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Jetstar Asia's exit spotlights Asia's budget airline squeeze

Jetstar Asia's exit spotlights Asia's budget airline squeeze

Jetstar Asia's recent closure highlights the need for
budget carriers in Asia to rethink their fare strategies, with analysts warning that the industry is expected to continue facing pressure on its profit margins due to economic volatility, rising costs and intense competition.
The Singapore-based subsidiary of Qantas was the latest casualty in a sector already squeezed by high fuel prices and supply chain bottlenecks. Its exit leaves the Singapore Airlines Group as the city-state's sole entity operating domestic carriers.
'I expect all airlines to reconfigure their fare offerings in the coming months and years. The more unstable the world economy becomes, the worse it will be for airlines,' said Shukor Yusof, founder of Singapore-based Endau Analytics, an aviation industry consultancy and research firm.
Budget airlines operate on relatively low profit margins, often in the range of one per cent to two per cent, compared with the broader airline industry, which may average around three per cent to four per cent. While they aim for high passenger volume and cost efficiencies to offset this, they remain vulnerable to economic fluctuations and intense competition, according to aviation analysts.
'Budget airlines find it harder to keep costs down today because the price of money has gone up. Expenses are typically denominated in US dollars but many regional low-cost carriers earn in local currencies, which have weakened versus the greenback,' Yusof said.
'In places such as Hong Kong and Singapore, the high cost of doing business is another factor,' he added.
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