Aircraft lessors say
market has peaked as new rivals swoop in
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[June 08, 2017]
SHANGHAI
(Reuters) - The global aircraft leasing industry has likely hit a peak,
after expanding at a frenetic pace over the past few decades, with
competition from new Chinese players dragging down rentals and returns,
senior industry executives said this week.
The leasing industry, which accounts for 42 percent of the global
aircraft fleet, has so far been aided by lower interest rates and
generous bank lending. But growing uncertainties such as geopolitical
instability in the Middle East, a firmer dollar and changes to
accounting standards for financial leasing could curb growth and weed
out the smaller players, they added.
"This is a highly specialized, international, funding and
technologically intensive business. I believe we will see many withdraw,
or be forced by business problems to quit," said Wang Fuhou, president
of Minsheng Commercial Aviation's aircraft leasing department, referring
to the Chinese market.
"We don't need this many (Chinese) aircraft leasing firms," Wang told
the China Airfinance Conference in Shanghai.
Hani Kuzbari, managing director of aircraft leasing and financing
platform Novus Aviation Capital, agreed.
"There is pressure from China which is resulting in severe pressure on
leasing factors and returns ... All-time high liquidity and all-time low
returns," he said. "On the industry cycle we're very much around the
peak, or post the peak."
The nearly $225-billion global aircraft leasing sector was once the
preserve of Western players, but Chinese firms such as the subsidiaries
of Bank of China, HNA Group, Bank of Communications (BOCOM) and China
Minsheng Banking Corp have muscled their way into deals at home and
abroad.
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A passenger aircraft makes it's landing approach to Heathrow airport
in front of a "super moon" at dawn in west London, Britain, October
17, 2016. REUTERS/Toby Melville
Many
Chinese local governments, including Tibet and Xiamen, as well as insurers have
also launched leasing firms, helped by government measures to support the
sector.
In 2007, Chinese lessors owned just 22 jets out of China's 430-strong leased
fleet, according to ICBC Financial Leasing. By January 2017, these lessors owned
583 planes out of the country's 1,235 fleet, it said.
Irena Badelska, head of business development at Dublin-based aircraft leasing
company Amedeo, estimated there were 54 Chinese leasing firms trying to build
expertise in the aviation space.
This is driving fierce competition for clients and qualified staff, said Li Ru,
senior vice president of BOCOM Leasing.
"Profit margins are shrinking every year, rents are falling but our plane-buying
costs are still growing annually."
(Reporting by Brenda Goh; Editing by Himani Sarkar)
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