Chinese airlines eye expansion and US allows more flights in
A little air update from China. Suparna Airlines, formerly Yangtze River Airlines, is to retire ...
PLD: REBOUND MATTERSAMZN: MULTI-BILLION LONG-TERM MEXICO INVESTMENTDSV: WEAKENING TO TWO-MONTH LOWSKNIN: ANOTHER LOW PG: STABLE YIELDAAPL: GAUGING EXPECTATIONSXOM: GO GREEN NOWKNIN: BOUNCING OFF NEW LOWS HON: BREAK-UP PRESSURECHRW: UPGRADESZIM: LAGGARDFWRD: LEADINGMAERSK: OPPORTUNISTIC UPGRADETSLA: GETTING OUTDSV: DOWN BELOW KEY LEVELLINE: DOWN TO ALL-TIME LOWS
PLD: REBOUND MATTERSAMZN: MULTI-BILLION LONG-TERM MEXICO INVESTMENTDSV: WEAKENING TO TWO-MONTH LOWSKNIN: ANOTHER LOW PG: STABLE YIELDAAPL: GAUGING EXPECTATIONSXOM: GO GREEN NOWKNIN: BOUNCING OFF NEW LOWS HON: BREAK-UP PRESSURECHRW: UPGRADESZIM: LAGGARDFWRD: LEADINGMAERSK: OPPORTUNISTIC UPGRADETSLA: GETTING OUTDSV: DOWN BELOW KEY LEVELLINE: DOWN TO ALL-TIME LOWS
China Eastern Air Holding Company has sold a 45% stake in its Eastern Air Logistics (EAL) division to four private investors in an attempt to build China’s own FedEx, UPS, or DHL. According to the South China Morning Post, Legend Holdings, owner of Lenovo, will take 25%, Greenland Financial will own 10%, while two private logistics firms – Global Logistic Properties’ China branch and Deppon Logistics – will take a 5% stake each. The move marks a progression of the Chinese government’s plans to reform state-owned enterprises by bringing in private investors.
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