IATA’s global passenger traffic results for July
2014 show demand growth of 5.3% (measured in revenue passenger
kilometers or RPKs) over July 2013.
Capacity expanded exactly in tandem with demand
(5.3%), resulting in a global load factor of 82.3%, unchanged from
last year.
“July was another strong month of growth for air
travel. People are connecting by air in ever greater numbers.
That’s true across all regions. Despite the various economic
challenges, the outlook for passenger travel remains broadly
positive. The overall sluggishness at the beginning of the year
appears to be behind us with growth in China and other emerging
economies offsetting recent deterioration in the Eurozone,” said
Tony Tyler, IATA’s Director General and CEO.
July
international passenger demand rose by 5.5% compared to the same
month in 2013. This was outstripped by a capacity expansion of
6.2% which resulted in a slight weakening of the load factor to
81.9% (down 0.5 percentage points from the year-ago period, but
still at a very high level).
European carriers reported
growth of 5.3% in July compared to a year ago. Capacity expanded
slightly more aggressively at 5.6%, but the region still reported
a very high load factor of 85.1%. While this is a robust
performance, latest indicators show a weakening in key European
economies such as Germany reflecting the impact of sanctions
associated with the deepening Russia-Ukraine crisis.
Asia Pacific airlines are benefitting from an improved economic
environment. Demand growth was slightly above the global average
at 5.6% which lagged a capacity increase of 6.8%. Load factor fell
0.9 percentage points to 78.9%. The biggest factor affecting
demand developments is the response of the Chinese economy to
stimulus measures which saw year-on-year GDP growth reach 7.5% in
July.
North American airlines saw international
demand grow by 2.9%--the slowest of all regions. Capacity
expansion was nearly double that at 5.6%; nonetheless the load
factor stood at 85.1%. Overall business conditions are the
strongest since mid-2010, which bodes well for the region’s
carriers.
Airlines in the Middle East recorded the
strongest growth at 9.2%. This was ahead of a capacity expansion
of 8.2%. Load factor rose 0.7 percentage points to 78.0%. The
carriers are benefitting from the strength of regional economies
and solid growth in business-related premium travel.
Latin American carriers reported growth of 6.7%, in line with a
6.6% capacity increase. Load factors stood at 82.5%. Robust economic performance in Colombia, Peru and Chile is being offset
by weakness in Brazil. Furthermore, regional trade volumes are not
expanding, the impact of which has been a dialing down of travel
demand from the 8% growth range experienced in 2013.
African airlines reported growth of 4.9%, reversing the
year-on-year contraction experienced in June. With capacity rising
4.5%, load factor improved slightly to 70.2%. The biggest factor
impacting international traffic demand in July was the slowdown of
the South African economy. The Ebola outbreak in West Africa
intensified towards the end of July, the impact of which will
likely be seen in August.
Domestic Passenger Markets
Demand on domestic routes rose by 4.9% in July over the
previous year, ahead of a 3.5% capacity increase, pushing load
factor up 1.1 percentage points to 83.0%. The strongest growth was
recorded in China (8.8%) and Russia (9.9%).
Russian
airlines saw the strongest growth rate among major domestic
markets at 9.9%. While the Russia-Ukraine crisis has seen a slowdown in the Russian economy, domestic demand grew as a result
of a significant reduction in fares.
India’s domestic
market increased by a solid 6.0% in July over the previous year.
This could be an early sign of the success of the new government’s
business-friendly stance. However, the government’s July budget
announcement showed little spending stimulus which could keep
India’s growth trend below the pace of other emerging markets.
Bottom Line
"Airlines
reported growth in July, which is a positive story for the global
economy. Robust economic conditions support the expansion of
travel. In turn connectivity stimulates economic growth and
creates jobs. It’s a tried and tested virtuous circle. And the
expectation is for continued solid growth over the remainder of
2014," said Tyler. "We cannot ignore, however, the risks
that could de-rail this trajectory. The Ebola outbreak in West
Africa, weakness in the Eurozone, hostilities in Eastern Ukraine
and instability in the Middle East loom large. Airlines are on
track to record a profit of some $18 billion this year. But that
is a net profit margin of just 2.4% which does not provide much of
a buffer. So it is critical that governments shore-up connectivity
with business friendly policies based on reasonable taxation,
cost-efficient infrastructure and smart regulation."
IATA,
Traffic,
Airlines,
Aviation,
July 2014
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