Outlook Highlights
- Continued strength in consumer spending and a
reduction in the drag from inventory spending should boost second half
growth, resulting in full-year 2016 GDP growth of 1.6 percent. The
economy should do modestly better in 2017, posting 1.9 percent
year-over-year growth.
- A mature expansion operating near full employment only
needs to generate enough jobs to keep the unemployment rate steady.
Expect the unemployment rate to decline slightly over the next
year-and-a-half, ending 2017 at 4.7 percent.
- Even if worldwide bond yields recover to the pre-Brexit
status quo, mortgage interest rates are likely to remain low for an
extended period. Expect a gradual rise in rates throughout the remainder
of 2016 and into 2017, with the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage averaging
3.9 percent in the fourth quarter of 2017.
- Don't expect much increase in total home sales going
forward with a slight decline in seasonally-adjusted sales in the fourth
quarter. Next year, rising new home sales driven by increases in new
single-family housing construction will push total home sales slightly
higher, to 6.16 million in 2017 compared to 6.04 million in 2016.
- Forecasting house prices will grow at a 5.6 percent annual rate in 2016, moderating to 4.7 percent in 2017.
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