bearish
2h agoU.S. airlines enforce second day of regulated flight cuts as shutdown drags on

Major U.S. carriers entered a second consecutive day of scheduled flight reductions, prompted by staffing shortages tied to the ongoing federal government shutdown.
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) instructed airlines to cut 4% of flights at 40 large airports on Saturday, with the number set to rise to 6% by Tuesday and potentially 10% by mid-November.
The disruption stems from absenteeism among air-traffic controllers and screeners working without pay, adding pressure on travel and supply-chain industries and feeding into broader economic risk-sentiment concerns.
Reuters• By Sneha Pathak
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bearish
2h agoU.S. airlines enforce second day of regulated flight cuts as shutdown drags on

Major U.S. carriers entered a second consecutive day of scheduled flight reductions, prompted by staffing shortages tied to the ongoing federal government shutdown.
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) instructed airlines to cut 4% of flights at 40 large airports on Saturday, with the number set to rise to 6% by Tuesday and potentially 10% by mid-November.
The disruption stems from absenteeism among air-traffic controllers and screeners working without pay, adding pressure on travel and supply-chain industries and feeding into broader economic risk-sentiment concerns.
Reuters• By Sneha Pathak
Explore:High Return Equity Mutual Fund
about 2 hours ago
1 min read
81 words

Flight reductions mandated amid U.S. shutdown signal rising travel and supply-chain stress.
Major U.S. carriers entered a second consecutive day of scheduled flight reductions, prompted by staffing shortages tied to the ongoing federal government shutdown.
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) instructed airlines to cut 4% of flights at 40 large airports on Saturday, with the number set to rise to 6% by Tuesday and potentially 10% by mid-November.
The disruption stems from absenteeism among air-traffic controllers and screeners working without pay, adding pressure on travel and supply-chain industries and feeding into broader economic risk-sentiment concerns.

Major U.S. carriers entered a second consecutive day of scheduled flight reductions, prompted by staffing shortages tied to the ongoing federal government shutdown.
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) instructed airlines to cut 4% of flights at 40 large airports on Saturday, with the number set to rise to 6% by Tuesday and potentially 10% by mid-November.
The disruption stems from absenteeism among air-traffic controllers and screeners working without pay, adding pressure on travel and supply-chain industries and feeding into broader economic risk-sentiment concerns.
Companies:
American Airlines
Delta Air Lines
Southwest Airlines
+1 more
Tags:
economy
US
economy
US
government shutdown
aviation
supply chain
Nov 8, 2025 • 13:46 IST