BAE Systems share price falls after UAE halts fighter talks

United Arab Emirates pulls out of talks to buy 60 Eurofighter Typhoon combat jets

The UAE Eurofighter snub punctures Britain’s hopes of a deal underpinning thousands of jobs. Photograph: Reuters/Valentin Flauraud
The UAE Eurofighter snub punctures Britain’s hopes of a deal underpinning thousands of jobs. Photograph: Reuters/Valentin Flauraud

BAE Systems faced investor worries over its growth prospects after the United Arab Emirates pulled out of talks to buy 60 Eurofighter Typhoon combat jets, in a blow to the UK government which had pushed hard to land the $9.8 billion deal.

The decision could boost the prospects of French firm Dassault Aviation, which sells the rival Rafale plane, although that firm has also suffered setbacks in a long-running and unpredictable UAE fighter contest.

The Eurofighter snub punctures Britain’s hopes of a deal underpinning thousands of jobs after British prime minister David Cameron travelled to the UAE last month to lobby for the Eurofighter Typhoon contract, which BAE had said could be a “major game-changer”.

Shares in Europe’s biggest defence firm fell 4.8 per cent. – (Reuters)