NEW YORK, June 21, 2026, 12:06 EDT
- American Airlines ended Thursday at $15.99, up 3.7%. U.S. markets were closed for Juneteenth.
- The stock climbed roughly 6.7% for the shortened trading week, with airline shares moving up on lower fuel pressure.
- Oil prices, analyst target changes and a U.S. airline competition hearing on June 24 are in focus for investors as Monday trading starts.
American Airlines Group Inc. shares rose for the shortened U.S. trading week, getting a boost as travel stocks climbed in a fuel-led rally ahead of the Juneteenth break and the weekend.
Shares of the Nasdaq-listed carrier ended Thursday at $15.99, up 3.7%. Trading volume was about 126.3 million shares. The stock stayed under its 52-week high of $16.50, so the gain stopped short of a full breakout.
Timing is key. American is more vulnerable than some bigger airlines to changes in jet fuel, which is one of its main operating costs. AAL climbed about 6.7%, going from $14.98 at the prior Friday close to $15.99 on Thursday, over four trading days.
The U.S. stock market didn’t open on Friday, with Nasdaq counting June 19 as a market holiday for Juneteenth. Nasdaq usually trades Monday through Friday, so the next session will be Monday, June 22.
Market tone was stronger. U.S. stocks moved higher Thursday with some pressure off bond yields and oil after worries tied to U.S.-Iran tension cooled. American climbed 3.7% and United Airlines added 2.1%, according to AP. But Adam Turnquist at LPL Financial said “uncertainty remains elevated” about new risks and when shipping will steady. AP News
That’s how the market saw it: airlines stocks got a lift because the fuel risk eased, not because American fixed all its internal problems. Delta Air Lines and United keep setting the higher bar on profits. American has lagged both for years on profitability while trying to push more premium seats and making tweaks to loyalty and distribution, Reuters reported last month.
American Airlines posted first-quarter revenue of $13.9 billion, a record for the carrier, but still logged a GAAP net loss of $382 million. The company kept its full-year guidance midpoint about level with 2025, even while facing over $4 billion in added jet-fuel costs. CEO Robert Isom told investors American was “on track for another record” in the second quarter and looking for “modest profitability” if fuel prices stay in line. American Airlines Newsroom
Wall Street is divided and the rally stays choppy. TipRanks flagged Wells Fargo’s Christian Wetherbee with a Hold and $12 target as of June 18. Jefferies’ Sheila Kahyaoglu also rated Hold, but bumped her target to $15 on June 16. Over at Morgan Stanley, Ravi Shanker kept a Buy with a $24 target from June 1. The wide range shows analysts still can’t agree how much fuel savings and premium demand balance out higher costs.
Washington risk is on the radar this week. Reuters said a House Judiciary subcommittee has a June 24 hearing planned, focused on U.S. airline competition and regulation after Spirit Airlines’ failure. The hearing for American, Delta, United and Southwest could spark more talk over fares, passenger rules and capacity at home.
American’s management shuffle is in play. Stephen L. Johnson, vice chair and chief strategy officer, told the company on June 14 he plans to leave at year-end, according to an SEC filing. The company hasn’t named who will replace him.
But fuel risk hasn’t gone away. U.S. Gulf Coast jet fuel was at $3.023 a gallon for June 15, EIA daily data showed, after weeks of higher prices; another jump could challenge the market’s new optimism. U.S. Energy Information Administration IATA on June 19 said airline profits and margins are still forecast to fall in 2026, even if the sector stays profitable as a whole. AAL holders still face a tight window: demand has to hold up, fuel prices can’t spike again, and management needs to show the premium strategy isn’t just catch-up.