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Amazon Prime Air delivery drone crashed into Texas apartment building

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Amazon Prime Air delivery drone crashed into Texas apartment building

An Amazon Prime Air delivery drone crashed into a Texas apartment building last week, with the incident caught on a bystander’s video.

The drone crash occurred in the Dallas suburb of Richardson, Texas, on Feb. 4 when a Prime Air MK30 drone collided with the side of the apartment building and crashed to the ground.

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FOX 4 KDFW reported that Cessy Johnson was working from home and heard the drone flying nearby, so she began to record it on her phone, as she hadn’t seen one in use before.

When the drone moved outside of her view, she told the outlet that she began to hear noises that didn’t seem right and then saw falling debris before the drone itself crashed outside the building.

AMAZON TO CUT 16,000 ROLES AS IT LOOKS TO INVEST IN AI, REMOVE ‘BUREAUCRACY’

An Amazon Prime Air MK30 delivery drone

An Amazon Prime Air MK30 delivery drone crashed into an apartment building in Texas. (Jason Redmond/AFP via Getty Images)

“The propellers on the thing were still moving, and you could smell it was starting to burn. And you see a few sparks in one of my videos. Luckily, nothing really caught on fire where it got, it escalated really crazy,” she said.

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“But they had to come and try to dismantle it. And then shortly after they came, two Amazon guys came and they had to clean it up and like take it in their truck,” Johnson told FOX 4 KDFW.

YOUR DOORDASH ORDER MIGHT ARRIVE FROM THE SKY AS DRONE DELIVERIES TAKE OFF

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AMZN AMAZON.COM INC. 208.72 -1.60 -0.76%

Amazon issued an apology for the drone crash and said it’s investigating the cause.

“We apologize for any inconvenience and are actively investigating the cause of this incident,” Amazon spokesperson Terrence Clark told FOX Business.

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The company is working to make minor repairs to the building related to the collision.

WALMART EXPANDS DRONE DELIVERY SERVICE TO 3 MORE STATES IN RACE AGAINST AMAZON

Exterior view showing the Amazon logo mounted on the building housing the company’s German headquarters in Munich.

Amazon issued an apology for the delivery drone crash. (Matthias Balk/picture alliance via Getty Images)

A growing number of retail companies are offering drone delivery services to customers as a means of streamlining the process.

FOX 4 KDFW noted that Amazon and Walmart offer drone delivery in North Texas communities like Richardson, where Amazon began drone deliveries in December.

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The Indian markets have witnessed renewed investor interest across pharma, speciality chemicals, and exchange-traded services, with recent corporate earnings providing both optimism and caution. ET Now spoke with Amnish Aggarwal from Prabhudas Lilladher, who shared his insights on sector trends and specific stock preferences.

Pharma: Numbers Improving, Select Names Preferred

When asked about the pharma sector and potential investment preferences beyond CDMOs. Aggarwal noted, “Pharma in the past, say, if you look at last 10-15 days, it has been sort of coming back and the main reason was that the market was a lot jittery at that point of time and also the pharma valuations have been relative to the valuations at which they are quoting at. However, if you look at the numbers of the past few days, the numbers have been good. If you look at particularly the MNC pharma companies like GSK or Pfizer, the numbers are quite decent and the stocks are also not expensive. But having said that, our current preference still revolves around, say, names like Sun Pharma where the numbers are okayish and if you look at the overall scenario, the pharma as a pack continues to look good.”

Speciality Chemicals: Growth Potential with Patience
On speciality chemicals, Aggarwal emphasized a company-specific approach. “You see in speciality chemicals one has to look at from company to company. Navin Fluorine, particularly, the numbers have been pretty decent. But if you look at their future expansion plans and where the stock is currently poised, it is already trading at something like 37-38 times on FY28. But having said that, if the actual impact of this US trade deal plays out over a period of time, then there could be more growth opportunities for many of these chemical companies, but it is not something which is going to happen in a day. It will take its own sweet time.”

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Currency and Operational Efficiencies
Addressing currency tailwinds and operational efficiency in pharma, Aggarwal remarked, “A currency tailwind first of all one has to look at that rupee used to be 88-89 and now whether it is going back to 89 I think I am particularly doubtful about it because it is definitely not likely to go there, it might not be 92 in the immediate term.”


“Now the second part is in many of these companies I would say there is a lot of gains from stable raw material prices as also the efficiency gains. So, to that extent the numbers of many of these pharma companies they seem sustainable. One has to separate between the generic pharma companies and the companies which are having more domestic exposure because in case of many of these generic pharma companies a couple of molecules which were actually driving the sales whether it is Zydus, whether it is I believe Dr Reddy’s and also those molecules they are not likely to get benefit from that, but definitely the numbers have been pretty decent for most of the names and the valuations are not expensive at this point of time,” he added.
Exchange Performance: BSE Margins and NSE Listing Impact
Regarding BSE’s recent performance, Aggarwal explained, “You see that if you look at BSE, then their profitability and margin they have improved over the quarters. But having said that the F&O segment is some bit, I would say, under pressure and the market is also not in that sort of a zone from the last, say, three months or so. So that is getting reflected in the performance of BSE because in exchanges it is highly, I would say, your operating leverage is very high which acts on both sides. So, last quarter the markets in general were very jittery. “Smallcap and midcaps were down quite a bit where BSE is also having, I would say, the bigger share because many of these older smallcap, midcaps they are listed only in BSE and also the overall sentiment actually plays out a role. So, it is just a passing phase and the things will rebound as we go along,” he added.

On the potential impact of the NSE IPO, Aggarwal added, “Difficult to say at this point of time, but if you look at global exchanges, so they actually get a valuation of 30 to 40 times very easily. So, is BSE overly expensive, that does not look at this point of time. But having said that, it will also be a function of how your NSE gets listed that is one and secondly in terms of volume you will also because once NSE gets listed, it will be listed only on BSE. So to that extent that, it will also be an advantage to BSE to some extent.”

EMS Sector: Divergence but Select Leaders Stand Out
Turning to EMS (Electronics Manufacturing Services), Aggarwal observed that numbers remain volatile. “The numbers on the EMS side, as you said, they have been very volatile because the companies have been either reporting very high numbers or where there are misses also, the misses have been very significant. Now, if you look at the Amber’s numbers yesterday, the numbers were quite good and if the summer season next time also remain strong as is expected for the air conditioners, I think the Amber as such should do well,” he said.

“Even in case of Dixon the numbers were pretty strong. So, Amber and Dixon which have been there listed from quite some time, where the numbers are strong and the valuations are not as expensive, they still seem to be better placed than some of the other companies,” he added.

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