Key Highlights

  • In light of the tariffs and ongoing negotiations, we anticipate elevated uncertainty and therefore heightened financial market volatility. We are monitoring the situation and will communicate any changes to the real estate Houseview, should the need arise. Please contact a member of the team for more information. 
  • The US economy is heading for a year of slower growth, amid trade policy uncertainty and disruptions from higher tariffs. 
  • While tariffs should keep supply muted, demand for office, retail, and some industrial markets may be challenged. 
  • A recovery in the multifamily sector is still on track, as supply begins to fade and demand remains robust.

United States economic outlook

Activity

The US economy appears to be losing momentum. Activity data has been weak in early 2025, and business and consumer sentiment has deteriorated sharply in the face of tariff threats. Uncertainty over trade policy and disruptions from higher tariffs now look set to provide a deeper drag on consumption and investment this year. This is likely to lead to slower, as opposed to stalling, growth. Strong household and corporate balance sheets are providing some ballast against policy disruptions. However, the risk of a downturn has increased, especially if tariff rates rise even more than we expect. 

Inflation

US inflation is set to remain higher for longer in the face of protectionist trade policy. Indeed, we now expect larger and broader increases in tariffs to drive consumer prices higher this year, assuming no significant offsetting currency moves or corporate margin compression. As such, the slowdown in core Personal Consumption Expenditures inflation will stall over 2025, leaving the year-over-year rate running uncomfortably hot between 2.5% and 3% [1]. Risks are tilted towards even higher inflation should tariffs rise more than we expect. Risks may also be affected by other aggressive policy action from the new administration, including immigration and fiscal policy.

Policy

During the March Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting, the median FOMC member interest rate forecast – or the dot plot – was unchanged [2], pointing to two rate cuts this year. Scratching beneath the surface, the individual forecasts moved in a more hawkish direction, with eight participants expecting just one or no cuts this year and only two expecting three cuts. Indeed, we think the Federal Reserve (Fed) will wait until September to deliver its only cut this year, as it looks to balance competing risks around its inflation and employment mandates. However, should the central bank see signs of distress emerging in the labour market, it would cut rates sooner and by more.  
 
(%) 2024 2025 2026 2027
GDP 2.8 1.6 1.8 2.1
 CPI 2.9 2.9 2.6 2.4
Deposit rate 4.375 4.125 4.125 3.875

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

North American real estate market overview 

As tariffs start to weigh on US economic growth, the real estate sector will feel some of this pressure, especially for retail, offices and industrials.

The US consumer is already weakening, with serious credit card defaults at 2% above the long-term average of around 9% [3]. Shop closures are also expected to double this year [4], as cost pressures associated with tariffs and deportations play out. Overall, we expect a challenging year for US retail. 

US offices will remain a bifurcated story, despite return-to-office (RTO) mandates for technology companies. Anecdotal evidence suggests there’s more life on the west-coast streets, but grey space is struggling to be absorbed and remains elevated [5].

In general, we are most positive about the multifamily sector, as excess supply should be absorbed by mid-2025. Industrials will face headwinds as tariffs weigh on occupier and investor decisions this year, but reshoring of occupiers should limit the negative impact on returns.

Outlook for risk and performance 

US office fundamentals remain challenging, given low job growth in the office sector and a weakening economic growth outlook. Despite RTO mandates, west-coast offices are struggling with an elevated amount of available grey space. Performance will be highly market- and asset-specific. 

Multifamily demand remains robust, given renters’ affordability has improved over the past two years and the higher-for-longer environment has slowed the jump to homeownership. Excess supply is also on track to be absorbed in the sunbelt markets. Overall, we expect a delayed supply response to drive rental growth as we head into 2026. But downside risks are present. With a slowing economy and weaker consumer confidence, there could be a reduced tenant pool for multifamily, which would weigh on rental growth prospects.

A weakening consumer backdrop and retailers announcing plans to close twice the number of stores they did in 2024 have dimmed the retail outlook. Rental growth for retail is likely to moderate as retail sales stabilise and as the pool of tenants seeking space becomes shallower. But rental spreads on spaces leased for five or more years should remain at elevated levels during 2025.

Performance in the industrial and logistics markets should be relatively stronger around east-coast ports and markets with established intermodal terminals and access to major population centres. Chicago, Atlanta and Dallas should fare well from the ongoing nearshoring and reshoring efforts. However, we see downside risks for the west-coast markets, as tariffs on China and Vietnam weigh on imports into the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach.

North American three- and five-year forecast returns

  1. Aberdeen Global Macro Research
  2. Aberdeen Global Macro Research
  3. Federal Reserve Bank of New York
  4. CoStar Analytics
  5. CoStar Analytics
  6. CoStar Analytics
  7. JLL
  8. U.S Department of Commerce
  9. U.S Department of Commerce
  10. CBRE