Lufthansa is getting hit from two sides this week — a Morgan Stanley downgrade and the threat of jet fuel running short. The German carrier has been one of the more exposed European airlines to the current turbulence in energy markets, and the numbers are starting to reflect that.
Deutsche Lufthansa AG, LHA.DE
CEO Carsten Spohr has directed internal teams to draw up contingency plans at different levels of disruption. The most concrete action on the table: grounding up to 40 aircraft, around 5% of the fleet. Management appears to be prioritizing cost control rather than waiting to see demand deteriorate first.
The root of the problem is the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz, a critical chokepoint for global jet fuel shipments. Refiners in Asia have already started cutting production in response, and Europe is particularly exposed — roughly half of EU and UK jet fuel comes from Persian Gulf imports.
The supply squeeze isn’t just about price. Potential scarcity adds a layer of uncertainty that’s hard to hedge around, especially for an airline that’s already at a disadvantage on fuel hedging relative to its peers.
Morgan Stanley moved Lufthansa to “equal-weight” from “overweight” on Wednesday, citing weaker earnings expectations and less favorable fuel hedging than competitors like IAG and Air France-KLM.
The broker cut its 2026 EBITDA estimate for Lufthansa by 17% — a steeper reduction than the 6% cut for IAG or 10% for Air France-KLM. That gap is largely down to hedging. Morgan Stanley said Lufthansa’s fuel hedging “remains less attractive vs. peers.”
In dollar terms, the bank estimates a €1.6bn fuel cost impact for the year, contributing to an ~€800m reduction in FY26 EBITDA versus prior forecasts.
Capacity growth guidance was also trimmed, from 4% down to 2.5%, with load factors expected to fall around 2% year-on-year from Q3 2026.
On the revenue side, Morgan Stanley does expect Lufthansa to push through higher fares. Passenger yields are projected to rise +7% in Q2, +11% in Q3, and +11% in Q4 of 2026.
But those gains won’t be enough to fully absorb the fuel hit. Flag carriers generally have more pricing power than low-cost rivals, but Lufthansa still comes out worse than its European peers on the fuel cost equation.
Interestingly, Morgan Stanley flagged that Lufthansa’s year-to-date decline of around 9% is actually smaller than the ~16% drop seen at IAG and Air France-KLM, calling that gap “a disconnect we view as unjustified.”
The stock had rallied as much as 8.1% in early Frankfurt trading on Tuesday after the contingency plan news broke — having fallen around 16% year-to-date at that point. Despite the bounce, the downgrade and fuel outlook have kept pressure on the stock.
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