The Airline Industry.Air Service.
Kansas City International Airport.
September 2013
What We’ll Cover Today
• Airline Industry Overview
• Importance of Kansas City International
• Air Service Realities
• What the Future May Bring
• Questions, Answers, and Discussion
The Airline Industry Today
Airlines – Hard Realities
• There are not many left – mergers and consolidation
• They are not even a single company – Delta Air Lines flights are operated by at least four certificated operators
• Example: Over half of United Airlines flights are not operated by United itself
• It’s not more passengers airlines look at – it’s the cost/revenue equation
• Airlines are looking for revenue streams. Not to pick fights with competitors
Let’s Cut To The Chase: There’s No Airline “Store”
Not a complete list.
1983
Consumers could book & buy on at least 21 large jet operator brands, plus over two dozen independent regional airline brands.
Majors Regionals
AIR CAL AIR ILLINIOIS
ALASKA AIR MIDWEST
AMERICA WEST AIR NEW ORLEANS
AMERICAN AIR OREGON
CONTINENTAL AR WISCONSIN
DELTA ASA
EASTERN ASPEN
FRONTIER ATLANTIS
MIDWAY BAR HARBOR
NEW YORK AIR BRITT
NORTHWEST CASCADE
OZARK CHAPARRAL
PAN AM COMAIR
PIEDMONT IMPERIAL
PSA MALL
REPUBLIC MESA
SOUTHWEST METRO
TWA MIDSTATE
UNITED NEW AIR
US AIRWAYS PBA
WESTERN PLIGRIMPRECISION
RIOROCKY MOUNTAIN
jetBLUE ROYALE
SPIRIT SKYWEST
Today,
Airports can turn to just none large jet operators, and none of the regionals who were around in 1983 are in the retail airline business.
Virgin America
The Airline Turf Is Now Decided…
There’s not much left to fight over…
The US Market is now mature and is not in a growth mode
Excess capacity – that had to be sold at a loss – is gone
The airline business now has huge economic barriers to new entry – and it’s not just because of current incumbents
Airline EconomicsA Very Tough Business in Which to Make a Profit
• The sharp increase in fuel costs has made many older aircraft obsolete before their time
• Fuel cost spikes have particularly hit regional aircraft and small city air service
• Constant cost pressure: labor, distribution, regulatory, service
• As a result carriers are constantly re-examining their route systems:
Nothing is sacred• The name of the game is system revenues & traffic “quality” – not volume
• If a route does not show an adequate return, based on scarce resources and other issues, it’s going to be toast
Regional Airlines: Gone Like The Do-Do
Small independent regional airlines are long gone –
The costs of operation, fuel, plus major airlines acquiring larger “regionals” ended this part of the industry
Point-to-point service – even between formerly strong markets – is no longer. Costs are the issue
Plus, no new small airliners, either
“Regional” Jets – Going, going…..Logical: when they go, so does service at some airports… true
This is a hard fact of airline economics, not a reversible trend
While some airports will benefit from this by gaining service from larger aircraft, many others are at risk of losing service altogether
50-Seat Markets In Need of Larger Aircraft
The replacement of 50-seat jets will fill a need for larger jets in dozens of markets across the nation…
There’s Something Called “Spill” …The National Picture –Hubsite Load Factors – Year Ending 2012
Much of the additional capacity that larger “small”jets will produce will allow smaller communities more access to/through the airline hub operation…
Airlines Are Buying Lots of AirplanesBut Retiring Older Ones, Too
Fleets: Decline through 2019North America 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 Net Chg
180 + Seats 643 621 647 655 663 664 680 690 705 736 769 126126 - 180 3,175 3,153 3,114 3,144 3,129 3,139 3,178 3,215 3,261 3,325 3,390 215101 - 125 330 433 587 714 858 1,005 1,030 1,052 1,073 1,093 1,111 78175 - 100 570 596 590 645 683 706 723 740 747 753 771 201
Regional Jets 1,401 1,308 980 728 583 405 405 405 405 405 405 -996
Total 6,119 6,111 5,918 5,886 5,916 5,919 6,017 6,102 6,191 6,312 6,446 327
Basic size floor will; be @ 80-90 seats – But the costs will be only marginally higher than where 50-seaters will be…
Fleets of larger airliners – more fuel-efficient – will expand
Hence – some loss of air service at smaller airports - but stronger air service at regionalized points
Airlines Are Cutting Excess Seats
There will be @ 6% fewer seats for sale in 4Q 2013
Air Travel Growth Is Slowing
Beijing Is Important To Kansas City2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 16 v 11
Total Passengers 458,405 461,668 468,327 475,602 484,065 492,704 7.5%
Pax Change Y-O-Y 1.5% 0.7% 1.4% 1.6% 1.8% 1.8%
Enplanements 725,659 730,731 741,210 752,654 765,513 778,509 7.3%
Enplmt Chg Y-O-Y 0.43% 0.70% 1.43% 1.54% 1.71% 1.70%
Enp/Pax Ratio 1.583 1.583 1.583 1.583 1.581 1.580
Direct International Component 76,557 77,823 79,680 81,663 83,058 84,468
Indirect Int'l-Generated Domestic Enplmts 114,836 116,734 119,520 122,494 124,587 126,702
Total Int'l Driven 191,393 194,557 199,200 204,157 207,645 211,170 10.3%
Total Intl-Related 26.4% 26.6% 26.9% 27.1% 27.1% 27.1%
The US Airline System
• It’s focused on aggregating passengers at connecting hubs
• Most small cities do not have sufficient traffic to a single destination to support service. An airline hub combines many destinations on to a single flight
• The further the distance to the hub, the more of the potential revenue is used up in the costs of flying the airplane
• Kansas City has access to all gateway hubs, plus all major metro non-hubsite cities
Kansas City: Air Service Issues
Kansas City Air Service
On average, @ 80% of seats are filled
Airline Share At MCI
• No carrier has as much as 50% - strong base
• American/US Airways merger will make AA #2
C arrier P sgr P D EW % P sgr Originat ing A VG F are F are P er M ile Eff ic iency
Americam 161,810 898.9 8.7% 55.1% $208.55 18.53¢ 84.2%Alaska 20,449 113.6 1.1% 40.6% $239.33 11.63¢ 94.9%Delta 329,905 1,832.8 17.8% 55.9% $245.11 20.64¢ 87.8%
Frontiler 87,576 486.5 4.7% 62.2% $147.45 13.58¢ 95.4%United 218,209 1,212.3 11.8% 46.8% $245.24 19.47¢ 89.2%
US Airways 161,357 896.4 8.7% 56.0% $240.28 16.36¢ 90.2%Southwest 876,457 4,869.2 47.2% 66.8% $195.00 19.10¢ 95.1%
Total 1,855,773 10,309.8 100.0% 60.0% $213.79 18.68¢ 91.4%
Southwest Thru/Connect Traffic
Southwest is concentrating connect passenger flows at other airports.
Top MCI Destinations
• Note that no market is more than 6% of the total…• “Efficiency” Indicates Strong Competition
R ank M arket P sgr A vg OW F are % o f P ax A vg. T icket M iles Eff ic iency
1 Denver 100,601 $128.85 5.42% 540 98.33%2 Phoenix 83,096 $215.05 4.48% 1,109 93.85%3 Las Vegas 76,593 $201.38 4.13% 1,202 94.52%4 Orlando 73,803 $202.21 3.98% 1,151 93.01%5 Chicago/Midway 66,601 $157.58 3.59% 410 98.32%6 Atlanta 58,381 $190.58 3.15% 732 94.45%7 Dallas/Love 53,056 $176.19 2.86% 464 99.28%8 Los Angeles 52,437 $233.95 2.83% 1,428 95.22%9 Ft. Lauderdale 50,119 $200.03 2.70% 1,338 92.85%10 Chicago/O'Hare 49,289 $180.83 2.66% 409 98.37%
Comparative MCI Fares
20-Year Passenger Trend
Airline Metrics
American – DFW will bear larger aircraft…
The nation will see @ 6% fewer seats – MCI is in the ballpark.
What About International?
MCI has great international access now
For non-stops - with new-generation airliners, more and more possible… BUT
It will require a hub at the other end – an alliance hub – SkyTeam, Star, or oneworld… connect traffic needed
Figure London, Paris or Frankfurt – which ID the airline targets
For now, highest and best use of equipment
The Pittsburgh experiment – pay to play
San Diego – Tokyo as a connect hub with Japan Airlines
Plan on needing a lot – and we mean a lot – of incentive money
Summing It Up
• The US airline industry is not growing… it’s contracting
• MCI air service is very strong and robust – high load factors and exceptional access
• A poster-child for other large non-hubsite airports
• No spikes or hits to the service levels are on the horizon
Okay, Let’s Talk!