Aviation consultancy IBA has questioned whether airline profitability may have peaked considering the current macroeconomic outlook. According to IBA, there are mixed signals at play - positive metrics including traffic growth, vibrant new markets, and a buoyant SLB market seem to indicate that strong net profitability will continue. However, with the gathering clouds of creeping fuel prices, rising interest rates, wage inflation and increasingly price sensitive passengers, a different picture begins to emerge. Mid-2018 fuel prices are $15 higher per barrel than IATA predicted, a 40% increase year on year.
Base airfares and yields have generally stabilised since the sustained decline seen in recent years. Stronger economic conditions, leading to higher passenger demand have been offset by increased competition thereby causing base fares to be held back. IBA suggests that airline costs are expected to rise which would result in an upward trend in yields.
With the use of its airline scoring system, IBA has identified a number of airlines that are operating with negative margins and may find the times ahead particularly difficult. IBA predicts that if costs continue to rise, more airlines may begin to feel the squeeze later in the year.
IBA’s mid-market analysis indicates that there is a gap in the market in terms of pricing range and payload, however it is not clear if the gap is as large as some have estimated. Further analysis is required, says IBA who will continue to conduct research around the market potential for a New Midsized Aircraft (NMA).
IBA expects values to remain strong for new types of narrowbody aircraft as demand continues to strengthen. Rising costs will favour the fuel-efficient new generation of neo and MAX aircraft, and with deliveries of new generation narrowbodies expected to rise, an increase in retirements is also expected along with a surge in conversion demand.
Demand for mid-sized widebody freighter conversions is strong, particularly for the Boeing 767-300ERs, which is expected to continue to go through the P2F process in significant numbers. Adding some future competition to this market, the first A330-300 aircraft have now been converted to freighters for DHL and the first converted A330‑200 is in testing and will subsequently enter service with Egyptair.
The 787-8 backlog continues to dwindle despite the recent orders from American Airlines. Transactions and deliveries are down and some operators have shown a desire to leave the smaller variant behind. The A380 programme benefitted from a further order from Emirates earlier this year; some transitions are apparent but teardowns have also been announced. Elsewhere, the Boeing 787-9 and Airbus A350-900 aircraft are performing well whilst mature wide-body values and lease rates are decreasing.
IBA.iQ, IBA’s data platform, forecasts over 60 Airbus A330ceo lease ends each year over the next three years while A330-200 lease ends are expected to peak in 2020, potentially pushing pricing to levels attractive for P2F conversion. IBA.iQ also forecasts a peak in Boeing 777-300ER deliveries in 2019.
With the Farnborough Air show fast approaching, IBA predicts that with a strengthening economic outlook – GDP and traffic growth, improving load factors, flattening of yield decline and rising oil prices, it is likely that there will be strong orders for new technology during the show.