Delta Air Lines (NYSE: DAL) has entered fiscal 2026 with strong momentum, buoyed by growing corporate and leisure travel demand and disciplined capacity growth that positions it to navigate a challenging cost environment. Management’s positive revenue guidance signals resilience despite industry-wide pressures from rising fuel costs.
Estimates
The aviation giant is set to publish its first-quarter 2026 earnings report on Wednesday, April 8, at 6:30 am ET. On average, analysts following the business forecast total revenues of $14.8 billion for Q1, representing a 5.3% year-over-year increase. They forecast a 35% annual growth in earnings to $0.62 per share. The company’s latest guidance is for a 5-7% year-over-year increase in first-quarter revenue, and adjusted earnings in the range of $0.50 per share to $0.90 per share.
Delta shares have grown more than 50% after hitting a multi-month low a year earlier. The stock climbed to an all-time high in February 2026 but pulled back since then and slipped below its 12-month moving average of $58.43 at one point. However, DAL shifted to recovery mode last month and is showing renewed momentum ahead of earnings.
Earnings Beat
In the fourth quarter of fiscal 2025, operating revenue increased 3% year-over-year to $16 billion, but fell short of expectations. Net income grew 45% year-over-year to $1.22 billion or $1.86 per share. On an adjusted basis, earnings were $1.55 per share in Q4, compared to $1.85 last year. Earnings topped estimates, marking the fifth consecutive beat. For fiscal 2026, the Delta leadership expects adjusted earnings to be in the range of $6.50 per share to $7.50 per share.
Also Read: How to Read an Earnings Call Transcript
From Delta’s Q4 2025 Earnings Call:
“Historically, March has been the strongest period for bookings, so it is very encouraging to be setting new records here in early January. We are aligned with U.S. GDP expectations, and we plan to grow capacity by 3% for the full year, with all new seat growth concentrated in premium cabins. Driven by interior upgrades and new aircraft deliveries. Domestically, we have balanced growth across our core and coastal hubs and are leveraging our integrated strategy to strengthen our industry-leading position.”
Strong, Yet Challenged
While Delta benefits from the premium-focused strategy, strong brand loyalty, and leading position in key domestic and transatlantic markets, it faces challenges such as cost pressure and softening demand for discretionary travel. Higher-margin segments such as business travel support revenue quality and pricing power. Additionally, the company’s operational reliability and disciplined capacity growth provide an added layer of stability in a still-volatile industry.
Delta shares were trading down 1.7% on Thursday afternoon, reversing the uptrend seen in the earlier sessions. The stock has gained 16% in the past six months alone.
The post Earnings Preview: What to expect when Delta Air Lines reports Q1 FY26 results first appeared on Alphastreet.