When will people stop moving to the riskiest areas?

For the last 50 years, Americans have flocked to the warm, sunny South. But, as climate change makes extreme heat, hurricanes, wildfire and flooding worse, will that trend ever STOP? Well, some regions might just be showing signs of a reversal, and they hold lessons for what other areas might expect as the world continues to warm. Weathered is a show hosted by weather expert Maiya May and produced by Balance Media that helps explain the most common natural disasters, what causes them, how they’re changing, and what we can do to prepare. Here is a direct video link.

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Rethinking risk-exposure

The Great Fire of London in 1666 prompted the creation of the first fire insurance companies, which later evolved into broader property insurance. Home insurance became more widespread in the 19th century, particularly in the United States and Europe, as urbanization and industrialization increased.

The Hartford Fire Insurance Company began offering policies in the U.S. in 1852. Post-World War II suburbanization (1950s–1960s) saw a significant increase in home and vehicle ownership, driving the widespread adoption of home and auto insurance.

The availability of affordable insurance has shaped capital allocation decisions and enabled complacency about property ownership and risk exposure.

A world where insurance is prohibitively expensive and hard to obtain is a new paradigm that should increasingly change how we allocate resources and value assets.

As Californians lose their homes and their livelihoods, finances will become a crucial issue for many people needing to rebuild and carry on. Bloomberg Business reporter Leslie Kaufman says this is an “existential test” for the state’s insurance system. She tells Hari Sreenivasan what it might mean for Americans as we face a future of increasingly extreme weather events. Here is a direct video link.

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Surprise: financial conditions tightening into 2025

While the U.S. Federal Reserve cut overnight rates by 125 basis points since November 2023 (below on the lower right), the U.S. 10-year Treasury yield has risen more than a percentage point, touching 4.8% for the first time since October 2023 (on the lower left) and April 2007 before that. Higher rates are the opposite of what financial markets had been expecting.Treasury investors are demanding more yield compensation in the face of incoming trade tariffs, rising debt levels, and galloping interest payments globally, and fair enough. See Global Bond Tantrum is a Wrenching and Worrisome Start to the New Year.

After a record 793 days of inversion from July 2022 through September 2024, an upward-sloping yield curve means that longer-dated bonds finally yield more than short (shown below since 2010). That makes sense.

Since 1955, every U.S. recession has been preceded by an inverted yield curve, followed by re-steepening before the recession fully materialized within 6 to 18 months. So far, no recession has been declared four months after the U.S. 10-2 curve normalized.

Furthermore, when the Fed cuts its policy rate, the U.S. dollar typically weakens, lowering borrowing costs for international USD debtors and boosting U.S. exports. The opposite has happened this time, with the U.S. dollar index (DXY) surging 10% against major trading partners since July 2023.

Magnifying the downside risk of highly inflated stock prices, 30% of S&P 500 company revenues are generated in deflating non-USD currencies and closer to 60% for the “Mag 7” companies (31% of the S&P 500 market capitalization).

Higher yields are better for savers but hard on debtors and are much less ‘stimulative’ to credit growth and stock markets than the zero-bound rates maintained for nine years, 2008-2015 and 2020-22. Investors would be wise to take note.

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