The incident has forced a sudden reassessment of safety protocols within a nascent industry that Beijing had previously championed as a pillar of future growth. Traders reacted to the wreckage by dumping holdings in aviation-related manufacturers and infrastructure developers, fearing that the crash will invite a wave of restrictive oversight. While the sector was once defined by its rapid expansion and government-backed subsidies, the visibility of the disaster at the city's highest point has shifted the narrative toward the inherent risks of integrating light aircraft into dense metropolitan airspace.
Beijing Aircraft Crash Triggers Sell-Off in Low-Altitude Stocks
A light aircraft slammed into Beijing’s tallest skyscraper last week, shattering investor confidence in China’s burgeoning low-altitude economy. Monday’s market session saw a sharp retreat across the sector as shareholders began to weigh the lethal reality of regulatory gaps against the government’s ambitious plans for urban aerial infrastructure.

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