IATA’s traffic results for May 2011 show a 6.8%
increase in passenger traffic over May 2010. This is 4% higher
than the beginning of the year.
Freight traffic showed a drop of
4% against the post-recession peak of the re-stocking cycle in May
2010.
However, recent months show a renewed upward trend with
freight volumes 2% higher than the start of the year.
“We saw positive developments for the air
transport volumes in May. International passenger load factors
rebounded by 0.8 percentage points to 75.8%. Freight volumes
improved by 1.2% over April and passenger volumes were up by 1.8%.
These will help to alleviate some of the pressure on profits from
continued high fuel prices,” said Giovanni Bisignani, IATA’s
Director General and CEO. “But there are risks associated with political
unrest in the Middle East and the European currency crisis. We
still expect the industry to make $4 billion this year. That is a
pathetic 0.7% margin and another shock could alter the industry’s
fortunes dramatically. It’s another tough year for a very fragile
industry.”
International Passenger
Markets by Region
African airlines’ international traffic
increased 1.1% over the previous year. Travel markets to the
region had been depressed by the impact of political unrest in
Egypt and Tunisia. Flights to these two destinations are still
about 20% down. However a significant 2.2 percentage point
improvement in the load factor for the month does show initial
signs of improvement.
Asia Pacific carriers recorded an expansion of
4.7%, considerably below the global average of 8%. This is due to
continuing weakness in the post-earthquake/tsunami Japanese
market. Compared to May 2010, capacity expanded 5% and the load
factor fell slightly to 73.4%.
European carriers’ traffic expanded by 10.9%,
boosted by increased northern European economic activity and a
weaker Euro encouraging trade and inbound travel. Capacity
expanded by 10.6%, second only to Latin America, and the load
factor strengthened to 77.7%.
Latin American carriers saw the fastest
international growth, up 21.3% compared to May 2010, and the
fastest capacity expansion (15.2%). This is a consequence of
strong economic growth and increased travel and trade flows to
North America and across the Pacific. The load factor is just
above the industry average at 76%.
Middle East carriers grew international traffic
by 7.8% over May 2010, slightly below a 9.6% capacity expansion
that saw load factors slip to 70.8%. While political unrest
continues to have a dramatic impact on several of the region’s
smaller markets, the overall impact on the region’s carriers is
very limited.
North American carriers have cut capacity for
two consecutive months (-0.4% in April and -0.5% in May).
Year-on-year, traffic is up 4.5% and capacity increased by 5.5%.
This cautious approach to capacity expansion resulted in the
highest load factor (81.8%) among the major regions.
Domestic Passenger
Markets by Region
Japanese domestic demand was 29.9% below May
2010 while capacity has been adjusted downwards by 20.8%. Total
volumes in May were 4.4% higher than in April, showing the initial
signs of recovery from the earthquake and tsunami. But the low
54.7% load factor indicates the continuing mismatch between supply
and demand.
Brazil remains volatile but demand is up 21.6%
on May 2010 while capacity was 7.2% higher. The volatility of the
market is evident in a 65.7% load factor even with the demand
outstripping capacity by such a wide margin.
In China, demand was 10.4% higher than the
previous May. A capacity expansion of just 3.3% resulted in load
factors of 81.5%. While this is still robust growth, it is a major
ramping down from the 14.6% recorded in 2010 - reflecting tighter
economic policies.
India domestic demand was 13.8% above
previous-year levels against a capacity expansion 19.9%. The load
factor of 78.3% is consistent with the global average of 79.4%.
The mature United States domestic demand grew by
4% compared to the previous May. Against a 1.5% increase in
capacity, load factors were pushed to 84.6% - the highest among
domestic markets surveyed.
Freight (Domestic + International)
Air freight markets showed a 4% decline in
May. This is skewed as a result of the May 2010 peak for of the
post-recession restocking cycle. Since the beginning of the year,
freight volumes have increased by a modest 2%. This is lower
than the 5.5% IATA forecast for 2011.
While the continued
expansion of world trade at around 6% annually could lend support
to accelerated freight growth in the second half of 2011, the
performance so far this year has been lower than expected.
Carriers in all regions except Latin America (up 1.5%) and the
Middle East (+8.1%) saw air freight declines compared to May 2010.
The largest fall was for Asia Pacific carriers with a 9.2% drop
showing the impact of disrupted supply chains in Japan and tighter
economic policies in China.
Declines by African carriers (down
7.8%) reflected the disruption in Egypt and Tunisia. European and
North American carriers had modest falls of 2.2% and 1.4%
respectively.
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May 2011
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