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Raymond James makes surprising call on Delta Air Lines

Sometimes a stock does so well that Wall Street starts worrying about its price. That is roughly where Delta Air Lines (DAL) finds itself this week. Financial research firm Raymond James still likes the business, but it thinks the near-term gains have already been made after ...

Raymond James makes surprising call on Delta Air Lines

Published July 8, 2026 · Category: Markets

Overview

Sometimes a stock does so well that Wall Street starts worrying about its price.

That is roughly where Delta Air Lines (DAL) finds itself this week.

Financial research firm Raymond James still likes the business, but it thinks the near-term gains have already been made after a significant pump in the shares. 

As a result, it cut its rating a few days before Delta reports second-quarter earnings.

For Delta shareholders and anyone tempted to buy the dip, this move is worth considering. 

Raymond James is flashing both caution and optimism, and investors need to understand why before making a decision.

Why Raymond James downgraded Delta Air Lines stock right before earnings

Raymond James lowered Delta to outperform from strong buy on Monday, July 7, while raising its price target to $104 from $80, Investing.com reported.

The two moves look contradictory until you separate the company from the stock price.

Analyst Savanthi Syth still calls Delta a top pick for long-term investors. 

She pointed to structural advantages over rival network carriers, a strong balance sheet, and steady capital returns, TipRanks noted. 

What changed was the entry point.

Delta shares have climbed hard in 2026, and Syth flagged the recent run-up as the main reason for the change.

She also mentioned the narrower gap between the current price and where she thinks it can go next.

A Delta Air Lines jet on the tarmac ahead of the airline's second-quarter earnings report

Michael Derrer Fuchs / Getty Images

What the higher $104 price target says about Delta's value

Raising a target while cutting a rating is Raymond James saying Delta can still climb, just not as steeply from here. 

According to 24/7 Wall St, the new$104 target replaces the old $80 figure.

Details

A rating measures how much room is left. A price target measures where the stock could land. Both can move at once.

Raymond James points to a few things holding Delta up:

  • A strong balance sheet and steady debt reduction
  • A recent 15% dividend increase that rewards shareholders
  • A renewed push into its third-party aircraft maintenance business

Delta declared a quarterly dividend of about 21.5 cents per share, roughly 15% above earlier levels, the company shared.

How jet fuel and airfare trends shape Delta's outlook

Delta does not fly in a vacuum, and two industry forces decide this call.

Raymond James reduced its jet fuel forecast for the second through fourth quarters, which lowers a major cost for every carrier. 

Related: Delta Air Lines cuts two flights forever, refunds available

At the same time, demand and pricing across U.S. airlines have stayed firm, GuruFocus noted.

Fares back that up. In May, airfares rose 26.7% compared to the previous year, while jet fuel has fallen about 35% from its April highs, The Business Times reported.

Cheaper fueland higher fares at the sametime is a setup airlines rarely get. It helps explain why targets across the group have been rising.

How Delta Air Lines stock stacks up against its airline peers

Delta is not the only carrier drawing fresh attention before earnings.

Bank of America recently placed Delta and United in what it called a rare sweet spot, lifting Delta's target to $100 and United's to $150.

More Airline Stocks:

Meanwhile, Morgan Stanley raised American Airlines to $24 while flagging a slower turnaround.

The pattern is consistent. Analysts like the sector, but they are getting choosier about which names still have obvious room for growth left after a strong first half.

What Delta investors should watch at second-quarter earnings

According to TipRanks, Delta reports its June-quarter results on the morning of July 10. That report will test whether the recent rally was justified.

A few things still need to line up before the bulls are proven right:

  • Premium cabin and corporate demand hold through peak summer travel.
  • Management raises or protects its full-year profit guidance.
  • Fuel costs stay near the lower end of forecasts.

If those hold, the higher targets across Wall Street look reasonable. 

If demand softens or capacity grows too fast, the near-term caution Raymond James flagged could prove correct.

For long-term holders, the downgrade is closer to a small warning than a stop sign. 

For newer buyers, it is a reminder that price matters as much as the story, and that chasing a stock after a big run rarely offers the same margin of safety.

Related: Southwest Airlines leaves rivals flat-footed as bankrupt carrier folds

Source

Originally published at www.thestreet.com.

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