Today, we will be clipping videos from the Senate Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs committee hearing on “How Private Equity Landlords are Changing the Housing Market.”
@SherrodBrown opens: "in plain English, that meant take advantage of the foreclosure crisis... to give Wall Street billionaires the chance to buy up homes for less than they're worth and rent them out at a steep profit."
@SherrodBrown "It's a variation on the same theme no matter the industry.... PE profits depend on squeezing every last nickel from workers and renters, without any kind of real investment in their employees or their communities."
Sofia Lopez, Deputy Campaign Direct on Housing at the Action Center on Race and the Economy @ACREcampaigns opening remarks: “Private equity business model exploits tenants.”
Holly Hook, a manufactured home resident and @MHaction leader: "nobody knew our community was for sale until a notice appeared on our doors"
Dr. Desiree Fields, assistant professor at University of California, Berkeley opening remarks: “The ways private equity landlords are changing the housing market is linked to the geography of corporate SFR.”
@SherrodBrown asks Holly Hook of @MHaction: "When Haven Park and other PE firms buy a community and raise the rents, what sacrifices have you and other residents had to make to keep your homes?"
@SherrodBrown asks Sofia Lopez of @ACREcampaigns: "what are some of the most problematic elements of the PE single family rental business model?"
@SenWarren: "Manufactured homes are a critical avenue to affordable housing for millions of Americans... the PE industry saw an opportunity... Wall Street vultures realized that families were effectively stuck in place."
@SenWarren to Sofia Lopez of @ACREcampaigns: "from what you've seen, when PE or other Wall Street firms purchase a manufactured home community, does the quality of life for residents of that community generally improve?"
Sofia Lopez: "No"
@SenWarren to Sofia Lopez of @ACREcampaigns: "What does Congress need to do to ensure that residents at Oak Hill and other manufactured home communities aren't being gauged by PE firms?"
Sofia Lopez: "I think the Stop Wall Street Looting Act is an excellent piece of legislation."
@SenTinaSmith: “What do you think we should be doing to level the playing field for ordinary home buyers so large institutional buyers don’t end up buying a large bulk of the available properties in certain areas?”
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When some small business owner suggests higher bank capital rules will reduce access to credit BEWARE: it may just be @GoldmanSachs astroturfing 🧵1/10
Goldman cooked up a PR initiative, “10,000 Small Businesses” to lobby the government. And right now, those businesses are fronting for Goldman’s opposition to higher bank capital levels, which help cushion against shocks and avoid financial crises 2/10 goldmansachs.com/citizenship/10…
The public dislikes #WallStreet (see this poll) so much that Goldman and other big banks often do their lobbying by hiding behind other entities 3/10 ourfinancialsecurity.org/2020/09/voters…
“[T]he explicit guarantee extended to the globally systemic banks is now extended to everyone,” said Renita Marcellin (@aphisha28)of @realBankRefrom. “We have this implicit guarantee for everyone, but not the rules and regulations that should be paired with [them].” 2/14
What do we need? How about a stable banking system, “essential services—such as deposits, money transfers, and credit—on a universal basis,” and “a strong role for regulatory agencies that protect consumers from abusive practices.” 3/14
GREAT SCOOPS: Last weekend, Federal Reserve Chair Powell sought to DOWNPLAY role of failed regulation/supervision -- partly by the Fed! -- in collapse of #SiliconValleyBank
"the Biden administration pushed to formally spotlight shortcomings in financial regulation that they blamed for the banks’ rapid descent to insolvency." But Powell "blocked efforts to include a phrase mentioning regulatory failures" 2/12 nytimes.com/2023/03/16/bus…
As @ddayen points out, that statement was pretty anodyne, and included praise for (unnamed) Dodd-Frank law of 2010 but no mention of the 2018 partial rollback that eased oversight of SVB 3/12 federalreserve.gov/newsevents/pre…
Thanks to the #BankLobbyistAct back in 2019, and the Trump-era Fed's further deregulation, the Fed took its eyes off large banks like SVB. AFR fought against that tooth and nail. 2/6
The government moved decisively to avoid a panic by guaranteeing deposits. Banks that benefit from that now need tougher supervision. AFR's Renita Marcellin told the NYT ... 3/6
The collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank have something in common: they both benefited from deregulation under the #BankLobbyistAct in 2018 1/5
Congress passed the law but the Trump-era regulators pushed it even further, giving authorities less oversight of these large-ish banks. Now we need action to reverse those changes and make others 2/5 ourfinancialsecurity.org/2023/03/news-r…
The subprime corporate credit market, which includes private equity’s fave, leveraged lending and CLOs, has hit $5 trillion in the US.
This problem portends bring slower growth, job losses, and possibly instability in parts of the financial sector.
🧵1/10
This lending seldom goes to productive uses, relies on sketchy accounting, and is often very opaque.
It's often to finance private equity buyouts refinance existing debt, or suck cash out of companies.
And it supports monopoly power, by driving corporate consolidation. 2/10
The odds of a 2008-style crisis are low but the risks of damage are high.
This debt has – a redistribution of money towards Wall Street – has left companies and workers in a worse position to handle a slowing U.S. economy. 3/10