As the world heralded in 2022, many found their travel plans derailed due to the Omicron variant of COVID.
The Onus of Omicron
While people worldwide hoped that COVID would be behind us by now and that regular travel would have long since resumed, the recent holiday season saw the Omicron variant continue to impact travel plans in the face of the industry’s attempted recovery. Omicron caused thousands of flight cancellations and delays across the US and worldwide, thanks to staffing shortages and sick crews. During what is typically a peak week of travel for the year, thousands of people scrambled to make other arrangements when their Christmas and New Year’s travel plans were grounded due to the highly-transmissible Omicron variant’s rapid spread.
Cases of the new variant have reached record levels, with a Reuters poll showing a whopping 45% uptick in new cases. South Africa, where the Omicron variant was first detected, reported quick spikes in COVID cases followed by a rapid decline, with a minimal rise in hospitalizations. Some health experts are hopeful that Omicron is a weaker strain of the virus, despite being highly contagious. While experts forecast that the variant may peak in the US by mid-January, COVID has been notoriously unpredictable these past two years. Estimates about how the virus would play out have been so frequently inaccurate that modelers have taken to making their projections on a weekly rather than monthly basis. While Omicron cases may be milder, it is expected to cause substantial increases in case numbers. Some health officials suggest that the widespread vaccination effort has played a role in reducing the impact of serious illness due to Omicron.
Recovery for individuals sick with the Omicron variant is predicted to be swift, and it’s possible that Omicron may not invade the lungs to the extent previous variants did. Vaccinated patients tend to be protected from more severe forms of the disease, according to David Rubin, director of PolicyLab at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. That said, uncertainty continues to be the dominant theme of the pandemic’s current state. As the new year began, it brought new cases across the US to over 550,000 and the impact is being felt on travel stocks, among others.
Tentative Travel
While airline stocks rallied in 2021, with many people going on vacations or visiting friends and family after restrictions eased, Omicron and staff shortages continue to plague the air travel sector. United and American Airlines reported significant flight delays, while Southwest Airlines had canceled only a handful of flights due to winter weather conditions rather than COVID. As Omicron spreads among US flight crews, those eligible to fly are also wary of current quarantine rules that would impact them upon landing.
Airline analyst Helane Becker at securities firm Cowen explained that the backup is expected to ease as end-of-year holiday travel pressure gives way to a quieter travel season through mid-February. Despite financial incentives, most workers in the airline industry did not opt to work overtime hours. Pilots, cabin crew, and support staff alike experienced drastic layoffs and furloughs during the first 18 months of the pandemic, and the ripple effect is still being felt today, with inconsistent and insufficient staffing continuing to impact airplane travel’s stability negatively.
Choppy Waters
Cruise travel and cruise stocks have also felt the repercussions of Omicron. In recent days, several cruise ships returned to port after they had already departed when travelers positive for COVID were found to be on board. Among ships that did set sail as planned, excursions to locations did not go as scheduled, such as a side trip to Aruba that purportedly did not let cruise passengers aboard the Carnival Freedom cruise ship to visit the island.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued a statement on December 30 telling people to avoid traveling on cruise ships regardless of their vaccination status. The CDC raised its travel health notice level for cruise ships to its highest warning level due to reports of outbreaks on tens of cruise ships. Cruise stocks fell 1% following the CDC’s travel advisory. Representatives from within the industry, including Norwegian Cruise and the Cruise Lines International Association voiced their disappointment over the CDC decision. They stated that cruise passengers were as safe as the general population or safer regarding the risk of COVID contraction, and that cases identified on ships made up a very small minority of the total population onboard.
Travel companies such as Tripadvisor and Expedia Group saw their stocks fall 1.6% and 1%, respectively, and hotel stocks such as Marriott International and Hilton Worldwide Holdings experienced losses as well, as did vacation rental company Airbnb.
Train travel has also been impacted by Omicron, with dozens of Amtrak cancellations due to COVID cases among employees and inclement weather conditions. Reduced train ridership led to service cuts at Amtrak as well as layoffs. In December, Amtrak executives told Congress that federal vaccine mandates would likely further reduce service.
Keep Your Bags Packed
Does this mean that travel’s comeback is over? Travel is an industry that refuses to be defeated despite severe setbacks over the past two years. It’s hard to chart the course of travel’s return, as we have come to expect the unexpected when it comes to COVID and its ensuing variants. Industry insiders remain optimistic that Omicron is likely to be less devastating than previous COVID strains. While highly transmissible, Omicron seems less deadly, and its impact may be offset by the fact that nearly half of the world’s population has been vaccinated. The need and desire for travel, including business travel, remains a priority to many people worldwide who are willing to jump through all of the hoops necessary to make it possible. While travel stocks have continued their tumultuous recovery, there is reason to hope that Omicron’s impact on travel will be over before long.
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A portfolio concentrated in a single industry or country, may be subject to a higher degree of risk. Specifically, the Index (and as a result, the Fund) is expected to be concentrated in passenger airline, hotel and resort, and cruise industries (“Travel Companies”). Travel Company revenues are heavily influenced by the condition of the U.S. and foreign economies and may be adversely affected by a downturn in economic conditions that can result in decreased demand for leisure and business travel. Travel Companies may be significantly affected by uncertainty in travel, including guest safety, security and privacy, changes in labor relations and insurance costs, issues affecting equipment reliability and longevity, changes in fuel prices, and shortages of experienced personnel.
Beginning in the first quarter of 2020, financial markets in the United States and around the world experienced extreme volatility and severe losses due to the global pandemic caused by COVID-19, a novel coronavirus. The pandemic has resulted in a wide range of social and economic disruptions, including closed borders and reduced or prohibited domestic or international travel. Some sectors of the economy and individual issuers, including Travel Companies, have experienced particularly large losses. Such disruptions may continue for an extended period of time or reoccur in the future to a similar or greater extent.
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