NEW YORK, March 17, 2026, 09:56 EDT
American Airlines Group jumped roughly 4.5% Tuesday morning, last changing hands at $10.97, after the airline raised its first-quarter revenue guidance on what it described as unexpectedly solid demand. Still, management flagged sharply higher fuel costs, cautioning that the quarterly loss would likely land near the more negative side of its earlier forecast. SEC
This development is notable: airline shares have taken a hit as the Iran conflict pushed up jet fuel costs, raising doubts about whether robust spring bookings can keep margins intact. The majority of U.S. airlines don’t hedge fuel — meaning they typically pay market rates as prices fluctuate — so they face greater risk if elevated costs persist. Reuters
American, in an 8-K filed before the J.P. Morgan event, lifted its first-quarter revenue outlook, now seeing growth topping 10% year-over-year—beating its previous projection of 7% to 10%. That’s the company’s fastest quarterly jump on record apart from the pandemic recovery period. The airline currently models jet fuel at roughly $2.75 per gallon and anticipates non-fuel unit costs climbing 4% to 5%. As for adjusted loss per share, American expects it to come in closer to the higher end of its prior 10-cent to 50-cent loss forecast. SEC
Shares moved up across the sector. Delta Air Lines climbed 5.1%, United Airlines tacked on 3.8%, after Delta raised its revenue guidance. Frontier Airlines, meanwhile, put its full-year outlook under review, citing first-quarter jet fuel possibly hitting $3 a gallon. Delta CEO Ed Bastian, speaking at the same conference, summed it up: “The story for us in this quarter is about revenue demand and the health of the demand set.” Reuters
Back in January, American told investors 2026 might look brighter. The airline guided for adjusted earnings between $1.70 and $2.70 a share, leaning on stronger demand in premium seats, a rebound among corporate travelers, and more loyalty revenue. Booking cash collections climbed by double digits during the first three weeks of the year, it said. In a bid to narrow its profitability gap with Delta and United, American has focused on boosting premium seating and mending fences with corporate clients and travel agencies. Reuters
Fuel remains the sticking point. “Hard to envision margin expansion this year barring a rapid decline in energy prices,” TD Cowen’s Tom Fitzgerald said last week. Even if airlines manage to push some of the extra costs onto passengers with higher fares, the analyst doesn’t see much room for relief. Reuters
Another, more pressing risk is on the table. On Monday, over 12,500 U.S. flights ran late or were canceled as weather disrupted key airports across the East Coast and Midwest. Data from FlightAware, reported by Reuters, indicated that American, Southwest, and Delta each saw delays or cancellations on 45% of their flights. Reuters
So American is juggling a stronger revenue number with rising fuel costs and new operating snags. The Tuesday filing gave a clearer snapshot for the first quarter, but the core issue still hangs: how long will fuel prices stay elevated, and what part of that burden can carriers push through to fares? SEC