Cathay Pacific and Dragonair’s combined traffic
figures for January 2016 show a double-digit increase in the
number of passengers carried compared to the same month in 2015,
but only a marginal rise in the volume of cargo and mail uplifted.
Cathay Pacific and Dragonair carried a total of 2,897,890
passengers last month – an increase of 10.9% compared to January
2015. The passenger load factor grew by 3.3 percentage points to
86.0% while capacity, measured in available seat kilometres
(ASKs), grew by 5.9%.
Cathay Pacific
General Manager Revenue Management Patricia Hwang said, “After a
busy Christmas peak, we continued to see robust demand for flights
across both airlines’ networks in January. At 86%, the combined
load factor was the highest January figure since Dragonair became
part of the Cathay Pacific Group. We continued to see strong
traffic flows on key regional routes last month, and Economy Class
demand on long-haul services remained high. However, demand in the
long-haul premium cabins once again lagged expectations, while
yield was affected by a combination of factors including unfavourable currency movements.”
The two airlines carried 147,690 tonnes of cargo
and mail in January, a 0.3% increase compared to the same month
last year. The cargo and mail load factor fell by 1.8 percentage
points to 61.6%. Capacity, measured in available cargo/mail tonne
kilometres, was up by 2.4% while cargo and mail revenue tonne
kilometres (RTKs) flown decreased by 0.5%.
Cathay Pacific General
Manager Cargo Sales & Marketing Mark Sutch said, “We saw a falloff
in airfreight demand after the end-of-year peak and we reduced the
number of freighter services operated accordingly. Demand on the
key transpacific routes was solid, and we continued to see strong
cargo traffic to and from India. The January result was boosted by
a surge in shipments towards the end of the month in advance of
the Chinese New Year holiday. Rate-cutting as a result of
overcapacity continued to put significant pressure on cargo
yield.”
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