Available Tonne Kilometres (ATK) is a key performance metric used primarily by airlines and air freight companies to measure their total cargo carrying capacity. Think of it as the total amount of freight space a company has for sale over a specific period. It is calculated by multiplying the available cargo capacity (measured in tonnes) by the distance flown (measured in kilometres). For instance, if a cargo jet with a 100-tonne capacity flies a 2,000-kilometre route, it generates 200,000 ATK for that flight. This metric is the freight equivalent of the more commonly known passenger metric, Available Seat Kilometres (ASK). For a value investor digging into the transportation sector, understanding ATK is crucial because it represents the “supply” side of a cargo business. It tells you not what a company has sold, but what it could sell. Tracking the trend in ATK helps an investor gauge a company's growth ambitions and strategic direction.
On its own, ATK simply tells you the size and scale of a company's cargo operation. A bigger number isn't automatically better. Its true power for an investor is unlocked when used as a comparative tool to assess growth, strategy, and, most importantly, efficiency.
A company's ATK figure reveals its potential to generate cargo revenue. A steadily increasing ATK suggests that management is expanding the business, either by:
For an investor, this is the first clue about a company's strategic posture. Is it in growth mode, aggressively adding capacity to capture market share? Or is it consolidating, perhaps even reducing ATK to focus on more profitable routes? This top-level view is the starting point of your analysis.
Capacity is meaningless if you can't sell it. This is where the real analysis begins. ATK represents the supply of cargo space. To judge how well a company is managing that supply, you must compare it against the demand. Demand is measured by a similar metric called Revenue Tonne Kilometres (RTK), which tracks the amount of paid cargo actually transported. By comparing these two figures, we can calculate the single most important metric for cargo efficiency: the Cargo Load Factor (CLF).
A high or rising CLF is a fantastic sign. It means the company is skilled at filling its available cargo space, turning potential capacity into actual revenue. Conversely, a company might boast about its growing ATK, but if its CLF is low or falling, it's a major red flag. It could signal weak demand, poor route planning, or intense competition, leading to empty space and wasted fixed costs.
ATK is a powerful number, but it never tells the whole story in isolation. A savvy investor always places it within a broader analytical framework to get a complete picture of the company's health and profitability.
When you see an ATK figure in a company's quarterly report, don't just glance at it. Use it as a springboard for deeper questions:
By using ATK as a starting point to investigate load factors, yields, and costs, you can move beyond simple growth metrics and develop a sophisticated understanding of an airline's or logistics company's operational and financial performance.