Key Highlights

  • The US economy is poised for a modest acceleration from expected tax cuts, higher defence spending, and looser regulatory policy.
  • Capital values are stabilising, but we see limited room for real estate yields to fall given inflationary pressures.
  • Multifamily fundamentals are promising, as supply begins to fade and demand remains relatively strong. 

United States economic outlook


Activity
The US economy is starting 2025 in seemingly good shape, with the economy growing robustly and a very solid-looking labour market. Policy changes under the Trump administration will shape the outlook from here. A combination of expected tax cuts, higher defence spending and looser regulatory policy will drive a modest acceleration in growth this year and into 2026. This should offset the drag from rising tariffs and slower net migration. However, uncertainty around this policy mix is high. An agenda that leans more on tariffs and large-scale deportations would hurt activity, while one that minimises these disruptions would be more growth-friendly.

Inflation
A welcome slowing in core inflation in December points to ongoing moderation in price pressures, even if this remains bumpy and uneven. However, there are threats to this trend in 2025. Firstly, price resets early in the year could drive a re-acceleration in sequential inflation over the first quarter of 2025. More fundamentally, a combination of demand-side stimulus (in the form of looser fiscal policy) and shocks to the supply side (via tariff hikes and deportations) are expected to leave inflation stuck above target.

Policy
The Federal Reserve (Fed) delivered a 25 basis-point (bp) rate cut in December. But it signalled a slower pace of easing ahead as it eyes renewed inflation risks from Trump’s policy agenda. Against this backdrop, and with the labour market looking solid, we expect the central bank to stay on hold until its June meeting and deliver just two 25bp cuts this year. This is still more easing than currently priced in by the market (40bps). Policy fireworks early in Trump’s second term or firmer-than-anticipated inflation pressures could see the central bank deliver even fewer cuts.

(%) 2023 2024 2025 2026
GDP 2.9 2.7 2.0 2.2
CPI 4.1 2.9 2.3 2.6
Deposit rate 5.375 4.375 3.875 3.875

Source: abrdn, January 2025
Forecasts are a guide only and actual outcomes could be significantly different.

North American real estate market overview 

We face a higher-for-longer scenario as the Trump administration gets underway and there is limited room for yield compression. Instead, returns will be driven by net-operating income (NOI) growth.

In this higher-for-longer environment, we are also expecting $500 billion of commercial real estate loan maturities, of which multifamily and offices make up a significant part. This could open more attractive entry opportunities in these two sectors, but investors should remain selective at a market and asset level. 

In general, we are most positive about the multifamily sector, as excess supply should be absorbed by mid-2025. Industrials should peak at a relatively low vacancy rate, but a reacceleration of rents will probably come only in 2026. Meanwhile, office performance will be highly dependent on market and asset quality.

Outlook for risk and performance 

US office fundamentals remain challenging, given low job growth in the office sector. Impending lease turnover risks may also lead to even higher vacancy rates. Returns will be highly market- and asset-specific. However, we expect office demolitions to accelerate this year, which could mark the beginning of a long road of rationalising supply with demand.  

Multifamily assets in Los Angeles will perform well, as the impact of the fires will drive occupancy and NOI growth. But the supply constrained East-Coast market is also among our top picks. The vacancy rate for multifamily should stabilise in 2025, but a delayed supply response should re-accelerate rental growth and capital values in 2026.

The lack of new supply in the retail sector continues. We particularly like grocery or discount-store-anchored assets in the Sunbelt and select states in the Northeast, such as New Jersey and Massachusetts. These should benefit from higher population growth, greater buying power, and a limited supply pipeline. Rental growth for retail is likely to moderate as retail sales stabilise and as the pool of tenants seeking space becomes shallower.

Performance in the industrial and logistics markets should be strongest around the Gulf and East-Coast ports. We think these ports should be primed to capture more shipping volumes from friendshoring, as the US looks to further decouple from China. More inland markets with established intermodal terminals, such as Chicago and Dallas, should benefit from the ongoing nearshoring and reshoring efforts.

North American three- and five-year forecast returns