Mexico · Business
Key Facts
—Record premium shift A record 43% of passenger revenue came from premium cabins in Q2 2026, showing a successful upmarket strategy that supports higher, more stable yields for investors.
—Disciplined capacity control Capacity grew only 1.9% year over year, allowing the airline to protect pricing power and avoid flooding the market with empty seats during a demand dip.
—Strong liquidity position The airline ended Q2 with about US$1.2 billion in liquidity and no cash burn, a crucial buffer for investors against fuel volatility and macroeconomic shocks.
—Fuel cost recovery strategy Aeromexico recaptured 76% of higher fuel costs through fares in Q2 and expects to fully recover the overrun in the second half of 2026, limiting margin erosion.
—Post-restructuring efficiency A leaner cost base and a more efficient fleet after Chapter 11 restructuring have structurally boosted profitability, with 2023 operating income nearly five times 2019 levels.
Aeromexico posted record revenue despite lower-than-expected World Cup travel in the second quarter of 2026, as surging premium demand and disciplined pricing more than offset a sharp June dip in domestic passenger traffic linked to the FIFA tournament.
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The World Cup shortfall in June
Aeromexico carried 1.851 million passengers in June 2026, a 9% decline from the 2.033 million recorded in June 2025. Domestic traffic tumbled 13% year over year, while international passenger numbers slipped 1.4%.
The airline attributed the drop directly to shifts in travel patterns caused by the 2026 FIFA World Cup, noting weaker corporate and leisure demand during Mexico’s national team matches.
CEO Andrés Conesa Labastida estimated the domestic revenue loss from the tournament at about MX$24 million (approximately US$1.4 million) in June, excluding positive charter flight effects. Despite the passenger decline and a load factor that fell roughly three percentage points to 82.7%, the company still reported its best June revenue in history, a feat Conesa described as ‘consistent with Q2 expectations.’
Premium demand and pricing drove the record
The record second-quarter revenue of US$1.5 billion—a 12.6% year-over-year increase—was built on a structural shift toward higher-yield passengers. Premium cabin ticket sales reached 43% of passenger revenue, a record high for the airline.
Traffic measured in passenger demand grew 10.5% overall in the quarter, and management highlighted that Q2 included the two best sales weeks in the company’s history.
Aeromexico also benefited from a booming loyalty program. A record 39% of passengers were Aeromexico Rewards members in the quarter, up seven percentage points from a year earlier.
The launch of a new Inbursa co-branded credit card further deepened engagement and added ancillary revenue. These commercial levers, combined with a disciplined capacity increase of just 1.9% in available seat miles, allowed the airline to recapture about 76% of a steep fuel-cost increase through stronger pricing.
Navigating a fuel-cost storm
The main pressure on profitability was a surge in fuel expenses, which rose 79.9% year over year to US$493.8 million in Q2. Total operating costs climbed roughly 30%, pushing the company to a net loss of US$57.7 million for the quarter, compared with a US$68 million profit a year earlier.
Operating income came in at US$68 million, translating to an operating margin between 4.6% and 5%.
CFO Ricardo Sánchez Baker told investors that the airline expects to recover more than 100% of the Q2 fuel cost overrun during the second half of 2026. Because many future tickets were sold after fuel prices had already risen, the company could price them at higher levels from the start.
Management projected higher EBITDA and EBIT in both the third and fourth quarters compared with the same periods in 2025.
A post-restructuring powerhouse
Since completing its Chapter 11 restructuring in the United States, Grupo Aeromexico has operated with a structurally lower cost base and a fleet of larger, more efficient aircraft. The turnaround is stark: 2023 full-year revenue of US$4.916 billion was 37.6% higher than in 2019, while operating income reached US$715.8 million, a 379.4% increase over pre-pandemic levels.
The airline is investing roughly US$5 billion over five years to expand and modernize its fleet.
Aeromexico ended Q2 2026 with strong liquidity of about US$1.2 billion and no cash burn, while reducing financial debt by roughly US$70 million during the quarter. This fortress balance sheet gives the company room to navigate the ongoing restriction on U.S. route expansion from Mexico City, which caps growth in some high-yield North American markets, and to capitalize on surging demand from Europe and South America.
Why this matters for expats and investors
For expatriates and frequent business travelers in Latin America, Aeromexico’s shift toward premium cabins and international routes means improved service quality and more connectivity to Europe, Asia, and South America. The airline’s record loyalty program participation suggests a stickier customer base, which typically leads to more consistent flight schedules and better redemption options for rewards members.
Investors are watching a carrier that has transformed from a restructuring case into a growth story. Full-year 2026 revenue guidance of US$6.05 to US$6.12 billion implies roughly 13–14% top-line growth over 2025. With operating margins guided to 11–13% and a clear strategy to pass through fuel costs, Aeromexico is signaling that the June World Cup turbulence was a footnote, not a trend. Management reported a strong traffic recovery already underway for July, with very solid bookings for August and September 2026.
The road ahead through 2026
Aeromexico plans to accelerate capacity growth to a higher single-digit pace in the fourth quarter, with ASMs set to rise between 6.5% and 8% year over year. Q4 revenue is expected to jump 14.5% to 16.5%, with adjusted EBITDA margins projected in the 15.5% to 18.5% range.
New aircraft deliveries previously timed for the World Cup ramp are now being absorbed into a network that management says has ample pricing power.
The airline’s third-quarter guidance calls for revenue between US$1.59 and US$1.62 billion and a mid-teens operating margin. While high fuel prices and the temporary June disruption remain near-term risks, the combination of a loyal premium customer base, disciplined capacity, and a post-restructuring cost structure positions Aeromexico to deliver what Conesa described as ‘healthy demand for the rest of 2026.’
Frequently Asked Questions
Why did Aeromexico’s passenger traffic fall in June 2026?
Passenger traffic fell 9% year over year in June 2026, mainly because of a 13% drop in domestic travel. The company linked the decline to the 2026 FIFA World Cup, as corporate and leisure demand weakened during Mexico’s national team matches.
The CEO estimated the tournament reduced domestic revenue by about US$24 million for the month.
How did Aeromexico still achieve record revenue?
Despite the June traffic dip, second-quarter revenue rose 12.6% to a record US$1.5 billion. The result was driven by a record-high premium cabin revenue mix of 43%, strong international demand, a growing loyalty program with an Inbursa co-branded credit card, and disciplined capacity control with ASMs up only 1.9%.
What is Aeromexico’s financial outlook for the rest of 2026?
The airline guided for full-year 2026 revenue of US$6.05 to US$6.12 billion, about 13–14% growth over 2025. Management expects a strong demand recovery after the World Cup, with higher EBITDA and operating profit in both Q3 and Q4, and full-year operating margins of 11% to 13%.
Sources: Aeromexico Reports Unaudited Second Quarter 2026 Results, Aeromexico Traffic Falls 9% in June Amid World Cup Impact, Grupo Aeromexico Q2 Earnings Call Highlights, Aeromexico Absorbe Golpe de 24 MDD por el Mundial y Avanza 2% en NYSE, Aeromexico 1Q26 Results, Aeromexico Concludes Restructuring Process
View original source — Rio Times ↗



