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Timestamps are as accurate as they can be but may be slightly off. We encourage you to listen to the full context.
This Business Breakdowns episode provides a comprehensive analysis of Amadeus, the dominant infrastructure company powering global travel bookings. (02:34) Host Matt Russell speaks with Ben Needham, Portfolio Manager at Ninety One Asset Management, about how Amadeus operates as "the gorilla of travel IT" across three main business segments. (04:51) The company has over 50% market share in distribution, linking travel sellers with providers, processes over 2 billion passengers annually through its Air IT systems, and is rapidly scaling its hospitality business. (05:33)
Matt Russell is the host of Business Breakdowns, a podcast series that explores individual businesses through conversations with investors and operators. He has experience as a former sell-side transportation analyst and focuses on diving deep into company histories, business models, and competitive advantages.
Ben Needham is a Portfolio Manager at Ninety One Asset Management with over a decade of experience covering Amadeus specifically. He has deep expertise in the travel IT sector and has been tracking Amadeus since the early 2010s when their hotel IT business was just emerging with minimal revenue and free cash flow.
Amadeus operates as a community-based platform that enables airlines to share economies of scale, making it increasingly attractive as more customers join. (06:49) Airlines, which operate cyclical and capital-intensive businesses, prefer to outsource IT operations to specialists who can do it better and more efficiently. This has led to over 80% of air IT being outsourced industry-wide, with only 20% remaining in-house. The network effects mean that as Amadeus gains more airline customers, they can amortize R&D costs across a larger base, creating better value propositions for all participants.
While many investors worry about AI agents potentially disintermediating Amadeus's distribution business, Ben argues this concern is largely misplaced. (15:15) AI agents will still need content aggregators to pull together disparate data from the travel ecosystem, and Amadeus already provides this economically with low industry take rates. The shift toward dynamic and real-time pricing will actually increase demand for Amadeus's services, as AI agents need sophisticated systems to deliver the right offers to customers. Additionally, the complexity of corporate travel management makes complete AI displacement unlikely.
Amadeus's pricing structure includes inflation-linked contracts that provide defensive characteristics during economic downturns. (20:23) On the Air IT side, they charge approximately €1 per passenger boarded through fixed-price, inflation-linked contracts spanning 10-15 years. This means that when airlines face volume pressure, they typically reduce prices rather than cut flights, but Amadeus doesn't suffer from lower ticket pricing since their fees are fixed and inflation-protected. This creates a variable cost structure for airlines while providing revenue stability for Amadeus.
The transition to order management systems like Nevio represents a significant structural growth opportunity for Amadeus. (30:31) Early implementations with airlines like Finnair, British Airways, and Air France-KLM are showing 5-7% revenue uplifts per passenger through better personalization and ancillary income generation. Industry experts believe this transition could deliver mid-teen revenue uplifts for airlines, suggesting Amadeus's current €1 per passenger fee could potentially increase by 50-100% over the next 5-10 years as they share in the value creation with customers.
Amadeus's strong financial position with less than 1x leverage provides significant advantages when competing for mission-critical airline contracts. (36:12) Airlines consider balance sheet strength crucial when selecting IT providers since these systems represent the central nervous system of their operations. With competitors like Sabre facing leverage issues and some players like Sabre's hotel IT division exiting the market, Amadeus is well-positioned to capture additional market share while investing heavily in R&D - spending equivalent to the total revenues of third-place competitor Travelport.