Analyst Ratings January 30, 2026

TD Cowen Cuts American Airlines Target to $17, Cites Storm Disruption and Q1 Pressure

Analyst holds Buy rating after trimming target; recent quarter missed expectations and forward metrics draw attention to yields and corporate travel recovery

By Caleb Monroe AAL
TD Cowen Cuts American Airlines Target to $17, Cites Storm Disruption and Q1 Pressure
AAL

TD Cowen reduced its price objective on American Airlines (NASDAQ:AAL) to $17.00 from $19.00 while keeping a Buy rating, citing expected first-quarter EPS near the low end of guidance after disruptions from Winter Storm Fern. The firm adjusted fiscal 2026 estimates based on management comments, noted robust forward bookings, and highlighted competitive and corporate travel variables it will monitor. The airline reported weaker-than-expected fourth-quarter 2025 results and revenue headwinds tied in part to a government shutdown; other brokers left or modestly adjusted their price targets.

Key Points

  • TD Cowen lowered its price target on American Airlines from $19.00 to $17.00 but maintained a Buy rating; the new target implies significant upside from the current $13.51 share price.
  • TD Cowen expects Q1 EPS near the low end of guidance, attributing pressure to disruptions from Winter Storm Fern, and has adjusted fiscal 2026 estimates following management commentary; forward bookings remain robust.
  • American reported Q4 2025 adjusted EPS of $0.16 versus analyst expectations of $0.34-$0.38 and revenue of $14.0 billion versus $14.04 billion consensus, with a $325 million revenue hit from a government shutdown and a 2.5% YoY decline in PRASM.

Overview

TD Cowen has trimmed its price target on American Airlines Group Inc. (NASDAQ:AAL) to $17.00 from $19.00 while retaining a Buy rating on the stock. The new target still implies substantial upside from the current share price of $13.51, even after the stock fell almost 8% over the past week, according to InvestingPro data.

Analyst rationale and near-term outlook

Analyst Tom Fitzgerald at TD Cowen expects American Airlines' first-quarter earnings per share to land near the low end of the company’s guidance range. Fitzgerald pointed specifically to operational disruptions caused by Winter Storm Fern as a factor weighing on the quarter’s results. Beyond the immediate quarter, the firm also revised its forecasts for the remainder of fiscal 2026 in response to commentary from company management.

Despite the downward adjustment to estimates, TD Cowen noted that forward bookings for American Airlines appear robust, which the firm flagged as a positive offset to near-term earnings pressure. The analyst also indicated he will be watching competitive dynamics in Chicago for potential impacts on the carrier’s yields, as well as the trajectory of corporate travel within indirect booking channels as that segment recovers.

Valuation metric

TD Cowen’s $17.00 price target corresponds to a multiple of 5.7 times its estimated 2027 EV/EBITDAR for American Airlines, as set out in the firm’s model.

Recent company financials

American Airlines reported fourth-quarter 2025 adjusted EPS of $0.16, well below analyst expectations that ranged from $0.34 to $0.38. Revenue for the quarter was $14.0 billion, slightly under the consensus figure of $14.04 billion. Management attributed part of the revenue shortfall to a government shutdown, which the company said reduced revenue by $325 million. The airline also recorded a 2.5% year-over-year decline in passenger revenue per available seat mile (PRASM), which pressured domestic segment performance.

Responses from other brokerages

Following the earnings release, Evercore ISI reiterated an In Line rating and held a $17.00 price target for the airline. BMO Capital raised its target modestly to $17.00 from $16.75 while maintaining a Market Perform rating. BMO pointed to American Airlines’ 2026 EPS guidance being about 12% above pre-earnings consensus as a consideration in its view.

Network developments

American Airlines is also planning to resume service to Venezuela from the United States for the first time since 2019, marking a network expansion milestone referenced alongside the company’s financial updates.

What analysts will watch next

Analysts are likely to focus on the company’s recovery of PRASM, the impacts of extreme weather on operational performance, competitive pressure in major hubs such as Chicago, and the pace of corporate travel returning through indirect channels. Forward bookings and management guidance will remain central inputs to near-term forecasts and valuation revisions.


This article presents the latest analyst moves and company-reported results used by market participants to reassess valuation and near-term earnings risk for American Airlines.

Risks

  • Weather-related operational disruptions (e.g., Winter Storm Fern) can push quarterly earnings toward the lower end of guidance and affect near-term results, impacting the airlines and travel sectors.
  • Competitive dynamics in hubs such as Chicago may pressure yields, introducing uncertainty to revenue and margin performance for the carrier and the broader airline industry.
  • Slower recovery in corporate travel booked via indirect channels could delay demand normalization and weigh on revenue trends for airlines and travel-adjacent sectors.

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