U.S. airlines abandoned the practice of hedging against fuel costs long ​ago. With oil prices surging following U.S.-Israel strikes on Iran, they could be looking at a big bite out of their bottom line in the event ‌of a lengthy conflict that keeps prices elevated for months.

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Reuters Business

Reuters Business

 

US airlines no longer hedge fuel costs. That could hurt margins if Iran conflict lingers 

 

Slower US job growth expected in February; unemployment rate forecast steady at 4.3% 

 

Morning Bid: No quiet on the eastern front 

 

Maritime insurance premiums surge as Iran conflict widens 

 

Wall St futures slip as Middle East turmoil rages on; jobs data on deck 

 

Gulf sovereign wealth funds were built for a rainy day. This may be it.  

 

Gulf carriers resume limited flights, but missile fire fuels uncertainty 

 

Oil set for steepest weekly gain since 2020 as Middle East conflict spreads 

 

Asia struggles to find fuel oil as Middle East exports plummet, sources say 

 

Embraer forecasts increase in plane deliveries, revenue in 2026 

 

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