Fannie Mae’s Economic and Strategic Research Group’s full-year economic growth forecast remains unchanged in June at 1.7 percent. Recent data emphasize the uneven nature of the current economic expansion, according to the forecast. Consumer spending and housing activity have picked up, but a slowing trend in hiring and business investment has increased downside risks to the forecast.
Headwinds facing businesses include declining profits, weakening productivity and rising labor costs.
“The bearish May jobs report signaled a further loss of momentum in the labor market,” Fannie Mae Chief Economist Doug Duncan said in the release. “Weak hiring and downward revisions to the prior two months’ payroll gains contributed to the Fed’s decision not to raise interest rates in June. Our expectation, which we’ve held since April, remains one rate hike this year, most likely in September.
“Housing activity is gaining heading into the summer, with pending home sales rising to a decade high,” Duncan continued. “In addition new-home sales surged to an expansion best, a positive for single-family homebuilding, especially since only a small share of new homes for sale are completed and ready to occupy. However, recent pullbacks in construction hiring, likely due to a shortage of skilled workers, could weigh on the outlook for the sector. With little improvement in the current housing supply picture so far, we expect only moderate housing expansion this year.”