U.S. home-builder confidence slipped in June. (WSJ)
China’s Huawei Technologies Corp. expects U.S. restrictions on its business will cost the company $30 billion in revenue. (WSJ)
Boeing Co. faces a delay in its 777X jetliner program because engine supplier General Electric Co. has to redesign a part. (WSJ)
Airbus SE plans to develop its longest-range single-aisle passenger plane yet, adding pressure on rival Boeing Co. (WSJ)
A gauge of factory activity in New York State fell in June at the steepest rate on record. (Bloomberg)
Hong Kong-based automotive and industrial parts supplier Impro Precision plans to open a plant in Mexico to avoid tariffs while supplying U.S. customers. (South China Morning Post)
Bombardier Inc. is moving assembly of rail cars for the Bay Area Rapid Transit system from New York to California. (Progressive Railroading)
A startup is launching business under the Shyp name after buying the brand from the defunct retail logistics company. (TechCrunch)
FedEx Corp. is offering package drop-off and pickup at Dollar General Inc. stores. (DC Velocity)
CSSC (Hong Kong) Shipping shares fell below their initial public offering price on their first trading day in Hong Kong. (Lloyd’s List)
The swine flu sweeping through China’s pig farms is cutting into the dry bulk shipping demand for carrying animal feed. (Splash 247)
Commodity trader Hudson Shipping Lines won’t use vessels with emissions scrubbers to meet anti-sulfur rules. (Shipping Watch)
DP World is building a 218,000-square-foot warehouse at the London Gateway Logistics Park. (Container Management)
A Ukrainian court ordered five Volga-Dnepr An-124 freighters seized because of safety violations. (The Loadstar)
Lenders gave up on a rescue of India’s Jet Airways and took the airline into bankruptcy. (Business Standard)
Truck maker Navistar International Corp. will spend $125 million to expand manufacturing capacity at its Huntsville, Ala., plant. (Commercial Carrier Journal)
Pennsylvania-based trucker A. Duie Pyle was hit by a ransomware attack. (Journal of Commerce)
A Bahraini company plans to sink a Boeing 747 to create an underwater theme park in the Persian Gulf. (Maritime-Executive)
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