U.S.-Europe Travel Ban Will Add To The Pain Already Being Felt By U.S. And Euro Airlines Because Of The Coronavirus Pandemic


Make no mistake about it, President Trump’s order halting all passenger air traffic between the United States and Europe – excluding the United Kingdom – for 30 days is going to hurt both U.S. and European carriers – a lot.

That’s one of the most heavily-traveled set of international routes in the world, and historically, at least, the most profitable ones. In 2017 E.U. citizens alone made 11.2 million trips to the United States, nearly all of them via commercial airlines. Remove from that total the 2.7 of those trips made by Britains, and the total still was an impressive 8.5 million trips by Europeans. Data was not immediately available but its safe to assume that Americans flew to Europe in roughly equal numbers.

But it could be worse. Had this unprecedented stoppage of service on the busiest international air travel market in the world happened sometime between 2008 and 2015, when trans-Atlantic travel was at or near its peak in terms of both passenger traffic and revenue paid per available seat mile. And, though Spring is a popular time for Americans to visit Europe, the mid-March through mid-April travel period effected by the travel ban doesn’t come close to rivaling the peak summer travel period for Europeans visiting the United States, or for that matter, Americans visiting the British Isles and the Continent.

Additionally, because international – and domestic – air travel already had entered a a steep decline as a result of the global spread of the coronavirus that causes COVID-19, the President’s emergency order might actually save the carriers some millions of dollars by eliminating their need to continue operating lots of empty, money-losing flights. Still, the ban is guaranteed to cause all airlines serving the trans-Atlantic market to ground a large number of planes – planes that they likely will need to continue making loan or lease payments while they sit idle. For that and related reason, some carriers are likely to begin retiring older planes earlier than previously planned, especially since several already had said they were considering such actions prior to Trump’s announcement Wednesday night.

In response to the spread of coronavirus around the globe most U.S. airlines this week already had withdrawn the financial guidance they’d previously given to Wall Street analysts. That unusual step was a strong indication that most likely will report previously unexpected first quarter losses and left the door open to possible full-year losses, depending on how long the contagion – and its related scare – remains active in global and regional markets.

Trump’s announcement, delivered in a nationally televised speech from the Oval Office, now mean’s American Airlines CEO Doug Parker’s assurances two years ago that his carrier and its principle rivals had become so financially healthy they should never again report full-year losses will be put to a severe test.

For most of the past 25 to 30 years trans-Atlantic flights have been a primary source of profits for both U.S. and European carriers. British Airways famously raked in $1 billion a year throughout the 2010s just one mega-route: New York-London, on which it offered as many as 15 flights each day every day. That was equal to about 6% of BA’s total revenues.

But in recent years average fare prices have fallen or remained relatively static in the face of growing competition from discount airlines – mostly based in Europe – on those formerly lucrative routes. Only in the last 18 to 24 months has some of that competitive pressure on big conventional airlines eased a bit as several European discounters reduced service on or withdrew from the trans-Atlantic market.

WOW, a discounter based in Iceland, led the dramatic disruption of the trans-Atlantic air market with $99 fares each way – until it failed last year. Primera Air, another trans-Atlantic discounter, shut down in late 2018.

Norwegian Air, yet another discounter, is continuing its fight to gain market share and build profits in the trans-Atlantic market, but earlier this week said it would layoff at least 3,000 workers and ground a big chunk of its fleet temporarily in response to the COVID-19 pandemic (a term that the World Health Organization began applying to the coronavirus outbreak just Wednesday afternoon).

British Airways, of course, will continue to have the right to fly between the U.S. and U.K., as will Virgin Atlantic and the three big U.S. carriers, Delta, American and United, that long have flown between those two nations. But all already have reduced service and were expected to make much deeper cuts. But the U.S.’s Big Three won’t be flying to the Continent, or to Ireland. Nor will carriers based there be flying here after Friday. The service ban is to last at least 30 days. The presumption is that the ban could be extended in whole or in part beyond the original 30-day period based on U.S. officials’ reading of the pandemic’s advance or pullback on both sides of the Atlantic.

According to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Airline Data Project, the U.S. Big Three offered 139.6 billion seat miles between the U.S. and Europe in 2018, the last full year for which the Project has data. While that was up from 134.9 billion available seat miles in 207, it’s still well below the 142.5 billion available seat miles that those three plus US Airways, Continental and Northwest airlines offered in 2008. Those three additional carriers disappeared from the between 2010 and 2014 as they were merged with American, United and Delta, respectively. Those mergers helped turn the trans-Atlantic market into a very profitable market for several years until the European discounters saw the results of that consolidation as an opportunity to enter the trans-Atlantic market and undercut the big conventional airlines.

Delta is the market leader on the trans-Atlantic currently in terms of both capacity and ridership, according to the MIT data. In 2018 it flew 50.7 billion available seat miles between Europe and the U.S., slightly ahead of United’s 49.7 billion seat miles and well ahead of American’s 39.2 billion. Delta had about 21.3% of its global capacity in the trans-Atlantic market in 2018, vs. 20.3% for United and 15.8% for American.

However, though American has a smaller position in the trans-Atlantic market, it will be less impacted by the 30-day ban on Europe-U.S. air travel than either of its rivals because more than half of its service over the Atlantic is between the U.S. and the U.K., where it has a hub at London’s Heathrow Airport. American also will benefit from domestic U.K. passengers funneling through Heathrow on flights operated by British Airways, with which American has trans-Atlantic joint venture revenue-sharing agreement that includes anti-trust immunity. Delta and United have similar agreements with their European partners – principally AirFrance-KLM for Delta and Lufthansa for United. But their joint ventures are centered on hubs in Paris, Amsterdam and Frankfurt, where the 30-day ban will be in effect.

In recent years United has been most dependent on the revenue it gains from trans-Atlantic operations. In 2018 it took 21.4 percent of its total revenues from flying over the Atlantic. Delta generated 18.7% of its 2018 revenue in the trans-Atlantic. And American brought in just 13.6% of its total 2018 revenue from its U.S.-Europe flying.

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