SEO Title
Global Business Aircraft Flying Drops in June
Subtitle
North America and Europe lag, but the rest of the world sees an increase in activity
Subject Area
Channel
Company Reference
Teaser Text
Business aircraft flying last month fell 3.4% YOY, with North America down 4.9% and Europe falling 8%, offset by an 18.5% increase in the rest of the world.
Content Body

Business aircraft flight activity last month fell 3.4% year over year (YOY), with North America down 4.9% and Europe falling 8%, offset by an 18.5% increase in the rest of the world, according to TraqPak data from Argus International. The company’s analysts had forecast a 3.2% decline in North America; for July, they expect flying in North America to see a marginal 0.2% increase while European activity would decrease by 5.1%.

In North America, fractional activity climbed by 12.1% YOY in June, while Part 135 and 91 flying activity eroded by 5.3% and 10.2%, respectively. By aircraft category in the region, midsize jets saw the least erosion, down 0.2%, followed by light jets, -5.9%; turboprops, -6.3%; and large-cabin jets, -10.4%. In individual segments, fractional midsize jets came in on top, increasing 14.8% YOY, while Part 135 large-cabin jet flying fared the worst, falling 15.2%.

Looking at Europe, light jet activity eked out a 0.8% YOY gain, while midsize jets were flat and turboprops and large-cabin jets dipped 20.7% and 11.2%, respectively. In the rest of the world, turboprop and light- and midsize-jet flying surged by more than 20% from a year ago, while large-cabin jets saw only a 0.5% increase.

“June was mostly status quo for our activity levels around the globe. North America and Europe are sluggish, but still remain up from pre-Covid levels, while the remaining regions of the world continue to see yearly growth,” said Argus senior v-p of software Travis Kuhn. “We continue to monitor Part 135 activity closely, and now the Part 91 market after the segment reported a double-digit yearly decline in June.”

Expert Opinion
False
Ads Enabled
True
Used in Print
False
Writer(s) - Credited
Newsletter Headline
Global Business Aircraft Flying Drops in June
Newsletter Body

Business aircraft flight activity last month fell 3.4% year over year (YOY), with North America down 4.9% and Europe falling 8%, offset by an 18.5% increase in the rest of the world, according to TraqPak data from Argus International. The company’s analysts had forecast a 3.2% decline in North America; for July, they expect flying in North America to see a marginal 0.2% increase while European activity would decrease by 5.1%.

In North America, fractional activity climbed by 12.1% YOY in June, while Part 135 and 91 flying activity eroded by 5.3% and 10.2%, respectively. By aircraft category in the region, midsize jets saw the least erosion, down 0.2%, followed by light jets, -5.9%; turboprops, -6.3%; and large-cabin jets, -10.4%. In individual segments, fractional midsize jets came in on top, increasing 14.8% YOY, while Part 135 large-cabin jet flying fared the worst, falling 15.2%.

Looking at Europe, light jet activity eked out a 0.8% YOY gain, while midsize jets were flat and turboprops and large-cabin jets dipped 20.7% and 11.2%, respectively. In the rest of the world, turboprop and light- and midsize-jet flying surged by more than 20% from a year ago, while large-cabin jets saw only a 0.5% increase.

Solutions in Business Aviation
0
Header Image Caption Override
Fractional flying bucked the downward trend in June, with midsize jet activity in this segment climbing by 14.8% from a year ago.
AIN Publication Date
----------------------------