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.
Summary
HR9014 is an early-stage bill referred to the House Financial Services Committee that directs HUD to reassess area median income calculations for federal housing assistance. The bill has no authorized funding and no direct market impact at this stage. The primary effect, if any, would be a potential shift in affordable housing loan demand for large multifamily lenders like JPM, BAC, C, and WFC, but the mechanism is indirect and uncertain.
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Key Takeaways
- 1.HR9014 is an early-stage bill with no authorized funding and no direct market impact.
- 2.The bill directs HUD to study AMI calculations, which could indirectly affect affordable housing loan demand for large banks like JPM, BAC, WFC, and C.
- 3.The legislative path is long and uncertain; the bill faces headwinds in a Republican-controlled House.
Market Implications
The bill has no immediate market implications. The finance sector is not expected to move on this news. The only potential long-term effect is a modest shift in affordable housing loan demand if HUD revises AMI calculations, but this is speculative and years away. No real market data is available to analyze price trends.
Full Analysis
Intelligence Surface
Cross-referenced against federal contracts, SEC insider filings & congressional trade disclosures
No confirming evidence found yet from contracts, insider trades, or congressional activity
What the bill does
Same as above — the bill directs HUD to reassess AMI calculations, which could affect the demand for affordable housing loans and the risk profile of such loans held by banks.
Who must act
HUD — the agency responsible for implementing AMI calculations and administering housing assistance programs.
What happens
A change in AMI methodology could expand or contract the pool of households qualifying for housing subsidies, thereby shifting the demand for affordable housing development and the associated financing needs. This may alter the volume and risk-adjusted returns of multifamily construction and permanent loans originated by banks.
Stock impact
Bank of America is a major multifamily lender and has a dedicated community development banking division focused on affordable housing. However, the bill only requires a study and potential revision of AMI calculations, with no immediate change to lending volumes or credit quality. The impact on BAC's $102.8B revenue is negligible.
What the bill does
Same as above — the bill directs HUD to reassess AMI calculations, which could affect the demand for affordable housing loans and the risk profile of such loans held by banks.
Who must act
HUD — the agency responsible for implementing AMI calculations and administering housing assistance programs.
What happens
A change in AMI methodology could expand or contract the pool of households qualifying for housing subsidies, thereby shifting the demand for affordable housing development and the associated financing needs. This may alter the volume and risk-adjusted returns of multifamily construction and permanent loans originated by banks.
Stock impact
Citigroup has a smaller multifamily lending footprint relative to JPM and BAC, and its community banking operations are less exposed to affordable housing finance. The bill's impact on C's $78.1B revenue is negligible.
Connected Signals
Matched on shared policy language across AI analyses, with ticker & timing weight
21st Century ROAD to Housing Act
To amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to allow 5-year carrybacks for the low-income housing tax credit.
Workforce Housing Tax Credit Act
Affordable Housing Barriers Transparency Act
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