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Air Travel Bust Worsens As Carriers Need More Cash  Tyler Durden Wed, 09/02/2020 - 20:25

While the global air travel industry has partially recovered from its April low, air travel demand remains about 50% below pre-pandemic levels. 

The crisis in demand continues through the summer end. Travelers are staying home, as the industry remains paralyzed. Governments across the world have reopened economies, adding to the surge in air travel over the last three months, though the recovery shape doesn't resemble a "V" but rather a "Nike Swoosh." 

Now COVID-19 cases and deaths are surging in the US, Europe, and other regions of the world, forcing governments to re-imposing quarantines doesn't give travelers confidence to fly this fall. 

To shed more color on where airlines are headed, John Grant, chief analyst at OAG, and Scott McCartney, an aviation expert and travel editor at The Wall Street Journal, discussed Tuesday, during a webinar, the dire situation airlines face through 2021. 

Grant said airline's year-end capacity offered could be in the range of -8% to -50%, with "a best-case scenario" that would be around -50% given depressed industry conditions. He said capacity could around -55%. 

Bloomberg summarizes the 45-minute webinar between Grant and McCartney - the biggest takeaway is that airlines will need more cash through summer 2021, airline suppliers will be hit hard, and more job losses industrywide: 

  • The situation for customers and airlines alike is very frustrating when quarantine requirements change on a weekly basis, forcing airlines to build flexibility into tickets and offer booking-change options

  • Many airlines will need a lot more cash to see them through summer 2021 and these discussions are ongoing 

  • Chapter 11 is often devastating for airline suppliers, while the airline itself often goes out in good shape

  • We will inevitably see more job losses

In a separate interview, Grant on Wednesday (Sept. 2) said airlines underwent "dramatic capacity cuts" in the last week. 

Scheduled flights across the world were halved through the end of August. 

Grant said more seat capacity would be removed. 

Airlines have announced 190,000 job cuts this year. United Airlines leads all global carriers in the total number of cuts announced. On Wednesday, United said it will furlough 16,370 workers on Oct. 1. Just days before that, American Airlines said it would need another round of bailouts or it would have to slash 19,000 workers. 

Another week, the same story, the airline industry is in a tailspin with more layoffs ahead. As for airlines in need of cash, President Trump said the federal government could support the industry. 


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