JetBlue Airways suffered the most significant damage among U.S. airline equities Tuesday, finishing the session down almost 6%, with losses extending into Wednesday’s pre-market hours with an additional 2.88% decline.
JetBlue Airways Corporation, JBLU
The steep decline followed multiple drone strikes targeting oil tankers navigating the Strait of Hormuz, which triggered a sharp spike in fuel costs. Compounding the situation, the U.S. government canceled waivers that previously permitted companies to purchase and sell Iranian crude, intensifying pressure on energy markets.
One strike hit a tanker approximately seven miles east of Oman’s Musandam Peninsula, resulting in what the United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations Centre characterized as “minor structural damage.”
These events led a maritime security organization to elevate its threat assessment to severe. Brent crude futures climbed roughly 3% to settle at $74.16 per barrel. West Texas Intermediate finished at $70.44 per barrel. Before Tuesday’s surge, both oil benchmarks had declined 22% and 24% respectively throughout the preceding month.
For airline operators, elevated crude prices translate directly to increased jet fuel expenses — and this dynamic impacts JetBlue more severely than its competitors.
Financial analysts on Wall Street characterize JetBlue as possessing the most fragile balance sheet among leading U.S. airline companies. The carrier’s per-share losses are projected to widen to $2.32 in 2026, expanding from $1.64 in 2025.
JetBlue disclosed last month that it anticipates recovering merely 40% of its jet fuel expenses in the second quarter. This leaves substantial vulnerability should energy prices remain elevated.
Competing carriers enjoy greater financial buffers. American Airlines (AAL) and Delta (DAL) generate more substantial premium cabin revenue and benefit from robust loyalty program income, which helps offset climbing fuel expenses. AAL finished down 3.1% and DAL dropped 3.3% — significant losses, but considerably less severe than JetBlue’s tumble.
Delta is scheduled to release quarterly earnings later this week, and Tuesday’s selling pressure may partially reflect investor hesitation preceding those financial results.
U.S. airline equities had enjoyed a robust rally leading up to Tuesday’s session. The U.S. Global Jets ETF (JETS) had surged nearly 20% since early 2026, powered by robust travel demand heading into the summer travel season.
JETS itself dropped 2.49% on Tuesday.
JetBlue’s circumstances warrant close monitoring. The carrier enters the crucial summer travel period with limited financial flexibility, escalating fuel expenses, and a stock price now facing renewed downward pressure.
The latest indicator: JBLU declined an additional 2.88% during Wednesday morning’s pre-market trading session.
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