
New video of China's tailless, triple-engine fighter jet has military aviation community buzzing
It's unclear when the images, which are taken from a video, were shot, but they appeared on Chinese social media sites on Monday and show the aircraft flying over a highway near the runway of Chengdu Aircraft Industry Group, the factory in Sichuan province where the new jet is believed to have been made.
Images of the J-36 first appeared on Chinese social media late last year, quickly capturing the attention of aircraft enthusiasts and military analysts. More appeared online last month.
The jet is thought to be a sixth-generation aircraft, incorporating the latest stealth technology, avionics and powerplant and airframe engineering.
Military aviation expert David Cenciotti, a former Italian Air Force officer, said on his website, The Aviationist, that the six-second video gives a close look at the design of the J-36.
'The trijet engine arrangement, with two engine intakes under the wings and a dorsally-mounted intake behind the cockpit, is a departure from conventional twin-engine setups seen in many contemporary fighters. This configuration may offer advantages in terms of thrust and redundancy,' Cenciotti wrote.
He said space on the aircraft's belly shows room for internal weapons bays that could enable it to carry long-range strike missiles.
The J-36 could see China pull even with, or possibly ahead of, the United States in the race to field a sixth-generation fighter.
The US military's fifth-generation jets – the twin-engine F-22 and single-engine F-35 – are generally regarded as the world's best at the moment, though China also has two fifth-generation models, the J-20 and J-35. Neither of those Chinese jets has proven combat experience and effectiveness like the two US fighters, however.
US President Donald Trump announced last month that a contract for the US Air Force's sixth-generation fighter – dubbed the F-47 – had been awarded to Boeing. Trump said a prototype of the jet had been flying for five years.
But a US Air Force announcement of the Boeing contract for the F-47 did not give a timeline for when the jets would be deployable, saying only the contract awarded on March 21 covered 'the engineering and manufacturing development phase' as well as funds for 'a small number of test aircraft for evaluation.'
While China's J-36 was dominating military aviation chatter this week, it's not the only sixth-generation jet that Beijing seems to have in the works.
The same day that pictures emerged of the J-36 in December, photos were also posted of a new tailless, twin-engine jet, referred to by analysts as the J-XX and sometimes the J-50.
The People's Liberation Army (PLA) hasn't publicly acknowledged the existence of either the J-36 or J-50.
But the state-run tabloid Global Times last month ran a story quoting various Chinese military experts as saying the images of the two new aircraft 'if authentic,' show China is making quick progress on sixth-generation fighter jets.
'From a development point of view, China appears to be determined to make explorations on next-generation aviation equipment,' Wang Ya'nan, chief editor of Aerospace Knowledge magazine, was quoted as saying.
It can take years for a fighter jet to go from concept to public introduction, let alone deployment.
China's J-35 was first shown to the public at last November's Airshow China in Zuhai, but it had been in development for 10 or more years, according to analysts.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Business Upturn
13 minutes ago
- Business Upturn
Top stocks to watch on brokerages, August 4: ITC, Tata Steel, Delhivery, Godrej Properties, UPL, Federal Bank, PB Fintech and more
Several key companies are in focus today as leading brokerages released their latest research reports, commenting on earnings, margins, and operational trends. Here's a detailed look at the top stock ideas and outlooks: ITC share Brokerages remain largely positive on ITC following its Q1FY26 results. CITI (Buy, TP ₹500): Revenue grew 21% YoY, driven by the agri segment. Cigarette revenue rose 8% YoY, with an estimated 7% volume growth. FMCG showed growth improvement, though paperboard remained under pressure. Goldman Sachs (Buy, TP ₹490): Results were in line; cigarette growth solid with margin recovery likely in H2. Macquarie (Outperform, TP ₹500): 6.5% volume growth in cigarettes helped offset input cost pressure. Positive on margin recovery in 4QFY26. HSBC (Buy, TP ₹510): Revenue beat by 10%, though EBITDA missed by 3%. Core segments performed in line. Lowered FY26–28e EPS by 2–3%. Jefferies (Buy, TP ₹535): Cigarette volumes rose >6%, but margins declined. Overall EBITDA grew 3%, slightly below estimates. Morgan Stanley (Overweight, TP ₹500): Cigarette and FMCG revenue trends positive. Paper business weak but likely bottomed. Tata Steel share Jefferies (Buy, TP ₹200): Q1 EBITDA grew 11% YoY and beat estimates. While 2Q margins may compress due to lower steel prices, signs of recovery from higher Chinese export prices are emerging. Thermax share Jefferies (Buy, TP ₹4,500): Revenue miss in Q1, but EBITDA margin improved 162 bps YoY. Bio-CNG drag in FY25 is expected to subside, helping margin expansion in FY26. Godrej Properties share Views remain mixed post Q1 results: Jefferies (Buy, TP ₹3,000): Pre-sales fell 18% YoY, but management remains confident. Strong launch pipeline. Nomura (Reduce, TP ₹1,900): Expects FY26 sales to miss guidance. Concerns over growth strategy, equity dilution, and valuation premium. Morgan Stanley (Equal-weight, TP ₹2,400): Q1 pre-sales in line, but collection dropped 47% QoQ. D/E ratio rose. Tata Power share CLSA (Underperform, TP ₹351): Weakness in Indonesian coal, RE IPP business, and Tata Projects hurt core profitability. Solar EPC & module business was the only bright spot. UPL share HSBC (Buy, TP ₹775): Q1 was muted but recovery and deleveraging underway. Kotak Institutional Equities (Sell, TP ₹520): Gross margins improved, but long-term gains uncertain amid demand softness and intense competition. Delhivery share Goldman Sachs (Neutral, TP ₹375): E-commerce volumes grew but realization declined. Profit aided by treasury gains. Kotak Institutional Equities (Buy, TP ₹500): Strong PBT growth despite challenges. Continued scale-up in express parcel. Jefferies (Underperform, TP ₹350): EBITDA miss due to timing issues in Ecom Express volume. Industry shift to insourcing remains a headwind. Federal Bank share Brokerages split on Federal Bank's Q1 print: Morgan Stanley (Underweight, TP ₹165): Slippages increased due to MFI stress. RoA may moderate. CLSA (Outperform, TP ₹230): PAT beat, but credit costs 70% above estimates. Other income and opex helped. Nuvama (Buy, TP ₹230): NIM and slippages worsened; expects elevated credit costs in Q2, then easing. PB Fintech share HSBC (Buy, TP ₹2,250): Beat estimates on margin uplift in new segments, though core business saw margin compression. Jefferies (Buy, TP ₹2,100): Adj. EBITDA rose 80%. Sees healthy growth and valuation support from strong cash flows. LIC Housing Finance share Morgan Stanley (Underweight, TP ₹480): NIM declined, credit costs slightly higher. Franchise weakening; outlook remains subdued. MCX share Morgan Stanley (Underweight, TP ₹5,750): Core EBITDA missed due to higher employee costs. Transaction revenue falling; valuation seen as expensive. Adani Power share Jefferies (Buy, TP ₹690): EBITDA missed by 2%, capacity expansion plans intact. Acquired 600MW Vidarbha unit in July. Adani Enterprises share Jefferies (Buy, TP ₹3,000): EBITDA fell 12–13% YoY/QoQ due to legacy businesses. PAT down 50%. Retains FY27/28 outlook despite Q1 miss. Disclaimer: This article is based on brokerage reports and is for informational purposes only. It does not constitute a recommendation or investment advice. Investors should consult their financial advisors before making investment decisions. Ahmedabad Plane Crash News desk at


CNBC
2 hours ago
- CNBC
CNBC Daily Open: There's no return policy for jobs numbers
After U.S. jobs figures for May and June were revised significantly downward by the Bureau of Labor Statistics — slashing a combined 258,000 from previous figures — President Donald Trump, imputing political bias and data manipulation to BLS Commissioner Erika McEntarfer, revised her employment status to "terminated." Government officials from both sides of the political aisle had plenty to say about that. "Bottom line, Trump wants to cook the books," said Ron Wyden, the top Democrat on the Senate Finance Committee. Meanwhile, Republican Senator Rand Paul told NBC News that "you can't really make the numbers different or better by firing the people doing the counting." The move, indeed, does have a whiff of the Chinese government, in August 2023, stopping the release of youth unemployment rates because they were spiking to record highs. (Beijing resumed disseminating the data in January 2024.) A falling tree makes a sound, regardless of whether there's anyone around to hear it. Terminating the person who reports that noise won't suck sound waves back into a vacuum either. Markets, too, were vocal in their response to Trump's firing of McEntarfer as well as the dismal jobs report. On Friday, the three major U.S. indexes had their worst day in months, a sharp turn from the week prior, which saw consecutive days of record highs for the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite. This changes the calculus. With new tariffs due to take effect Aug. 7 — which could further slow hiring in the U.S. because of increased costs and uncertainties for companies — both the economy and markets might weaken further. Then it becomes a matter of whether the "TACO trade" — "Trump Always Chickens Out" — will, in the words of The Terminator, be appear in the U.S. jobs market. Nonfarm payrolls in July grew 73,000, lower than the Dow Jones estimate of a 100,000 gain. Unemployment edged up 10 basis points to 4.2%. June and May's jobs numbers were revised dramatically lower. Trump fires commissioner of labor statistics after jobs report. In a Truth Social post, the U.S. president accused BLS Commissioner Erika McEntarfer of being a political appointee who "faked the Jobs Numbers before the Election" and providing inaccurate data. Stocks suffer their worst day in months. On Friday, the S&P 500 lost 1.6%, its worst day since May 21, breaking a 26-day streak when the index's moves remained within a 1% range. The pan-European Stoxx 600 index fell 1.89%, its biggest drop since April. Berkshire Hathaway's operating profit drops. Year over year, Warren Buffet's conglomerate experienced a 4% drop in second-quarter earnings to $11.16 billion. Berkshire warned of Trump's tariffs and their impact on its businesses. [PRO] August is historically the second worst month for the S&P 500. That's according to the Stock Trader's Almanac, which tracks data back to 1988. Tariff developments and AI-related earnings during the week will give a sign of whether history will repeat itself. Switzerland's tariff shock: The 39% U.S. hit no one saw coming The U.S.' imposition of a 39% tariff rate on Switzerland's came as a shock to the Alpine nation. Indications in the Swiss press had been that the country was close to negotiating an outline deal similar to those struck by the European Union, the U.K. and Japan, which set baseline tariffs between 10% and 15%. Instead, it has received one of the highest rates of any country. That is a significant blow, with the U.S. accounting for around a sixth of Switzerland's total exports.

Wall Street Journal
2 hours ago
- Wall Street Journal
China Is Choking Supply of Critical Minerals to Western Defense Companies
China is limiting the flow of critical minerals to Western defense manufacturers, delaying production and forcing companies to scour the world for stockpiles of the minerals needed to make everything from bullets to jet fighters. Earlier this year, as U.S.-China trade tensions soared, Beijing tightened the controls it places on the export of rare earths. While Beijing allowed them to start flowing after the Trump administration agreed in June to a series of trade concessions, China has maintained a lock on critical minerals for defense purposes. China supplies around 90% of the world's rare earths and dominates the production of many other critical minerals.