
Chinese airline competition lowering Lufthansa's Asia profits, executive says
SEOUL, April 4 (Reuters) - Competition from Chinese airlines that do not have to avoid Russian airspace is undermining the profitability of Lufthansa's (LHAG.DE), opens new tab Asian business, despite demand between Europe and China being quite strong, a senior executive said.
"It's really overcapacity in Europe from Chinese carriers," Lufthansa's Vice President Asia Pacific, Felipe Bonifatti, said in an interview this week.
Lufthansa singled out Asia a number of times last year, including in a profit warning, opens new tab, as the region where yields, a proxy for airfares, were falling sharpest.
Chinese airlines have since the pandemic and the outbreak of war in Ukraine in 2022 taken a rising proportion of China's international air traffic, with foreign rivals deterred from some Asian routes by weaker-than-anticipated Chinese traveller demand and higher crew and fuel costs due to the need to avoid Russian airspace.
The trend is particularly pronounced in Europe, where Chinese carriers, which still overfly Russia, last year operated 21% more capacity into Europe and Britain than in 2019, according to Cirium schedule data, while non-Chinese airline capacity fell 54%.
"Customers flying from different cities in Southeast Asia via China to Europe - this is one of the targets that the Chinese carriers are looking into, which was not the case before the war," Bonifatti said.
Lufthansa Airlines in October cut its Frankfurt to Beijing service, but kept its Munich-Beijing service and routes from both cities to Shanghai.
Asia-Pacific passenger yields fell 9.8% in 2024, compared to an all-market decline of 2.6% across the German airline group, which has promised to cut costs at its loss-making core brand Lufthansa Airlines.
"One situation outside of our control is the war. This is really putting a lot of pressure in terms of our costs," said Bonifatti.
He said Lufthansa was in discussions with its joint venture partner Air China (601111.SS), opens new tab about capacity issues, such as which aircraft to use on which routes, and how often.
"It's not about the demand. It's really about how do we have a fair playing field for us," he said.
Within the group, however, there are some more robust Asian markets. SWISS started up a new Zurich-Seoul route last year.
Asia-Pacific remains a very important region for the group, Bonifatti said, but there are no near-term plans for new routes.
Operational stability is the focus as Lufthansa deals with delays in the delivery, opens new tab of new widebody aircraft, he said.
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