NEW YORK, July 1, 2026, 09:03 EDT
- American Airlines Group Inc. NASDAQ:AAL changed hands at $18.07 ahead of the open, 16 cents higher than where it ended last session.
- Nasdaq opens its regular session at 9:30 a.m. ET. July 3 is the holiday for Independence Day, not July 1.
- U.S. jet fuel priced at $2.86 a gallon on June 30, down from the about $4.00 a gallon level American cited in its April Q2 outlook.
American Airlines Group Inc. NASDAQ:AAL moved higher in premarket trading Wednesday, extending a streak that saw shares climb for seven straight sessions through Monday. The stock closed at $17.91, gaining over 16% in that run.
Fuel is now the focus for investors. Airlines for America said the Argus US Jet Fuel Index showed U.S. jet fuel at $2.86 a gallon on June 30. American’s April outlook was based on second-quarter fuel at around $4.00 a gallon. That’s a big difference for an airline that used 1.066 billion gallons in Q1.
| Fuel input | Confirmed figure | Market read |
|---|---|---|
| Q1 fuel burn | 1.066 bln gallons | $0.25/gal move means ~$267 mln shift per quarter |
| April Q2 fuel assumption | about $4.00/gal | used as EPS baseline |
| Argus U.S. jet fuel, June 30 | $2.86/gal | $1.14 under EPS guide |
| Spot-guide run-rate gap | about $1.2 bln | near 10% of AAL’s market cap |
This isn’t a second-quarter earnings guide. It’s a run-rate math using a single day’s spot price and Q1 fuel burn. That’s why American’s shares can swing with fuel—market cap was around $11.95 billion in the latest trade, and Q1 aircraft fuel plus taxes totaled $2.93 billion, roughly 21% of operating costs.
| Security | Latest quote | Move | Market value | P/E |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| American Airlines Group Inc. NASDAQ:AAL | $18.07 | up $0.16 | $11.95 bln | 58.3x |
| Delta Air Lines Inc. NYSE:DAL | $93.66 | up $0.48 | $61.53 bln | 13.7x |
| United Airlines Holdings Inc. NASDAQ:UAL | $135.99 | up $0.79 | $44.14 bln | 12.2x |
| Southwest Airlines Co. NYSE:LUV | $51.42 | down $0.18 | $25.86 bln | 34.3x |
| JetBlue Airways Corp. NASDAQ:JBLU | $5.73 | up $0.09 | $2.13 bln | n.m. |
| U.S. Global Jets ETF (NYSEARCA:JETS) | $33.22 | up $0.13 | — | — |
The peer table breaks out the difference. American’s P/E is way higher than Delta and United since its trailing earnings are slim. If fuel costs drop, earnings can jump quicker here, but that leverage also cuts the other way if fuel rises again.
Demand keeps holding up. “Air-travel demand was strong before the Iran war and has remained strong throughout,” TradeStation’s global head of market strategy David Russell told MarketWatch in a report updated Tuesday. MarketWatch
Back in April, American told investors it saw adjusted EPS for the June quarter landing anywhere from a 20-cent loss to a 20-cent gain. The airline expected revenue to climb 13.5% to 16.5%. CEO Robert Isom at the time said American had “delivered record revenue” for Q1 and that “Demand for our product is growing.”
American’s latest move is part of its revenue focus, though the numbers are small compared to fuel. The airline said Tuesday it plans to open a 3,700-square-foot Provisions by Admirals Club area at JFK in New York. The spot will have grab-and-go food, a barista station and staff for customer support. “We think the space will better match the pace of our customers’ journeys,” Chief Customer Officer Heather Garboden said. American Airlines Newsroom
Balance sheet risk hasn’t moved far from the stock. American closed Q1 with $34.7 billion of total debt, the lowest since mid-2015, and $10.8 billion in liquidity. That much debt means lower fuel prices benefit shareholders, but if fares disappoint or costs rise again, the small market cap takes the hit first.