance from Greater
China and Southeast Asia. Growth in total passenger
demand however lagged capacity growth, leading to a
moderate drop in load factor. The outlook for
premium-cabin demand remains very weak, and the Economy
cabin is challenged by intensifying yield pressures.”
Cathay Pacific General
Manager Cargo Sales & Marketing Titus Diu added, “The slump in the
global airfreight market continued in January, resulting in a big
drop in our cargo and mail tonnage, while our load factor for the
month fell below 60% despite a substantial cut in capacity. Output
from the Pearl and Yangtze River Deltas continued to fall and
there was no pre-Chinese New Year rush this year to spur the
market in Hong Kong. Despite the downturn we are doing what we can
to find new revenue streams, and a recently launched service to
Jakarta and Ho Chi Minh City has made a positive contribution so
far.”
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