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Home » Lufthansa Shares Face Headwinds Amid Operational Challenges
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Lufthansa Shares Face Headwinds Amid Operational Challenges

Sarah MitchellBy Sarah MitchellMarch 20, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
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While carrying the momentum of a record financial year, Lufthansa Group finds its core operations under significant pressure as it navigates the spring of 2026. A confluence of labor disputes, geopolitical tensions, and staffing issues at subsidiary Swiss are weighing on day-to-day functions, with the strain reflected in the company’s share price performance.

A Multifaceted Operational Squeeze

The group’s immediate difficulties are threefold. Geopolitical instability has led to a suspension of services to key Middle Eastern destinations. Flights to Tel Aviv, Beirut, Amman, Tehran, and Riyadh are currently grounded due to regional tensions. Connections to Dubai have also been temporarily removed from the network, with suspensions in place until March 28. The region presents a further risk factor in the form of potential jet fuel cost volatility.

Simultaneously, labor action is causing disruption closer to home. A warning strike called by the ver.di union recently brought Berlin’s BER airport to a standstill mid-week, leading to the cancellation of 445 take-offs and landings and stranding approximately 57,000 passengers. The next round of negotiations is scheduled for March 25, with no resolution yet in sight.

Adding to the complexity, the Swiss subsidiary is implementing schedule reductions for the upcoming summer season. It will cut 326 flights, equating to roughly 0.4% of its planned capacity. This move is prompted by a shortage of cockpit personnel for Airbus aircraft models and technical problems affecting eleven planes. In a parallel effort to manage surplus cabin crew, Swiss is offering voluntary departure packages with premiums of up to 15,000 Swiss Francs.

Strong Financials Overshadowed by Current Pressures

These operational headwinds arrive despite Lufthansa reporting remarkably robust results for the 2025 fiscal year. The group achieved revenue of €39.6 billion, marking a 5% increase. Its operating profit reached approximately €2 billion, representing a gain of about 20%. Notably, even the core Lufthansa Airlines brand returned to profitability, posting an Adjusted EBIT margin of 0.9%.

This strong financial backdrop, however, is providing little support to the equity in the near term. Since the start of the year, Lufthansa shares have shed nearly 11% of their value. Trading around €9.50, the stock price sits roughly 20% below its 52-week high. Reflecting the ongoing uncertainty, Deutsche Bank Research has lowered its price target on the shares. The bank maintained its “Hold” recommendation, citing persistent risks from the Middle East conflict and the potential for rising fuel costs.

With the next labor negotiation round on March 25 and Dubai routes suspended until March 28, operational conditions are likely to remain challenging in the short term. The pace of any improvement is largely contingent on when stability returns to the Middle East region.

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Sarah Mitchell
Sarah Mitchell

Sarah Mitchell is a markets writer at Primary Ignition, covering equities across the sectors that move on hard catalysts, defense and aerospace, industrials, automotive, and the energy and technology names increasingly tied to them. Her work focuses on connecting macro shifts to individual stocks: how NATO procurement budgets feed European defense order books, why a Fed rate hold reshapes auto financing, or how a pre-revenue nuclear company like Oklo ends up carrying an $11 billion valuation. She has a particular interest in the overlap between heavy industry and emerging technology, quantum computing, AI infrastructure, and next-generation defense systems, and writes with an emphasis on the numbers behind the narrative rather than the headline itself. Sarah's coverage spans earnings, dividends, IPOs, and market commentary.

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