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Environment & Energy

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hatrack

(64,653 posts)
Thu Dec 8, 2016, 07:55 AM Dec 2016

The Slow-Motion Crash In Coastal Real Estate Awaits; $1 Trillion Plus On The Line [View all]

EDIT

It’s a trillion-dollar bubble. Once again, this raises a key question for all Americans: What year will coastal property values crash? I first posed the question in 2009, pointing out that coastal property values will crash long before sea levels have actually risen a few feet. Instead, coastal property values will crash when a large fraction of the financial community, mortgage bankers and opinion-makers — along with a smaller but substantial fraction of the public — realize that it is too late for us to stop catastrophic sea level rise.

When sellers outnumber buyers, and banks become reluctant to write 30-year mortgages for doomed property and insurance rates soar, then the coastal property bubble will slow, peak, and crash. This appears to be underway. As the Times reports, “Nationally, median home prices in areas at high risk for flooding are still 4.4 percent below what they were 10 years ago, while home prices in low-risk areas are up 29.7 percent over the same period, according to the housing data.” Since 2001, “home sales in flood-prone areas grew about 25 percent less quickly than in counties that do not typically flood.”

South Miami mayor Philip Stoddard warns that “coastal mortgages are growing into as big a bubble as the housing market of 2007.” But, he notes, when this bubble crashes it will never recover. Indeed, property values will keep declining since the waters will keep rising and the storm surges will only get worse.

Back in April, Sean Becketti, the chief economist for mortgage giant Freddie Mac also warned this scenario is much closer than the public realizes, in a post and video sardonically headlined, “Life’s a beach.”



EDIT

https://thinkprogress.org/rapid-arctic-ice-melt-economic-trump-98e0e01e23e#.6d2flggsb
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