IATA has updated its analysis of the financial
impact of the COVID19 outbreak on the global air transport
industry and now forecasts 2020 global revenue losses of between
$63 billion and $113 billion.
No estimates are yet available for the impact on
cargo operations.
IATA’s
previous analysis put lost revenues at $29.3 billion based on a scenario that
would see the impact of COVID19 largely confined to markets
associated with China. Since that time, the virus has spread to
over 80 countries and forward bookings have been severely impacted
on routes beyond China.
Financial markets have reacted
strongly. Airline share prices have fallen nearly 25% since the
outbreak began, some 21 percentage points greater than the decline
that occurred at a similar point during the SARS crisis of 2003.
To a large extent, this fall already prices in a shock to industry
revenues much greater than our previous analysis.
To take into account the evolving situation with
COVID19, IATA
estimated the potential impact on passenger revenues based on two
possible scenarios:
Scenario 1: Limited Spread
This scenario includes markets with more than 100 confirmed
COVID19 cases (as of 2 March) experiencing a sharp downturn
followed by a V-shaped recovery profile. It also estimates falls
in consumer confidence in other markets (North America, Asia
Pacific and Europe).
The markets accounted for in
this scenario and their anticipated fall in passenger numbers, due
to COVID19, as are as follows: China (-23%), Japan (-12%),
Singapore (-10%), South Korea (-14%), Italy (-24%), France (-10%),
Germany (-10%), and Iran (-16%).
Additionally, Asia (excluding
China, Japan, Singapore and South Korea) would be expected to see
an 11% fall in demand.
Europe (excluding Italy, France and
Germany) would see a 7% fall in demand and Middle East (excluding
Iran) would see a 7% fall in demand.
Globally,
this fall in demand translates to an 11% worldwide passenger
revenue loss equal to $63 billion. China would account for some
$22 billion of this total. Markets associated with Asia (including
China) would account for $47 billion of this total.
Scenario 2: Extensive Spread
This scenario applies a
similar methodology but to all markets that currently have 10 or
more confirmed COVID19 cases (as of 2 March).
The outcome is a
19% loss in worldwide passenger revenues, which equates to $113
billion. Financially, that would be on a scale equivalent to what
the industry experienced in the Global Financial Crisis.
Africa and Latin America/Caribbean regions are not explicitly
included in this market-based analysis, because there are
currently no countries in either region with at least 10 COVID19
cases.
Mitigation
Oil prices have fallen
significantly (-$13/barrel Brent) since the beginning of the year.
This could cut costs up to $28 billion on the 2020 fuel bill (on
top of those savings which would be achieved as a result of
reduced operations) which would provide some relief but would not
significantly cushion the devastating impact that COVID19 is
having on demand. And it should be noted that hedging practices
will postpone this impact for many airlines.
Impact
“The turn of events as a result of COVID19 is almost without
precedent. In little over two months, the industry’s prospects in much of the world have taken a dramatic turn for the worse. It is
unclear how the virus will develop, but whether we see the impact
contained to a few markets and a $63 billion revenue loss, or a
broader impact leading to a $113 billion loss of revenue, this is
a crisis. Many airlines are cutting capacity and
taking emergency measures to reduce costs. Governments must take note. Airlines are doing their best to stay afloat as they perform
the vital task of linking the world’s economies. As governments look to stimulus measures, the airline industry will need
consideration for relief on taxes, charges and slot allocation.
These are extraordinary times,” said Alexandre de Juniac, IATA’s
Director General and CEO.
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