Trump outlines next steps for housing investor ban
Subscribe to enjoy similar stories. President Trump accelerated his effort to ban institutional investors from buying single-family homes, issuing an executive order Tuesday that laid out new steps to stop Wall Street home purchases. The order directs executive agencies to find ways to stop the federal government from backing loans and providing other financial incentives for institutional investor purchases of single-family homes that might otherwise have been bought by an individual homeowner.
Trump’s order also bans those agencies from offloading any federally owned homes to large institutional investors. “My Administration will take decisive action to stop Wall Street from treating America’s neighborhoods like a trading floor and empower American families to own their homes," Trump said in his executive order. The order, however, leaves a number of questions unanswered.
It doesn’t address immediate steps for implementation. Instead, Trump is asking his White House staff to put together “a legislative recommendation" to codify this ban through Congress. And Trump has yet to define who qualifies as a “large institutional investor" and what counts as a “single-family home." As part of this order, he directed Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent to come up with those definitions in the next 30 days.
Trump’s executive order comes the day before he is slated to speak at the World Economic Forum in Davos where, he has said, he will sketch out his plan for making the housing market more affordable. In addition to his pledge to ban large investors from home buying, Trump this month said the government-backed mortgage-finance companies would buy $200 billion in mortgage bonds in an effort to lower mortgage rates. Trump will also
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