IATA's traffic results for November 2012 show an
improvement in both passenger and air freight demand.
Air travel
was 4.6% higher compared to November 2011, up on the October
result of 2.9%. Air freight volumes edged up 1.6% over the same
period after declining 2.6% in October, year to year.
Passenger
capacity rose 3.2% and load factor improved one percentage point
to 77.3% compared to the year-ago period.
“November brought some positive signs for air
transport demand—particularly for air cargo. It is premature to
consider this a turning point for air cargo markets in terms of
bouncing back and regaining lost ground. But, when coupled with
positive economic developments in the US and an improvement in
business confidence in recent months, the conditions are aligning
to see a return to growth in 2013. In 2013 we expect that cargo
volumes will grow 1.4%, and passenger traffic will increase by
4.5% worldwide,” said Tony Tyler, IATA’s Director General and CEO. “Passenger markets have held up better than cargo in
the face of adverse economic conditions. But the current level of
air travel is just 2% higher than at the start of 2012. This is
considerably weaker than the long-term average growth rate.”
Compared to October, November passenger
traffic grew 0.6%. The majority of growth came from domestic
markets, particularly China. November air freight volumes
increased 2.4% on October. This reflects a shift in seasonal
shopping to online retailers, which depend heavily on air cargo.
It also shows improved consumer confidence in the US.
Seasonally-adjusted air freight volumes have now risen back to the
levels of mid-2012, after declines in the third quarter.
International Passenger Markets
November
international passenger demand grew 5.6% compared to November
2011. However, the month-on-month increase was only 0.2%,
indicating that year-on-year growth was more likely owing to
depressed demand a year ago. Nevertheless, emerging markets in
particular continued to perform well, and capacity increased 3.1%
compared to a year ago. Load factor rose 1.8 percentage points to
76.3%.
Asia Pacific carriers experienced the
strongest growth among the major regions, with demand up 6.2%
year-on-year, on a capacity increase of 2.5%. Some of this growth,
however, likely reflected depressed results in 2011 owing to
the severe and prolonged flooding north of Bangkok in Thailand. The growth of 1.7% in November compared to
October could be due to volatility in the data given the extended period of slower growth since early 2012. Airlines in the region
have experienced increased competition on long-haul markets, and
continued improvement in the month-on-month growth would be needed
to determine a change in trend. Load factor surged 2.6 percentage
points to 75.7%.
North American airlines’ demand was up 2.6%
compared to November 2011, an improvement on the weak 0.2% growth
in October, when Hurricane Sandy impacted international flights
across the North Atlantic. Airlines in the region have experienced
some of the slower growth rates in international traffic
throughout the year, but that is largely a result of tight capacity management rather than particularly weak demand. Capacity
climbed 0.4%, pushing load factor up 1.6 percentage points to
79.6%, the highest for any region.
European carriers saw
demand grow 4% compared to November 2011, while capacity climbed
0.8% and load factor was 77.8%, up 2.3 percentage points. Traffic
rose 0.5% compared to October.
Middle East airlines’ demand
expanded 10.5% compared to November 2011, second best among the
regions, continuing the exceptional growth throughout the year.
However, this was outstripped by a capacity increase of 11.2%
which resulted in the load factor falling 0.5 percentage points to
73.5%. Month-on-month growth was 0.3%.
Latin American
carriers posted demand growth of 11.0% compared to November 2011,
the strongest of any region. Although the Latin American economy
has suffered from the Eurozone crisis and China’s slower growth
this year, strong domestic demand in several major economies has
provided continued support to air travel. Capacity climbed 9.8%
leading to an improvement in load factor of 0.8 percentage points
to 76.3%. Compared to October, traffic rose 2.9%.
African
airlines saw demand expand 5.0% year-on-year but capacity growth
was held in check, at 4.4%. Load factor rose 0.4 percentage points
to 64.7% but remains the lowest of any region. Compared to
October, African traffic was up just 0.1%.
Domestic
Passenger Markets
Domestic markets rose 3.0%
compared to November 2011, an improvement over the 2.4%
year-on-year growth reported in October. However, the
month-on-month increase was just 1.2%. Capacity growth of 3.3%
outstripped demand and load factor dipped 0.2 percentage points to
79.1%.
US demand travel was up 1.1%, but capacity
expanded 2.7% leading to a 1.3 percentage point drop in load
factor to a still industry-leading 82.1%. Demand rose just 0.6%
compared to October.
Chinese demand grew 7.7%, lagging strong
capacity expansion of 10.3%. Load factor fell 1.9 percentage
points to 79.1%. Compared to October Chinese domestic travel
increased 1.9%.
Indian demand fell by 6.5%, reflecting the
slowing economy and sinking business confidence. Month-on-month
traffic increased by 3.2%, the second month of positive growth in
a row. However, it is not clear if India has turned the corner as business fundamentals remain weak.
Japan traffic grew 4.4%
year-on-year, eclipsing a 1.5% increase in capacity and pushing
load factor up 1.9 percentage points to 67.3%--which was still the
weakest for any market. Compared to October, demand rose 3%.
Brazil recorded strong demand growth of 10.2%. Brazil has been the
fastest-growing domestic market for two consecutive months.
Capacity fell 2.1% and load factor jumped 8.3 percentage points to
73.9%. Compared to October, traffic rose 2.3%.
Freight Markets (International and Domestic)
Air
freight markets rebounded strongly in November, expanding by 1.6%
after a 2.6% year-on-year decline in October. Although some of
this increase again reflects the impact of the Thai floods in the
year-ago period, the month-on-month increase of 2.4% is a positive
sign.
Asia Pacific airlines were responsible for
almost half the rise in total volumes compared to October. The
2.4% rise in month-on-month volumes for the region was in contrast
to a 1.5% decline compared to November 2011. Freight capacity fell
2.8% over the period. North American carriers increased freight
traffic by 1.7%, and cut capacity by 0.6%, compared to November
2011. European airlines’ year-on-year freight traffic was flat,
and capacity grew just 0.3%.
Middle East carriers’ freight
showed the strongest year-on-year growth of any region, up 16% on
just a 6.1% rise in capacity. Load factor surged to 46.7%, up 4
percentage points.
Latin American airlines’ freight grew
4.2% year-on-year, but capacity grew at more than twice the rate,
up 8.5%.
African carriers grew freight volumes by 4.4%
compared to November 2011. Although they kept the capacity
increase to 3.6%, the load factor of 26.2% was still the weakest
of all regions by a wide margin.
Tyler's Take
“The recently-ended holiday period serves as
a reminder of the value aviation provides. Travel made possible by
aviation brought seasonal goods to markets and re-united friends
and families around the globe to celebrate. 2013 is
the 100th year of commercial aviation. Over that century, through
an ever-expanding network, air transport has transformed the way
we live, work and play, providing jobs for some 57 million people
and supporting $2.2 trillion in economic activity by connecting
people and goods on 35,000 routes. But continued
connectivity growth is not guaranteed. The industry’s expected
margin in 2013 of 1.3% is very weak. Furthermore current returns
on investment are less than half the industry’s cost of capital,
which continues to erode shareholder value. In the
New Year, governments should resolve to bring down the barriers to
connectivity growth. This can be done by addressing excessive
taxation, high infrastructure costs, onerous regulation and
improving the capacity and efficiency of airports and air
navigation services. A strong air transport sector is in the
self-interest of governments eager to support economic growth and
development. Trade is the key to growth. For that connectivity is
critical. And it is aviation that makes connectivity happen,” said
Tyler.
IATA
|