Aviation Analyst

Sign up to receive Aviation Analyst, CAPA's free weekly newsletter!

CAPA Profiles

Alitalia

Majority owned by private consortium Compagnia Aerea Italiana (CAI) and Air France-KLM, Alitalia is based in Rome and is the national airline and largest carrier in Italy. The carrier operates an extensive domestic and regional network within Italy and Europe and international services to North America, South America, Africa and Asia. Alitalia is a founding member of SkyTeam.

Location of Alitalia main hub (Rome Fiumicino Airport)


 
This content is exclusively for
CAPA Members
CAPA Members Login
Username:
Password:
Create Diamond Alert

393 total articles

6,123 total articles

Acquisition of Blue Panorama and Wind Jet ensures Alitalia will keep ahead of Ryanair in Italy

1-Feb-12 10:30 AM

Alitalia is poised to bolster its position in its home market through the planned acquisition of smaller Italian carriers Wind Jet and Blue Panorama. If the recently announced deals are completed, Alitalia stands to increase its total market share to about 27%, cementing its position as Italy’s leading passenger carrier.

The acquisitions will also result in increased low-cost competition in Italy as Alitalia expands its presence in the budget sector through the new subsidiary companies.

Alitalia stated there are potential synergies with Blue Panorama and Wind Jet, with the airlines having complementary networks, markets and products. Alitalia will be submitting its plan to Italy’s Antitrust Authority for approval prior to the acquisitions being presented to the governing bodies of the three airlines.

Europe loses four airlines in an unhappy start to 2012

31-Jan-12 4:41 PM

As the economic noose tightens around European airlines, the industry's ranks look set to thin this year. Over late 2011 and the first month of 2012, the industry has witnessed the collapse of four small European carriers as well as the announcement of a merger between Wind Jet and Blue Panorama Airlines by Alitalia. For the time being, it is predominantly smaller, lower capitalised airlines that have failed. The four failed carriers deploy only around 217,000 weekly seats or 0.6% of total European system capacity.

However, the collapses, which follow more than 30 European airline failures over the 2008/09 economic crisis, could in the coming months foreshadow the demise of further carriers or further consolidation, with a number of financially weak carriers operating in the European market. While all but one of the airlines affected so far in 2012 have been based in Continental Europe, there are several weak carriers in Eastern Europe urgently seeking further funding and/or new investors in the near term. Three of the collapsed carriers have been privately owned, but last week's collapse of Spanair shows governments may be willing to let state-supported carriers dither away.

Emirates and Lufthansa growing strongly this summer: World's biggest airlines rankings for August

11-Aug-11 4:17 PM

Lufthansa and Emirates are the fastest growing carriers of the global top ten, increasing their capacity (ASKs) by 12.4% and 8.1% year-on-year, respectively. Delta remains the world's leading carrier by this measure, followed by American Airlines and United Airlines. Combined, United-Continental is roughly 3.3% bigger than Delta by systemwide ASKs.

European airlines ramp-up capacity to China

10-Aug-11 5:33 PM

Asia Pacific, particularly China, is one of the current destination hotspots for European carriers, with connections between Europe and China improving in recent months and over the past couple of years. The initial focus was obviously on providing connectivity between key European hubs and the capital city of Beijing, with services to Shanghai also quite extensive, although a number of carriers are adding service to secondary, albeit still large destinations in China, such as Chengdu, Guangzhou, Hangzhou, Nanjing, Chongqin, Urumqi, Sancha, Dalian and Harbin.

Alitalia narrows losses amid tough conditions

4-Aug-11 4:20 PM

Alitalia’s restructuring continued throughout 1HY2011 amid difficult trading conditions as conflict spread throughout key markets and fuel prices spiked. But the airline’s cost reduction measures outweighed the costs associated with the disruptions and oil prices, with the Italian flag carrier narrowing its losses from the same period in 2010.

The (public) investors’ guide to Milan's SEA SpA

12-Jul-11 10:52 AM

SEA SpA, the operator of Milan’s Malpensa and Linate airports, has confirmed it applied to launch its IPO on the Milan Stock Exchange despite choppy waters in the markets, the cancellation of IPOs by some other Italian companies and the withdrawal of Lufthansa Italia from its flagship airport. SEA expects healthy traffic trends going forward and believes it will list by Oct-2011. Airport IPOs are thin on the ground presently. How will this one fare, and what should potential investors beware of?

This content is exclusively for
CAPA Members
CAPA Members Login
Username:
Password:
This content is exclusively for
CAPA Members
CAPA Members Login
Username:
Password:
This content is exclusively for
CAPA Members
CAPA Members Login
Username:
Password:
This content is exclusively for
CAPA Members
CAPA Members Login
Username:
Password:
This content is exclusively for
CAPA Members
CAPA Members Login
Username:
Password:
This content is exclusively for
CAPA Members
CAPA Members Login
Username:
Password:
This content is exclusively for
CAPA Members
CAPA Members Login
Username:
Password:
This content is exclusively for
CAPA Members
CAPA Members Login
Username:
Password: