DAL Stock Recent News
DAL LATEST HEADLINES
Delta Air Lines (DAL) is set to report fiscal 2025 first-quarter results before the opening bell Wednesday as analysts have grown more cautious about air travel demand amid rising economic uncertainty.
1 Ideal Buy From 23 "Safer" April Dividend Dogs In 50 Fortune World's Most Admired Companies (FWMAC)
1 Ideal Buy From 23 "Safer" April Dividend Dogs In 50 Fortune World's Most Admired Companies (FWMAC)
Delta stock has come under heavy selling pressure after CEO Ed Bastian sounded bullish after the company's fourth-quarter report. The post Delta Stock Nailed Ahead Of Results; JPMorgan, Wells Fargo Headline Earnings Calendar appeared first on Investor's Business Daily.
Get a deeper insight into the potential performance of Delta (DAL) for the quarter ended March 2025 by going beyond Wall Street's top -and-bottom-line estimates and examining the estimates for some of its key metrics.
Delta Air Lines is set to post its Q1 results next week. Here, we assess factors that are likely to have influenced it and how investors should play this stock now.
Rick Ducat examines the chart of Delta Airlines (DAL) which has been a steady downtrend since hitting highs in January. Rick points to heavy trading volume during the selling action, and notes that shares will likely take out the standard -2 deviation level upon Thursday's open.
Airlines have been in a flat spin recently, due to macroeconomic turmoil. Certain airlines are growing despite the market outlook, and have advantages in certain areas, including valuations and efficiency. The full-year outlook is broadly unchanged for the market demand-wise, with load factors increasing YoY despite RPK decreases.
On Tuesday investment banking company Jefferies downgraded its rankings on Delta, American Airlines, Southwest Airlines, and Air Canada. This has caused airline stocks to trade significantly lower today with Delta down over 3%, Southwest Airlines down over 5%, and American Airlines down around 2.9%.
Airline stocks extended their slide on Tuesday as Wall Street grew increasingly concerned about weaker-than-expected travel demand, ongoing economic uncertainty, and the impact of looming tariffs. Investors are bracing for a difficult earnings season, with some major carriers already cutting profit forecasts.
Airline stocks slumped Tuesday after Jefferies analysts lowered their ratings for three of the four major U.S. carriers, writing “consumer sentiment continues to disappoint.”