Business Travelers Pack Their Bags

Business Travelers Pack Their Bags

Our Freight Transportation & Airlines Analyst discusses the key takeaways from his mid-year corporate travel survey, which includes a number of positive trends for the second half of 2024.


----- Transcript -----


Welcome to Thoughts on the Market. I’m Ravi Shanker, Morgan Stanley’s Freight Transportation and Airlines analyst. Along with my colleagues bringing you a variety of perspectives, today I’ll discuss my expectations for corporate travel in the second half of this year.

It’s Thursday, July 11th, at 10am in New York.

More and more business travelers are packing their bags and taking a flight for business meetings. In fact, our corporate travel survey suggests that a record 50 percent of respondents marked their travel itineraries as returning to pre-COVID levels. As well, corporate travel budgets are expected to be up five to seven percent year-over-year in 2024, and about six percent in 2025. This means significantly more flights, hotels and car bookings for corporate travel.

Interestingly, this is the first survey since 2021 that larger enterprises were more optimistic on corporate travel demand compared to smaller enterprises.

The shift to virtual meetings over the next two years will likely be stable. Companies continue to predict that 12-13 percent of travel volume will be replaced by virtual meetings in 2024 and 2025. Looking ahead, respondents expect this level to hold through 2025, supporting some level of permanent shift we think.

For US airlines specifically, we have started to see more signs of life within the corporate space. Several US airlines are pointing to noticeable improvement in the first quarter after fairly stagnant volumes at the end of 2023. We also saw a reversal from prior surveys with larger corporations recovering faster than smaller enterprises, which had initially led the post-COVID recovery.

This positive trend in airline demand is supportive of our attractive view on US aerospace, as well. Even though global air traffic has already reached pre-COVID-19 levels, it is still about 32 percent below where the trendline would have been if COVID-19 had not happened, which leaves more room for growth.

For business aviation, private jet use should remain strong and stable as a large majority of survey participants are not planning to change their business jet travel. Higher interest rates and a potentially slowing economy could lead to a potential slowdown in business jet demand, but this hasn’t happened so far as there continues to be limited excess capacity in the industry as well as continued strong demand for aircraft.

Our colleagues in Europe note that although near-term indicators are positive, 40 percent of European respondents now do not expect corporate travel volumes to return to 2019 levels. This is concerning for the longer-term prospects of European corporate demand growth, which appears to be weaker than US growth.

Whether you're flying private jets or commercial, or choosing to keep your team meetings virtual, we'll continue to monitor corporate travel trends, and let you know of any updates to those flight manifests.

Thanks for listening. If you enjoy the show, please leave us a review wherever you listen and share Thoughts on the Market with a friend or colleague today.

Avsnitt(1514)

Michael Zezas: On Infrastructure, Follow the Money

Michael Zezas: On Infrastructure, Follow the Money

Last night, President Biden laid out his vision to rebuild the existing U.S. infrastructure. Here are three takeaways and sectors to watch as negotiations unfold.

29 Apr 20212min

Andrew Sheets: A Choppier, More Range-bound Summer?

Andrew Sheets: A Choppier, More Range-bound Summer?

Summer months have historically seen lower, more volatile returns, but strong year-to-date gains and potentially higher inflation could intensify that trend.

28 Apr 20213min

Graham Secker: 4 Reasons to Consider European Equities

Graham Secker: 4 Reasons to Consider European Equities

Europe's 'unloved' quality among global investors is not the only reason to feel optimistic about the potential for outperformance among European equities. Chief European Equity Analyst Graham Secker explains.

27 Apr 20213min

Mike Wilson: Reopening - It’s All About the Execution

Mike Wilson: Reopening - It’s All About the Execution

High expectations around reopening may already be substantially priced into markets, pointing to new risks around how the reopening actually plays out.

26 Apr 20214min

Special Episode: Electric Vehicles, Pt 2 – Turning the Supertanker

Special Episode: Electric Vehicles, Pt 2 – Turning the Supertanker

Stresses on the electrical grid, climate policy, and national security are only a few of the issues we will confront as we transition to EVs.

23 Apr 20219min

Special Episode: Electric Vehicles, Pt 1 – Follow the Fleet

Special Episode: Electric Vehicles, Pt 1 – Follow the Fleet

Price, charging infrastructure and dirty battery production are limiting the impact of EVs, but look to fleet operations to lead the way to broader adoption.

22 Apr 20219min

Michael Zezas: Coal Country Support for Green Energy?

Michael Zezas: Coal Country Support for Green Energy?

With a sizable infrastructure bill moving through the U.S. Congress, support from coal producing states, often considered unlikely, may be a factor that ultimately ensures its passage.

21 Apr 20212min

Special Episode: Earth Week Investing Themes

Special Episode: Earth Week Investing Themes

Green investment is on investors' minds this Earth Week: Today, a look at key investment themes across carbon capture, plastics and agri-food developments.

20 Apr 202110min

Populärt inom Business & ekonomi

badfluence
framgangspodden
varvet
rss-jossan-nina
rss-borsens-finest
rss-svart-marknad
uppgang-och-fall
affarsvarlden
lastbilspodden
24fragor
fill-or-kill
rss-kort-lang-analyspodden-fran-di
avanzapodden
kapitalet-en-podd-om-ekonomi
borsmorgon
rss-dagen-med-di
bathina-en-podcast
tabberaset
rss-en-rik-historia
rss-inga-dumma-fragor-om-pengar