American Airlines Group Inc (NASDAQ: AAL) shares are trading lower Thursday morning as crude oil extended gains toward six-month highs. Here's what investors need to know. Oil Spike On Middle East Tensions
The move comes after nuclear talks between Washington and Tehran stalled in Geneva, while both sides stepped up military rhetoric, prompting traders to add a geopolitical "risk premium" to energy markets. Brent and WTI crude pushed higher as investors weighed the possibility of supply disruptions through the Strait of Hormuz, a key shipping chokepoint.
Why Higher Oil Prices Hurt American Airlines
For American Airlines, rising crude prices translate into higher jet fuel costs, one of the company's largest and most volatile expenses. When oil climbs sharply, unit costs rise almost immediately, while ticket prices typically adjust only with a lag, if competition and demand even allow increases at all.
That squeeze narrows profit margins, pressures cash flow and can force management to trim capacity or delay growth and fleet investment plans.
Risk Repricing Across Travel And Energy
Investors are also likely reassessing macro risk. Prolonged high oil prices can weigh on consumer spending and corporate travel budgets, threatening passenger demand just as airlines work to protect pricing power.
As crude holds near recent highs and volatility in the Middle East remains elevated, traders appear more comfortable owning energy-linked assets than fuel-sensitive names like AAL, leaving the stock under pressure even without company-specific news.
Bearish Technical Signals Emerge
Technical indicators suggest that AAL is facing downward pressure, as it trades significantly below its short-term moving averages. The company has seen a 12-month performance decline of 15.44%, indicating a longer-term bearish trend.
Currently, American Airlines is trading 5.3% below its 20-day simple moving average (SMA) and 9.7% below its 50-day SMA, demonstrating short-term weakness. The stock is also positioned 2.1% below its 100-day SMA, while it remains 5.1% above its 200-day SMA, suggesting some longer-term support.
The RSI is at 45.56, which is considered neutral territory, indicating a lack of strong momentum in either direction. Meanwhile, the MACD shows a value of -0.1672, with the signal line at -0.1722, indicating a bullish crossover as the MACD is above the signal line.
The combination of neutral RSI and bullish MACD suggests mixed momentum, indicating that while there may be some underlying strength, the stock is not currently exhibiting strong directional movement.
- Key Resistance: $15.50
- Key Support: $12.50
Benzinga Edge stock rankings give you four critical scores to help you identify the strongest and weakest stocks to buy and sell, with AAL currently posting a low Momentum score of 22.14 and a Value score of 29.13, underscoring its relative technical and valuation weakness.
AAL Shares Fall Thursday Morning
AAL Price Action: American Airlines shares were down 4.61% at $13.45 at the time of publication on Thursday, according to Benzinga Pro data.