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Honeywell forecast: Business aviation healthy, regional concerns exist

A wisp of caution appears to be influencing operators’ decisions to buy new business jets, according to the latest Global Business Aviation Outlook from Honeywell Business Aviation. The twenty-eighth annual outlook was presented October 20 prior to the start of the National Business Aviation Association's annual convention in Las Vegas.

Graphic courtesy of Honeywell.

The forecast indicates a demand for 7,600 new business jets from 2020 to 2029 worth $248 billion, down about 100 units and $3 billion from the previous forecast. This 1-percent decrease in anticipated deliveries and billings is based largely on economic trends, according to Gaetan Handfield, Honeywell’s senior manager of marketing analysis—known as the person behind the forecast.

“That’s a bit lower than last year,” said Handfield. “Last year we were at 7,700. So, just slightly lower and this is based mostly on recent economic projections which are a bit lower this year for the short-medium term, so this is backing our 10-year outlook. The purchase intentions for new jets are also a bit lower in our forecast this year at 17 percent [of operators’ fleets over the next five years as replacements or additions to their current fleet] compared to 20 percent last year. All the regions are lower except for Asia in our forecast. So, these are two elements that are a bit more negative in our forecast this year.”

Honeywell subsets its forecast into five regions: North America, Europe, Latin America, Asia Pacific, and Middle East and Africa. Compared with last year, new aircraft acquisition plans in North America decreased 2 percentage points. However, purchase plans for used jets are significantly higher, up 11 percentage points when compared with last year’s survey. European operators are facing a slow economic growth environment and the uncertain effects of Brexit—and new jet purchase plans decreased 5 percentage points in this year’s survey. Despite geopolitical and commercial tensions, purchase plans are higher in Asia, up 3 percentage points from last year. The biggest surprise about Asia, according to Handfield, is that South Korea and India are driving the forecast increase—not China. Purchase plans are stable in Latin America; lower purchase plans were reported in the Middle East and Africa, impacted by political tensions and ongoing conflicts in the region.

Graphic courtesy of Honeywell.“On the positive side, [there are] very strong intentions on buying used jets overall in our survey. In the U.S. market, the intentions for used aircraft are at their highest in the last 10 years. Many of these used jets are very young, five years and less, and some are for aircraft not yet delivered; so, hopefully our projections will be fulfilled by the fact that some of these will transition back to the new market in the medium term,” Handfield said. Operators worldwide indicated that 32 percent of their fleet is expected to be replaced or expanded by used jets over the next five years, up 8 percentage points compared with survey results from 2018.

Operators are continuing to focus on larger-cabin aircraft classes, from large-cabin through ultralong-range aircraft, which are expected to account for more than 71 percent of all expenditures of new business jets in the next five years. The longer-range forecast through 2029 projects a 2-percent to 3-percent average annual growth rate in line with expected worldwide economic growth.

“Production ramp up on many new business jet platforms are expected to lead to a 7-percent increase in deliveries in 2020,” said Heath Patrick, president of Americas Aftermarket for Honeywell Aerospace. “We are confident that these new and innovative aircraft models will support solid growth in the short term and have a continuing impact on new business jet purchases in the midterm and long term.”

Honeywell’s global outlook is based on multiple sources, including interviews with over 1,500 nonfractional business jet operators worldwide, and complete results are broken down by region.

Graphic courtesy of Honeywell.
Alyssa J. Miller
Kollin Stagnito
Senior Vice President of Media
Senior Vice President of Media Kollin Stagnito is a commercial pilot, advanced and instrument ground instructor and a certificated remote pilot. He owns a 1953 Cessna 170B.
Topics: National Business Aviation Association, Jet

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