Why Europe’s Short-Haul Aviation Market Is in Flux

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Why Europe’s Short-Haul Aviation Market Is in Flux
Why Europe’s Short-Haul Aviation Market Is in Flux

Flying within Europe was once a pretty expensive affair. National flag carriers enjoyed route monopolies and could charge whatever they wanted — that is, until the European Union created a single market leading to a boom in low-cost carriers.

Not only was it cheaper to travel but there were now more places to travel to. Small regional airports were eager to do deals with these new airlines, especially with the promise of hundreds of new visitors arriving on every flight.

As the likes of EasyJet and Ryanair have grown, they’ve seen off much of the competition while also putting pressure on the established legacy carriers like Lufthansa, Air France, and British Airways. But now a series of challenges is putting the whole market under pressure.

Ryanair recently reported a 24 percent fall in pretax profit. It’s still making lots of money but is feeling the pain and expects others to suffer even more over the upcoming winter season.

“I think we’re going to see more airline failures and consolidation over the next number of months. The current high fuel environment, particularly for the unhedged carriers, is going to cause significant problems,” Neil Sorahan, chief financial officer, said recently.

A number of well-known names have already gone out of business in recent years, and others like Alitalia are still struggling. No case is exactly the same, and there are usually multiple reasons why airlines collapse, but the short-haul market at the moment is proving pretty challenging.

Plenty of Europe’s biggest airlines will view this as a good thing. For years they have argued that for such a big, single market there are still too many carriers.

“Ultimately we do have too many airlines in Europe, and some further consolidation would both help the stronger carriers and also create a bit more balance in the market,” said John Grant, partner at consultancy Midas Aviation.

For their part Ryanair’s low-cost rivals EasyJet and Wizz Air seem broadly more optimistic. EasyJet still expects to hit its profit target of between $483 million (£400 million) and $531 million (£440 million), while Wizz Air said trading across the key summer period had been “encouraging.”

Not everyone is that happy though.

Lufthansa, which regularly makes annual profits in excess of $1 billion, is finding it tough in its home markets of Germany and Austria, thanks to Ryanair and EasyJet muscling in, and it’s in the middle of repositioning its own low-cost brand, Eurowings.

Ulrik Svensson, Lufthansa’s chief financial officer, said he expected the European market to remain challenging “at least until the end of the year” in contrast to the long-haul business, which is performing well.