President Donald Trump’s decision to postpone the signing of a bipartisan housing affordability bill has created a new point of uncertainty for housing-related ETFs, forcing investors to reassess which corners of the real estate market stand to benefit if the legislation remains stalled.
The proposed 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act sought to increase housing supply through faster permitting, expanded financing options, incentives for local governments to support development, and reduced barriers to manufactured housing construction. The bill also included restrictions on large institutional investors purchasing additional single-family homes.
While the legislation could still become law without Trump’s signature, the delay has raised questions about its ultimate fate and the implications for ETFs tied to homebuilders, residential real estate, and rental housing.
Homebuilder ETFs Lose A Potential Policy Catalyst
Among the ETFs most exposed to the bill are homebuilder-focused funds that would have benefited from measures designed to accelerate housing construction and ease supply constraints. Ironically, homebuilder stocks like KB Home (NYSE:KBH) and Dream Finders Homes, Inc. (NYSE:DFH) surged on Wednesday and collectively posted their strongest day in a year.
The iShares U.S. Home Construction ETF (BATS:ITB) and SPDR S&P Homebuilders ETF (NYSE:XHB) provide exposure to major homebuilders and housing-related companies that could have seen stronger long-term demand if the legislation succeeded in unlocking new housing supply.
For these funds, the bill represented a potential tailwind beyond interest-rate movements. Faster approvals and expanded housing development could have supported construction activity at a time when the U.S. continues to face a multi-million-unit housing shortage.
With the legislation now in limbo, investors may have to rely more heavily on falling mortgage rates and improving affordability to drive gains in homebuilder ETFs.
Real Estate ETFs May Avoid New Investor Restrictions
The bill’s provisions targeting institutional ownership of single-family homes created a different set of implications for broader real estate ETFs.
The compromise legislation would have limited the ability of the largest institutional investors to acquire additional single-family homes, a measure aimed at easing competition for prospective homebuyers.
That restriction could have weighed on some residential rental operators held in real estate ETFs such as the Vanguard Real Estate ETF (NYSE:VNQ) and Real Estate Select Sector SPDR Fund (NYSE:XLRE).
By delaying the bill, Trump may have temporarily removed a regulatory overhang for parts of the residential rental market, potentially offering a modest positive for REIT-focused funds with exposure to single-family rental operators.
ETF Investors Still Face The Rate Question
While the political drama surrounding the housing bill has captured headlines, ETF investors may ultimately conclude that interest rates remain the dominant driver of housing-sector performance.
Trump himself argued that lower rates are more important than the legislation. Trump downplayed the significance of the housing bill before canceling the signing ceremony, saying on Truth Social that the legislation was “of minor importance compared to lower interest rates” and the SAVE America Act. That view aligns with the broader market, where mortgage rates above 6% have weighed on housing demand, affordability, and transaction volumes.
For housing ETFs, the biggest catalyst may therefore remain the path of interest rates rather than housing legislation. Still, the split within the sector, with regard to homebuilder ETFs and some real estate ETFs could become a key theme for ETF investors as the bill’s future remains uncertain.
Photo: Shutterstock/ Juraj Kral
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