UK Labour leader Keir Starmer has been courting Wall Street landlords, despite their dominance of the US single-family home market. This unexpected move has drawn criticism from many who see it as a betrayal of the party's core principles. The decision to pursue this line is surprising given that Starmer and his team have spent much time trying to win over firms such as Blackstone.
The US-based real estate tycoon Donald Trump, on the other hand, recently announced his intention to ban large institutional investors from acquiring single-family homes. This stance against corporate takeover of housing appears sensible but places Trump far to the left of Britain's Labour party. The announcement has prompted analysts to forecast a shift in activity towards the UK.
Starmer is now staking his reputation on building 1.5 million new homes, and Steve Reed, the UK's latest housing secretary, announced ambitious plans for the sector at the party conference in Liverpool. However, many have found Reed's performance evocative of Trump's knack for spectacle, with its abrasive rhetoric and sartorial choices.
Industry insiders expect large institutional investors to play a critical role in delivering new housing in Britain. They point out that the new towns plan is implausible without such investment. Corporate landlords are set to deliver up to a quarter of these new homes through build-to-rent schemes, including developments with single-family rental homes.
The UK's single-family rental market remains small compared to the US. However, Trump's announcement has prompted forecasters to predict a shift in activity towards the UK. Analysts believe that 19 of the 20 largest single-family rental markets are located in states won by Trump in 2024. The president knows his electoral heartlands lie in middle-class suburbs shifting away from home ownership and towards renting.
Starmer, however, seems oblivious to where his vanishing base lies. Communities across the country are mobilising against his new towns plan. Social housing-led developments could help overcome this aversion, but Reeves's self-imposed fiscal rules make direct public investment in housing a nonstarter. The government is now left with no option but to knock on Wall Street's door with a begging bowl in hand.
In the UK's fractious political system, one thing unites renters and homeowners, the working class and the aristocracy, racists and anti-racists - their deep-seated distaste for the government of the day. Housing policy remains an area where no one is particularly happy.
The US-based real estate tycoon Donald Trump, on the other hand, recently announced his intention to ban large institutional investors from acquiring single-family homes. This stance against corporate takeover of housing appears sensible but places Trump far to the left of Britain's Labour party. The announcement has prompted analysts to forecast a shift in activity towards the UK.
Starmer is now staking his reputation on building 1.5 million new homes, and Steve Reed, the UK's latest housing secretary, announced ambitious plans for the sector at the party conference in Liverpool. However, many have found Reed's performance evocative of Trump's knack for spectacle, with its abrasive rhetoric and sartorial choices.
Industry insiders expect large institutional investors to play a critical role in delivering new housing in Britain. They point out that the new towns plan is implausible without such investment. Corporate landlords are set to deliver up to a quarter of these new homes through build-to-rent schemes, including developments with single-family rental homes.
The UK's single-family rental market remains small compared to the US. However, Trump's announcement has prompted forecasters to predict a shift in activity towards the UK. Analysts believe that 19 of the 20 largest single-family rental markets are located in states won by Trump in 2024. The president knows his electoral heartlands lie in middle-class suburbs shifting away from home ownership and towards renting.
Starmer, however, seems oblivious to where his vanishing base lies. Communities across the country are mobilising against his new towns plan. Social housing-led developments could help overcome this aversion, but Reeves's self-imposed fiscal rules make direct public investment in housing a nonstarter. The government is now left with no option but to knock on Wall Street's door with a begging bowl in hand.
In the UK's fractious political system, one thing unites renters and homeowners, the working class and the aristocracy, racists and anti-racists - their deep-seated distaste for the government of the day. Housing policy remains an area where no one is particularly happy.