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The Cathay Pacific Group today released combined Cathay Pacific and Cathay Dragon traffic figures for March 2020 that show drastic decreases in the number of passengers carried and the amount of cargo and mail uplifted compared to the same month in 2019. The trend reflected the capacity reductions for March 2020 as the global COVID-19 pandemic continued to intensify with more and tightened travel restrictions and quarantine requirements implemented in Hong Kong and other markets.
Cathay Pacific and Cathay Dragon carried a total of 311,128 passengers last month, a decrease of 90% compared to March 2019. The month's revenue passenger kilometres (RPKs) also fell 84.3% year-on-year. Passenger load factor slid by 34.6 percentage points to 49.3%, while capacity, measured in available seat kilometres (ASKs), decreased by 73.2%
The two airlines carried 119,277 tonnes of cargo and mail last month, a decrease of 35.6% compared to March 2019. The month's revenue freight tonne kilometres (RFTKs) also fell 29% year-on-year. The cargo and mail load factor increased by 9 percentage points to 77.4%, while capacity, measured in available freight tonne kilometres (AFTKs), was down by 37.2%.
Outlook
"As the economic impact of the global COVID-19 pandemic is intensifying, a recovery timeline in our customer demand remains impossible to predict. We still do not see an improvement in our advance passenger bookings and we are anticipating average daily passenger numbers to remain below 1,000 throughout April. On a typical day we would normally expect to carry some 100,000 passengers; earlier this week, this had dropped to 302 only on one day.
"In April and May, we will be operating a bare skeleton passenger flight schedule comprising 3% of our normal capacity. We are doing everything we can to reduce our expenditure and preserve cash for the coming months. We are exploring all options to ensure that the Cathay Pacific Group rides out this current storm, and is able to compete vigorously and to help Hong Kong recover when we emerge from this crisis."