U.S. airlines isolated in bid to scrap change fees
forever
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[September 03, 2020] By
Tracy Rucinski and Laurence Frost
CHICAGO/PARIS (Reuters) - A radical bid to
revive air travel demand by permanently sacrificing billions of dollars
in fees to change tickets has left U.S. airlines isolated, as foreign
rivals fear the tactic would undermine the higher fares paid by premium
travellers.
The COVID-19 crisis has weakened one of the core elements of the airline
playbook: price many fares attractively low, then charge for ticket
changes. And meanwhile charge a hefty premium to those wanting more
flexibility: typically business passengers.
"For the fee model to work, you have to have a passenger to
nickel-and-dime," said John Zhang, professor of marketing at the
University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School. Airlines may soon "walk
back other fees as well," he added.
Citi data shows U.S. carriers last year earned $2.8 billion or 1.1% of
revenue from cancellations and change fees.
American Airlines <AAL.O>, Delta Air Lines <DAL.N> and United Airlines <UAL.O>
have all permanently axed the charges on domestic travel in recent days,
followed by Alaska Airlines.
"It's a revenue loss, but the bet is that this is going to win over
customers," said ICF consultant Carlos Ozores.
The move comes as U.S. and European passenger traffic remains more than
80% below 2019 levels, July data from global industry body IATA shows,
with Asia-Pacific down 72%.
While airlines globally have suspended change fees during the pandemic,
those outside the U.S. are resisting making the concessions permanent.
Lufthansa <LHAG.DE> has announced a waiver until year-end, while Air
France-KLM <AIR.PA> has set no date for a resumption of fees and says it
is unlikely to make them permanent.
Low-cost carriers EasyJet <EZJ.L> and Ryanair <RYA.I> also said there
were no plans for lasting fee changes.
Analysts say restoring fees could prove near-impossible through the weak
northern-hemisphere winter - and will only get tougher as consumers
increasingly take new terms for granted.
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Passengers practise 'social distancing' at a main Miami
International Airport terminal after the Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA) temporarily halted flights arriving at New York
City airports due to coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Miami,
Florida, U.S., March 21, 2020. REUTERS/Carlos Barria/File Photo
But much could depend on an expected wave of industry consolidation, reducing
competition in some markets as weaker airlines shrink or fold, Citi analyst Mark
Manduca said.
"Once that happens we'll be in a better place to assess the bargaining power
between airline and customer," he said, adding that surviving airlines that
emerge fewer and stronger may swiftly end any "free-lunch mentality".
Australia's Qantas Airways Ltd <QAN.AX> dismissed suggestions that temporary
concessions could stay.
Axing fees would undermine the value to a corporate customer of paying more
upfront for flexibility, Qantas Chief Executive Alan Joyce told the CAPA
Australia Pacific Aviation Summit.
"If every airfare is going to be flexible, your revenue management system I
think fundamentally breaks down," Joyce said, backed by Qatar Airways
counterpart Akbar al-Baker.
Some observers also question the eye-catching permanency of the U.S. fee
waivers, predicting that airlines will find a way to bring them back.
"It's almost impossible they won't do that once demand is higher, only it might
be a 'transfer' fee instead of a 'change' fee," said Zhang. "This isn't a
forever kind of thing."
(Reporting by Tracy Rucinski and Laurence Frost; additional reporting by Jamie
Freed in Sydney; editing by Tim Hepher and Barbara Lewis)
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