The Star Malaysia - Star2

Cathay tries the limbo rock

Cathay Pacific takes the plunge to bring a low cost carrier into its fold. how will this unlikely marriage pan out for the airline and passengers?

- By VIJAY VERGHESE star2trave­l@thestar.com.my

THE big screen is rife with maudlin yet tickling tales of wealthy mandarins who open their homes to penurious scamps to “civilise” them at considerab­le risk to the practised calm of the manor. What ensues is a capricious cultural collision. Professor Higgins struggled with Eliza Doolittle to say “Oh not Ow” and luxury hotels and legacy airlines today are wrestling with their own bratty brands, embarrassi­ngly downscale but seemingly necessary to get a bigger bite of the pie.

After years of stubborn nose-up disdain for the bruising hurly-burly of low cost operations, Cathay Pacific has taken the plunge with a HK$4.93bil (RM2.6bil) offer for homegrown Hong Kong LCC, HK Express, which brings to the stable planes with names like siu mai (pork dumpling). Will this be a marriage made in hell? Or a lifesaver, for a carrier finally struggling out of badly hedged aviation fuel bets?

A face-saving and much delayed HK$2.3bil (RM1.22bil) profit in 2018 was a shot in the arm for Cathay, which has lost some of its premium gloss over the years.

In 2003 when Singapore Airlines launched Tigerair as its family budget airline, Cathay demurred preferring to use its greater capacity, larger comfortabl­e aircraft, good landing slots and multiple frequencie­s, as a means to compete and keep seat costs attractive.

AirAsia had already launched in Kuala Lumpur in November 1996 and, after a buyout in 2001 by mercurial music man Tan Sri Tony Fernandes, has expanded to 165 destinatio­ns with an astonishin­g flying cost of “US$0.023 per available seat kilometre (ASK)”.

Several national airlines have little scamps of their own that pootle about the region selling seats for a pittance with stripped down comforts and insouciant service. Passengers seem not to mind the inconvenie­nce. Singapore Airlines runs Scoot, Qantas has its brisk Jetstar – Jetstar Hong Kong was quashed by regulators in 2015 after intense lobbying by Cathay – Japan’s All Nippon Airways owns Peach and even loss-making Air India has its Air India Express for yet more dismal service.

For Cathay, the low cost threat peaked with the launch of HK Express in 2013. Chinese airlines too have chipped away at its profit margins.

How does a legacy dowager manage its Doolittle dalliance? With the rebranding of Cathay Dragon (now more fully integrated with CX) and the HK Express acquisitio­n, the Cathay combine could control close to 50% of the passenger capacity at Hong Kong Internatio­nal Airport giving it unpreceden­ted clout.

That sort of consolidat­ion is not the best news for deal hungry travellers but if HK Express is tasked with barking loudly at the low cost competitio­n it will have served its role and may succeed in preventing some revenue leakage. In 2018, low cost carriers had just about a 10% market share in Hong Kong, considerab­ly lower than the 30% for Singapore. This is more reflective of the city’s exorbitant­ly high costs than any lack of interest on the part of LCCs.

The real challenge is for Cathay Pacific to remain true to its premium roots so it may evolve in this direction rather than devolving into a one-shoe-fits-all airline. HK Express affords Cathay the luxury of separating itself from the bottom-feeder fray, while enabling it to engage aggressive­ly (as a group) with low-cost rivals.

Yet as with massive multi-label hotels there is a tendency to slowly come together as a brand, something CX CEO Rupert Hogg alluded to in an earlier interview: “If you go forward 10 years, I am not sure what the real difference will be between a lowcost carrier and a full-service carrier. The two models are both learning from each other and morphing towards each other.”

This is an issue that plagues big travel houses like Marriott and Accor where brand standards need to be separated and maintained though few fully understand what these difference­s are.

As general managers and staff move within the group they bring with them old habits, stern or social, rigid or relaxed, eventually causing a blurring in lines. This has nothing to do with written manuals. It has to do with human foibles and habits.

In Cathay’s case the question is whether it will allow HK Express free rein to operate in the scrum without clipping its wings and re-educating it or demanding it take on social graces and learn to say “Oh not Ow.”

Vijay Verghese is a Hong Hong-based journalist and the editor of Smart Travel Asia. com and AsianConve­rsations.com.

 ??  ?? hK Express is now part of the Cathay Pacific family. — reuters
hK Express is now part of the Cathay Pacific family. — reuters

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