As Demand Gathers Steam, U.S. Carriers' Corporate Revenues Chug Along - Business Travel News

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As Demand Gathers Steam, U.S. Carriers' Corporate Revenues Chug Along

January 26, 2012 - 03:45 PM ET

By Jay Boehmer

Buoyed by airfare growth and what executives characterized as unflagging business demand, Delta Air Lines, United Airlines and US Airways during quarterly earnings calls this week reported year-over-year double-digit percentage increases in corporate revenues for the last three months of 2011. Those carriers expect business traffic and corporate spending this year to steadily grow.

Delta's fourth-quarter corporate revenues grew by 15 percent year over year, while United reported a 13 percent increase, with corporate yields—a representation of average fare per mile—up 9 percent. US Airways, meanwhile, reported an 11 percent increase in overall passenger revenue per available seat mile.

So far, demand this year appears to be building on that base. Calling the second week in January "typically the largest booking week of the year"—as business travelers return to work and leisure travelers set spring and summer vacations—US Airways president Scott Kirby said the carrier's "booked revenue was up 35 percent year-over-year in that week." Booked corporate revenue, he added, "is up almost 30 percent year-to-date in 2012."

"If anything, the new year has seen a step up in business demand from the already-strong levels that we saw in the second half of 2011," Kirby continued. "As a result of the strong demand environment, the pricing environment also remains strong and the industry is successfully recovering high fuel prices."

At United, "the majority of our global corporate accounts expect 2012 travel volumes to be flat to up and travel spend to moderately increase versus 2011, with first-quarter trends expected to mimic the full year," according to chief revenue officer Jim Compton.

Delta president Ed Bastian noted that financial services clients last quarter spent 18 percent more year over year, while revenue from technology clients grew 15 percent and manufacturing clients spent 10 percent more. While airlines last fall cited softness in the banking sector, Delta reported 5 percent fourth-quarter revenue growth from that segment.

Meanwhile, airline executives said that economic troubles in the eurozone have yet to significantly impact demand or revenue. "The corporate base really hasn’t shown much weakness in the European side," Bastian said. Kirby claimed US Airways "simply did not see any evidence of macroeconomic weakness in our business. That was true even across the Atlantic."

Though less reliant than its network carrier competitors on corporate travel revenues, Southwest Airlines similarly pointed to strength in business travel demand for the last quarter of 2011 and into 2012.

American Airlines likely won't publicly report corporate revenue performance as its parent company, AMR, restructures under bankruptcy court protection. J.P. Morgan analysts in a recent research note wrote, "We believe AMR is sacrificing share to others (GDS/OTA issues, weakening corporate share, etc.)."

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