Bombardier Bonds Tumble as U.S. Slaps Import Duties on C-Series

A Bombardier CS300 C Series aircraft, manufactured by Bombardier Inc., lands after a flying display on day two of the 51st International Paris Air Show in Paris, France, on Tuesday, June 16, 2015. The 51st International Paris Air Show is the world's largest aviation and space industry exhibition and takes place at Le Bourget airport June 15 - 21.Photographer: Jasper Juinen
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Bombardier Inc.’s euro-denominated bonds maturing in 2021 have declined the most in more than two years after the U.S. imposed import duties of 220 percent on the company’s C-series plane, threatening to upend deliveries of more than $5 billion to Delta Air Lines Inc. next year.

The Canadian aircraft and train manufacturer’s senior unsecured notes are currently down by more than seven price points at 99.963, according to Bloomberg prices at 10am London time. The notes had already fallen 2.2 points on Tuesday -- the same day that competitors Siemens AG and Alstrom SA agreed to join their rail businesses.