Nuclear Power
Iran Holds Air Defense Drills As IAEA Says Iran Blocks Access To Key Nuclear Site
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/21/2012 22:59 -0500
As if the market needed another bizarro catalyst to ramp even higher courtesy of an even more pronounced drop in corporate earnings courtesy of soaring energy costs, that is just what it is about to get following news of further deterioration in the Nash equilibrium in Iran, where on one hand we learn that IAEA just pronounced Iran nuclear talks a failure (this is bad), and on the other Press TV reports that the Iran army just started a 4 day air defense exercise in a 190,000 square kilometer area in southern Iran (this is just as bad). The escalation "ball" is now in the Western court. And if Iraq is any indication, after IAEA talks "failure" (no matter how grossly manipulated by the media), the aftermath is usually always one and the same...
Prime-Ministerial Unpopularity Contest at the Edge of the Japanese Abyss
Submitted by testosteronepit on 02/20/2012 22:49 -0500While all eyes are on Europe and its Greek farce, Japan is advancing at an inexorable pace...
Guest Post: Consequences To Expect If The U.S. Invades Iran
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/20/2012 10:31 -0500
Let’s be honest, quite a few Americans love a good war, especially those Americans who have never had to bear witness to one first hand. War is the ultimate tribally vicarious experience. Anyone, even pudgy armchair generals with deep-seated feelings of personal inadequacy, can revel in the victories and actions of armies a half a world away as if they themselves stood on the front lines risking possible annihilation at the hands of dastardly cartoon-land “evil doers”. They may have never done a single worthwhile thing in their lives, but at least they can bask in the perceived glory of their country’s military might. This attitude of swollen ego through proxy is not limited to the “Right” side of the political spectrum as some might expect. In fact, if the terrifyingly demented presidency of Barack Obama has proven anything so far, it is that elements of the “Left” are just as bloodthirsty as any NeoCon, and just as ready to blindly support the political supremacy of their “side” regardless of any broken promises, abandoned principles, or openly flaunted hypocrisies. No matter how reasonable or irrefutable the arguments against a particular conflict are, there will ALWAYS be a certain percentage of the populace which ignores all logic and barrels forward to cheerlead violent actions which ultimately only benefit a select and elite few.
Guest Post: Exploring The Not-So-Altruistic Aspects Of The "Buffett Rule"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/17/2012 19:24 -0500Although no one can be sure of Buffett's motives, it would be naïve to believe that someone as intelligent as Buffett has not considered the benefits of pushing through this tax structure. Higher taxes are always problems for entrepreneurs and regular people in the economy. However, they're often beneficial to the well-connected, who receive government bailouts and favors. And with Buffett even on the president's lips, he is becoming more connected to the power mechanism in D.C. every day. With many of Berkshire's companies, your loss as a taxpayer will be their gains.
Update on Middle Eastern Wars
Submitted by George Washington on 02/17/2012 02:45 -0500The drums of war are beating louder and louder ... What's really going on?
20 Times More Japanese Earthquakes in the 6 Months Following March 2011 than in the Previous 9 YEARS ... Quake May Have "Awaken
Submitted by George Washington on 02/15/2012 14:05 -0500Pandora's Box?
Peace In Our Time
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/13/2012 07:30 -0500Markets are rallying on the back of Greece’s approval of the austerity measures, and all I can think of is the ill-timed 1938 speech by Neville Chamberlain. But analyzing that leads to dark places, far too dark for a Monday morning when the markets are up. So I’ll try and lighten the mood, and only think about a book with talking animals – Animal Farm:
Do not imagine, comrades, that leadership is a pleasure. On the contrary, it is a deep and heavy responsibility. No one believes more firmly than Comrade Napoleon that all animals are equal. He would be only too happy to let you make your decisions for yourselves. But sometimes you might make the wrong decisions, comrades, and then where should we be?
Why do I find it so easy to imagine those words coming out of some technocrat’s mouth? Why are the Greek people faced with bailout or chaos? There has never been an alternative to the bailout since no politician has worked on one. There is plenty of historical evidence showing that countries can default, and not just survive, but thrive.
Frontrunning: February 13
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/13/2012 07:04 -0500- Greek Parliament Backs Austerity as Rioters Burn Buildings (Bloomberg)
- China CIC Wary of EU Government Bond Investments (Reuters)
- Spain Unions Decry New Labor Rules (WSJ)
- China Tells Banks to Roll Over Loans (FT)
- We're Not Greece: Italian Prime Minister Monti (CNBC)
- Bernanke’s Labor Pessimism at Odds With U.S. Growth (Bloomberg)
- Obama Budget Seeks Funding for Trade Unit (Bloomberg)
- Obama's Election-Year Budget to Target Rich (Reuters)
- China May Need to Fine-Tune Policy This Quarter, Wen Says (Bloomberg)
- China’s Xi Seeks Second Front for U.S. Ties in Return to Iowa (Bloomberg)
- Why Greece and Portugal Ought to go Bankrupt (FT)
The Endgame: Japan Inc. Seeks Salvation Overseas
Submitted by testosteronepit on 02/06/2012 22:18 -0500Just when Japan can least afford it....
Fukushima Reactors Heating Up Again … Water Fails to Cool Them Down
Submitted by George Washington on 02/06/2012 16:45 -0500Radioactive Leak at California Nuclear Power Plant
Submitted by George Washington on 02/01/2012 16:38 -0500Forget radiation from clusterFukushima ... Let's irradiate OURSELVES too!
Illinois Nuclear Power Plant Loses Power ... Vents Radioactive Steam
Submitted by George Washington on 01/31/2012 11:25 -0500Radioactive tritium released ... just like 75% of nuclear plants in America.
Update on Fukushima
Submitted by George Washington on 01/23/2012 14:23 -0500Round up for ZH readers ...
Nomura Skeptical On Bullish Consensus
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/18/2012 10:49 -0500Last week we heard from Nomura's bearded bear as Bob Janjuah restated his less-then-optimistic scenario for the global economy. Today his partner-in-crime, Kevin Gaynor, takes on the bullish consensus cognoscenti's three mutually supportive themes in his usual skeptical manner. While he respects the market's potential view that fundamentals, flow, valuation, and sentiment seem aligned for meaningful outperformance, it seems actual positioning does not reflect this (yet). Taking on each of the three bullish threads (EM policy shift as inflation slows, ECB has done and will do more QE, and US decoupling), the strategist teases out the reality and what is priced in as he does not see this as the March-2009-equivalent 'big-one' in rerisking (warranting concerns on chasing here).
Guest Post: Returning to Simplicity (Whether We Want to or Not)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/17/2012 17:47 -0500The modern world depends on economic growth to function properly. And throughout the living memory of every human on earth today, technology has continually developed to extract more and more raw material from the environment to power that growth. This has produced a faithful belief among the public that has helped to blur the lines between human innovation and limited natural resources. Technology does not create resources, though it does embody our ability to access resources. When the two are operating smoothly in tandem, society mistakes one for the other. This has created a new and very modern problem -- a misplaced trust in technology to consistently fulfill our economic needs. What happens once key resources become so dilute that technology, by itself, can no longer meet our growth needs? We may be about to find out.





