Trump’s plan to transform federal land into housing will be costly, given minimal existing infrastructure, UBS says.
The firm says his homeowner tax incentives, meanwhile, could boost buyer competition in a supply-limited market.
Those policies, plus a set of potentially inflationary proposals, could drive up both home prices and mortgage rates, they say.
President-elect Donald Trump’s plan to make housing more accessible might do anything but, according to UBS analysts.
The firm says the plan’s proposal to turn federal land into housing and tax incentives for homeownership could unintentionally fuel higher prices, while his other policy proposals could drive up mortgage rates, they say.
Trump’s plan to transform federal land into more housing seems particularly challenged, the analysts say. With those lands heavily concentrated in rural areas of the western US, there is little existing infrastructure to build, which will make any development costly and therefore unlikely to actually boost supply.
His tax incentives to encourage homeownership, meanwhile, could increase buyer competition amid an already constrained housing supply, driving up home prices in the process.
“While details are limited, we believe the federal land initiative could be challenged by a lack of existing infrastructure in these generally rural areas, and tax incentives for homeownership could result in the unintended consequence of driving home prices higher in a supply-constrained market,” the analysts said in a Thursday note.
Trump and Vice President-elect JD Vance have repeatedly pushed back on the notion that they will negatively impact the housing market. From the perspective of prices, they have said that deporting immigrants would bring down housing costs by reducing demand for homes.
In a September address, Trump said that Americans shouldn’t “ignore the impact” millions of illegal aliens have had on driving up housing costs.
Critics — most notably homebuilders — have also said that Trump’s immigration plans could deplete the home-construction workforce, which would worsen America’s ongoing inventory shortage. Vance, meanwhile, has countered that there are ample displaced American workers ready to take those jobs.
All the while, homebuyers have faced a steepening housing shortage in recent years. In 2022, the US was short roughly 4.5 million homes, and while the number of US families increased by 1.8 million that year, only 1.4 million housing units were built, according to a recent Zillow report.