Aircraft leasing companies have experienced a stellar year in 2023. With demand outpacing supply, leasing fundamentals have improved substantially, translating to a solid bottom line for many of the largest lessors.
“I cannot remember a time in my almost 40-year long career when I have seen such strong demand and such tightening supply,” says ALC’s Plueger. “Manufacturers are sold out for years ahead, which is causing all sorts of additional planning requirements for the airlines.”
ALC is now 100% placed for all of its deliveries to 2025, which includes all passenger widebody aircraft, and is also reporting strong demand for its older aircraft on the secondary trading market.
Most lessors have a much more positive outlook for airlines than equity investors and are confident that demand for air travel will continue to grow so long as they can access additional capacity even with continued production and delivery delays as well as aircraft groundings caused by manufacturing defects.
“There is no problem around demand,” says AerCap’s Kelly. “From speaking to airline CEOs, the demand is there. The question is at what price level. From an aircraft lessor’s perspective, whether an airline makes a billion dollars or zero doesn’t impact how much they pay a lessor. What we need to make sure is that demand is being serviced.”
The supply chain challenges and disruption caused by manufacturing and engines defects – discussed in detail in the following chapter – have created immense demand for aircraft from airlines keen to expand capacity to tap into that continued spike in demand.
“Providing a top class service to our customers is vital,” says Kelly. “The real issue with delays is when a customer has a flight schedule booked for next summer, they have hired pilots, ground crew, catering airport slots based on a certain level of capacity. If that capacity does not show up, if they don’t get the aircraft or if they get the aircraft and it breaks down, that’s a huge issue, because they can’t get out of their fixed cost base. That’s the real issue with the delays.”
Throughout the pandemic period, airlines have proven to be adept at dealing with adversity and pivoting quickly to continue generating revenue or raising debt even in the deepest crisis. However, dealing with such surprise delays is a big problem.
Kelly has called on the OEMs to ensure they inform customers of delays with as much notice as possible so they can plan on longer periods of downtown, something he says they have not been doing to date.
“[The OEMs] have a blatant disregard for their customers,” says Kelly. “They’re not going to hit the production targets at Airbus. Pratt & Whitney are not going to meet the turn times on their shop visits this year…. The most important thing for customers is to be able to plan with certainty. And the OEMs have to realise that there is a ceiling on what they can produce. The engine guys have to realise there is already tremendous strain in the MRO network. When you have a system that’s strained and piling more on top of it, things rarely go well.”
Cognisant of the continued supply chain pressures, airlines are seeking to secure capacity outside of their normal fleet plans to plug the gap caused by productions delays and AOGs due to the required engine maintenance. “On the new aircraft side, airlines are extending their commitment horizon up to 2030- 2032 to lock up slots,” says Avolon’s Cronin.
“We have seen manufacturers being more assertive around taking slots back from airlines that they don’t think need them. We are seeing scarcity of lessor orderbooks and rentals and asset values rise. We are also seeing enormous demand on the used end of the market, with the value of greentime in particular engines increasing. But also generally aircraft lives are being extended and residual values are rising across the board.”
The defining trend in aircraft leasing over the past year has been the proliferation of existing lessees seeking to extend leases rather than hand back aircraft at the conclusion of a lease term. Plueger reports 100% renewal rate for ALC’s leases as airlines seek to retain capacity.
The extension of existing leases has been a common theme in interviews with all chief executives of aircraft lessors for this report.