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Businesses The Almighty Buck

Toshiba Shares Plummet After Warning of 'Billions' in Losses (cnn.com) 100

Toshiba's troubles keep piling up. From a report on CNN Money: The Japanese firm's shares plunged 20% on Wednesday, after the company warned it is expecting billions of dollars in losses from its takeover of a U.S. nuclear construction business last year. "We're still figuring out the exact numbers, but it could reach up to several hundred billion yen," CEO Satoshi Tsunakawa told reporters Tuesday. Toshiba's U.S. nuclear-power subsidiary Westinghouse acquired CB&I Stone & Webster late last year, when Toshiba was still struggling to recover from a $1.2 billion accounting scandal. Toshiba's shares dived in the months following that scandal, which led to a major management reshuffle after the Japanese conglomerate admitted it had doctored financial results for years. The company reported a loss of 460 billion yen ($3.9 billion) for 2015.
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Toshiba Shares Plummet After Warning of 'Billions' in Losses

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    And Uber is projected to lose 2.6 billion next year.

    Funny how that works.

  • It seems to me they'll always have that to fall back on. I assume they have all sorts of patent money coming in from that. But yeah, nuclear construction sounds expensive.

    Link about Toshiba:
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    • by Hadlock ( 143607 )

      Flash memory is literally a commodity traded on the market like wheat or corn now. Your post is like saying "well at least Toshiba has wheat to fall back on"

      • So is oil, and while they're not #1 right now, Exxon, Chevron, Shell, Aramco, Pemex, etc. are not exactly hurting too badly.

    • Whatever happened to their semiconductor business? I recall a time they used to fab MIPS R4600 CPUs
    • It seems to me they'll always have that to fall back on. I assume they have all sorts of patent money coming in from that.

      Toshiba's original patents for flash were issued in the 1980s, and have long since expired. Sandisk has some current patents for NAND flash, but I don't think Toshiba is still getting any royalties for flash.

    • > But yeah, nuclear construction sounds expensive

      "Nuclear fission, continual business failures for 50 years!"

      Siemens. Framatome. Westinghouse. Babcock and Wilcox. Toshiba. AECL. BNFL.

  • I like nuke reactors. I think much can be done with them to reduce reliance on fossil fuels. However, due to the regulatory red tape and NIMBY/enviro freakout factions in the US, investing in reactor construction in the US seems like a very expensive and extremely risky proposition. I wouldn't put a large portion of my eggs in that basket.
    • I think the issue is the building as it is being designed and the poor engineering controls at Westinghouse. Add in the issues related to improper N&Ds by Westinghouse's quality engineering, it just means ballooned cost.The work is solid, but the rework due to poor engineering controls and wastage is MASSIVELY expensive from the people I know on the sites.

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward

        poor engineering controls at Westinghouse

        There were issues with quality at a modular unit manufacturing site in Louisiana, but otherwise there have only been the expected challenges when building a large first of a kind plant. Yes, it is expensive, but once built the plant can run for 80 to 100 years and pay for itself many times over.

        • Most of the rebuild happen due to changes in design between the module being constructed and assembly on site. Who the hell subtracts the consideration of a bolt being in the way between the plan for the module when the marrying module been already placed? Why not make work packages cumulative, just showing the changes made in rev 1, rev 2, etc... not considering that some poor craft has to figure out what the hell to build? But hey, that is the Westinghouse way. How can you meet INPO principle 7 - Build as

        • Yes, it is expensive, but once built the plant can run for 80 to 100 years and pay for itself many times over.

          No. When you consider the interest payments on the capital investment, and the amortized cost of decommissioning, nuclear is not competitive with shale gas, and cannot operate without subsidies. Nuclear is no longer even competitive with wind. If current trends continue, solar will be more economical within a decade. While the cost of wind and solar are going down, the cost of nuclear is going UP.

          • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

            by blindseer ( 891256 )

            If current trends continue, solar will be more economical within a decade. While the cost of wind and solar are going down, the cost of nuclear is going UP.

            Do you think that maybe, possibly, perhaps the costs of nuclear power has gone up because we've stopped building them for 40 years? The people that knew how to do this are all retired, senile, or dead now. We see this in every industry that prices go down as experience improves. This can even be seen as a single project, like a large building, progresses. The first ten stories take longer to build than the next ten, and the next ten take less time yet.

            Do you think that maybe, possibly, perhaps that sola

            • Do you think that maybe, possibly, perhaps the costs of nuclear power has gone up because we've stopped building them for 40 years?

              Why does that matter? If they are uneconomic, they are uneconomic. The reasons are irrelevant. Do you really believe that we should squander money subsidizing nukes because that is the "fair" thing to do? Fair to whom?

              • Why does that matter? If they are uneconomic, they are uneconomic. The reasons are irrelevant.

                Irrelevant? Nuclear power is uneconomic only because the government deemed it so. This is violation of a very basic freedom, the freedom to choose how we spend our money. This is not how a free nation or strong economy is built.

                Do you really believe that we should squander money subsidizing nukes because that is the "fair" thing to do? Fair to whom?

                I don't want anything subsidized. I just want nuclear power allowed.

                Tell me something, is it fair that the government is talking about how we need to reduce our carbon footprint but denies us access to an energy source we know of that has a lower footprint to any other energy sou

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Oh sure. One of the most long lasting and devastating industries in the world and red tape is the problem. /s

      No. You are the problem. Regulation is necessary for safety and competition. So tired of lazy right wingers and their "if we just got rid of the red tape" bullshit.

      I believe in nuclear power. But corner cutting cannot be allowed. If you can't do it without putting everyone at risk for your own profits, then you don't get to do it.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Oh sure. One of the most long lasting and devastating industries in the world and red tape is the problem.

        Coal has red tape? But I believe in coal. Corner cutting cannot be allowed. If you can't do it without putting everyone at risk for your own profits, then you don't get to do it.

      • How do you define what corner cutting is? Nuclear always has some non-zero risk. We can make it extremely unlikely, but that costs money. So you want the power plant operator to operate at break-even or even profit loss before you are satisfied?

        • by khallow ( 566160 )

          So you want the power plant operator to operate at break-even or even profit loss before you are satisfied?

          I think it's rather obvious. They don't want the plant to operate at all. The concern over safety is just the pretext. Making nuclear plants too expensive to operate is the end goal.

    • I like nuke reactors. I think much can be done with them to reduce reliance on fossil fuels.

      How do you stop the next Fukashima from happening? It's a cost issue and people building nuclear reactors don't want to pay for larger margins of safety.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        How do you stop the next Fukashima from happening?

        Its simple. Don't put a plant that is not designed to operate underwater in a location where it can be hit by a tsunami. Its not about safety margin. They designed for earthquakes and there was plenty of safety margin. They did not design them to be suddenly deluged, add all the margin you want and it won't matter.

        • by khallow ( 566160 )

          They did not design them to be suddenly deluged, add all the margin you want and it won't matter.

          You miss the obvious. Enough margin and the deluge doesn't happen.

      • How do you stop the next Fukashima from happening?

        First by understanding what went wrong. The reactor survived the tsunami, shutdown successfully from an automated system that detected the seismic activity. So, nothing in the reactor itself failed. What failed was the systems designed to dissipate the heat from the short lived fission products. At least one of the failed reactors was near the end of a fuel cycle and so it had a very large proportion of fission products in the fuel, meaning the core was going to get dangerously hot if cooling stopped.

        • How do you stop the next Fukashima from happening?

          First by understanding what went wrong, I'm not sure why.

          Let me help you with these parts.

          The reactors that were in service there all suffered from design flaws, referred to as a 'Design Basis Issues'. They work around these issues by have operational and implementation processes so that suffering an accident from that flaw can be avoided. This requires strict adherence to the manufactuer and implementing the support systems the reactor requires.

          In

          • Let me help you with these parts.

            Thank you for adding detail to my description.

            No matter what reactor technology is being used it seems we haven't been able to avoid this characteristic of human nature as Fukushima shows that the nuclear industry learned nothing from Chernobyl.

            I do not believe it is fair to say the industry learned nothing from Chernobyl. You can say the lessons learned were not implemented. You can say the wrong lessons were learned. The industry knows what went wrong but there are a lot of reasons why we are still at much higher risk than we should from a nuclear accident.

            The hubris of the operators caused the destruction of the communities that surround them.

            TEPCO was overconfident in their ability to prevent a meltdown. I have little doubt that they saw additional safety measures that were ordered

            • by MrKaos ( 858439 )

              Thank you for adding detail to my description.

              You're welcome.

              I do not believe it is fair to say the industry learned nothing from Chernobyl. You can say the lessons learned were not implemented. You can say the wrong lessons were learned.

              We can say, from what we know, is that TEPCO willfully ignored known lessons and colluded with the government regulator to prevent regulation being created. Therefore it is charitable to say the nuclear industry learned nothing.

              You can say it was criminal negligence and

              • by khallow ( 566160 )

                We can say, from what we know, is that TEPCO willfully ignored known lessons and colluded with the government regulator to prevent regulation being created. Therefore it is charitable to say the nuclear industry learned nothing.

                We also know that this collusion was irrelevant to the Fukushima accident. We also know that collusion with regulators wasn't the cause of the accident at Chernobyl either. So no, "learned nothing" is an empty assertion.

                Unfortunately TEPCO also neglected to make improvements to the sea wall precluding that option to themselves and effectively neutering the triple redundancy you speak of.

                What neglect? The research that indicated this was a problem was done in 2001. The regulatory agency didn't get around to determining that was something to look at until around 2006 and TEPCO did the research a couple years later which I gather concluded that that the Fukushima sea wall was

                • by MrKaos ( 858439 )

                  We also know that this collusion was irrelevant to the Fukushima accident. We also know that collusion with regulators wasn't the cause of the accident at Chernobyl either. So no, "learned nothing" is an empty assertion.

                  Your opinion differs from the official report which states the nuclear industry "managed to avoid absorbing the critical lessons learned from Three Mile Island and Chernobyl" so, yes, it's an accurate assertion. Organizational failures led to the accident in both cases.

                  What neglect?

                  Cited

              • Unfortunately doing so would reduce nuclear powers capacity factor significantly making nuclear power pointless.

                No, it would increase capacity factor because right now the standard response is a shutdown. If the power is reduced, instead of eliminated, the reactor itself can provide the power needed for cooling. Also, if kept running the fission will "eat" some of the fission products which means that if a shutdown is called for later then there is less cooling required due to there being less fission products in the core.

                I believe it is INSANE to point at those two reactor facilities and claim nuclear power is safe.

                Sure, if you look at only those two then nuclear power does not look very safe. If you compar

                • by MrKaos ( 858439 )

                  No, it would increase capacity factor because right now the standard response is a shutdown. If the power is reduced, instead of eliminated, the reactor itself can provide the power needed for cooling.

                  During an earthquake and Tsunami - that is insane idea. We are only discussing this as an option because of Fukushima and they may have had this option *IF* the seawall was protecting the reactor from flooding and damage. So this option wasn't available to Fukushima operators.

                  However, proposing running rea

                • by MrKaos ( 858439 )

                  Incidentally, what is you position on nuclear disarmament?

    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      It's not regulatory red tape, it's cheap fossil fuels. US natural gas spot prices dropped from $14 / MMBTU in 2006 to around $2.60 in 2016. Over the same period nuclear plants under construction were completed, but

      Prior to that nuclear had to weather a 66% drop in coal prices from the 1970s to 2001 and a 8% drop in oil prices from 1980 to 1998.

      There is really one and only one compelling economic argument for nuclear at this point: the climate change costs of fossil fuels are externalized, amounting to an i

      • There are more arguments for nuclear depending on where you are. Energy independence can be one. The fuel market is a lot less volatile than the oil market and it's trivial to stockpile fuel.

    • It's best we keep moving away from the nuclear industry. In Finland two new nuclear power plants are currently being built. The French state is desperately trying to get rid of its state-controlled nuclear company Areva and it seems plausible [ft.com] that the remains of Areva - company may not even be able finalize building of the Olkiluoto 3 nuclear power plant.

      Another (Russian) nuclear plant that is under construction is expected to produce more expensive MWh's than most of the competing energy sources. In pr
      • by Anonymous Coward

        Its funny how you fail to mention the lower cost, faster construction of many plants by the Chinese and Koreans. You just pick a few worst case first of a kind builds.

      • Solar power...in Finland?

        Going to be a few years before that is economic. But Finland is an edge case...edge if the Arctic ocean.

        Just hand bottles of vodka in front of treadmills and let the citizens generate the power.

        • by Nethead ( 1563 )

          Just hand bottles of vodka in front of treadmills and let the citizens generate the power.

          Drunken Rage Against the Machine?

      • Did you bother reading the article? The chart title is "Fuel Prices in Heat Production".
        http://www.stat.fi/til/ehi/201... [www.stat.fi]

        Do you even know the difference between MWt and MWe?

      • by MrKaos ( 858439 )

        I was reading the links you provided colordev, however the ft link is paywalled. Do you have another link or a paste so I can read it please?

    • However, due to the regulatory red tape and NIMBY/enviro freakout factions in the US, investing in reactor construction in the US seems like a very expensive and extremely risky proposition.

      Well, Trump did say that he wants to increase out nuclear capacity, so I guess he's planning for Atomic Boy Scout reactors in everyone's backyards . . .

    • investing in reactor construction in the US seems like a very expensive and extremely risky proposition

      They didn't invest, they bought out a competitor. Toshiba is already the largest operator and service supplier and second largest engineering and construction company in the nuclear industry. (Google Westinghouse Nuclear)

  • Media just likes to blow things out of proportion as usual. Toshiba is doing fine, and will keep doing fine.

  • See what happens when you fsck with the alt-f4 keyboard mapping?
  • Bleep the whole bleeping company. Absolutely the worst customer service for retail products I've ever run across. If only I'd read some of the forum columns about their refusal to honor warranties before I'd bought a TV set, I could have saved myself a lot of pain.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    These are bargain prices, Mortimer!

  • Toshiba is still in business? What business are they in? I've not seen a Toshiba product in the past decade.
  • They stopped their entire direct resale and direct consumer sales program and their C50-55 satellite computers are absolute garbage. Like on par with HP garbage. Those are the real 2 reasons they're tanking right now.

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