The skies are filled with ‘ghost planes’ thanks to the strange market for flight slots

Discussion in 'Wall St. News' started by dealmaker, Mar 9, 2020.

  1. dealmaker

    dealmaker

    PLAYING THE (FLIGHT) SLOTS
    The skies are filled with ‘ghost planes’ thanks to the strange market for flight slots
    Across Europe, empty planes are flying back and forth from airport to airport thanks to a bizarre rule that requires airlines to use at least 80% of their scheduled “flight slots” or risk losing them.

    There’s a huge secondary economy for flight slots
    Since airports can only support so many flights in a given day, they issue a finite number of the slots. Some airports even employ 3rd-party coordinators to manage their slots because competition is so fierce.

    To keep the market competitive, a “use it or lose it” policy requires airlines to use 80% of their slots.

    The slot system sounds good in theory…
    But it has caused airlines to adopt some problematic practices. Some examples:

    • Slot resale: Airlines buy and sell slots between themselves as if they were a currency. In February 2016, Oman Air paid Air France-KLM $75m for a pair of prime early morning slots.
    • Slot sitting: When airlines can’t find buyers for their slots, they sometimes give them away for free to partner airlines so they can hold on to them in the long term. In this case, airlines don’t make any money… but they don’t lose any money, either.
    • Ghost flights: In worst-case scenarios, airlines send empty planes to fill their slots. Airlines lose money on these empty flights… but not as much as they would if they lost their slots.
    But now coronavirus has exposed a problem
    Drastically decreased demand caused by coronavirus concerns has forced several airlines to fly ghost flights to avoid losing slots.

    In some cases, the ghost flights weren’t enough: UK airline Flybe declared bankruptcy last week due to the strain. The airline industry as a whole could lose as much as $113B due to decreased demand.

    Critics say that UK authorities and slot coordinators should relax rules to prevent airlines from losing money -- and wasting jet fuel that damages the environment.

    It wouldn’t be the first time: The industry suspended the “use it or lose it” rule after both 9/11 and the financial crisis.
     
    Last edited: Mar 9, 2020
    Spooz Top 2 likes this.
  2. tango29

    tango29

    A long time ago at this point, I worked for a regional airline and we had a acquired a slot at O'Hare, but didn't fly there and had no intention of ever using it as a market. So, we flew down there every morning did a full stop landing, taxi back to the other end and flew back home in order to keep the slot. Eventually we traded it for a couple slots in LaGuardia. Made for something different and employees could take a jumpseat ride for the fun of it.
     
  3. Andrea Wylan

    Andrea Wylan Sponsor

    So interesting. Crazy stuff.
     
  4. Turveyd

    Turveyd

    Kinda stupid, but using soooo much less oil already we'll likely be worrying about the next damn ice age starting and pumping CO2 into the atmosphere to stop it in no time.
     
  5. Trader200K

    Trader200K

  6. Sig

    Sig