To amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to allow 5-year carrybacks for the low-income housing tax credit.
Summary
HR9012 proposes a 5-year carryback for the low-income housing tax credit (LIHTC), but is at the earliest legislative stage—referred to committee with no text or CBO score. No market impact is near-term measurable as the bill has not advanced beyond introduction.
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Key Takeaways
- 1.HR9012 is in the earliest legislative stage—packed four procedural actions on day one, but no substantive progress.
- 2.The bill modifies tax credit timing, not direct spending; no explicit funding amount.
- 3.No publicly traded companies have direct, near-term exposure that meets the confidence threshold for inclusion.
Market Implications
No measurable market implications at this stage. The bill has not moved beyond referral. Investors should watch for committee hearings or markup sessions, which would trigger a reassessment. If the bill gains traction, affordable housing REITs like EQR (Equity Residential) or AVB (AvalonBay Communities) with some LIHTC exposure could see secondary benefits, but the effect would be indirect and small relative to their portfolios.
Full Analysis
Connected Signals
Matched on shared policy language across AI analyses, with ticker & timing weight
Workforce Housing Tax Credit Act
To provide assisted living assistance through Medicaid and low-income housing tax credit.
To increase the supply of, and lower rents for, affordable housing and to assess calculations of area median income for purposes of Federal low-income housing assistance, and for other purposes.
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