Melburnian1
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Jun 7, 2013
- Posts
- 25,508
While one month is just that and not a trend, and load factors do not necessarily equate directly to profits or losses, it's nonetheless interesting in what is usually a low month for Australian aviation, rail and coach travel - May (and has just been described by QF as 'weak' in demand terms) that QFi was the only bright spot for the QF group.
Seat occupancy for the orange cancer declined by 3.2 per cent compared with May 2013; for QFd by 2.9 percentage points and for Qantaslink by 1.7 per cent to a very low 61 per cent, the latter probably a major concern because despite higher average fares, the operating costs of smaller aircraft must be significantly higher on a per seat basis.
However, QFi bucked the trend, rising a creditable 1.6 per cent to 75 per cent of seats taken. JQi declined a dramatic 4.6 per cent to 68.8 per cent while JQ Asia dropped 1.9 per cent to 77.6 per cent:
http://www.qantas.com.au/infodetail/about/investors/trafficStats/may-2014.pdf
The 8 per cent plus in QFd passenger numbers (May 2014 v May 2013) suggests softness in the Australian economy (which QF acknowledges in its typically brief comments), although some QFd passengers may have transferred to VA or (shudder) JQ or TT. The raw number drop in QFd passengers was wayin excess of the JQ gain.
It will be interesting to see if AJ ever pays QFi any credit, although in fairness I do not know how much the loss (or profit) is for each passenger carried per seat kilometre.
Seat occupancy for the orange cancer declined by 3.2 per cent compared with May 2013; for QFd by 2.9 percentage points and for Qantaslink by 1.7 per cent to a very low 61 per cent, the latter probably a major concern because despite higher average fares, the operating costs of smaller aircraft must be significantly higher on a per seat basis.
However, QFi bucked the trend, rising a creditable 1.6 per cent to 75 per cent of seats taken. JQi declined a dramatic 4.6 per cent to 68.8 per cent while JQ Asia dropped 1.9 per cent to 77.6 per cent:
http://www.qantas.com.au/infodetail/about/investors/trafficStats/may-2014.pdf
The 8 per cent plus in QFd passenger numbers (May 2014 v May 2013) suggests softness in the Australian economy (which QF acknowledges in its typically brief comments), although some QFd passengers may have transferred to VA or (shudder) JQ or TT. The raw number drop in QFd passengers was wayin excess of the JQ gain.
It will be interesting to see if AJ ever pays QFi any credit, although in fairness I do not know how much the loss (or profit) is for each passenger carried per seat kilometre.