Residential

  • March 20, 2026

    Texas Judge Tosses FinCEN Rule On All-Cash Home Sales

    A Texas federal judge has found that the U.S. Department of the Treasury's Financial Crimes Enforcement Network can't maintain its directive regarding reporting of all-cash residential real estate transactions, after the agency failed to show how the deals should broadly warrant suspicion.

  • March 20, 2026

    Freddie Mac Extends $512M To KC, Dallas Multifamily Portfolio

    Broker Northmarq said Friday it secured a $512 million Freddie Mac credit facility to refinance and recapitalize a 13-property multifamily portfolio for Kansas City, Missouri-based real estate company Price Brothers.

  • March 20, 2026

    Builders Can Proceed As Class In Fee Suit, NC Justices Say

    Homebuilders challenging the City of Raleigh's capital facilities fee ordinances can proceed within a certified class action after North Carolina's highest court ruled Friday that state statute requires unlawful fees be returned to the payor regardless of who ultimately shouldered the cost.

  • March 20, 2026

    Northwest Listing Service Can't Exit Compass Antitrust Suit

    Northwest Multiple Listing Service must face Compass Inc.'s claims that Northwest abused its market power by requiring brokerages to list all properties on its platform before marketing them internally, a Seattle federal judge has said, finding Compass has plausibly alleged anticompetitive harm from the rules at issue.  

  • March 20, 2026

    SD Lowers Maximum Property Tax Levies For School Districts

    South Dakota lowered maximum property tax levies that may be imposed by school districts under a bill signed by the governor.

  • March 19, 2026

    Judge Digs Into Counsel Over 'Astronomically High' Fee Bid

    Attorneys who represented classes of people who say they received harassing phone calls from real estate agents in violation of federal telemarketing laws are asking for way too much of the $20 million settlement, according to the California federal judge who tore into them Wednesday.

  • March 19, 2026

    NYC, State Take On Latest Challenge To Rent Regulations

    New York and New York City separately urged a federal court this week to dismiss landlords' latest attempt to challenge 2019 changes to the state's rent stabilization laws, alleging the landlords' takings claims aren't ripe because they haven't made use of a hardship exemption yet.

  • March 19, 2026

    New Polluter Pay Bills Center AG Action On Insurance Costs

    Recent bills would give attorneys general in three states more power to sue fossil fuel companies over climate change-related insurance costs. Such lawsuits would likely face challenges.

  • March 19, 2026

    Investor Home-Flipping Hits Lowest Profits Since 2008: Report

    U.S. investors who bought single-family homes and condos to sell within a year for profit saw the lowest median rate of return on investment last year since the Great Recession, ATTOM said in a recent report.

  • March 19, 2026

    Two Harbors REIT Fields Buyout Offer To Rival UWM Bid

    Two Harbors Investment Corp., a real estate investment trust focused on mortgage servicing rights, said Thursday it received a new acquisition proposal from an unnamed bidder, after reaching a deal in December to be bought by mortgage lender UWM Holdings Corp. for $1.3 billion.

  • March 19, 2026

    Palantir Rolls Out AI-Mortgage Platform In Startup Partnership

    Artificial intelligence company Palantir Technologies announced a partnership with startup Moder to build AI-based mortgage operations, starting with Freedom Mortgage, a mortgage originator and servicer, as a pilot customer.

  • March 19, 2026

    Conn. Class Action Over 'Inflated' Realty Commissions Settles

    A putative class action claiming antitrust violations against one of the biggest real estate firms in the Northeast has been settled, according to a judge's order on the Connecticut state court case docket.

  • March 18, 2026

    Fla. Panel Affirms Zillow's Win In Merger Battle

    The co-founder of a real estate software company that was acquired by house-hunting platform Zillow Inc. cannot recover the money he says he is owed from the 2013 merger because his claim is time-barred and is not covered by the Florida Unclaimed Property Act, a Florida appeals court ruled Wednesday.

  • March 18, 2026

    Zillow Preview Appeases Compass Enough To Drop Ban Suit

    Compass dropped its New York federal court antitrust lawsuit against Zillow on Wednesday, satisfied that a new "preview" feature for pre-market home listings was enough of a departure from a contested rule that banned listings from appearing on Zillow if they had been marketed elsewhere for more than a day.

  • March 18, 2026

    Fed Keeps Rates Steady, To Dismay Of Most In Real Estate

    The Federal Reserve on Wednesday voted to keep interest rates steady, dashing any hope the real estate market had for a reduction in interest rates to bring down the cost of borrowing, boost prices and drive transactions.

  • March 18, 2026

    Judge Finalizes $3.3M Tax Bill Order For 'Survivor' Winner

    A Rhode Island federal court entered a final $3.3 million tax judgment against the first "Survivor" winner, clearing the way for the federal government to start debt collection proceedings to recoup funds tied to the former contestant's tax avoidance on his prize money.

  • March 18, 2026

    Mamdani Reopens 'Granny Flat' Funding, With Rules In Place

    New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani opened applications on Wednesday for a program that helps homeowners plan and finance the addition of ancillary dwelling units, or "granny flats," after pausing the program in 2024 following substantial homeowner interest.

  • March 18, 2026

    Fla. Lawmakers Expanded Housing Efforts In Slow Session

    At a time when housing affordability is a major concern among constituents, Florida state lawmakers produced mixed results in the realm of real estate during their 2026 session, taking some significant actions but also not reaching consensus on numerous proposals, including the most prominent — property tax reform.

  • March 18, 2026

    SL Green Sells FiDi Apartments To REIT For $223M

    Office landlord SL Green Realty Corp. said it has agreed to sell the residential and retail components of its 7 Dey St. property in Manhattan's Financial District to Go Residential Real Estate Investment Trust for $222.6 million.

  • March 18, 2026

    Idaho Expands Short-Term Rental Tax Obligations

    Idaho short-term and vacation rental property owners must adhere to local tax rules for rental marketplaces even if they don't do business through a marketplace under a bill signed by the governor.

  • March 18, 2026

    Report: Data Centers Loom Large, But Investors Are Cautious

    Investor optimism for commercial real estate remains high in 2026 and data centers are seen as having the biggest impact on the market this year, although investors are cautious about doing new deals, according to a Seyfarth Shaw LLP survey out this week.

  • March 18, 2026

    Two-Tower Brooklyn Resi Complex Lands $370M Refinancing

    Property Markets Group and the Carlyle Group have landed $370 million in refinancing from Brookfield Asset Management for their two-tower residential development in Brooklyn's Gowanus neighborhood.

  • March 18, 2026

    Ga. Panel Preserves HOA Fraud Verdict, Scraps $21M Award

    The Georgia Court of Appeals backed fraud and civil racketeering verdicts won by nearly a dozen homeowners against a developer but scrapped $21 million in punitive damages the residents were awarded as excessive "even given the defendants' wealth and repeated instances of bad behavior."

  • March 18, 2026

    4 Firms Guide Warburg's Majority Stake In RE Lease Platform

    Private equity firm Warburg Pincus said Wednesday that it has made a majority investment in The Guarantors, a residential lease guarantee platform, in a deal advised by Cooley LLP, Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz, Paul Weiss and Greenberg Traurig LLP.

  • March 18, 2026

    2 Firms Lead Audax's Buy Of Property Management Co. AKAM

    Troutman Pepper Locke LLP and Ropes & Gray LLP advised on a recent deal that saw Audax Private Equity acquire AKAM — a property management and real estate firm serving condominiums, cooperatives and homeowner associations — from private equity firm Nautic Partners.

Expert Analysis

  • Navigating The Complexities Of NYC Waterfront Development

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    More than a dozen city, state and federal agencies share oversight of New York City's waterfront, presenting developers and their counsel with both challenges and opportunities to shape the regional and national economy, say attorneys at HSF Kramer.

  • New NY Residential Real Estate Rules May Be Overbroad

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    New legislation imposing a 90-day-waiting period and tax deduction restrictions on certain New York real estate investors may have broad effects and unintended consequences, creating impediments for a wide range of corporate and other transactions, says Libin Zhang at Fried Frank.

  • Compliance Is A New Competitive Edge For Mortgage Lenders

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    So far, 2025 has introduced state and federal regulatory turbulence that is pressuring mortgage lenders to reevaluate the balance between competitive and compliant employee and customer recruiting practices, necessitating a compliance recalibration that prioritizes five key strategies, say attorneys at Mitchell Sandler.

  • What Developers Can Glean From Miami Condo Ruling

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    A Florida state appeals court's recent denial of a Miami condo redevelopment bid offers a detailed blueprint of what future developers must address when they evaluate the condominium's governing declaration and seek to terminate a condominium, say attorneys at Shubin Law.

  • 6 Questions We Should Ask About The Trump Trade Deals

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    Whenever the text becomes available, certain questions will help determine whether the Trump administration’s trade deals with U.S. trading partners have been crafted to form durable economic relationships, or ephemeral ties likely to break upon interpretive disagreement or a change in political will, says Ted Posner at Baker Botts.

  • CEQA Reform May Spur More Housing, But Devil Is In Details

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    A recently enacted law reforming the California Environmental Quality Act has been touted by state leaders as a fix for the state's housing crisis — but provisions including a new theoretically optional traffic mitigation fee could offset any potential benefits, says attorney David Smith.

  • Wells Fargo Suit Shows Consumer Protection Limits In Mass.

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    The Massachusetts Appeals Court's May decision in Wells Fargo Bank v. Coulsey underscores that consumer rights are balanced against the need for closure, and even the broad protections of state consumer protection law will not open the door to relitigating the same claims, say attorneys at Greenberg Traurig.

  • What Calif. Insurance Ruling Means For Smoke Damage Limits

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    As California continues to grapple with an increasing number of wildfire claims, a state court's recent Aliff v. California FAIR Plan decision serves as a clear directive to insurers that policy language that narrows the scope of fire coverage below the California Insurance Code's minimum standards is impermissible, say attorneys at Wood Smith.

  • The Metamorphosis Of The Major Questions Doctrine

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    The so-called major questions doctrine arose as a counterweight to Chevron deference over the past few decades, but invocations of the doctrine have persisted in the year since Chevron was overturned, suggesting it still has a role to play in reining in agency overreach, say attorneys at Crowell & Moring.

  • What 9th Circ. Ruling Shows About Rebutting SEC Comments

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    The Ninth Circuit's June opinion in Pino v. Cardone Capital suggests that a company's lack of pushback to a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission comment may be evidence of its state of mind for evaluating potential liability, meaning companies should consider including additional disclosure in SEC response letters, say attorneys at Barnes & Thornburg.

  • 2 NY Cases May Clarify Foreclosure Law Retroactivity

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    Two pending cases may soon provide the long-awaited resolution to the question of whether retroactive application of the New York Foreclosure Abuse Prevention Act violates the state Constitution, providing a guide for New York courts inundated with motions in foreclosure and quiet title actions, says Fernando Rivera Maissonet at Hinshaw & Culbertson.

  • Yacht Broker Case Highlights Industry Groups' Antitrust Risk

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    The Eleventh Circuit recently revived class claims against the International Yacht Brokers Association, signaling that commission-driven industries beyond real estate are vulnerable to antitrust challenges after the National Association of Realtors settled similar allegations last year, says Miles Santiago at the Southern University Law Center and Alex Hebert at Southern Compass.

  • A Look At Trump Admin's Shifting Strategies To Curtail CFPB

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    The Trump administration has so far carried out its goal of minimizing the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's authority and footprint via an individualized approach comprising rule rollbacks, litigation moves and administrative tools, say attorneys at Holland & Knight.