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Strategies & Market Trends : The Financial Collapse of 2001 Unwinding -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Elroy Jetson who wrote (2138)3/20/2019 3:09:12 PM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 13775
 
That grand plan to recover the old glory will last max 10 years more



To: Elroy Jetson who wrote (2138)3/21/2019 12:35:57 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 13775
 
Huawei obstructing European carriers’ efforts to switch 5G suppliers, AT&T CEO says

AT&T Inc Chief Executive Randall Stephenson said Wednesday that China’s Huawei Technologies Co Ltd is making it very difficult for European carriers to drop the company from its supply chain for next-generation 5G wireless service.

DAVID SHEPARDSON
WASHINGTON
REUTERS
PUBLISHED MARCH 20, 2019UPDATED 6 HOURS AGO

AT&T Inc Chief Executive Randall Stephenson said Wednesday that China’s Huawei Technologies Co Ltd is making it very difficult for European carriers to drop the company from its supply chain for next-generation 5G wireless service.

“If you have deployed Huawei as your 4G network, Huawei is not allowing interoperability to 5G – meaning if you are 4G, you are stuck with Huawei for 5G,” said Stephenson at a speech in Washington. “When the Europeans say we got a problem – that’s their problem. They really don’t have an option to go to somebody else.”

The United States has been pressuring other countries to drop Huawei from their networks. Stephenson said the U.S. government could do a better job explaining the security risks of Huawei. “The biggest risk is not that the Chinese government might listen in on our conversations or mine our data if we use their equipment,” Stephenson said.

Within a decade, 5G will drive all U.S. factories, utilities, refineries, traffic management and help underpin autonomous vehicles. “If that much of infrastructure will be attached to this kind of technology do we want to be cautious about who is the underlying company behind that technology. We damn well better be,” Stephenson said.

Huawei did not respond to a request for comment Wednesday.

The United States warns that next-generation 5G equipment, which some telecoms experts see as more vulnerable to attack than previous technology, could be exploited by the Chinese government for spying if supplied by Huawei.

Huawei has grown rapidly to become the world’s biggest maker of telecoms equipment and is embedded in the mobile networks and 5G plans of many European operators. It denies that its technology represents a security risk.

In the United States, 5G networks will largely be built by Nordic equipment makers Ericsson and Nokia, and Strayer said there were safer alternatives to Huawei.

The United States has also alleged Huawei violated its sanctions on Iran and stole intellectual property. No evidence of spying has been presented publicly even as scrutiny on Huawei has intensified, and several Western countries have restricted the firm’s access to their markets.

Chancellor Angela Merkel said on Tuesday Germany was not planning to exclude any one company from its 5G auction per se, but rather wanted bidders in the mobile spectrum auction to meet certain requirements.



To: Elroy Jetson who wrote (2138)3/21/2019 6:46:11 AM
From: elmatador  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 13775
 
A Boeing 797 built with metal fuselage could favor Everett

The planemaker faces competition from cheaper derivative models of Airbus’s A321 and A330 airplanes.
(OK last year's article but show the plans of Boeign and Airbus for the medium sized planes.)
Thursday, July 19, 2018 8:11am
HERALD BUSINESS JOURNAL NORTHWEST AVIATION AND SPACE EVERETT
By Dominic Gates / The Seattle Times

FARNBOROUGH, England — Though industry analysts have long assumed Boeing’s next new jet would have an all-composite airframe like the 787, cost considerations may now favor a shift to building the 797 with a carbon composite wing and a metal fuselage.

Such a combination, similar to the forthcoming 777X jet built in Everett, would substantially increase the chances that Boeing will also build the 797 there.

“Boeing’s challenge is to make the plane affordable,” Steven Udvar-Hazy, executive chairman of Air Lease Corp. and a hugely influential figure in the aviation market, said in an interview Wednesday in London during the Farnborough Air Show.

The cost and complexity of composites manufacturing mean that may not be the way to go for building the plane’s fuselage, he said.

Boeing is still weighing all options, said Hazy, but “my gut feeling is that the new aluminum alloys available in the next decade may be a little more cost-effective.”

The jet’s composite wing is not in question. Because Boeing has honed the process of designing and manufacturing an exceptionally thin and aerodynamic wing out of composites, Hazy said he’s seen no discussion of anything but a composite wing.

Probably no outsider is as privy to Boeing’s thinking as Hazy. As he did on previous Boeing jet programs, he’s been closely advising the jetmaker about the performance capabilities and pricing required to make its New Mid-market Airplane (NMA), or 797, a sales success.

Boeing says it won’t decide on whether or not to launch this all-new jet until early next year. Publicly, it has said nothing definitive about the airplane’s design or the materials to be used.

For now, it’s struggling to come up with a business plan that can ensure the required multibillion-dollar investment will earn a return, as the 797 faces stiff competition from much-cheaper derivative models of Airbus’s A321 and A330 airplanes.

For that reason, said Michel Merluzeau, Bellevue-based aviation analyst with AirInsightResearch, “It’s a race to crush the costs.”

He said one cost-driven scenario is that Boeing will try to leverage the industrial approach and processes it has created in Everett to build the 777X.

Boeing built a huge new facility there to fabricate carbon composite wings, and in the main assembly plant it has installed a new highly automated wing assembly system. In addition, it’s developed a robotic system that transforms the way it assembles the 777’s metal fuselage.

For this reason, Merluzeau said, a metal fuselage and composite wing combination “definitely helps Everett’s case” as the location where the 797 will be manufactured and assembled.

In an interview in London, Merluzeau added that another company with specific expertise in designing and building metal fuselages and composite wings is Brazil’s Embraer.

Boeing has just announced a deal to buy an 80 percent stake in Embraer’s regional jets and to collaborate on its KC-390 military transport. The regional jetmaker’s commercial E-jets are mostly metal with carbon composite tails. The KC-390 has wings made from composites.

Merluzeau wonders whether the metal/composites combination could also create a 797 role for Embraer.

Intense competition emerges

If anything, the Farnborough Air Show this week has produced more skepticism about whether Boeing will be able to get the 797 costs in line with market necessities. Airbus has highlighted its ability to squeeze the 797 by selling its A321neo at the small end of Boeing’s target market and its A330neo at the large end.

Scott Hamilton, Bainbridge Island-based aviation analyst with Leeham.net, also at the Air Show this week, wrote Wednesday that “the buzz on the sidelines and interviews with key observers and industry participants is that Boeing’s business case for the airplane appears to be getting weaker, not stronger.”

Hamilton was first to report this week that Boeing is weighing the possibility of making the 797 fuselage from metal rather than composite, though he said he has no information on which option is now favored.

Hazy said Boeing’s task to design the 797 is very difficult because, as Airbus has made clear at Farnborough, it plans to offer airlines good alternatives that will cost much less.

The 797 is conceived as a two-airplane family seating 220 to 270 passengers and with a range of about 5,000 nautical miles. It’s intended to be a twin-aisle airplane sized between the current 737 narrowbody and the 787 widebody.

As such, the 797 will fly more passengers and fly further than the hot-selling Airbus A321neo narrowbody jet.

To close the gap, Airbus has already designed a longer range version of its jet, called the A321LR, simply by adding up to three auxiliary fuel tanks in the belly of the airplane.

That crude method means the plane has less room for cargo or luggage, but the range is increased to 4,000 nautical miles.

Could an XLR kill the 797?

At Farnborough, Airbus has begun to talk about another more refined and even longer-range version, the A321XLR, that it could launch as early as next year ­— if Boeing launches the 797.

Hazy said the A321XLR will dispense with the separate auxiliary fuel tanks and instead put the extra fuel into an expanded center wing tank that’s an integral part of the airframe. Airbus will make other tweaks and increase the maximum take-off weight, allowing it to carry an extra four tons of fuel and increasing the range to about 4,400 nautical miles, Hazy said.

Airbus has in the past talked about more drastic upgrades, such as stretching the fuselage by a couple of seat rows or even putting on a new wing. Hazy said those options would be much more costly — a new wing would add $2 billion —and are “not top of the list.”

He said the less costly XLR concept would give the A321 a range above that of Boeing’s now out-of-production 757, a plane many airlines are seeking to replace.

That would make the XLR “a true transatlantic airplane,” Hazy said, and “a much more formidable competitor to the 797.”

Over 45 years of leasing airplanes in every corner of the globe, Hazy has developed an intimate knowledge of what airlines will buy. As a lessor, he puts his money where the demand is and is a huge customer of both Airbus and Boeing.

On Tuesday at the Air Show, he announced a big order for 75 of Boeing’s 737 MAX 8s, bringing his running order tally to more than 200 MAXs. Hazy agrees with Boeing’s description that the MAX 8 is sized “at the heart of the market,” where demand is strongest.

But at the larger end of the MAX family, just below the 797 target market, Hazy’s purchases reveal his skewed view of where that piece of the market is going.

He’s bought 170 A321s, including 141 A321neos. “We already have several airlines flying them over the Atlantic,” he said. But he’s bought no 737 MAX 10s, Boeing’s largest single aisle jet.

“We see huge demand for the MAX. We love the airplane,” Hazy said. “But at the big end, above 200 seats, the market demand is for the A321.”

The A321XLR could tilt the balance further and bite deep into Boeing’s potential 797 market.



To: Elroy Jetson who wrote (2138)3/21/2019 12:35:27 PM
From: elmatador  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 13775
 
This is a shot across Ericsson's bow
Ex-Swedish ambassador to China denies breaching national security

Anna Lindstedt was recalled from Beijing in a case that has soured relations

Sweden’s former ambassador to China has denied breaching national security in the latest stage of a long-running spat between the two countries.

Anna Lindstedt, Sweden’s ambassador to Beijing until February, is under criminal investigation for breaches of national security, deputy chief public prosecutor Hans Ihrman told the Financial Times.

The investigation centres on claims by the daughter of Hong Kong bookseller Gui Minhai — a Swedish citizen detained in China — that the then ambassador organised an unauthorised meeting between her and two Chinese businessmen.

“My client has no other comment than she denies the crime and welcomes an investigation,” Conny Cedermark, Ms Lindstedt’s lawyer, told Swedish daily Dagens Nyheter.

The national security investigation is the latest twist in a rapidly deteriorating relationship between the Scandinavian country and China after Mr Gui vanished from his home in Thailand in 2015 amid a broader crackdown on sellers of books about Chinese leaders. Mr Gui has since been held in China and was detained again in 2018 while travelling on a train with Swedish diplomats. He is accused of killing a young woman in a traffic accident.

China’s embassy in Sweden has been unusually outspoken in its criticism both of local authorities, Swedish media outlets and journalists.

It lashed out last year at Swedish police for what it termed the “brutal abuse of Chinese tourists” after videos were published online showing officers carrying an old man out of a Stockholm hostel. The embassy also issued a warning to Chinese travellers to Sweden.

Gui Congyou, the Chinese ambassador in Stockholm, has escalated his criticism of the country’s journalists over their coverage of China in recent months, drawing a sharp rebuke this week from Reporters Without Borders (RSF).

“Diplomatic missions have no say in the editorial content of media in their host country,” said Erik Halkjaer, head of RSF in Sweden.

There are also tensions between the two countries over the treatment of Muslim Uighurs. A recent ruling from Sweden’s immigration authorities was publicised this week granting refugee status to “asylum seekers from China who are Muslim and Uighur” after previously rejecting a case that led to an international outcry.

The UN estimates China is holding 1m Muslim Uighurs in concentration camps in the western province of Xinjiang, allegations Beijing has fiercely rejected. China says the camps are vocational training schools.

The case against Ms Lindstedt stems from an article written in February by Angela Gui, Mr Gui’s daughter, that the former ambassador invited her to Stockholm in January to meet two Chinese businessmen who could help her father. Ms Gui called the meetings “a very strange experience”, as the businessmen allegedly hinted they could help have her father released if she complied with their demands to stop talking publicly about the case.

Sweden’s foreign ministry recalled Ms Lindstedt from Beijing shortly afterwards and said she had acted “incorrectly” as it had no knowledge of the meetings.

The Chinese embassy in Sweden said it had never authorised anyone to meet Ms Gui. The Swedish embassy in Beijing has declined assistance from other European diplomats in Beijing over Mr Gui’s case.

Chinese business has a number of ties with Sweden after Zhejiang Geely successfully revived Volvo Cars earlier this decade. But there have been signs of growing suspicion in Sweden in recent months, not least after Geely took a stake in truckmaker Volvo Group and a revelation of how state-controlled funds bought several Swedish technology companies.