NEW YORK, June 15, 2026, 19:03 (EDT) — American Airlines climbed as oil prices slipped, giving the airline a break on fuel costs.
- American Airlines Group shares rose $0.49 to $15.46 late Monday, up around 3.3%. The stock touched $15.89 at its high earlier in the session.
- Oil dropped sharply after the U.S. and Iran agreed on deal terms, easing market worries about the Strait of Hormuz. Reuters
- Investors are looking to see if fuel costs stay flat and whether American can generate enough Q2 revenue to cover high costs.
American Airlines Group Inc. (NASDAQ: AAL) traded higher Monday as travel stocks saw interest on shifting fuel prices. AAL reached $15.46 in late trade, up 49 cents, after touching a session high of $15.89. Volume was heavy at 180.2 million shares. The move wasn’t tied to any fresh earnings. Fuel costs have stayed in focus for the airline’s investors.
Oil prices slid after the U.S. and Iran reached a deal, according to Reuters. Brent crude lost 5.5% to trade at $82.55. U.S. West Texas Intermediate dropped 5.8%, settling at $79.96. The deal would end fighting and open the Strait of Hormuz, a passage that handles about a fifth of world crude shipments. Airlines keep an eye on the strait because it shapes shipping patterns. Cheaper crude won’t hit jet fuel costs right away, but can still support airline margins. Reuters
American’s 2026 forecast is weighed down by fuel costs. The airline posted a Q1 revenue record at $13.9 billion in April, but booked a GAAP net loss of $382 million, or $0.58 per share. For Q2, American expects adjusted EPS between a $0.20 loss and a $0.20 gain. Jet fuel costs should top $4 billion. Quarter-end debt came in at $34.7 billion, down to the lowest since mid-2015, but still high for a carrier exposed to economic swings. American Airlines Newsroom
American Airlines (AAL) is holding onto its full-year outlook as demand stays strong, CEO Robert Isom told Reuters last month. The airline is about 80% booked for Q2 and says corporate travel is up 13% from a year ago. American expects Q2 revenue to rise 15% with capacity up about 5%. That points to unit revenue growth of around 10%. Unit revenue, or revenue per seat-mile, drives pricing and demand for airlines. If fuel prices keep dropping and bookings hold up, American’s profit outlook could improve faster than thought. Reuters
Bears still have a case. Monday’s jump pushed the stock near the average Wall Street target, narrowing any safety net for buyers. According to MarketScreener, 26 analysts cover American Airlines, with a consensus “outperform” and a $15.53 price target, just above Monday’s close at $14.98. Targets are wide—from $10 up to $24—so there’s disagreement. With AAL sitting at the consensus after its rally, the shares look less like a bargain, risk stands out. Pressure grows if the Iran deal hits a snag, fuel prices climb, or demand slips. MarketScreener
Traders are eyeing Friday’s planned memorandum of understanding in Switzerland for signs it might bring oil shipments back to normal in the Strait of Hormuz. But analysts told Reuters flows could stay below prewar rates for months, so crude and jet-fuel prices are still getting attention. Those hoping for relief from high costs may have to keep waiting. Next up is American’s quarterly report. It will be looking for stronger revenue, some help on fuel costs, and headway on cutting debt. Reuters