The global aviation sector is reeling from its most severe financial shock in years. As of March 23, 2026, the world’s 20 largest publicly listed airlines have collectively lost approximately $53 billion in market capitalization since the outbreak of the U.S.-Israel-Iran conflict on February 28.
Industry leaders, including IATA Director General Willie Walsh, have compared the current supply-side disruption to the post-9/11 era, while easyJet CEO Kenton Jarvis described the situation as the “severest upheaval” since the COVID-19 pandemic grounded global travel in 2020.
1. The Fuel Firestorm
The primary engine of the crisis is the unprecedented spike in jet fuel costs.
- Price Doubling: Jet fuel prices have surged from $85–$90 per barrel to $150–$200 per barrel in just three weeks.
- The “Hormuz” Effect: With the Strait of Hormuz effectively impassable for U.S. and Israeli-linked vessels (and 70-80% of total tanker traffic collapsed), refinery outputs have tightened globally.
- Scarcity Premium: In some regions, fuel “crack spreads” have widened significantly due to high military demand for refined products, making commercial jet fuel even scarcer.
2. Airspace “Blackout” & Rerouting Costs
The conflict has effectively closed the “Middle East Gateway,” forcing a total redesign of international flight maps.
| Operational Impact | Details (March 2026) |
| Cancellations | Over 45,000 flights to/from the Middle East have been cancelled since Feb 28. |
| Detour Costs | Long-haul rerouting (e.g., Tokyo to London) adds 15–20% in fuel burn, costing an extra $20,000 to $60,000 per flight. |
| Hub Closures | Major hubs like Dubai (DXB), Abu Dhabi (AUH), and Doha (DOH) have faced temporary shutdowns or 80%+ schedule cuts. |
| Insurance | War-risk premiums for widebody aircraft have jumped by up to $109,000 per flight in high-risk zones. |
3. Impact on Major Carriers
While the crisis is global, it is hitting carriers with high Middle East exposure the hardest.
- Low-Cost Under Pressure: Wizz Air has become the “most shorted” company on the FTSE 100 after flagging a $58 million hit to its profits.
- Asian Carriers: Airlines like Korean Air (-8.6%) and Air New Zealand (-7.8%) saw sharp stock declines as they struggle with longer polar routes to avoid Iranian-adjacent airspace.
- Indian Carriers: The DGCA has advised Indian airlines to avoid nine specific airspaces. Combined with the loss of Gulf traffic, Indian carriers are facing a “dual-front” crisis of high costs and cancelled high-margin routes.
4. The “Fare Surge” for Passengers
Airlines are moving aggressively to pass these costs to consumers to protect their 3.9% net margins.
- Fuel Surcharges: Cathay Pacific and Air France-KLM have introduced surcharges ranging from $18 to $150 per segment.
- Price Hikes: International airfares on some Asia-Europe routes are reportedly 7x higher than they were a month ago as capacity shrinks.
- Domestic India: The Indian government officially lifted airfare caps on domestic flights starting today (March 23) to allow airlines to adjust to the 2x fuel spike.
Outlook: The “48-Hour” Pivot
The industry is currently holding its breath as President Trump’s 48-hour ultimatum to Iran nears its expiration.
- Scenario A (De-escalation): Analysts believe airline stocks could recover “overnight” if a ceasefire is announced.
- Scenario B (Escalation): If the U.S. strikes Iran’s power grid, IATA warns of a “structural financial crisis” that could force the grounding of thousands of aircraft globally due to a total collapse in energy security.


