Milton's flood insurance reckoning for Capitol Hill

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Oct 09, 2024 View in browser
 
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By Eleanor Mueller and Sam Sutton

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QUICK FIX

Hurricane Milton, a monstrous storm set to hit western Florida Wednesday night, is poised to deplete the finances of the government’s chronically indebted flood insurance program. Congress is already bracing for a fight over what to do about it.

Key lawmakers and aides are beginning to game out the likely impact on the National Flood Insurance Program, which is the primary option for millions of American homeowners to protect their finances from catastrophic flooding.

The emerging view from several lawmakers and staffers is that NFIP claims spurred by Milton and last month’s Hurricane Helene will likely exhaust the program’s nearly $5 billion in funds and force it to tap $9.9 billion in Treasury borrowing authority. While the NFIP collects premiums and pays out claims similar to a typical insurer, it’s been upside down financially because of weaknesses in how it assessed flood risks for decades and giant losses brought by devastating storms including Hurricane Katrina.

Some on Capitol Hill expect Milton could push the NFIP to the edge of what it can borrow from Treasury, potentially forcing Congress to raise its borrowing cap or to pursue some kind of alternative funding to ensure that claims are paid.

Nearly 2 million NFIP policies are in areas hit by last month’s Helene or threatened by Milton, a Category 5 storm as of Tuesday evening. Milton is expected to cause much bigger losses than Helene, which hit hardest in areas with relatively low levels of flood insurance coverage. Florida has more than 1.7 million NFIP policies.

“The fundamental question here is, will $15 billion be enough to cover Helene and a Category 5 that hits Tampa?” said one House Financial Services Committee GOP staffer granted anonymity because the person wasn’t authorized to speak publicly. “No, $15 billion probably would not ultimately be enough money.”

The looming disaster is set to rekindle long-running political conflicts about how to shore up the program. Congress has struggled for years with how to revamp the NFIP, amid clashes over whether changes would drive up the cost of coverage and housing. The prospects for an emergency intervention to ensure claims are paid, if such a move is necessary post-Milton, are likewise looking fraught as opposing ideas emerge over how to bridge the gap. Among them: Whether to simply raise the NFIP’s borrowing authority, appropriate money to pay policyholders or cancel more of the NFIP’s debt, as Congress did with $16 billion in debt forgiveness to pay claims after 2017’s string of hurricanes.

“It's been nearly impossible to try to get any type of consensus on this,” said Rep. Garret Graves, a Louisiana Republican. “The way that we prepare for disasters and the way we recover from them just needs to be fundamentally changed because at the end of the day, disaster victims are re-victimized by the stupidity and inefficiency of our federal government.”

Graves said in an interview that he raised the issue with House Financial Services Chair Patrick McHenry on Monday. House Financial Services and Senate Banking have jurisdiction over the NFIP and its borrowing authority.

“My takeaway was that [McHenry’s] frustrated by all the landmines out there in the flood insurance space,” Graves said.

According to House aides granted anonymity, McHenry and the lead Democratic member of his committee, Rep. Maxine Waters of California, have clashing views on how to free up cash for claims if such a move is warranted, despite coming together in the past on long-term reform plans. McHenry would favor raising the NFIP’s borrowing cap or appropriating funds, while Waters has long advocated for debt forgiveness. Congress has imposed a $30.4 billion limit on the NFIP’s ability to borrow from Treasury.

McHenry and Waters spokespeople declined to comment.

Lisa Peto, who worked on NFIP issues as a former Financial Services Committee chief counsel to Waters, said she expects the borrowing authority to be raised as it has in the past but that it’s less clear whether there is political will to forgive debt.

“There may be some backlash from lawmakers representing less 'risky' areas that have raised concerns in the past about cross-subsidization,” said Peto, who is now a partner at the government affairs firm Mindset.

Lawmakers are beginning to stress that Congress will ensure NFIP policyholders receive the funds they’re owed. FEMA, which operates the NFIP, is facing mounting pressure across its operations thanks to Helene and now Milton.

“We're going to do everything we can to make sure that there is not a delay in the ability of FEMA to respond to their needs,” said Sen. Mike Rounds, a South Dakota Republican who sits on Senate Banking. “It should always be a concern that you're going deeper in debt with a program that has to be reformed, but it is not inconsistent with the way the program has been run in the past.”

The NFIP did not respond to a request for comment.

Congress, which won’t return to Washington until after the November elections, likely has ample runway to address any kind of NFIP claims crunch that arises.

"It is definitely a possibility that you could have, with combined Helene plus Milton, claims that would be more than the NFIP borrowing authority,” said former NFIP chief actuary Andy Neal, who is now a managing director at Aon. “The good news is, with a $9.9 billion cushion provided by the borrowing authority, there would be time for action to be taken."

IT’S WEDNESDAY— And stay safe. If you’ve got tips, let Eleanor know at emueller@politico.com and Sam at ssutton@politico.com.

 

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Driving the day

SEC Chair Gary Gensler speaks with former SEC Commissioner Robert Jackson Jr. at an NYU Law event at 11:45 a.m. … Fed Vice Chair Philip Jefferson speaks at the Charlotte Economics Club at 12:30 p.m. … FOMC minutes are released at 2 p.m. … CFTC Commissioner Caroline Pham speaks at the Northwind 2024 Disruptive Technologies Invitational Forum at 7 p.m. … Crypto conference Permissionless kicks off in Salt Lake City. Speakers include Reps. Tom Emmer (R-Minn.) and Ritchie Torres (D-N.Y.), Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah) and Pham.

Satoshi unveiled? — From POLITICO EU’s Izabella Kaminska: “A new HBO documentary identifies Canadian developer Peter Todd as Satoshi Nakamoto, the pseudonymous founder of cryptocurrency bitcoin.

“‘It seems like you had these deep insights into bitcoin at the time?’[the film’s maker Cullen] Hoback puts to Todd in the film's finale. ‘Well, yeah, I'm Satoshi Nakamoto,’ Todd replies.”

“The admission, however, is not necessarily a smoking gun. Todd, who is a vocal backer of Ukraine and Israel on his X feed, is known to invoke the claim “I am Satoshi” as an expression of solidarity with the creator’s bid for privacy. In an email to CoinDesk prior to the documentary's release, Todd reportedly denied he was the bitcoin creator: ‘Of course I'm not Satoshi,’ he said.”

Milton — Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis warned Florida residents on Tuesday that Hurricane Milton could unleash significant damage across the state and that they should prepare for the worst, Arek Sarkissian reports.

— Milton, which lands on the heels of Hurricane Helene, could prove more damaging than Hurricane Ian in 2022. That spells trouble for catastrophe bonds. The destruction caused by Ian caused a 10 percent slump in the Swiss Re Catastrophe Bond Index, Bloomberg’s Gautam Naik reports.

— The storm’s arrival comes amid a sharp increase in premiums for commercial real estate property insurance, the NYT’s Emily Flitter reports.

Warning signs — Rust Belt Democrats think Kamala Harris needs to sharpen her economic messaging to working-class voters if she wants to maintain the “blue wall” in Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, according to the WSJ’s Ken Thomas and Catherine Lucey. Michigan Democrats are urging the campaign to emphasize the administration’s work to grow the auto industry and build new plants.

— While Harris’s polling with rank-and-file workers is flashing warning signs, she’s outperforming Joe Biden and Hillary Clinton among white, college-educated workers, according to CNN polling expert Harry Enten.

— Nationally, the NYT/Siena poll of likely voters has Harris up 49-46 percent over Donald Trump.

— A new swing state poll commissioned by the Peter G. Peterson Foundation and conducted jointly by the Democratic polling firm Global Strategy Group and the Republican firm North Star Opinion Research found Harris and Trump deadlocked across the seven major swing states. Trump has a one-point lead in Georgia, and a two-point lead in Michigan, while Harris is up by a point in Wisconsin.

The fiscal headache — The Congressional Budget Office on Tuesday estimated that the federal deficit was $1.8 trillion during the 2024 fiscal year. The latest estimate is $81 billion smaller than the June estimate.

2024 ELECTION

Can’t win — The economy is on solid footing but top executives at U.S. firms are bearish no matter who wins the election on Nov. 5. PwC surveyed 709 business leaders about the risks that would accompany a Biden or Harris presidency and, regardless of the outcome, 71 percent said that post-election trade and tax policies will hurt U.S. competitiveness.

Economic policy was identified as the top risk under both Harris and Trump. More specifically, executives said they were more worried about tax and climate policy shifts under Harris. Under Trump, regulation of tech, artificial intelligence and data — along with U.S. antitrust and competition environments — were named as top risks. A majority — 61 percent – said they anticipate a recession in the next six months. The survey was conducted between Sept. 12 and Sept. 19.

 

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Wall Street

Hamlet on Park Avenue — Days after Trump falsely claimed that JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon had endorsed him, Dimon told Bloomberg that he has not made a decision on whether to publicly back a candidate in the election. “I will decide, and I will vote,” the big bank CEO said. “I reserve the right to do whatever I want. I’m a citizen. I can vote. I can say what I want. I’ve never been endorsing candidates. But I am thinking through what I want to say or do.”

Dimon also said the U.S. regulatory environment has become “anti-M&A” and that both U.S. and U.K. agencies need to make it easier for companies to go public.

At the regulators

Here we go again — Another cryptocurrency company is suing the SEC. On Tuesday, Crypto.com challenged the Wall Street regulator’s approach to the $2 trillion market with a lawsuit in the Eastern District of Texas, our Declan Harty reports.

The company relocated its North American headquarters to Texas earlier this year. Still, long-time investor advocate Todd Phillips, a professor at Georgia State University, said Crypto.com appears to be forum shopping ahead of the SEC’s own potentially looming lawsuit against the company.

“If you don’t like what the Biden administration is doing, you try to get it to the Fifth Circuit any way you can,” Phillips said. “This seems to be exactly what Crypto.com is doing.”

More time — The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. on Tuesday said it would grant stakeholders more time to comment on rules that would tighten standards around brokered deposits, Michael Stratford reports. The proposal was advanced by the FDIC’s Democrats in a 3-2 party line vote in July.

Jobs report

Wells Fargo has named Elena Gallo as the lead executive of its government banking division Executive. Gallo, who joined Wells Fargo in 2019, will succeed the retiring Mara Holley.

 

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