IATA’s global passenger traffic results for
August 2013 show a strengthening of the healthy demand trend of
the last few months.
Total revenue passenger kilometers (RPKs)
rose 6.8% compared to August 2012. Capacity increases over the
year-ago period lagged demand at 5.6%. This pushed the load factor
to match the record high of 83.4% set in July 2011.
“August was a positive month for passenger
travel. Strong demand and capacity discipline saw load factors
match the previous record high of 83.4%. The solid performance was
also supported by a stabilization of emerging market weakness and
renewed confidence in Europe and North America. Trading conditions
are still tough with high oil prices, stiff competition and
regulatory hurdles. But demand growth remains a bright spot with
most indications pointing towards an acceleration in the fourth
quarter,” said Tony Tyler, IATA’s Director General and CEO.
International Passenger Markets
August international
passenger demand was up 7.5% compared to the year-ago period.
Capacity rose 5.6% versus August 2012 and load factor climbed 1.5
percentage points to 84.0%. All regions recorded year-over-year
increases in demand.
Asia Pacific carriers recorded an
increase of 8.6% compared to August 2012, the strongest
performance among the three biggest regions. Market indicators for
emerging regional markets have been weak. But downward pressure on
growth appears to have eased, at least with respect to China,
where latest indicators show an improvement in new export orders. With capacity up 6.3% over August 2012, load factor rose 1.7
percentage points to 81.6%.
European carriers’
international traffic climbed 5.4% in August compared to the
year-ago period, on a 3.7% rise in capacity, pushing load factor
up 1.4 percentage points to 86.4%. Modest economic improvements
and rising consumer confidence are supporting the growth in
demand. Business confidence is also strengthening with increased
manufacturing and export activity.
North American
airlines saw demand rise 5.1% over a year ago, the slowest growth
for any region but still close to double the year-to-date increase
of 2.7%. This is consistent with indicators of a more supportive
business environment, although manufacturing activity remains
below the average seen at the start of 2013. A 4.0% rise in
capacity meant that load factor climbed one percentage point to
88.1%, the highest for any region. Looking ahead, the US
Government shutdown is not expected to impact airline operations
but could dampen demand. The 27-day shutdown in 1996, for example,
resulted in delays for tens of thousands of passport and visa
applications.
Middle East carriers had the strongest
year-over-year traffic growth at 15.1%. The result was positively
biased from the timing of Ramadan, which occurred a month earlier
(in July) in 2013. Capacity expansion was held to 10.8% which
pushed up load factor 3.1 percentage points to 82.0%. The strong
demand trend is expected to continue, with August data showing solid progress in non-oil producing sectors in countries such as
Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.
Latin
American airlines posted a demand rise of 9.8% in August,
year-over-year. Although Brazil continues to face deteriorating
business confidence, Colombia, Peru and Chile, for example, are
expanding and the region is also enjoying strong export activity,
well above the global trend. Capacity rose 7.6% and load factor
climbed 1.6 percentage points to 80.8%.
African
airlines’ traffic climbed 5.4% compared to August while capacity
rose 6.5%, resulting in a 0.7 percentage point dip in load factor
to 70.9%. Africa was the only region to see a decline in the load
factor.
Domestic Passenger Markets
Demand for
domestic travel climbed 5.6% in August compared to a year-ago.
Developing markets in Asia posted double-digit demand growth and
all markets showed year-over-year increases. Total domestic
capacity was up 5.7% and load factor slipped fractionally to
82.4%.
US domestic traffic rose 1.2% in August, largely
in line with July’s 1.5% growth but below the year-to-date growth
of 1.8%. Capacity, however, rose 2.6% compared to August 2012,
dropping the load factor 1.2 percentage points to 85.8%, which
still was the highest for any market. The demand environment is
broadly optimistic with measures of business activity suggesting
that the third quarter will maintain the faster rates of economic
growth seen in the second quarter.
China’s domestic
traffic jumped 13.7% compared to the year ago. Indicators of
manufacturing and services activity increased in August after
reaching a post-crisis low in July. Capacity expansion (13.6%)
almost matched demand growth and load factor grew 0.1 percentage
point to 83.7%.
Japan enjoyed another month of
strong growth with traffic up 8.8% in August year-on-year. Japan’s
economy is showing signs of steady improvement and consumer prices
continue to increase, in line with government actions to end
deflation. Capacity growth of 7.1% was outpaced by demand, raising
the load factor to 70.7%. Even so, this is the weakest load factor
among the domestic markets followed.
Brazil’s
domestic traffic rose just 0.5%, a result of both capacity
reductions and sluggish demand. Capacity declined 1.2%, propelling
load factor up 1.3 percentage points to 74.3%.
Indian domestic traffic surged 15.7% in August compared to a year
ago. There has been substantial volatility in growth rates in
recent months but year-to-date growth of 2.8% confirms that demand
has been weak overall, consistent with weakening economic
conditions. Capacity rose 8.5% over August 2012 and load factor
climbed 4.5 percentage points to 71.9%.
Russian
demand climbed 6.9% compared to August 2012, below the July
increase of 11.9% and the year-to-date result of 9.6%. Capacity
rose 7.8%, dropping load factor 0.7 percentage points to 81.7%.
The healthy traffic growth occurred against a backdrop of a
potentially weakening economic outlook, with manufacturing
activity in contraction and employment declining at the fastest
rate in four years.
Australian domestic traffic rose
4.7% on a 2.2% rise in capacity, and load factor climbed 1.9
percentage points to 77.7%.
The Bottom Line
The
growth in demand for passenger travel highlights the important
role that global connectivity plays in today’s world.
“Aviation is
the lifeblood of the global economy. It’s important for jobs and
development that aviation’s growth is sustainable. That’s equally
critical for its financial and environmental performance,” said
Tyler. “Last week we announced a revised industry outlook.
Profits are weak, but moving in the right direction. In 2012
airlines made an average 1.1% net profit margin. That is expected
to double to 2.2% in 2014. Cost control, consolidation, joint
ventures and product innovations are among the measures that are
helping airlines achieve the efficiencies needed to secure their
financial futures.”
“This week we have a golden
opportunity to secure a major step forward on environmental
sustainability at the 38th Assembly of the International Civil
Aviation Organization (ICAO). It is critical that the Assembly
agree a way forward on a single market-based measure (MBM) to
support the shared commitment of industry and governments to
carbon-neutral growth from 2020. Interim regional schemes will
only serve to distract policymakers and the industry at a time
when we should be focused on the big picture. Finding a way
forward on a global mechanism will be an historic achievement that keeps aviation at the forefront of industries managing their
climate change impact,” said Tyler.
At its 2013 Annual
General Meeting, IATA members overwhelmingly supported a
resolution calling for the implementation of a global mandatory
carbon offsetting scheme from 2020.
IATA
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