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Air Canada sees surging overseas corporate travel following U.S. trade tensions

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Air Canada Boeing 737 MAX 8 aircraft are parked at Vancouver International Airport in August.DARRYL DYCK/The Canadian Press

Air Canada AC-T sees a near 30-per-cent surge in ​corporate traffic flowing overseas as ‌the country seeks to diversify trade away from the United States, fueling demand for international travel, a company executive said on Friday.

“We’re seeing ⁠a ​lot of corporate demand growth on the North Atlantic, seeing almost a 30% increase in the amount of corporate traffic going to Europe and the Pacific and we attribute ​part of that to the fact ‌that Canada can diversify trade corridors,” Chief Commercial Officer Mark Galardo told analysts.

In its fourth-quarter results statement on Thursday, Canada’s largest carrier had forecast 2026 core profit marginally above Wall Street estimates, betting on ‌strong ​demand on international routes ‌outside the U.S. and a surge in premium travel.

Canadian officials ​are trying to foster a new ⁠global trading order by working more closely with China ⁠and inking smaller trade deals, but the country remains constrained by ​Canada’s overwhelming economic dependency on the United States.

CANADIANS AVOIDING TRAVEL TO THE US

Montreal-based Air Canada expects higher revenue in 2026 as it adds seats and benefits from surging demand for premium travel, but faces cost ⁠pressures from labor agreements reached with unions.

The carrier said premium travel accounted for about 30 per cent of total passenger revenue. Strong premium cabin demand and long-haul bookings helped it offset softness on U.S.-Canada routes due to the trade tensions between ⁠the countries.

U.S. airlines have also seen ​premium travel as a revenue-generating bright spot.

Canadians have been choosing ⁠to avoid travel to the United States, instead booking holidays to international destinations in ‌Europe and Latin America.

Air Canada expects little change in terms of ​market conditions on transborder travel.

The carrier expects its available seat miles capacity, a key measure of passenger-carrying capacity, to rise between 3.5 per cent and 5.5 per cent in 2026.

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