Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Housing Stimulus Means What To You?

 
Hello everyone! I thought you could all benefit from this first hand information from Steve Murray publisher of Real Trends. It's written in easy to understand terms. Feel free to contact me with any questions. Warmest, Darla RealtorDarla@aol.com or 614-431-1003
 
On the Positive Side: 
Stimulus advances with tax credit changes
 
The $790 billion stimulus package hammered out by House and Senate conferees increases the homebuyer tax credit to $8,000, from $7,500, and drops the repayment feature for buyers who hold on to their property for at least three years.
 
The legislation also extends the effective date of the credit to December 1 from June 30, and extends eligibility to borrowers who buy their home with the help of state or local financial assistance that comes from the proceeds of tax-exempt mortgage revenue bonds.  The credit remains open only to first-time buyers (those who haven't owned in at least three years) and some income eligibility restrictions apply, but those are unchanged from the existing program.
 
Other provisions reportedly in the bill that could help housing markets and communities include:
 
* FHA and conforming loan limits. Specifics have not been released but reports indicate that the 2008 limits have been reinstated for 2009 ($313,000 purchase limit for Columbus, OH) except in those communities where the 2009 limits are higher. Additional increases in individual communities may also be available at the discretion of the secretary of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.
 
* Foreclosure mitigation and neighborhood stabilization. Funding for states and localities to be used for neighborhood stabilization activities for the redevelopment of abandoned and foreclosed homes are authorized. Some news reports put the funding level at $2 billion.
 
* Rental assistance. Up to $1.5 billion to provide short-term rental assistance and other aid for families during the economic crisis.
 
* Low-income housing grants. Allow states to trade in a portion of their 2009 low-income housing tax credits for Treasury grants to finance the construction or acquisition and rehabilitation of low-income housing, including those with or without tax credit allocations
 
* Tax-exempt housing bonds. Tax-exempt interest earned on specified state and local bonds issued during 2009 and 2010 will not be subject to the Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT). In addition, financial institutions will have greater capacity to purchase tax-exempt state and local bonds
 
Energy efficient housing. Grants for energy retrofits for federally assisted housing (Section 8), funding for energy efficiency and conservation block grants to states, and increases in the residential tax credit through 2010 for certain energy efficient upgrades.
 
Source: NAR, AP, Washington Post, New York Times, Bloomberg, and The Wall Street Journal
 
REAL Trends Comment:  As we have said in earlier REAL Trends E-mail Updates, the Congress missed the boat with the limited additional assistance to the housing market included in the final bill.  While virtually every national political leader has said that arresting the decline in the housing market is critical to economic recovery, the final bill poured the proverbial "spoon" of medicine on a raging infection (or so say political leaders and those at the Federal Reserve Board and the Treasury). The purchase of homes triggers thousands of additional dollars in spending on paint, carpeting, fixtures, furniture and appliances and would have initiated more economic activity than almost any other use of the funds. The fact that the Congress missed this so badly does not bode well for other actions taken by the Federal government who seem to be deaf to economic reality.
Fannie, Freddie, banks suspend foreclosure sales
 
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will suspend all foreclosure sales and evictions of occupied properties through March 6 in anticipation of the Administration's national foreclosure prevention and loan modification program.

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