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Chris Tarry

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Mainline airlines - what needs to be done? British Airways: Productivity measures British Airways: Total measurement New entrant airlines Changing markets - The ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chris Tarry


1
Is sustainable profit an unrealisable dream?
  • Chris Tarry
  • Stockholm
  • 19th November 2003

2
Agenda
  • Industry background issues
  • Structural changes and consequences
  • Managing the responses
  • Conclusions
  • Final thoughts

3
General Strategic Objectives
  • Survive
  • Compete
  • Prosper
  • BUT
  • How does the industry match up

4
Global airline industry Performance
Source ICAO
5
Airline traffic and capacity trends
Source ICAO
6
Passenger load factor trends
7
Break even load factor trends
Break even load factor ((op cost x traffic)/(op
rev x capacity))
8
Long term industry trends
Source ICAO/CTAIRA research
9
International operating economics
Data IATA
10
The source of profit
Data IATA
11
Long term US yield trends in a mature market
Source ATA
12
European Airlines Trends Europe
Source AEA
13
European Airlines Trends North Atlantic
Source AEA
14
European Airlines Trends Far East
Source AEA
15
Forecasting issues traffic and real GDP
Data IMF, ICAO
16
Nominal GDP and airline revenue
Source IMF/ICAO
17
The search for a turning point USA
Source Pollingreport.com/ATA
18
Industry Outlook
  • Still an exceptionally tough environment
  • Unsupported profit may not be possible before
    2005/06
  • Airlines still need to achieve structural cost
    reduction

19
Structural changes and consequences
20
Terminology
  • Low cost airline
  • Low fare airline
  • New model airline (NMA)
  • Traveller
  • Customer
  • Business traveller
  • Travel policy
  • Compliance
  • Product
  • Commodity
  • Marketplace
  • Value for money
  • ROI

21
Product issues
  • What constitutes the product offer?
  • The flight?
  • Flexibility?
  • Timing?
  • Frequency?
  • Airport attractiveness?
  • On board service?
  • On ground service
  • It depends
  • Each of us (and our employer) will value and
    price the attributes differently

22
Market segmentation - The UK example
  • Mainline
  • British Airways
  • Virgin
  • bmi British Midland
  • Lower Cost
  • easyJet
  • Low cost
  • Ryanair
  • Charter airlines
  • More widely, segmentation is also possible
    between geographic region, maturity of market and
    market type

23
Market segmentation - International
  • Regional limited long haul network (Finnair)
  • Supra-regional extensive long haul network
    (Lufthansa)
  • Intra-regional cross- border but not long haul
    (easyJet)
  • Global hub and spoke global reach (Singapore,
    Emirates)

24
Industry life cycles
  • What happens ?
  • Slowing growth rate
  • Changing consumer behaviour in maturing
    markets
  • Decline unless there is change and
    re-invention

25
What are the constraints to change?
  • Management?
  • Labour?
  • Capital?
  • Infrastructure?
  • Regulation?
  • In reality a combination

26
Airline industry life cycles
  • Is maturity and decline the only option?
  • Does structural rigidity mean an inability to
    change?
  • Has the managerial prerogative at some
    airlines been ceded?
  • Is the fundamental and necessary change
    impossible?
  • Are the costs of change too high?
  • Will there be further exits?
  • Opportunities for segmental new entrants

27
If traffic alone is not the route to profit, what
is?
  • A need for
  • The right cost base
  • The best revenue stream
  • The appropriate level of assets
  • There is not a one size fits all template

28
Mainline airlines - what needs to be done?
  • Reduction of structural excess supply
  • Differentiation of increasingly commoditised
    products
  • Addressing the gap between customer and the
    traveller
  • Reacting to changing market structures
  • Structural reduction of cost
  • Improvement of shareholder returns
  • Also important to keep a sense of perspective

29
British Airways Productivity measures
Source Company reports
30
British Airways Total measurement
Data British Airways
31
New entrant airlines
32
Changing markets - The new entrant formula
  • Supply led growth
  • High utilisation
  • High density seating
  • Low distribution costs
  • Simple fare structure

33
The London area experience
Source CAA
34
London and the Southeast
  • Main focus of NMAs
  • Rich travel market and incumbents initially
    pressured
  • Significant fight back by incumbents
  • Signs of market maturity

35
The Mainline fight back
  • With a focus on
  • Price discriminators
  • Quality discriminators
  • Now able to offer more options
  • Business to Full fare Economy
  • Full Fare Economy to Restricted Economy
  • Fundamentally changed rules of engagement

36
Mainline fight back (2)
  • Fare structure simplification
  • Easier internet booking process
  • Raising awareness of value proposition
  • Exportation of new fare structures

37
Fare trends 2002
Source American Express
38
The UK in an intra-European context
Source American Express
39
A snapshot of marketplace changes (1)
Source British Airways
40
A snapshot of marketplace changes (2)
Source British Airways
41
Potential effects on the NMAs
  • From the mainline airlines response
  • Fall in average fare
  • Rise in break even load factor
  • Pressure on earnings growth
  • Stock market reaction when go-go stocks go ex

42
Limits to growth exist even for NMAs
  • Markets are not infinite
  • Risk of over-dependence on journey price
    elasticity
  • Need for a reason to travel even if the ticket is
    free
  • Increasing importance of other trip
    determinants
  • Relationship between income and travel

43
UK Maturing markets? (1)
Source CAA
44
UK Maturing markets? (2)
Source CAA
45
UK Regional traffic trends (1)
Source CAA
46
UK Regional traffic trends (2)
Source CAA
47
Industry Consolidation
48
Consolidation issues
  • The degree of concentration in an industry
    reflects the extent and nature of competition
  • based on Douglas Needham The Economics of
    Industrial Structure 1970
  • Competition and market maturity are not evenly
    spread
  • So is consolidation the answer to the
    industrys problems?

49
Putting it in context
  • What are the problems of the mature and maturing
    airlines?
  • Too much capacity
  • Too much cost
  • Not enough profit even in the best times
  • Will these be solved by consolidation?
  • Not in the absence of other actions
  • Is the industry capable of managing the necessary
    change?
  • Not a good track record in this area

50
Conclusions
  • Permanent change in the operating environment
  • New business models needed
  • Without continuing change the industry will not
  • Achieve adequate profitability
  • Attract new capital
  • Key challenge remains the management of change

51
Two final thoughts
  • Progress is a nice word but change is its
    motivator and change has its enemies
  • Robert Kennedy
  • More of the same is not an option
  • Chris Tarry

52
This report has been prepared and issued by
Chris Tarry Aviation Industry Research and
Advisory Limited a business that is not
registered to give investment advice. This
report is for information purposes only and
should not be construed as giving investment
advice. Chris Tarry Aviation Industry Research
and Advisory Limited accepts no responsibility or
liability whatsoever for any expense, loss or
damage arising out of or in any way connected
with the use of all or any part of this
report. No part of this report may be reproduced
or distributed in any manner without permission
of Chris Tarry Aviation Industry Research and
Advisory Limited.
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