Cathay traffic edges higher despite Chinese decline

TD Guest Writer

Guest Writers are not employed, compensated or governed by TD, opinions and statements are from the specific writer directly

Cathay's aircraft in their new livery
Cathay’s aircraft in their new livery

Cathay Pacific recorded a slight increase in passenger traffic in 2016, despite falling demand on routes to and from mainland China.

Revealing its full-year results this week, the company revealed that Cathay Pacific and its Dragonair subsidiary, recently rebranded as Cathay Dragon, boarded a total of 34.32 million passengers last year, just 0.8% higher than in 2015.

The airlines operated a total of 78,830 flights in 2016, while the average passenger load factor – or the number of seats filled per aircraft – dipped 1.2 percentage points to 84.5%.

Cathay struggled with falling demand on routes to and from mainland China (-0.5%) and the Middle East & South Asia (-13.4%) last year, but this was offset by increased traffic to and from Southeast Asia (+3.7%), Northeast Asia (+0.8%), North America (+0.8%) and Europe (+6.0%). Traffic to and from Oceania was almost flat (+0.1%).

Cathay launched new several new destinations in 2016, including London Gatwick and Madrid, and it has already announced plans to fly to Barcelona in 2017.

Klook.com

EXPERT OPINION

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