Members Login
Username 
 
Password 
    Remember Me  
Post Info TOPIC: New airlines gain more ground


Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 2289
Date:
New airlines gain more ground
Permalink Closed


http://www.dnaindia.com/report.asp?NewsID=1035067


New airlines gain more ground


Praveena Sharma
Monday, June 12, 2006  

   
 
BANGALORE: Challenger airlines like Air Deccan, Kingfisher Air, SpiceJet and Go Air continue to eat into the market share of incumbent carriers like Indian Airlines, Jet Airways and Air Sahara.


Statistics put out by the director-general of civil aviation (DGCA) on the airline market share, between September 2005 and April this year, show that all legacy airlines have lost market share even as challenger carrier are beefing theirs.


As per DGCA figures, the legacy operators have lost 14.26 percentage points as their share fell from 81% (September 2005) to 66.74% in April 2006. Of this, 4.56 percentage points were lopped off between January and April this year.


And who do you think is the biggest loser? It’s the one-time undisputed market leader -Jet Airways (which still is, but with a smaller lead). Its market share during the same period decreased 6.4 percentage points from 41% to 34.6%. The full service carriers’ share has been ranging in the region of 34% and 36% since January this year.


If the combined market share of Jet and Air Sahara (which was acquired by Jet in January this year for Rs 2,300 crore) is taken, then the fall is quite steep at nine percentage points, from 52.5% to 43.5%. Sahara’s market share has tumbled 3.1 percentage points since the takeover, from 11.6% in January to 8.5% in April.  During this four-month period, Jet-Sahara market share has slumped 9.7 percentage points from 46.2% to 36.5%.


The airline that has bitten off the largest chunk of the aviation pie is budget carrier Air Deccan. It has scaled up its share by 6.8 percentage points to 16.7% in April from 9.9% in September last year.


This low-cost carrier, promoted by ex-pilot Captain G R Gopinath, is now missing Jet’s half market share size by 1.2 percentage points.


Another casualty among the new breed of airlines is state-owned Indian (Indian Airlines). Indian’s market share has eroded 4.86 percentage points in the eight-month period from 28.5% to 23.64%. Since January, it has dropped 1.36 percentage points from 25% to 23.64% in April.


Jet’s rival in the domestic market - Kingfisher Air - took 3 percentage points of the market as it increased its share from 4.6% in September last year to 7.6% in April. Last four months have seen its market hover between 7.6% and 8.7%. SpiceJet’s market share from September 2005 to April this year has also climbed 2.5 percentage points from 4.5% to 7.01%. Go Air, which has started releasing its market share figures since February this year, has seen its share rise from 1.8% in February to 2.09% in April. 


_______________________________________________________________


http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/1641546.cms


IA, Jet, Sahara hit back to gain share in April
Byas Anand
June 13, 2006 12:37:00 amTIMES NEWS NETWORK ]
 
 


NEW DELHI: The legacy carriers are finally hitting back at their high-flying start-up rivals in the Indian skies.


After months of losing marketshare to the new low-cost entrants, the three legacy carriers - Indian Airlines, Jet Airways and Air Sahara - have finally witnessed a reversal in the new fiscal, with their combined marketshare in April 2006 reporting a slight growth to 66.7%.


In comparison, their combined share of the Indian skies had been dropping for the whole of 2005-06, touching a low of 65.1% in March this year.


This April also marks the first time in 13 months that the group of four start-up airlines - Air Deccan, Kingfisher, SpiceJet and GoAir - have witnessed a drop in their combined marketshare at 33.3%.


According to latest DGCA figures, the 2006-07 fiscal has opened a bright note for the legacy airlines, which are witnessing a growth in their share of the market pie.


"The airlines have been introducing new fare schemes and other offers and the results are finally showing. Even during the period when their marketshare dropped, the passenger carriage in these legacy airlines had not declined.


But the April figures show that their passenger carriage has grown faster than the market growth,"said an industry observer.


Jet Airways continued to rule the skies with a 34.6% share of the market in April 2006, followed by the state-owned Indian at 23.6%.


Air Sahara saw its marketshare cruise higher to 8.5%. Meanwhile, Air Deccan ended the month with a 16.7% share of the pie. Kingfisher's marketshare for the month stood at 7.6%, followed by Spicejet at 7% and GoAir at 2%.
 


 



-- Edited by karatecatman at 13:07, 2006-06-13

__________________
KCM
Page 1 of 1  sorted by
 
Quick Reply

Please log in to post quick replies.

Tweet this page Post to Digg Post to Del.icio.us


Create your own FREE Forum
Report Abuse
Powered by ActiveBoard