Airline Weekly

Daily Airline News

A Lot of ‘Ifs’

Madhu Unnikrishnan
August 3rd, 2020 at 3:53 PM EDT

 Tomás Del Coro

In this week’s feature story, Senior Analyst Jay Shabat takes an in-depth look into the phases of the pandemic for U.S. airlines. We all know the second quarter was awful. But what comes next? What are the next phases of the recovery?

Much of how the fall turns out for airlines depends on Congress and whether another federal stimulus will support the industry. Will schools re-open? Will passengers want to travel when the coronavirus is rampaging in many leisure destinations?

On today’s episode of “Mondays With Skift Airline Weekly,” Brett “The Cranky Flier” Snyder said travelers are “gun shy” to buy tickets. In late May and early June, pent-up demand for summer vacations fueled the beginnings of a recovery, but as the virus spread, that recovery was quashed. Now, Snyder says, people are thinking twice about going on a summer vacation, and the fall could be lost as well.

What about next year? Shabat says a lot rides on whether it’s safe to travel to Florida, currently a Covid hotspot. International travel probably is on ice for longer. And business travel is unlikely to return at anything approaching pre-pandemic levels by early next year, Snyder adds.

And beyond next year? IATA predicts the recovery won’t come until 2024. European airport operator Aena is gaming out a worst-case scenario for a 2027 recovery. Airlines could return to profitability quickly, if travel begins to rebound, thanks to low fuel costs and the benefits that already accrued from consolidation a decade ago.

But there are still a lot of “ifs.” If an effective vaccine is developed (and enough people actually take it). If travel restrictions ease (and global tensions don’t spike). If business travel returns to the 2019 levels. If the economy starts to recover (or continues off a cliff). If people have enough discretionary income for leisure travel.

Snyder pointed out we knew very little about the pandemic’s effect on travel as recently as May. Now a clearer picture is emerging, but much is still unknown, and indeed, unknowable.

Subscribe

Already a member?

Already a member?

Up Next

Latin America

Mexico’s Viva Aerobus Announces Major U.S. Expansion

Viva Aerobus, a low-cost airline in Mexico, has announced six new routes to the U.S. from Monterrey, its busiest airport. The move follows the long-anticipated U.S. government decision to upgrade…

North America

Breeze Sees Softer Bookings as Airline Growth Outpaces Fall Travel Demand

U.S. airlines have scheduled too many flights this fall for the number of travelers, Breeze Airways founder and CEO David Neeleman said. This is pushing down airfares just as fuel…

Asia-Pacific

Hawaiian Airlines Defends Tokyo Haneda Flight Rights as United Seeks to Expand

Hawaiian Airlines plans to resume all of its flights to Tokyo Haneda this winter that were suspended during the pandemic, CEO Peter Ingram said. The move comes as United Airlines…

Asia-Pacific

U.S. Airlines Expect Further Easing of China Flight Limits this Winter

U.S. and Chinese airlines are eager to resume nonstop flights between the two countries following a diplomatic accord in August doubling the number allowed. They have proposed 63 weekly flights…

Europe

KLM CEO Rebukes Dutch Proposal to Tax Transit Passengers at Schiphol

KLM CEO Marjan Rintel offered a firm rebuke of a proposal in the Netherlands' legislature to tax transfer passengers at the airline's hub, Amsterdam's Schiphol airport.

Exit mobile version