Oman Daily Observer

Cracks emerge in global aviation finance boom

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An unpreceden­ted boom in the $280 billion aircraft finance industry is showing signs of faltering as rising interest rates, cut-rate competitio­n and higher oil prices trigger a shakeout in a sector that has attracted a flood of Chinese funding. Conference­s in Hong Kong last week saw more than 1,000 financiers, lawyers and airline bosses talk up the fundamenta­ls of an industry that has emerged as a flourishin­g asset class globally, but in contrast to previous years the mood was one of subdued optimism even as corks popped on new deals.

Concerns about central bank tightening, trade rows and currency swings could blow some froth, they cautioned.

“I think the party is over in terms of lower interest rates,” said Robert Martin, CEO of Asia’s largest-listed aircraft lessor BOC Aviation.

The sector veteran of three decades noted that smaller players who had not matched their funding needs to liabilitie­s, unlike larger ones like his company, would find it difficult to ride out any volatility.

The failure to do so has caused some high-profile collapses, such as Guinness Peat Aviation (GPA) in the 1990s.

The former GPA executives who now dominate the industry say the sector has matured and is backed by diversifie­d sources of funding as aviation finance sits proudly alongside property and infrastruc­ture as alternativ­es to traditiona­l market bets.

Yet danger signals have emerged, such as stronger dollar hitting the coffers of

AIRLINE BOSSES TALK UP THE FUNDAMENTA­LS OF AN INDUSTRY THAT HAS EMERGED AS A FLOURISHIN­G ASSET CLASS GLOBALLY, BUT IN CONTRAST TO PREVIOUS YEARS THE MOOD WAS ONE OF SUBDUED OPTIMISM.

many airlines just as they must adjust to a spike in oil prices. That could land unwanted aircraft back into the laps of lessors needing to find new takers.

In a sign of turbulence ahead, global airlines have already slashed profit forecasts due to high oil prices.

A few leasing companies are also quietly giving airlines rental ‘holidays’ to help their cash flows, sources said.

And some airlines are increasing traffic only by cutting prices, which will hurt all but those with the lowest costs, said Rob Morris, chief consultant at Flight Ascend.

According to Stuart Hatcher, chief operating officer of asset managers IBA: “The market is poised for the start of a correction. There are too many signals. When airlines feel pain, lessors feel pain.”

The industry, however, remains in better shape than in previous cycles, driven by consolidat­ion in the United States.

Airlines have begun to recoup their costs of capital in the past four years after decades of value destructio­n, according to the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n. Demand for financing for new commercial aircraft deliveries is expected to rise almost 7 per cent this year to $139 billion, Boeing has said.

Last week, financiers were busy doing deals overlookin­g Hong Kong’s Victoria Harbour at conference­s hosted by Airline Economics and Euromoney’s Airfinance Journal.

Lessors say liquidity is abundant and that financial strains in one part of the globe can be offset by demand elsewhere.

Currently, Chinese capital accounts for about 30 per cent of the funding deployed by leasing firms worldwide, up from 5 per cent about nine years ago.

But while the carousel continues, the flood of new money chasing deals has lowered returns for most in the industry.

Goshawk Aviation, a venture of Hong Kong conglomera­te NWS Holdings and Chow Tai Fook Enterprise­s, says the sector’s low yields are not feasible for long.

Brian Cheng, executive director at NWS that bought Dublin-based Sky Aviation Leasing this year, said he had seen funding bids from companies that are prepared to accept returns of 3-5 per cent on their aircraft investment­s.

“Insurance companies or banks can achieve (these rates) because their borrowing costs are so low... but for us there’s no way to compete with that.”

Against that backdrop, opportunis­tic M&A is also picking up. Japan’s Orix Corp struck a $2.2 billion deal this year for a 30 per cent stake in leasing firm Avolon Holdings.

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