New York, June 18, 2026, 05:06 EDT
- American Airlines shares moved higher early Thursday, bouncing from a drop on Wednesday.
- Cheaper oil gave airlines a boost ahead of the shorter U.S. trading week.
- Jefferies raised its price target. American said a top strategy executive will retire at the end of the year.
American Airlines Group shares climbed in early premarket action Thursday as softer oil prices gave the airline some relief after a drop yesterday. The stock changed hands at $15.63 ahead of the open, up 1.36% from a $15.42 finish Wednesday, Public.com showed at 5:00 a.m. ET.
Timing is in focus. With Nasdaq shutting Friday for Juneteenth, Thursday gives traders their last shot this week to move on airline stocks after crude and transport names swung around.
Oil was leading the move. Brent and U.S. crude dropped roughly 2%, hitting lows not seen since the Iran war began. That followed a U.S.-Iran interim deal meant to open the Strait of Hormuz and ease supply worries, but the agreement still has a 60-day negotiation window and several major points are unsettled.
That has a direct impact on American. In April, the airline posted record Q1 revenue of $13.9 billion but reported a net loss. The company warned its 2026 outlook was being squeezed by more than $4 billion in higher jet fuel costs. American put its full-year adjusted EPS at between a 40-cent loss and a $1.10 profit. Adjusted EPS excludes one-time and unusual items.
Jefferies’ Sheila Kahyaoglu bumped the price target on American to $15, up from $13, and left the Hold rating unchanged. The rating signals Jefferies doesn’t have a strong view to buy or sell. The firm flagged continued strong demand, fares running 20% higher than a year ago, and said it saw only minor churn after management meetings.
American executives say revenue growth should offset some of the higher fuel costs. CEO Robert Isom told the Bernstein investor conference in late May that there were “not making any changes” to the company’s outlook and that American still aimed to “repeat the profitability we had last year.” But Reuters has reported that American has lagged Delta Air Lines and United Airlines on profits for years. Reuters
Management changes showed up too. American disclosed in a June 16 filing that vice chair and chief strategy officer Stephen L. Johnson will retire at year end. Isom, in a note with the filing, called Johnson a “trusted counselor.” American Airlines
Airlines were in the red Wednesday. Delta ended down 1.07%. United dropped 2.26%. Southwest gave up 1.62%, and American was off 1.85%, MarketWatch data showed. Losses hit across the screen, not just one name.
Options traders didn’t all jump on the rebound. TheFly flagged bearish options flow on American, puts outpacing calls. Puts can rise when the stock drops, often used for protection. Implied volatility suggested about a 50-cent swing per day.
The downside view is still clear. Cheaper oil offers relief but only if prices stay down. Airline fares may fall if cost-conscious travelers cut back. A June 24 House hearing on airline competition after Spirit Airlines’ collapse could bring more attention to regulation and how the industry is set up.