<p>Affluent travelers avoiding commercial flights during the pandemic are helping fuel a recovery in pre-owned corporate aircraft transactions this year and reviving shoots of demand for new planes even as the business aviation industry braces for a slump in 2020 deliveries.</p>.<p>Jets built as corporate aircraft, which can carry from roughly a handful to 19 travelers, tout less risk of exposure to the coronavirus because their passengers can avoid airports and generally select who comes on board.</p>.<p>Private flights have mostly recovered better than those of commercial airlines, with operators like NetJets reporting improved demand this summer.</p>.<p>Corporate planemakers, such as Canada's Bombardier Inc, have been watching to see whether the rebound in leisure flights would translate into new aircraft orders.</p>.<p>Pre-owned jet transactions are bouncing back to near 2019 levels, while lawyers and brokers are seeing orders for new planes trickling in after a pandemic-induced lull, generating cautious optimism for corporate planemakers as they begin reporting quarterly earnings this week.</p>.<p>"There's just so much more activity than we anticipated four or five months ago," said Don Dwyer, managing partner at Guardian Jet, which does aircraft brokerage, appraisals, and consulting.</p>.<p>"In April you could hear crickets chirping for new orders."</p>.<p>The private jet industry, which delivered 809 new business jets in 2019, has still not recovered since its peak of 1,317 deliveries in 2008, said analyst Brian Foley.</p>.<p>But pre-owned transactions for the first nine months of 2020 range from flat to down 8%, on an annual basis, depending on the data source, surprising aviation analysts Foley and Rolland Vincent. During the third quarter, transactions rose 9% to 643, according to Vincent's JetNet IQ data.</p>.<p>Executives attribute the improvement in the pre-owned market to a combination of tax incentives this year in the United States, the world's largest market for corporate planes, along with demand from first-time and occasional business jet travelers, upgrades, and charter companies.</p>.<p>Small through super mid-sized planes which carry up to 10 passengers are especially in demand for domestic leisure travel, executives said.</p>.<p>September business aviation flights in the United States, Caribbean and Canada were up 1.2% compared with August but remain down almost 17% on an annual basis, according to Argus TRAQPak data.</p>.<p>Amanda Applegate, a partner at Aerlex Law Group, said she has done post-Covid-19 transactions for new-model Bombardier Challenger 350s, Embraer SA Praetors, along with Gulfstream G500 and G600 jets, some of which were for clients who previously flew commercially.</p>.<p>More first-time buyers and clients who used to fly commercial at least part of the time now opt to fly private either because of concerns over Covid-19, or because airlines have scaled back their schedules, she said.</p>.<p>Florida attorney Stewart Lapayowker is seeing planemakers offer discounts off retail pricing to win deals. "I think you’re seeing manufacturers get realistic about their new aircraft pricing," he said.</p>.<p>At Canadian plane-share operator AirSprint, which is taking two pre-owned planes post-Covid-19, the number of new fractional owners increased by 36% between April and October compared with the same period in 2019, said Chief Operating Officer James Elian. Fractional ownership allows passengers to invest in a private jet to gain access to it.</p>.<p>Flexjet, scheduled to accept delivery of more than 10 aircraft by year's end, including Praetor 500s and Challenger 350s, has not seen a steep cutback on flying private compared with previous downturns, said Chief Operating Officer Megan Wolf.</p>.<p>"This time around has been different." </p>
<p>Affluent travelers avoiding commercial flights during the pandemic are helping fuel a recovery in pre-owned corporate aircraft transactions this year and reviving shoots of demand for new planes even as the business aviation industry braces for a slump in 2020 deliveries.</p>.<p>Jets built as corporate aircraft, which can carry from roughly a handful to 19 travelers, tout less risk of exposure to the coronavirus because their passengers can avoid airports and generally select who comes on board.</p>.<p>Private flights have mostly recovered better than those of commercial airlines, with operators like NetJets reporting improved demand this summer.</p>.<p>Corporate planemakers, such as Canada's Bombardier Inc, have been watching to see whether the rebound in leisure flights would translate into new aircraft orders.</p>.<p>Pre-owned jet transactions are bouncing back to near 2019 levels, while lawyers and brokers are seeing orders for new planes trickling in after a pandemic-induced lull, generating cautious optimism for corporate planemakers as they begin reporting quarterly earnings this week.</p>.<p>"There's just so much more activity than we anticipated four or five months ago," said Don Dwyer, managing partner at Guardian Jet, which does aircraft brokerage, appraisals, and consulting.</p>.<p>"In April you could hear crickets chirping for new orders."</p>.<p>The private jet industry, which delivered 809 new business jets in 2019, has still not recovered since its peak of 1,317 deliveries in 2008, said analyst Brian Foley.</p>.<p>But pre-owned transactions for the first nine months of 2020 range from flat to down 8%, on an annual basis, depending on the data source, surprising aviation analysts Foley and Rolland Vincent. During the third quarter, transactions rose 9% to 643, according to Vincent's JetNet IQ data.</p>.<p>Executives attribute the improvement in the pre-owned market to a combination of tax incentives this year in the United States, the world's largest market for corporate planes, along with demand from first-time and occasional business jet travelers, upgrades, and charter companies.</p>.<p>Small through super mid-sized planes which carry up to 10 passengers are especially in demand for domestic leisure travel, executives said.</p>.<p>September business aviation flights in the United States, Caribbean and Canada were up 1.2% compared with August but remain down almost 17% on an annual basis, according to Argus TRAQPak data.</p>.<p>Amanda Applegate, a partner at Aerlex Law Group, said she has done post-Covid-19 transactions for new-model Bombardier Challenger 350s, Embraer SA Praetors, along with Gulfstream G500 and G600 jets, some of which were for clients who previously flew commercially.</p>.<p>More first-time buyers and clients who used to fly commercial at least part of the time now opt to fly private either because of concerns over Covid-19, or because airlines have scaled back their schedules, she said.</p>.<p>Florida attorney Stewart Lapayowker is seeing planemakers offer discounts off retail pricing to win deals. "I think you’re seeing manufacturers get realistic about their new aircraft pricing," he said.</p>.<p>At Canadian plane-share operator AirSprint, which is taking two pre-owned planes post-Covid-19, the number of new fractional owners increased by 36% between April and October compared with the same period in 2019, said Chief Operating Officer James Elian. Fractional ownership allows passengers to invest in a private jet to gain access to it.</p>.<p>Flexjet, scheduled to accept delivery of more than 10 aircraft by year's end, including Praetor 500s and Challenger 350s, has not seen a steep cutback on flying private compared with previous downturns, said Chief Operating Officer Megan Wolf.</p>.<p>"This time around has been different." </p>