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Fading powers of Cathay Pacific and Singapore Airlines ominous

The Venetian Republic and the British Empire built their economies on ocean trade. Dwindling naval power heralded their decline and fall.

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The Venetian Republic and the British Empire built their economies on ocean trade. Dwindling naval power heralded their decline and fall.

It is a thought that should provoke a shiver of recognition in Hong Kong and Singapore, given the way their airborne fleets are falling victim to a new Great Power struggle.

Cathay Pacific Airways will cut jobs and carry out the biggest review of its business in more than 20 years, Hong Kong’s flag-carrier said on Wednesday. It will also try to improve profits by hedging its jet-fuel bill over a shorter period, the carrier said this week.

Singapore Airlines (SIA) is in a comparable predicament. Its shares have not broken north of S$10 in more than two months, the longest stretch since 2009 below a level that appears to matter deeply to management. Stock buybacks, the usual remedy, are notable by their absence this time.

The two carriers have long been tied up with the destinies of Asia’s great trading cities.

When the Boeing 747 shrank the world in the 1970s, it was Cathay and SIA that connected the wealthy population centres of Europe, North America and Japan with Asia’s emerging economies.

That helped transform their home territories from backwaters surrounded by a wilderness of poverty into global hubs of banking and commerce.

Those times are gone, and the new world order is looking markedly less friendly — both to the entrepot cities, and the airlines that link them to the world.

In their heyday, SIA and Cathay lost little sleep worrying about their rivals in China and the Persian Gulf. Nowadays, they cannot afford not to: China Southern Airlines, China Eastern Airlines, Air China, Emirates and Qatar Airways all exceed them in capacity terms, and Etihad Airways is rapidly catching up.

That has left the two cities’ airlines exposed. Long-haul international aviation is a cut-throat business, and its best practitioners historically have had either state support or an easily dominated domestic market at their backs.

Cathay and Singapore have never had the latter, and it is a hotly contested debate whether they benefit from the former — especially when compared with their aggressive new state-owned competitors.

Staying in the game has required cutting ticket prices to worryingly low levels.

Yield, a measure of revenue per passenger per kilometre, fell to its lowest level since 2009 at Cathay in the six months ended in June, and the 2016 fiscal year figure at SIA was the weakest since 2010.

Crushed between the tectonic plates of the Chinese and Gulf carriers, the cities’ airlines are also geographically disadvantaged.

Two-thirds of humanity lives within an eight-hour flight of Emirates’ base in Dubai, making it particularly well placed to link global travellers.

Qantas Airways’ 2012 deal with the Gulf carrier, which saw it give up connections via Changi and Chek Lap Kok to serve a wider array of European destinations through the Gulf, is a warning that geography is destiny for airlines.

While the carriers try to fight a rearguard action against this — see SIA’s flights to Houston via the English city of Manchester, or the nonstop polar trips to Newark it plans to restart next year — they are working from a position of weakness.

With ultra-long-haul jets such as the Boeing 787 and Airbus SE’s A350 opening up unheard-of routes such as direct Perth-London flights, and Chinese airlines hitting their stride, the old roles connecting Asia to Europe and North America are disappearing.

Where they still have an advantage — using the hub-and-spoke model to fill more seats on planes, thus improving profitability — the Gulf carriers’ geographic advantage means Emirates and Qatar can do it better.

The short-term solution is likely to be local. Cathay Pacific may hand more routes to its regional affiliate Cathay Dragon, Australian Business Traveller reported on Wednesday, citing an internal memo.

SIA has gone in a similar direction, doubling passenger capacity at its regional SilkAir unit in the seven years through 2016 while the measure stood still at its core long-haul business, and adding low-cost brands in the form of Tiger Airways and Scoot.

That is a high-stakes strategy, though, because regional routes are where budget carriers come into their own. Ryanair Holdings, EasyJet and Wizz Air Holdings now constitute three of Europe’s top five airlines by market capitalisation.

Tony Fernandes is working to repeat the trick in Cathay and SIA’s backyard with AirAsia.

In a race to the bottom, do either Singapore Inc or Hong Kong Holdings really want to be the winner? BLOOMBERG

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

David Fickling is a Bloomberg Gadfly columnist covering commodities, as well as industrial and consumer companies. He has been a reporter for Bloomberg News, Dow Jones, the Wall Street Journal, the Financial Times and the Guardian.

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