Today: 17 May 2026
American Airlines Faces Deeper O’Hare Flight Cuts as FAA Seeks Chicago Summer Cap
6 March 2026
2 mins read

American Airlines Faces Deeper O’Hare Flight Cuts as FAA Seeks Chicago Summer Cap

WASHINGTON, March 6, 2026, 05:50 EST

American Airlines is up against fresh turbulence in Chicago, as the Federal Aviation Administration has asked airlines to slash summer schedules at O’Hare more aggressively than the agency suggested just a week earlier, according to sources speaking with Reuters. The latest request would pull back flying in one of the carrier’s most hotly competitive markets.

Timing is key here: American has staked a big piece of its 2026 turnaround on Chicago. The summer schedule is set to begin March 29, but the FAA is pushing for the airport to handle just about 2,500 flights a day — both arrivals and departures. That’s a cut from the 3,080 flights airlines had planned, and even lower than the 2,800 daily limit floated by the agency last week.

In a notice dated March 3, DOT and FAA warned that the upcoming increase could put pressure on O’Hare’s runways, terminal capacity, and air traffic controls. The agency said it plans to issue a final order once the reduction meeting wraps up. For now, the current summer schedule is slated to continue until Oct. 25.

Back in December, American laid out plans to tack on 100 peak-day departures out of O’Hare, targeting over 75 destinations for the spring break rush. That brings daily flights above 500, putting the airline right back at pre-pandemic volumes. Reuters, just last week, pegged American’s departures at O’Hare climbing from 484 last summer to 526 this year.

This fight is really about gates—the spots at the airport dictating how many flights an airline can push through. Back in January, United Chief Executive Scott Kirby signaled the airline was “drawing a line in the sand,” promising to add “as many flights as are required” to keep American from locking up more gates. But according to Reuters, American warned staff this week that United’s “reckless” scheduling could clog up the airport: longer taxi times, missed connections, and broader headaches. Reuters

Chicago stands out as one of the rare major U.S. airports where two giant network carriers both operate at serious scale. According to Reuters last month, United runs around half the scheduled flights at O’Hare, while American manages about a third. But American’s adjusted pretax profit for 2025 hit just $352 million—far behind Delta’s $5 billion and United’s $4.6 billion.

Analysts caution that a fare war—steep price slashing—might not stay confined to Chicago as network growth ramps up. “If history is any guide, competitive skirmishes are rarely contained,” Melius Research’s Conor Cunningham told Reuters last month. American’s vice chair and chief strategy officer Steve Johnson, for his part, said back in December the airline was still “committed to rebuilding” in Chicago. Reuters

But the FAA standoff isn’t the only thing weighing on the sector. Airline stocks slid Thursday as oil surged, rattled by the Middle East conflict. “We expect March to hit (U.S.) airlines’ profitability due to the unanticipated jump in fuel prices,” Morningstar’s Nicolas Owens told Reuters. Shares of American, Delta and United each ended the session down between 4% and 9%, Reuters said. Reuters

The FAA hasn’t settled on a final number yet, with the agency planning to release an official order following the reduction meeting. If the cap ends up stricter, airlines at O’Hare would face sharper cutbacks right ahead of the key spring and summer travel seasons. A lighter cap, though, would leave American with extra flexibility to keep advancing its Chicago expansion.

American and United aren’t commenting on where negotiations stand, according to Reuters. The FAA has another round lined up next week, just ahead of the summer schedule kicking off on March 29. Whatever comes out of it could decide how much of American’s planned Chicago push actually makes it through the season.

Stock Market Today

  • Tokyo Seimitsu Co. (TSE:7729) Stock Overview and Market Performance
    May 17, 2026, 12:16 PM EDT. Tokyo Seimitsu Co., Ltd., listed on the Tokyo Stock Exchange under ticker 7729, manufactures semiconductor production equipment and measuring instruments. The company serves the semiconductor industry with products including wafer probers, dicing machines, and precision measurement tools. Founded in 1949 and based in Tokyo, Tokyo Seimitsu operates through two main segments: Semiconductor Manufacturing Equipment and Measuring Instruments. Its product portfolio supports semiconductor fabrication processes and quality control, catering to global chipmakers amid rising demand for advanced semiconductor technologies.

Latest articles

SoFi Stock’s Rough Friday Sets Up a Big Week: Here’s What Could Move SOFI Next

17 May 2026
New York, May 17, 2026, 12:06 (EDT) SoFi Technologies heads into the new trading week under pressure after its shares fell on Friday, caught between a broader pullback in U.S. growth stocks and lingering questions over whether the digital lender can keep beating expectations without raising its full-year forecast. The timing matters. U.S. markets are closed for the weekend, so the next regular session will give investors their first chance to respond to a full week that included SoFi’s PrimaryBid asset deal, fresh market stress over bond yields and oil prices, and a coming investor-conference appearance by management. SoFi closed
Bitmine Faces $13.4B Ether Position Into Monday After Weekend Drop

Bitmine Faces $13.4B Ether Position Into Monday After Weekend Drop

17 May 2026
Bitmine Immersion Technologies shares fell 9.7% to $19.87 Friday, capping a 10.4% weekly drop, as Ether slid to $2,186, below the $2,366 price Bitmine used in its latest update. The company holds 5.21 million ETH, now worth about $11.4 billion, nearly $1 billion less than its May 10 valuation. Trading resumes Monday.
Microsoft Stock Moves on Weekend; Bigger Wall Street Test Ahead

Microsoft Stock Moves on Weekend; Bigger Wall Street Test Ahead

17 May 2026
Microsoft shares rose 3.05% to $421.92 Friday after Bill Ackman’s Pershing Square disclosed a new stake, bucking a 1.5% drop in the Nasdaq Composite. Ackman began building the position in February as Microsoft shares fell on concerns about cloud growth and AI spending. Microsoft reported 18% revenue growth in its fiscal third quarter, with cloud demand still outpacing supply. U.S. markets will remain closed Sunday.
Unilever PLC’s India Unit Exits Nutritionalab as Premium Growth Push Gains Pace
Previous Story

Unilever PLC’s India Unit Exits Nutritionalab as Premium Growth Push Gains Pace

Microsoft Stock Price Week Ahead: Can MSFT Hold Near $409 as AI Demand Faces a CPI Test?
Next Story

Microsoft Stock Price Week Ahead: Can MSFT Hold Near $409 as AI Demand Faces a CPI Test?

Go toTop