Six unanswered questions linger over the Air India crash investigation like a stubborn budget deficit. UK aviation experts are demanding transparency, but the markets are already pricing in the uncertainty. The longer the probe drags on, the more the cost of capital rises for the entire industry. Investors hate ambiguity. They loathe it more than a surprise rate hike from the Bank of England.
Let's cut through the noise. What are these six questions? First, the maintenance log: was it cooked? Second, the cockpit voice recorder: why the silence at a critical moment? Third, the pilot's training record: a black mark or a clean slate? Fourth, the weather data: a perfect storm or a convenient excuse? Fifth, the regulatory oversight: asleep at the wheel? Sixth, the manufacturer's liability: who pays the ultimate dividend?
Every unanswered question is a drag on the share price of related firms. Airlines, insurers, and lessors are all feeling the heat. The bond market is getting jittery. Gilt yields are rising on the back of risk aversion. Capital flight is beginning. Investors are rotating into safe havens. The Bank of England is now under pressure to signal a pause in rate hikes, but inflationary pressures remain. It's a policy conundrum that could have been avoided with a bit more fiscal responsibility.
This isn't just about aviation safety. It's about market stability. The longer the probe lingers, the more the cost of uncertainty compounds. The market hates a vacuum. It fills it with assumptions, and those assumptions are almost always wrong. The City is already discounting worst-case scenarios. The only way to restore confidence is full disclosure.
The regulator must step in. The UK's aviation authority should demand a final report within 60 days. If not, the market will impose its own penalty: higher borrowing costs and lower equity valuations. That's the bottom line.
Central bank policy is also in play. The Bank of England is watching this closely. If the probe reveals systemic failures, expect tighter regulation and a drag on economic growth. That could force the MPC to reconsider its tightening stance. But if the probe is clean, the rebound could be sharp. Either way, the market is pricing in a volatility spike.
The bottom line is clear: transparency is the only cure for this market malaise. Without it, the cost of capital will rise, gilt yields will spike, and capital flight will accelerate. The markets are watching. They are not impressed.
This is Alastair Thorne, Chief Financial Editor, signing off. The market never sleeps, but it does remember.









