According to IATA, global passenger traffic
results for October 2013 show a moderate acceleration of the
robust demand trend of the last few months.
Total revenue
passenger kilometers (RPKs) rose 6.6% compared to October 2012, an
improvement over the September increase of 5.2%, while a capacity
increase of 6.5% meant that load factor was virtually flat at
78.9%.
"October traffic results reinforce expectations
for a strong fourth quarter traffic performance in line with
rising business confidence and better economic performance in the
major advanced economies," said Tony Tyler, IATA’s Director
General and CEO.
International Passenger Markets
October
international passenger demand was up 6.9% compared to the
year-ago period with airlines in all regions recording growth.
Capacity rose 6.6% and load factor climbed 0.2 percentage points
to 78.4%.
Asia Pacific carriers continued their solid
performance of recent months with a 7.8% rise in October compared
to October 2012, the strongest performance among the three biggest
regions. Current growth rates are an improvement compared to the
first half of 2013, supported by better performance of major
economies such as China and Japan. Furthermore, international
trade volumes in emerging Asian economies rebounded in September
adding support for business travel. With capacity up 7.1% versus
October 2012, load factor rose 0.5 percentage points to 76.4%.
European carriers’ international traffic climbed 5.4% in
October compared to the year-ago period, on a 4.6% rise in
capacity, pushing load factor up 0.6 percentage points to 81.0%.
The Eurozone economy stopped contracting in the second quarter and
has continued the modest recovery in the second half of 2013. The
pace of economic growth has slowed, however, from 0.3% in the
second quarter to just 0.1% in the third, as the recovery remains
fragile and patchy.
North American airlines saw
demand rise 3.6% compared to October a year ago, an improvement on
September growth of 2.3%. Recent indications suggest a more
supportive business environment, with consumer confidence and
business activity showing improvement throughout the third
quarter. But rates of manufacturing and service sector growth are
still well down on growth seen at the beginning of the year,
suggesting international demand could remain close to year-to-date rates (2.8%) for the rest of 2013. Capacity rose 4.6%, resulting
in a 0.8 percentage point decline in load factor to 81.4%.
Middle East carriers had by far the strongest year-over-year
traffic growth in October at 14.0%. Capacity kept pace, however,
rising 13.9%, and load factor stayed flat compared to the year-ago
period at 75.5%. Airlines in the region have benefitted from
strong demand for business-related premium travel, particularly to
developing markets such as Africa. Solid performance of key
economies like Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates has also
supported strong expansion in business and leisure travel.
Latin American airlines saw demand climb 8.3% in October
buoyed by solid trade growth and business related travel. Economic
expansion in Colombia, Peru and Chile is supporting demand for
international travel, offsetting continuing weakness in Brazil.
Capacity rose 4.6% and load factor jumped 2.7 percentage points to
79.7%.
African airlines’ traffic climbed 3.5%
compared to October 2012, the slowest rate of growth for any
region and well below year-to-date expansion of 6.4%. Capacity
rose 8.7%, resulting in a 3.3 percentage point drop in load factor
to 66.1%, the lowest load factor for any region. Intense
competition on major trunk routes and market volatility may have
affected volumes in October.
Domestic Passenger Markets
Domestic travel demand rose 6.0% in October compared to a
year-ago, largely driven by strong traffic growth in developing
markets. Total domestic capacity was up 6.3%, however, pushing
load down 0.2 percentage points to 79.8%.
US domestic
traffic rose 2.8% in October compared to October 2012, above the
year-to-date growth of 1.7%, suggesting domestic traffic was not
seriously impacted by the federal government shutdown that month.
Capacity, however, rose 4.7% and load factor dropped 1.6
percentage points to 82.8%, which still was the highest for any
market.
China’s domestic traffic jumped 12.3%
compared to the year ago period, the highest for any market and
consistent with robust economic activity in the country. October
capacity rose 11.7% and load factor grew 0.4 percentage points to
80.9%.
India’s airlines also experienced
double-digit growth as traffic leapt 11.5% in October compared to
a year ago. Airlines have experienced substantial volatility in
traffic and it is likely that the increase is a result of
unusually low volumes a year ago rather than growth in October.
Capacity rose 9.4% and load factor climbed 1.4 percentage points
to 72.1%.
Japan traffic climbed 5.1% in October
year-on-year, supported by sustained increases in business
activity and trade growth. With capacity up 4.1% load factor rose
0.6 percentage points to 68.8%, which still was the lowest among
the regions.
Brazil’s airlines posted domestic
traffic growth of 5.5%, a significant improvement compared to the
September result of 0.4%. Capacity was nearly flat with the result
that load factor climbed 3.9 percentage points to 77.9%, the
steepest rise for any market.
Russia was the third
market to experience a double-digit increase in demand, with
traffic up 11.4% in October compared to October 2012. The
exuberant result was in contrast to indicators showing a slowdown
in economic activity, with weakness in consumer demand and trade
activity. Capacity rose 12.5%, dropping load factor 0.7 percentage
points to 72.7%.
Australian domestic traffic rose
1.2% in October compared to last year, similar to September
year-on-year growth of 1.4%. While weaker domestic demand and
sluggishness in growth of major trade partners like China
constrained air travel, improvements in business and consumer
confidence linked to interest rate cuts suggest a more positive
economic outlook. Capacity rose 3.5%, and load factor declined 1.7
percentage points to 77.4%.
"In 2013, the airline industry will carry more than 3 billion
passengers in a year for the first time. And on 1 January 2014, we will celebrate a century of scheduled commercial aviation. These
twin landmarks provide an opportunity to reflect on the enormous
contribution aviation makes to all of our lives. That contribution
comes not from the fees and taxes with which governments continue
to burden aviation and air travelers, but rather from the ability
to bring people together, connect people to markets and to create
opportunities for greater understanding among cultures," said
Tyler.
IATA
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