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Search resuls for: "Michael Linenberg"


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U.S. airlines are reducing their capacity through the end of the year in a bid to cool an oversupplied domestic market that has led to lower fares and reduced profits despite strong summer travel demand. Airlines now expect to grow flying about 4% year over year during the final three months of the year. U.S. airline executives have noted strong demand but a U.S. domestic market that's awash in flights, forcing them to dial back growth plans, which could drive up fares. Reducing capacity could drive up fares for consumers and boost airlines' bottom lines, if travel demand holds up. Getting fares in the market that are profitable to airlines but palatable to consumers is crucial for the industry as consumers have pulled back on spending in other areas.
Persons: Michael Linenberg Organizations: United, JetBlue, Delta, Laguardia Airport, Deutsche Bank, Sunday . Airlines Locations: Queens, New York City . U.S, U.S
Meanwhile, Redburn Atlantic initiated coverage of DoorDash with a buy rating and a price target implying upside of more than 60%. He also notched down his price target to $29 from $32, indicating 9.4% downside potential from Thursday's close. Analyst Vivek Arya reiterated his buy rating on the Dutch-based chipmaker in a client note on Thursday. He also cut his price target to $1.25 from $6.25, which was 7 cents below Thursday's close price. DASH YTD mountain AAPL year to date — Hakyung Kim 5:33 a.m.: Raymond James raises Apple price target Raymond James is getting more bullish on Apple ahead of earnings.
Persons: Raymond James, Michael Linenberg, Linenberg, Southwest's, — Hakyung Kim, BofA, Vivek Arya, NXP, NXPI, Arya, Davidson, Alexander Perry's, Perry, Morgan Stanley, International Morgan Stanley, Nathan Feather, Feather, Hakyung Kim, James Cordwell, Cordwell, EBITDA, Srini Pajjuri, Fred Imbert Organizations: CNBC, Apple, Southwest Airlines Deutsche Bank, Southwest Airlines, Revenue, NXP, Bank of America, EV, Harley, International, WW International, DoorDash Locations: U.S, China, Thursday's, 2H24
Its price target of $4,380 suggests nearly 18% upside from Friday's close. "We expect numbers to reset lower (again) with the downward revision a negative catalyst for the multiple, and the margin story likely being pushed out to 2025," wrote analyst Christian Carlino. Analyst Anthony Powell accompanied the move by raising his price target to $204 from $194, implying a potential 15% rally for the stock. The investment firm upgraded the airline stock to market-perform from underperform, boosting its price target to $32 from $26. His price target of $338 per share implies upside of just 5% from Friday's close.
Persons: Bernstein, Evercore, Piper Sandler, Brian Mullan, Mullan, — Jesse Pound, Aaron Kessler, — Michelle Fox, JPMorgan downgrades Holley, Holley, Christian Carlino, Carlino, HLLY, hasn't, — Lisa Kailai Han, AvalonBay, Anthony Powell, Powell, AVB, Lisa Kailai Han, Joshua Shanker, Morgan Stanley, bullish Tesla, Tesla, Adam Jonas, Jonas, Russell Quelch, Quelch, MSCI, Arun Viswanathan, Viswanathan, Rosenblatt, Hans Mosesmann, Mosesmann, Michael Linenberg, Linenberg, David Vernon, David Raso, Raso, Assuredness, Fred Imbert, ~$ ~$ Organizations: CNBC, Airlines, Southwest Airlines, Deutsche Bank, JetBlue, Caterpillar, Foods, . Restaurant, Seaport Research, Booking Holdings Seaport Research Partners, Booking Holdings, JPMorgan, Barclays, Bank of America, AIG, of America, Tesla Network, RBC, Ball Corporation, Markets, Ball Corp, Aerospace, BAE Systems, Ball, Micro Computer, Super Micro Computer, Micro, ASM, Spirit Airlines, Bernstein, Spirit, Boeing Max, ISI, CAT Locations: Southwest, Friday's
Alaska and Hawaiian Airlines planes takeoff at the same time from San Francisco International Airport (SFO) in San Francisco, California, United States on June 21, 2023. President Joe Biden's Justice Department has successfully had two airline link-ups halted in court in recent months. That doesn't necessarily spell doom for Alaska Air's plan to buy Hawaiian Airlines . The decision immediately sparked questions of whether an Alaska-Hawaiian combination would suffer a similar fate in an antitrust lawsuit. The Justice Department didn't immediately respond to a request for comment about whether it plans to challenge Alaska and Hawaiian's proposed deal.
Persons: Joe Biden's, William Young, Michael Linenberg, Department didn't, Hawaiian's, Herbert Hovenkamp Organizations: Hawaiian Airlines, San Francisco International Airport, Department, Hawaiian Airlines . U.S, Justice Department, JetBlue Airways, Spirit Airlines, Deutsche Bank, JetBlue, University of Pennsylvania's Carey Law School, Spirit Locations: Alaska, San Francisco , California, United States, Hawaiian Airlines ., Hawaii
A sale to JetBlue represented a lifeline for Spirit, which faces $1.1 billion in debt maturing next year. But a federal judge in Boston scuttled that plan by ruling Tuesday that JetBlue’s $3.8 billion proposal to buy Spirit violates antitrust law. But Frontier has its own challenges and is in no position to renew merger discussions with Spirit now, Baker said. Like Spirit, JetBlue has not had a profitable year since 2019, before the pandemic. Investors are also trying to gauge what the ruling against the JetBlue-Spirit deal means for Alaska Airlines' pending proposal to buy Hawaiian Airlines.
Persons: Airlines hasn’t, haven’t, William Young's, , Helane Becker, Cowen, , Jamie Baker wasn’t, ” Baker, Baker, Judge Young, Young, Robin Hayes –, Biden, hasn't, Michael Linenberg Organizations: Airlines, JetBlue, Justice Department, Bank of America, Pratt & Whitney, Airbus, Frontier Airlines, , Investors, Alaska Airlines, Hawaiian Airlines, Deutsche Bank, Spirit, American Airlines Locations: Boston, Miramar , Florida, Alaska
There have been some encouraging signs that business travel is rebounding to pre-Covid spending levels sooner than anticipated, according to the Global Business Travel Association . Business travel was essentially shut down during the Covid pandemic, with many predicting a slow slog to revive sales and a landscape that would be permanently changed. Now the organization is predicting global business travel spending will surpass its 2019 spending level of $1.4 trillion in 2024, compared with its earlier forecast of 2026. Some 28% of those who make the business travel decisions and 32% of those in charge of company travel budgets said their workplace will increase business travel in the coming year, Morning Consult found. Of course, the recovery in business travel can also shift if there are changes in the economic environment.
Persons: Lindsey Roeschke, Roeschke, That's, Michael Linenberg, Linenberg, Patrick Scholes, Scholes, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Global Business Travel Association . Business, Morning, Deutsche Bank, CNBC, American Airlines, Delta Air Lines, United Airlines, Ryman Hospitality Properties, Ole Opry, Hospitality, Hyatt Hotels Locations: Delta
A recent sell-off in airline stocks has created an attractive entry point — but investors should be careful about which names they buy, according to Deutsche Bank. Airline stocks have pulled back about 15% since peaking in mid-July, analyst Michael Linenberg told clients in a note released Monday. That comes as investors attempt to gauge how rising fuel prices, increases in domestic capacity and macro economic uncertainty will impact these companies. AAL DAL,UAL YTD mountain The three airlines this year Airline stocks, he said, are discounting a hard economic landing unlike the broader market. High fuel prices have also been a key driver of downward pressure on these stocks, he said.
Persons: Michael Linenberg, Linenberg, AAL DAL, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Deutsche Bank . Airline, NYSE Arca, nab, International, Sun Locations: Delta, United, China, Alaska, Allegiant, SkyWest
The analyst lowered his price target to $38 from $52, still implying 15% upside from Thursday's close. Raymond James also downgraded Southwest shares to outperform from strong buy, calling it a "Texas-size heartache." The firm reduced its price target to $40 from $47, implying a 21.1% rally. Bank of America decreased its price target on shares to $35 from $45, which implies just 6% upside from where shares ended Thursday. Southwest shares shed 0.6% Friday before the bell, following an almost 9% tumble during the previous trading session.
Persons: Michael Linenberg, Linenberg, Raymond James, Savanthi Syth, Syth, Andrew Didora, Didora, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Southwest Airlines, Deutsche Bank, Deutsche, Southwest, Bank of America Locations: Alaska, American, United, Southwest, Texas
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