Freddie Mac (Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation) forecasted in July 2015 that mortgage loan interest rates would
slowly rise over the next year, topping out at 5 %.
In fact, roughly three - quarters of business owners say they expect to see discrimination claims by LGBT
workers rise over the next year, compared to 31 % who had such worries in 2015.
Sixty - two percent of residential firms and 60 percent of commercial firms see
profits rising over the next year, even as sales volume has slightly tempered: $ 6.2 million for residential firms in 2016, down from $ 6.3 million the year prior, and $ 4.0 million for commercial firms in 2016, down from $ 4.5 million the year prior.
If prices do
indeed rise over the next year or so, as they are expected to do, then those buyers who postpone their purchases until 2018 will encounter higher housing costs.
Just 33 % of people polled by the Conference Board this month expected stock prices to
rise over the next year.
Let's say you're happy with the current gasoline price of $ 3.00 per gallon (much less in most areas) but feared the price might
rise over the next year (which is a very real possibility).
Because mortgage interest rates are likely to
rise over the next year or two, you should calculate whether it makes sense to pull the trigger on a house with savings you already have.
«The biggest driver for the increase in the HPSI is the rebound in the good time to buy sentiment, which outweighed the largest drag: a sizable reduction in the net share of consumers expecting home prices to
rise over the next year,» says Doug Duncan, chief economist and senior vice president at Fannie Mae.
The majority of respondents (60 percent) expect interest rates to
rise over the next year.
This year's survey says 72 per cent of all Canadians expect housing prices to
rise over the next year.
Even if the economy slows, Colliers International predicts parking rates will continue to
rise over the next year.
Respondents also are more bullish that occupancies will
rise over the next year.
The results are similar to a recent Rasmussen poll of homeowners that found only 20 percent expect home prices to
rise over the next year.