The Japanese Disaster and the Capital Markets
What was already a cataclysmic catastrophe in last week’s earthquake and tsunami in Japan has become a calamity of potentially worldwide proportions. On the heels of the tsunami has been a series of hazardous nuclear system failures at the nuclear power complex at Fukushima Daiichi. These failures have been caused by the destruction of water cooling systems that are essential to maintaining the safety of nuclear power plants. The loss of this water cooling apparatus has resulted in dreaded nuclear fuel overheating and potential meltdowns that would release deadly radioactive gas into the atmosphere. What appeared to be a containable situation last Friday has become a seemingly out of control nuclear nightmare, rivaling the nuclear tragedies of Chernobyl and Three Mile Island.Â
This ongoing nuclear misfortune has exacerbated the Japanese disaster into one of world consequences. World capital and commodity markets have declined substantially since the proportions of the nuclear threat increased. The declines have been severe and precipitous as concerns that the impact of the Japanese national destruction would curtail world economic growth and cause another international financial crisis. After concerning ourselves with the rising tide of inflation in our March 7th website article, the Japanese crisis threatens to unleash deflationary forces, temporarily, from diminished demand from the world’s third largest economy. In addition, the spread of nuclear radiation to Asia and the Pacific Basin would impair economic activity in the important emerging industrialized countries in that region, further reducing worldwide growth.
In the long term, the rebuilding of the Japanese economy will stimulate demand for industrial commodities, raw materials and capital goods resulting in reflationary trends and accelerated worldwide economic growth. This should be reflected in rising capital and commodity markets after the near term corrections in these markets. However, the recent severe declines in equity prices threaten to derail the stock market recoveries began last September if they continue. As we publish this post, Asian markets are stabilizing from Tuesday’s sharp declines and we expect this will spread to European and U.S. markets on Wednesday.
If equity market recoveries are to continue, the Japanese nuclear threat must be removed so reconstruction can proceed. The disposition of Japan’s nuclear problems will determine the direction of capital and commodity markets in the short term. Those problems have become unpredictable and the uncertainty of that situation is causing public and investor consternation. At this time, we are maintaining our economic and capital market outlooks and allocations (See our website article of January 6th, “Great Expectations”),  but we are watching the Japanese situation closely to see if reevaluation is necessary. The recent public market declines and volatility from adverse overseas developments fortifies our capital market strategy emphasis on private equity investment in transaction and hard asset themes and cyclical recovery emphasis on the U.S.
Morris R. Segall, CFA, CIC
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