
FORGET
PEAK OIL, PEAK NET
WORTH IS THE REAL DANGER
Is
the proverbial 'peak' in consumer borrowing upon us?
by Brady Willett &
Todd Alway
FallStreet.com
August 21, 2007
But as stocks started to go bust in 2000 something unexpected happened: the housing market went boom.


The reason the �net worth� data is an important consideration today is self evident: unable to explain why the outlook for consumer spending is positive given that debt service costs are hitting record highs, savings are near record lows, and wages are failing to keep pace with inflation, optimistic economists point to the consumer�s balance sheet and calmly conclude that everything will be all right. And although these analysts have indeed been right for a long time (16-years and counting), there is ample evidence brewing to suggest that the US consumer is about to fall down. For example, declining housing prices have closed the housing ATMs for many, last month�s larger than expected increase in consumer credit was the result of credit card borrowing, and retailers are already starting to warn of tougher times.
As for the headline net worth figure that serves to assuage economist�s forecasts, even if one assumes that the fallout in the housing market can be contained via a commensurate increase in say equity wealth, the ominous trend of liability growth outpacing asset growth is difficult to ignore. Seemingly counterintuitive � if debt growth is really that ominous why does household net worth continue to increase? � basic math suggests that debt growth is nearing the point of being dangerous.

What can be added to the basic math theme is the correlation between long-term U.S. interest rates and asset prices. Without straying from our focus, the story here is of a precipitous long-term decline in U.S. interest rates which, in part, has fueled outsized appreciation in equities and homes. Given that real adjusted return for these assets could disappoint when compared to the spectacular returns logged in the last 25-years, it makes it that much more challenging to avoid a day of reckoning soon on present net worth trends alone.
Long ignored as overly pessimistic, bears have come out of hibernation in recent weeks proclaiming that the day of reckoning is here. And while most bears do not specifically focus on long-term net worth trends, the complex interplay between asset appreciation and household debt coverage is generally implied in any pessimistic manifesto. Quite frankly, �Can the U.S. consumer keep spending?� is a question that deserves to be asked repeatedly so long as trends suggest that consumer spending is grounded upon unstable moorings.
Whether another peak in net worth is here or near, it should be remembered that the first consumer led recession in more than 16-years is not likely to be as painless as the previous recession. If the current trends in debt growth persist it is not a question of if, but when�
In short, while much of the press has been focused on the threat of peak oil to the U.S. economy, the more immediate danger lies in the liquidation of household wealth through the accumulation of debt.
© 2007 Brady Willett
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