2026-06-22T18:04:00-0400 / 哥伦比亚广播公司新闻
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更新时间:2026年6月22日 / 美国东部时间下午6:50 / 哥伦比亚广播公司新闻
参议院周一通过了一项罕见的两党法案,旨在通过增加美国住房供应量,让美国人更容易、更负担得起地购买住房。
这项《21世纪住房之路法案》将限制机构投资者购买独栋住宅,消除建筑监管壁垒,并采取其他措施扩大经济适用房的供应。
该法案现已送交众议院进行最终投票。如果获得通过,特朗普总统预计将签署该法案使之生效。本月早些时候,特朗普在一份公告中敦促国会通过这项立法,称其为“我国历史上最全面、最具意义的住房法案”。
特朗普在1月份的国情咨文演讲中也曾推动禁止机构投资者收购独栋住宅。
除了限制投资者所有权,《住房之路法案》还将通过推出预先批准的住宅设计方案、简化环境审查流程、鼓励 zoning 改革以加快住宅建设来增加住房供应。
另一项条款将设立一个名为“创新基金”的拨款项目,在五年内每年拨款2亿美元,用于奖励那些在增加住房供应方面有良好记录的地方政府。
该法案还将启动一项试点项目,帮助地方政府将空置商业建筑改造为经济适用房;为预制住宅建设解锁更多联邦资金;并废除一项要求住宅必须安装底盘(用于运输的钢制框架)的规定。
房价为何飙升?
2007年至2009年金融危机期间房价暴跌后,美国房价暴涨的一个主要原因是全国住房需求远远超过了供应。
“人们普遍认为,房价和租金大幅上涨的一个重要原因是,自大衰退以来,我们少建了数百万套住房,”两党政策中心执行副总裁丹尼斯·谢伊说道。该智库位于华盛顿特区,已表示支持《住房之路法案》。
根据圣路易斯联邦储备银行的数据,美国当前的住宅中位数价格约为40.3万美元,较2011年的约22.7万美元上涨了77%。房地产公司Redfin的数据显示,美国人需要达到11.678万美元的年度家庭收入,才能负担得起普通住宅。
该法案中的一项条款将把美国机构投资者可购买的独栋住宅数量上限设定为350套。此举旨在限制私募股权公司和房地产投资信托基金等财力雄厚的投资者大量收购住宅房地产。
在2007年至2008年的楼市崩盘期间,这类投资者利用低成本融资收购了数千套止赎房产。尽管这在当时帮助稳定了楼市,但金融机构在随后几年中持续扩大其住宅地产持有量。
不过,如果该法案最终生效,当前住宅地产投资组合超过拟议的350套上限的投资公司,无需清算任何现有房产。
部分城市投资者持股比例更高
参议院一名助手告诉哥伦比亚广播公司新闻,拟议的机构投资者规则旨在遏制他们对住房市场的控制,包括在投资者影响力过大的大都市地区。这位工作人员指出,这些限制仅适用于现有独栋住宅,不适用于新建住宅,这一例外保留了金融公司投资新建住宅的激励。
美国银行全球研究部的分析师表示,截至2025年,拥有超过1000套住宅的大型机构投资者合计拥有50万套房产,占美国住房存量的0.34%,约占独栋住宅租赁总供应量的3%。
但在一些城市,这类投资者的存在感要高得多。例如,根据2026年美国政府问责局的分析,在佛罗里达州杰克逊维尔,投资者拥有超过20%的独栋租赁住宅。2018年至2024年间,达拉斯和凤凰城各新增了至少1.6万套投资者拥有的住宅,在此期间分别增长了177%和114%。
“机构投资者并未拥有美国所有独栋住宅的很大一部分,但它们集中在全国某些社区,这才是令人担忧的地方,”谢伊说道。
限制投资者持股会带来改变吗?
该法案的立法支持者将其宣传为解决全国范围内经济适用房严重短缺问题的重要一步。
“这项法案是多年来致力于降低成本、扩大住房供应、减少繁文缛节、保护纳税人权益并帮助更多美国人实现住房拥有梦想的成果,”该法案主要起草人之一、南卡罗来纳州参议员蒂姆·斯科特上周在一份声明中说道。
专家们对该法案的潜在影响则更为谨慎。房地产公司Redfin的首席经济学家达里尔·费尔韦瑟对该法案能否切实增加全国住房供应表示怀疑,她指出投资者可能会通过将其持有的房产拆分到更小的实体来规避持股上限。
“很多人认为,如果我们摆脱私募股权,就会有大量房屋可供首次购房者购买,”她说。“但这不会发生。”
不过费尔韦瑟指出,该立法可能会刺激新住宅建设,从而潜在缓解价格压力。
“开发商目前专注于大型独栋住宅或小型公寓楼,”她说。“有了该法案中的这些新激励措施,我们应该会看到开发商建造更多的‘缺失中间型’住房,比如联排别墅、多户住宅或小型公寓楼,”她告诉哥伦比亚广播公司新闻。
本文编辑:阿兰·谢特尔
Could the ROAD to Housing Act actually lower home prices? Here’s what experts say.
2026-06-22T18:04:00-0400 / CBS News
By
Updated on: June 22, 2026 / 6:50 PM EDT / CBS News
A rare bipartisan bill passed in the Senate on Monday aims to make it easier and more affordable for Americans to buy a home by boosting the nation’s housing supply.
The 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act would restrict institutional investors from purchasing single-family homes, remove regulatory barriers to construction and take other steps to expand the availability of affordable housing.
It now heads to the House for a final vote. President Trump is expected to sign the bill into law if it is approved. In a proclamation earlier this month, he urged Congress to pass the legislation, calling it “the most comprehensive and consequential housing legislation in the history of our country.”
Mr. Trump also pushed for a ban on institutional investors scooping up single-family homes during his January State of the Union address.
Along with the limit on investor ownership, the ROAD Act would seek to boost housing supply by establishing pre-approved home designs, streamlining environmental reviews and encouraging zoning reforms to accelerate homebuilding.
Another provision would create a grant program, the Innovation Fund, that awards $200 million a year for five years to localities with a track record of increasing housing supply.
The bill would also launch a pilot program to help local governments convert vacant commercial buildings into affordable housing; unlock more federal funding for the construction of factory-built homes; and eliminate a rule that requires homes to be built on a chassis, a steel framework used to transport them.
Why have home prices soared?
A major reason home prices have skyrocketed after crashing during the 2007-09 financial crisis is that housing demand across the U.S. has far outstripped supply.
“There’s a general recognition that a big part of the reason why home sale prices and rents have gone up significantly is that we have under-built housing by millions of homes since the Great Recession,” said Dennis Shea, executive vice president at the Bipartisan Policy Center, a Washington, D.C., think tank that has expressed support for the ROAD Act.
The median home price in the U.S. now hovers around $403,000, up 77% from roughly $227,000 in 2011, according to data from the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. Americans need an annual household income of $116,780 to afford the average home, according to real estate firm Redfin.
A provision in the bill would cap the number of single-family homes that institutional investors can buy across the U.S. at 350 properties. The goal is to restrict deep-pocketed investors, such as private equity firms and real estate investment trusts, from buying up vast swaths of residential real estate.
During the 2007-08 housing crash, such investors capitalized on low-cost financing to hoover up thousands of foreclosed properties. Although that helped stabilize the housing market at the time, financial firms have continued to expand their holdings in the years that followed.
However, investment firms whose residential real estate portfolios currently exceed the proposed 350-home limit would not be required to liquidate any properties if the bill becomes law.
Investor ownership higher in some cities
A Senate aide told CBS News that the proposed rules for institutional investors are aimed at curbing their control of the housing market, including in metro areas where investors have an outsized influence. The restrictions apply to existing single-family homes, not new construction, a carveout that preserves incentives for financial firms to invest in new housing construction, the staffer noted.
As of 2025, larger institutional investors — those that own more than 1,000 homes — owned a combined 500,000 properties, accounting for 0.34% of U.S. housing stock and roughly 3% of the total single-family rental supply, according to analysts with BofA Global Research.
Yet such investors are a much larger presence in some cities. In Jacksonville, Florida, for example, investors own more than 20% of single-family rental homes, according to a 2026 U.S. Government Accountability Office analysis. Between 2018 and 2024, Dallas and Phoenix each added at least 16,000 investor-owned homes, up 177% and 114%, respectively, over that period.
Institutional investors “don’t own a large percentage of all the single-family homes in the United States, but it’s concentrated in certain communities throughout the country, and that’s the concern,” Shea said.
Would limiting investors make a difference?
The bill’s legislative backers tout it as an important step in addressing the critical shortage of affordable homes around the country.
“This bill is the result of years of work to lower costs, expand housing supply, cut red tape, protect taxpayers and help more Americans achieve the dream of homeownership,” Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina, one of the main architects of the bill, said in a statement last week.
Experts are more tempered in assessing the bill’s potential impact. Daryl Fairweather, chief economist at the real estate firm Redfin, expressed doubt that the bill would meaningfully boost the nation’s housing supply, noting that investors could potentially skirt the ownership cap by breaking their holdings into smaller entities.
“A lot of people think that if we get rid of private equity, there will be all these houses available for sale for first-time homebuyers,” she said. “But that’s not going to happen.”
Yet Fairweather noted that the legislation could work to spur new home construction, potentially easing price pressures.
“Developers, they focus on large single-family homes or small apartments and condos,” she said. “With these new incentives in the act, we should see developers building more of that missing middle housing like town homes, multi-family or smaller condo buildings,” she told CBS News.
Edited by Alain Sherter
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