2 Airline Stocks To Consider For 2022

 | Dec 29, 2021 02:13PM ET

While many key industries within the equity markets have learned to roll with the punches that the COVID-19 pandemic continues to deliver ad-hoc, it has to be said that airline stocks are still almost as vulnerable to changes in the pandemic’s trajectory as they were at the onset.

The recent rise of the Omicron variant has played havoc with their recovery progress, and the fact that it’s proving to be a much less severe strain of the virus than its predecessors matters little when it’s still resulting in huge numbers of airline flight crew members calling in sick.

More than 2,000 flights were canceled on Christmas Eve alone as staff shortages reached critical levels, showing just how susceptible the airline industry remains to future infection waves. But while the overall industry might struggle to be called a safe bet for the foreseeable future, let’s take a look at two of the more well-known names and see if there’s any potential upside to be had in light of the recalibrated risk profile.

h2 American Airlines /h2

American Airlines Group (NASDAQ:AAL) shares were among the quickest to bounce after the whole industry was decimated in the first quarter of last year, but the recovery ran out of steam this past summer. Shares are down 30% from their recovery high and in danger of cementing a dirty-looking downtrend as we head into 2022.

This is unfortunate for investors as their most recent earnings report showed that they weren’t all that far away from matching their pre-pandemic numbers. Revenue was up 183% year on year, an impressive number but a little empty considering it was almost nil in 2020 but still well ahead of analyst expectations. At the time, management was expecting their Q4 numbers to be back within 11-13% of the same quarter in 2019 and will surely be hoping that the disruption caused by Omicron won’t adversely affect that.

As CEO Doug Parker said with the results, the key to American getting back to consistent profitability lies in the successful rebound of their business travel segment, as well as their international traffic numbers. Based on stock performance, Wall Street is backing them to be among the first to get there. Of the three majors covered in this article, American is the only one that’s come close to beating the S&P 500 for the year. It relinquished the lead late last month but is within a few percent of retaking it.