"Increased awareness of flood risk and rising future insurance
costs impact perceptions of value, which will impact real estate
markets," said Matthew Eby, founder and executive director of
First Street Foundation.
The cost of flood damage was approximately $17 billion annually
between 2010 and 2018, according to testimony (https://science.house.gov/
imo/media/doc/Grimm%20Testimony.pdf) from Federal Emergency
Management Agency representative Michael Grimm. First Street
does not have comparable estimates for 2020 or 2019.
Roughly 4.3 million homes - concentrated in Florida, California,
South Carolina and Texas - have a substantial risk of sustaining
economic damage from flooding this year, the report shows. The
majority are not required by the U.S. government to have flood
insurance. Were all of them to buy federal insurance, National
Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) rates would need to increase 4.5
times to cover the risk, according to the report. The current
average NFIP premium for these 4.3 million homes is $981.
Using Miami-Dade county in Florida as a case study, earlier
First Street research (https://firststreet.org/flood-lab/published-research/mckinsey-report-will-mortgages-and-markets-stay-afloat-in-florida)
showed that homes that had been flooded had a 3% price discount.
Homes that were nearby other flooded properties and roads had an
11% discount.
This flood risk has been underpriced in mortgage- and
real-estate-backed markets due to outdated federal government
flood maps.
The number of properties with a substantial risk of flooding
this year is approximately 70% higher than what is estimated by
FEMA's maps, according to First Street (https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-floods-real-estate/from-new-york-to-houston-flood-risk-for-real-estate-hubs-ramps-up-idUSKBN2400YV).
FEMA maps are used to determine rates on government flood
insurance and to underpin risk assessments done by mortgage
lenders, big real estate firms and investors.
"By and large, we find that most commercial real estate firms
don't presently have a good grasp of what this change could mean
to the repricing of assets," said Eby.
(Reporting by Kate Duguid; editing by Megan Davies & Simon
Cameron-Moore)
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