Macroeconomic headwinds prevail, but is there light at the end of the tunnel?

One year following our outlook for 2023, it might seem that everything – and yet nothing has changed.
Written By:
Victoria Ormond, Knight Frank
5 minutes to read

Welcome to our Active Capital Q4 2023 Outlook

After a year of speaking to a variety of investors across sectors and risk appetites around the world as we took Active Capital on the road, we take a look back to see where the crystal ball was clear – and not so clear and update our predictions for the rest of the 2023.

Firstly, in the macro-economic context, for the highly leverage dependent real estate sector, central bank interest rates and their outlook are arguably the key metric currently for investors to track over the coming months and therefore the central focus for our Active Capital Q4 Outlook update.

The fate of the risk-free rate, swap rates, bank health, overall GDP and leverage-dependent investor demand are driven by these central bank rates.

2023 prediction (from Active Capital October 2022)

"With supply-led inflation…the usual lever of interest rates is, at best, only weak in taming pricing. The result is significant volatility across equity, bonds and currency markets, as forecasting houses diverge significantly in their outlook on rates. Economics are forecast to deteriorate before they get better, and, for the next 18 to 24 months, global interest rates are expected to peak before falling back in some locations. There is, however, significant variation in these forecasts."

Updated prediction 

The year has seen nose-bleed rate hikes in many locations. The moves have been even swifter than our Active Capital predictions. In many locations, what is notable is not necessarily just the level of interest rates but the speed of change, although indications are that we may be coming to the end of the hiking cycle, with both the US Federal Reserve and the Bank of England both taking a rate hike pause at the time of writing (September 2023).


The bell-weather rate to track is the US Federal Funds Rate. The US Federal Reserve Rate is key because historically, the central bank rates of major trading economies across the globe have tended to track the US fed rate, albeit with more or less of a lag – and with the notable exception of Japan, which continues to experience relative immunity to rate pressures – for now at least.

At the time of writing, the Federal Funds rate is 5.50% versus a long-term average of 4.85%. 

So, what is the outlook for rates?

Base rate forecasts globally are typically looking at peaking over the end of 2023 and into the first quarter of next year, with the question then becoming when and how steeply will they reverse?

Divergence of views remains, keeping things tricky for investors. To provide one example however, Oxford Economics are currently forecasting a relatively steep US base rate reversal, to reach a stabilised 2% by the end of 2027. They expect European Central Bank rates to peak by the end of the year reaching a stabilised 1.75% over Q3 2025. The UK is currently expected to similarly peak towards the end of this year but then have a longer drift back to a stabilised rate of 1.75% - but only by mid-2028.

Over in Australia, rates are expected to peak lower and sooner – potentially Q3 2023, drifting down to 2.6% by the end of 2026. Meanwhile, South Korea could see rate cutting sooner, stabilising at a rate around 2.25% by the end of next year.

However, there are conflicting interpretations around health of economies, inflation, lending and general risks which do lead to divergences in economists’ views, but also in scenario probabilities. Oxford Economics themselves assign a 40% probability to the base case economic view and a 20% global chance of an excess savings run-down – i.e., the ‘accidental savers’ as a result of covid, use up these excess savings, driving growth and meaning that rates globally peak higher than expected and take longer to unwind. 

Oxford Economics apply a 20% chance to tighter credit conditions spreading to the wider economy and dampening growth for a longer period, and a 10% probability to a global asset price crash triggered by continued rate. For the former, this means the US would start reversing rates from Q2 next year, seeing rates potentially dip below 1.90% by mid-2027 before stabilising at 2%. Similarly, elsewhere this is forecast to mean a steeper rate cut sooner (for example, Australia, UK) and / or an ‘overshooting’ of interest rate cuts to a lower level, before stabilising (for example, Eurozone, South Korea).

In the case of the lower probability asset price crash, in most of Oxford Economics scenarios this is predicated by rates continuing to hike typically 1-2% higher than the base case depending on country, leading to a fast reversal to much lower rates as central banks use interest rates as a tool to pump start their economies. Ironically (or rather – exactly what it is meant to do) in the event of this scenario leading to a quicker shift in rates, this may reduce the degree of refinancing stresses and re-pricing.

While we are likely to see a rush of investors breathing a sigh of relief and coming back to the market as sentiment improves, this scenario also leads to less opportunity for those investors looking for significant repricing to make, for example, refurbishment and repurposing strategies work in an era of higher costs, but also higher sustainability requirements, which many global commercial real estate assets don’t currently meet. In this scenario we are likely to see a swathe of investment managers, private equity, insurers and pension funds returning to market, albeit with a refocus on sector weighting towards those with the most structural tail winds – beds and sheds.

As we continue our Active Capital Q4 Outlook, we take a deep-dive into what this economic outlook means for investment flows and where the opportunities lie.

If you would like to read more from our Active Capital programme, visit www.knightfrank.com/active-capital