Replica watches
atr-aeromorning-banner-accueil-698x96
chaire-sirius-space-tals-24-space-business-law-conference-728
enac-aeromorning-en
LHR_21-03_Aerospace_600x100
collins-aerospace
atr-aeromorning-banner-accueil-698x96
Collins
previous arrow
next arrow

AIRCRAFT VALUES IN DISTRESS SAYS IBA AS COVID DRIVES DOWN DEMAND

News actualites aeromorning

Airline commercial aircraft fleet drops $60 billion in value

7th October, 2020 – There is a growing divergence between aircraft base and market values as the global effects of the Covid-19 pandemic drive down demand, according to data from leading independent aviation consultancy, IBA.

The gap between aircraft base values – the underlying economic value of an aircraft in an open, unrestricted, stable market with a reasonable balance of supply and demand – and market values have grown by as much as 40%*.

Phil Seymour, President of IBA, says: “Aircraft base and market values are diverging at the greatest extent ever seen and to the extent that, across the  global commercial aircraft fleet owned by airlines, there is now a gap of around US$60 billion. This figure is not related to leased aircraft, only those that are owned by the airline.

“This could become an impairment issue for airlines unless those aircraft are earning revenue, either now or as part of the long-term plan for an airline, which makes getting the right valuation imperative. Those valuations must be assessed by a reputable valuer (ISTAT accredited) and one that has been subject to IAS 620 assessment by the auditors rather than a rough order of magnitude opinion of the management team which may have been acceptable in the past.”

The fall in passenger demand caused by Covid-19 is driving a dramatic fall in new aircraft commitments, with lease starts down 57% on 2019 levels according to data from IBA.iQ the leading platform for aviation intelligence.

Each aircraft not earning revenue  attracts a wide range of significant costs including parking and storage, CAMO, remarketing  and maintenance. These cost burdens, coupled with the oversupply of aircraft against current demand, are driving aircraft market values downwards to distressed levels.

For example, IBA’s current half-life market value for a 2015 built Boeing 787-8 is circa US$74 million against a base value of circa U$73 million. However, its distressed value range for that aircraft is significantly lower at between US$42.69 million and US$57.74 million.

Notes to editors

*Based on the 40% value gap in a 2010 built Boeing 777-300ER where IBA has set the base value at US$72.22 million and the current market value at US$51.64 million.

IBA Webinar

The IBA webinar slides can be downloaded from here.

About IBA
IBA has over 30 years’ experience in delivering independent, expert business analysis and data on the aviation sector. Established in 1988, it provides a wide range of services including IBA.iQ, the leading platform for aviation intelligence, advisory, asset valuations, asset management, industry and sector research and analysis.IBA advises prominent investment funds and banks, aircraft leasing companies, operators, manufacturers and MROs. In January 2020, IBA was named ‘Appraiser of the Year’ by Airline Economics.

Source : iba
www.iba.aero

Be the first to comment on "AIRCRAFT VALUES IN DISTRESS SAYS IBA AS COVID DRIVES DOWN DEMAND"

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published.


*