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    01/11/2016 - 08:59
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Archive - Apr 2011

April 2nd

Tyler Durden's picture

Attempt To Pour Concrete On Fukushima Pit Crack Generating 1 Sievert/Hour Fails; New Unmanned Drone Photos Of Reactors





After prior reports that radiation in and around Fukushima had breached the dreaded barrier of 1 sievert/hour were attributed to some PR apparatchik not knowing how to carry the decimal comma, we once again get confirmation that previous attempts to refute what some saw merely as scaremongering, were in fact more lies. According to Reuters, the soon to be nationalized TEPCO said it had found a crack in the pit at its No.2 reactor in Fukushima, generating readings 1,000 millisieverts (1 sievert) of radiation per hour in the air inside the pit. "With radiation levels rising in the seawater near the plant, we have been trying to confirm the reason why, and in that context, this could be one source," said Hidehiko Nishiyama, deputy head of the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency (NISA), said on Saturday. He cautioned, however: "We can't really say for certain until we've studied the results." Since at this point nobody believes anything coming out of Japan and TEPCO, most are just expecting for the concrete to come: "TEPCO has begun pouring concrete into the pit to stop the leak, he said." Alas, as always happens when horrible plans go awry, this latest attempt to fix the problem with the nuclear (pardon the pan) "solution" is failing. "Public broadcaster NHK said late on Saturday that water was preventing the concrete from hardening and the pit was still leaking." In other words, recent horrendously planned attempts to cool the reactor by pumping water on it may well scuttle the Plan Z option of entombing the reactor. And if that doesn't work, then Japan is straight out of plans.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

A Visual Presentation Of What Happens To The Market During Rising Interest Rate Cycles





While it is no surprise that there is nothing in this world that can derail the optimism of Goldman's David Kostin (GS S&P 2011 target 1,500 until Jan Hatzius and his double Bill Dudley say otherwise), in his latest Weekly Kickstart he does provide a useful visual analysis of what happens in a period of rising interest rate cycles. Of course, this is only to create the illusion that rates are indeed set to rise: as we indicated said illusion was roughly two times stronger this time last year when the market once again didn't remember what a downtick looked like, and yet it all turned out to be a function of QE1, which upon ending on March 31 caused a correction, and QE2 a few months later. We wonder how many professional investors actually are naive enough to equate constant pumping of billions of dollars into the market by the Fed with economic improvement. But while we will get our answer in the next several weeks, here are the key signs to look for in the latter part of the interest rate cycle.

 

RobotTrader's picture

The King's Speech: Will It Mark The Top in Stocks?





Next week is bound to be a doozy. The SPY and NYA are sitting just under their highs, and The Bernank is schedule to give his post-FOMC "King's Speech" on April 27. What are the odds that the market is going to have a significant correction going into this speech? At the same time, thousands of hedge fund managers who stepped aside during the recent correction will be forced to get back in to stocks if they take out new highs. After all, the desperation is reaching March Madness levels to "make your year" so they can temporarily "retire" at The Hamptons for the summer.

 

Bruce Krasting's picture

Bernanke shows his cards to the WSJ (again)





Big B tips his hand. What it might mean.

 

asiablues's picture

U.S. Consumers Have Big Banks To Blame For High Gasoline Prices





The very same banks that taxpayers bailed out, and saved from going completely belly up, are actually making consumers pay once again in the form of higher Oil prices, and the resultant higher gasoline prices at the pump

 

April 1st

Leo Kolivakis's picture

US Wants More Disclosure on Pension Funding





A federal board will soon propose that U.S. states disclose more about their pension funding as worries grow whether states and municipalities can pay for their employees' pensions...

 

Phoenix Capital Research's picture

Do Economists Even LOOK At the Data They Claim Supports a “Recovery”?





For well over two years now we’ve been told that the US was in recovery and that as most the biggest risk was a potential double dip. The reality however was that the US never experienced a real recovery (unless you work at one of the “chosen” firms on Wall Street).

 

Phoenix Capital Research's picture

The Next Major Bull Market Will Be In…





Going forward, we’re going to see economic data become even MORE divorced from reality, assertions that the economy is back on track, and that at worst there is the specter of a “double-dip” recession looming. Heck, even these fears are sugar-coated… literally (making an economic nightmare sound like an ice-cream sundae is a GENIUS marketing move).

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Chris Martenson Exclusive: New Photos Of Fukushima Reactors





Zero Hedge friend Chris Martenson has procured and analyzed the latest set of Fukushima overflight photos from DigitalGlobe. His key takeaways: (i) The situation on the ground is still not stabilized. (ii) At current scope and resources of the response effort, it will take weeks to months before TEPCO is in real control of the situation.(iii) The aftereffects will occupy TEPCO and the Japanese government for years. Read the full analysis inside.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Throwing In The Tea Towel: Government Shutdown Averted?





A late afternoon update from Stone McCarthy's Nancy Vanden Houten provides some much needed clarity on the topic that will be next week's number one topic (absent another colored swan joining the clusterflock): the threat of a government shutdown. It appears that Obama's warning that it would "height of irresponsibility" to shut down the government over a spending battle may have pushed republicans to come to an compromise. From SMR: "Increasingly, it looks as though Congress will be able to pass legislation funding the government for the rest of fiscal 2011, which is now half over and ends on September 30." And naturally this is merely one more of those strawmen whose inevitable resolution will be seen as an upside catalyst even if the probability of a downside outcome is impossible: after all the US government can not afford a shutdown period. So the only natural outcome will serve as the latest piece of news to get the momentum algos ramping the market into overdrive even though there is nothing notably catalytic about this development.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Guest Post: The Lesson From Japan For PM Investors





It’s commonly known in Japanese culture that citizens harbor gold to protect against unforeseen events. The gold isn’t sold unless it’s needed for an emergency. With respect to the Japanese government, the country’s central bank is the 8th largest holder of the metal (including the IMF and GLD). Beyond investment, Japan represents about 6% of worldwide gold fabrication (excluding investment demand), the majority of which is in electronics. Scrap recycling has been heavy in recent years, while jewelry demand is low. Regarding silver, the tiny island represents about 9% of global demand. Industrial uses comprise the biggest part of that, which includes the automotive industry, construction, medical uses and solar. Jewelry and silverware have minimal end-use, and photography, like most everywhere else, has been falling heavily. While the percentage of Japan’s buying to worldwide demand won’t drastically change in reaction to the recent disasters, they, like several other countries, are pursing another tactic to get minerals. The government is considering revising its mining law, specifically when it comes to seabed mineral exploration and extraction. This is noteworthy because Japan hasn’t touched its mining law in 50 years. To be sure, revisions will be stricter for permitting and monitoring, but the process will be streamlined for Japanese companies.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Bull/Bear Weekly Recap: Mar 28-Apr 1





Your one stop summary of the week's key bullish and bearish developments.

 

RANSquawk Video's picture

RANsquawk Market Wrap Up - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 01/04/11





RANsquawk Market Wrap Up - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 01/04/11

 

ilene's picture

Skyshine





The lack of water means the nuclear fuel is unshielded. Its gamma rays are rising into the sky and bouncing off air molecules through a phenomenon called "skyshine."

 

Tyler Durden's picture

The G7 Turns On Itself: BOK Sells Its Share Of Japan Rescue Dollars, Sends Greenback Plunging





Remember when the G7 stepped in to valiantly sell yen when the Japanese currency was threatening to take out all of Wall Street with its hundreds of billions in wrong way carry trades? Well, it seems that today's bizarre sell off in the dollar was due to that particular plan crashing and burning, with Korea defecting from the pact first, and selling its $7 billion in USD acquired in the process of bailing out Japan. It seems it is fair game to buy the Yen once again.

 
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