Post-Election Economic Outlook

Economics
Published

NAHB Chief Economist Robert Dietz recently provided the following economic overview in his bi-weekly newsletter Eye on the Economy.

The dramatic election victory for President-Elect Donald Trump and congressional Republicans reshapes the outlook for the housing sector and the overall economy. For example, equity/stock markets loved the result, expecting an improved regulatory environment and significant — if not, total — extension of the 2017 tax reform policies.

However, the bond market has deep concerns, with investors dumping bonds and pushing the 10-year Treasury rate from 3.6% in mid-September to near 4.3% at the end of last week. Bond investors are concerned about possible inflationary impacts from a larger federal government deficit and a move to tariffs.

And while the incoming Trump administration has been clear that deportation will be used to deal with illegal immigration, the scope and scale of this policy is unclear. It remains a significant wildcard for the economic outlook, with potential impacts on housing demand, labor supply and border issues. Greater clarity on all of these policy issues will be gained as Trump names key officials to staff his new administration in the coming weeks.

In the meantime, the rise in long-term interest rates has had a direct impact on the mortgage market. Counter to most forecasts, including NAHB’s, the average interest rate for a 30-year mortgage has increased from below 6.1% in mid-September to almost 6.8% last week. While this represents a significant hit to housing affordability, macro conditions remain solid. U.S. GDP expanded at a 2.8% annualized growth rate in the third quarter, albeit lower than the 3% rate from the second quarter.

The labor market is showing signs of strain. After some of the most significant job market data revisions in more than a decade, October job growth totaled a meager 12,000 in part because of major hurricanes and labor strikes. The unemployment rate was steady, at a low 4.1% reading. Home builders and remodelers lost 5,300 jobs in October as residential construction activity slowed, particularly in the apartment development sector. Over the last year, residential construction has added just 44,500 jobs. The total number of open, unfilled construction jobs declined to just 288,000 in September — another sign of weakening demand for construction labor.

We will get a reading of single-family builder confidence in just under a week, which will help get a sense of how builders are viewing market conditions over the next six months. Apartment developers continue to report mixed sentiment regarding the market. The latest NAHB Multifamily Production Index decreased four points from the previous quarter to a weak reading of 40, indicating more apartment builders are facing poor market conditions. However, the third quarter reading was two points higher than a year ago, suggesting the multifamily construction market could potentially stabilize later in 2025.

But the multifamily outlook, along with other housing and economic indicators, contains more uncertainty until the election results are finalized and what policies Trump intends to pursue at the start of his second administration.

Subscribe for free to the Eye on the Economy newsletter.

Subscribe to NAHBNow

Log in or create account to subscribe to notifications of new posts.

Log in to subscribe

Latest from NAHBNow

Membership

Dec 02, 2025

2025 Member Census: We Want to Hear From You

Keep an eye on your inboxes this week for an important invitation from NAHB to complete our 2025 Builder and Associate Member Census.

Education at IBS

Dec 01, 2025

Remodelers Will Have Tons of Education Options at IBS 2026

Remodelers constitute for nearly one quarter of NAHB’s membership, so the 2026 NAHB International Builders’ Show® (IBS) will have plenty for those seeking to improve their remodeling practices and businesses. Here are four IBS Education sessions tailored for attendees interested in remodeling, all taking place this February.

View all

Latest Economic News

Economics

Dec 02, 2025

Single-Family Construction Loan Volume Rises in the Third Quarter

Single-family construction lending picked up in the third quarter, amidst the overall cooling lending environment. Loan balances for 1-4 family construction grew to $91.2 billion in the third quarter, registering the first annual increase in over two years.

Economics

Dec 01, 2025

About 7% of New Homes Are Teardowns

In 2024, 6.9% of new single-family detached homes were teardowns (structures torn down and rebuilt in older neighborhoods), and another 20.1% were built on infill lots in older neighborhoods, according to the latest Builder Practices Survey (BPS) conducted by Home Innovation Research Labs.

Economics

Nov 26, 2025

Property Taxes by State – 2024

Nationally, across the 87 million owner-occupied homes in the U.S., the average amount of annual real estate taxes paid in 2024 was $4,271, according to NAHB analysis of the 2024 American Community Survey.