If you’ve been following the housing market lately, you know it feels a bit like a high-stakes game of musical chairs—except someone keeps taking away the chairs. For professionals in the middle of a corporate relocation, finding a soft place to land has become increasingly complex.
Enter HR 6644, the End Hedge Fund Control of American Homes Act. While the headline sounds like a battle between Washington and Wall Street, the ripple effects could fundamentally change the "temporary housing" phase of your next move.
At its core, HR 6644 aims to push institutional investors out of the single-family residential market. The bill proposes a transition period where large hedge funds and institutional investors must sell off their single-family home portfolios to individual buyers.
The "Why" is simple: The goal is to lower home prices and increase availability for first-time homebuyers by removing deep-pocketed corporations from the bidding wars.
For decades, the "Relo" playbook relied on a steady supply of corporate housing—often single-family rentals managed by large entities. Here’s how the shift affects you:
Many corporate housing providers lease blocks of homes from institutional owners. If those owners are forced to sell, the pool of available short-term, fully furnished single-family homes could shrink. You might find yourself trading that suburban three-bedroom rental for a high-rise executive suite or an extended-stay hotel.
In the short term, as hedge funds exit the market, we might see a dip in home prices—a win if you’re looking to buy in your new city. However, the rental market for temporary housing may see a price hike due to lower supply and higher demand for the remaining "managed" units.
Relocation Management Companies (RMCs) are having to get creative. Instead of a standard 30-to-60-day rental in a house, we’re seeing a rise in:
At Nearsite, we believe relocation shouldn’t feel like a cold transaction. While HR 6644 aims to fix a systemic issue in the housing market, the transition period will be messy.
Our Take: If you are planning a move in the next 12–18 months, flexibility is your best asset. Don't get married to the idea of a specific temporary housing type. The "American Dream" of a white picket fence is being legally re-coded, and your relocation strategy needs to be just as adaptive.
Pro Tip: If your company offers a lump sum for relocation, consider allocating more toward "bridge" costs. With institutional inventory potentially hitting the sales market, you might find a "forever home" faster than expected, but your temporary stay might be more expensive than the old HR spreadsheets suggest.