Key Highlights

  • US economic activity appears to be slowing, as fiscal stimulus fades and consumer spending tapers. But rates are not expected to fall until December.
  • Oversupply in the multifamily sector should be mostly absorbed within a year. We then expect a delayed supply reaction. Industrial absorption may be weakening, but the tenant base is still growing. 
  • Quality and geographical bifurcation – especially in asset classes under stress, such as offices – will widen. 

United States economic outlook

Activity

 The pace of US growth appears to be moving down a gear. Consumer spending has slowed, last year’s surprise fiscal stimulus is fading, and investment remains subdued amid high interest rates. These dynamics should persist in the coming quarters. We expect annualised growth of around 2% for the second quarter of 2024, and between 1.5% and 2% for the rest of the year. Admittedly, we still see the risk of a ‘no-landing’ scenario (in which growth and inflation remain strong) and a more abrupt slowdown. However, our base case is that the economy can walk the tightrope between both.

Inflation

Inflation has slowed in recent months. We expect this softer rate to persist, helped by a normalisation in those components that spiked over the first quarter. These included portfolio management and recreational goods prices, slower housing inflation, and an ongoing easing in the labour market and wage growth. Indeed, we expect an average monthly rate of 0.2% in core personal consumption expenditure during the rest of 2024. This should give the Federal Reserve (Fed) confidence that inflation is back on track – even if this leaves the year-on-year rate treading water between 2.5% and 3%.

Policy

The Fed delivered a hawkish surprise at its June Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting. The Fed signaled that it expects one rate cut this year, instead of three when last surveyed in March. The Fed is now expected to wait until December to cut, unless inflation data is very weak, or activity indicators look more concerning ahead of its September meeting. We think equilibrium rates remain low, which could provide more room to cut later in the cycle, but there is a risk that the rate structure has shifted persistently higher.

(&) 2023 2024 2025 2026
GDP 2.5 2.3 1.7 2.0
CPI 4.1 3.3 2.4  2.1 
Deposit rate 5.375 5.125 4.125 3.125

Source: abrdn June 2024
Forecasts are a guide only and actual outcomes could be significantly different.

North American real estate market overview 

We’re not expecting prices to move much in the immediate forecast period. Overall, we should see capital values decline around 2-3% over a rolling one-year period.

The industrial sector should experience moderating rental growth as absorption slows. Prices should be relatively stable for the first year of our forecast. East-Coast and Midwest industrials should outperform their Western counterparts over the forecast period.

We think the bifurcation will widen between offices with strong and weak amenities, and between offices on the West and East Coast. New supply-constrained East-Coast markets, such as Boston and New York, should perform well, relative to West-Coast markets.

In the retail sector, weak supply numbers for strip retail are cause for some near-term positivity, but we’re not confident that this will translate into long-term real rental growth.  

Outlook for risk and performance 

The outlook for US offices is still negative, as occupiers struggle to get employees back into the office. Weekly physical occupancy seems to have plateaued at around 50% nationally. Effective rental growth will be weak as the availability of subleases forces landlords to offer higher concessions to attract tenants. There’s also the impending lease turnover risk to consider, which may lead to even higher vacancy rates.

We favour established East-Coast population hubs in the multifamily sector. Multifamily assets could also perform well in Washington DC, given its strong renter base amid the uncertain political background this year. However, the Sunbelt will be very weak, as excess supply is absorbed. Pockets of forced sales may become more prominent for properties transacted and financed between 2020-2022, which could offer buying opportunities. Overall, we think multifamily will struggle in this coming year, but a delayed supply response should re-accelerate rental growth and capital values in 2026.

We like strip retail, lifestyle centres, and standalone retail – particularly grocery or discount-store-anchored properties in the Sunbelt, Midwest, and the East Coast. These should benefit from higher population growth and a limited supply pipeline. But rental growth for these properties is likely to weaken, as retail sales stabilise and the pool of tenants seeking space becomes shallower.

We like industrial and logistics markets surrounding the Gulf and East-Coast ports. We think these ports should be primed to capture more shipping volumes as friend-shoring becomes more prominent. Land-border traffic is expected to grow because of near-shoring. This should boost markets with established intermodal terminals, such as Chicago and Dallas.

North American three- and five-year forecast returns