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The International Air Transport Association (IATA) has released its financial outlook for the global air transport industry showing that airlines are expected to lose $84.3 billion in 2020 for a net profit margin of -20.1 per cent.

According  to the international airline body, revenues will fall 50 per cent to $419 billion from $838 billion in 2019.

It also said that in 2021, losses are expected to be cut to $15.8 billion as revenues rise to $598 billion.

According to IATA’s Director General and CEO, Alexandre de Juniac, “Financially, 2020 will go down as the worst year in the history of aviation. On average, every day of this year will add $230 million to industry losses. In total that’s a loss of $84.3 billion. It means that—based on an estimate of 2.2 billion passengers this year—airlines will lose $37.54 per passenger. That’s why government financial relief was and remains crucial as airlines burn through cash.”

“Provided there is not a second and more damaging wave of COVID-19, the worst of the collapse in traffic is likely behind us. A key to the recovery is universal implementation of the re-start measures agreed through the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) to keep passengers and crew safe. And, with the help of effective contact tracing, these measures should give governments the confidence to open borders without quarantine measures. That’s an important part of the economic recovery because about 10 per cent of the world’s GDP is from tourism and much of that depends on air travel. Getting people safely flying again will be a powerful economic boost,” said de Juniac.

2020 Main Forecast Drivers

Passenger demand evaporated as international borders closed and countries locked down to prevent the spread of the virus.

IATA said that it is the biggest driver of industry losses. At the low point in April, global air travel was roughly 95 per cent below 2019 levels, adding that there are indications that traffic is slowly improving.

IATA added that nonetheless, traffic levels (in Revenue Passenger Kilometer) for 2020 are expected to fall by 54.7 per cent compared to 2019. According to IATA passenger numbers will roughly halve to 2.25 billion, approximately equal to 2006 levels while capacity, however, cannot be adjusted quickly enough with a 40.4 per cent decline expected for the year.

Passenger revenues, it said are expected to fall to $241 billon (down from $612 billion in 2019), adding that this is greater than the fall in demand, reflecting an expected 18 per cent fall in passenger yields as airlines try to encourage people to fly again through price stimulation.

Load factors, IATA also posited are expected to average 62.7 per cent for 2020, some 20 percentage points below the record high of 82.5 per cent achieved in 2019.

IATA released that costs are not falling as fast as demand and that total expenses of $517 billion are 34.9 per cent below 2019 levels but revenues will see a 50 per cent  drop.

Non-fuel unit costs, it added will rise sharply by 14.1 per cent, as fixed costs are spread over fewer passengers.

Lower utilization of aircraft and seats as a result of restrictions will also add to rising costs.

The IATA outlook stated that fuel prices would offer some relief, stressing that in 2019 jet fuel averaged $77/barrel whereas the forecast average for 2020 is $36.8.

Fuel, the body said is expected to account for 15 per cent of overall costs compared to 23.7 per cent in 2019.

On cargo, IATA said is the one bright spot and that compared to 2019, overall freight tonnes carried are expected to drop by 10.3 million tonnes to 51 million tonnes.

It however stated that a severe shortage in cargo capacity due to the unavailability of belly cargo on (grounded) passenger aircraft is expected to push rates up by some 30 per cent  for the year.

“Cargo revenues will reach a near-record $110.8 billion in 2020 (up from $102.4 billion in 2019). As a portion of industry revenues, cargo will contribute approximately 26 per cent –up from 12 per cent in 2019,” IATA outlook revealed.

2020 Regional Performance

All regions, IATA said will post losses in 2020 and that the crisis has taken on a similar dimension in all parts of the world with capacity cuts lagging about 10-15 percentage points or more behind the over-50 per cent fall in demand.

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