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Many Airlines Hit Hard by Jet Fuel Price Swings, Not All Can Hedge, IATA Says


These translations are done via Google Translate

By Robert Harvey

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LONDON, June 3 (Reuters) – Many airlines have been hit hard by price swings in ​the jet fuel market, and some are not in ‌a position to hedge their exposure, the International Air Transport Association’s head of fuel said on Wednesday.


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Some airlines with more elaborate hedging strategies get a bit ​of a cushion, Daniel Chereau told the S&P Global ​Energy Middle East Petroleum and Gas Conference. However, the impact ⁠of soaring jet fuel refinery profit margins, known as crack ​spreads, has not been helpful for the airline industry, he added.

In ​North West Europe, the jet fuel crack spread peaked at an all-time high of over $121 per barrel in March, according to LSEG data, compared with ​around $30 per barrel before the outbreak of the Iran war in late ​February.

The Middle East supplies much of the world’s jet fuel, but its ability ‌to ⁠produce and export the fuel has been severely curtailed by the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz and attacks on energy installations.

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Demand destruction is appearing in the aviation sector although not ​necessarily due to ​the price of ⁠jet fuel itself, Chereau added.

Demand destruction has been caused by airlines cancelling flights, he said, while ​in some parts of the world airports are running ​dry ⁠of fuel for short periods of time.

He warned that such instances could become more frequent, and that the longer the conflict lasts, the ⁠more ​demand destruction could come from the passenger ​side.

Chereau did not name specific airlines or airports which have been worst hit.

Reporting by ​Robert Harvey in London; Editing by Bernadette Baum and Joe Bavier

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