‘Studies’ Indicate Disappearing Beaches. Markets Think Studies Idiotic

https://www.realclearmarkets.com/articles/2020/03/24/studies_indicate_disappearing_beaches_markets_think_studies_idiotic_486331.html

In the late 1990s, and after Michael Ovitz and Ron Meyer had both left CAA (the superagency that they created, and ran together) respectively for Disney and Universal, the two Hollywood moguls got together. At this point they were pretty much estranged, there was routine backtalk from both about one another, but in Ovitz’s recounting in his endlessly interesting memoir Who Is Michael Ovitz?, the Hollywood legend acknowledged that the estrangement was “tougher on me than him.” They had formerly talked at least 30 times a day during the CAA years, but since then communication had all but dried up.

Ovitz and Meyer met up only for Ovitz to suggest that they start up a management or production company together. Meyer didn’t bite as his long tenure at Universal indicates, but he did relay to Ovitz his interest in Motown founder Berry Gordy’s Malibu house. The only hold-up for Meyer was the price. Ovitz recalls Meyer telling him that at $5.5 million, Gordy’s ask was too much. Ovitz added in his memoir that he too had long desired Gordy’s house, and “thinking that Ron was priced out,” he bought it. When Meyer found out, he was incensed. He was the one who’d told Ovitz about Gordy’s house being on the market, he called Ovitz to express his anger, and per Ovitz “that was our last conversation for years.”

So while Ovitz paints his actions as somewhat innocent in the matter, time has a way of softening hardened feelings. He admits now that there was some anger within him about what he heard Meyer was telling others about him. Better yet, a few weeks after their difficult phone call Ovitz sold the property to Meyer in a transaction brokered by their mutual business manager.

The all-too-Hollywood spat between Ovitz and Meyer rates mention for two reasons. First is that in 2019 news accounts indicated that Meyer was in contract to sell the house. Notable is that the market value of the house had gone up quite a bit since the late ‘90s when Meyer deemed $5.5 million a bit pricey. In his case, he sold the house for somewhere in the range of $120 million to a Silicon Valley tech entrepreneur. It’s quite a return for the entertainment mogul, and though Ovitz has since moved his genius to venture capital investing, one wonders if he wonders if he was perhaps too easy on Meyer way back when…

But that’s a digression. The other reason Meyer’s $100 million+ sale is notable is in consideration of continued alarmism on the part of climate scientists and researchers with regard to vanishing shorelines around the world.

As USA Today recently reported, a new study from the European Union’s Joint Research Center warns that a global catastrophe looms due to “the near-extinction of almost half of the world’s sandy beaches by the end of the century.” Hmmmm. Really?

It seems the only individuals who never get the message about the “near-extinction” of beaches are those who actually live at those beaches, along with those who yearn to live at beaches. Stop and think about it.

Presumably the desirability of Malibu, Laguna, La Jolla, the Hamptons, Martha’s Vineyard, Newport (RI), Ibiza, St. Tropez and other glamorous coastal locales has something to do with these destinations existing essentially on the beach. In other words, land and the housing that sits on said land is quite bit more valuable in Malibu than it is in the San Fernando Valley that is just over the hill from Malibu. Malibu is on or near the beach, while San Fernando Valley is, for lack of a better word, inland.

Though houses are expensive in parts of the San Fernando Valley, they don’t fetch anywhere near the amount that “shacks” in Malibu do. To the halfway awake, the previous sentence is a statement of the obvious. Those of us in possession of passably sound mind understand that property on the beach or near the beach is quite a bit more desirable than cities and towns far from it.

Crucial is that what’s true in California is true around the world. Housing near the water is almost monolithically dear relative to what’s inland from the water. It’s almost a waste of words to write down what is so obvious.

Yet it’s worth writing down in consideration of all the alarmism on the part of climate scientists (and those who aim to mimic them), and who claim that so much of the world’s beaches are set to disappear thanks to the theory that is global warming, or the tautology that’s climate change. Don’t you get it readers, “studies” show us that the world’s beaches are set to disappear.

Ok, but if so, does anyone seriously think Meyer could have fetched so much for his Malibu compound, and does anyone think beach real estate globally would be so eye-wateringly expensive if the world’s beaches were set to disappear? Implicit in this dour, alarmist view is that markets are incredibly dense; that the world’s richest don’t see what climate scientists see all-too-clearly.

To the above, some will say the rich are too rich to care. On its face the previous assertion is doubtful, plus haven’t the perpetually alarmed and offended told us for decades that the rich are “greedy”? If so, why would they place so much of their wealth in harm’s way? And what about insurance companies. Why would they insure properties that are set to be washed away? And again, why did Meyer enjoy such an impressive return on his Malibu house; one whose transfer in the $5 million range was once the stuff of Hollywood legend?

More broadly, all the hand wringing by the climate alarmists must be considered in terms of what the world is enduring right now. Getting into specifics, politicans around the world are overseeing the shutdown of the global economy based on a theory that millions will die if they get to close to one another. The economic agony these actions have brought about is and will be massively cruel in terms of jobs lost, businesses shuttered, and dreams dashed. Scary about all this is that the global warming true believers view economic growth as a major threat to the planet, and similarly seek economic shutdown by political force to save the planet. Readers might keep this in mind in consideration of how they feel now, and how they might feel in the future if the warming alarmists get their way.

Ideally before these climate religionists get the chance to commit major damage, the market signals provided by people like Ron Meyer will gain needed attention. Indeed, just once it would be great for the climate alarmists in our midst to answer why, if beaches are allegedly disappearing, beach houses are so expensive.

John Tamny is editor of RealClearMarkets, Vice President at FreedomWorks, and a senior economic adviser to Toreador Research and Trading (www.trtadvisors.com). His new book is titled They’re Both Wrong: A Policy Guide for America’s Frustrated Independent Thinkers. Other books by Tamny include The End of Work, about the exciting growth of jobs more and more of us love, Who Needs the Fed? and Popular Economics. He can be reached at [email protected].  

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