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Press Release

Housing's Supporting Role: Residential Fixed Investment Expected to Help Drive Economic Growth into 2020

October 17, 2019

Consumer Spending Remains Primary Driver of GDP, Countering Ongoing Weakness in Business Fixed Investment

Matthew Classick

202-752-3662

WASHINGTON, DC – Residential fixed investment and continued strong consumer spending are expected to help counteract weakness in business fixed investment, according to the latest commentary from the Fannie Mae (FNMA/OTCQB) Economic and Strategic Research (ESR) Group. The ESR Group maintained its forecast of 2.2 percent full-year 2019 growth but adjusted its quarterly forecasts for the third and fourth quarters to account for the expected effects of the strike at General Motors. Risks to the forecast remain biased to the downside, with trade tensions between the U.S. and China continuing to pose the greatest threat to growth. The ESR Group also noted that trade tensions, weak manufacturing data, and the Federal Reserve’s seeming reticence to disappoint financial markets are factors in its updated prediction of two more rate cuts by the Fed in the next few months – one in October and a second in January – rather than its previously projected one.

Housing, which had been a drag on the economy for nearly two years, is expected to be a source of strength in the near term. While the ESR Group had expected housing to contribute positively to third quarter GDP growth, stronger-than-expected recent data led the Group to revise substantially upward its projection for residential fixed investment. The Group’s updated forecast of 4.2 percent annualized is 3.3 percentage points higher than last month’s projection and, if realized, would represent the first time residential fixed investment has been positive since 2017.

“While consumer spending, supported by a healthy labor market and gains in household wealth, remains the current expansion’s economic engine, the housing sector appears poised to offer meaningful near-term contributions to growth,” said Fannie Mae Senior Vice President and Chief Economist Doug Duncan. “Our macroeconomic forecast continues to call for solid, if modest, real GDP growth through 2020 despite the persistence of downside risks associated with U.S.-China trade tensions, slowing global growth, and other geopolitical concerns. Considering these risks and the Fed’s reluctance to roil financial markets, this month we’ve updated our monetary policy expectations. We now expect the federal funds rate cut previously projected for December to occur this month, followed by one more in January, the final such cut of the forecast horizon. The potential January rate cut is more conditioned on the intervening data than normal given the divided views of the voting members of the Fed Board.”

“Unfortunately, expectations for a stronger housing market through the early part of next year are unlikely to offer prospective homebuyers much respite from the longstanding affordability issue,” continued Duncan. “Home prices appear likely to maintain a positive growth trajectory due in part to persistently low mortgage rates and evidence of declining inventory. On the flip side, the supply imbalance should be supportive of new home construction, which we believe will lead to an uptick in single-family housing starts through next year.”

Visit the Economic & Strategic Research site at www.fanniemae.com to read the full October 2019 Economic Outlook, including the Economic Developments Commentary, Economic Forecast, Housing Forecast, and Multifamily Market Commentary. To receive e-mail updates with other housing market research from Fannie Mae’s Economic & Strategic Research Group, please click here.

Opinions, analyses, estimates, forecasts, and other views of Fannie Mae's Economic & Strategic Research (ESR) Group included in these materials should not be construed as indicating Fannie Mae's business prospects or expected results, are based on a number of assumptions, and are subject to change without notice. How this information affects Fannie Mae will depend on many factors. Although the ESR Group bases its opinions, analyses, estimates, forecasts, and other views on information it considers reliable, it does not guarantee that the information provided in these materials is accurate, current, or suitable for any particular purpose. Changes in the assumptions or the information underlying these views could produce materially different results. The analyses, opinions, estimates, forecasts, and other views published by the ESR Group represent the views of that group as of the date indicated and do not necessarily represent the views of Fannie Mae or its management.

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