WSJ What’s News - What’s in the New Bipartisan Housing Bill That Congress Just Passed

Episode Date: June 24, 2026

P.M. Edition for June 24. After months of back and forth, Congress has passed new housing legislation aimed at making it easier to build homes and make housing more affordable. As part of our ongoing ...housing series, we hear from WSJ real estate reporter Rebecca Picciotto about what’s in the bill. Plus, President Trump met with Senate Republicans today after he refused to sign the housing legislation into law until the Senate passes a controversial voter-ID bill. Journal reporter Marianne LeVine joins us from the Capitol to discuss how the face-off went and where lawmakers go from here. And this week’s tech selloff is over, but markets are still keeping AI in focus. Alex Ossola hosts. Sign up for the WSJ's free What's News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Tech stocks continued to struggle as concerns of an AI bubble loom, but some chipmakers are forging ahead. Plus, President Trump meets with Senate Republicans amid his latest push for controversial voter ID rules. And what's in the newly passed housing bill that could be one of the biggest changes to federal housing policy in decades? The bill is generally something that the real estate industry likes. You know, it sends a message to local leaders that you want to streamline regulations. and make it easier to build. So the real estate industry broadly sees this bill as a victory. It's Wednesday, June 24th.
Starting point is 00:00:38 I'm Alex O'Sulliffe for the Wall Street Journal. This is the PM edition of What's News, the top headlines and business stories that move the world today. Starting off this evening with a look at markets. Major U.S. indexes ended the day mixed, with the Dow rising about 0.4%. But tech stocks struggle to shake off fears of an AI bubble.
Starting point is 00:00:59 One of the day's biggest losers was Cerebrus, the chipmaker that went public in May. Its shares fell almost 20% after the company warned it expects to keep operating at a loss. Another reminder of the heavy costs of the AI buildout. The NASDAQ dropped 0.4% today after declining 4% over the past two days. And the S&P 500 fell 0.1%. Meanwhile, oil prices dropped near pre-war levels. Brent crude futures fell 4.3% to $73.74 a barrel. And Bitcoin dipped below $60,000 this afternoon, its lowest intraday levels since earlier this month,
Starting point is 00:01:34 when Bitcoin accumulation firm's strategy said it had unloaded a portion of its holdings. In earnings, U.S. memory chipmaker Micron reported more than $41 billion in revenue for its latest quarter, a more than four-fold increase from a year before and beating analyst expectations in virtually every financial metric watched closely by investors. The company forecasted that rapid growth will continue due to near-insatiable demand for its memory chip. a key component in AI technology. But its stock has also been hit by investor worries about runaway tech valuations, high AI capital spending, and possible interest rate increases from the Federal Reserve. After getting hit hard yesterday by the broader tech sell-off,
Starting point is 00:02:13 micron shares were up nearly 14% in after-hours trading. Separately, South Korean chipmaker SK Hynix plans to raise more than $29 billion through a U.S. listing. The deal would be one of the biggest share sales in company history, comparable to Saudi Aramco's 2019 IPO. The company is looking to tap foreign investors to fund its expansion plans as the AI boom fuels a rush for advanced chips. S.K. Heinex expects trading to begin July 10th, adding to a blockbuster year for equity raises. And new government data shows that U.S. new home sales fell in May to 580,000.
Starting point is 00:02:48 That's down from 626,000 in April and worse than economists had expected. Today on Capitol Hill, President Trump had a lunch meeting with Senate Republicans about their legislative agenda. The face-off has been in the works for some time. Last week, President Trump threw a wrench in plans to confirm a new intelligence chief and renew a key spying law until Congress passes a contentious voter ID bill, the Save America Act. Ahead of today's lunch, Trump doubled down, canceling plans to sign a bipartisan housing bill into law, again, until Congress took action on that legislation. For more on the meeting and where lawmakers go from here, reporter Marianne Levin joins me now from the Capitol.
Starting point is 00:03:28 Marianne, what is in this Save America Act and why is it so controversial among lawmakers? So the Save America Act is a top priority for President Trump. It would basically impose new voter eligibility rules, including proof of citizenship. And this is something that the president really wants Senate Republicans to pass, but there basically are not enough votes to get rid of the filibuster and pass this legislation. So it seems like based on some of the things that have happened just leading up to this meeting today, the vibe among Republicans was like pretty tense. What was the outcome from this meeting? They really did not talk all that much about the Save America Act. And the president apparently got into a very contentious disagreement with Senator Bill Cassidy, who voted to convict him during the president's second impeachment. He and Cassidy have had a very tense relationship. But it seems like a lot of the focus of the meeting really was not about this bill. It was really about the war in Iran. And where does Iran fit into this?
Starting point is 00:04:26 The war in Iran has been a huge political question in the Senate, especially in terms of the impact the wars had on the midterms, in terms of gas prices and this broader question of affordability. The war in Iran was also very much on the president's mind because the Senate yesterday passed a war powers resolution that sought to restrict the president's authority on the war. The president was unhappy about with that vote and that informed some of his own anger today. Where do lawmakers go from here? Will they be pushing Trump for more concessions? It's hard to say. I mean, the president has coming in a pre-contentious moment in his relationship with Senate Republicans. This is, I think, an encapsulation of broader tension that's been growing between the president and the Senate Republican caucus that we've seen. And that's kind of spilling out in different ways, including this pressure to pass the SAVE Act. And so there's been this frustration of asking why the president is so focused on this bill that has no chance of passing. Mary Ann Levine joining me from the Capitol. Thank you so much for the rundown. Thanks for having me.
Starting point is 00:05:27 Coming up, how a new federal bill seeks to address the housing crisis. That's after the break. Visit BetMGM Casino and check out the newest exclusive. The Price is Right Fortune Pick. BetMDM and GameSense remind you to play responsibly, 19 plus to wager. Ontario only. Please play responsibly. If you have questions or concerns about your gambling or someone close to you,
Starting point is 00:05:51 Peace contact connects Ontario at 1-866-531-2600 to speak to an advisor, free of charge. BetMGM operates pursuant to an operating agreement with Eye Gaming, Ontario. For months, lawmakers on Capitol Hill have gone back and forth over a bill to encourage new housing development. The 21st century Road to Housing Act would be one of the biggest changes to federal housing policy in years. And this week, it finally passed through both changes. chambers of Congress with overwhelming majorities and was said to be signed into law by President Trump today. Until, as we discussed earlier in the show, he abruptly canceled that plan.
Starting point is 00:06:35 As the bill sits in limbo, some say its passage could speed up construction of much-needed new housing across the country. I'm joined now by Rebecca Pachodo, who covers the residential real estate market for the journal. Rebecca, walk us through. What is in this legislation? So this final bill has more than 50 provisions. aimed at making it easier to build more housing and one provision aimed at trying to keep private equity out of the housing market. It's been nearly a year of back and forth, but what the two
Starting point is 00:07:06 chambers have settled on has all of the same bills that the House passed in May, but it adds back some of the earlier Senate provisions that the House had removed. So for example, this Build Now Act, which is a provision that essentially ties federal grant funding that a city gets to the amount of housing they produce. So the more housing a city produces, the more grant funding they could be eligible for. This is one of the kind of carrot and stick approaches that the two chambers settled on to try to incentivize local governments to build more. Let's go back to the beginning with these bills. Who introduced the bill? What was the intention behind it? The first version of this bill came out in August 2025. It was introduced by Senators Elizabeth Warren.
Starting point is 00:07:54 and Tim Scott, a Democrat and a Republican. At that time, it really was just a pretty uncontroversial package of a bunch of small housing bills that everyone largely agreed was a step in the right direction. You know, no one bill in the package was going to do enough to move the needle. But together, it was seen as Congress's largest move on housing in decades, and it had this massive bipartisan support. It included everything from, you know, speeding up permitting processes, cutting red tape around environmental reviews, making it easier to build manufactured housing, encouraging local municipalities to ease their zoning laws, a bunch of small tweaks that, in tandem, are seen as crucial to increase housing supply. If you ask real estate leaders,
Starting point is 00:08:42 the federal government has a very limited ability to actually enact real change. What housing gets built where is often determined on the local level. But the sort of symbol, that the federal government was moving towards encouraging more housing supply, that was seen as enough to have the momentum and support to pass it. Okay, so these two lawmakers introduce it. It's bipartisan. Then what happens? When Trump at the beginning of this year announced his executive order to ban Wall Street housing investors, he demanded that Congress codify that ban into law. And the White House saw the Senate's road to housing bill as a very convenient vehicle to get that done.
Starting point is 00:09:23 And now this van has created this back and forth that I don't think lawmakers had initially intended when they first introduced the bill. So for those of us who haven't been following the bill up to this point, what is the investor ban and why is this something that President Trump cares about? Basically, Trump wants to forbid large institutional investors from buying up single family homes and essentially turning them into investments, renting them out, etc. His theory is that there are these large Wall Street companies that are basically stealing the housing supply from American families who otherwise would have been able to pursue the American dream of home ownership. So the idea is to eliminate these behemoth investors from competing with individual investors who can't pay all cash or offer the higher bids that these firms can. It's been controversial because there's this general sense that this is a largely political move, and economists will maintain that the amount of housing that Wall Street investors actually own is relatively low single digits across the country that is felt differently in different places.
Starting point is 00:10:36 You know, Phoenix, Atlanta, you can have investor-owned housing stock up to like 20%. So this polled really well, but investors are often kind of an important financing, avenue for home builders to offload surplus housing stock. It allows them to build more homes. The primary worry of the real estate industry was that this investor ban would send a signal to the lenders and financing partners that they typically go to, that the government is trying to suppress the number of single-family rentals that exist in America. So the real estate industry has been lobbying around this bill. They've had concerns about it. Where does the industry stand on it now?
Starting point is 00:11:18 The bill is generally something that the real estate industry likes. You know, it sends a message to local leaders that you want to streamline regulations and make it easier to build. So the real estate industry broadly sees this bill as a victory. The investor ban piece is sort of a more sour pill to swallow, but at this point, I think they've negotiated down to a point where they feel okay. That was residential real estate reporter, Rebecca Pichodo. For more from her and on housing legislation, check out today's episode of your money
Starting point is 00:11:51 briefing. Tomorrow, our housing series continues on the PM episode of What's News, looking at what happens when people decide that home ownership is a part of the American dream that's no longer for them. We'll be talking about the renter revolution. If you have any questions about that, affordability, or the legislation we discussed today, then send us a voice memo to WNPOD at WSJ.com or leave a voicemail with your name and location at two. 12-416-4328. Or if you're a listener on Spotify, leave us a comment with your thoughts. We'll be looking to answer your most burning questions with journal real estate editor Craig Carman at the end of the week. And that's what's news for this Wednesday afternoon.
Starting point is 00:12:31 Today's show is produced by Anthony Bansy and Danny Lewis with supervising producer Katie Ferguson. I'm Alex O'Sillov for the Wall Street Journal. We'll be back by the news show tomorrow morning. Thanks for listening. Hey, y'all. It's Kelly Clarkson with you. With Wayfair, ever order furniture online and wonder what if? Like, what if it doesn't hold up? That sofa was four days old.
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