NERVOUS TRAVELLERS will break out in a cold sweat seeing pictures of a gaping hole in the fuselage of an Alaska Airlines Boeing 737 MAX 9, blown out at 15,000 feet (4,600 metres) after the plane had taken off over Oregon on January 5th. Nervous investors will have the same reaction to share prices of Boeing and Spirit AeroSystems, a firm spun off by the planemaker in 2005 which manufactured the fuselage and the failed part, a plug in the airframe where some larger MAX models have an emergency exit. The two companies’ market value plunged by 8% and 11%, respectively, following the incident.
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