Housing recovery could also tumble off the 'fiscal cliff'
32 min.
If Congress drives the economy off the "fiscal cliff," wave goodbye to short sales that have helped the housing market get back on its feet.
At risk is the?expiration of a provision that erases taxes on selling a home for less than what's?owed to?the bank.
The change would create a major new headache for the one in four homeowners who owe more than their house is worth.?Now, those "underwater"?sellers would have to come up with a big check for Uncle Sam to pay the tax on the difference.
That ?would be a blow to the housing recovery,? said Paul Diggle, a housing economist at Capital Economics. ?The increased use of short sales, rather than foreclosures, has become an important support to the recovery.?
Currently, roughly a quarter of all home sales are short sales. ?There are several reasons?they've?become much more common in the aftermath of the biggest housing bust since the 1930s. ?
"Will all hell break loose?" Your fiscal cliff questions answered
The steep plunge in home prices left some 12 million home owners owing more than can get by selling their house. Without a short sale, selling their home means coming up with a large check to pay off the difference.
Lenders have also turned to short sales as a faster way of getting bad loans off their books. After a surge in foreclosures brought widespread complaints that lenders?weren't?fully reviewing documents, many states passed legislation that made it more difficult, and costly, for lenders to seize homes.
?(A short sale) certainly seems to be the foreclosure alternative that has gained the most momentum in the past couple of years," said?Daren Blomquist, an analyst at?RealtyTrac, which tracks foreclosures.
The five biggest mortgage lenders also got a powerful incentive to forgive more mortgage debt following a $25 billion settlement in April with 49 states and the federal government. Under?a complex formula, the lenders earn credits against a portion of the settlement payment for each dollar of mortgage debt forgiven.
The government official appointed to monitor the settlement reported at the end of August?that the banks extended $10.6 billion in relief from March 1 through June 30. Some 140,000 homeowners got an average $77,000 in debt relief.
Bank of America Wednesday reported that some?62,000 borrowers have?completed short sales that saved?them?$7.4?billion?in forgiven debt, or an average of about $120,000 each.
Until the housing collapse, when a lender forgave a portion of a homeowner?s mortgage debt, that money was considered ordinary income, and the IRS came calling with a tax bill. Under the old rules, a typical household would owe about ?$19,000 on the average settlement relief so far.
But in 2007, as the housing boom turned to bust, Congress passed the Mortgage Debt Relief Act, which shielded mortgage debt relief from taxes. The law was extended in 2010 but is due to expire at the end of the year ? along with a package of other tax cuts ? unless Congress moves to steer away from the so-called ?fiscal cliff.?
Separate bills have been introduced?in the House and Senate to extend the mortgage relief tax break for another year. The measure would cost about $1.3 billion in uncollected taxes.??
Five years after the law took effect, the impact is helping pull the housing industry out of the worst recession in nearly a century. Though still deeply depressed, sales of both new and existing homes have been steadily rising. Home prices appear to have bottomed out and are rising again in many parts of the country.
But restoring the tax on debt forgiveness would throw cold water on one in four home sales by sticking the seller with a large tax bill.?
?If (homeowners) decide they that short sale is not the best option, and they just allow (the mortgage) to be foreclosed, that has a more negative impact on the neighborhood and on home values,? said?Blomquist.
That would be bad news for lenders, too. The average price of a bank-owned property seized in foreclosure is about $30,000 lower than comparable house transferred in a short sale. Banks also avoid the legal costs of seizing a home and the?extended cost of maintaining it while it?s on the market.
?(A short sale) really does work out to both the borrower?s and lender?s benefit in most cases, ?said Michael Fratantoni, a research analyst at the Mortgage Bankers Association.
??
jennie garth space needle nashville predators king arthur king arthur there will be blood there will be blood
0টি মন্তব্য:
একটি মন্তব্য পোস্ট করুন
এতে সদস্যতা মন্তব্যগুলি পোস্ট করুন [Atom]
<< হোম