SINGAPORE - Global airlines are likely to see
a further profit cut in 2008 as the global credit crisis
deepens, while fuel costs remain near record highs, the
International Air Transport Association said.
The association, which represents 240
airlines comprising about 94 percent of international air
traffic, in December slashed its 2008 earnings forecast for
members by more than a third to $5 billion, citing the two
factors. It is due to revise the forecast in two months.
"We will have to see in April what happens.
But if these are the conditions, then I think we may expect a
downgrade," IATA Director General and Chief Executive Giovanni
Bisignani told Reuters ahead of the Singapore Airshow this week.
Growth in global travel demand is expected to
slow this year on fears that a possible U.S. recession will lead
to a global economic slowdown, while crude oil is still trading
over $95 a barrel.
Bisignani, who was chief executive of ailing
Italian airline Alitalia before joining IATA in 2002, said signs
of the slowdown emerged in December when the United States
recorded a 3 percent decline in domestic air traffic.
"Now business traffic, with the high yields,
has started to decrease. The traffic of bankers flying between
London and New York, Paris and New York, this we started seeing
in the first two months of this year."
Total net profit of Asia-Pacific airlines is
forecast to drop to $600 million in 2008 from $700 million last
year, the lowest in four years, as capacity expansion outstrips
the rise in passenger demand.
Asian airlines will receive 427 new planes
this year, boosting capacity by 8 percent, while passenger
demand will rise just 6.4 percent, Bisignani said.
But he expects carriers in the region,
especially in booming China and India, to continue ordering new
planes to meet long-term domestic demand, while emerging
low-cost carriers like Malaysia's AirAsia will also be hungry
for more capacity.
"Low-cost carriers in Europe represent 29
percent of capacity, but in Asia its now just 6 percent. So
there's still a lot of room to grow," Bisignani said.
Analysts are expecting Asian airlines to
announce up to $20 billion worth of aircraft orders during the
Singapore Airshow, the bulk from low cost carriers. Boeing, the
world's top commercial planemaker, has said it will unveil $8
billion in orders.
Bisignani said he intends to push for Asian governments to
play a leading role in setting aviation rules in a speech on
Monday. -Reuters