After
Cobalt, will any more European airlines go bust?
The Cypriot carrier has gone the way of Primera Air and Monarch. What is going
on in Europe's aviation industry?
A departure board displays
cancelled Cobalt flights at Larnaca airport, Cyprus. Photograph: Yasmine
Canga-Valles/AFP/Getty Images
Cobalt has become the latest European budget airline to go bust, following
Danish carrier Primera Air, which ceased trading earlier this month. While the
Cypriot airline had only two years of flying behind it, after stepping into the
breach left by the failure of the national carrier Cyprus Airways, Primera had
flown for 14 years. Both carried a fraction of the passengers of British
holiday airline Monarch, which collapsed last year.
Are other airlines on
the brink?
The big players in Europe have long warned that smaller airlines would go bust,
arguing that consolidation - them snapping up the minnows - was the way forward
for the industry. British Airways parent IAG eyed Norwegian, which has defied
predictions from a year ago and kept aloft, but still sustained losses.
Perennial struggler Flybe issued a profits warning this week, sending its share
price tumbling.
What are the problems?
The big one is rising fuel costs. The unexpected bonus of plunging oil prices
saw airlines' jet fuel bills drop dramatically from $120-$140 (£92-£107) a
barrel for much of the decade to a low of $40 in early 2016. That led almost
all airlines to finally make a profit. But now the price is back at nearly
$100.
Some airlines loosened the purse strings and committed to aircraft purchases or
leases that the industry could ill afford overall: analysts talk of
overcapacity, which can be good news for passengers in the short term with
lower fares to fill seats, but may not prove sustainable.
What else?
For some, Brexit - or at least the tumbling pound since the referendum. Fuel
and aircraft are bought in dollars, but a large proportion of the revenue for
IAG, Ryanair and others is in sterling.
Poorer sterling exchange rates also deter Britons from travelling, and the UK
punches above its population weight for air travel. Cobalt was heavily reliant
on the UK routes, including Heathrow and Gatwick - almost 30% of air traffic to
Cyprus came from the UK last year.
The uncertainty surrounding Brexit continues to affect confidence: Wizz Air has
become the second scheduled airline, after Ryanair, to put a clause in its
conditions disclaiming liability for flights grounded due to Brexit after 29
March next year. Whether Brexit-related or not, several airlines have
identified falling consumer demand and forecast overall revenues to decline.
Are bigger airlines immune to the problems?
Share prices are slumping across the sector, at almost three times the rate of
the overall FTSE fall in the last month. So no, probably not.
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