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Controladora Vuela Compañía de Aviación, S.A.B. de C.V. (VOLARA.MX)

Mexico - Mexico Delayed Price. Currency in MXN
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11.55-0.54 (-4.47%)
At close: 01:59PM CST
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Previous Close12.09
Open0.00
Bid11.52 x 822900
Ask11.60 x 30000
Day's Range0.00 - 0.00
52 Week Range
Volume0
Avg. Volume3,100,189
Market Cap13.299B
Beta (5Y Monthly)1.88
PE Ratio (TTM)6.42
EPS (TTM)1.80
Earnings DateJul 22, 2024 - Jul 26, 2024
Forward Dividend & YieldN/A (N/A)
Ex-Dividend DateN/A
1y Target Est20.99
  • GlobeNewswire

    Volaris Reports May 2024 Traffic Results: 86% Load Factor

    MEXICO CITY, June 06, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Controladora Vuela Compañía de Aviación, S.A.B. de C.V. (NYSE: VLRS and BMV: VOLAR) (“Volaris” or “the Company”), the ultra-low-cost carrier (ULCC) serving Mexico, the United States, Central, and South America, reports its May 2024 preliminary traffic results. In May 2024, Volaris' ASM capacity decreased by 17.5% year-over-year due to the accelerated Pratt & Whitney engine inspections and the resulting aircraft groundings. However, load factor incre

  • Reuters

    UPDATE 2-US fines Volaris up to $300,000 for violating tarmac delay rules

    The U.S. Transportation Department said on Wednesday it will fine Mexican carrier Volaris Airlines up to $300,000 for airport tarmac delays that violate federal law. Federal law and government regulations prohibit tarmac delays of four hours or more on international flights without providing passengers an opportunity to deplane. The department said that in 2021 in Houston, a Volaris flight remained on the tarmac for a lengthy period without allowing passengers to deplane.

  • Reuters

    US fines Volaris up to $300,000 for violating tarmac delay rules

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The U.S. Transportation Department said on Wednesday it will fine Mexican carrier Volaris Airlines up to $300,000 for airport tarmac delays that violate federal law. Federal law and government regulations prohibit tarmac delays of four hours or more on international flights without providing passengers an opportunity to deplane. The department said that in 2021 in Houston, a Volaris flight remained on the tarmac for a lengthy period without allowing passengers to deplane.