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International Monetary Fund

BAI Capital Weekly News Summary | Investment, Immigration, U.S. Economy and Real Estate | Week of October 19–25, 2025

Regulatory updates in immigration, IMF growth warnings, softening residential real estate, and the ongoing federal shutdown continue to shape investment sentiment.

1. IMF slightly raises U.S. growth outlook but warns of risks

The IMF lifted its 2025 growth forecast to 2 %, cautioning that trade tensions and immigration policy shifts may slow expansion.

Structural vulnerabilities remain a key concern for investors and the real estate market.

2. USCIS clarifies scope of the $100,000 H-1B fee

The agency confirmed that the new charge applies only to petitions filed abroad without valid H-1B status as of September 21.

The clarification provides guidance to employers but underscores the complexity of the U.S. visa system.

3. DHS begins enforcing $1,000 parole fee

The Department of Homeland Security has started applying the new $1,000 fee to parole admissions.

The rule raises processing costs and impacts both humanitarian and business immigration programs.

4. Federal Reserve reports slight decline in residential real estate activity

The Fed’s Beige Book noted that residential real estate activity weakened modestly in several regions.

The slowdown signals market caution amid higher borrowing costs and macro uncertainty.

5. Home listings increase 4.1 % year over year

New home listings rose 4.1 % YoY in the four weeks ending October 12. This expanding inventory could ease competition among buyers but demand remains tepid.

6. Federal shutdown continues to hinder key data releases

The ongoing government shutdown, in effect since October 1, continues to block publication of critical employment and housing statistics. 

This opacity increases the risk premium for investors in real estate and credit-sensitive sectors.

7. Immigration policies projected to cut millions from the U.S. workforce

Analysts estimate that restrictions could shrink the labor force by 6.8 million by 2028, with negative GDP implications.

Labor shortages in construction, agriculture and tech remain a central risk for investors.

8. Divergent trends in commercial real estate

While office properties remain oversupplied, multifamily housing and data centers are outperforming expectations.

Investors are shifting toward sectors with stronger fundamentals and long-term resilience.

 

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