AerCap Leased, Purchased and Sold 286 Assets in the First Quarter 2026

AerCap Holdings N.V. ("AerCap") (NYSE: AER) has announced its major business transactions during the first quarter 2026: Signed 202 lease agreements, including 22 widebody aircraft, 59 narrowbody aircraft, 102 engines and 19 helicopters. Completed 32 purchases for 10 aircraft (including 3 Airbus A320neo Family aircraft, 5 Boeing 737 MAX aircraft, 1 Boeing 787-9 and 1 Embraer E195-E2 for AerCap's owned aircraft portfolio), 20 engines for AerCap's owned engine portfolio and 2 helicopters. Completed 52 sale transactions for 47 aircraft (including 14 Airbus A320 Family aircraft, 12 Airbus A320neo Family aircraft, 3 Airbus A330s, 1 Airbus A350, 1 Boeing 737NG, 3 Boeing 737 MAX aircraft, 1 Boeing 787-8, 1 Boeing 767-300ER, 1 Boeing 777-300ER and 1 Embraer E195-E2 from AerCap's owned aircraft portfolio and 9 aircraft from AerCap's managed aircraft portfolio), 4 engines (including 2 engines from AerCap's owned engine portfolio and 2 engines from AerCap's managed engine portfolio) and 1 helicopter. Signed financing transactions for approximately $3 billion. Repurchased approximately 5.4 million shares, at an average price of $139.06 per share, for a total of approximately $745 million. Declared quarterly cash dividend on ordinary shares of $0.40 per share.... Read more

AER

Latest Price: $ 139.18

Dividend Yield (TTM): 0.68%

  • 2025-05-14: $ 0.27
  • 2025-08-13: $ 0.27
  • 2026-02-25: $ 0.40
Source: Yahoo Finance. Stock prices and dividends can be delayed, cached or incomplete.
Older articles featuring AER:
Aircastle: 7% Dividend Yielder Flying High But Trading In The Basement
Fly Leasing: The Case For Sustainable Dividends
This Undervalued High Dividend Stock Has Triple-Digit Income Growth And Yields Over 6%
A High Dividend Stock Yielding 7%-Plus, Going Ex-Dividend This Week Vs. A Faster-Growing 4% Yielder
Fly Leasing: A Growing Company With Soaring Dividends
Aircastle Limited: Significantly Undervalued At 6x Earnings, Sports A 6.0% Dividend Yield
Revisiting Yield Products