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Air Canada a Year Out of CCAA

The juggernaut spools up

Written by Rick Erickson   
307-aircanadaAir Canada reported a net income of $270 million for its 2005 third quarter. It had been 13 months since the carrier exited CCAA bankruptcy protection: judging from its financial results, a productive year. ACE Aviation Holdings, as the new corporate structure is traded, has reported a net income of $443 million over the past four consecutive quarters. Cash on hand is an impressive $2.5 billion.

Considering that you could have bought the entire Air Canada franchise for something less than $100 million in 2004, ACE Holdings has a current market capitalization of $2.6 billion – greater than the market cap of all of the beleaguered US majors combined. Also noteworthy has been ACE’s ability to raise new equity – $1.9 billion over the past year, and this from a domestic and international investor community that cannot be characterized as being overtly friendly in today’s tough aviation environment.

Completing its massive restructuring process has resulted in a dynamically changed carrier that all other legacy airlines worldwide will need to emulate if they have any hope for survival. The process involved renegotiated labour agreements resulting in lower costs alongside significant productivity improvements (labour contracts are in place through 2009); $7 billion in debt was removed from its balance sheet (current debt, including aircraft leases, is a manageable $5 billion). The carrier also reduced its aircraft lease obligations and other third-party vendor agreements.

To compete in the new low-fare environment Air Canada has substantially redesigned its distribution platform, based heavily upon internet sales. The new website is transparent; consumers can clearly depict the value equation as they buy up the price chain. In the past customers generally relied upon the vagaries of what the reservations or travel agent had to offer on the other end of the line. Not so now; with a few clicks of the mouse a consumer can view all of the price and product options available at virtually any carrier in the country. Air Canada has learned a transparency lesson from the lowcost carriers, which has paid sizeable dividends in terms of regained customer trust and value. When the value equation is placed alongside the carrier’s substantive network, flight frequency, Aeroplan benefits and alliance partner advantages, one can see why customers display loyalty.

Look at Air Canada’s string of 19 months of record load factors. In part this success is based upon the carrier ending its decadeslong practice of chasing market share. Air Canada has finally aligned capacity with demand and as a consequence is reporting system-wide load factors at an unheard-of 82% on a year-round basis.

In the old legacy-carrier days such load factors suggested that a dreaded ‘spill’ was occurring – spill being passengers unable to find seats, especially on highdemand flights, who migrate to other carriers with their revenue lost. At such high load factors, one suspects this phenomenon continues to occur, until one reviews the load factors of Air Canada’s chief domestic competitor, WestJet. Odd – its annual load factors are fully 10 points behind the national airline. Apparently there isn’t much spill happening here. Kudos to the folks working in Air Canada’s scheduling and marketing departments.

This fall Air Canada launched a new subscriptionpurchase option. Much like the ubiquitous transit passes found in most cities, one buys unlimited travel on the airline’s various networks (domestic, transborder or international) for a given period for a fixed, all-in price. Subscription purchase translates into known revenue streams for the airline; passengers benefit from convenience. It is novel to say the least, and as yet unproven. Plainly it depicts “out of the box” thinking. Industry observers will be watching this closely.

Robert Milton, CEO of ACE, has called them game breakers‚ and I think he is right. Air Canada/Jazz have begun deploying their newly acquired fleet of regional jets: 15 Bombardier 705s (70 seats); 15 Embraer 175s (73 seats); with 45 Embraer 190s (93 seats) just starting to arrive now through late 2007. It is a misnomer to call these aircraft regional jets. They are small transcontinental aircraft with the legs to fly virtually any city-pair in Canada and between smaller domestic centres and popular US destinations. The Embraer aircraft in particular will set new standards for passenger comfort and appeal. Indeed, this fleet will provide the airline with the means to provide jet service in an increasingly fragmented market. The impact of a smaller cabin to fill with lower trip costs could come as an unwelcome surprise to the low-cost carriers. One suspects that a good deal of Canada’s domestic market will be a dogfight between WestJet and Air Canada/Jazz in 2006, as these aircraft are progressively introduced into secondary markets. Most US and European operators will be observing the deployment of this fleet with considerable interest.

A recent binding labour mediation process has resolved a longstanding internal pilot seniority dispute and adds further to Air Canada’s parade of good news. If the carrier is to fully realize its international revenue potential it requires the next generation of fuel- and maintenance-efficient aircraft. Subsequent to the pilot arbitration announcement, the airline has been able to resurrect a previously announced order for 14 Boeing 787 Dreamliners and 18 B777 aircraft. If one reviews the aggressive aspirations of Air Canada’s international competitors, putting this fleet to work sooner will be far better than later.

A year out of CCAA, Air Canada has transformed itself into a loyalty carrier, adopting a new business strategy to achieve sustained profitability in the highly competitive low-fare environment. The airline has captured the bulk of the country’s high-yield passenger traffic, alongside the significant revenue base generated by the other ACE Holding ventures. This permits the firm to sustain the current high fuel price, unlike its low-cost competitors who remain near wholly dependent upon passenger revenues. It is apparent that the company’s strategy is focused upon innovation.

The new model appears to be working. The Air Canada franchise is in the vanguard of where the world’s major air carriers need to go to survive, much less prosper.