About Travel Industry

BNET Travel provides daily industry trends and news coverage with insights for managers and executives into all aspects of the travel and tourism industry. In addition to detailed airline and hotel company profiles, we bring you industry analysis on new travel and carrier routes, bankruptcies, mergers, tourism figures, investments and a host of other important business issues.

Why is Allegiant's Load Factor Dropping While Others Increase?

By Brett Snyder | Aug 10, 2009

As July traffic numbers continue to roll in, we see load factor increases nearly across the board. Southwest leads the pack with a whopping 6.9 point increase year-over-year, but there are a couple that saw lower loads in July. One was AirTran, down .9 points, and the other was Allegiant, down a staggering 5.6 points. What’s going on?

First, we have to remember that Allegiant was already running at incredibly high load factors. Last July they filled 95.2 percent of their seats, so a 6.9 point increase like Southwest saw is physically impossible. But that still doesn’t explain why loads would have dropped to a “mere” 89.6 percent right smack in the middle of the busy summer season.

Take a look at the change in available seat miles (ASMs) and you’ll have your answer. This July, Allegiant flew 50.1 percent more ASMs than last July. In June, they flew only 37.8 percent more than the previous year and in May it was only 22.9 percent more. So Allegiant really decided to throw capacity out there this summer and see how they could do.

To run just shy of a 90 percent load on such rapid growth is still quite impressive. And Allegiant is quick to make changes where necessary. For example, the weak Monterey-LAX route is being cut after Labor Day this year after only a couple months of flying.

So I don’t see anything to be concerned about in these numbers, despite what others may be saying. They really threw a ton of capacity out there in July and it didn’t all hit as they planned. That’s not that concerning since they have the flexibility to make rapid changes as necessary.

In addition to writing BNET's travel industry blog, Brett Snyder also pens the award-winning consumer travel blog, Cranky Flier. You can follow him on Twitter under the name crankyflier.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • December Airline Traffic Numbers

    BNET Travel - 319 days 2 hours 37 minutes ago

    Things got much better in December for the airlines as load factors bounced up across the board.  American’s increase of 0.4 points was the most anemic when compared to Allegiant’s turbocharged 9.8 point increase and AirTran’s 7.1 point increase, but these are all positive.  You’ll also note that every airline cut capacity this month...

  • July 2009 Traffic Numbers

    BNET Travel - 109 days 4 hours ago

    July is noteworthy in that most airlines saw strong load factor gains during the month as the busy summer season finally kicked into gear. The largest load factor gain came from Southwest with a 6.9 point increase. That is tremendous, though we don’t know what the fare levels were. Fortunately, we’re seeing July unit revenue...

  • December Traffic Looks Better Than November

    BNET Industries - 322 days 2 hours 34 minutes ago

    There were some pretty ugly traffic numbers in November, but December is shaping up better so far. Year-over-year load factors have been up for all airlines reporting to date, with AirTran reporting a stunning 7.1 point increase to end at 79.8 percent. As usual, I’ll have a full rundown later on, but first, let’s dig in to the always...

  • Traffic trends improve on international flights

    Dallas Morning News - 56 days 3 hours 10 minutes ago

    The International Air Transport Association released August international traffic numbers, and here are several things of note: â?¢ Traffic declined 1.1 percent compared to August 2008. It was the 12th straight month that international traffic has gone down, but it's the smallest year-over-year decrease since last October. The bottom was...

  • Southwest Airlines says load factor jumps nearly 9 points in October

    Dallas Morning News - 19 days 4 hours 52 minutes ago

    Southwest Airlines said its traffic, load factors and unit revenues were up and its capacity was down in October. The Dallas-based carrier said its traffic increased 1.9 percent last month compared to October 2008, with a 9.4 percent decline in capacity, With more passenger traffic and fewer seats offered, Southwest said it filled 79.2...

 

BNET TalkbackShare your ideas and expertise on this topic

Please add your comment:

  1. You are currently: a Guest |
  2.  

Basic HTML tags that work in comments are: bold (<b></b>), italic (<i></i>), underline (<u></u>), and hyperlink (<a href></a)

advertisement
Click Here
advertisement
  • Click Here
  • Click Here
  • Click Here
advertisement
Click Here