Mortgage Access Threatened by Climate Risk

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Summary

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell quietly warned that in the next 10 to 15 years, some regions in the U.S. may become ineligible for mortgages due to insurers and lenders pulling out of disaster-prone areas.

Why You Might Not Qualify for a Mortgage in Climate-Risk Zones — Powell’s Stark Warning

Homeownership in disaster-prone regions is becoming increasingly precarious. In a recent Senate testimony, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell cautioned that banks and insurers are retreating from high-risk areas—coastal zones, wildfire corridors, and hurricane-prone states—making mortgages harder to obtain.

This shift is already underway: major insurers like State Farm and Allstate have exited markets in California and Florida, while premiums in vulnerable zip codes have surged by over 80%.

SOURCES

  • 1 Deng, Y, CHan, T Li & T Riddiough (2021). Whither Weather?: High Temperature, Climate Change and Mortgage Default. Paris December 2021 Finance Meeting EUROFIDAI – ESSEC.
  • 2 Biswas, S, Hossain, M, & D Zink (2023). California Wildfires, Property Damage, and Mortgage Repayment. Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelpha. Working Paper WP23-05.
  • 3 Du, D, & X Zhao (2020). Hurricanes and Residential Mortgage Loan Performance. Officer of the Comptroller of the Currency Report.

Mortgage lenders typically require homeowners insurance, but with fewer providers and skyrocketing costs, many buyers are left without viable options. If coverage is canceled, lenders may impose force-placed insurance, which is often more expensive and less comprehensive. For those unable to secure traditional insurance, state-run FAIR plans offer minimal protection—often only covering cash value, not full replacement costs.

This article explores the evolving landscape of climate-driven mortgage access and offers practical guidance for navigating insurance cancellations, FAIR plan limitations, and rising costs.

Powell Warns Mortgages Will Be Gone In Some US Regions

As climate risks escalate, homeowners face rising premiums, limited coverage, and shrinking access to financing—especially in wildfire and hurricane zones.

  • The implications are clear: prospective buyers must research insurance availability before purchasing property, and current homeowners in high-risk zones may need to consider relocation or alternative financing strategies.
  • Jerome Powell’s warning: In 10–15 years, some U.S. regions may become ineligible for mortgages due to insurers and banks pulling out of disaster-prone areas.
  • Why it matters: Mortgage lenders require homeowners insurance, and without it, buyers can’t secure loans.

Climate Change and Insurance Withdrawals

  • Wildfires and hurricanes: Events like California’s wildfires and predicted major hurricanes are driving insurers out of high-risk zones.
  • Financial impact: Insurers face billions in losses—$1.21B projected for 2025, $50B from recent wildfires.

Rising Insurance Costs

  • Premium hikes: From 2021–2024, average premiums rose 24%. In high-risk zip codes, costs are 82% higher than low-risk areas.
  • State-level exits: Major insurers like Allstate and State Farm have exited markets in Florida and California.

The climate-driven retreat of insurers and lenders from high-risk regions is reshaping real estate investing—especially for small investors and private equity (PE) firms.

For Small Investors

Reduced access to financing: In disaster-prone areas, mortgages may become unavailable, limiting opportunities for buy-and-hold strategies or house flipping.

Insurance volatility: Rising premiums and limited coverage options (like FAIR plans) increase holding costs and risk exposure.

Depressed property values: Homes in high-risk zones may appreciate more slowly—or even lose value—due to insurance constraints and buyer hesitancy.

Shift to alternative markets: Investors may pivot to lower-risk regions with more stable insurance and financing ecosystems.

For Private Equity Firms

Risk transfer opportunities: PE firms can participate in Credit Risk Transfer (CRT) pools, absorbing mortgage risk off government-sponsored entities like Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

Due diligence intensifies: Climate risk now factors into underwriting, asset selection, and exit strategies. Firms must model exposure to wildfires, floods, and hurricanes.

Operational pressure: ESG mandates and investor scrutiny are pushing PE firms to align climate resilience with portfolio strategy.

Distressed asset plays: As insurance exits destabilize local markets, PE firms may find undervalued assets ripe for repositioning—though with higher risk and regulatory complexity.

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