Tui has another ally in Geraldine Marshall, director of Glasgow’s Marshall Travel. “I’m selling more Tui,” she said. “They have their own Facebook page for agents pushing offers for various destinations. It feels like they’re keeping their promises to re-engage with the trade.”
She added sales were generally exceeding her expectations. “I did around £95,000 in January,” she revealed.
Operators have played their part in all this, as Linda Boyd, Stewart Travel retail director, explained. “There’s definitely been a lot of price-matching going on, more so than last year. It’s been a tougher fight this year compared with last.”
However, she was also optimistic. “Our enquiries are increasing week-on-week at the moment,” she said.
Another who saw peaks extend well into February was Darren Bien, Designer Travel’s head of sales and commercial. “The first three weeks of February were definitely up on prior years,” he said.
“January and February peaks actually felt the same, as we’re still seeing lots of demand. About 60% of what we’re booking is for summer 2024.
“I’ve been in travel 30 years, and you used to bet the first six weeks of the year would be the busiest, but we’re still seeing busy days. Customers are still looking for holidays and they’re still booking with us – they want human interaction.”
’Similar booking curve’
Kelly Cookes, Advantage Travel Partnership chief commercial officer described January as “a very successful month” for its agents. “The only exception to this has been the lower end of the family market which has yet to pick up and has been slower than usual,” she said.
She attributed a rise in average booking value in part due to an increase in suppliers’ costs and partly consumers trading up. “While we have seen a slowdown in February in terms of volume, we are still significantly outperforming 2023 and this is a similar booking curve to that which we saw last year.”
Cookes played down discounting: “Some suppliers will always be aggressively chasing both volume and market share during peaks,” she added.
“We will be closely monitoring the lates market as we are still seeing capacity go in. We know that certain markets haven’t booked yet, but we are also hearing that other product such as family suites with cruise already has limited availability.”
Operators are similarly bullish, but there may be trouble ahead. In a February update, Jet2holidays, which has increased capacity by 12.5%, said prices for summer 2024 were ahead of last year but with load factors up by only 1.5 percentage points, although its proportion of package customers is up 17%.
Nevertheless, in late February, the operator was discounting most packages by a flat rate of £100.
And there are signs the competition is hotting up in some places. At Birmingham, where easyJet opens a base on 18 March, Tui was heavily discounting some early summer packages to Spain and other destinations where the two will clash.
Similarly, Tui’s packages from Stansted, where Jet2 has increased its inventory, show some deep discounting, with prices that were in the £500 bracket now nearer £300.
Promising signs
In February, investment firm Hargreaves Lansdown wrote of Tui’s “positive bookings momentum”, noting it was 32% sold for summer 2024 as “a promising sign”. However, it warned: “The question is whether this can continue,” adding, “Tui was concerned about over-capacity in the wider industry before the pandemic. This is an ongoing concern in our opinion.“
Hargreaves was writing before Tui signed its deal with Ryanair, which Tui hopes will bring up to a million extra packages, mainly via its First Choice brand.
What does the Tui of the future look like?
The big question, as the summer looms, is what impact this will have in a year when Jet2 is looking to cement market leadership, and easyJet holidays is expanding its package reach.
Naturally, all operators are coy about a potential late sales surplus, preferring to concentrate on what’s been achieved. Roy Stratford, easyJet holidays’ head of commercial partnerships, said bookings “took off“ during peaks with retail backing. “We’re still very much seeing consumers prioritise a summer break, evidenced by a boost in bookings for May, June and July,” he said.
Similarly, Lynsey Jones, Balkan Holidays’ national sales manager, is upbeat. “I would say we’re 10-12% up year-on-year. We did the biggest sale we’ve ever had in the last five years – 10% off per booking. There’s a lot of feedback from agents that customers are happy to spend a little bit more.”