Business Standard

Airlines can raise fares up to 30%, capacity cap stays

Flight tariff set to go up first time after pandemic

- ARINDAM MAJUMDER

The government has increased the upper and lower caps on airfare by up to 30 per cent in a move that’s expected to push up tariffs and improve the financials of airlines hit hard by the pandemic. However, the cap on airline capacity, currently at 80 per cent of the pre-covid level, has been extended till March 31.

Flights with 90 to 120 minutes of duration will have a lower fare cap of ~3,900, up from ~3,500 earlier, for instance. The cap on maximum chargeable fare has been raised to ~13,000 from ~10,000.

Except market leader Indigo, no airline has been able to deploy even 70 per cent capacity of the year-ago operation. After being shut for almost two months due to the lockdown, domestic flights resumed on May 25.

The extension of cap on capacity will help airlines with weaker balance sheet like Spicejet and Goair, which can’t increase their fleet size immediatel­y. “A few airlines said that allowing full capacity will create pressure on them and may even lead to bankruptcy. That’s why we are treading cautiously,” said a government official.

Airlines, other than Indigo, wanted the government to defer any decision on increasing capacity to March as forward booking for the next three months is poor.

Indigo, currently with 265 aircraft in their fleet, is eager to expand and has repeatedly lobbied the government to remove any regulation­s on fare and capacity. With a ban on normal internatio­nal travel, the airline needs to expand domestical­ly or risk idling its planes and increasing fixed cost. In December, the airline deployed around 78 per cent of what it operated before Covid.

Executives of airlines said that though the government had increased the upper and lower price cap on air tickets, it may be difficult for them to hike fares as demand was still uncertain and only limited to a specific routes — primarily in tier 2 and tier 3 routes.

“Fares are lower than they should be at this point and again it is because we are not getting enough of our booking period,’’ Ronojoy Dutta, CEO of Indigo, said during the recent post results call with analysts, adding that it was difficult for airlines to make money when occupancy is around 70 per cent. Since the bookings are happening close to the date of travel, it’s too short a period to have good load factors and good yield management, according to Dutta.

Civil aviation minister Hardeep Singh Puri had recently said that floor and ceiling price on airfares was an extraordin­ary measure to prevent a tariff war, which could trigger bankruptci­es.

“It is not our intention —it also cannot be in an open, deregulate­d market situation —to have the fare bands as a permanent feature. So, it is our expectatio­n that when flights open up to precovid levels in this summer schedule, we would not have the need for a price band,” he said.

Analysts tracking the sector said the biggest worry was the absence of business travelers who buy costly tickets making it possible for airlines to offer cheaper fares to vacationer­s.

“We believe domestic passenger growth would be slower going forward (than seen over the last seven months) – particular­ly from business travel and foreigners travelling on domestic routes. This is attributab­le to long lasting changes in demand demographi­cs from Covid,” Swarnendu Bhushan of Motital Oswal wrote in a recent note to clients.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India