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Fannie Mae: 2019 Economic Growth Slowing

Full-year real GDP growth is estimated to come in at 2.2 percent in 2019, unchanged from the prior forecast but down markedly from 2018’s 3.1 percent, according to the Fannie Mae Economic and Strategic Research Group’s March outlook.

The expected deceleration in growth is attributable to the fading fiscal impact from the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, as well as continued sluggishness in business investment and consumer spending. Economic growth in the first quarter of 2019 is forecasted to slow to 1.3 percent--in part due to consumer caution following significant volatility in households’ financial assets in the fourth quarter.

Also, the ESR Group noted that risks to its forecast exist on the downside, including slower global growth and ongoing U.S.-China trade uncertainty, but that sustained improvement in productivity and the central bank policy response to fourth quarter volatility will play an important role in shaping the full growth picture.

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The ESR Group continues to expect home sales to stabilize in 2019, with housing demand supported by a solid labor market and strong household formation. Affordability, too, has improved by slowing house price appreciation and more attractive mortgage rates. Purchase mortgage originations are expected to expand in 2019 while refinancings contract.

[caption id="attachment_9271" align="alignleft" width="300"]Duncan opines on the reasons lenders feel more optimistic this quarter. Doug Duncan[/caption]

“We expect headline growth in the first quarter of 2019 to fall to 1.3 percent annualized--the slowest quarterly growth in over three years,” said Doug Duncan, Fannie Mae’s chief economist. “Growth is clearly on the decline, in line with our projection for 2.2 percent in 2019. As we weigh the downside risks to the economy, including moderating international growth and trade uncertainty, we now project that the Fed will wait until the fourth quarter to raise rates, if at all. However, some ground may have been broken on a path to improved growth, as productivity rose by 1.8 percent annually last quarter--a clear step above the well-trodden 1.0 to 1.4 percent band of the last few years.

“We continue to expect another year of steady home sales in 2019,” Duncan continued. “While inventory has improved, it remains low by historical standards, particularly among existing homes, and threatens to derail the spring home buying season, though a recent jump in single-family starts suggests that new supply is on the way. Considering the general inventory shortage and strong demand for housing, affordability remains a key challenge facing the industry, particularly in the conforming space.”

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