- Household finances are falling due to higher interest rates, which threaten to further depress property prices
- In response, developers are cutting back on projects to counter low demand and rising borrowing costs, which in turn hurts investment levels
- The global real estate crisis raises concerns over another market crash infecting the banking and financial services sectors.
Global residential real estate markets peaked post COVID-19 on the back of forecast long-term cheap debt, and people's desire to spend lockdown and beyond in a bigger home. What homeowners, governments and central banks failed to anticipate was a rapid rise in inflation so soon after the pandemic - along with consequent central bank rate rises. Now, these macroeconomic factors are dictating the terms. The sheer size of the real estate market in global economies makes the sector emblematic of broader economic concerns. As per our FPI index, Infrastructure and real estate is among the top 10 underperforming sectors globally, posting a year-on-year drop of 1.3 percent to a score of 90.49 in September 2023.
As a forerunner to the worldwide property slump, residential real estate markets in the advanced economies overheated during the pandemic while interest rates were low. Since then, many of these economies have entered a vicious debt trap, led by decreases in property value and credit availability. In contrast, households in emerging economies have relatively lower levels of debt and suffered fewer booms and busts in their housing markets, as evidenced in our FPI results, which show how the real estate industry in these markets has taken less of a hit.