What happened Spirit Airlines has failed, and the proximate cause is a fuel bill the carrier simply couldn't absorb. [WTI](/metrics/dcoilwtico) closed Friday at $101.94 and [Brent](/metrics/dcoilbrenteu) at $108.17, both reflecting a sustained geopolitical risk premium tied to U.S.-Iran hostilities and the Hormuz constraint that has dominated energy markets [for](/metrics/fodsp) weeks. Spirit's ultra-low-cost model runs on razor-thin unit economics: fuel typically represents 25-30% of an ULCC's operating costs, and at $100-plus crude that ratio blows through any hedging program a sub-investment-grade carrier could afford. Spirit entered this crisis already carrying a junk-rated [balance sheet](/glossary/balance-sheet), having narrowly avoided a prior restructuring; the combination of elevated debt service and a doubling of effective fuel costs since the geopolitical escalation began was not survivable. No major airline has announced emergency capacity cuts yet, but Spirit's exit removes roughly 5% of U.S. domestic seat capacity, which is a perverse short-term positive [for](/metrics/fodsp) legacy carriers' [yield](/glossary/dividend-yield) management. American, United, and [Delta](/glossary/delta) all trade at materially better credit quality and carry more sophisticated hedging books, so the contagion read is selective rather than systemic. The [CRAI](/indicators/crai) sits at 75, a reading that implies broad [risk appetite](/glossary/risk-on-risk-off) remains elevated despite the [oil](/metrics/wti) shock, which means equity markets haven't yet priced the sector-level stress that Spirit's collapse makes concrete. [HY OAS](/glossary/hy-spreads) at 2.83 [basis points](/glossary/basis-points) as of Friday's close is historically tight, and a wave of airline-adjacent credit deterioration would be the kind of idiosyncratic pressure that starts moving that number. Spirit's failure is less a surprise than a confirmation: when a structurally fragile carrier meets a sustained commodity shock, the outcome is arithmetic, not bad luck.
What our data says The [NVI](/indicators/nvi) ([Narrative Velocity Index](/metrics/convex_nvi)) reads 87.4, near the top of its range, reflecting the speed at which Iran-related energy disruption has consumed market attention. [WTI](/metrics/dcoilwtico) at $101.94 sits squarely inside the "Energy supply shock" risk scenario flagged at 20% probability, which maps to [oil](/metrics/wti) +30-50% and equities -15-25% if the [move](/metrics/move-index) extends. [HY OAS](/metrics/bamlh0a0hym2) at 2.83 remains historically compressed, but the credit-equity [divergence](/glossary/divergence) ([HYG](/metrics/hyg) -5.9% vs [SPY](/metrics/spy) on a 20-day [basis](/glossary/net-futures-basis), z-score -1.6) already pointed toward stress that Spirit's collapse now makes visible in a specific sector.
What this means Spirit's exit is a [stress test](/glossary/stress-test) result, not an isolated corporate failure. ULCC carriers are the canary in the aviation coal mine precisely because they carry no buffer: no premium cabin revenue, no cargo, no loyalty program cash flow. If WTI holds above $100 through summer, the next tier of marginal carriers faces the same arithmetic. More broadly, this is the transmission mechanism the macro thesis has been waiting for: elevated energy costs compressing margins in leveraged, consumer-facing industries, which then feeds into credit deterioration and eventually equity repricing.
Positioning implications Watch [HY OAS](/glossary/hy-spreads) for a [move](/metrics/move-index) above 3.20; that level would confirm credit stress is spreading beyond idiosyncratic names and would validate the bearish equity thesis with a tighter timeline. Legacy carrier stocks (AAL, UAL, DAL) face a split verdict: capacity relief is real, but fuel cost exposure is also real, and the net depends entirely on whether hedging programs extend into Q3. The energy supply shock scenario at 20% probability deserves an upward revision given Spirit's collapse as confirming evidence; if WTI breaks $110, the scenario-weighted equity outlook deteriorates materially from current levels.
Explore these indicators together: Chart WTI Crude Oil (FRED Daily), Brent Crude Oil (FRED Daily), and 3 more on the Indicators Dashboard