TY - JOUR
T1 - A ‘Distributional Apparatus’ for Real Estate
T2 - Fair Value Accounting and the Assetization of UK Property
AU - Goulding, Richard
AU - Haslam, Colin
AU - Leaver, Adam
AU - Silver, Jonathan
PY - 2024/3
Y1 - 2024/3
N2 - Research on housing financialization argues that property assets are important stores of value that collateralise global systems of financial accumulation. Yet remarkably little is known about how those assets are constructed, valued and generate returns. This paper draws on the assetization literature to unpack how investment properties are constructed as ‘assets’, applying an accounting lens to locate their growing importance within the move towards a fair value accounting regime. We argue that property investors benefit from a generous 'distributional apparatus' - that is, a collection of rules, norms, reporting technologies and market-orienting devices that act as both a resource and an incentive to engage in practices of valuation that maximise potential distributions. In the case of property assets, accounting rule IAS40 determines how housing assets should be recognised in an annual statement; the RICS Red Book acts as a market device which articulates with IAS40, providing rules and principles on the techniques of valuation and revaluation; and the ICAEW provides guidance on whether revaluations amount to a ‘realised profit’ which can be distributed to shareholders legally. Together these three features underpin the assetization process in investment property. We use two case studies to show that this apparatus acts as a flexible resource as companies build different valuation and distribution strategies around the RICS Red Book revaluation process, with different risk implications. Our findings contribute to financialization, assetization and accounting scholarship.
AB - Research on housing financialization argues that property assets are important stores of value that collateralise global systems of financial accumulation. Yet remarkably little is known about how those assets are constructed, valued and generate returns. This paper draws on the assetization literature to unpack how investment properties are constructed as ‘assets’, applying an accounting lens to locate their growing importance within the move towards a fair value accounting regime. We argue that property investors benefit from a generous 'distributional apparatus' - that is, a collection of rules, norms, reporting technologies and market-orienting devices that act as both a resource and an incentive to engage in practices of valuation that maximise potential distributions. In the case of property assets, accounting rule IAS40 determines how housing assets should be recognised in an annual statement; the RICS Red Book acts as a market device which articulates with IAS40, providing rules and principles on the techniques of valuation and revaluation; and the ICAEW provides guidance on whether revaluations amount to a ‘realised profit’ which can be distributed to shareholders legally. Together these three features underpin the assetization process in investment property. We use two case studies to show that this apparatus acts as a flexible resource as companies build different valuation and distribution strategies around the RICS Red Book revaluation process, with different risk implications. Our findings contribute to financialization, assetization and accounting scholarship.
KW - Assetization
KW - RICS red book
KW - IAS40
KW - Distributional apparatus
KW - Real estate accounting
KW - Assetization
KW - RICS red book
KW - IAS40
KW - Distributional apparatus
KW - Real estate accounting
U2 - 10.1016/j.cpa.2024.102729
DO - 10.1016/j.cpa.2024.102729
M3 - Journal article
SN - 1045-2354
VL - 99
JO - Critical Perspectives on Accounting
JF - Critical Perspectives on Accounting
M1 - 102729
ER -