╌>

How high prices could impact rebuilding cost after Hurricane Ian

  

Category:  News & Politics

Via:  perrie-halpern  •  2 years ago  •  5 comments

By:   Rob Wile

How high prices could impact rebuilding cost after Hurricane Ian
If there's any consolation for survivors of Hurricane Ian, it's that the rising cost of building materials has started to slow — and in some cases even

S E E D E D   C O N T E N T



If there's any consolation for survivors of Hurricane Ian, it's that the rising cost of building materials has started to slow — and in some cases even reversed.

Thanks to a global economic slowdown, what seemed like a relentless increase in prices for materials over the past year or two had started to fade by the time Ian struck southwest Florida on Wednesday as a Category 4 storm.

The price of lumber, which surged during the Covid-19 pandemic and peaked in January, has returned to pre-pandemic levels, data from CME Group, a global markets company, show. It's due in part to a sharp slowdown in construction as higher mortgage rates and higher home prices have taken hold.

Meanwhile, global shipping bottlenecks have eased, making more shippingcontainers available and reducing the cost of freight. Data from Drewry's index, a global shipping tracking firm, show costs fell for 31 consecutive weeks, and have declined by 61% over the past 12 months.

"You're not going to have to spend so much on flooring or kitchen supplies — right now [prices] are going down as we speak," said Michelangelo Cocchiola, co-owner of Imeca Lumber & Hardware in Florida. "If the hurricane had hit two months or three months earlier, it would have been so much worse than now."

Nationwide demand for houses has ground to a halt, said Brendan Lowney, principal of Forest Economic Advisors, a company that studies building costs. The run-up in prices has also caused producers of key commodities like lumber to expand production capacity, helping to cool off those price gains, Lowney said.

In addition to lumber, prices for other key homebuilding commodities like PVC (polyvinyl chloride) and copper are also reversing, according to market data.

The cost of materials "have come down substantially," Lowney said.

But they are still elevated. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported this month that prices for building materials had climbed 4.9% through the year-to-date, and were up 14.3% over the past year.

1664623739635_tdy_sat_admiral_ian_rescue_crews_221001_1920x1080-0hgfc5.jpg

The sheer scale of the rebuilding to be done could also cause demand and prices to increase from here. According to the property information group CoreLogic, early estimates suggest Hurricane Ian will prove the costliest Florida storm since Hurricane Andrew hit the state in 1992, with a record number of homes and properties lost.

"Hurricane Ian will forever change the real estate industry and city infrastructure," said Tom Larsen, CoreLogic's associate vice president overseeing hazard and risk management. "Insurers will go into bankruptcy, homeowners will be forced into delinquency and insurance will become less accessible in regions like Florida."

Hurricane Ian victims and disaster responders are likely to encounter other rising costs amid an annual headline inflation rate that continues to hover above 8%.

Food price increases continue to hit multi-decade highs. Stephanie Ink-Edwards, CEO of Community Cooperative, an organization that fights hunger and homelessness in Lee County, said among the losses Ian victims are encountering is an absence of perishable food . She said food costs were already triple what they were last year in certain instances, even before the storm hit.

"The outflow of people in need who we must serve is now so much higher, but the cost to get supplies is also higher, so we're feeling the pinch from both ends," she said.

And while gas prices have come down from their summer peaks, with a Florida gas-tax holiday set to kick in Oct. 1, they remain well above their year-ago levels. As of Friday, the average price of regular unleaded gasoline in Florida was $3.39, according to AAA. That's about $0.33 higher than it was last September.

This week, Costco executives warned that they were seeing higher wages among suppliers — costs that will ultimately be passed on to consumers, in some cases.

"Wages are still the culprit," said CFO Richard Galanti, adding: "We'll try to unstick them, but I'm sure some of it will stick and some of it won't."

It is also likely to be harder — and costlier — to find qualified labor to help in the rebuilding process, experts say. While the global economic slowdown may be easing the cost of materials, Florida remains in the midst of a building boom, said Rusty Payton, CEO of the Florida Homebuilders Association.

"They've already got plenty of projects to get done," Payton said. "You're not going see a mass migration of folks" to southwest Florida.

Lowney predicted labor costs may jump in the short term as building contractors ration their services.

"In other words, they will raise their rates as high as the market will bear," he said.

On the flip side, with demand for jobs in Florida at an all-time high, those who have been displaced from their occupations by the storm are likely to find work more quickly than in other post-disaster periods, Lowney said.

"It's going to be less stressful if people don't have to worry about being unemployed," Lowney said.

At least one local state official estimated Thursday it would take a decade to rebuild the areas hit hardest by the storm.

"This is more similar to Katrina than the Florida storms we are familiar with," state Rep. Spencer Roach, who lost his home in the storm, told FloridaPolitics.com. "There is a different level of devastation and recovery, and it is going to impact a lot of folks."


Tags

jrDiscussion - desc
[]
 
Kavika
Professor Principal
1  Kavika     2 years ago

Most of the news coverage has been centered on the Fort Meyers area. The inland counties have been devasted with massive flooding which you don't see much coverage of. 

After the disaster of Ian, the next huge problem for Florida is the insurance companies or lack thereof. Ian could be the final death blow to the industry in Florida.

 
 
 
SteevieGee
Professor Silent
1.1  SteevieGee  replied to  Kavika @1    2 years ago

Seems to me it would have been much cheaper if we had just listened to Al Gore 30 years ago.

 
 
 
Greg Jones
Professor Participates
1.1.1  Greg Jones  replied to  SteevieGee @1.1    2 years ago

And just what would Al Gore have had us do?

 
 
 
Texan1211
Professor Principal
1.1.2  Texan1211  replied to  Greg Jones @1.1.1    2 years ago
And just what would Al Gore have had us do?

Just a wild guess here:

Sell him carbon offsets so he can jet around the world talking about the evils of climate change?

 
 
 
SteevieGee
Professor Silent
1.1.3  SteevieGee  replied to  Greg Jones @1.1.1    2 years ago

Doing nothing clearly wasn't the best course of action here.  Gore predicted everything that's happening right now and it's going to get a lot worse.  I doubt that there's anything we can do at this point to stop it.  Be sure to lie to your grandchildren and tell them you did your best to stop it.

 
 

Who is online


Texan1211
Gsquared
Kavika
devangelical


86 visitors