NEW YORK, July 8, 2026, 13:01 (EDT)
- American Airlines dropped more than the market as oil risk came back into airline stocks.
- The problem for the stock is basic. No fuel hedging, a heavy debt load, and earnings are thin.
- Demand remains the main story for bulls, but investors are starting to question just how much pricing power American actually holds.
- Delta’s numbers on Friday are the next test for the sector, not a minor point for AAL.
Markets traded as normal. Nasdaq’s published holiday schedule for 2026 puts the Independence Day break on July 3, not July 8. NYSE says its regular session is from 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. ET.
American Airlines Group Inc. NASDAQ:AAL is taking more heat than the rest of airlines in this pullback. The stock is moving the way it often does when oil spikes, with the market focused on fuel costs and debt outweighing its equity value.
Oil set the pace. Wall Street lost ground after President Donald Trump said the Iran deal was “over.” Brent crude jumped 7% and travel names sold off on renewed fuel price worries. United Airlines Holdings Inc. NASDAQ:UAL was down 4.4% and Delta Air Lines Inc. NYSE:DAL dropped 3.4% as of 12:04 p.m. ET, Reuters said. Reuters
| Instrument | Latest price | Day change | Intraday low |
|---|---|---|---|
| American Airlines Group Inc. NASDAQ:AAL | $16.50 | -4.1% | $16.11 |
| Delta Air Lines Inc. NYSE:DAL | $86.54 | -2.4% | $85.29 |
| United Airlines Holdings Inc. NASDAQ:UAL | $124.49 | -3.0% | $121.78 |
| JetBlue Airways Corp. NASDAQ:JBLU | $5.565 | -2.7% | $5.39 |
| U.S. Global Jets ETF NYSEARCA:JETS | $31.59 | -2.8% | $31.15 |
| SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust NYSEARCA:SPY | $744.13 | -0.5% | $739.34 |
Quotes last updated at about 12:46 p.m. EDT.
The real takeaway from the table isn’t just that AAL dropped. It’s that AAL dropped harder than JETS or SPY. American fell 4% while the airline ETF was off 2.8%. The market isn’t dumping all airlines equally here. It’s targeting the balance sheet.
American Airlines put out its own update. First-quarter revenue hit a new high at $13.9 billion. The company posted a GAAP net loss of $382 million. Total debt stands at $34.7 billion. CEO Robert Isom said American is “on track for another record in the second quarter.” American Airlines
| American data point | Latest company figure | Stock read |
|---|---|---|
| Q1 aircraft fuel and related taxes | $2.9 billion | Cost base already high |
| Q1 average fuel price | $2.75 per gallon | Was $2.48 per gallon last year |
| Fuel hedges | None | No cushion on higher fuel |
| Fuel sensitivity | 1 cent/gallon = about $45 million annual expense | Even small jumps add up |
| Available liquidity | $10.8 billion | Gives runway, but not margin strength |
| Total debt | $34.7 billion | Tops equity market cap by 3x |
American said in its 10-Q it doesn’t have any fuel hedges, leaving it “fully exposed” to shifts in fuel prices if it sticks with this approach. It also estimated every one-cent-per-gallon increase in jet fuel adds around $45 million to its annual 2026 fuel bill. SEC
The stock story here is all about that fuel sensitivity. American’s own math shows if fuel goes up 25 cents a gallon and fares don’t move, that’s $1.13 billion in extra annual cost. That’s over 10% of the company’s market cap. This isn’t a projection, just the size of the risk.
Analyst views on AAL are mixed. Google Finance tracked 15 analysts in the last three months, with seven rating AAL a buy, seven rating it hold, and one a sell. The average 12-month price target was $19.23. Targets ranged from $12 to $25. On July 7, Susquehanna’s Christopher Stathoulopoulos stuck with buy and a $25 target. BMO Capital’s Michael Goldie kept a hold and set a $19.50 target on July 2.
Isom is sticking with his demand view. Speaking at a Bernstein event in May, he said American isn’t changing its cut 2026 guidance, saying about 80% of its Q2 bookings are set, corporate travel grew 13%, and Q2 revenue should be up 15% with capacity rising 5%. American still expects to match last year’s profit, he said.
The Delta comparison is key. Delta reports before Friday’s open, and options are pricing in about a 6% stock swing by the end of the week. Visible Alpha has revenue at $19.02 billion with adjusted EPS at $1.51.
Delta has a refinery, which American lacks. In April, CEO Ed Bastian said Delta was “moving quickly to recapture higher fuel costs.” Delta guided for about $300 million in refinery benefit for the June quarter. Delta Air Lines
The big question for AAL is if demand can cover fuel costs before debt slices into gains. Delta posting strong numbers would lift the sector. If margins miss, American takes it worse — it’s got direct fuel exposure and thin profits.