To amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to provide incentives for certain residential rental property.
Summary
HR9573 is an early-stage bill that would amend the Internal Revenue Code to provide tax incentives for certain residential rental property. It was introduced on 2026-07-02 and referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means with no further action. The bill has no specified funding amount, no concrete tax mechanism details, and is at a procedural stage with no committee hearings or markups. There is no market-moving data or convergence to analyze.
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Key Takeaways
- 1.HR9573 is in the earliest legislative stage: introduced and referred to committee.
- 2.No bill text, CBO score, or tax mechanism details are available to determine winners or losers.
- 3.The sponsor is a junior House member, reducing near-term passage probability.
- 4.No companion Senate bill exists.
Market Implications
No near-term market implications. Residential rental property REITs such as $AVB, $EQR, $ESS, $MAA, and homebuilder $LEN, $DHI, $PHM could be affected if the bill ultimately specifies new tax credits for development or rehab, but no details exist to evaluate. The market has not reacted because there is no substance to price.
Full Analysis
On 2026-07-02, Rep. Carey (R-OH-15) introduced HR9573, titled 'To amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to provide incentives for certain residential rental property.' The bill was referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means, which has jurisdiction over tax legislation. This is the earliest possible stage of the legislative process: introduce and refer. No bill text has been published, no hearings scheduled, no CBO score requested. The sponsor is a junior member (no committee chair or leadership role), which reduces the probability of rapid advancement. The bill contains no explicit funding amount — it is a tax-incentive authorization, meaning any revenue loss would be offset through the tax code, but no dollar figure is stated. Because the exact mechanism (credit, deduction, exclusion, or rate change) is not specified, there is no way to model which property owners, developers, or REITs benefit. No companion bill exists in the Senate. Action history shows three identical entries on the same day (introduction and referral), indicating no legislative velocity. The bill remains in committee. If it advances, the next steps would be committee hearings, markup, then floor vote. For retail investors, this bill requires monitoring for a published bill text and committee action before any structural analysis is possible. No tickers are assigned because the causal chain cannot be specified without the tax-incentive details. The convergence array is empty because no related signals, procurements, or presidential actions were provided in the candidate context.
Key Legislators
Connected Signals
Matched on shared policy language across AI analyses, with ticker & timing weight
8-K: Federal Home Loan Bank of Atlanta — Obligation Acceleration
8-K: Federal Home Loan Bank of Des Moines — Obligation Acceleration
To restrict the eligibility of mortgagors to citizens of the United States with respect to mortgage insurance provided by the Federal Housing Administration and the purchase and securitization of mortgages by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
Executive Order: Removing Unnecessary and Counterproductive Restrictions on Access to Federal Lands
Executive Order: Restoring Integrity to America’s Financial System
Proclamation: National Homeownership Month, 2026
Ensuring Better Interest Treatment and Deductibility Act (EBITDA)
Proportional Reviews for Broadband Deployment Act
Related Presidential Actions
Executive orders & memoranda affecting the same sectors or companies
National Homeownership Month, 2026
This proclamation formalizes National Homeownership Month and details several ongoing or proposed policy actions: Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are directed to purchase $200 billion in mortgage-backed securities to lower borrowing costs; an executive order bans large institutional investors from buying single-family homes; and the Administration calls on Congress to pass the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act to make these reforms permanent. The action also reaffirms efforts to restrict taxpayer-backed loans to only law-abiding citizens, targeting fraud and illegal immigration as a means to improve housing affordability.
Removing Unnecessary and Counterproductive Restrictions on Access to Federal Lands
This executive order rescinds two 1970s-era executive orders (11644 and 11989) that required federal agencies to use vague environmental and social criteria when designating off-road vehicle use on federal lands. It directs the Secretaries of War, Interior, Agriculture, the TVA Board, and other relevant agency heads to initiate rulemakings to remove or revise regulations based on those criteria, aiming to increase access for energy, timber, utility maintenance, and recreation.
Restoring Integrity to America’s Financial System
This executive order directs the Treasury Department to issue an advisory to financial institutions on risks from non-work authorized populations and their employers, propose regulatory changes to strengthen Bank Secrecy Act customer due diligence and identification requirements, and consider risks from foreign consular IDs. It also directs the CFPB to clarify that deportation risk can affect ability-to-repay assessments for non-work authorized borrowers, and federal financial regulators to issue guidance on credit risks from this population.
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