Budget airlines the flavor of South Korean aviation
market, Jeju travel booms
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[June 01, 2019]
By Heekyong Yang
JEJU, South Korea (Reuters) - Kim Bo-Min, a
Starbucks barista, paid 140,000 won ($118) for a round-trip from her
hometown of Daegu to the popular resort island of Jeju, arriving on
T'Way Air Co Ltd, part of South Korea's rapidly growing low-cost airline
sector.
The route between Jeju and Seoul has in fact emerged as the world's
busiest domestic one as travelers like Bo-Min flock to the southern
resort island, lured by cheaper rates from budget carriers. The
28-year-old barista would have paid 22% more if she had flown Korean Air
Lines Co Ltd.
"I have taken both full-service airlines and budget carriers for my
previous Jeju trips, but I do not think there is much difference when it
comes to services," she told Reuters after her flight of under one hour
to Jeju.
Korean low-cost carriers (LCCs) have cornered a large chunk of the
domestic market since Jeju Air Co Ltd launched in 2005 with five Q400
turboprops, turning up the heat for bigger players like Korean Air and
Asiana Airlines Inc and pushing them to start their own budget brands.
Jeju Air is South Korea's No.3 airline by revenue, operating 6 local and
66 international routes with 42 Boeing 737-700 jets. In November, it
placed a $4.4 billion order for 50 737 MAX jets.
The budget airline boom has fueled a spike in travel to Jeju, with the
number of tourists jumping almost three-fold to 14.3 million over
2005-2018 from 5.3 million, Jeju Tourism Association data shows.
https://tmsnrt.rs/2WEa5b8
South Korea's five no-frills carriers had a 61% share of the Jeju travel
market in 2018, according to data firm OAG.
"Not too long ago, many South Koreans found air travel a luxury, but
perception has changed as budget carriers brought us lower fares,
allowing more affordable travel," an official at Korea's Airports
Corporation's Jeju International Airport said, declining to be named due
to company policy.
SOUTH KOREA LEADS
In broader North Asia, LCCs have been slower to take off than in other
parts of the world, due partly to slow-moving Chinese policies, a
domestic aviation duopoly in Japan and Cathay Pacific's dominance of the
Hong Kong market.
But South Korea, host to the high-profile International Air Transport
Association annual meeting in Seoul this weekend, is the outlier, with
local start-ups like Jeju, financially backed by the Jeju Island
government, being encouraged to grow.
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Jeju International Airport is pictured in Jeju on Jeju Island, South
Korea May 30, 2019. REUTERS/Yang Hee-kyong
The country's transport ministry in March issued aviation business licenses to
three additional budget carriers, further crowding the industry and intensifying
competition.
The 53% domestic market share of carriers like Jeju and Jin Air Co Ltd outstrips
the 9% LCC penetration in Japan and 13% in China, data from CAPA Centre for
Aviation shows.
Internationally, South Korean LCCs have rapidly expanded on routes to nearby
destinations like Japan, Vietnam and China with narrowbody jets, with their
market share growing to nearly 57 percent on international routes to Japan in
2017, from 44 percent in 2016, according to South Korea's transport ministry.
"We should not underestimate how important the role of budget carriers are on a
given route," said Park Seong-bong, a senior analyst at Seoul-based Hana
Financial Investment.
INCUMBENTS FEEL THE HEAT
With the fleet size of the country's budget carriers jumping three-fold over the
past five years, legacy carriers Korean Air and Asiana are feeling the heat.
Korean Air's operating profit fell over 40 percent to 640 billion won ($537
million) in 2018 from 1.1 trillion won in 2016, while Jeju Air's operating
profit nearly doubled to 100 billion won over the period.
Korean Air's budget arm Jin Air has come under a lot of pressure in the wake of
public outrage over the behavior of members of its founding family, while
financially troubled Asiana's largest shareholder has put its stake up for sale.
Their pains have meant gains for independent budget carriers like Jeju Air and
Eastar Jet as they expand their long-haul routes such as Busan-Singapore to
attract more customers.
"For long-haul routes, customers tend to seek more premium services which used
to be found in full-service carriers. We are now providing business-class like
services at more competitive prices," said Lee Dae-woo, a deputy general manager
at Jeju Air.
(Reporting by Heekyong Yang; additional reporting by Jamie Freed in Seoul;
Editing by Himani Sarkar)
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