The Senate approved a procedural bill last night to raise the national debt ceiling without the risk of a Republican filibuster. The House and Senate plan to consider a subsequent bill within days that will increase the debt limit by more than $30 trillion, thereby avoiding a national default and delaying the next fiscal cliff until after the November midterm elections. (Wall Street Journal | Punchbowl News | Reuters, Dec. 9)
Hurdles Await BBB Act
BBB and CRE
The BBB Act’s potential impacts on tax and climate policy issues of importance to CRE will be topics for discussion at The Roundtable’s Jan. 25-26 State of the Industry Meeting in Washington, DC.
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Legislation passed by the House of Representatives on Dec. 8 would protect trillions in “tough legacy” contracts that use the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR) as a reference rate for financial transactions. The Real Estate Roundtable and a broad coalition of industry groups have long-supported this protective measure. (Industry Coalition letter, Dec. 7 and Bloomberg, Dec. 8)
LIBOR and CRE
Tough Legacy Issues Addressed
The House bill provides that when LIBOR reaches its final replacement date (June 30, 2023), all contracts with no adequate fallback provisions for an alternative benchmark substitute will be replaced with SOFR.
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The Biden Administration on Dec. 6 announced it is seeking public comment about a proposed anti-money laundering rule that may result in increased reporting requirements about certain commercial real estate transactions. (Bloomberg, Dec. 6 and GlobeSt, Dec. 7)
Impact on Real Estate
FINCEN Concerns
CRE Industry Response
The new ANPRM is open for comment until February 7, 2022. A response to FINCEN will be one of the topics discussed on Jan. 25 during The Roundtable's Real Estate Capital Policy Advisory Committee (RECPAC) meeting in Washington, DC.
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The Real Estate Roundtable has released its FY2018 Annual Report “Building Success,” which reports on the organization’s policy activities from July 1, 2017 to June 30, 2018 and outlines its policy priorities for the coming year.
The Report includes summaries showing continued progress on the policy front, including:
Newly elected Roundtable Chair Debra A. Cafaro (Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Ventas, Inc.) emphasized that The Roundtable’s policy agenda remains full of key issues that require our engagement as a non-partisan industry voice. “Above all, we must uphold our independent and respected position on Capitol Hill, emphasizing our optimism about the economy and the positive contributions the real estate industry provides as a job creator and as a cornerstone for retirement savings. We are committed to proactively advancing policies that promote a healthy balance of capital and people flows to create sustainable economic growth that is good for our members, our industry and our national economy,” said Cafaro.
The publication includes a listing of all Roundtable members, as well as the FY2019 Board of Directors and Committee Leadership, and has been mailed to all Roundtable members, congressional offices on Capitol Hill, and is available online.
Real Estate Roundtable President and CEO Jeffrey DeBoer, above, was recognized this month as one of the Top Lobbyists in Washington, DC by the influential policy news publication The Hill.
The Roundtable’s next meeting on January 25-26 in Washington, DC will address its 2021 policy agenda during business and policy advisory committee meetings.
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