Residential

  • September 30, 2025

    IRS Defines Rural Areas For Opportunity Zone Tax Breaks

    The Internal Revenue Service published the definitions Tuesday for rural areas that qualify for the federal opportunity zone program's rural zone expansion under the Republican budget bill signed into law this summer.

  • September 30, 2025

    Longtime SEC Litigator Joins Invitation Homes In Texas

    A litigator with more than two decades of U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission experience has joined the legal team at Dallas-based single-family home leasing and management company Invitation Homes Inc. as senior vice president, litigation and investigations.

  • September 30, 2025

    FTC Accuses Zillow, Redfin Of Stifling Rental Ad Competition

    The Federal Trade Commission filed a lawsuit in Virginia federal court on Tuesday accusing Zillow of paying Redfin more than $100 million to stop competing for the sale of rental housing advertisements on their listing services.

  • September 30, 2025

    NYC To Spend $1.8B To Speed Up Housing Production

    New York City Mayor Eric Adams announced that his administration plans to accelerate housing production by investing an additional $1.8 billion in fiscal year 2026, fast-tracking funding earmarked under a 10-year capital plan for housing production.

  • September 30, 2025

    Trump Orders Lumber, Furniture Tariffs To Begin Oct. 14

    In an executive order signed Monday evening, President Donald Trump outlined a series of tariff rates on imported lumber and derivative products to be imposed in two weeks.

  • September 30, 2025

    Co-Marketing Isn't A Kickback Scheme, NC Lender Says

    A mortgage lender is urging a North Carolina federal court to toss a homebuyer's suit accusing it and an insurance broker of running a kickback scheme, arguing that the homebuyer is wrongfully alleging that its co-marketing agreement with the brokerage is some sort of kickback scheme.

  • September 30, 2025

    Senior Housing REIT Buys 5 Wisconsin Properties For $195M

    Senior housing real estate investment trust LTC Properties Inc. said Tuesday that it has acquired a portfolio of five independent living, assisted living and memory care properties in Wisconsin for $195 million.

  • September 29, 2025

    FPI Signs $2.8M Deal To Exit Yardi Price-Fixing Class Action

    Property management firm FPI Management Inc. has reached a $2.8 million deal to settle a proposed price-fixing class action in Washington federal court accusing it and others of using Yardi Systems Inc.'s third-party software to inflate residential rents.

  • September 29, 2025

    Kazakh Money Laundering Retrial Against Felix Sater Begins

    A Manhattan federal jury heard opening statements Monday in a civil money laundering retrial against financier Felix Sater, whom plaintiffs branded as a thief who enriched himself as he helped hide millions of dollars looted from a Kazakh bank 20 years ago.

  • September 29, 2025

    Residential REIT Wants Shareholder Vote For $354M Merger

    Dream Residential Real Estate Investment Trust wants its shareholders to vote on approving a $354 million all-cash acquisition of the company by an affiliate of real estate investment and management company Morgan Properties LP, the Canadian residential REIT has announced.

  • September 29, 2025

    NYC Real Estate Week In Review

    Goldberg Weprin and Jeffrey Zwick are among the law firms that landed work on the largest New York City real estate deals to hit public records last week, a period that included large deals in three boroughs.

  • September 29, 2025

    IRS Finalizes Income Rules For Housing Tax Credit Projects

    The U.S. Department of the Treasury and Internal Revenue Service published finalized rules for housing tax credit developers opting to use an average-income test to set rents for affordable housing projects, aiming to reduce the risk of disqualification if a unit falls out of compliance.

  • September 29, 2025

    Airbnb Rental Violates Zoning Rules, Conn. Town Says

    An Airbnb listing for a "poolside retreat" with 10 beds violates a Connecticut town's zoning ordinance because it is commercial in nature, not residential, according to an enforcement action that asks a state court to shut down the enterprise for good.

  • September 29, 2025

    Related Group Sells Atlanta Suburb Apartments For $352M

    Related Group has sold two multifamily properties in the Atlanta suburbs of Buford and Kennesaw for nearly $352.8 million, according to a Monday announcement by seller-side broker Walker & Dunlop.

  • September 29, 2025

    NY Committee Advances Bally's Bronx Casino Project

    A six-member New York community advisory committee decided on Monday to move forward gambling company Bally's Corp.'s proposed $4 billion, 3 million-square-foot Bronx casino and resort project for further consideration.

  • September 29, 2025

    Fla. Cities, Counties Take Aim At Storm Recovery Law

    A coalition of 25 Florida municipalities and counties sued the state on Monday over a state law aimed at encouraging post-hurricane rebuilding efforts that the local governments say unconstitutionally tramples their authority to regulate land use and development in their communities.

  • September 26, 2025

    Zillow Loses 9th Circ. Bid To Undo Investor Class Cert.

    The Ninth Circuit on Friday affirmed a lower court's decision to grant class certification in an investor suit claiming Zillow Group Inc. oversold a now-shuttered home-buying program, rejecting the real estate listing site's arguments that the lower court did not correctly apply the U.S. Supreme Court's Goldman decision to the class certification bid.

  • September 26, 2025

    Banks Evade Most Liability Claims In Copyright Suit

    A pair of banks had the majority of the liability claims against them tossed by a Colorado federal judge Friday in an architectural group's copyright lawsuit against a real estate developer, whose project they financed.

  • September 26, 2025

    SEC Eyes Tweaking RMBS Rules To Revive Dormant Market

    The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission put out a call for public comments on improving its rules over residential mortgage-backed securities, noting that there have been no such public offerings in more than a decade and questioning whether the agency's requirements may be partially to blame.

  • September 26, 2025

    Court Erases $187M Hurricane Damage Appraisal Award

    A Florida federal court invalidated a $187 million appraisal award that a group of homeowners associations won against their insurers over damage related to Hurricane Sally in 2020, finding that the group's chosen appraiser "never stated the 'amount of loss'" to the property.

  • September 26, 2025

    $33M NJ Mansion Wasn't Chinese Exile's, Holding Co. Says

    A holding company that nominally owns a $33 million New Jersey mansion has asked a Connecticut federal judge to flip a bankruptcy finding that the company was equitably owned by Chinese exile Miles Guo and functioned as his alter ego, arguing the property was actually paid for by Guo's fraud victims.

  • September 26, 2025

    Mortgage Insurer Wants To Settle 401(k) Mismanagement Suit

    A mortgage insurance company has agreed to settle a proposed Employee Retirement Income Security Act class action filed by a former employee who accused the insurer in North Carolina federal court of mismanaging a 401(k) plan.

  • September 26, 2025

    NYCHA Lands $706M Financing For Repairs At 18 Towers

    New York City's Housing Authority announced that it has closed on a combined $705.7 million in financing for renovations for 18 Manhattan and Brooklyn buildings, funding unlocked via the properties' conversion to Section 8 units under a federal program.

  • September 26, 2025

    Mass. Tax Board Cuts $1M Home Value To Sale Price

    A Massachusetts home valued at $1 million by a county assessor should have the value lowered to the price the home sold for, the state Appellate Tax Board ruled. 

  • September 26, 2025

    11th Circ. Told $33M Easement Deduction Improperly Cut

    The U.S. Tax Court ignored evidence of land values that the IRS had failed to rebut — or even backed — when it drastically reduced a partnership's $33 million tax deduction for donating a Georgia conservation easement, the partnership told the Eleventh Circuit.

Expert Analysis

  • High Court's BofA Ruling Leaves State Preemption Questions

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    A recent U.S. Supreme Court decision in Cantero v. Bank of America sheds light on whether certain state banking regulations apply to federally chartered banks, but a circuit split could still force the Supreme Court to take a more direct position, says Brett Garver at Moritt Hock.

  • How A Bumblebee Got Under Calif. Wildlife Regulator's Bonnet

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    A California bumblebee's listing as an endangered species could lead to a regulatory quagmire as California Department of Fish and Wildlife permits now routinely include survey requirements for the bee, but the regulator has yet to determine what the species needs for conservation, says David Smith at Manatt.

  • The Clock Is Ticking For Fla. Construction Defect Claims

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    Ahead of the fast-approaching July 1 deadline for filing construction defect claims in Florida, Sean Ravenel at Foran Glennon discusses how the state's new statute of repose has changed the timeline, and highlights several related issues that property owners should be aware of.

  • Wiretap Use In Cartel Probes Likely To Remain An Exception

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    Although the U.S. Department of Justice's Antitrust Division has recently signaled interest in wiretaps, the use of this technology to capture evidence of antitrust conspiracies and pursue monopolization as a criminal matter has been rare historically, and is likely to remain so, say Carsten Reichel and Will Conway at DLA Piper.

  • Debate Over CFPB Definition Of Credit Is Just Beginning

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    The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has recently worked to expand the meaning of credit, so anyone operating on the edges of the credit markets, or even those who assumed they were safely outside the scope of this regulatory perimeter, should pay close attention as legal challenges to broad interpretations of the definition unfold, says John Coleman at Orrick.

  • A Closer Look At Feds' Proposed Banker Compensation Rule

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    A recently proposed rule to limit financial institutions' ability to award incentive-based compensation for risk-taking may progress through the rulemaking process slowly due to the sheer number of regulators collaborating on the rule and the number of issues under consideration, say attorneys at Troutman Pepper.

  • The FTC And DOJ Should Backtrack On RealPage

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    The antitrust agencies ought to reverse course on their enforcement actions against RealPage, which are based on a faulty legal premise, risk further property shortages and threaten the use of algorithms that are central to the U.S. economy, says Thomas Stratmann at George Mason University.

  • Ohio Tax Talk: The Legislative Push For Property Tax Relief

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    As Ohio legislators attempt to alleviate the increasing property tax burden, four recent bills that could significantly affect homeowners propose to eliminate replacement property tax levies, freeze property taxes for longtime homeowners, adjust homestead exemptions annually for inflation, and temporarily expand the homestead exemption, say Raghav Agnihotri and Rachael Chamberlain at Frost Brown.

  • In The CFPB Playbook: Regulatory Aims Get High Court Assist

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    Newly emboldened after the U.S. Supreme Court last month found that the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's funding is constitutional, the bureau has likely experienced a psychic boost, allowing its already robust enforcement agenda to continue expanding, say attorneys at Husch Blackwell.

  • What's New In Kentucky's Financial Services Overhaul

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    Kentucky's H.B. 726 will go into effect in July and brings with it some significant restructuring to the Kentucky Financial Services Code, including changes to mortgage loan license fees and repeals of provisions relating to installment term loans and savings associations, say attorneys at Frost Brown.

  • A Comparison Of FDIC, OCC Proposed Merger Approaches

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    Max Bonici and Connor Webb at Venable take a closer look at the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.'s and Office of the Comptroller of the Currency's respective bank merger proposals and highlight certain common themes and important differences, in light of regulators continually rethinking their approaches to bank mergers.

  • Tax Assessment: Recapping Georgia's Legislative Session

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    Jonathan Feldman and Alla Raykin at Eversheds Sutherland examine tax-related changes from Georgia’s General Assembly — such as the governor’s successful push to accelerate income tax cuts — and suggest steps to take before certain tax incentives are challenged in the state's next legislative session.

  • 11th Circ. Ruling May Foreshadow Ch. 15 Clashes

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    The Eleventh Circuit's recent decision in In re: Talal Qais Abdulmunem Al Zawawi has introduced a split from the Second Circuit regarding whether debtors in foreign proceedings must have a domicile, calling attention to the understudied nature of Chapter 15 of the Bankruptcy Code, say attorneys at Cleary.