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Participants in the survey consider the housing market rebound sustainable. Home prices are predicted to rise 1.6 percent in 2010 and an additional 2.6 percent in 2011. Those may not be huge increases but they would still represent an important watershed for the economy, the NABE noted, after the declines of the recent past. The stock market is expected to climb significantly in 2010 and 2011. On average, the economists predict the Standard & Poor's 500 index, a widely used barometer of the stock market, will rise 23 percent over the next two years. The S&P 500 jumped 3.1 percent last week, though it's still down 29.1 percent from its high. Those surveyed agreed that financial headwinds are expected to remain problematic but also should abate. Bank lending, for example, is seen becoming less restrictive over the course of this year as bank earnings and economic conditions improve. Nearly a third of those surveyed, however, believe conditions will remain restrictive due to regulatory guidance, capital pressures and a general climate of risk aversion. Federal debt was identified as the biggest concern among 14 economic challenges. The NABE survey of 48 professional forecasters was taken Jan. 22-Feb. 4.
[Associated
Press;
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