Where A Bad World Means Good Business
Bloomberg Businessweek|August 07, 2017

U.S. makers of nuclear bomb shelters are thriving on fears of North Korea.

Justin Mattingly, with Andy Sharp
Where A Bad World Means Good Business

Much has been written about the difficulties many high-cost American businesses face when trying to sell to customers outside the U.S. But export demand has never been better at Atlas Survival Shelters LLC, which ships bunkers to customers around the world from its U.S. factories. Among its best sellers: the BombNado, an underground safe room that can be put under a garage, which starts at $18,999.

The popularity of the company’s doomsday fortifications is no surprise, considering the state of the world in general and, specifically, Kim Jong UN’s pursuit of a missile that can hit the continental U.S. The most intense interest is in Japan, which has long been within North Korea’s striking distance.

The intercontinental ballistic missile used in the July 28 launch is believed to be North Korea’s most advanced yet, capable of striking U.S. targets such as Los Angeles, Chicago, and possibly even some East Coast cities. But Tokyo is only 800 miles from Pyongyang, across the Sea of Japan, so the technology doesn’t need to be nearly as advanced or accurate to cause mayhem. “Japan’s going hog wild right now,” says Ron Hubbard, owner of Atlas Survival.

This story is from the August 07, 2017 edition of Bloomberg Businessweek.

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This story is from the August 07, 2017 edition of Bloomberg Businessweek.

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