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South Africa storm past Sri Lanka in rain-hit World Cup encounter
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King Charles III to pray with pope during Vatican visit next week
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Zelensky meets Trump to push for Tomahawk missiles
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Gazans return to damaged mosques for first post-truce Friday prayers
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Trump foe John Bolton pleads not guilty to mishandling classified info
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Most US nuke workers to be sent home as shutdown bites
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Two dead in stampede at Kenya funeral for opposition leader Odinga
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US Treasury chief to speak with China counterpart as tensions flare
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US sinks international deal on decarbonising ships
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Zelensky to push for Tomahawk missiles in Trump meeting
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Amorim wants sense of urgency at Man Utd despite Ratcliffe backing
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Turkish experts await Israeli go ahead to help recover bodies in Gaza
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France tries Algerian woman for rape and murder of 12-year-old girl
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US stocks rise as fears over banks, trade war ease
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Temporary Afghanistan-Pakistan ceasefire expires, next step unclear
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Report calls French massacre of WWII African riflemen premeditated, covered up
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In Brazil, Michelle Bolsonaro leaves it to God, and Jair
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Flawless Fleetwood jumps into India Championship lead
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Temporary Afghanistan-Pakistan ceasefire nears end
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UK government in talks to reverse ban on Maccabi Tel Aviv fans
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US puts plan to cut ship emissions in troubled waters
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BBC accepts sanction over 'misleading' Gaza documentary
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King Charles III to visit Vatican next week
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Afghanistan-Pakistan ceasefire enters second day
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Kenya holds state funeral for opposition leader Odinga after mourners killed
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Mexican national Guard aids towns isolated by flood that killed 70
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Ex-McLaren boss could take the wheel at Porsche
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Army colonel sworn in as Madagascar president
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Chelsea's Palmer out of action for another six weeks: Maresca
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RBGPF | 4.48% | 79.09 | $ | |
BCC | 0.01% | 70.85 | $ | |
GSK | 0.55% | 44.01 | $ | |
BTI | 0.96% | 51.635 | $ | |
RIO | -1.08% | 68.015 | $ | |
BP | 1.18% | 33.17 | $ | |
NGG | 1.16% | 76.79 | $ | |
JRI | -0.11% | 13.765 | $ | |
CMSC | 0.74% | 23.8976 | $ | |
SCS | -0.23% | 16.522 | $ | |
CMSD | 0.24% | 24.149 | $ | |
RYCEF | -2.07% | 14.99 | $ | |
BCE | 2.59% | 24.32 | $ | |
AZN | 1.13% | 84.785 | $ | |
RELX | -0.23% | 45.115 | $ | |
VOD | 1.46% | 11.65 | $ |
Embraer’s 950% surge
Embraer has rewritten the aerospace playbook. From a once-overlooked regional specialist, the Brazilian manufacturer has emerged as the industry’s quiet juggernaut—outpacing its far larger rivals in shareholder returns and converting a focused product strategy into record commercial momentum. Since the pandemic trough, Embraer’s New York–listed shares have risen by well over ninefold, vaulting from single digits to new highs and putting a spotlight on how a disciplined “middle-of-the-market” bet can beat scale.
At the heart of the surge is a portfolio calibrated for today’s constraints. Where Boeing fights through quality and compliance crises and Airbus wrestles with capacity limits and engine supply headaches, Embraer has leaned into the 70–150 seat segment with its second-generation E-Jets, expanded a resilient business-jet franchise, and steadily racked up wins for its C-390 Millennium airlifter. The result: an all-time-high firm order backlog nearing $30 billion this summer, alongside quarter-record revenues and deliveries. In a supply-choked world, dependable execution is a strategy—and it shows.
Commercial aviation is the spear tip. Flagship orders in 2025—from Japan’s ANA for E190-E2s to a landmark SAS deal for up to 55 E195-E2s—signaled that network planners across developed markets want lower trip costs without sacrificing comfort or range. E2 economics have given carriers a credible alternative to deploying larger narrowbodies on thin or regional routes, and Embraer’s cabin design (no middle seat, fast turns) aligns neatly with post-pandemic route rebuilding. New-market beachheads in Mexico and continued growth with operators in Europe and the Americas are translating into delivery growth that’s outpacing last year.
Defense has become the dark horse. The C-390 Millennium, once a niche challenger, has turned into Europe’s go-to Hercules alternative, notching selections and orders across NATO and beyond. Beyond mission flexibility and speed, Embraer’s willingness to localize industrial footprints in Europe has strengthened its political and logistical case. As defense budgets rose, that combination—performance plus partnership—pulled the program into the mainstream and diversified group earnings just as commercial demand returned.
Then there is executive aviation, an underestimated earnings engine. Phenom and Praetor jets continue to compound on the back of strong utilization, fleet replacements, and aftermarket growth. Together with services and support, these businesses have added ballast to Embraer’s cash generation and helped smooth cyclicality—another reason the equity rerated higher rather than snapping back to pre-crisis multiples.
The competitive contrast is stark. Airbus remains the global delivery leader with a gargantuan backlog—but constrained slots mean years-long waits, particularly in single-aisles. Boeing, meanwhile, is still working through a prolonged manufacturing and oversight reset that has capped output and sapped buyer confidence. Embraer isn’t “bigger” than either; it’s simply been better positioned to deliver reliable capacity now, in exactly the seat ranges airlines can actually crew, fuel, and fill profitably. In public markets, timing and credibility compound.
None of this is risk-free. The E2 family’s reliance on geared-turbofan technology ties Embraer to an engine ecosystem still normalizing after widespread inspection programs. Trade policy is a new wild card, with tariff chatter periodically jolting shares. And the urban-air-mobility bet via Eve remains a long-dated option, not a 2025 cash cow. But the core machine—commercial E-Jets, executive jets, C-390, and services—is running at record velocity with improving mix and scale.
“Destroyed” may be the language of headlines; what’s indisputable is the scoreboard: since its pandemic low, Embraer has delivered a stock performance that has eclipsed both transatlantic giants, while building a backlog and delivery cadence that validate its strategic lane. In today’s aerospace cycle, the middle seat wins.

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