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A presidential plea for rent control, California realtors under a Justice Department magnifying glass and an unlikely viral video hit. From the wild and wooly world of real estate, here are our Hits and Misses for the week of July 15-19.

Miss: Biden’s Rent Control Idea. President Biden was in the real estate spotlight this week when he called on Congress to pass legislation that would give “corporate landlords a choice to either cap rent increases on existing units at 5% or risk losing current valuable federal tax breaks.” Without identifying the “corporate landlords” by name, the White House insisted these entities were arbitrarily raising rents. It is unlikely that the divided Congress will unite behind this proposal, which was overwhelmingly slammed by housing industry leaders as failing to address to core causes for the lack of affordable rental housing.

Miss: Another Slam at Realtors. Also this week, Biden’s Department of Justice (DOJ) launched a “formal inquiry” into the California Association of Realtors (CAR) in response to a complaint by the Consumer Federation of America that insisted two new CAR contracts contained “anti-consumer provisions,” including a new buyer-agent representation agreement that was criticized for being “too disorganized and complex for the average homebuyer to understand.” The exact focus of this inquiry was not made public, but in view of this action plus the DOJ’s efforts to abrogate its 2020 settlement with the National Association of Realtors and Biden’s claim that broker commissions are raising home prices, one needs to wonder why this White House is so hostile to the real estate profession.

Miss: Reform or Revenge? Perhaps more disturbing than the rent control proposal and the CAR inquiry was an Associated Press report that claimed Biden was “seriously considering proposals” to redesign the U.S. Supreme Court with term limits for the justices and an ethics code that “would be enforceable under law.” Biden was also considering the call for a constitutional amendment that would reverse the Supreme Court’s recent presidential immunity ruling. While these changes are being promoted as reforms, they smell like revenge by a president whose agenda has been repeatedly thwarted by a branch of government that he cannot control – and that is ironically unsettling behavior from someone who claims his opponent represents a “threat to democracy.”

Hit: Hook Up the Chicago Gas. Kudos the Chicago City Council for not embracing Mayor Brandon Johnson’s Clean and Affordable Buildings Ordinance, which sought to end natural gas connections in new homes and buildings. The Chicago Sun-Times reported the proposal is indefinitely stalled in the Council’s Rules Committee, and that state of limbo was encouraged by the International Union of Operating Engineers Local 150 – Marc Poulos, the union’s executive director, said the mayor’s plan would be “killing a bunch of jobs at the behest of special-interest environmental groups.” Johnson has vowed to push forward, but the likelihood of his bulldozing the union to get his way is slim-to-nil.

Hit: A New Online Star. A feel-good story of the week involved Mike Hege, a 43-year-old North Carolina realtor who became an unlikely viral sensation thanks to the 27-year-old video marketing manager at his company. Hege, a realtor at Pridemore Properties in Charlotte, requested a video for presentation on his Instagram and TikTok pages. The resulting video carried the on-screen caption “Asked my Gen Z employee to edit a video for me, and this is what I got!” – and the presentation consisted of a comic montage of a smiling Hege pausing for heavy inhaled breaths while speaking on his property tours. Hege’s unlikely appearance captured nearly 3.5 million views within four days of going online – and, of course, if that translates into an upswing in sales, then Hege will truly get the last laugh.

Booking.com

Hit: Good Vibes by Investors. The industry ended this week with good news via the new RCN Capital/CJ Patrick Company Investor Sentiment Index, which found real estate investor sentiment during the second quarter rose by 16% from the previous quarter. The new data report also found 60% of investors viewed today’s market as better or much better than it was a year ago, compared to only 20% who felt it was worse or much worse. Looking ahead, 61% of investors expected the market to continue improving while 14% expected it to decline – the highest percentage of positive responses and lowest percentage of negative responses since data was tracked. Here’s hoping that good vibes transition into a great investment environment.

Phil Hall is editor of Weekly Real Estate News. He can be reached at [email protected].

Photo: AndreyPopov / iStock

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