In the 1980s, when I planned my first trip to Europe, I can’t remember which Frommer’s travel guidebook I brought along. It might have been “Europe on $25 a Day” or “Europe on $40 a Day.” Either way, I had Arthur Frommer by my side.
07.11.2024 - 17:29 / skift.com / Corinne Menegaux / Air France / Gordon Smith
Air France insists it is playing the long game after a costly Olympic Games. The French flag carrier – part of the Air France-KLM Group – posted its third-quarter earnings Thursday and quantified the negative financial impact from the Paris event.
The Olympics cost the firm €160 million ($173 million), weighing heavily on its operating income for the all-important June-September quarter. A bonus pot of around €50 million ($54 million) to Air France staff “rewarding strong operational performance” during the Games was a significant one-off cost.
Net profit at AF-KLM was down 13% year-on-year to €824 million ($891 million), with Group CEO, Ben Smith, acknowledging that earnings were “significantly affected” by the event.
Large events like the Olympics can be disruptive rather than profitable for airlines. This is particularly true for carriers such as Air France, which have no trouble filling planes in midsummer.
An initial surge of inbound traffic is typically countered by sluggish demand for flights departing the city. The opposite is often true towards the end of the event. These irregular passenger flows are a drag on traditional peak season profitability.
Lucrative business travelers may also postpone non-essential visits until after the competition to dodge the crowds and inflated prices. In a market filing, AF-KLM noted “less international inbound traffic to Paris and less travel from France as a consequence of the Olympic Games.”
Given Air France’s ‘official partner’ status at Paris 2024, the hit could feel counter-intuitive.
On Thursday, Smith reiterated that the investment and opportunity cost will pay dividends. “Beyond their financial implications, the Olympic Games provided a unique platform to demonstrate the Group’s operational expertise and capabilities while offering unparalleled visibility for France as a destination. In the long term, this will be advantageous for the Group,” said the CEO.
Smith’s assessment mirrors that of Paris tourism chief Corinne Menegaux. Speaking to Skift ahead of the Games, she insisted that the Olympics would be a strategic global tourism advertisement for the city, rather than an immediate driver of international visitors. Menegaux highlighted that only 30% of Olympic visitors to Paris were expected to be from overseas.
In the weeks leading to the Games, Air France estimated it would carry 15% of Olympic athletes, 35% of Paralympic athletes and 13% of the members of the broader “Olympic family.”
Wider benefits should also benefit Air France in the medium and long term. The Olympics brought major infrastructure improvements to Paris, such as upgrades to the city’s Orly Airport and enhancements to Air France’s busy Charles de Gaulle hub.
Air France-KLM
In the 1980s, when I planned my first trip to Europe, I can’t remember which Frommer’s travel guidebook I brought along. It might have been “Europe on $25 a Day” or “Europe on $40 a Day.” Either way, I had Arthur Frommer by my side.
Nov 21, 2024 • 6 min read
I moved to Italy in my 20s after a summer study abroad in Rome during my senior year of college.
The world’s largest airline alliance is ramping up the battle for premium travelers. On Thursday, Star Alliance opened its first branded airport lounge in Asia. The new facility is in Terminal One at Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport in southern China. A second lounge will operate from the new Terminal Three when it opens next year.
Travel Weekly and sister brand Phocuswright have released their highly anticipated 2024 Travel Industry Survey, which polled nearly 1,600 advisors over the final weeks of summer.
Spanish flag carrier Iberia operated the first-ever commercial transatlantic Airbus A321XLR flight from Madrid to Boston on Thursday.
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This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Zachary Gerth, cofounder of StartAbroad , a concierge international relocation service. It has been edited for length and clarity.
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