The International Air Transport Association (IATA) has revised its industry financial outlook upwards. For 2013 airlines are now expected to return a global net profit of $12.9 billion. This is expected to improve to a net profit of $19.7 billion in 2014. Both are improvements on the September forecast which anticipated an industry net profit of $11.7 billion in 2013 increasing to $16.4 billion in 2014.
The upward revision reflects lower jet fuel prices over the forecast period as well as improvements to the industry’s structure and efficiency already visible in quarterly results this year. Passenger markets continue to outperform the cargo business which remains stagnant both on volumes and revenues.
IATA expects 2014 to be a second consecutive year of strengthening profitability (beginning from 2012 when airlines posted a net profit of $7.4 billion). Industry net profit margins, however, remain weak at 1.1% of revenues in 2012, 1.8% in 2013 and 2.6% in 2014. Within this aggregate forecast for the entire industry, performance of individual airlines and regions will vary considerably.
The anticipated $19.7 billion profit in 2014 would come on projected revenues of $743 billion. While this would be the largest absolute profit for the airline industry—outstripping the $19.2 billion net profit that the industry returned in 2010 - it is important to note that 2010 revenues were $579 billion. The net profit margin in 2010 was 3.3%, some 0.7 percentage points higher than the 2.6% expected for 2014.
“Overall, the industry’s fortunes are moving in the right direction. Jet fuel prices remain high, but below their 2012 peak. Passenger demand is expanding in the 5-6% range—in line with the historical trend. Efficiencies gained through mergers and joint ventures are delivering value to both passengers and shareholders. And product innovations are growing ancillary revenues,” said Tony Tyler, IATA’s Director General and CEO. “We must temper our optimism with an appropriate dose of caution. It’s a tough environment in which to run an airline. Competition is intense and yields are deteriorating. Cargo volumes haven’t grown since 2010 and cargo revenues are back at 2007 levels. The passenger business is expanding more robustly. Some airlines will out-perform our estimates and others will under-perform. But, on average, airlines will only make a net profit of about $5.94 per passenger in 2014,” said Tyler.
Once again it is this service which gives you the jump on the markets
It amazes me how lazy some giant news services can be, we sit on a story for a week so as not to ruin the deal and then we decide to break the news, the guys at the big global news agencies five hours later and the aviation press 30 hours later then wake up and decide to slap their names all over the story and claim they have “sources”. It is of course the second time in less than a week for us as the same thing happened on the A340/RR news last Wednesday.
Luckily, as the eagle-eyed among you will have noticed, the major global news outlets have been forced over night to change their stories to state that Airline Economics broke the news and that AIG, AerCap and ILFC have indeed not spoken to them. To this moment Airline Economicsremains the only news outlet to have three different sources confirming the deal.
Our news yesterday morning at 10:22GMT caused AerCap shares to jump to their highest point since before the credit crisis. This is great news for them so long as the deal goes through, which is by no means a dead certainty at this point.