Senator Warren introduces bill against corporate housing purchases

Senator Elizabeth Warren and fellow Democrats unveiled the American Homeownership Act to limit investment firms' acquisition of residential properties. The legislation responds to growing concerns over housing affordability amid corporate buying sprees. A viral video from a New York blizzard interview highlighted public frustration with the issue.

On Tuesday, Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) announced the American Homeownership Act alongside over a dozen Senate Democrats. The bill targets tax incentives and loopholes that favor Wall Street investors purchasing single-family homes for rental purposes.

The push gained traction from a viral clip of Caj Thomasson, interviewed by NBC 4 in New York City's Washington Heights during a recent East Coast blizzard. Thomasson shifted the weather discussion to housing woes, stating, “There’s still people out in doorways looking for shelter, and I think a lot of people think this is why we shouldn’t allow hedge funds to own residential property.” When pressed on nostalgia, he added, “Yeah, it was much, much more snow, colder winters. And again, private equity didn’t own so much of the housing stock in America.”

Warren quote-tweeted the video, writing, “Democrats dropped a bill TODAY to stop private equity’s housing takeover. Let’s get this done.” In an interview, she described the exchange as “a funny video, but also, to me, a very touching video,” emphasizing, “It’s cold, it’s snowing, and he’s telling it like it is. That man brought home that America has housing, but when corporate landlords are in charge of it, those homes won’t be there for the people who need them.”

According to Brookings Institute research, large institutional investors hold just over 3% of U.S. rental stock, with concentrations up to 20% in cities like Atlanta, Phoenix, Charlotte, and Indianapolis. Warren noted, “Right now, U.S. taxpayers subsidize private equity to buy up the homes in your neighborhood. In other words, it is more profitable for some Wall Street billionaire investor to buy the house next door than a young family trying to move in.” She explained that such purchases drive up rents and hinder homeownership.

The act would eliminate tax breaks for corporate buyers, redirect funds to affordable housing, bar federally backed mortgages like those from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac for institutional investors, and apply stricter antitrust rules, deeming over 30% market ownership presumptively illegal. Warren stated, “This bill takes away those tax breaks so that Wall Street is not being subsidized to turn us into a nation of renters.”

President Donald Trump supported similar measures in his State of the Union address, calling to “make that ban permanent, because homes for people — really, that’s what we want. We want homes for people, not for corporations.” He had signed an executive order in January restricting federal lenders from facilitating sales to institutional investors. However, some Republicans, including Rep. Troy Downing (R-Mont.), expressed reservations, with Downing telling Politico, “I don’t think banning institutional investors is a good idea.”

Warren indicated Democrats are in negotiations to advance the bill. In a follow-up video with Thomasson, he reported “overwhelmingly positive” feedback nationwide, adding little controversy. Warren replied, “Sometimes government can do really good things. We just kind of have to do what seems sensible under the circumstances.”

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이재명 대통령, 부동산 투기 불공정 특혜 회복 정책 강조

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이재명 대통령은 14일 소셜미디어 X에 게시한 글에서 부동산 시장 안정을 위한 정부 정책이 투기와 투자로 인한 불공정 특혜를 회복하는 데 목적이 있다고 밝혔다. 그는 주택을 생활 목적으로 소유한 사람들을 보호하면서 다주택자들의 투기적 행위로 인한 피해를 강조했다. 야당은 이러한 발언이 부동산 시장을 위협한다고 비판했다.

The U.S. Senate's major cryptocurrency market structure bill faces a delay of weeks or months as lawmakers shift attention to housing affordability initiatives. This pivot follows Coinbase's withdrawal of support and aligns with the Trump administration's push to restrict institutional investors from buying single-family homes. The change raises questions about the bill's future viability.

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The Trump administration is considering a partial privatization of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the government-backed mortgage giants that support 70% of U.S. home loans. Promoted by FHFA Director Bill Pulte, the plan could generate profits for wealthy Trump donors but raises concerns about market stability and higher mortgage rates. Critics argue it offers little benefit to taxpayers while risking financial disruption.

더불어민주당은 부동산 시장을 감독하고 불공정 거래를 감시하기 위한 국가 규제 기관 설립 법안을 화요일 제출할 예정이다. 김현정 의원이 발의한 이 법안은 부동산 시장의 불규칙성을 조사하고 개인의 신용 정보를 법원 영장 없이 접근할 수 있는 권한을 부여한다. 야당은 과도한 권한과 프라이버시 침해를 이유로 비판했다.

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