Houston Chronicle

Airline group forecastin­g a decline in profit for 2017

- By Christophe­r Jasper

Global airline earnings are set to suffer their first annual decline in six years after reaching a record in 2016 as higher oil prices clip margins, according to the industry’s main trade group.

Net income is likely to total $29.8 billion worldwide in 2017, the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n said Thursday. That’s 16 percent lower than the $35.6 billion forecast for this year, a figure that itself represents a downward revision from the $39.4 billion estimated in June.

The decline would be the first since 2011, when high fuel prices and disruption caused by the so-called Arab Spring political protests and a devastatin­g earthquake and tsunami in Japan led earnings to fall by half.

While airlines have this year been reaping record profits after a slump in the price of crude, IATA reckons a barrel of oil will average $55 in 2017, up from $44.60, lifting jet fuel expenses to almost 19 percent of overall costs.

Alexandre de Juniac, IATA’s new chief executive officer, said the profit slide amounts to a “very soft landing” for the sector.

“These three years are the best performanc­e in the industry’s history,” De Juniac said at IATA’s annual media day in Geneva. At the same time, “risks are abundant — political, economic and security among them. And controllin­g costs is still a constant battle in our hyper-competitiv­e industry.”

Though the higher oil price will squeeze earnings, airlines have improved their ability to “efficientl­y restructur­e and manage their business,” making the industry more resilient, said De Juniac, formerly CEO of Air France-KLM Group, where he clashed with unions over cost cuts.

IATA represents 265 carriers accounting for 83 percent of global air traffic.

 ??  ?? Alexandre de Juniac says airlines had three years of great profits.
Alexandre de Juniac says airlines had three years of great profits.

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