
Bloomberg Businessweek Trump Directs $200 Billion Mortgage Bond Buy in Housing Push
Jan 8, 2026
Conor Sen, a Bloomberg Opinion columnist and founder of Peachtree Creek Investments, discusses President Trump's recent push to buy $200 billion in mortgage bonds to lower housing costs. Ali McCartney, a wealth management director, emphasizes the importance of focusing on fundamentals rather than political chatter for investment strategies. David Woo shares insights on how U.S. actions aim to impact oil prices and affordability ahead of midterms. Tech reporter Alexandra Levine updates on TikTok's ongoing negotiations and the implications for U.S. national security.
AI Snips
Chapters
Transcript
Episode notes
Institutional Buyers Are Not Dominant
- Institutional buyers are a small slice of new-home sales and often buy communities built for them.
- Conor Sen warns banning them could reduce demand and depress homebuilding activity.
Past Purchases Drive Institutional Footprint
- Many institutional-owned single-family homes were bought after the foreclosure crisis and aren't active buyers now.
- Sen says those holdings came in a different market and don't explain current affordability problems.
Fix Zoning And Restore Transactions
- Tackle zoning and local restrictions to increase housing supply where shortages exist.
- Also restore normal transaction volumes to free up regional inventory via migration, Sen advises.


