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Tag: BTIQ-Enl

  • Accor: Q1 RevPAR Up, ‘Good Traction’ on Corp. Travel

    Accor: Q1 RevPAR Up, ‘Good Traction’ on Corp. Travel

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    Accor Group’s first-quarter systemwide revenue per available room increased nearly 8 percent year over year, officials said, helped by “good traction” on business travel demand.

    “We’re seeing good traction on business bookings,” Accor CFO Martine Gerow said during Thursday conference call. “Business bookings are actually up in the low teens, in the quarter on a bookings value.”

    Gerow also said corporate meetings volume picked up during the quarter, perhaps moreso than did large meetings.

    “We’re also seeing an increase in group meetings,” she said. “It’s more smaller groups than larger groups. It’s obviously very different by region because it depends on what kind of events you have, but overall we’re seeing a nice pickup in small meetings.”

    Accor’s systemwide first-quarter RevPAR increased 7.6 percent year over year to €66, while occupancy increased 1.2 percentage points to 60.9 percent and average daily rate increased 5.5 percent to €109. Without delving into specifics, Gerow said the company had noticed “softening” in the United States.

    Accor maintained its forecast of a compound annualized RevPAR increase of 3 percent to 4 percent through 2027.

    RELATED: Accor Q4 performance

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  • Delta to Relaunch NYC-Lagos Service

    Delta to Relaunch NYC-Lagos Service

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    Delta Air Lines on Dec. 1 will relaunch service between New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport and Lagos, Nigeria, the carrier announced Friday. 

    The routes initially will be daily, then beginning Jan. 16, 2025, will operate three times weekly, using Airbus A330-200 aircraft configured with four cabins—Delta One, Delta Premium Select, Delta Comfort Plus and Main. The carrier currently operates daily flights between Atlanta and Lagos.

    In addition, the carrier in October will upgrade its aircraft on flights serving Accra, Ghana, from JFK to the 281-seat Airbus A330-900neo, adding nearly 1,000 more seats each week and providing 30 percent more capacity between Ghana and the United States, according to Delta. The carrier will offer a four-cabin configuration.

    Further, Delta also is upgrading to the Airbus A350-900 on flights between Atlanta and each Johannesburg and Cape Town in South Africa, which will provide an additional eight Delta One Suite seats, bringing the total to 40, according to the carrier. The aircraft will go into service on June 20 for Johannesburg and on Sept. 9 for Cape Town.

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  • Southwest to Pull Out of Four Airports After Downcast Q1

    Southwest to Pull Out of Four Airports After Downcast Q1

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    Southwest Airlines will pull out of four airports, reduce service at Chicago O’Hare and Atlanta and reduce headcount by 2,000 employees as cost-cutting measures, executives announced during a dour Thursday earnings call. Business travel demand nevertheless was a bright spot, with managed business revenue increasing significantly.

    Southwest on Aug. 4 will end service at Houston’s George Bush Intercontinental Airport as well as Syracuse, N.Y., Bellingham, Wash., and Cozumel, Mexico. On the same day, it will reduce capacity at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport and Chicago O’Hare International Airport.

    Southwest announced a first-quarter net loss of $231 million, wider than many analysts expected, and while president and CEO Bob Jordan noted the effects that Boeing’s struggles have had on the carrier’s performance, he said the airport pullouts were necessary to control costs and recalibrate capacity.

    “We are continuing efforts to optimize the network and reduce the number of markets in development that aren’t performing to more historic levels,” Jordan said.

    The carrier also has “essentially frozen and stopped all hiring except for a limited number of critical positions,” Jordan said, and will end 2024 with 2,000 fewer employees than one year prior, with plans for further cuts in 2025.

    “I am disappointed with our first-quarter performance,” Jordan said.

    As for Boeing, Southwest EVP and CFO Tammy Romo on the call said the carrier began the first quarter with the expectation that it would receive 79 of 85 contracted jet deliveries in 2024, but that number since has steadily decreased, and the carrier now expects only 20. Southwest now expects second-quarter capacity to increase 8 percent to 9 percent year over year, with third-quarter capacity up “in the low single digits,” she said, and fourth-quarter “expected to decrease in the low to mid-single digits.”

    Corporate Demand Boost

    In contrast with the downbeat tenor of the rest of Southwest’s call, business travel proved a first-quarter silver lining, with managed business travel revenue up 25 percent year over year, said EVP and chief commercial officer Ryan Green, reaching 2019 levels.

    “That was driven by a double-digit increase in unique travelers traveling under a contract in the managed business space,” Green said. “So that just means we’re penetrating deeper into accounts.”

    Green painted the corporate demand increase as “widespread,” noting “of our top 15 industries, 11 of those had double-digit growth year over year.”

    Southwest is “growing the number of companies under accounts, and we continue to pick up market share there,” Green said. “We expect the performance to continue and to accelerate the sequential performance in the second quarter to be better than the first.”

    Cabin Changes?

    Jordan was short on specifics but alluded to the prospect of changing the nature of Southwest’s passenger cabin and said the carrier was studying possibilities.

    “We are considering more transformational options and follow-on initiatives,” he said. “That includes work previously underway to study customer preference around seating and our cabin. … We are also studying the operational and financial benefits of any potential change.”

    Jordan and other Southwest executives rebuffed all efforts by analysts and journalists to suss out what that meant—No more open seating? Multiple classes? No detail—but said they would reveal more details at its investor day in September.

    Southwest Q1 Metrics

    Southwest reported first-quarter passenger revenue of more than $5.7 billion, an 11.9 percent increase year over year. Total revenue was more than $6.3 billion, up 10.9 percent from a year prior. The comparisons were expected to be positive given the carrier in the first quarter of 2023 still was dealing with fallout from the disruptions it experienced during the end of December 2022.

    Still, the carrier’s net loss for the quarter was $231 million, compared with a loss of $159 million in Q1 2023. 

    First-quarter average fuel costs were $2.92 per gallon. 

    Southwest projects second-quarter capacity to be up 8 percent to 9 percent year over year, with average fuel costs to be $2.70 to $2.80 per gallon. The carrier also provided an updated full-year guidance. Capacity for 2024 is now projected to be up 4 percent year over year, down from the previous 6 percent estimate. Average fuel costs are now expected to be $2.70 to $2.80 per gallon, up from prior guidance of $2.55 to $2.65 per gallon.

    RELATED: Southwest Q4 performance

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  • Hilton: Q1 Corp. Demand Recovery ‘Steady’

    Hilton: Q1 Corp. Demand Recovery ‘Steady’

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    Hilton Worldwide’s first-quarter business transient travel revenue per available room among large corporate clients increased more than 3 percent year over year on “strong demand in consulting and government contracting,” president and CEO Christopher Nassetta said Wednesday during an earnings call.

    “Business transient recovery remained steady,” Nassetta said. 

    The company expects full-year overall business transient RevPAR to increase at “the midpoint” of a projected year-over-year systemwide RevPAR increase of 2 percent to 4 percent. 

    “When you talk to customers …  you get a very positive view about their people traveling more for business transient,” Nassetta said. “And because the economy has been resilient and employment has been strong, I think it helps with the underpinning.”

    Should that projected growth occur, Nassetta said by year-end business transient occupancy and demand could fully return to 2019 levels. Business transient revenue, he noted, already has eclipsed pre-pandemic levels. Demand levels currently are “modestly” below 2019 levels, he said, with small and midsized enterprises already having reached that level but not larger corporate clients.

    Still, he noted the “pretty big growth” in demand in that segment in the first quarter. “That’s what we’re hearing from our big corporate customers as they’re traveling more,” Nassetta said. “So that is coming back. Their balance sheets are strong. Earnings are still … relatively strong. And so our expectation is by the end of the year from a demand point of view, we think there’s an awfully good chance that BT will get there, too, with continued growth in the big corporates and very resilient SMB business.”

    Group RevPAR continued to show strength, with that segment’s RevPAR up 5 percent year over year, and Nassetta said “corporate groups continue to grow as a percentage of booking mix, and booking windows continue to lengthen.”

    RELATED: BTN’s 2024 Meeting Strategy Survey

    Q1 Metrics, 2024 Outlook

    Hilton systemwide RevPAR increased 2 percent year over year in the first quarter, at the low end of the projection the company issued a quarter before. U.S. RevPAR declined by 0.4 percent. Nassetta blamed “renovations, inclement weather and unfavorable holiday shifts” that “weighed on results more than we anticipated.”

    Hilton’s systemwide first-quarter average daily rate was $154.91, up 1.7 percent year over year. Occupancy increased 0.2 percentage points to 67.2 percent.

    In the United States, occupancy declined 0.6 percentage points year over year, while ADR increased 0.5 percent to $161.67.

    Total first-quarter revenue increased 12.2 percent to $2.57 billion. Net income was $268 million, compared with $209 million in the first quarter of 2023.

    The company projected full-year and second-quarter systemwide RevPAR each to increase 2 percent to 4 percent year over year. Nassetta projected U.S. full-year RevPAR would be “towards the low end of the range.”

    Hilton’s development pipeline at the end of the first quarter comprised 472,300 rooms, up 10 percent year over year.

    RELATED: Hilton Q4 performance

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  • American Postpones ‘Preferred’ Agency Deadline

    American Postpones ‘Preferred’ Agency Deadline

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    American Airlines has postponed to July 11 from May 1 its deadline for changing the ways travelers can earn AAdvantage loyalty program miles and points and announcing its newly designated preferred travel agencies, the carrier confirmed. 

    The airline in February announced changes effective May 1 about earning credits for American flights. To earn points, travelers would have to book direct or through a New Distribution Capability-enabled channel, belong to a firm that has a corporate contract with the carrier or is part of its small and midsize business AAdvantage Business program, or by booking through preferred travel agencies—a new category. 

    To qualify as preferred, an agency would need to book as of April 21 at least 30 percent of its American volume through NDC-enabled channels, 50 percent by Oct. 31 and 70 percent by April 30, 2025. The new date for that first qualification hurdle now is June 5. The 30 percent volume threshold remains the same, and the future dates and volume levels also will remain the same, American said in an email.

    “We’ve seen a great response from agencies increasingly adopting modern retailing technology, and many have already achieved preferred retailer status,” according to an American spokesperson. “The majority of our indirect bookings are now made via an agency with NDC capabilities, and the current list of agencies beyond 30 percent NDC bookings is already impressive.” 

    American added that the extension gives those agencies who are “on the cusp of meeting the threshold” time to complete the transition.

    But according to BTN portfolio mate The Beat, it’s unclear how that 30 percent would be measured. 

    On the surface, the changes might not seem to affect corporate programs very much; however, according to industry sources, American has canceled contracts with some corporations as well as with some agencies, or at least in some cases significantly reconfigured their corporate incentive contracts

    There are two things a travel buyer can do to manage this process and “buy a little time,” said Results Plus Consulting partner Kim Hamer during a Tuesday AmTrav webinar: “If you have a corporate agreement, continue booking through your [travel management company, even if they are not preferred] and earn loyalty and points. If you don’t have a corporate agreement and want to continue using your TMC, then sign up for AAdvantage Business.” 

    Added Garner Advisory founder Cory Garner on the same webinar: “It has been peculiar to me to watch the corporate market have quite as much of a flurry of activity around [this AAdvantage change] considering there is a really easy ‘get out of jail free card’ associated with the strategy,” Garner said, referring to the option for companies to sign up for the SME business program. “Could [American] change down the road? Absolutely. But it’s pretty clear this is more a leisure strategy than a corporate one at this point.”  

    RELATED: American Sets New Loyalty Restrictions, Plans Preferred Agency Status

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  • SBTi Approves Marriott Emissions Targets

    SBTi Approves Marriott Emissions Targets

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    The Science Based Targets initiative has verified Marriott International’s plans to reduce carbon emissions, the hotel company announced Monday.

    Marriott has committed to reach net-zero value chain greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, a goal it announced in 2021. Marriott on Monday said it has “committed to reduce absolute Scope 1 and 2 GHG emissions 46.2 percent by 2030 from a 2019 base year” and Scope 3 emissions by 2030 by 27.5 percent from 2019 levels.

    The company’s 2050 targets include a 90 percent reduction of Scope 1 and 2 emissions, and a 90 percent reduction of Scope 3 emissions, all against a 2019 baseline.

    Marriott said it is focusing on three areas to reach the 2050 target: “energy reduction, sourcing more energy from renewables, and purchasing goods with lower carbon footprints across its portfolio of over 8,800 properties in 139 countries and territories.”

    The SBTi is an initiative of several climate-related groups that assists companies in setting science-based greenhouse gas emissions-reduction targets to achieve net-zero goals. The group requires companies to submit plans to achieve such goals within 24 months of a net-zero commitment. Validation is no certainty; earlier this year, the group removed the commitments of scores of companies for failure to develop plans for sufficient mitigation

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  • Amex Commercial Client T&E Spending Grows to $28B in Q1

    Amex Commercial Client T&E Spending Grows to $28B in Q1

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    Travel and entertainment spending by American Express U.S. commercial customers increased 4 percent year over year in the first quarter even as the company reported “soft” spending trends from its small and midsized commercial customers.

    The 4 percent increase brought total T&E spending by U.S. commercial customers to $28 billion in the quarter, up from $25 billion in the first quarter of 2023 and from $26 billion in the fourth quarter of 2023, Amex reported. U.S. commercial customer spending on goods and services was $99 billion, up 1 percent year over year but down from $105 billion in the previous quarter.

    Total spending, inclusive of T&E and goods and services, was up 5 percent year over year among Amex’s large and global U.S. customers, which account for just under a fifth of total commercial customer spending. Among U.S. SMEs, the increase was 1 percent.

    “The SME billed business has been in that 1 percent to 2 percent range for a year now,” Amex CFO Christophe Le Caillec said in an earnings call on Friday. “We think that this is macro-driven, and we have a ton of data that confirms that it’s not specific to American Express, and the rest of the industry is experiencing similar trends.”

    T&E spending by international customers, both consumer and commercial combined, increased 14 percent year over year in the first quarter to $27 billion. Spending by international commercial customers on both T&E and goods and services was up 11 percent year over year and made up 35 percent of Amex’s total international business.

    Amex chairman and CEO Stephen Squeri said the company expects continued growth in its international business.

    “International acceptance continues to grow and continues to improve,” Squeri said in the earnings call. “And when you look at the international business growing at the rate it’s growing and coverage continuing to grow, we see that as a long runway for future growth.”

    Amex reported total revenues of $15.8 billion for the quarter, up 11 percent year over year due to increased card member spending and higher net interest income. Its first-quarter net income was $2.4 billion, up from $1.8 billion in the first quarter of 2023.

    RELATED: Amex Q4 results

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  • Alaska Airlines: ‘Stunning’ Corp. Revenue Growth During Q1

    Alaska Airlines: ‘Stunning’ Corp. Revenue Growth During Q1

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    The start to the first quarter for Alaska Airlines was rocky at best, with the Flight 1282 door-plug incident in January followed by the weeks-long grounding of the Boeing 737 Max 9 aircraft. The combined incidents cost the carrier $162 million, “which Boeing has fully compensated us for,” Alaska president and CEO Ben Minicucci said during a Thursday quarterly earnings call.

    But the carrier recovered and had a “positive performance,” minus the grounding impact, in part due to the return of West Coast business travel, particularly among technology companies, Minicucci said. 

    For the quarter, the carrier’s managed business travel revenue grew 22 percent year over year, Alaska CCO Andrew Harrison said, with approximately 50 percent driven from yield and 50 percent from volume. 

    “Tech companies saw the biggest improvement with revenues up over 50 percent year over year, and professional services revenue [was up] an impressive 20 percent,” Harrison added. “To put the speed of recovery into perspective, managed business revenues increased 10 percent [year over year] in January, a stunning 30 percent in February and 24 percent in March. These results were achieved despite the grounding and book-away we experienced.”

    The carrier’s managed corporate revenue has fully recovered to 2019 levels, while the tech sector is approximately 85 percent recovered, Harrison said. “As we’ve said for some time, we expected business travel to come back, which we are clearly seeing today. While we did not bake this into our Q1 forecast, we do not anticipate any step back in corporate travel in Q2.”

    Alaska Q1 Metrics

    Alaska reported $2 billion in first-quarter passenger revenue, up 1 percent year over year, with total revenue at more than $2.3 billion, a 1.6 percent increase. The carrier’s operating loss was $166 million, including the grounding impact.

    Capacity for the quarter was down 2.1 percent year over year, inclusive of an approximate 5.5 percentage-point effect from the grounding, Harrison said. Without that incident, capacity would have been up about 3.5 percent. 

    Average Q1 fuel costs were $3.08 per gallon, and the carrier expects Q2 cost of $3 to $3.20 per gallon, according to CFO Shane Tackett. 

    Alaska projects second-quarter capacity to be up 5 percent to 7 percent year over year, with full-year 2024 capacity up less than 3 percent. The carrier does not expect to receive all 23 Boeing deliveries on the books for this year and has “extended the retirements of several of our older aircraft over the next few months and pushed utilization slightly higher across the mainline fleet, where we had opportunity,” Harrison said.

    Also during the first quarter, Alaska received a second request for information from the U.S. Department of Justice regarding the carrier’s proposed acquisition of Hawaiian Airlines. Alaska is working to respond as quickly as possible, and “granted the government an additional 60 days to review its responses,” Minicucci said. “We will continue to work with them to advance the process as swiftly as possible.”

    RELATED: Alaska Q4 performance

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  • FCM M&E Restructures Americas Leadership

    FCM M&E Restructures Americas Leadership

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    FCM Meetings & Events has restructured the leadership of its Americas operations team, naming Gabriella Antoniotti as head of operations for the region.

    In the newly created role, Antoniotti is overseeing the event travel, sourcing and managed meetings and event management departments for FCM M&E in the Americas. Antoniotti has been with the company for about a decade, most recently as director of business improvements and previously at event operations positions at the company in Australia.

    FCM president for the Americas Billy McDonough in a statement said Antoniotti’s “leadership, operational expertise and deep understanding of the meetings and events space will be integral to our continued success and future growth plans in the U.S. and Canada.”

    The restructuring also included the promotion of Steph Garcia to team leader for the event travel division. Garcia joined the organization last year and previously worked for Liberty Travel, FCM parent company Flight Centre Travel Group’s U.S. leisure brand.

    Other department leaders—Jessica Cortese for sourcing and managed meetings, and event management leaders Emma Eves in the U.S. and Sophie Marsh in Canada—are continuing in the roles under the new structure. They, along with Garcia, all are reporting to Antoniotti.

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  • United: Q1 Corp. Travel ‘Strong Across the Board’

    United: Q1 Corp. Travel ‘Strong Across the Board’

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    United Airlines’ managed corporate travel in the first quarter was up 14 percent year over year, United chief commercial officer Andrew Nocella said during a Wednesday morning earnings call. 

    Nocella did not specify whether he was referring to corporate bookings or revenue, and United did not immediately respond to a request for clarification.

    “Yields for managed travel grew faster than non-managed travel due to stronger close-in pricing and refined discounting guidelines,” Nocella said. “The strength of the business traffic rebound is a nice development for an airline like United.”

    The increase in corporate travel came during a quarter that is typically the carrier’s “most challenging financially,” Nocella noted, and where “post-pandemic Q1 seasonality worsened due to decreases in corporate business.”

    Despite that, “corporate was strong across the board” during the quarter, domestically and around the globe, Nocella said. “We saw nine of our top 10 corporate booking days this year in our history. The strongest industries were professional services, tech and industrials. But every sector was up in the numbers this year. Q1 corporate is really important to us, and the fact that Q1 is gaining strength, corporate is really very good for our outlook for future Q1s.”

    FAA, Aircraft Delivery Delays

    United CEO Scott Kirby addressed the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration’s recent increased oversight of the carrier. “We welcome the FAA’s engagement, and we are embracing this review as an opportunity to take our safety culture standards to an even higher level,” Kirby said. 

    Through the FAA safety review, certain certifications will be delayed, United president Brett Hart said, and the carrier expects a “small number” of aircraft scheduled for delivery in the second quarter to be delayed, though this will have a “minimal impact to our 2024 capacity plans.”

    Further, Boeing’s “repeated delivery delays” has created an “impractical bow wave” of deliveries that United had to address, United CFO Mike Leskinen said. The carrier in 2024 now expects to take delivery of 61 narrowbody aircraft and five widebody aircraft, compared with the “contractual deliveries of 183 narrowbody aircraft at year-end and the 101 aircraft we were planning for at the start of the year,” he added.

    United also converted a portion of its Boeing 737 Max 10 orders scheduled through 2027 to Max 9s, Leskinen said. The carrier also plans to lease 35 new Airbus A321neos scheduled for delivery in 2026 and 2027. With those changes, United expects to take delivery of about 100 narrowbody aircraft on average each year during the 2025 through 2027 period, and has “the ability to fly some of our older aircraft longer,” he added. 

    United Q1 Metrics

    United reported first-quarter passenger revenue of more than $11.3 billion, up 10.1 percent year over year. Total revenue was more than $12.5 billion, representing a 9.7 percent increase compared with a year prior. 

    Domestic first-quarter passenger revenue was more than $6.9 million, up 6.6 percent versus Q1 2023 on increased capacity of 0.5 percent. International passenger revenue was up 16 percent on increased capacity of 21.1 percent. Total network capacity grew 9.1 percent year over year.

    The carrier reported a Q1 net loss of $124 million, down from the loss of $194 million in Q1 2023. United executives said that the grounding of the Boeing 737 Max 9 aircraft in January cost the carrier about $200 million, and without that grounding the airline would have been profitable during the first quarter.

    RELATED: United Q4 performance

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  • Cvent Integrates Maestro Property Mgmt. System

    Cvent Integrates Maestro Property Mgmt. System

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    Meetings management and hospitality technology provider Cvent
    announced on Monday an integration with hotel property management system Maestro
    and Cvent’s room block management system Cvent Passkey. The integration will
    enable hotels on the Maestro platform with real-time room block data to make
    accurate inventory and pricing decisions, while allowing planner and attendees
    to leverage direct room bookings and upgrade options. 

    BTN contacted Cvent to understand the prevalence in the
    company’s hospitality cloud of properties using the Maestro system. A
    spokesperson for the company said they could not “share an exact number.” 

    Passkey already integrates with a number of hotel central
    reservation systems and property management systems, including Sabre SynXis,
    Marriott CRS, Hilton CRS, IHG CRS, Disney, Hyatt CRS, and Accor CRS. It adds Maestro
    to its current collection of integrated PMS providers: HMS Infor, Opera, Opera
    Cloud, Agulysis, Visual One, Springer Miller, Megasys and Resort Suite.

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  • Delta Preparing to Unveil NDC Strategy

    Delta Preparing to Unveil NDC Strategy

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    Delta Air Lines is the last of the big three U.S. carriers to implement a New Distribution Capability strategy, but the wait soon may be over. 

    The company is preparing to unveil its NDC strategy—or at least some of it—at a corporate showcase event scheduled for next week, Delta managing director of sales technology and global sales support Sara Reid said this week at the joint Elevate and TravelConnect conference in Washington, D.C., held by ATPCO and Airlines Reporting Corp.

    She didn’t let any NDC secrets out of the bag, but instead noted the strategy would be an “iterative process” with some of the plan’s “first milestones” to come out toward the end of 2024. 

    “We are committed to the ecosystem, committed to creating value for our partners, and we want to make sure that our journey is to be customer-oriented,” Reid said. “It’s important to know we remain committed to business travel on this journey and remain committed to the third-party partners.”

    Reid added that Delta “right now has no plans to follow other airlines’ strategies to remove content [from EDIFACT] or impose surcharges at this point.” She also reiterated the need to focus on servicing, not just selling Delta products. “If we can only sell our products and not service them, then we’re missing something. The key to our journey is better servicing.”

    Over the past six months, Delta has pulled together an interdepartmental team to meet with travel agencies, online booking tools, global distribution systems and corporate travel buyers to assess current processes, Reid said. 

    Delta also has heard what isn’t working with NDC and what stakeholders want, she said, such as making sure what is offered in NDC is the same as what is found on an airline’s dot-com site, with even better deals if there’s a corporate discount.

    AmTrav CEO Jeff Klee, who was on stage with Reid, is among the participants in Delta’s research. 

    “I really appreciate the thoughtful approach that Delta is taking to this,” Klee said. “To be fair, they’re coming at this a little late, but really trying to get the benefit of that hindsight. They sent a team to our offices, and to many of their other partners, and they are diving into and dissecting every little detail about our operations, so that when they release this product or build this product, they are not leaving any stone unturned.”

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  • Industry Orgs Urge Gov’t to ‘Pause’ New Chinese Flights

    Industry Orgs Urge Gov’t to ‘Pause’ New Chinese Flights

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    Representatives from four U.S. aviation-related organizations on Thursday urged the Biden administration to “pause additional passenger flights” between the United States and China until “U.S. workers and businesses are guaranteed equality of access in the marketplace, free from the existing harmful anti-competitive policies of the Chinese government,” according to a joint letter sent Thursday to Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg.

    The signatories included presidents of Airlines for America, the Air Line Pilots Association, the Allied Pilots Association and the Association of Flight Attendants–CWA.

    In February, the U.S. Department of Transportation allowed the number of weekly passenger flights by Chinese carriers to the U.S. to increase to 50 from 35 beginning March 31. U.S. carriers are allowed the same number, but currently are not operating that many flights.

    After China suspended bilateral air services agreements and closed its market to U.S. carriers following the outbreak of Covid-19, its government implemented “strict limits on market access,” and imposed rules “affecting operations, customers and the treatment of our airline crew,” according to the letter, which added that this “competitive disadvantage” is harmful to the 315,000 workers employed by U.S. passenger airlines that serve China.

    The letter also cited the advantage Chinese carriers have in continuing to fly through Russian airspace, which U.S. carriers stopped in March 2022, shortly after Russia invaded Ukraine, thereby making Chinese-carrier flights shorter than U.S.-operated ones.

    Congressional Request

    Also on Thursday, Rep. Mike Gallagher (R-Wis.) and Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-Ill.), chairman and ranking member, respectively, of the House Select Committee on the Strategic Competition Between the United States and the Chinese Communist Party, sent a joint letter to Blinken and Buttigieg to “urge caution in the approval of new flights” between the two countries. It, too, noted an “anti-competitive commercial advantage” for China.

    The representatives’ letter also stated that “American passengers must not be exposed to unnecessary security risks by traversing Russian airspace. … Should the U.S.-China passenger carrier market expand without the U.S. government addressing these significant issues, U.S. aviation workers, travelers and airlines will pay a hefty price tag.”

    DOT declined comment. The State Department declined to comment directly on the letter.

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  • ATPCO Unveils ‘Product Catalog’ for Dynamic Air Offer Filing

    ATPCO Unveils ‘Product Catalog’ for Dynamic Air Offer Filing

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    ATPCO has created a new solution that will “dramatically increase” the speed with which airlines will be able to move toward dynamic offers, the company announced Thursday at its Elevate + TravelConnect conference in partnership with Airlines Reporting Corp. in Washington, D.C.

    Dubbed Product Catalog, the solution is an electronic record of airline products and services that ATPCO can create for each airline client so that they “can differentiate offers beyond price,” with more detail on offer attributes.

    “Today, an airline can only sell what they send through ATPCO, and what they send is fully formed—the price, the attributes.” ATPCO CEO Alex Zoghlin told BTN. “What we are doing with Product Catalog is we are breaking down all those component parts into their individual pieces, so that you can assemble them independently of having to file every possible permutation a customer may want.”

    The solution, which also can be used by sales channels, also will help move the industry toward building the framework necessary to achieve a goal that ATPCO set in October 2022 for airlines to dynamically generate 80 percent of offers sold by 2026.

    Product Catalog was “created after months of industry collaboration in ATPCO’s dynamic offers design team,” which includes members from several of its airline and technology clients, and is currently in the proof-of-concept stage. ATPCO plans to build a Product Catalog for each of its 450 member airlines by the end of the year, Zoghlin said, adding that “this is a 2024 work, not a ‘sometime in the future.’ “

    “Long-term, I think this is really good for corporate travel buyers. They will be able to procure exactly what they’re looking for and might even be able to negotiate deals around attributes and things harder to do today,” Zoghlin added. “Some airlines do file fares specific for corporations, but think about a Product Catalog world where I can create nearly a bespoke offering for your company that might be a unique offering.” The catalog also could create different levels of offerings for travelers within the same company, he noted, based on whether the traveler is an executive or a conference attendee, for example.

    The solution’s first iteration is backwards-compatible, Zoghlin said: “We can take the fare filings you have right now, and we can create your Product Catalog for you,” he said of airlines. ” Then technology providers and others can take those and create dynamic offers on them. … But you can also take that Product Catalog and go backward and create fare filings. If you’re an airline that is further ahead in dynamic offer creation, but you have a codeshare or [joint venture] partner not quite there, we can make the ecosystem still work, going backward and forward.”

    In other words, the product will work with both EDIFACT and New Distribution Capability channels, Zoghlin said. ATPCO also is working on another product that would allow carriers to file fares in global distribution systems after building them in their Product Catalog. 

    Multiple airlines have asked ATPCO if this new product means that they can train their fare-filing staff on Product Catalog and “not have them learn all the arcane fare rules,” Zoghlin said. “That is exactly what we are saying. We can move beyond all the complicated rules. We think this is really good for even carriers that don’t think or care about moving past traditional fare filings. We think this will be a simpler way to manage everything.”

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  • Brazil Again Delays Visa Requirement by One Year

    Brazil Again Delays Visa Requirement by One Year

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    Brazil has delayed the return of a visa requirement for tourists from the United States, Australia and Canada until April 2025, per a decree signed this week by Brazil President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva.

    This marks the second postponement of the requirement this year, which originally was supposed to begin in January but was pushed back that month to April 10. The visa requirement for the three countries is returning as their waiver expires, a result of them not establishing a reciprocal visa waiver agreement for visitors from Brazil.

    Brazil’s tourism board, Embratur, noted that the U.S. was the second-largest source of international travel for Brazil in 2023 and that arrivals of Americans to Brazil in the first two months of 2024 was up 11 percent year over year.

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  • Mastercard Restructures Leadership Organization

    Mastercard Restructures Leadership Organization

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    Chief commercial payments officer Raj Seshadi
    Chief AI and data officer Greg Ulrich
    Chief AI and data officer Greg Ulrich
    Chief services officer Craig Vosburg
    Chief services officer Craig Vosburg
    Chief product officer Jorn Lambert
    Chief product officer Jorn Lambert

    Mastercard is restructuring its leadership team to three
    “interdependent areas,” with commercial cards grouped with “new
    payment flows” and the development of a new data and AI organization in
    another area, the company announced.

    The commercial and new payment flows area will be led by
    newly named chief commercial payments officer Raj Seshadri and will include
    commercial cards, B-to-B accounts payables and receivables, non-carded bill
    payments, remittances and disbursements. Mastercard said payments and data
    flows beyond the consumer side is a “scalable opportunity” for the
    company.

    Seshadri has been with Mastercard for eight years and most
    recently was president of data and services.

    The new data and AI organization, led by Mastercard
    executive Greg Ulrich as chief AI and data officer, will focus on
    commercializing the technology for both internal and external applications and
    governing those functions across the entire company. That organization will
    fall under Mastercard’s services area, which also includes cyber and
    intelligence, data and services and open banking teams.

    Craig Vosburg, most recently Mastercard’s chief product
    officer, will lead that area as chief services officer.

    Jorn Lambert, a longtime executive who has been Mastercard’s
    chief digital officer since 2020, is taking the role of chief product officer
    and will lead the core payments area for Mastercard. That area includes core
    payments, products and platforms, real-time payments capabilities and
    acceptance innovation, according to Mastercard.

    The new organization “will reinforce our strategy and
    competitive advantage to drive long-term growth, diversify our revenue streams
    and differentiate our products and solutions,” Mastercard CEO Michael
    Miebach said in a statement.

    The new organizational structure will take effect on May 1,
    though the leadership changes announced with the restructuring are effective
    immediately, according to Mastercard.

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  • SAS to Switch Airline Alliance Programs

    SAS to Switch Airline Alliance Programs

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    SAS on Sept. 1 will join the SkyTeam airline alliance,
    leaving behind the Star Alliance program on Aug. 31, the carrier
    announced Monday.

    Members of SAS’ EuroBonus loyalty program “will enjoy
    loyalty benefits similar to those offered today” with “most of
    SkyTeam’s airlines,” according to the carrier, which is in
    “advanced negotiations” with SkyTeam and its member carriers
    to “develop and grow extensive commercial relationships.”

    The new alliance will provide SAS customers access to 19
    new airlines and more than 1,060 destinations globally, according to the
    carrier. Star Alliance benefits will remain in place through Aug. 31.

    The main North American carriers affiliated with SkyTeam
    include Delta Airlines and Aeromexico. The European carriers include Air
    France, KLM, Virgin Atlantic, ITA Airways and Czech Airlines.

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  • Nasdaq Warns Sonder on Financial Filings

    Nasdaq Warns Sonder on Financial Filings

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    Short-term accommodation provider Sonder Holdings acknowledged Friday it had received a “delinquency notice” from Nasdaq regarding its listing. Sonder has yet to file its fourth-quarter and full-year results, and announced March 15 it had “identified accounting errors related to the valuation and impairment of operating lease right of use assets and related items for the fiscal years 2022 and 2023.” Sonder has 60 calendar days from the time it received the notice—April 2—to regain compliance with Nasdaq listing rules, Sonder said, although Nasdaq could extend that deadline to Sept. 30. Sonder in a statement said it “intends to submit a compliance plan to Nasdaq and take the necessary steps to regain compliance with Nasdaq’s listing rules as soon as practicable.”

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  • Eulogy for EDIFACT? Airline, Tech Execs Debate at UATP Conference

    Eulogy for EDIFACT? Airline, Tech Execs Debate at UATP Conference

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    It’s time to prepare the obituary for traditional air distribution’s EDIFACT technology, some airlines executives said during the UATP’s annual Airline Distribution Conference in recent weeks, although its run date is still far from certain.

    “EDIFACT is going to sunset as a technology,” Air Canada managing director of customer digital and distribution Keith Wallis said at the conference in Vienna. “It is decades and decades old, and it is not fit for purpose anymore. It doesn’t allow airlines to do the content they want, and it doesn’t allow travel agents to get the content they want. Whether it happens in 2025 or over the next five to seven years, it will die a natural death.”

    Indeed, several airlines at the conference reported significant progress in New Distribution Capability adoption. Finnair, one of the most aggressive carriers in shifting to NDC, remains on track to discontinuing support for EDIFACT content by the end of 2025. NDC also has been “pivotal” to the strategy of Hawaiian Airlines over the past few years, with about 60 percent of indirect volume now through NDC and growth to 75 percent expected through the end of the year, the carrier’s senior director of distribution George Bryan said. Via its aggregator, Hawaiian can “provide 95 percent of capabilities a [travel management company] or tour operator requires” with NDC content, according to Bryan.

    Lufthansa Group head of distribution solutions Mario Maier acknowledged that it has been a “bumpy road” with NDC. “Should we have delivered more in content differentiation over the past few years? Yes,” Maier said. “Did we promise more than we delivered? Yes.”

    Even so, the group is “happy where we are at the moment,” he said. Executives late last year said 2024 would be the “year of NDC for Lufthansa Group,” Maier said, with a “next-level NDC program” to be announced in the coming months. One of the main streams of that will be enhancing API servicing capabilities, which he said remains one of the biggest gaps in terms of covering corporate travel needs. Another stream will focus on offer management, with Lufthansa already piloting some bundles for both corporate and leisure travelers in the market.

    “You’re going to see some brave moves in the upcoming months from Lufthansa Group,” Maier said. The group aims to be “full offer and order” sometime in the range of 2028 to 2030, according to Maier.

    Eric Dumas, CEO of TPConnects—the tech company majority owned-by Flight Centre Travel Group, and which aggregates travel content, including NDC content and makes it available through a universal API—said it had about 1.5 million NDC bookings in 2023. That should “double or triple this year,” he said.

    Spotnana, which was “built for NDC from day one,” continues to add NDC connections as well, with three airline companies—Emirates, Air France/KLM and British Airways—all in the final stages of connecting to the platform, Spotnana VP of business development for content distribution Johnny Thorsen said. One of the recently completed connections took just two days to complete, he said.


    There are 400 to 450 airlines in the world that matter. At this point, maybe 60 have started down the path of NDC, and only a smaller subset of those are really, truly exercising the APIs that are out there.”

    Hudson Crossing’s Brian Clark


    Amid all of those progress reports, however, Hudson Crossing partner Brian Clark had a little cold water to toss. Airlines that have made distinct progress with NDC are currently in a solid minority.

    “There are 400 to 450 airlines in the world that matter,” Clark said. “At this point, maybe 60 have started down the path of NDC, and only a smaller subset of those are really, truly exercising the APIs that are out there.”

    Germany’s Hahnair, which provides distribution and ticketing services for hundreds of partner carriers, sees a variety of progress among those carriers, Hahnair CEO Kirsten Rehmann said. “Some are defining their strategy, and some are further ahead,” she said. “It’s defining the strategy, defining the needs and identifying the gaps—and there are many gaps.” 

    The need to work with agency technology is one of those gaps, she said. On the agency side, while new technology built with NDC standards in mind like Spotnana can executive NDC integration in a matter of days, the reality for most agencies is still a process of “years, not weeks or months,” Clark said.

    “Large agencies are rooted and seeded … in the GDS,” he said. “They’re using the GDS PNRs for inventory management, back offices, inventory, stores, customer profiles. If you’re an agency, and the strategy is, now I have to be flexible, now you need to take that back, and extracting all of that—if it’s not a heart transplant, it’s certainly a liver transplant.”

    As such, while the “challenge for content” will continue, the end of EDIFACT is not likely to happen in the near future, said Ray Pazerekas, Concur Travel Suppliers regional vice president for the Americas.

    “Legacy technology isn’t going anywhere, and moving away from legacy technology isn’t all that easy,” Pazerekas said. “Looking at some proof points, Southwest Airlines, after years and years of API-only, moved into GDSs because they felt like they were missing out on sales opportunities. Delta Air Lines, the largest carrier by far in terms of corporate travel, continues to be an EDIFACT carrier.”

    Those agencies, however, will still need to find ways around EDIFACT as there are more “sharp turns” for airlines in distribution policy, such as American Airlines’ loyalty restrictions and “preferred agency” status announced earlier this year, Dumas said. “Your product, which is an airline experience, you need to be able to have the freedom to sell to who you want,” he said. “This can be done only by using modern technology.”

    The new technology entrants haven’t necessarily written off EDIFACT as dead either, as Spotnana is “not anti-GDS,” and in fact “relies heavily on Sabre” and supports Sabre EDIFACT, Thorsen said. Sabre and Spotnana in the past six months have had conversations on how to “accelerate together” toward evolution, he said.

    “It’s a good example of a player that has been in an old business model for a long time also evolving into a new marketplace,” according to Thorsen. “We can innovate together, but it still relies on the airlines to define what they want and change the business models with the TMC.”

    As such, the final prognosis for EDIFACT via the UATP conference seemed to be a bit more life left but decreasing usefulness. 

    That comes as the world of corporate airline negotiations is changing as well, evolving for toward “a tiered program” with fare brands created around corporation’s specific needs for their travelers. In the vein, EDIFACT was not the only long-standing corporate travel entity on death watch at the conference.”

    “We have our sales team sit down and talk to our closest corporate clients,” Wallis said. “The world where Air Canada is not offering discounts to corporate travel is coming. That is not a bad thing; help us be a close partner and create a corporate travel program where you are attracting the best talent.”

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  • Boeing Pays Alaska Airlines $160M for Max Grounding

    Boeing Pays Alaska Airlines $160M for Max Grounding

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    Boeing has paid Alaska Airlines approximately $160 million in cash during the first quarter to cover losses due to the grounding of the Boeing 737 Max 9 aircraft, the carrier noted Thursday in a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filing.

    The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration grounded the Max 9 following a Jan. 5 door-plug blowout shortly after Alaska Airlines flight 1282 departed Portland, Ore.

    Alaska said its “operation and results were significantly impacted” by the incident. The $160 million covers a loss in pre-tax profit, “primarily comprising lost revenues, costs due to irregular operations and costs to restore our fleet to operating service,” according to the filing. Alaska said it expects additional compensation to be provided beyond the first quarter, the terms of which it said are confidential.

    The carrier added that without these factors, first-quarter adjusted pre-tax profit would have improved about 80 percent year over year, “versus our pre-grounding expectations of a 30 percent improvement.” Alaska said that the improvement to its core business performance has been driven by “strategic network adjustments, strong demand within the quarter and continued recovery of West Coast business travel.”

    Despite some “book away” following the January incident and aircraft grounding, “February and March both finished above our original pre-grounding expectations due to these core improvements,” according to Alaska.

    The carrier added that while it initially planned to have the Boeing payment accounted into its earnings, the carrier instead is recording it as a reduction to aircraft assets. As a result, the airline now expects an adjusted pre-tax loss of $180 million to $195 million, factoring in the $160 million grounding affect, compared with a pre-tax loss estimate of $20 million to $35 million.

    The events also affected Alaska’s capacity outlook. Excluding the grounding impact, capacity was expected to increase about 3 percent year over year. The events had a negative 5.5 percent affect, and the carrier now expects first-quarter capacity to fall about 2.5 percent compared with Q1 2023.

    On March 25, Boeing announced that CEO David Calhoun would step down at the end of the year, with Boeing Commercial Airplanes president and CEO Stan Deal retiring immediately. Boeing chair Larry Kellner also declined to run for reelection at the company’s annual shareholder meeting.

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