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"Alleged bomb plot in U.K. sends airline stocks down"


 
Thursday, August 10, 2006

Alleged bomb plot in U.K. sends airline stocks down
Canada - CBC News


Airline stocks fell sharply on world markets Thursday morning after the
revelation of an alleged passenger jet bomb plot in the U.K. sent shock
waves through the travel industry.

Shares of American Airlines parent AMR Corp. fell nearly 13 per cent in
early trading on European exchanges, while the parents of United Airlines
and British Airways fell more than four per cent.

But many of the world's markets recovered later in the day after the initial
panic wore off. The price of oil continued to slide, taking the Toronto
Stock Exchange with it, but Wall Street recovered on hopes that oil prices
will keep going down.

"I think the market is starting to get used to these kinds of news events,"
Ian Filderman of Scotiabank Wealth Management told Canadian Press. "We're
not seeing the kind of negative impact on equities that we saw, certainly
after 9/11 and some of the other subsequent events to that as well."

The impact of the U.K. news affected a host of airlines and travel companies
that were not involved in the alleged plot, as investors feared the terror
campaign would affect tourism in the midst of the summer vacation period.

Security officials said the alleged bomb plot targeted three American
airlines - United, American and Continental. But the security crackdown that
followed the announcement of the plot caused chaos at airports around the
world.

Air Canada's parent, Ace Aviation Holdings, fell sharply before rising later
in the day to $26.86, up 82 cents. WestJet fell 12 cents to $9.84 by late
afternoon and airplane maker Bombardier Inc. recovered to $3.17, flat on the
day.

Boeing, Air France-KLM, Lufthansa and the discount airlines easyJet and
Ryanair were all swept up by the wave of selling.

Oil prices also fell, by $2.30 a barrel to $74.05 US, on the New York
Mercantile Exchange on fears of a coming slump in travel, while investors
surmised that a ban on hand luggage would affect impulse buying at duty-free
shops at the world's major airports.

Losses were severe in Toronto, where a sharp decline in the energy sector
helped take the S&P/TSX composite points 53.32 points lower to 11,954.83 by
early afternoon. The TSX Venture Exchange dipped 18.03 points to 2,631.14.

The Canadian dollar tumbled by half a cent to 88.73 cents US despite good
news on the trade front. Statistics Canada reported earlier in the day that
the merchandise trade surplus rose in June for the second consecutive month.

Wall Street also tumbled after the alleged bomb plot was announced, but
recovered later in the day on news that oil prices had fallen. In New York,
the Dow Jones industrial index rose 62.67 points to 11,138.85. The Nasdaq
rose 15.61 points to 2,075.89, while the S&P 500 index rose 4.97 points to
1,270.92.

Stocks tumble on alleged plot news

The news sent European stocks down across the board in mid-day trading, with
the FTSE 100 share index in London down 55.8 points to 5,804.7, Frankfurt's
DAX 30 lost 96.26 points to 5,606.55, while the Paris CAC 40 declined 60.67
points to 4,964.48.

Japan's benchmark Nikkei 225 index fell 25.68 points, or 0.16 per cent, to
finish at 15,630.91 points on the Tokyo Stock Exchange.

In Hong Kong, stocks fell as traders held off moves ahead of more corporate
earnings announcements. The blue-chip Hang Seng Index fell 124.44 points, or
0.72 per cent, to 17,222.14.

Attached Photo:

Passengers wait to check in for their flights outside Terminal 4 at Heathrow
Airport in London on Thursday.

heathrow-pass-outside_cp_10529499.jpg


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