Friday, July 23, 2010

Azul goes regional – nation-wide!

Azul’s order for 20+20 ATR-72-600’s at Farnborough caught a lot of people by surprise – in a way, even yours truly! Aside from entering a market which is somewhat ‘abandoned’ in Brazil – regional aviation has been ‘dormant’ for a while and it wasn’t until recently that airlines woke up to realize the full potential this segment has –, Azul is on the right path to build the most comprehensive and extensive domestic network of any carrier in Brazil.

The ATR’s will offer Azul a distinctive advantage over its competitors, most notably Gol and TAM – though Trip ought to be scarred too, because our “blue friends” only plays for keeps: not only will Azul stamp its foot in the regional market, which so far has been pretty much up for grabs. Ok, that’s not entirely true: the regional market is pretty much Trip’s territory (if you look at the national coverage; there are other local regional carriers, but their market share is very small) and they have been doing whatever they feel like as they are/were the sole player. But, back to the point at hand: Azul will have the perfect aircraft with which to serve smaller markets and feed them directly into their hubs. Note that I’ve written hubs, not single hub. That’s because Azul will have the opportunity to create regional mini-hubs, a concept still more or less unexplored in Brazil. And there are plenty of mini-hub options for Azul to choose from: imagine if you can, creating small, regional hubs in Porto Alegre (Rio Grande do Sul state catchment area); Curitiba (Paraná state catchment area); Salvador (Bahia state catchment area); Brasília or Goiânia (the latter holds more potential as the airport is not quite as clogged); and especially the state of São Paulo which has plenty of potential and has a scattered, virtually ‘unconnected network’ (meaning its basically cut of from the main hubs in CGH, GRU and even VCP – there are exceptions, obviously). And there are many, many more potential regional hubs, I just listed a couple.

If (or should I say when?) Azul manages to create this proposed regional mini-hub system, the airline will be stimulating local traffic and thereby creating even more business opportunities. There is plenty of potential and one has to wonder why neither Gol nor TAM ever saw this potential? Regional code-shares are good and all – they are also the “safe” way of serving regional markets without generating additional costs – , but what Azul is doing seems to be a much more sound strategy.

So far so good, but it doesn’t stop there. If the creation of regional mini-hubs is indeed Azul’s strategy, they might have found the key to securing their long-term future. Here’s why:

1) Azul will push local traffic and create regional mini-hubs (meaning new business!);
2) Azul can stimulate new local traffic through its regional mini-hubs using their now widely accepted “Brazil's new middle class strategy": the combo “ease-of-acquisition” + segmented marketing + sporadic, specific pricing actions”.;
3) Use the “new regional business” to feed its mainline network.

Aside from the “commercial side of it”, the ATR’s Azul will use also offer an advantage other carriers simply don’t have: this particular airplane, designed to carry 70 passengers, can operate in and out of small airports, with short runways and reduced infrastructure (airports which Gol and TAM can’t serve because they simply don’t have the right airplane to do so – neither commercially, nor operation-wise). More than that, as it’s a designated “regional” turbo-prop, the ATR-72-600 is ideal for short and medium routes as its CASK simply can’t be matched by that of any jet of its size.

Everything fits like a glove. With everything we just covered above, Azul definitely looks set to take on the “big guys” Gol and TAM and give them a good run for their money, especially because one needs to remember that aside from expanding its network, Azul is set to introduce a hot new entertainment system by year’s end – something only Avianca Brazil could in theory match with their new A319’s; and so far they only have three – which will certainly ‘up the game’ by a notch. Furthermore, don’t forget that Trip, the carrier with the most number of destinations in Brazil, and so far the only regional carrier with national coverage, is reigning supreme only because it is alone and has no ‘real competition’. This is about to change.

Last but not least I do have one thing which has been bugging me. One needs to remember that Brazil has a huge airport infra-structure problem – all main airports are fully clogged – and the logical outcome of Azul’s discussed ‘regional hub’ strategy is that some traffic will flow into its mainline network. Or that’s the way it should be. But if there are no more slots available and your biggest jet serving the mainline network is the Embraer 195 with seating capacity for 118 passengers (and your average SLF is around 85%), you definitely risk loosing your ‘regional passengers’ to the competition. The only logical solution to this equation would, in my personal view, be the acquisition of new, larger airplanes (Airbus A320 family or Boeing 737NG family) which would take over the main trunk routes from the Embraer E-Jets (and thus also freeing them up to explore and open new markets). Knowing Azul you can only wonder: they’re certainly perfectly aware of what we just covered here and the big question becomes: do they have an ace up their sleeve (which nobody knows about)?

Finally, I almost forgot this: in my analysis I was only looking at Azul’s prospects in Brazil, but, as the airline itself already publicly stated, it intends to serve South America in a couple of years – the first charter flights to Buenos Aires and Bariloche in Argentina already took place this month (July 2010). It won’t be long before Azul’s reach goes beyond Brazil. Imagine what they could do in South America if they continue to pursue the same strategy they have in Brazil in the rest of South America…

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