Japan
TEPCO Chimes In With News On The Powerline, NRC's Jaczko Warns Japan Radiation Levels "Very High", As AP Says No More Water In Spent Fuel Plant
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/16/2011 14:27 -0500The "powerline" meme which suddenly everyone is talking about, may be a little premature according to TEPCO:
- TEPCO CANNOT CONFIRM IF THE POWERLINE IS ALMOST DONE OR NOT
And in the meantime the NRC's Chairman Jaczko comes out swinging with some more bull in china shop statements:
- JACZKO SAYS PEAK NUCLEAR RADIATION LEVELS IN JAPAN `VERY HIGH'
- JACZKO SAYS PEAK LEVELS `LETHAL' AFTER `FAIRLY SHORT' EXPOSURE
And the worst news comes from AP:
- NO MORE MORE WATER IN SPENT FUEL POOL AT JAPAN NUCLEAR PLANT:AP
To all trading this headline driven market, our sincerest condolences.
When All Else Fails, Change The Rules: Japan Increases Maximum "Safe" Radiation Dose Allowed For Nuclear Workers By 150% To Near-Chernobyl Levels
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/16/2011 09:42 -0500This is about as pathetic as it gets. In order to deal with a new baseline level of radiation across Fukushima (which Japan still refuses to discloses to the world because it is "Under Survey"), the Japanese ministry of health labor has decided to take the unilateral act of scrapping years of safety data, and more than doubled the maximum allowable exposure for nuclear workers from 100 millisieverts to 250 millisieverts. At least we now know that the radiation level around Fukushima is most likely bounded by this range. As to the reason for the increase, the ministry said it is "unavoidable due to the circumstances." In other words, when self-administered Seppuku will not work, just apply it to someone else.
Summary Update Of Japan's Nuclear Crisis - Last Ditch Attempt To Cool Reactor 4 Involves Police And A Water Cannon
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/16/2011 06:13 -0500- A helicopter was unable to drop water to cool the No.3 reactor at the quake-damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power complex in northeastern Japan probably because of the high radiation, Kyodo news agency said, quoting the defence minister.
- Police will attempt to cool No.4 reactor's spent nuclear fuel pool using a water cannon, TV says.
- Japan's top government spokesman says radiation levels around the complex are not at levels to cause an immediate health risk.
- There is no evidence of a significant spread of radiation from Japan's crippled nuclear plants, the World Health Organisation says.
- Operator says it is unable to resume work cooling the reactors due to radiation risk. Workers ordered to leave the plant were allowed back in after radiation levels fall. Operator says there were 180 workers on site as of 0230 GMT.
- Operator of the nuclear power complex in northeastern Japan recorded the site's highest levels of radiation at the No.3 reactor on Wednesday.
- Water is being poured into reactors No.5 and No.6 at the plant, the operating company says. Those two reactors had been shut down for scheduled maintenance.
Stratfor On Japan, the Persian Gulf and Energy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/15/2011 14:43 -0500It is not yet clear how devastating the nuclear-reactor damage will prove to be, but the situation appears to be worsening. What is clear is that the potential crisis in the Persian Gulf, the loss of nuclear reactors and the rising radiation levels will undermine the confidence of the Japanese. Beyond the human toll, these reactors were Japan’s hedge against an unpredictable world. They gave it control of a substantial amount of its energy production. Even if the Japanese still had to import coal and oil, there at least a part of their energy structure was largely under their own control and secure. Japan’s nuclear power sector seemed invulnerable, which no other part of its energy infrastructure was. For Japan, a country that went to war with the United States over energy in 1941 and was devastated as a result, this was no small thing. Japan had a safety net. The safety net was psychological as much as anything. The destruction of a series of nuclear reactors not only creates energy shortages and fear of radiation; it also drives home the profound and very real vulnerability underlying all of Japan’s success. Japan does not control the source of its oil, it does not control the sea lanes over which coal and other minerals travel, and it cannot be certain that its nuclear reactors will not suddenly be destroyed. To the extent that economics and politics are psychological, this is a huge blow. Japan lives in constant danger, both from nature and from geopolitics. What the earthquake drove home was just how profound and how dangerous Japan’s world is. It is difficult to imagine another industrial economy as inherently insecure as Japan’s. The earthquake will impose many economic constraints on Japan that will significantly complicate its emergence from its post-boom economy, but one important question is the impact on the political system.
Interactive Japan Wind Map
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/15/2011 13:51 -0500
You asked for it, and here it is - a fully interactive Japan wind map which includes forecasting up to 3 days forward. By the looks of things, the Jetstream is about to start glowing in the dark.
Japan Update: It’s Much Worse than it Looks
Submitted by madhedgefundtrader on 03/15/2011 11:00 -0500Japan is back in recession. The incoming tide just brought in 2,000 bodies. Most major companies, including Toyota, Nissan, Honda, and Sony have shut down all domestic production. Tokyo’s subway system is closed, stranding 25 million residents there. Electric power shortages are a huge problem. Half the country’s nuclear generating capacity is now down. 20,000 expatriates waiting at Tokyo’s Narita airport as foreign companies evacuate staff to avoid a nuclear meltdown. $187 billion worth of credit intervention to “save Japan.”
A First Person Account From Japan's Ground Zero
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/15/2011 10:25 -0500
Jason Kelly, a financial writer living in Sano, Japan, shares his first person experience of the stunning events from the past several days: "The power interruptions and damage to infrastructure are leaving stores in Japan’s earthquake area sold out. Gas stations are rationing, but closing one by one as they go dry. Between a third and half of the shops in my town, Sano, are closed for various reasons, not least of which is to let society catch its breath. The following pictures were taken by mobile phone at stores in Sano"
China Orders Mass Evacuation Of Its Citizens From Northeast Japan
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/15/2011 09:33 -0500Following reports that all major banks have pulled their employees out of Tokyo overnight, finally broad evacuations are starting to spread to the ordinary citizens, starting with China. AP reports that: "China became the first government to organize a mass evacuation of its citizens from Japan's northeast on Tuesday, while other foreigners left the country following radiation leaks at an earthquake-damaged nuclear power plant. Austria said it is moving its embassy from Tokyo to Osaka, 250 miles (400 kilometers) away, due to radiation concerns. France recommended that its citizens leave the Japanese capital, while the U.S. government advised Americans to avoid travel to Japan." And while the Chinese concern for its citizens is admirable, what is peculiar is the complete silence as to how China, which is very much downwind from Fukushima, is handling the fears of its own local citizens regarding spreading radiation.
Overnight Recap: Japan's Nuclear Crisis Leads To 'Panic' - Nikkei Crashes 17% In 2 Days, Japanese Default Risk Rises to Record, Gold Down 1% in $
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/15/2011 06:40 -0500Japan's nuclear crisis has deepened and we deeply regret to say that there is now the real possibility of a nuclear catastrophe. Investor panic has set in with the Nikkei down over 16.5% in two days and the Topic index down by 17% - its worst two-day loss since the 1987 Wall Street stock market crash. The cost to insure Japanese debt has surged to a record with credit-default swaps protecting Japanese government debt for five years soaring 27 basis points to a record of 125 basis points. One UBS trader said that the deteriorating nuclear crisis had led to "near panic across local credit-default swap markets." While most equity indices and commodities have fallen, some sharply, gold has remained resilient and is down 1% in US dollar terms and is higher in Australian dollars which like other so called 'commodity' currencies has come under pressure in recent days. Gold remains marginally higher in all currencies since the tragedy began last Friday.
Japan Nuclear Crisis Update
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/15/2011 06:06 -0500- Radiation levels at the quake-stricken Fukushima Daiichi
complex have varied wildly, with a reading of 11,930
microsieverts at the main gate of the plant at 0000 GMT, up from
596 microsieverts as of 0630 GMT. - Elsewhere at the plant, levels reached as high as 400,000
microsieverts an hour (or 400 millisieverts an hour). - The government gave no update on the status of a steel
container surrounding the core of the plant's No.2 reactor,
deemed by observers as most at risk of a meltdown. - An explosion on Tuesday at the No.2 reactor had caused
some damage to its suppression pool, which helps to cool and
trap the majority of cesium, iodine, strontium in its water. - Later, there was a fire and explosion at the complex's No.
4 reactor and this is likely to have contributed to rising
radiation levels. - The No. 4 reactor had been shut down for maintenance ahead
of the quake, but a spent-fuel cooling pool associated with that
reactor caught fire, causing the explosion. - The No.4 reactor's cooling pool, where spent nuclear fuel
is stored, may be boiling and the water level may be falling. - Radioactivity at the cooling pool is high and Tokyo
Electric cannot make checks at the site or determine what has
burned. - Radiation leakage from complex is likely to spread after a
fresh explosion at the plant.
Nikkei Flash Crash - Futures Plummet 16% As All Hell Breaks Loose In Japan
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/14/2011 22:01 -0500
All hell is currently breaking loose following an explosion at reactor #2 and a another hydrogen explosion at reactor #4 per Kyodo, leading to a 16% drop in Nikkei futures as blind panic grips Japan. Kyodo essentially confirms there was a reactor meltdown as radiation levels at Fukushima 3 are now 400 times legal levels. And topping it all Japan's warning that all people within 30 kilometers from Fukushima should stay indoors and that the radioactive winds may reach Tokyo in as little as 8-10 hours. The BOJ has just intervened to prevent the yen from surging, as the following chart shows. Our prayers are with the people of Japan.
Baseline Japan Disaster Cost Estimates: 3-5% Of GDP; Could Be As High As $1 Trillion
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/14/2011 13:27 -0500All those hoping (here's looking at you Mo) to see a prompt bounce back in Japan to baseline economic levels may be in for some disappointment. Reuters reports that according to various sellside analysts, the impact to Japanese GDP (which is virtually tied with China for the world's second largest economy), could be anywhere between 3 and 5%. "Quake-hit Japan faces a recovery and reconstruction bill of at least $180 billion, or 3 percent of its annual economic output and more than 50 percent higher than the total cost of 1995's earthquake in Kobe. The Kobe earthquake is estimated to have cost $115-118 billion, or 2 percent of GDP in 1995 terms. This time -- in a still unfolding disaster -- initial estimates from Credit Suisse and Barclays put the cost at $180 billion. Mitsubishi UFJ Securities and Sarasin expect the cost could run as high as 5 percent of GDP. Mitsubishi's estimates take into account a wider economic cost including a loss of tax revenues, subsidies to various industries of the affected area, loss of productivity following rolling blackouts on top of straight reconstruction costs." And it could be far, far worse: "some extreme projections of the longer-term cost look at figures closer to $1 trillion over several years." And as we first quantified over the weekend, the reinsurance caps for real estate losses are maxed out at about $60 billion. Which means either the government will leave those with insurance policies to split pro rate proceeds that refunds amounts owed at a big haircut, or in tried US fashion, will have to step in with emergency transfer funding measures, capitalized through the issuance of tens if not hundreds of billions of new debt. As for who will buy that debt, we look forward to Bill Gross' next letter for clues thereto. In the meantime, look for global GDP to be cut by at least 1-2% by the sellside pundits "shortly" especially as the way for QE3 is paved by the likes of Jan Hatzius who is lucky to have a force majeure on his second "Golden Age" call.
Why You Should Dump Everything in Japan
Submitted by madhedgefundtrader on 03/14/2011 12:02 -0500All corporate earnings forecasts have just been rendered meaningless. We could be putting in a 50 year double top on the yen here. Taking a bite out of global economic growth. Flipping from a +2% GDP growth rate to -3% in two minutes. International trade takes a major hit. The looming electronics parts shortage. The death toll could go to six figures. Don’t rush out and short Japanese insurance companies. (FXY), (YCS), (EWJ).
Japan Moves 8 Feet Over and 633 Points Down
Submitted by ilene on 03/14/2011 11:18 -0500The media is still banging the nuclear fear drum over and over again to keep people watching but the reality is that the chance of a catastrophe, at this point is very slim...
Pimco's El-Erian Sees "Japan Economy Recovering, Temporary Rebound In Inflation"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/14/2011 08:50 -0500The damage control comes earlier. In an Op-Ed just posted at the FT, Pimco executive Mohamed El-Erian has presented his thoughts on why the Japanese devastation, while disrputive, will eventually lead to another GDP surge: "Japan’s economic growth rate will fall in the immediate aftermath of the natural disasters before rising sharply due to reconstruction activities." Yet even by Pimco standards it is not all good news and the immediate effect will likely be a jump in inflation per the former Harvdardite: "Disruptions to supply chains and the loss of inventories will cause shortages and inflation to spike temporarily from very low levels. The fiscal deficit and public debt will rise meaningfully due to lost revenues and, more importantly, emergency spending. The central bank will ease monetary policy which, given policy interest rates floored at the zero bound, will involve the provision of extraordinary credit and liquidity facilities. Last, the country will receive transfers from abroad, including the repatriation of funds held outside the country by Japanese residents." What however received no mention is Pimco's lamentation that the firm will no longer be able to frontrun Japanese buying of Spanish (and Eurozone in general) bonds: a plan that is certainly put on indefinite hold.




