IATA has reported that full year 2011 passenger
demand rose 5.9% compared to 2010, in line with long-term growth
trends.
In contrast, cargo markets contracted by
0.7% for the year; but recorded positive demand growth in December
of 0.2%.
Growth in demand lagged capacity increases
at 6.3% (passenger) and 4.1% (cargo) putting downward pressure on
load factors. The average passenger load factor for 2011 was
78.1%, down from 78.3% in 2010, while the freight load factor was
just 45.9%, down from 48.1% in 2010.
“Given the weak conditions in Western economies
the passenger market held up well in 2011. But overall 2011 was a
year of contrasts. Healthy passenger growth, primarily in the
first half of the year, was offset by a declining cargo market.
Optimism in China contrasted with gloom in Europe. Ironically, the
weak euro supported business travel demand. But Europe's primarily
tax and restrict approach to aviation policy left the continent's
carriers with the weakest profitability among the industry's major
regions. Cautious improving business confidence is good news. But
2012 is still going to be a tough year,” said Tony Tyler, IATA’s
Director General and CEO.
Passenger demand for
December rose 5.4% compared to the same month in 2010. But the
trend since mid-year has clearly slowed, as travel markets react
with a lag to the declines in confidence that weakened cargo in
the second half of 2011. Comparisons with December 2010 are also
distorted as severe winter weather in Europe and North America as
well as strikes in Europe suppressed demand. December 2011
passenger demand was up just 0.7% over November while the load
factor declined 0.2 percentage points. Freight capacity climbed
4.4% in December compared to December 2010. The freight load
factor was just 46.1% for the month.
International
Passenger Markets
International air travel rose
6.9% last year, reflecting the strong growth of 6.2% recorded
between February and July, compared to 1.2% between September and
December. International capacity climbed 8.2%, pushing the
passenger load factor down to 77.4%. For December, international
traffic climbed 6.4% year over year, in part owing to depressed
traffic levels in 2010 in North American and Europe, and rose 1.4%
compared to November.
- European carriers posted
the second highest growth rates, behind Latin American carriers.
Demand rose 9.5% last year while capacity climbed 10.2%, resulting
in a load factor of 78.9%. December traffic rose 9.8% but this was
surpassed by a 10.3% rise in capacity. Europe’s strong performance
is somewhat surprising in light of the European sovereign debt
crisis; however European airlines have benefited from robust
business travel on long-haul markets, in part related to strong
exports from Northern Europe.
- North American
carriers had the industry’s highest load factors for both the
year - 80.7%, and the month of December, 80.5%. These figures
demonstrate tight capacity management, as the industry coped with
demand increases of just 1% for December and 4% for the year.
Nevertheless, capacity still expanded a little faster than demand,
with increases of 1.4% in December and 6% for the year, so load
factors were not quite as high as in 2010.
- Latin
American airlines led the industry in traffic growth in 2011 with
a 10.2% rise in demand compared to 2010. This also was the only
region in which demand growth outstripped capacity growth for the
full year, with capacity up 9.2%. However, December’s strong
traffic growth of 8.8% was exceeded by an 11.1% rise in capacity.
Latin America air traffic is supported by healthy domestic economic conditions and trade activity with North America and
Asia.
- Middle Eastern carriers’ traffic rose 8.9%
for the year, against a 9.7% climb in capacity, putting pressure
on load factors, which at 75.4%, was the lowest except for Africa.
However, December ended on a more positive note, with traffic up
11.7% against an 11% rise in capacity and a load factor of 77.1%.
Airlines in this region have slowed the pace at which they have
expanded but price competitive products and geographically
well-positioned hubs are enabling Middle East carriers to continue
to improve their share of long-haul markets.
-
Asia Pacific airlines experienced the widest traffic/capacity gap
for the year, with annual traffic up 4.1% versus a 6.4% climb in capacity. A significant part of this slowdown was due to the
earthquake and tsunami in Japan, the impact of which on air travel
should be temporary. However, the sharp fall in air freight in the
region as Western demand for manufactured goods declined also
reduced some business travel for the region’s airlines. The
average load factor was 75.9%. In December, demand climbed 3.7%
and capacity rose 5.9% producing a 74.7% load factor.
- African airlines saw travel demand fall 0.7% for December,
but it rose 2.3% for the full year. This relatively weak
performance was in part owing to the civil unrest in a number of
North African countries. However, good economic performance in the
region was also generating significant demand for air travel.
African airlines were unable to fully benefit and their low growth
represents a loss of market share. Capacity climbed just 0.2% for
December and 4.4% for the 12 months. Load factors were the weakest
in the industry at 68.9% for December and 67.2% for the full year.
Domestic Passenger Markets
Passenger
demand in domestic markets for the full year rose 4.2% compared to
a 3.1% rise in capacity, leading to a load factor of 79.3%.
December demand rose 3.7% from a year earlier, however, this
represented a 0.5% decline from November. It is not clear yet whether this signals a new trend or is just an anomaly. Individual
markets varied dramatically in their performance.
US demand rose just 1.3% for the year – the result of market
maturity and a sluggish US economy – but with nearly flat capacity growth of 0.5%, load factors led the industry at 83%, helping to
boost airline unit revenues. For December, traffic actually
contracted 1.2% while capacity tightened 1.4%, pushing load
factors to 81.1%.
Chinese domestic demand rose a
solid 10.9% for the year on a 7.8% lift in capacity, strengthening
load factors to 82.2%, which helped the profitability of the
country’s airlines. Economic growth slowed but by most standards
still remained strong, underpinning air travel demand. December
capacity rose 14% compared to the year-ago period with demand up
12.3%, achieving a 78.7% load factor.
India had the
strongest annual growth with demand up 16.4% but capacity rose
18.6% and the load factor was 74.7%. The demand/capacity gap was
particularly acute in December, with traffic rising 9.3% on a
15.5% increase in capacity. The deterioration in load factors
generated by this excess capacity is one of the factors behind the
losses being reported by Indian airlines, in contrast to the
current situation in China.
The impact of last
year’s earthquake and tsunami meant Japan’s airlines ended the
year with demand down 15.2% on a capacity decline of 11.5%. By
December, however, the domestic market had recovered to levels
4.7% below pre-earthquake levels. Even with an 8.7% drop in
capacity load factors were the lowest among the group at just
58.8%.
Brazilian carriers saw a 13.7% jump in
demand from their home market last year on an 11.2% rise in
capacity. Load factors remain below the industry average at 69.3%.
December demand slipped back to 5.6% on a 9.6% rise in capacity,
resulting in a load factor of 69.6%.
Air Freight
(Domestic and International)
Air freight markets
turned up at the end of the year after shrinking through much of
the summer and autumn as business confidence across major
economies, and export orders, slumped.
Surveys are now showing
that business confidence, a leading indicator for changes in cargo
markets, turned up in December, suggesting that industrial
production and international trade may be stabilizing.
Although
international freight markets contracted 0.6% for the full year
and 0.8% in December, compared to a year ago, December international demand was 1.5% ahead of the level in November,
while domestic demand was up 3.2% compared to November and 5.5%
compared to December 2010.
Freight markets have now shown
sequential month-over-month growth in November and December,
adding evidence to the view that international trade may be
stabilizing. However, the situation for airlines in these markets
has deteriorated significantly.
Freight load factors declined
considerably to 45.9% in 2011, as measures to match capacity with
demand by reducing the freighter fleet have been offset by
introduction of new twin aisle passenger aircraft.
Bottom Line
“Improving business confidence and
encouraging news from the US economy are heartening developments.
But it is far too early to start predicting a soft landing for
2012. The euro zone crisis is far from over. Failure to achieve a
durable solution will have dire consequences for economies around
the world. And it would most certainly tip the airline industry
into the red,” said Tyler.
“Airlines have made massive
investments in new fuel-efficient, environmentally friendly
aircraft. The challenge is to deploy them profitably into a
dynamic and uncertain market. Governments, meanwhile, need to take
a strategic view of the airline industry that recognizes its value
as a catalyst for economic growth. Airlines transport about 3
billion people a year. And over a third of the value of goods that
are traded internationally is transported by air. Getting people
and goods to their destinations more efficiently improves competitiveness. Infrastructure investments to enable aircraft to
land and takeoff with a minimum of delay and fly the most fuel and carbon efficient trajectories will return a far greater payout to
global GDP than shortsighted and narrowly-focused tax grabs. Let’s hope that 2012 will be the year when politicians put the required
political capital behind important projects such as the Single European Sky and NextGen in the US,”
Tyler added.
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