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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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  • Air New Zealand Buys 9M Liters of SAF from Neste

    Air New Zealand Buys 9M Liters of SAF from Neste

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    Air New Zealand has agreed to purchase 9 million liters of
    neat sustainable aviation fuel from producer Neste, the carrier announced
    Monday. Neither company disclosed the value of the deal. 

    The fuel will be produced at Neste’s Singapore refinery and
    will be blended with conventional jet fuel and supplied to Los Angeles
    International Airport between April 1 and Nov. 30, 2024, according to the
    carrier. Air New Zealand expected its total fuel uptake during that period to
    be about 850 million liters across its network.

    The carrier said the deal is the “largest purchase of
    SAF from Neste by any airline outside of North America and Europe for delivery
    before the end of 2024.”

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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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  • Cirium: March N. American Air On-Time Performance Dips

    Cirium: March N. American Air On-Time Performance Dips

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    North American carrier on-time performance has zig-zagged through the first quarter of 2024, nosediving in January, recovering in February, and dipping again in March, according to the latest report from Cirium, an aviation analytics company. 

    The March average on-time performance was 74.9 percent, down 5.1 percentage points month over month, but it was up from the 71.7 percent reported in January. Each of the 10 carriers included in the report posted on-time performance declines, the inverse of February’s changes. 

    Delta Air Lines once again had the highest on-time performance at 85.5 percent, followed by United Airlines at 82.8 percent. Alaska Airlines rounded out the top three with 78.8 percent. Delta was the only North American carrier to place in the global top 10 at sixth.

    [Report continues below chart.]

    Frontier Airlines’ drop of 11.7 percentage points was the largest decline reported, followed by Spirit with a loss of 7.5 percentage points. Air Canada had the smallest decline, at 0.2 percentage points, and managed to move up to sixth place from eighth in February, with an on-time performance of 75.1 percent that was above the weighted average.

    North American carriers in March canceled 7,721 flights, compared with the 5,803 flights canceled in February.

    Completion factors for March remained steady at 99 percent or higher. Delta led with 99.8 percent, followed by Alaska at 99.4 percent, Southwest Airlines at 99.3 percent, American Airlines at 99.1 percent and United at 99.1 as well.

    A flight is considered on time if the aircraft arrives at the gate within 15 minutes of the scheduled arrival time.

    RELATED: Cirium: February N. American Air On-Time Performance Improves

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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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  • Finnair to Expand Service in U.S., Japan

    Finnair to Expand Service in U.S., Japan

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    Finnair in October will increase flights between Dallas and
    Helsinki to daily, up from four times per week last winter, due to increased
    customer demand, the carrier announced Tuesday. In November, Finnair will bring
    back winter seasonal service between Miami and Helsinki, operating three times
    weekly. 

    The carrier plans in summer 2025 to offer daily flights to
    each Tokyo Haneda and Tokyo Narita, according to Finnair. Relaunching this
    summer are flights between Helsinki and Nagoya, operating three times weekly.

    Finnair in Europe also has added flights to “a number
    of its most popular destinations, including the Baltic capitals of Riga,
    Tallinn and Vilnius.”

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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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  • JetBlue Changes Checked-Bag Fees, Again

    JetBlue Changes Checked-Bag Fees, Again

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    JetBlue recently, quietly, has made changes to its checked-bag policy—about two months after it raised those fees—to differentiate between peak and off-peak pricing, according to its website. The increases follow not only its own prior hikes but also those made since January by Alaska Airlines, American Airlines and United Airlines.

    The fees JetBlue updated in February remain the same for off-peak flights: $45 for the first checked bag and $60 for the second for flights booked within the United States, Canada, Latin America and the Caribbean, if checked within 24 hours of departure. If checked prior to that, there is a $10 discount. 

    But for peak flight times, the charges increase to $50 and $70, respectively, with a $10 discount if checked more than 24 hours before departure. JetBlue has defined peak times mostly around spring break, holidays and summer travel, including: April 1-29, June 20 to Sept. 3, Nov. 21 to Dec. 2, Dec. 19 to Jan. 6, 2025, Feb. 13-24, 2025, and April 3-28, 2025. “All other travel dates would be off-peak pricing,” according to the website.

    The new peak-fare pricing applies to bookings made on or after March 22, 2024. 

    Blue Plus fares and JetBlue Plus cardmembers still get a first bag checked for free. Mint fares get two free checked bags, up to 70 pounds. Mosaic members get two free checked bags, with no weight limitation noted.

    JetBlue in an emailed statement provided to BTN said: “The cost of transporting bags has gone up significantly due to increased wages and higher fuel costs, and we remain unprofitable since COVID. While we don’t like increasing fees, we are making these adjustments to help get our company back to profitability and cover the increased costs. By adjusting fees for added services that only certain customers use, especially during periods of highest demand for limited space in the cargo hold, we can keep base fares as low as possible and ensure customer favorites like seatback TVs and high-speed Wi-Fi remain free for everyone.”

    RELATED: United Joins American in Raising Checked-Bag Fees

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  • Wyndham Deal to Add Ext.-Stay WaterWalk to Portfolio

    Wyndham Deal to Add Ext.-Stay WaterWalk to Portfolio

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    Wyndham Hotels & Resorts has partnered to bring extended-stay brand WaterWalk’s 11 properties into its portfolio, the company announced Tuesday. Under the deal, WaterWalk becomes Wyndham’s 25th brand and its third extended-stay brand, as well as its first upscale extended-stay brand.

    The deal isn’t an acquisition, and WaterWalk retains ownership of the brand, a Wyndham spokesperson told BTN. Still, WaterWalk will be “fully integrated” into the Wyndham portfolio, “same as any other Wyndham brand,” according to the spokesperson. WaterWalk will participate in Wyndham’s loyalty program and access Wyndham’s property and revenue management systems.

    Financial terms of the partnership weren’t disclosed, nor would Wyndham clarify whether the arrangement was for a fixed period.

    “In the last year, guest demand for the extended-stay segment reached record highs, which has been underscored by demand from owners and developers looking for new opportunities to partner with Wyndham,” Wyndham chief development officer Chip Ohlsson said in a statement. “Our vision is to offer the industry’s most robust portfolio of extended-stay brands, and the addition of WaterWalk marks an important step in that direction.”

    Founded in 2014 by the late hospitality and extended-stay veteran Jack DeBoer, Wyndham said WaterWalk has 11 properties totaling more than 1,500 rooms. The brand’s calling card is each property’s split between traditionally furnished extended-stay guest rooms and unfurnished rooms, designed to allow long-term guests to decorate to their taste. DeBoer, who launched such brands as Residence Inn and Candlewood Suites, died in 2021. His granddaughter, Mimi Oliver, is CEO of WaterWalk.

    Wyndham wouldn’t disclose whether any additional WaterWalk properties are in the development pipeline, but the spokesperson said, “we see long-term opportunity for the brand across both primary and secondary markets, with both new construction and conversion being viable options for growth.” 

    Wyndham is “responsible for the brand’s long-term growth, taking point on identifying and selling new franchise opportunities,” according to the spokesperson. 

    WaterWalk’s website lists 12 open properties in Atlanta; Boise, Idaho; Charlotte, N.C.; Huntsville, Ala.; Jacksonville, Fla.; Kansas City, Kan.; Minneapolis; Phoenix; Raleigh, N.C.; San Antonio; Tucson, Ariz.; and Wichita, Kan.; the reason for the discrepancy with the 11 Wyndham said was joining its portfolio wasn’t immediately clear. 

    WaterWalk joins a Wyndham extended-stay portfolio that includes 72-property midscale brand Hawthorn Suites and Echo, the economy brand Wyndham announced in 2022. Wyndham on Tuesday said about 265 Echo properties were in the development pipeline with six nearing completion. Wyndham CEO Geoff Ballotti in February said the company planned for 75 to be open by 2026

    WaterWalk in 2019 struck a deal with the serviced-apartment provider then known as Oakwood Worldwide to form an extended-stay brand, but Oakwood soon after shifted its business focus to hospitality management before being acquired by The Ascott Limited in 2022.

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    cdavis@thebtngroup.com (Chris Davis)

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  • Layoffs Hit Travelport’s Commercial Organization

    Layoffs Hit Travelport’s Commercial Organization

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    Travel retail platform Travelport has laid off an undisclosed number of employees in its commercial organization.

    A company spokesperson said the reduction is across all regions but it is not a companywide initiative and “it did not affect a material number of employees (percentage wise).”

    “Travelport is focused on driving revenue growth while operating as efficiently and effectively as possible,” said Katie Cline, Travelport’s global head of external communications, in an email.

    “As such, we’re always reviewing our organizational structure to ensure we’re as agile as possible. Now that we have successfully launched Travelport+ and upgraded the majority of our customers to the new platform, these changes will allow us to create and respond to innovation opportunities with even greater speed than our competitors.”

    In January, Travelport completed an equity financing transaction of $570 million that was initially announced in December.   

    Travelport returned to private ownership in late 2018 following a $4.4 billion takeover by Elliott Management Corp. and others. The company had been listed on the New York Stock Exchange for almost four years and was valued at approximately $1.9 billion when it went public.

    Originally published by PhocusWire.

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    Mitra Sorrells

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  • 5Qs with Sonesta Int’l CEO John Murray

    5Qs with Sonesta Int’l CEO John Murray

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    Hosted by BTN Editorial Director Elizabeth West

    Business Travel News editorial director Elizabeth West and Sonesta International CEO John Murray talk about reported moderated leisure and business travel growth in 2024, but also optimism for a soft landing for the U.S. economy. Murray offers insights into what continues to drive business travel (hint: it’s still led by meetings) as well as rates, and how Sonesta has structured its sales strategy to reach deep into the business travel market. We’ll also talk about Sonesta’s new lifestyle brand The James that is seeing more openings this year as well as its economy-minded brand Sonesta Essentials, which launched a year ago – along with Sonesta’s Worksuite model designed for remote and hybrid work models. Murray offers a unique vantage point in this BTN video interview.
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    businesstravelnews@ntmllc.com (Business Travel News)

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  • Farrell Takes Global Commercial Lead at Deem

    Farrell Takes Global Commercial Lead at Deem

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    Deem global commercial lead Michael Farrell

    Travel management company veteran Michael Farrell stepped into the global commercial lead role at Travelport’s Deem booking platform this week, he announced on LinkedIn. Formerly the EVP of business development for World Travel, Inc. and VP of client solutions and event strategy at Fox Travel before that, Farrell wrote that he will manage the commercial organization and sales strategy at Deem, both for direct corporate sales and agency partnerships.

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    EWest@thebtngroup.com (Elizabeth West)

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  • Executive Travel to Add NDC Price Guarantee Service

    Executive Travel to Add NDC Price Guarantee Service

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    Executive Travel is adding a fare assurance service to ensure clients are not missing out on lower-priced New Distribution Capability fares when booking air travel, the travel management company announced.

    With its NDC Low Price Guarantee, Executive Travel’s staff will review all online and in-person air bookings with NDC fares and automatically rebook them when lower fares are available, according to the TMC. “Our goal is to simplify the booking process and ensure that our clients receive the most cost-effective fares without the need to navigate off-channel options,” Executive Travel president Jennifer Belt said in a statement.

    The service will launch in three to five weeks, an Executive Travel spokesperson said. All Executive Travel accounts will be automatically enrolled into the NDC Low Price Guarantee program, though clients can opt out of the program if they wish, according to the TMC

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    mbaker@thebtngroup.com (Michael B. Baker)

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  • Cirium: Airfare Increases Trail U.S. Inflation Rate

    Cirium: Airfare Increases Trail U.S. Inflation Rate

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    While economy airfares in North America and Europe for the most part have risen over the past few years, the rate of increase has been below that of other products and services, according to data published by Cirium this week.

    U.S. domestic airfares across 13 airlines, in fact, were down year over year by the end of 2023, with December 2023 fares 9 percent lower than those in December 2022, Cirium reported. For the full year, the average U.S. domestic fare was $179.25, an increase of 9 percent from 2019, but Cirium noted that the inflation rate during that period was 19 percent, according to the U.S. Consumer Price Index. 

    Transatlantic economy fares have increased at a higher rate but still below that 19 percent inflation rate, the data indicated. Cirium reported an average 2023 transatlantic economy fare of $435.17, up 5.9 percent from 2022 and up 14 percent from 2019. The average transatlantic business-class fare, $1,845 in 2023, has declined 3 percent since 2019, Cirium said.

    “While airfare has risen in nominal terms in [the] U.S. and Europe, consumers will appreciate that the increases are less than other consumables,” Cirium CEO Jeremy Bowen said in a statement.

    Transatlantic fares on some routes might decrease this summer with about 375,000 additional seats compared with 2023 scheduled to be flown in July, according to Cirium’s schedule data. Transatlantic capacity among measured carriers was up 18 percent year over year in 2023.

    Airfares within Europe averaged $104.58 in 2023, up 8 percent compared with 2022 and 12 percent compared with 2019, Cirium said. Those averages exclude taxes and fees.

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    mbaker@thebtngroup.com (Michael B. Baker)

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