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Sunday, June 28, 2026

Mamdani’s on a quest to kill NYC’s free market housing — the rent freeze is step one

 by Michael Goodwin

After Mayor Mamdani promised to freeze rents for two years in nearly a million rent-stabilized apartments, the lefties on the Rent Guidelines Board saluted and delivered for him.

Here is some of how he gloated afterward:

“This is a historic victory for New York City tenants. After reviewing the data and hearing from New Yorkers across the city, the independent RGB has delivered a freeze on one-year leases, and the first-ever freeze on two- year leases in our city’s history. This is the relief that working people across our city deserve.”

He also vowed that, “I’ll continue working to deliver a more affordable city by building and preserving affordable housing, lowering building operating costs like insurance, and ensuring tenants know their rights.”

In plain English, he’s warning that private-sector owners must realize they have no rights to cover their costs, let alone to make a profit.

And oh, by the way, developers shouldn’t even think of building rental units here. The free housing market in New York is dead.

Long live the revolution!

https://nypost.com/2026/06/27/opinion/mamdanis-on-a-quest-to-kill-nycs-free-housing-market-the-rent-freeze-is-step-one/

Saturday, June 27, 2026

Mamdani’s rent freeze means big trouble for MOST tenants, and maybe for ALL

 Mayor Zohran Mamdani won office vowing to freeze rents and now he’s delivered — for some renters, with a ham-handed “victory” that will force big hikes for other renters and risks getting the rent laws nixed by the US Supreme Court.

Like every mayor before him, Mamdani’s named a majority of the supposedly independent Rent Guidelines Board, which each year sets allowed hikes on one- and two-year leases for the city’s 1 million regulated units; unlike all them until now, he had his handpicked toadies ram through zero increases on all leases — at a time when the RGB’s own staff says landlords’ costs (which the board is supposed to consider) are rising far faster than inflation.

We’ve written at length on the troubles this means in buildings that are mostly rent-regulated: no money for maintenance; buildings forced into bankruptcy or forced sale to slumlords or incompetents.

But it doesn’t stop there.

In complexes with a good number of non-regulated units, landlords will hike rents on those apartments to cover their costs, especially on newly-vacant ones; market-rate rents will soar, making them even less affordable for anyone trying to move here.

Oh, and anyone with a good deal will stay if they can (maybe subletting illegally to great profit), meaning fewer vacancies than ever even in the rent-regulated market.

Gotham’s rent inequities will get worse.

Lots of Mamdani voters are in for an unpleasant surprise.

Note that the rent laws aren’t truly all that progressive to start with: More than a third of rent-regged apartments are occupied by single adults with no children; about 30% of tenants make over $100,000 a year, well above median income.

The ham-handed RGB move will certainly bring court challenges, and practically begs the Supremes to toss the rent laws completely.

The justices aren’t eager to do that: In the past, they’ve ruled that the laws are not an unconstitutional taking because nonpartisan experts play an important role in RGB decisions, so this (arguably) is not a process where politicians just do as they please.

Oops: Ahead of Thursday’s meeting, Christina Smyth, named to the RGB to speak for landlords, quit in protest, ripping the process as “theater” that ignored rising building and insurance costs for property owners. 

Plus, the mayor’s Democratic Socialists of America cronies crowed: “Just days after our candidates sweep their elections, we’re going to deliver a rent freeze for millions of New Yorkers!”

These are damning facts to raise with the Supremes; what an irony if Mamdani goes down in history as the mayor who killed rent control.

https://nypost.com/2026/06/27/opinion/mamdanis-rent-freeze-means-big-trouble-for-most-tenants-and-maybe-for-all/

https://nypost.com/2026/06/26/us-news/mamdanis-nyc-rent-freeze-already-facing-lawsuit-threats/

Thursday, June 25, 2026

Healthcare and data center REITs dominate real estate growth rankings

 Real estate stocks remain in focus as property owners and REITs navigate changing interest-rate expectations, evolving occupancy trends, and demand across sectors ranging from healthcare and data centers to industrial and retail properties.

In light of this, below is a list of the top S&P 500 Real Estate holdings ranked according to their growth factor grade.

The list is topped by Welltower (WELL), which earns an A+ growth grade. Realty Income (O) and Equinix (EQIX) follow with A grades, while Ventas (VTR), Digital Realty Trust (DLR), and Prologis (PLD) round out the stronger performers with B+ grades.

The rankings highlight generally solid growth characteristics across many of the sector's largest holdings. Healthcare, data center, and industrial-focused REITs dominate the upper portion of the list, while several traditional property owners rank lower. Public Storage (PSA), Simon Property Group (SPG), and American Tower (AMT) each receive B- grades, while Crown Castle (CCI) sits at the bottom with an F growth grade, the weakest score among the group.

The growth factor grade is a quantitative assessment used in stock analysis to evaluate a company's growth prospects and expansion trajectory. This metric systematically analyzes multiple growth-related indicators to determine how effectively a company is scaling its business operations.

Growth factor grades are typically expressed on a letter scale (A+ through F), where higher grades indicate stronger growth characteristics relative to sector peers. An A+ grade represents exceptional growth potential, while lower grades suggest more moderate expansion or potential headwinds.

Here is the list:

• Welltower Inc. (WELL), Growth grade: A+

• Realty Income Corporation (O), Growth grade: A

• Equinix, Inc. (EQIX), Growth grade: A

• Ventas, Inc. (VTR), Growth grade: B+

• Digital Realty Trust, Inc. (DLR), Growth grade: B+

• Prologis, Inc. (PLD), Growth grade: B+

• Public Storage (PSA), Growth grade: B-

• Simon Property Group, Inc. (SPG), Growth grade: B-

• American Tower Corporation (AMT), Growth grade: B-

• Crown Castle Inc. (CCI), Growth grade: F

 

Real Estate ETFs: (VNQ), (XLRE), (IYR), (USRT), and (HOMZ)

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/realestate/healthcare-and-data-center-reits-dominate-real-estate-growth-rankings/ar-AA26ydSg

Mamdani rent freeze scheme ripped as ‘theater’ by landlord rep who resigns in protest hours before vote

 A landlord rep on the city’s Rent Guidelines Board resigned just hours before the group is scheduled to vote on a rent freeze. 

Christina Smyth, one of the board’s two landlord representatives, sent out a scathing letter of resignation to the group Thursday morning, claiming it had “stopped being a fact-finding body,” the New York Daily News first reported.

Landlord representatives Christina Smyth and Robert Erlich at a Rent Guidelines Board meeting, with a protest sign "Tenants Demand A Rent Rollback" in the background.
Landlord representatives Christina Smyth and Robert Erlich at a Rent Guidelines Board meeting.William Miller

“This rebuilt board was required to deliver a rent freeze. Everything since has been theater,” she wrote.

Smyth, a real estate attorney and law firm owner, slammed Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s hand-picked board — on which he appointed six of the nine members — for turning a blind eye to rising building and insurance costs for landlords.

“I asked why the data showing rising costs and falling net income was not reflected in the board’s direction to its members. Those questions went unanswered,” she said.

A signature promise of Hizzoner’s mayoral campaign was to “Freeze the Rent” on the city’s rent-stabilized housing stock. 

“This year’s RGB order was decided last year on the campaign trail,” she wrote, adding, “This rebuilt board was required to deliver a rent freeze.”

Ann Korchak, board president of the landlord-interest group Small Property Owners of New York, called the reasons for Smyth’s resignation “disturbing.”

“If the vote is already predetermined by the majority Mamdani-appointed RGB, then this independent board would be acting illegally by injecting political influence into its objective decision on rent adjustments,” she told The Post in a statement.

https://nypost.com/2026/06/25/us-news/landlord-rep-resigns-from-rent-guidelines-board-hours-before-freeze-the-rent-vote-claiming-it-stopped-being-a-fact-finding-body/

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Massachusetts Court Kills Proposal for Toughest US Rent Control

 


The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court struck down a ballot proposal that would have imposed the strictest statewide rent control in the US.

The measure sought to limit apartment rent increases to 5% or the annual gain in the Consumer Price Index, whichever was lower. The proposal can’t go before voters in November because it includes an exception for religious housing that violates the Massachusetts constitution, the state’s highest appeals court ruled on Tuesday.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-06-23/massachusetts-court-kills-proposal-for-toughest-us-rent-control

Monday, June 22, 2026

US Senate advances housing bill

 The United States Senate approved sweeping housing legislation, advancing the measure to the House of Representatives after an 85-5 vote.

The bill, known as the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act, combines more than 45 provisions to expand supply and reduce prices.

US President Donald Trump is expected to sign the bill into law once it clears the lower chamber.

https://breakingthenews.net/Article/US-Senate-advances-housing-bill/66552577