The Real Deal Miami

Posts Tagged ‘homebuyer tax credit’

  • U.S. home prices began to stabilize in April after months of declines, according to a report yesterday from CoreLogic. Home prices increased on a month-to-month basis by 0.7 percent between March and April, the first increase since the first-time homebuyer tax credit expired in mid-2010.

    “While the economic recovery is still fragile and one data point is not a trend,” said Mark Fleming, chief economist for CoreLogic, “the month-over-month increase based on April sales activity is a positive sign. “[It] provides reason for cautious optimism.” [more]

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  • New home sales inched upward nationwide to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 323,000 in April 2011, the highest level achieved this year, according to a report released today by the Department of Commerce. In the trailing 12 months, only December 2010, when many expected the first-time homebuyer tax credit to expire, experienced more new home sales, with 331,000.

    The April figure represents a 7.3 percent increase over March’s rate of 301,000, but remains 23.1 percent less than the 420,000 sold in April 2010. The median sales price for homes last month was $217,900, and the average was $268,900. [more]

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    Thousands of taxpayers took advantage of the first-time homebuyer tax credit which expired last May. People who purchased a main residence between January 2009 and April 30, 2010 may have been eligible for a maximum tax credit of $8,000 for the first-time homebuyer and a $6,500 credit for the repeat homebuyer.

    This credit does not generally have to be repaid unless the home is disposed of or ceases to be a main residence within 36 months of the date of purchase.

    But for first-time homebuyers who purchased a home between April and December of 2008 and claimed a different federal tax credit, they are faced with a tax liability. [more]

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  • Record-low mortgage interest rates helped to further stabilize the housing market over the past month, according to the latest “Housing Scorecard” released by the Obama Administration yesterday. While new and existing home sales stuck at lower levels than those seen prior to the expiration of the homebuyer tax credit, prices have stopped slipping after 33 consecutive months of declines, the report says, and in the second quarter of 2010, U.S. homeowners gained $95 billion worth of home equity. TRD [more]

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  • Over 65,000 Floridians get homebuyer credit

    September 30, 2010 01:00PM

    The federal homebuyer tax credit program will end Thursday, but more
    than 65,000 Floridians have taken advantage of the credit,
    according to the U.S. Government Accountability Office. Since 2008, the
    program has been changed and extended several times. The most recent
    version of the program required buyers to sign a home contract by April
    30, with a closing deadline of June 30. That deadline was extended to
    tomorrow by Congress. Most buyers were able to close on their home
    purchases, with either $8,000 in first-time homebuyer credits, or
    $6,500 as a repeat homeowner. [Palm
    Beach Post]

    [more]

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  • The federal homebuyer tax credit programs have been widely praised for stimulating real estate sales, but also reviled by critics who see the credits as a multibillion-dollar waste of the government’s money. 
    Now a new audit raises questions about the ability of the IRS to handle key basics of the programs, such as determining the year credit claimants actually purchased their houses, whether they have retained the property as a principal residence, and even if they were alive when a tax credit application was submitted in their name. 
    The audit by the Treasury Department’s inspector general for tax administration praised the IRS for its recent efforts to develop a “comprehensive strategy” to keep track of the credit programs but identified deficiencies in a small but significant number of cases involving claims for credits. 
    For example, auditors found that the IRS has had trouble distinguishing between houses purchased during 2008 and those bought in 2009. This can be an important distinction since first-time purchasers in 2008 were limited to tax credits up to $7,500 that must be repaid annually over a 15-year period. By contrast, purchasers who opted to claim a revised version of the credit during 2009 — for up to $8,000 — were not subject to the annual repayment requirement. 
    Out of approximately 1.77 million credit filings during 2009, auditors said they identified 73,119 individual returns from taxpayers who received credits whose account records at the IRS had incorrect — or no — purchase dates: 
    – 59,802 recipients who purchased their homes in 2009 were incorrectly recorded by the IRS as having purchased during 2008, or no year was identified. 
    – 9,122 credit recipients actually bought their homes during 2008, but the IRS recorded the purchases as occurring in 2009. This could result in potential tax revenue losses to the government of nearly $31 million, auditors estimated, since these individuals might not be asked to repay the homebuyer credit over 15 years even though their 2008 purchase date required them to do so. 
    – 4,195 recipients’ claim forms had no purchase date stated or the purchase occurred prior to 2008. “These claims should not have been processed,” auditors said. 
    Beyond these claims, a total of 514,987 tax credit requests contained purchase dates that “cannot be verified” because the data were not “captured” by IRS computers. 
    The Treasury’s inspector general also focused on another set of problems: The IRS’ lack of systems to enforce the various “recapture” and “accelerated repayment” provisions that Congress included in the housing tax credit programs. 
    “Currently, the IRS does not have the ability to identify individuals” who received the homebuyer credit but subsequently may not retain the property as their principal residence — a key requirement imposed by Congress. For the $7,500 credit covering purchases made from April 9, 2008, through Jan. 30, 2009, recipients who sell the home before the end of the 15-year payback period are expected to repay the credit to the IRS “immediately” — on the tax filing for the year in which the home is sold. 
    In the case of the 2009-era credits — up to $8,000 for first-time buyers, $6,500 for qualified repeat purchasers — the credit must be repaid if the home is sold within three years of acquisition. The repayment is due on the taxpayer’s return filed in the year of the sale. Because the IRS has no systems in place to detect early sales or conversions of properties from principal residences, auditors said, it must rely on individuals to disclose such information voluntarily. The agency is now developing systems to keep track of repayment and recapture events using third-party sources of real estate and other data, said the report. 
    Auditors also found the IRS has no system at present to identify situations that allow certain taxpayers to bypass recapture rules, such as the death of the homeowner, foreclosures where there is no gain to the taxpayer, and extended overseas duty assignments of armed forces and other personnel that prevent them from occupying their houses. 
    Still another deficiency, auditors said, is IRS’ handling of homebuyer tax credit claims from applicants using the Social Security numbers of dead people. In the 2008 credit program, the audit identified 1,326 individuals who claimed a total of $10.1 million when the home purchase date occurred after the purported claimant’s date of death. 
    In 951 claims the individual whose Social Security number was used had been dead for at least half a year. The IRS denied 528 of the 1,326 total claims — worth about $4 million — but 798 claimants using dead persons’ Social Security identifications apparently received credits. The IRS has agreed to audit those 798 tax returns, according to the inspector general’s report. 
    Ken Harney is a real estate columnist with the Washington Post.

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  • Policy makers need to be more “inspirational” when designing solutions to the housing market crisis, according to Yale economist Robert Shiller, after whom the S&P’s Case-Shiller Home Price Index is named and which released its second quarter findings yesterday. Shiller noted that it did not make sense to extend the homebuyer tax credit, and that the responses by the Bush and Obama administrations have amounted to “patches and bailouts,” he told the Wall Street Journal. Shiller believes that the solution lies in more “forward thinking” measures. One suggestion he offered was that mortgages should be indexed to inflation to allow for greater long-term certainty for borrowers. Another idea was that mortgage contracts in the future should include some kind of “preplanned workout,” detailing how a loan modification would proceed if the borrower fell behind on payments. Though the Obama administration has launched a debate on how to overhaul Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, it’s not clear how much that debate will focus on ideas like those suggested by Shiller. [WSJ]

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  • Homebuyer tax credit: part II?

    August 31, 2010 01:45PM

    Does the U.S. housing market need more propping up with a second installment of the homebuyer tax credit? Shaun Donovan, secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development, isn’t saying yes, but he isn’t saying no, either. According to CNBC’s Diana Olick, there’s a push amongst politicians, particularly in Florida, where the housing market has really gotten pummeled, to recreate the spring’s surge in home sales that was largely attributed to the federal government-supplied boost. While some would argue that the housing market needs to correct itself without an artificial stimulus to recover in the long term, Olick says another homebuyer tax credit could clear out some excess inventory quickly. Still, the official word from HUD is that “there are no discussions underway to revive the credit.” [CNBC]

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  • Homebuyer tax credit: part II?

    August 31, 2010 01:45PM

    Does the U.S. housing market need more propping up with a second installment of the homebuyer tax credit? Shaun Donovan, secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development, isn’t saying yes, but he isn’t saying no, either. According to CNBC’s Diana Olick, there’s a push amongst politicians, particularly in Florida, where the housing market has really gotten pummeled, to recreate the spring’s surge in home sales that was largely attributed to the federal government-supplied boost. While some would argue that the housing market needs to correct itself without an artificial stimulus to recover in the long term, Olick says another homebuyer tax credit could clear out some excess inventory quickly. Still, the official word from HUD is that “there are no discussions underway to revive the credit.” [CNBC]

    [more]

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  • Homebuyer tax credit: part II?

    August 31, 2010 01:45PM

    Does the U.S. housing market need more propping up with a second installment of the homebuyer tax credit? Shaun Donovan, secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development, isn’t saying yes, but he isn’t saying no, either. According to CNBC’s Diana Olick, there’s a push amongst politicians, particularly in Florida, where the housing market has really gotten pummeled, to recreate the spring’s surge in home sales that was largely attributed to the federal government-supplied boost. While some would argue that the housing market needs to correct itself without an artificial stimulus to recover in the long term, Olick says another homebuyer tax credit could clear out some excess inventory quickly. Still, the official word from HUD is that “there are no discussions underway to revive the credit.” [CNBC]

    [more]

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