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The war is stress-testing airlines’ endurance under prolonged disruptions

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WHAT WE’RE TRACKING TODAY

TODAY: Airspace is for the last airlines standing

Good morning, friends. We shift focus to aviation today — breaking down which airline models can best withstand a prolonged regional war and how the fallout could ripple through operations and hit emerging carriers.

Watch this space

SHIPPING Iran is trying to play toll keeper: Tehran’s parliamentary security committee approved a Strait of Hormuz management plan that would impose an IRR-denominated toll system on vessels using the waterway while also codifying security, ship safety, environmental, and financial rules around transit.

Who’s out now? The plan also bars US and Israeli vessels, extends restrictions to countries participating in unilateral sanctions on Iran, and sketches out cooperation with Oman on the legislative framework — with Iran reportedly favoring countries that maintain bilateral channels or friendly relations, including China, Russia, India, and Pakistan. Malaysia appears to fall into that camp after Kuala Lumpur said yesterday that its tankers would be exempted from Iran’s Hormuz toll following diplomatic engagement with Tehran.


TRADE — Will Tanzania become the gateway for Egyptian goods to East Africa? Egypt and Tanzania will soon ink an MoU to establish a multi-purpose terminal at Dar es Salaam Port, a shipping line between Egyptian Red Sea ports and Dar es Salaam, and reciprocal logistics zones in both countries, according to a statement from the Transport Ministry.

The planned terminal at Tanzania’s largest city will open access to six landlocked nations, with the jointly developed port providing a path for Egyptian goods to more easily make it to Malawi, Zambia, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Burundi, Rwanda, and Uganda. Feeding the terminal is a proposed maritime line from Egypt, linking the Tanzanian port with the Red Sea ports of Sokhna and Safaga.

The upcoming agreement solidifies the proposal we heard about in December to set up a Tanzanian logistics zone in Egypt and vice versa, modeled after a similar agreement with Rwanda. The zones would help increase bilateral investments, support joint industrial work, and better connect the two countries economically. The zone planned for Tanzania is also set to join up with the country’s high-speed rail network to help deliver goods.


CUSTOMS — The Finance Ministry is activating the pilot phase of the Advanced Cargo Information (ACI) system for express couriers today, a move that will become mandatory on 1 May for all airport-based courier firms, a government official told EnterpriseAM.

Under the new regulations, parcels exceeding 50 kg will require a unique ACID number to ensure “tight control” and market protection against substandard goods as the Nafeza platform evolves into a unified trade hub for all Egyptian ports, our source added.

While the full electronic export system has seen its April launch slightly deferred to finalize procedural organizing, the Finance Ministry is simultaneously preparing legislative amendments aimed at reducing customs disputes and slashing clearance times to boost the competitiveness of local exports, according to our source.


KITKAT HEIST — Have a break, steal a Kitkat truck? Around 12 tons of Kitkat chocolate bars were stolen from a truck while transiting between the company’s factory in central Italy and their destination in Poland, according to a statement on X. The truck — still missing at this time — was carrying nearly 414k units of Kitkat’s new chocolate range, the company said.

Not an isolated break-in (literally): Kitkat noted that the incident follows a recent jointreport (pdf) by the International Union of Marine Ins. and the Transported Asset Protection Association, which identified a significant increase in cargo theft and freight fraud involving increasingly sophisticated deceptive practices.

Market watch

Oil prices rose 1% this morning as Middle East jitters outweighed easing war fears, Reuters reports. Brent crude futures increased USD 1.40 to trade at USD 105.37 / bbl by 04.30 GMT, while US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) increased USD 1.59 to USD 102.97 / bbl.

Meanwhile, the latest oil spike is testing US airlines’ ability to absorb the price shock. Jet fuel has jumped to USD 4.2 per gallon from around USD 2.5, with some large carriers now modeling Brent at USD 175 / bbl in a worst-case scenario and above USD 100 through 2027.


The Baltic Index slipped again: The Baltic Exchange’s dry bulk index — which tracks rates for the capesize, panamax, and supramax vessel segments — fell 1.1% to 1,995 points on Tuesday, in its second straight daily drop. The capesize declined 1.9% to 2,947 points, while the panamax index edged up 0.1% to 1,744. The smaller supramax eased by 1 point to 1,202 points.

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The Big Story Today

The airspace shock

If the war continues, which airline model holds up best? Carriers are grappling with restricted airspace, longer routings, and intensifying price pressure. What began as a broad market squeeze is now filtering into core operations, exposing a sharper divide in how low-cost carriers (LCCs), regular airlines, and new entrants absorb disruption and adapt to prolonged instability.

Where it hits first

“The first cracks typically appear in network planning and scheduling,” Richard Maslen, head of analysis at CAPA - Centre for Aviation, tells EnterpriseAM. Airlines are forced to reroute around restricted airspace and start trimming weaker routes with longer block times, which drags on aircraft utilization and makes rotations less efficient.

That pressure is already visible in day-to-day operations: Airlines have been canceling, delaying, and diverting flights as large parts of Middle Eastern airspace remain closed, with carriers across global corridors — including Indian carriers — pushed onto longer routes to Europe and North America.

The next question is whether demand can absorb the shock. Global carriers have started raising prices, trimming flights, and imposing surcharges as jet fuel prices roughly doubled after the conflict began.

LCCs have the smallest buffer

LCCs have the least room to absorb the shock: LCCs are likely to struggle the most as their price-sensitive customer base makes it harder to pass through higher costs. Budget airlines are expected to feel prolonged fuel and operating pressure first — their model leaves them far less room to absorb fuel disruption or inefficiency, Sindy Foster, principal managing partner at Avaero Capital Partners, tells EnterpriseAM.

“Low-cost airlines are ruthless,” John Grant, partner at Midas Aviation, tells us. Their model relies on cheap pricing to stimulate demand while keeping aircraft in the air for as many hours as possible, rather than waiting for connecting traffic — giving them an operational edge, Grant adds.

That’s why disruption hits them first. Once longer and less efficient routings eat into high aircraft utilization and tight cost control, the model begins to come under pressure, Maslen argues.

The model is already taking fire: Wizz Air has suspended multiple Middle Eastern routes from mainland Europe, and the budget carrier said the disruption would take about EUR 50 mn off FY 2026 net income. IndiGo and other Indian carriers have been pushed into longer, more expensive routings, while EasyJet has flagged softer bookings on conflict-adjacent leisure routes.

Regular carriers have slightly more room to maneuver

Network carriers are more insulated — at first. They’re usually not the first to take the hit, but they’re far more exposed to how the crisis unfolds operationally across the Gulf, Foster tells us. Their model relies on moving long-haul traffic through a hub smoothly and reliably. Once the flow is disrupted, the network stops functioning as it should. The carriers best placed in this kind of market — a disrupted operating environment — are those that can stay efficient without losing flexibility, Maslen tells us.

When the machine starts skipping: The impact shows up quickly with fewer flights, weaker connections, and aircraft sitting idle, Foster says. “Qatar Airways looks the most exposed right now, given the level of cancellations and grounded aircraft, and how much depends on Doha working smoothly,” she adds.

Does state backing shield airlines? Not quite. It can delay cuts by giving carriers time to keep some routes running, defend market share, and manage the shock more gradually, Foster says, but it doesn’t fix the disruption. State support doesn’t reopen closed airspace, revive demand, or stop aircraft from idling while costs continue to build.

Gulf carriers are running a different playbook

The Gulf’s “big three” are resilient, but they aren’t managing the war the same way. Emirates has taken a preemptive approach, trimming forward capacity, adjusting schedules months out, and downsizing aircraft on the same routes to match softer or less predictable demand, Maslen says. Qatar Airways and — to a degree — Etihad have leaned more toward preserving broader schedule integrity and making shorter-notice cancellations or tactical adjustments as booking trends evolve, he adds.

Capacity is the main lever, but operations crack first: Aircraft utilization and load factors are the clearest early indicators, followed by yield performance as airlines try to offset higher operating costs, Maslen argues. Across the market, capacity levels are already diverging: Emirates has recovered to roughly three-quarters of its pre-conflict capacity, Etihad to around half, while Qatar is still running at only about 20%, Maslen says.

Where do newer entrants fit in?

Openings in the disruption? A war-driven reshaping of air travel flows in and around the region could still create room for a new airline, even if the backdrop looks hostile, Edmond Rose, aviation consulting director at ASM Global Route Development Consultants, tells EnterpriseAM.

But it’s a much tougher launch environment now. Uncertainty raises capital risk and undermines early-stage network development, Maslen argues. That leaves any new entrant trying to build itself in a market that is moving against stability.

What’s next?

Traffic flows are starting to shift: The longer the conflict lasts, the more airline networks outside the Middle East are likely to be reshaped, as carriers redeploy capacity to capture demand that would otherwise flow through Gulf hubs, Rose says.

Rivals may step in to plug the gap: Some of the flow that once moved through regional airlines may start getting absorbed elsewhere. Singapore Airlines is adding extra flights to London for the summer to pick up traffic that might have otherwise connected through the Gulf. If the disruption drags on, some of the flow that once moved through Dubai, Doha, and Abu Dhabi may shift elsewhere, Rose tells us.

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Shipping + Maritime

Hormuz isn’t the Red Sea — and that’s the problem

Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on…? Western nations are trying to reopen Hormuz with a playbook that has already failed once — the Red Sea campaign — which burned through USD 1 bn on defense operations, lost four ships, and still pushed global shipping to reroute, not recover.

The precedent

The past experience is now shaping expectations — and they’re not optimistic. The Red Sea effort wasn’t a tactical W, but a strategic draw at best; the system absorbed the blows but didn’t solve the threat.

The outcome was avoidance, not security: Despite naval protection, carriers abandoned the route, forcing trade around the Cape of Good Hope and pushing 12% of the global trade artery into a risk premium. Hormuz risks following the same pattern, where availability doesn’t equal usability.

This time, there’s no reroute

Hormuz doesn’t offer that same escape valve: The strait carries around a fifth of global oil and LNG flows, alongside critical commodities from food to metals — volumes that can’t be rerouted at scale.

“There is no substitute for the Strait of Hormuz,” Kuwait Petroleum CEO Nawaf Saud Al-Sabah said.

… which means disruption there doesn’t delay trade — it compresses it. Instead of longer routes, the system faces fewer cargoes moving at all, tightening supply rather than stretching timelines.

No escort, no backstop

The operating environment is materially harder: The danger zone is up to five times larger than Bab Al Mandab, and Iran’s revolutionary guard operates as a full military force — not an insurgent group — with funding, industrial backing, and layered capabilities.

The threat is everything at once: Missiles, drones, floating mines, mini-submarines, and swarm attacks all sit in the same battlespace, forcing defenders to split attention across risks.

Scaling protection becomes a logistical problem of its own. Military planners argue that it could take a dozen large warships, plus air cover from jets, drones, and helicopters just to stabilize flows, not fully secure them.

Even then, reopening is a time game: Analysts expect months of sustained operations to degrade Iran’s capabilities enough to reopen traffic — assuming escalation doesn’t reset the clock.

No guarantor — except the one in control

The backstop isn’t there: The US is signaling it won’t carry Hormuz alone, openly calling on China — the largest buyer of Gulf crude — to help secure the route, while key Nato and European allies have declined to commit forces or expand existing missions, with recent reports on “ coordination ” and “ talks.”

For shipowners, the trade-off is immediate: Pay for passage and risk sanctions from Western nations, or avoid the route and strand cargo.

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Earnings Watch

GulfNav’s revenue jumps as net income dips

Gulf Navigation Holding posts a mixed bag of earnings

GulfNav posts a mixed bag: Dubai-listed maritime firm Gulf Navigation Holding (GulfNav) posted a near 59% y-o-y decline in its net income to AED 13.7 mn in FY 2025, according to its financials (pdf). The firm’s revenue saw a 9.5% y-o-y increase to AED 307 mn.

GulfNav had a busy year: The firm acquired the Fujairah-based storage business of Nasdaq-listed Brooge Energy last year. It also directed part of its operating cashflow toward the Phase III expansion, which is set to add 1.1 mcm of storage capacity.

Saudi Ground Services had a solid 2025

Saudi Ground Services Company saw its bottom line increase 23.8% y-o-y to SAR 404.7 mn in 2025, driven by gains from equity investments and lower zakat charges, it said in a disclosure to Tadawul. Revenue edged up 1.7% y-o-y to SAR 2.7 bn, supported by higher domestic and international flight activity.

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Also on Our Radar

QatarEnergy’s Golden Pass is online

Golden Pass debuts LNG production at Texas facility

QatarEnergy’s Golden Pass is online. ExxonMobil and QatarEnergy’s Golden Pass LNG project in Sabine Pass, Texas, has produced its first LNG from Train 1 — setting the stage for first cargo exports in 2Q 2026. The project has three liquefaction trains with a total capacity of 18.1 mtpa.

This matters for supply dynamics: The project could be a live supply lever as QatarEnergy is building supply optionality outside the Gulf. The startup lands while Qatar’s LNG system at home is still under pressure, with two Ras Laffan trains representing around 12.8 mtpa — or roughly 17% of Qatar’s LNG export capacity — knocked offline and inducing force majeure notices in long-term contracts.


APRIL

16-17 April (Thursday-Friday): Global Supply Chain and Logistics Summit, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

23-24 April (Thursday-Friday): Sustainability World Summit, Frankfurt, Germany.

28-30 April (Tuesday-Thursday): Mediterranean Ports and Logistics, Porto, Portugal.

MAY

12-14 May (Tuesday-Thursday): Aviation Energy Forum (AEF), Paris, France.

19-21 May (Tuesday-Thursday): Ground Handling Conference (IGHC), Cairo, Egypt.

19-21 May (Tuesday-Thursday): Terminal Operations Conference & Exhibition, Hamburg, Germany.

JUNE

2-4 June (Tuesday-Thursday): ProPak Mena, Cairo, Egypt.

4-5 June (Thursday-Friday): Supply Chain and Logistics Summit, Amsterdam, Netherlands.

6-8 June (Saturday-Monday): IATA World Air Transport Summit, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

10-11 June (Wednesday-Thursday): Black Sea Ports and Logistics, Istanbul, Turkey.

21-24 June (Sunday-Wednesday): Saudi Smart Logistics, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

22-23 June (Monday-Tuesday): Decarbonizing Shipping Forum, Rotterdam, Netherlands.

AUGUST

30 August-1 September (Sunday-Tuesday): Air Cargo Middle East, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

30 August-1 September (Sunday-Tuesday): Saudi Warehouse and Logistics Expo, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

SEPTEMBER

16-17 September (Wednesday-Thursday): Saudi Maritime & Logistics Congress, Dammam, Saudi Arabia.

22-24 September (Tuesday-Thursday): Seamless Middle East, Dubai, UAE.

28-30 September (Monday-Wednesday): Transport Logistics Middle East, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

OCTOBER

12-14 October (Monday-Wednesday): The Airport Show, Dubai, UAE.

21-22 October (Wednesday-Thursday): Global Ports Forum, Singapore.

26-29 (Monday-Thursday): Air Cargo Forum, Miami, US.

27-29 October (Tuesday-Thursday): Routes World, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

NOVEMBER

2-5 November (Monday-Thursday): ADIPEC Maritime and Logistics Exhibition and Conference, Abu Dhabi, UAE.

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