Arab Times

Japan exports fall for 10th straight month

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SEATTLE, Oct 21, (RTRS): Boeing Co may have to book billions of dollars in additional charges related to its grounded 737 MAX jets, brokerages said on Monday, following reports that call into question the timing of the aircraft’s return to service.

Credit Suisse and UBS downgraded the stock after reports on Friday showed internal messages between two Boeing employees stating that the plane’s antistall system behaved erraticall­y during testing before the aircraft entered service.

The new revelation­s pose fresh challenges for Boeing, which is reeling under pressure after two fatal crashes forced the company to ground the planes and book billions of dollars in losses.

Boeing’s shares fell as much as 5.7% to $324.40 in early trading on Monday, making the stock the biggest percentage loser on the Dow Jones Industrial Average. They have lost 18% of their value since the second deadly crash of the popular single-aisle jet in March.

The planemaker has already cut production of the MAX, and analysts said there was an increasing possibilit­y that the company would have to halt production altogether.

“We see increasing risk that the Federal Aviation Administra­tion won’t follow through with a certificat­ion flight in November and lift the emergency grounding order in December,” UBS analyst Myles Walton said, downgradin­g the stock to “neutral” from “buy”.

Walton cut his target price on Boeing’s shares by $95 to $375, citing an increase in “likelihood of a pause on the 737 MAX production system” due to a delay in the jet’s return.

UBS also downgraded Boeing’s biggest supplier, Spirit AeroSystem­s, to “neutral” from “buy” and cut its target price on the stock to $88 from $92.

Boeing’s shares fell nearly 7% on Friday after Reuters first reported the news, which prompted a demand by US regulators for an immediate explanatio­n and a new call in Congress for the company to shake up its management.

The company on Sunday expressed regret over the messages, and said it was still investigat­ing what they meant.

Credit Suisse, which had stuck to its “outperform” rating since July 2017, downgraded the stock to “neutral” and cut its target price by $93 to $323, 6% below Boeing’s Friday closing price of $344.

 ?? (AP) ?? In this file photo, cars for export are parked at Kawasaki port, near of Tokyo. Japan has logged a third straight month of a trade deficit in September, according to the latest government data, as trade tensions between China and the US crimped exports. Japan’s Finance Ministry reported on Oct 21, the nation’s trade deficit in September
totaled 122.98 billion yen ($1.13 billion).
(AP) In this file photo, cars for export are parked at Kawasaki port, near of Tokyo. Japan has logged a third straight month of a trade deficit in September, according to the latest government data, as trade tensions between China and the US crimped exports. Japan’s Finance Ministry reported on Oct 21, the nation’s trade deficit in September totaled 122.98 billion yen ($1.13 billion).

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