News
Air Transport Markets Weaken in
November
Geneva - The International Air Transport Association
(IATA) announced global traffic results for November showing a softening
in passenger markets while air cargo markets remained weak compared to
levels attained earlier in the year.
Passenger traffic was 4.3% above November 2010 levels but
this is skewed as November 2010 was a particularly weak month. The
softening in passenger markets becomes apparent when comparing to the
previous month (October 2011). This shows a 0.5% decline on a
seasonally-adjusted basis.
Freight markets were 3.1% below November 2010 levels
despite a 1.1% increase on October 2011 performance.
“Weak global economic performance is being reflected in
air transport markets. Freight markets have contracted some 4% compared
to January. Although passenger markets have had some growth relative to
the beginning of the year – about 2%– the trend has been both soft and
volatile. Continuing economic uncertainty will likely mean market
shortcomings deepening as we enter 2012,” said Tony Tyler, IATA’s
Director General and CEO.
Globally, passenger load factors have
fallen sharply to 76.3% from 78.5% in October. This shows that the
weakness in passenger demand is outpacing airlines’ ability to adjust
capacity accordingly. Regional differences are sharp. While North
American carriers saw a 0.8% decline in travel, carriers in the Middle
East experienced a 10.1% increase, followed by 9.0% for Latin American
airlines.
.
Nov
2011 vs. Nov 2010
|
RPK
Growth
|
ASK
Growth
|
PLF
|
FTK
Growth
|
AFTK
Growth
|
International
|
4.0%
|
5.2%
|
74.6
|
-3.8%
|
1.9%
|
Domestic
|
4.7%
|
2.8%
|
79.2
|
2.0%
|
1.9%
|
Total
Market
|
4.3%
|
4.3%
|
76.3
|
-3.1%
|
1.9%
|
YTD
2011 vs. YTD 2010
|
RPK
Growth
|
ASK
Growth
|
PLF
|
FTK
Growth
|
AFTK
Growth
|
International
|
6.9%
|
8.3%
|
77.5
|
-0.5%
|
5.3%
|
Domestic
|
4.2%
|
3.0%
|
79.4
|
-2.2%
|
-0.1%
|
Total
Market
|
5.9%
|
6.3%
|
78.2
|
-0.7%
|
4.1%
|
International Passenger Markets
International travel markets continue to be weaker than
domestic markets. Compared to October, international demand contracted by
1.5% while domestic demand grew by 1.3%.
- North
American airlines saw international demand shrink
by 1.2% (compared to November 2010), roughly in line with a 1.0%
reduction in capacity. The fourth quarter uptick in the US
economy has yet to be reflected in passenger markets.
- Latin
American and the
Middle Eastern carriers recorded the strongest
year-on-year growth at 8.8% and 9.8% respectively. For both regions,
capacity increases outstripped the growth in demand with Middle
Eastern carriers growing their capacity by 10.4% and Latin American
carriers by 11.4%. Latin American economies have remained strong
with robust trade activity. Middle Eastern airlines have seen a gain
in market share on long-haul markets through price competitive
products.
- European
airlines continued to face the weakest market outlook
due to the uncertainty in the Euro-zone. Demand grew 4.9%
compared to the previous November while capacity increased by 5.3%.
This is a steep change from the 6.4% demand growth recorded for
October on a capacity increase of 8.1%. Growth in travel has been
supported by business travel on the back of export strength in
economies such as Germany.
- Asia-Pacific
airlines reported 2.4% growth in year-on-year demand
which is less than half the 5.4% growth in capacity. The region’s
carriers recorded a load factor of 73.3%.
- African
carriers reported 2.6% growth in demand. While this is
twice the 1.3% capacity expansion, the region still recorded the
weakest load factors of 66.2%.
Domestic Passenger Markets
Overall domestic performance was better than that of
international markets with 4.7% year-on-year growth in November and an
average load factor of 79.2%. Sharp differences remained between the
major markets:
- US domestic
demand fell by 0.8% (year-on-year). Capacity cuts of 3.4% resulted
in the strongest load factor of 83.4%.
- Chinese domestic
demand showed the strongest year-on-year growth at 17.2%. This is in
excess of the 13.3% growth in capacity and resulted in a load factor
of 80.7%.
- Demand in
the Indian domestic
market grew by 10.7%, which is well below the 17.3% expansion in
capacity. Load factors stood at 76.8%.
- Brazil recorded 9.4%
year-on-year growth in demand which was relatively in line with the
10.3% increase in capacity. Load factors stood at 65.7% for the
month.
- The
post-earthquake and tsunami recovery in the Japanese market
stagnated in November. Demand was 10.7% below levels attained in the
previous year. Despite capacity cuts of 9%, Japan still recorded the
weakest domestic load factor at 65.4%.
Air Freight (Domestic and International)
Air freight markets continued their decline in line with
weak economic performance and falling business confidence. International
markets declined by 3.8%. This was offset by 2.0% growth in domestic
markets. Nonetheless, system wide demand shrank by 3.1% in comparison
with November 2010.
- International
freight load factors have declined 6 percentage points from their
peak in mid-2010. While freighter capacity has been adjusted to meet
demand, belly cargo capacity follows the trend in passenger demand.
- Asia-Pacific
carriers have seen the weakest demand performance
driven by falling demand for Asian manufactured goods from US and
European consumers. The region’s carriers saw the market decline by
6.4%. European
carriers reported a 4.6% fall in demand reflecting
continued uncertainty associated with the Euro-zone crisis. North American carriers’ operations
were largely unchanged from the previous year with only 0.2% growth.
- The Middle
East and Latin American carriers delivered
the strongest cargo performance with 4.6% and 4.0% growth
respectively.
- African
carriers reported a 1.7% year-on-year decline.
The Bottom Line
“The year-end holiday season reminds us all of the
importance of connectivity and how aviation is a force for good in the
world. Global supply chains bring holiday goods to markets. Millions of
people are reunited with family and friends. Millions more embark on
journeys of discovery or rest and relaxation. Early in the New Year they
will be joined by business travelers seeking to grow their businesses by
exploring new market opportunities,” said Tyler.
“This year the story of aviation’s importance is even more
compelling as governments around the world seek solutions to economic
uncertainty. Economic growth is the only durable solution. Aviation can
be a catalyst for that growth. But that depends on governments allowing
airlines to get on with the business of providing global connectivity.
The New Year’s resolution for every government with respect to aviation
should be to stop over-taxation or mis-regulation of this vital economic
driver,” said Tyler.
IATA is estimating the airline industry will make a
collective profit of $6.9 billion in 2011 for a net margin of 1.2%. IATA
forecasts that this will fall to $3.5 billion in 2012 (0.6% net margin).
But the association has warned that the downside risk of the Euro-zone
crisis failing to be resolved could lead to losses in excess of $8
billion.
View November
traffic results
- IATA -
For more information, please contact:
Anthony Concil
Director Corporate Communications
Tel: +41 22 770 2967
Email: corpcomms@iata.org
Notes for Editors:
- IATA
(International Air Transport Association) represents some 240
airlines comprising 84% of global air traffic.
- You can
follow us at http://twitter.com/iata2press
for news specially catered for the media.
- Domestic
Markets: Domestic RPKs account for about 37.0% of the
total market. It is most important for North American airlines as it
is about 66.5% of their operations. In Latin America, domestic
travel accounts for 47.3% of operations, primarily owing to the large
Brazilian market. For Asia-Pacific carriers, the large markets in
India, China and Japan mean that domestic travel accounts for 42.2%
of the region’s operations. It is less important for Europe and most
of Africa where domestic travel represents just 11.0% and 11.6% of
operations respectively. And it is negligible for Middle Eastern
carriers for whom domestic travel represents just 5.5% of
operations.
- Explanation
of measurement terms:
- RPK:
Revenue Passenger Kilometers measures actual passenger traffic
- ASK:
Available Seat Kilometers measures available passenger capacity
- PLF:
Passenger Load Factor is % of ASKs used. In comparison of 2011 to
2010, PLF indicates point differential between the periods
comparedFTK: Freight Tonne Kilometers measures actual freight
traffic
- AFTK:
Available Freight Tonne Kilometers measures available total freight
capacity
- FLF:
Freight Load Factor is % of AFTKs used
- IATA
statistics cover international and domestic scheduled air traffic
for IATA member and non-member airlines.
- All figures
are provisional and represent total reporting at time of publication
plus estimates for missing data. Historic figures may be
revised.
- Total
passenger traffic market shares by region of carriers in terms of
RPK are: Europe 28.3%, Asia-Pacific 28.9%, North America 27.9%,
Middle East 7.3%, Latin America 5.3%, Africa 2.3%.
- Total
freight traffic market shares by region of carriers in terms of FTK
are: Asia-Pacific 40.5%, Europe 22.0%, North America 23.6%, Middle
East 9.8%, Latin America 3.0%, Africa 1.1%.
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