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Senate poised to advance housing bill to limit private equity purchases of single-family homes

CNBC June 22, 2026 1 views
Senate poised to advance housing bill to limit private equity purchases of single-family homes

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  • The Senate is expected to vote Monday to advance a sprawling bipartisan affordable housing package after months of debate.
  • The legislation aims to lower housing prices and increase supply, while limiting the number of units institutional investors can own.
  • President Donald Trump has signaled his support for the legislation, which could reach his desk by the end of this week.
    The
    Senate on Monday is expected to vote on passage of a bipartisan affordable housing bill that would limit the number of single-family homes major investors can purchase, after months of debate spanning both chambers of Congress.
    The vote comes after lawmakers reached a deal last week on the bill, which is aimed at increasing the supply of homes while limiting
    private equity's influence on the housing market. The House is expected to vote on the bill later this week.
    "America is facing a housing crisis, and it's long past time for Congress to act," Sen.
    Adam Schiff, D-Calif., a supporter of the legislation, posted to X on Sunday. "The bipartisan ROAD to Housing Act will boost our housing supply & stop private equity from buying up single-family homes — and bring costs down."
    The legislation is meant to increase housing affordability at a time when both parties are touting their work to bring down the
    cost of living ahead of the 2026 midterm elections, in which Republicans hope to defend narrow majorities in both chambers. President Donald Trump has signaled its support for the bill.
    But the bill almost failed to get off the ground, as Republicans debated over provisions limiting institutional investors and the
    House and Senate haggled over different versions of the proposal. Lawmakers found middle ground last week between the House version, which was viewed as more friendly to Wall Street, and the Senate version, which included more restrictions on institutional investors.
    One sticking point in an earlier iteration would have required investors who own 350 units or more to sell any new units they build beyond that cap within seven years. Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle worried that putting such limits in place would stifle the creation of new housing.
    The final version of the bill, which the Senate is expected to vote on Monday afternoon, maintains the 350-unit cap but removes the seven-year sell-by provision.
    "With America facing a shortage of over 4.7 million homes, expanding supply remains the most effective and sustainable way to improve affordability, support workforce mobility, and strengthen local economies," Neil Bradley, executive vice president, chief policy officer and head of strategic advocacy at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, said in a statement last week.
    "This supply-focused package would incentivize housing development by modernizing federal housing programs, reducing regulatory barriers, preserving residential and multifamily rental housing options, increasing pathways to homeownership, and encouraging much needed investment and new construction," Bradley said.
    The package was led by Sens.
    Tim Scott, R-S.C., and Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., the top Republican and Democrat on the Senate banking panel, and Reps. French Hill, R-Ark., and Maxine Waters, D-Calif., who sit atop the House Financial Services Committee.
    It would also ease some regulations to allow for the building of new homes, tie Community Development Block Grant funding to increasing housing supply in communities and create a pilot program to award grants to fund the redevelopment of vacant units into housing.
    "Never before has Congress put any restriction on the ability of private equity to move into whatever industry they want, buy up whatever they want and destroy whatever they want," Warren told CNBC in a short Capitol hallway interview. "This bill is historic because it puts a big fat 'no' right in front of private equity's growth as it tries to mow through our neighborhoods."

    Emily Wilkins contributed to this story.

    <small>Source: CNBC</small>

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