Investment unmasked as consumption as UK pops: James Saft

Wed Jun 25, 2008 8:12am EDT
 
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(James Saft is a Reuters columnist. The opinions expressed are his own)

By James Saft

LONDON (Reuters) - During the housing bubble a lot of people confused consumption with investment, a fact now becoming painfully obvious in Britain as prices fall and businesses suffer.

As in the United States, home owners helped inflate a wider bubble by ploughing money into housing-related consumption, from granite kitchen countertops to living room furniture to under floor heating. The illusion, or justification, was that this consumption, often financed via mortgage debt, was actually investment in a can't-miss real asset.

It wasn't, it's stopping and the impact on the economy will be considerable.

Think of it as the "Land of Leather Fallacy," after the British furniture retailer now coming to grief due to people no longer thinking that buying a lemon yellow L-shaped sofa will be repaid with a higher house price or is part of a viable buy-to-let retirement plan.

Now you may not have Land of Leather where you live, but if you live in one of the economies which has been in the grip of a property bubble you will have something similar: a barn like store on a busy road outside of town selling household durable goods.

Business, for these companies, has not been so good lately.

Land of Leather Holdings Plc LAN.L, whose shares have fallen to about 5 pence from 228 pence last August, has like many similar companies seen its sales plunge, in its case by 35 percent in the six weeks to June 6. This comes as housing transactions in Britain fall off a cliff, down 13 percent month-on-month in May. House prices were down 2.4 percent in May and 6.4 percent in a year, according to the Halifax index.

Don't get me wrong, I'm sure Land of Leather makes comfy sofas and in some ways what has happened is not their fault. But they were part of a huge misallocation of resources.

The unwinding of that, which is midway in the Unites States but just beginning in Britain, is going to be difficult, especially as central banks have little room to loosen rates due to rising inflation.

Shopping will give way to saving, and some consumption will rebalance to actual investment.

THE ILLUSION OF CONTROL

In fact, beyond durable goods, the bubble in housing changed common attitudes towards owning a house, persuading people to consume more housing by buying as much as they could afford or by buying more than one house.

And while that strategy works beautifully when prices are going up by three or four times the rate of general inflation, it feels much more like consumption -- sometimes at an astonishing cost -- when prices are flat or falling.

At that point the older person with a large house or someone with a vacation house can see very clearly that they are consuming housing rather than investing in it.  Continued...

 

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