Delta Air Lines, Inc. News
Delta Air Lines, Inc. provides scheduled air transportation for passengers and cargo in the United States and internationally. The company operates through two segments, Airline and Refinery. Its domestic network centered on core hubs in Atlanta, Minneapolis-St. Paul, Detroit, and Salt Lake City, as well as coastal hub positions in Boston, Los Angeles, New York-LaGuardia, New York-JFK, and Seattle; and international network centered on hubs and market presence in Amsterdam, Mexico City, London-Heathrow, Paris-Charles de Gaulle, and Seoul-Incheon. The company sells its tickets through various distribution channels, including delta.com and the Fly Delta app, reservations, online travel agencies, traditional brick and mortar, and other agencies. It also provides aircraft maintenance and engineering support, repair, and overhaul services; and vacation packages to third-party consumers, as well as aircraft charters, and management and programs. The company operates through a fleet of approximately 1,250 aircrafts. Delta Air Lines, Inc. was founded in 1924 and is based in Atlanta, Georgia.
see moreDelta Air Lines, Inc. Market News
5d
Delta Air Lines Q1: Strong Ops, Fuel Pressure Now!
- Delta reported robust adjusted March-quarter results—$14.2B revenue and $0.64 adjusted EPS—while GAAP was impacted by one-offs. Management guided to low‑teens revenue growth for Q2 but flagged a ~$2B fuel headwind and all‑in fuel near $4.30/gal. Cash flow and debt reduction remain strengths, and a $0.1875 quarterly dividend reinforces capital returns. Investors should weigh durable demand and balance‑sheet repair against near‑term fuel cost risk.
12d
Delta Air Lines: Fuel Squeeze Tests DALs Valuation
Delta’s recent quarter showed resilient revenue and strong operations, but a renewed jet-fuel surge and rising fuel expense are the principal near-term headwinds for DAL. Attractive valuation metrics and a solid balance sheet cushion risk, while dividends and operational performance support investor confidence.
19d
Delta (DAL) Surges as TechOps, Cargo Cushion Fuel!
Delta Air Lines stock (DAL) jumped after strong March-quarter results, robust non-ticket revenue growth and heavy options trading. Despite rising jet-fuel costs, Delta’s TechOps, cargo and loyalty businesses are insulating margins and driving investor confidence.
26d
Delta Stock: Fleet Upgrades vs Weather Costs Today
Delta Air Lines (DAL) faces a tug-of-war: analyst optimism around fleet renewal, TechOps expansion and new routes contrasts with repeated weather-related cancellations that have clipped near-term earnings. Recent analyst target adjustments and company disclosures point to long-term operational improvements, while winter storms continue to pressure short-term performance.
06 Apr at 04:24
Delta: Fuel Costs Bite; Amazon Wi-Fi Deal Wins Now
Rising jet fuel costs are pressuring Delta’s near-term margins even as analysts keep constructive ratings. A major Amazon Project Leo LEO-satellite Wi‑Fi agreement for 500 aircraft and upcoming Q1 results shape investor focus.
30 Mar at 04:24
Delta Air Lines: Q1 Earnings, Shutdown Drag & JV!!
Delta approaches its April 8 Q1 earnings amid lingering costs from the U.S. government shutdown, the forced Aeroméxico joint-venture unwind, and rising labor and regulatory pressures. These concrete headwinds help explain Delta’s cautious guidance and make the upcoming report a key near-term catalyst for DAL stock.
16 Mar at 04:23
Delta (DAL) Slides as Jet Fuel Surges
Delta Air Lines shares fell after a sharp Brent crude jump and mass flight cancellations pressured the airline sector. Rising jet-fuel costs, limited hedging, and potential government staffing disruptions are the primary near-term risks to DAL in the S&P 500, while Delta’s cash flow and guidance provide some medium-term resilience.