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Helicopters Magazine Careers in Aviation
Fractional Ownership Ready for Takeoff

Fractional aircraft ownership is the ‘in-between’ alternative to chartering aircraft or buying them outright.

Written by James Careless   
368-fractionalFractional aircraft ownership is the ‘in-between’ alternative to chartering aircraft or buying them outright. In return for purchasing ‘share’ in an aircraft – typically 1/8th or 1/16th of the aircraft’s purchase price – a fractional owner gets access to it as needed (unless someone else is using the plane), or to a similar aircraft in a fractional aircraft operator’s fleet.

“Fractional ownership allows business executives to make the best use of their time and skills,” says Michael Bannock, president and CEO of Jet-Share Canada. “More than just cost-competitive to airline or charter flights, a private jet can often take passengers to smaller – and often far more convenient – municipal and private airports.” Based in Toronto, Jet-Share Canada has a fleet of Citation and Beech jet aircraft operating from Toronto Pearson and Toronto Buttonville airports.

“For customers who are chartering aircraft for 100 hours or more a year up to 400 hours annually, fractional ownership offers a cost-effective alternative that delivers superior service,” says Judson Macor, CEO of AirSprint Canada. Based in Calgary, AirSprint offers fractional aircraft ownership of Pilatus PC-12, Citation Bravo, and Citation Excel aircraft from bases across Canada. “It’s like owning your own business aircraft, without having to pay the full cost of ownership.” Adds Jet-Share Canada’s Bannock, “No lineups, convenience of scheduling, and complete security means travel arrangements are built around the client’s needs.”

This said, there’s more to fractional ownership than the shared purchase price. You also have to pay for each hour flown, cover fuel, and pay fractional aircraft management companies such as AirSprint a monthly fixedcost fee that includes maintenance and storage. But for those businesses needing the convenience of and access to a private aircraft without the total cost, fractional ownership can be a wise choice.

TAKEOFF DIFFICULTIES
In the US, the economics of fractional ownership have made it a key player in corporate aviation. Yet the same is not true in Canada. To date, AirSprint and Jet-Share are among the few national service providers. Even Bombardier, which markets fractional ownership in the US and Canada under its Flexjet program, only flies out of Montreal while Corporate Express sticks to the West. Flexjet flies two Learjet 45s and one Challenger 604 in Canada, while Corporate Express flies four Piaggio P-180 Avanti twin turboprops.

“The US is years ahead of Canada when it comes to personal and private aircraft,” says Brent Genesis, Corporate Express manager of corporate charter services. “People there have the financial wherewithal to go out and purchase a personal jet for themselves or a corporate aircraft for their business, but such is not usually the case in Canada.”

These conditions govern fractional aircraft ownership here as well, which is why “our primary service is defined by the continental US, where we have 70 fractionally-owned aircraft,” says Sylvain Lévesque, Bombardier Flexjet’s vicepresident of marketing, contracts and administration. “This service area includes anything within 200 miles of CONUS, which is why we are able to reach most Canadian cities with crossborder flights in addition to our service based out of Montreal.” In a market where fractional ownership has yet to truly catch on, this is a realistic strategy.

FRACTIONAL OWNERSHIP HURDLES
Lethbridge’s Integra Air used to include fractional ownership among its many aviation services. However, the company gave up after numerous headaches selling shares in its first fractional ownership aircraft.

“We had lined up three fractional owners for a Piper Cheyenne,” says Integra Air president Brent Gateman. “However, when it came down to the last minute, it turned out that the guys didn’t want to own the aircraft just to have access to it to fly when they needed to. This left us financing the aircraft, which really didn’t offer any advantage to our company. So we decided to get out of fractional ownership and stick to our core scheduled regional and charter flight businesses.”

Integra Air’s experience points to what may well be the biggest hurdle to selling this service north of the 49th parallel: The thrifty, nonflashy Canadian psyche, which doesn’t think well of ‘show-offs.’

“In the US, people view private business aircraft as evidence that a company is prosperous and well-run,” says Dr. Joe D’Cruz, an aviation analyst and professor of business strategy at the University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management. “In Canada, that’s not the case at all: A company that uses business aircraft is seen as somewhat ostentatious and even spendthrift. Since Canadian businesspeople tend to be more conservative than their American counterparts, they are not comfortable with being perceived as flashy or arrogant. That’s why they shy away from business aircraft in general, including those that are fractionally-owned.”

Even if Canadian businesses were comfortable with owning corporate aircraft, our economy just doesn’t have the strength to support widespread purchases. It’s not just because Canada’s market is 1/10th the size of the US: it’s also because Canadian executives are paid far less than their US counterparts. Without this extra income and business-paid budgets to match, they do not have the money at hand to buy private aircraft the way American executives do.

This fact makes it hard for Canadian fractional companies to purchase aircraft, which they have to do in order to sell shares in them. “It requires a tremendous amount of capital to operate a fractional ownership service,” observes AirSprint’s Macor. “This is why – besides ourselves – there hasn’t been an entrant that has fully committed to the Canadian marketplace.”

“In addition, US tax laws encourage American business to buy their own aircraft,” says Integra Air’s Gateman. “That’s not the case in Canada. In fact, Transport Canada’s regulations – which don’t recognize fractionallyowned business aircraft as being unique the way the FAA does – lump this category in with commercial aircraft in general, adding to cost and paperwork. This can result in a fractionally-owned aircraft sitting on the tarmac for months unused, while we wait for the documentation to be approved. Businesspeople are impatient by nature: They don’t like to wait, and will often go elsewhere if they’re forced to wait too long.”

If these hurdles aren’t enough, geography in Canada works against fractional ownership, while helping to boost it south of the border.

“Even though Canada is a very large country, the actual market for business aviation is highly concentrated along the Canada-US border,” says Dr. D’Cruz. “As a result, virtually all of the major centres that could be reached by business aircraft are already well covered by commercial carriers. Given that these carriers charge less and offer a varied schedule of flights, Canadian companies are far more likely to use them than to spend extra for the added flexibility of using their own aircraft.”

“Canada’s geography really doesn’t work well for business travel, what with its long distances between cities,” he adds. “In contrast, the US has urban areas distributed throughout its territory. For most companies, this means that they are working within regions that are easily and efficiently covered by small aircraft. There’s also not the same degree of commercial service to smaller centres as there is in Canada, making business aviation more of a necessity than a luxury.”

This last point is proven by Wal-Mart’s US fleet of business jets. “Wal-Mart is not known for extravagance, yet they have their own fleet,” says Dr. D’Cruz. “Why? Because every Monday Wal- Mart dispatches its vice-presidents from head office in Bentonville, Arkansas to check stores throughout the country. Given their schedules and available commercial flights, it is simply more cost-effective for Wal-Mart to fly them itself. Contrast that with Canada, where the company doesn’t operate its own aircraft: The reason is that they can get where they need to using commercial carriers, so they do.”

DETERMINED TO KEEP GOING
Despite these challenges, Air- Sprint, Bombardier Flexjet, Jet-Share Canada and Corporate Express are sticking with the Canadian fractional ownership market. “In fact, we’re expecting the market to grow, which is why we have four Citations 550s and 20 Pilatus PC-12s on order,” says AirSprint’s Macor. “We also have a 95% retention rate for our fractional ownership program,” Bombardier Flexjet’s Lévesque says, “which is a good testament to how satisfied our fractional owners are.”

Still, it will likely take a major decline in fractional ownership costs, relative to commercial carriers and other mass transportation alternatives, to make this aircraft option popular in Canada. That’s just how Canadians are: In this market, price trumps convenience and sometimes even economic common sense.