Dear Mr. President & Cabinet,

Thank you for issuing the Executive Order โ€œStopping Wall Street from competing with Main Street Homebuyersโ€ on January 20, 2026. This decisive step directly confronts one of the core structural distortions identified in my 2026 Case Study titled How Government Inefficiencies Destabilize Affordable Housing released January 15, 2026 with a draft version shared to Mar-A-Lago founding family members December 29, 2025.
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Your Executive Order intent to make housing affordable is one I hold to dear to my heart.ย  As a fellow real estate aficionado I can not stress the importance of affordable housing stock & I applaud your bold statement to make this an adminstration priority.ย  I pray you find my recommendations of service, thank you, God Bless America ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

Preface

Inflation Perspective: Resetting to 2018 Par-Value even if all speculative pressures (institutional buyers, iBuyers, short-term rentals, crowdfunding) were fully removed tomorrow, headline home prices would still appear dramatically higher than in 2018 due to cumulative inflation and dollar weakening.
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  • A typical $350,000 house today (2026) would have been priced in the $230,000โ€“$250,000 range in 2018 dollars, based on cumulative CPI inflation since 2018 (depending on regional data and construction-specific costs).
  • This means the “new normal” price tag looks inflated on paper โ€” the house hasn’t gotten better or bigger; the dollar has simply lost purchasing power.
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To restore real affordability, policy should aim to bring costs and expectations back toward 2018 par value levels, where median households could realistically save for a down payment and see homeownership as attainable rather than a speculative asset.

Recommendationsย 

1. Close the Crowdfunding & Fractional-Ownership Workaround.ย  ย  ย  ย  ย  ย  ย 

Platforms that pool third-party/retail investor money (minimums as low as $10โ€“$5,000) to acquire residential properties at scale are already functioning like โ€œcrowd-funded institutions.โ€ They enable the same rapid absorption the order targets.

Action:
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Treasury should expand the definition of โ€œlarge institutional investorโ€ to include any entity that uses pooled capital to hold or acquire more than X single-family units.

2. Restrict iBuyer & Large-Inventory Cash-Offer Platforms

Unsolicited cash offers are a long-standing part of American real estate. The problem is the scale, speed, and inorganic nature of modern iBuyer companies and similar tech-driven models that use raised capital to acquire and hold large inventories of single-family homes in normal housing markets where first-time buyers save years for a down payment and see homes as their primary nest egg. These platforms create pressure, inflate comps, and reduce inventory available to owner-occupants through high-volume acquisitions and holding for speculative resale, rental or savvy accounting purposes.

Action:

  • Completely halt the practice of large-scale iBuyer / cash-offer inventory accumulation by companies or platforms that acquire more than X single-family homes annually for speculative purposes.
  • Require any unsold inventory held by such companies to be offered first to verified first-time or low-to-moderate-income buyers at or below market value, with preference given to owner-occupants.
  • Provide tax incentives (e.g., capital-gains relief or accelerated depreciation) to companies that comply with this conversion requirement, ensuring the inventory is moved into the hands of families rather than held as assets.
3. Limit Leverage on Short-Term Rentals & Crowdfunded Properties
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Short-term rental operators and crowdfunding funds use high-leverage mortgages to convert affordable long-term rentals into nightly cash cows, driving up property values and rents. This shifts housing stock from stable $500โ€“$1,000/month leases to high-yield nightly units, reducing long-term supply and pricing out median and low-income households.
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Action:

  • Cap or ban mortgages (e.g., max 50% LTV) on properties licensed for short-term rentals or held in crowdfunding portfolios. Require owners of licensed short-term rentals to hold the property in a cash/equity-only position (no new financing allowed after licensing) to limit absorption of affordable long-term stock.
  • Tie federal insurance/guarantees to equity-only requirements for any property used as a short-term rental, preventing leveraged conversion of existing rental inventory.
  • Require cities and local jurisdictions to issue short-term rental licenses to monitor and report on their impact on long-term housing availability. Excluding already established high cost of living markets local governments should maintain a department or tracking system to ensure quality affordable housing under $1,000/month remains available especially elder housing.ย 

4. Terminate or Strictly Regulate Automated Valuation Models (AVMs)

Automated valuation models (AVMs) emerged suddenly and without public consent, using public data, algorithms, and loose assumptions to generate property estimates that are often speculative, inaccurate, or biased. These valuations are used in unsolicited cash offers, comps, appraisals, and listings, creating unnecessary pressure on owners and raising concerns about their influence on market behavior. The mere presence of AVMs can become a self-fulfilling dynamic: a generated valuation may affect how owners, buyers, or appraisers perceive or act in the market, even if no sale occurs.

Action:

  • Preferred: CFPB and FTC to issue joint guidance effectively terminating the use of AVMs for residential properties without explicit owner consent, or banning their use entirely in markets where they raise significant concerns (e.g., high-growth Florida metros).
  • Fallback (if full termination is not feasible): Require mandatory opt-in consent from the property owner (or anyone with legal interest) before any AVM is run on their property or the resulting valuation is used, advertised, shared, or incorporated into comps/appraisals.
  • Mandate a simple, permanent, one-step opt-out/remove mechanism so owners can block their property from AVMs.
  • Prohibit non-consented AVM data from being used in appraisals, lending decisions, or public comps.
  • Enforce against platforms or data providers that ignore opt-outs or continue to use without consented valuations as unfair or deceptive practices.
5. Incentivize Conversion to First-Time Buyer Ownership
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Institutional and crowdfunded owners hold hundreds of thousands of homes as rentals or flips instead of selling to families.
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Action:
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Treasury/HUD to propose capital-gains tax relief or credits for institutions that sell to verified first-time buyers with a 3โ€“5 year owner-occupancy requirement (with recapture penalties for violations). Pair with federal matching down-payment grants when institutions offload to eligible buyers.
6. Require Full Transparency & Reporting on Large Residential Holdings
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Concentration stays hidden without clear reporting.
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Action:
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SEC to update crowdfunding regulations (JOBS Act) for real estate to require annual public disclosure of residential holdings by ZIP code and property type for any entity with >X units.
7. Protect Organic Small-Scale Investors
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Individual investors who start with one property and scale organically to a modest portfolio (e.g., <1,000 units, primarily personal capital) are not the same as crowd-funded or institutional players.
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Action:
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Explicitly exempt these owners from new restrictions. Domestic Policy Council to issue clear guidance distinguishing the two models and encouraging states to adopt similar carve-outs.

8. Outlaw the โ€œWalt Disney Methodโ€ of Condo Board Takeovers

A common practice among large developers (often called the โ€œWalt Disney methodโ€) involves buying up a controlling number of units in an existing condominium or HOA community, then using majority ownership to take over the board, amend bylaws, waive reserves, dissolve protections, or push through redevelopment plans that benefit the developer at the expense of long-term residents. This tactic has been used in Florida and other states to convert older condos into luxury projects or high-density developments, displacing existing owners and renters while bypassing normal community consent processes.Action:

  • HUD and DOJ to issue model state legislation prohibiting developers (or any entity) from acquiring a controlling interest in an existing condo/HOA board for the purpose of overriding resident protections or forcing redevelopment without supermajority resident approval (e.g., 75โ€“80% of all unit owners, not just a simple majority of board seats).
  • Require any developer acquiring >20% of units in a community to disclose intent and obtain independent resident vote approval before any board takeover, bylaw change, or redevelopment plan.
  • Impose civil penalties and license revocation for developers that engage in this practice without proper consent.
  • Offer federal housing grants to states that adopt these protections to ensure older condo communities remain stable and affordable for existing residents.

9. Address Construction Cost Inflation (COGS) to Enable Affordable New Supply

Building new homes is now 30โ€“50%+ more expensive than the 2017โ€“2019 “normal” market due to material inflation (lumber/steel/concrete up 40โ€“100% at peak, still 30โ€“50% higher), labor shortages/wage pressure (skilled trades up 25โ€“40%), permitting delays (adding 10โ€“20% via inflation exposure), and energy/logistics costs (up 30โ€“50%). Even with speculation reduced, new supply remains too costly to bring prices back down meaningfully.

Action:

  • Reduce material tariffs on imported lumber, steel, aluminum, gypsum, and appliances to lower input costs (target 10โ€“20% reduction).
  • Boost domestic production through tax credits or accelerated depreciation for new lumber mills, steel plants, and prefab/modular factories (aim for 20โ€“30% increase in U.S. output by 2028).
  • Expand skilled labor supply via federal/state funding for apprenticeships, vocational programs, and skilled-trade immigration reforms (target 200,000โ€“300,000 new workers nationwide by 2028).
  • Streamline permitting with federal incentives for cities/counties that cut approval times (e.g., 6โ€“18 months to 3โ€“6 months) via pre-approved designs and fee waivers for affordable projects.
  • Offer builder credits for projects using domestic materials/labor or modular construction to offset inflation and encourage supply growth without raising prices.
10. Align Immigration & Population Growth with Housing Supply Capacity
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Rapid, unmanaged immigration inflows since 2021 have added significant demand pressure to an already constrained market.
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Action:
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Require annual reporting from DHS and HUD on net migration vs. new housing units permitted/built in key metros. When supply lags demand by >X% in a region, temporarily modulate discretionary admission programs downward until construction catches up. Provide federal grants to states that adopt โ€œmanaged supplyโ€ policies (e.g., local caps on S.T.R. conversions or institutional holdings when inventory falls short).

11. Require Clear Disclosure & Labeling for Media Sponsored by Developers or Government Departments

Local and regional media outlets frequently act as promotional arms for rapid development projects, redevelopment deals, and government initiatives. Stories often emphasize economic benefits, official statements, and project renderings while minimizing or omitting citizen opposition, petitions, environmental impacts, legal administrative procedures, or affordability concerns. When media coverage is sponsored, funded, or coordinated by developers or government departments, it creates a conflict of interest that obscures the full picture and reinforces incentive misalignment.

Action:

  • Direct the FTC and FCC to issue guidance requiring any media content (print, broadcast, online, social media) sponsored, funded, or coordinated by real estate developers, redevelopment agencies, or government departments to be clearly and prominently labeled as “Paid Promotion,” “Sponsored Content,” or “Government-Funded Advertisement” โ€” similar to Instagram’s “Paid Partnership” disclosures.
  • Labels must appear at the top of the article/video/post and be visible without scrolling/clicking.
  • Require disclosure of the sponsoring entity and the nature of the funding/relationship (e.g., “Sponsored by [Developer Name]” or “Produced with support from [City Department]”).
  • Enforce penalties for non-disclosure under existing FTC native advertising rules and FCC sponsorship identification requirements.
12. Enforce Extended Residency Requirements for Elected Office
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Short residency rules (e.g., 6 months in some cities) allow commercial interest “plants” to move in and run for office, prioritizing outside agendas over local concerns.
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Action:
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HUD/DOJ to provide model state legislation requiring at least 7 years of continuous residency for local elected offices (e.g., city councils, county commissions). Offer federal grants to states that adopt this to ensure decision-makers have real stakes in community outcomes.

Closing

The Executive Order is a bold move toward realigning incentives. These ten recommendations aim to aid in the restoration & keeping of a stable American Shelter Marketplace.
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Anthony L. Pizzarelli
Licensed Florida R.E. Broker
#MrDTwpb ๐ŸŒด #Gr8rUSa ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธย 
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January 27, 2026

This letter (โ€œWhitehouse Executive Order Affordable Housing Recommendationsโ€) is provided for informational and educational purposes only.

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