On any flight with bad turbulence there is a moment where it stops and you hope that the stomach-lurching is over. Monday’s bounce in China’s airlines felt like that after last week’s one-10th drop, which was linked to the outbreak of bird flu. But there is no way of knowing whether these bumps have stopped for good. That is because disease is not the only threat the sector faces.
The outbreak, although very limited, is reason for some concern. At the peak of the 2003 Sars outbreak, airline and railway traffic in China more than halved year-on-year, according to Citigroup. To date, authorities have reported 21 cases and six deaths. Jitters have been contained, helped by the fact the disease has not passed between humans, while officials have been far more communicative compared with last time and have taken early action. Since December, when hopes grew that the Chinese economy had bottomed, the big carriers – Air China, China Eastern and China Southern – had been comfortably outperforming the market with gains of a sixth or more. Earnings at the three last year were down two-fifths on 2011, providing a nice low base from which to recover. Yet early pre-bird flu data for this year do not show this happening. Growth in revenue per passenger kilometre at Air China was down a third in January and February at 6.5 per cent, from 2012. This might not just be anaemic economics either. Visitor distaste at Beijing’s smog could be involved and China’s regional squabbles will not help – flights to the Philippines and Japan dropped off last year.