TLDR
- Jet fuel costs have surged from $2.50 to $4.24 per gallon following recent U.S.-Israeli military actions against Iran
- United Airlines is preparing scenarios with Brent crude reaching $175 per barrel, potentially increasing annual fuel expenses by $11 billion
- Budget carriers including JetBlue, Spirit, and Frontier were operating at losses even before the current fuel price escalation
- Budget airlines throughout Asia are implementing fare increases, vendor reductions, and new technologies like Starlink for cost management
- Delta and United appear most financially stable to endure the crisis; Spirit Airlines cautions the price surge may lead to company liquidation
The airline industry across the United States is confronting its most severe financial challenge since the COVID-19 pandemic as jet fuel costs skyrocket in the aftermath of U.S.-Israeli military operations targeting Iran. This same economic pressure is impacting budget airlines throughout the Asian market, compressing profit margins and requiring immediate operational cost reductions.
According to Airlines for America, jet fuel reached $4.24 per gallon by the end of last week, representing a dramatic increase from the $2.50 level recorded immediately before the Iran strikes. By Friday, Brent crude was trading near the $112 per barrel mark.
United Airlines CEO Scott Kirby informed staff members that the carrier is preparing financial models based on Brent oil prices climbing to $175 per barrel and remaining above the $100 threshold through 2027. This projection suggests United’s yearly fuel expenditures could increase by approximately $11 billion — a figure exceeding double the company’s highest-ever annual earnings.
United Airlines Holdings, Inc., UAL
Neverthstanding these challenges, Kirby characterized the situation as offering strategic advantages, suggesting elevated fuel costs might enable United to acquire assets and capture market opportunities as competing airlines face difficulties.
Fuel expenditures represent approximately 25% of airline operational expenses. Because airlines typically sell tickets weeks or months ahead of travel dates, sudden price increases impact profitability well before carriers can adjust their fare structures accordingly.
Moody’s credit ratings agency identified low-cost and ultra-low-cost carriers as the most vulnerable segment. JetBlue, Spirit, and Frontier were reporting financial losses prior to this latest surge. Moody’s analysis indicated that had Brent crude averaged $80 rather than $69 during the previous year, collective operating profits for rated U.S. airlines would have declined by approximately 50%.
Major Carriers Maintain Stronger Financial Positions
Delta and United recorded the strongest operating margins among rated U.S. carriers during the previous year, based on Moody’s data. S&P Global Ratings noted both airlines maintain minimal debt obligations, robust cash positions, and derive a larger percentage of revenue from premium cabin sales.
American Airlines begins this challenging period with more than $10 billion in accessible liquidity, though the carrier maintains approximately $25 billion in long-term debt obligations. CEO Robert Isom reported the fuel price increase contributed roughly $400 million to first-quarter operational expenses.
Southwest Airlines possesses a solid balance sheet, but Fitch has cautioned that extended elevated fuel prices could negatively impact profitability and available cash. Alaska Air disclosed it maintains $3 billion in liquidity and has implemented fare increases to compensate for higher costs without reducing flight capacity.
JetBlue concluded the previous year holding $2.5 billion in liquidity without fuel hedging strategies in place. S&P projects the carrier will continue consuming cash throughout this year before approaching breakeven status by 2027. Frontier reported net losses for the prior year with only $874 million in available liquidity.
Spirit Airlines, presently operating under bankruptcy protection, has cautioned that the fuel price escalation could jeopardize creditor negotiations and potentially result in complete liquidation.
Asian Budget Carriers Adjust Routes and Costs
Throughout Asia, budget airlines are experiencing comparable financial pressures. SpiceJet reported that Middle East route disruptions are severely affecting its India-Dubai corridor, which operates 77 weekly flights. On March 26, ICRA downgraded India’s aviation sector outlook to negative, citing elevated fuel prices and rupee depreciation.
Zipair Tokyo indicated its long-haul operations have circumvented Middle East disruptions and passenger demand continues strong. The airline integrated Starlink internet connectivity across its fleet to reduce entertainment system hardware expenses and intends to expand its fleet to more than 20 aircraft by 2032.
SpiceJet’s technology division, SpiceTech, has eliminated approximately 80% of external technology vendors, lowering operational costs while simultaneously offering services to additional airlines.
