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Hurricane Irma
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Residents purchase water at BJ Wholesale in preparation for Hurricane Irma on Tuesday, September 5, 2017, in Miami. Hurricane Irma grew into a dangerous Category 5 storm, and businesses in the state are bracing for its hit this weekend. Photo: Miami Herald via AP

Businesses and ordinary Americans fear the worst as Hurricane Irma bears down on Florida

Businesses are bracing for the worst as Hurricane Irma barrels toward South Florida, packing potentially catastrophic winds.

Insurers led the S&P 500 Index lower on Tuesday, as forecasters struggled to predict whether the strongest storm to form in the open Atlantic Ocean will slam into the third most-populous US state. A direct hit on Miami could theoretically inflict damages in the US$200 billion range, according to Enki Research risk modeller Chuck Watson.

Cruise lines, banks and money managers prepared contingency plans. Since Hurricane Andrew ravaged the peninsula in 1992, South Florida has developed into a financial centre, drawing hedge fund offices and billions in wealth from across the US, Latin America and beyond. Supermarkets in the city ran out of bottled water, residents rushed to hardware stores and voluntary evacuations prompted the price of flights leaving for New York to surge on Expedia.

Businesses and residents were particularly on edge in the wake of deadly Hurricane Harvey, which swamped Houston, strained federal resources and put pressure on insurance companies. Birmingham, Alabama-based Regions Financial Corp, among Florida’s larger banks by deposits, said its teams worked through the weekend preparing. Yet with Irma’s potential landfall still days away, business continued mostly as usual on Tuesday afternoon in Miami’s Brickell financial district just blocks from Biscayne Bay.

A shelf normally containing packaged water is empty at a Piggly Wiggly store on Tuesday, September 5, 2017, in Panama City, Florida. Photo: News Herald via AP

Ray Zucaro, the chief investment officer at RVX Asset Management in Miami’s Aventura suburb, said he is going to weather the storm in a hotel in the Orlando area. Many employees are leaving town too, some by plane.

“If the office is damaged we can still all work remotely,” he said. “We’re going through procedures and trying to batten down the hatches. I’ve told everyone tomorrow to focus on getting their homes and their families safe.”

Downtown, some stores were doing brisk business.

“We’ve been through Andrew, so you have to be prepared,” said Jessica Eagan, a 37-year-old dentist who was shopping at a busy Whole Foods, buying what she could on her lunch hour. “Look what just happened in Texas.”

With large bottles of water in short supply, some shoppers were buying sparkling instead.

Residents of St Petersburg prepare sandbags as they prepare for Hurricane Irma. Photo: Tampa Bay Times via AP

Cruise-line operators such as Carnival and Royal Caribbean Cruises, among South Florida’s biggest companies by market value, are monitoring the storm and re-routing ships to avoid islands that may be hit.

A seven-day cruise on the Carnival Glory that left Miami on Saturday, for example, cancelled stops in St Thomas, Puerto Rico and the Turks and Caicos in favour of western Caribbean destinations such as Mexico and Belize. Royal Caribbean aborted two sailings to the Bahamas scheduled to depart on Friday. The company is reimbursing passengers for their fares and giving them a 25 per cent credit toward future bookings.

Carlos Otero loads his car with water bottles outside a Publix grocery store as residents brace for the arrival of Hurricane Irma in Florida. Photo: AFP

Miami-based Carnival is also prepping its call centre and support staff for a possible landfall in Florida. “Fingers crossed for the storm to take a sharp right-hand turn north,” Carnival spokeswoman Jennifer De La Cruz said in an email.

Carnival, Royal Caribbean and Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings Ltd tumbled in Tuesday trading. So did insurers and some real estate investment trusts.

Analysts cited worst-case scenarios in which the storm could inflict as much as US$130 billion in insured damage. Katrina, the costliest storm for insurers in US history, resulted in about US$50 billion in losses on an inflation-adjusted basis. Everest Re Group, Brighthouse Financial and XL Group all fell more than 5 per cent in New York on Tuesday, the worst declines in the S&P 500.

Hotels in the storm’s path could see a drop in business as people leave the area and cancel trips, said Alison Hoyt, senior director of consulting and analytics for STR, a provider of data on the lodging industry. Last year, Hurricane Matthew cause demand for hotel rooms to shift inland, she said.

“You do see some of that potentially moving to other cities and just that overall drop in occupancy along coastal areas,” Hoyt said.

Stan Glass fills four 5-gallon fuel tanks with petrol for his boat should he have to evacuate from Florida if the area is hit by Hurricane Irma. Photo: AFP

Miami’s hotel market has had an average occupancy rate of 79.2 per cent this year through July, well above the national average of 66.6 per cent, according to STR. Even so, room rates have declined amid a glut of construction.

Marriott International said its hotels in the projected path are preparing for the storm. The company said it will communicate directly with guests about Irma, and urged travellers to call for news about the storm before making plans.

Jose Escobar puts up shutters as he prepares for Hurricane Irma on September 5, 2017 in Homestead, Florida. A state of emergency has been declared as Hurricane Irma threatens to batter the state this weekend. Photo: AFP

In the Caribbean, some airlines are trying to get more customers to the mainland. American Airlines added two flights on Tuesday from St Maarten and St Kitts in the Leeward Islands to get passengers to Miami ahead of Irma. The carrier also will make an extra flight on Wednesday morning from San Juan, Puerto Rico, to Miami. American has cancelled dozens of flights to several Caribbean cities through Thursday, the airline said in an emailed statement.

American also issued waivers for 27 airports in the possible path of the storm, including Miami, a move that enables customers to change travel plans for Tuesday through September 12 to other dates without paying a fee.

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