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New Home Construction Surges 41%

New Home Construction Surges 41%

By Julianne Pepitone, staff reporterMay 18, 2010: 10:34 AM ET

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) — New home construction skyrocketed 40.9% in April compared to last year, according to a government report released Tuesday. Housing starts increased to a seasonally-adjusted annual rate of 672,000 last month, the Commerce Department said. That was a 5.8% rise over March 2010. Economists were expecting housing starts to jump to 655,000.

New construction of single-family homes, the key sector of the housing market, rose 10.2% over the month to an annual rate of 593,000. New construction of multi-family homes — buildings with 5 or more units — was 68,000. April was the last month in which sales to first-time home buyers could qualify for a federal tax credit of up to $8,000. Earlier this year lawmakers extended the deadline through April 30 and added a new credit of up to $6,500 for some existing home owners who move.

“The increase in demand prompted by the tax credit has lifted construction,” wrote Ian Shepherdson, economist at High Frequency Economics, in a research note. “But the expiration of the credit … has made homebuilders wary about continuing to add new homes during the summer,” he said.

BUILDING PERMITS
That’s probably why applications for building permits, a gauge of future construction activity, sank in April. Permits fell to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 606,000 last month, down 11.5% from a revised 685,000 in March. Economists were expecting 680,000 permits. But despite this month’s sharp drop, permits were still up 15.9% from April 2009. “In the near-term the drop in permits clearly signals falling starts ahead,” Shepherdson wrote.

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Banks Ignore Delinquent Borrowers

Banks Ignore Delinquent Borrowers

By: Diana Olick

CNBC Real Estate Reporter

Some encouraging signs on the foreclosure front may not be as rosy as some are reporting. RealtyTrac, the online foreclosure sale site, shows a 9 percent dip in the number of properties with foreclosure filings in April, month-to-month. The driver of that dip is a big drop in new notices of default. The final stage of foreclosure, that is bank repossessions (REO) shot up to a new record high, up 45 percent from a year ago.

When I first read the report I thought, okay, we knew there was a big pipeline of loans that would not get modified and would have to come out the end at some point; now is that point. The fact that fewer loans are going into the pipeline should be our focus, and that’s a positive. That’s what I thought until I interviewed RealtyTrac’s Rick Sharga.

“People are sitting in their houses not paying their mortgages, and the banks are letting those delinquencies extend longer and longer periods of time before they put them in foreclosure,” Sharga told me.

That, he adds, is the main reason we’re seeing lower numbers of new defaults. The borrowers are in default, but the banks aren’t paying attention, so they don’t show up in the numbers.

He goes on -

“The fact that we have six to six and a half million loans that are either seriously delinquent or in foreclosure also suggests we are not nearly out of the woods. If we just started to absorb that inventory at the pace we’re currently seeing new foreclosure proceedings we have about a 50 to 55 month supply of loans that yet have yet to be processed, so we have a way to go before we are out of the mess.”

I know you’re all going to tell me that Sharga works for a company that makes its money selling foreclosures, so he’s going to play the bear side. Take it for what it’s worth. But Sharga makes a compelling point when it comes to redefaults on loan modifications. A lot of folks are either falling out of the trial modification period or not qualifying in the first place, and those loans are moving quickly to bank repossession.

California-based mortgage analyst Mark Hanson adds perspective with a look at “cancelled foreclosures.”

These are not tracked by RealtyTrac, but they “bite right out of Notices of Default and foreclosures, so to get a real idea of how ‘credit’ is doing, you have to add a certain percentage back.”

That’s because Hanson believes the redefault rate on these modifications will be at the very least 50 percent 6-19 months out.

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Foreclosure Easing in Big Cities But Still Spreading

Foreclosure Easing in Big Cities But Still Spreading

By Les Christie, staff writerApril 29, 2010: 12:10 PM ET

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) — Foreclosure filings declined in more than half of the country’s worst-hit spots in the first three months of 2010. But that doesn’t mean the healing has begun.

In a release issued Thursday, RealtyTrac, a leading online marketer of foreclosed homes, reported that foreclosure filings declined in 14 of the top 20 cities year-over-year, most of which are concentrated in the Sunbelt “bubble” states of California, Arizona, Florida and Nevada.

But the improvement during the first quarter, compared with 12 months earlier, may have been a statistical glitch, not evidence of a real trend. “The decreasing foreclosure activity in some of the nation’s top foreclosure hot spots in the first quarter is not a sure signal that those areas are out of the woods yet,” said RealtyTrac CEO James Saccacio.

Plus, those improvements bucked the market’s general trend: Nationwide foreclosures rose 16% during the quarter.  Saccacio attributed much of the improvement to government-led foreclosure prevention programs, especially a new program encouraging banks to facilitate short sales. Those are transactions in which sellers, with lender approval, sell their homes to third parties for less than what they owe on the mortgage.

Banks have figured out that short sales are less costly to them than foreclosures because they save on a long list of expenses, including legal fees, taxes and maintenance, and brokers’ commissions. “Lenders take about twice the hit on a foreclosure as on a sort sale,” said Rick Sharga, a RealtyTrac spokesman.

Hardest Hit Markets
California cities accounted for half of the top 20 metro areas for foreclosure filings, but Las Vegas claimed the number one position. It had one foreclosure filing for every 28 households during the quarter, roughly five times the national average of one filing for every 128.

The Sin City news is a mixed bag: Filings are 13% worse than in the last three months of 2009, but 19% better than in the first three months of 2009. The second hardest hit metro area was Modesto, Calif., with a rate of one filing for every 34 homes, down more than 13% year-over-year. Cape Coral, Fla., was third, with one in 35, down 26% year-over year. Tied for fourth at one for every 36 homes were Riverside, Calif., (down 19%) and Stockton, Calif., (down 25%).

Los Angeles, the nation’s second largest metro area, recorded 59,293 filings during the quarter, more than any other metro area, but its rate of one for every 75 households made it only the 32nd hardest hit U.S. market.  Miami had the steepest year-over-year increase for any top 20 market. There were over 71% more filings during the first quarter of 2010 than it recorded during the same quarter in 2009.

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New Short Sale Guideline for Ventura County

New Short Sale Guideline for Ventura County

Written by Mana Tulberg, www.venturacountyrealestatetalk.com

On April 5, 2010, the Federal Government’s new short sale guidelines known as Home Affordable Foreclosure Avoidance Program (HAFA) went into effect. These new guidelines, once implemented, will have a huge impact on Ventura County’s real estate market. The Federal Government’s goal is to streamline the incredibly cumbersome short sale process for both home sellers and home buyers. As a Realtor in Ventura County who has represented home buyers and home sellers in the short sale process, I find it hard to fully express my relief when I consider the new HAFA short sale guidelines. As noted below, not all short sales qualify for the HAFA program, so please review the qualification requirements and program guidelines below.

HAFA Qualification Requirements:
Borrowers may be qualified for the HAFA program if they meet any of the following criteria:

1- The home is the borrowers primary residence.

2- The mortgage is the first lien holder and was obtained on or before January 1st, 2009.

3- The homeowner’s total monthly mortgage payment is more than 31% of the homeowner’s gross income.

4- Homeowners who qualify for the Federal Government’s Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) but, cannot meet HAMP’s trial period plan requirements.

5- Homeowners who do not successfully complete the HAMP’s trial period plan.

6- Homeowners who during the HAMP modification trial miss at least 2 consecutive mortgage payments.

7- Homeowners who request a short sale.

8- The homeowner’s loan is not guaranteed or owned by Freddie Mac or Fannie Mae.

HAFA Guidelines:
1- Requires each servicer participating in this program to create their own policy, procedure, and process. This means each lender will have a different set of short sale procedures for borrowers to follow.

2- Under the new short sale guidelines home seller can obtain a pre-approved short sale term and an approved sales price from their lender before listing their house for sale.

3- Once a homeowner has received the pre-approved short sale term, the lender will give the homeowner 120 days to sell the property. However, if the homeowner is unable to sell the property within this time frame an extension can be obtained from the homeowners lender.

4- Within 3 business days of receiving an offer the homeowner must send the offer, Request to Approve a Short Sale form, and the home buyer’s pre-qualification letter.

5- Upon receiving the above documents, the lender has 10 business days to approve the short sale. The lender will approve the offer only if the offer is within the terms and conditions of the Short Sale Agreement they originally released to the seller (see #1).

6- Upon a successful sale of the property, the home seller will receive $3000 for relocation expenses. The lender will also receive $1,500 for processing costs.

7- After the sale of the property the borrower is fully released from all liabilities for the first mortgage and second lien holder (if any). The liability towards the second lien holder is released only if the second has received an incentive under HAFA.

Time line

The new short sale guidelines started April 5, 2010 and will end December 31, 2012. Although HAFA is giving some incentives to mortgage servicers and junior lien holders, it will be interesting to see if these institutions will implement the new short sale guidelines. I don’t want to sound pessimistic, however, I can’t help but wonder if the lenders’ incentives are sufficient to cause the lenders to hire more able bodies for this new, fast-paced, short sale turn around. Time will tell if HAFA’s new stipulated short sale rules will actually help Ventura County’s real estate. I will keep you posted as usual.

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Posted in Real Estate News, Residential Homes Real Estate News12 Comments

How Foreclosure Impacts Your Credit Score

How Foreclosure Impacts Your Credit Score

By Les Christie, staff writerApril 22, 2010: 4:44 PM ET

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) — If you’re delinquent on your mortgage, your credit score will suffer. Everyone knows that. The question is, by how much?

Until recently, those answers were hard to come by. Credit bureaus were uncommunicative about expressing, in points, just how much impact different foreclosure types of mortgage delinquencies have on scores.

Recently, Fair Isaac, which developed FICO scores, pulled back the curtain a bit, revealing some estimates of point-score declines following mortgage delinquency problems.

Here are the average hit your credit will take:
30 days late: 40 – 110 points
90 days late: 70 – 135 points
Foreclosure, short sale or deed-in-lieu: 85 – 160
Bankruptcy: 130 – 240

To come to these figures, Fair Isaac created two hypothetical consumers, one who starts out with a fair-to-middling score of 680 and the other with a very good one of 780. (FICO scores range from 300 to 850.)

The hypothetical person with the 780 FICO has 10 credit accounts versus six for the 580, plus a longer credit history, lower utilization of total credit limit and no missed payments on any account. The other consumer has two slightly damaged accounts. Neither have any accounts in collection or adverse public records.

“The lending industry tends to regard an account differently when it has become 90 or more days late,” he said, “The likelihood that consumers will resume paying their overdue obligations drops off significantly after the delinquencies have reached 90 days.”

One reason credit companies were so closed-mouthed is that they often can’t definitively state how much each delinquencies will affect scores because there are too many variables.

Some borrowers will fall much more steeply than others for the same payment problem, according to Maxine Sweet, vice president for public education at Experian, one of the nation’s main credit bureaus.

“If you picture someone who has just one mortgage and one other credit account versus a mature credit user like me with 15 accounts, if they miss one payment that would impact their scores a lot more,” she said. “For me, one missed payment would just be a blip.”

The point loss also depends on the borrower’s starting point: People with very high credit scores have more to lose than low-score borrowers; the impact of a single blemish on an 800 score is more than on a 500.

Mortgage borrowers can lose their homes three basic ways: a foreclosure; a short sale, where the home is sold for less than than is owed and the bank (generally) forgives the difference; or a deed-in-lieu, in which the borrower gives back the property and the bank again forgives any unpaid balance.

Sweet said credit bureaus generally slash scores equally for those three resolutions to someone losing their home. The important factor, she said, is that “it’s reported that you paid less on a settled account.”

Some borrowers may think that because they never missed a payment, they can “walk away” from their homes with relatively little impact on scores. Not true. “When a deed-in-lieu or short sale is reported as a partial payment, it’s treated as a serious delinquency,” Watts said, “just like a foreclosure.”

Even if borrowers made payments faithfully for years before short selling or doing a deed-in-lieu, their credit score will still take a hit. The total decline will run about 85 points for the 680 score borrower to as much as 160 for the 780 score.

Mortgage debt, combined with other financial problems, can send borrowers into bankruptcy, the worst thing that can happen to your credit score.

The effects are long-lasting, according to Sweet. In a Chapter 13 bankruptcy, which involves partial repayment over several years, the stain will take seven years to remove. A Chapter 7 bankruptcy, which involves liquidation, takes 10 years to get over.

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What Is The Difference Between Pre-foreclosure, Foreclosure, And Post-Foreclosure?

What Is The Difference Between Pre-foreclosure, Foreclosure, And Post-Foreclosure?

Written on April 21, 2010 by Mana Tulberg, www.venturacountyrealestatetalk.com

Pre-foreclosure, foreclosure, and post-foreclosure are very different stages in the cycle of a defaulted property, yet many people have the view that “foreclosure” is a single event, not a multi-step process. Understanding what each stage of a foreclosure process means can help both home buyers and home sellers in Ventura County make better informed decisions.

Pre-Foreclosure:
As soon as a homeowner misses a payment on his/her monthly loan payment, the pre-foreclosure procedure begins. The pre-foreclosure process is initiated by the homeowner’s lending institute who holds the mortgage. In this stage a Notice of Default (NOD) is mailed to the homeowner.

In the State of California 30 days prior to issuing a notice of default, the lender MUST make a personal contact or a phone contact to the homeowner in order to assess the borrowers’ financial situation. The lender and the homeowner then explore different options in order to avoid foreclosure.

30 days after the lender has made contact with the homeowner, if no steps have been taken to resolve the unpaid mortgage, the lender will issue an NOD. Meanwhile, the lender/mortgage holder will file the default notice with the county in which the property is located. The notice of default is a public notice and can usually be found on many sites including some public foreclosure auction websites! The homeowner is then given 90 days to respond to the bank’s action and become current with his/her loan (catch up on late payments).

It is during the pre-foreclosure period that most homeowners seek to either short sale their home or take different courses of action in order to save themselves from going into foreclosure. (Note: not all short sale homes have missed a mortgage payment or been given a notice of default.).

After the 90* days, if the homeowner is not able to short sale the property or is not able to catch up on the late payments, a Notice of Sale is posted on the property. At this point of the pre-foreclosure period the homeowner still has 21 days to save his/her property from going into foreclosure.

Foreclosure:
If the homeowner is unable to bring his/her mortgage up to date then a notice of trustee sale is mailed to the homeowner and is posted on the property. In the notice of trustee sale a specific place, date, and time are scheduled for the public auction of the property. Up to 5 days before the trustee sale the homeowner can still pay off the defaulted amount on the loan.

This second stage in the foreclosure process, also known as the sheriff’s sale, is very similar to a public auction. The property is sold to the highest bidder and the title is transferred to the new owner.

Post-Foreclosure:
If the property is not sold in a foreclosure auction the ownership goes to the lender/mortgage holder. The property is now a Bank Owned Home or a Real Estate Owned (REO). At this point the bank will hire a Realtor to sell the property in its As-Is condition.

*Please Note: In California, only owner occupied homes where the loan was obtained between 2003-2007, are the extra 90 days added to the pre-foreclosure time line. Also, this 90 day extension is only applicable if the homeowner’s lender has not obtained an exemption from this program.

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Ventura County Median Home Prices Rise

Ventura County Median Home Prices Rise

Ventura County Star, Published April 13, 2010

A quaint Camarillo three-bedroom house priced at $310,000 sold recently after fetching 11 offers. The winning bid came from an investor who offered $10,000 below asking price. The bank selling the home rejected several solid offers, including one that was $45,000 more than the asking price, with 20 percent down. The catch? The investor had cash, and the bank wanted a quick close.

Traditional homebuyers are finding it hard to compete as banks try to minimize challenges by going for cash offers, said Kay Wilson-Bolton, a broker for Century 21 Buena Vista. “If you have the cash today, this is a great market to get in,” said Sung Won Sohn, an economics professor at CSU Channel Islands in Camarillo.

Ventura County’s housing market continued to show signs of an upward crawl in March, as the median sales price increased by double digits but sales volume dipped from a year ago. There were 739 sales of existing and new homes and condominiums, a 4.8 percent decline from 776 sales in March 2009, according to figures released Tuesday by San Diego-based MDA DataQuick. But sales rose 27.4 percent from the 580 reported in February.

The fluctuation of home sales this spring was based on the expected expiration of the first-time homebuyer credit, which was extended until the end of April, Sohn said. The median price — the point at which half the homes sold for more and half for less — was $375,000 last month, up 15 percent from $326,000 in March 2009, MDA DataQuick reported. That’s also up 7 percent from $350,000 in February. But don’t get too excited.

“It’s not a sign that we’re in for double-digit growth in home prices,” said Bill Watkins, executive director of the Center for Economic Research and Forecasting at California Lutheran University in Thousand Oaks. Although there’s some creeping upward, the median’s uptick reflects a boost in activity in the $500,000-plus market. “A year ago, the only thing selling was at the bottom of the market,” Watkins said. “This year we’re seeing sales across the markets.”

Ventura County homes resold in March that had been foreclosed on in the prior 12 months accounted for 28.4 percent of the sales, compared with 46.2 percent a year ago. The market won’t rebalance until mortgage lending patterns normalize, and that’s not happening yet, said John Walsh, MDA DataQuick president.

“Some of the best deals out there right now are happening when the buyer comes in with cash,” Walsh said. In Ventura County, 22.9 percent of the buyers in March had no evidence of a purchase loan in public records. But these buyers could be using non-traditional loans, or be putting mortgages on their properties after the purchases, said Andrew LePage, MDA DataQuick analyst.

“Many want to be able to offer cash to be in first position with a seller, or because they couldn’t obtain a traditional purchase mortgage in today’s relatively tight lending environment,” LePage said. A traditional homebuyer is going to have difficulty competing with a well-financed investor, Watkins said. “If you really want to get the good deals, you need to have the cash,” he said.

Prices seem to have stabilized, but it’s still difficult for buyers to get financing, Wilson-Bolton said. Banks don’t want to deal with Federal Housing Administration financing because it takes 45 days, she said. Cash offers can take as little as 10 days. “We’re busy,” Wilson-Bolton said. “There’s a lot of activity, but it’s a different kind of activity. Investors are taking their money out of the stock market and putting it into the real estate market.”

Cash sales represented 27.1 percent of homes sold in Southern California last month, MDA DataQuick reported. In February, the figure reached 30 percent — an all-time high since DataQuick began tracking in 1988. The 22-year monthly average is 13.8 percent.

There are some promising signs — down-payment sizes are stable, foreclosure activity has fallen and investors are scooping up deals. Multiple offers have been prevalent in areas throughout the county, Sohn said.

“I’m pretty sure housing has really hit the bottom,” Sohn said. “This is especially true around coastal areas, including Ventura County.” But there’s still a long way to go before stability is reached, Watkins said. “We still have a lot of foreclosures in the pipeline,” Watkins said. “There are still a lot of people out of jobs for very long periods of time. And until we see jobs, you can’t have a normal real estate market.”

Posted in Residential Homes Real Estate News, Ventura and Los Angeles Real Estate News6 Comments

California Home Buyer Tax Credit Chart

California Home Buyer Tax Credit Chart

HOMEBUYER TAX CREDIT FEDERAL CALIFORNIA
Amount of Tax Credit 10% of purchase price not to exceed $8,000 for first-time homebuyers or $6,500 for long-term residents. 5% of purchase price, not to exceed $10,000 for first-time homebuyers or buyers of properties that have never been occupied. (See also Maximum Credit for All Taxpayers.)
Date of Purchase Taxpayer must enter into a written binding contract by April 30, 2010, and close escrow by June 30, 2010.  Taxpayer must enter into an enforceable contract by December 31, 2010, and close escrow between May 1, 2010 and July 31, 2011, inclusive.
Principal Residence Yes. Property purchased must be the taxpayer’s principal residence which is generally the home the taxpayer lives in most of the time (26 U.S.C. § 121). Yes. Property purchased must be a qualified principal residence and eligible for the homeowner’s exemption from property taxes (Cal. Tax & Rev. Code § 218).
Type of Property House, condominium, townhome, manufactured home, apartment cooperative, houseboat, housetrailer, or other type of property located in the U.S. Single-family residence, whether detached or attached, condominium, co-op, manufactured home, mobilehome, or house boat. A home constructed by the taxpayer is not eligible because the home has not been “purchased”.
 Eligibility 1. First-Time Homebuyer: Up to $8,000 if buyer (and buyer’s spouse if any) has not owned a principal residence for the three-year period before date of purchase; OR

2. Long-Time Resident: Up to $6,500 if buyer (and buyer’s spouse if any) has owned and used existing home as a principal residence for 5 of the last 8 years.

1. First-Time Homebuyer: Up to $10,000 if the buyer (and buyer’s spouse/RDP if any, according to FTB) has not owned a principal residence for the three-year period before date of purchase; OR

2. Never-Occupied Property: Up to $10,000 for a principal residence if the property has never been previously occupied as certified by the seller.

Income Restriction Yes. Tax credit begins to phase out for modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) over $125,000 (or $225,000 for joint filers). No tax credit at all for MAGI over $145,000 (or $245,000 for joint filers). No
Maximum Purchase Price $800,000. N/A
Tax Credit Yes. Any amount of the tax credit not used to reduce the tax owed may be added to the taxpayer’s tax refund check. No
Repayment No repayment required if the buyer owns and occupies the property for at least 36 months after purchase. No repayment required if the buyer owns and occupies the property for at least two years immediately following the purchase.
Multiple Buyers
(not married to each other)
Tax credit may be allocated between eligible taxpayers in any reasonable manner. See IRS Notice 2009-12 at www.irs.gov/pub/irs-drop/n-09-12.pdf. Tax credit must be allocated between eligible taxpayers based on their percentage of ownership.
Maximum Credit for All Taxpayers N/A $100 million for first-time homebuyers and $100 million for never-occupied properties, both on a first-come-first-served basis.
Reservations of Credit N/A Yes. Buyer may reserve credit before close of escrow for a property that has never been occupied by submitting a certification signed by buyer and seller stating they have entered into an enforceable contract between May 1, 2010 and December 31, 2010, inclusive.
When to Claim Full tax credit may be claimed on 2009 or 2010 tax returns. 1/3 of total tax credit may be claimed each year for 3 successive years (e.g. $3,333 for 2010, $3,333 for 2011, and $3,333 for 2012).
Tax Agency Internal Revenue Service (IRS). Franchise Tax Board (FTB).
How to File First-Time Homebuyer Credit and Repayment of the Credit (IRS Form 5405) to be filed with tax returns Submit application to the FTB to obtain Certificate of Allocation. The FTB may prescribe additional rules and procedures to carry out this law.
Other Restrictions Cannot be an acquisition from related persons as defined; cannot be an acquisition by gift or inheritance; and buyer cannot be a non resident alien. Cannot be an acquisition from related persons as defined; buyer or spouse must be 18 years old; buyer cannot be another taxpayer’s dependent; credit is allowed for only one qualified principal residence; credit is disallowed if taxpayer received 2009 new home tax credit; and credit allowed cannot be a business credit under Cal. Tax & Rev. Code § 17039.2.
Legal Authority 26 U.S.C. section 36. Cal. Rev. & Tax Code section 17059.1 (as added by Assembly Bill 183).
Date of Enactment November 6, 2009 (as revised). March 25, 2010.
More Information IRS Web site at http://www.irs.gov/newsroom/article/0,,id=
204671,00.html
.
FTB Web site at http://www.ftb.ca.gov/
individuals/ New_Home_Credit.shtml
.

Information provided by California Association of Realtors.

Posted in First Time Home Buyer Tax Credit, Real Estate News, Residential Homes Real Estate News5 Comments

California won’t tax forgiven home debt

California won’t tax forgiven home debt

By Jim Wasserman, jwasserman@sacbee.com
Published: Friday, Apr. 9, 2010 – 12:00 am | Page 1A

Tax relief is on the way for thousands of fearful California mortgage borrowers. Most no longer face a double whammy of losing their homes – and then paying a big state tax bill on the forgiven debt.

State lawmakers Thursday passed SB 401, a bill by Sen. Lois Wolk, D-Davis, to exempt borrowers who lost homes to foreclosure or short sales in 2009 from state taxes that can run into thousands of dollars. The same is true for certain types of loan modifications.

State tax officials say 100,000 people statewide will be spared paying tax they otherwise would owe.

A spokesman for Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger said he will sign the bill.

Here’s what it does:

SB 401 aligns much of California’s tax code with that used by the Internal Revenue Service nationally. The U.S. government has banned the IRS from taxing forgiven mortgage debt as extra household income from 2007 through the end of 2012. California did the same for the 2007 and 2008 tax years.

The bill extends the state ban from 2009 through the end of 2012. It also bans state taxes on federal stimulus grants for renewable energy projects.

“It will be great for everybody in my situation. This is a big, big relief,” said Sara Palasch, who sold her Bakersfield house through a short sale last year and now lives in Georgia. Weeks ago, she got a state tax bill for $10,500.

Also relieved is Debbie Wong of Sacramento, who received a state tax bill for $7,500. She sold her Elk Grove condo last year through a short sale. The forgiven debt gave her a state taxable income of $108,000 when her salary was $13,000, she said.

“I don’t have the $7,500,” she said Thursday.

Who is affected:

Primarily, the bill affects people who had debt forgiven as they lost homes in foreclosures, short sales and deeds in lieu of foreclosure last year – and through 2012 now. Also affected: those who got loan modifications that cut the amount they owe the bank.

In short sales, a bank might accept a sales price of $250,000 when it is still owed $350,000 on the home. In deeds in lieu of foreclosure, the bank simply takes back the house and may forgive what’s still owed. The difference is the forgiven debt. Borrowers can avoid state taxes on up to $500,000 in forgiven debt.

The Franchise Tax Board says the tax forgiveness measure mostly applies to people who refinanced their homes to get better interest rates or extract equity, and then had a short sale or foreclosure where debt was forgiven.

But the tax board also warned that refinanced dollars taken out as cash and spent on items other than home improvements may be taxable.

Who is not affected:

Those who bought houses and never refinanced before doing a short sale, loan modification or foreclosure are unaffected. In most cases the banks just take back the houses. There is no forgiven debt, and no tax bill, said the tax board.

Investors are also unaffected. They still must pay state taxes on forgiven debt. The bill affects only people who live in their home.

What people should do now when filing their taxes:

The Franchise Tax Board says: “Once the governor signs this into law, California taxpayers will not have to do anything. If they qualify for federal relief on the mortgage debt forgiven, then they will also qualify for state income tax purposes. California Form 540 starts with federal adjusted gross income so there will be no adjustment necessary to properly reflect the state adjusted gross income amount for this issue.”

What this will cost the state:

The tax board estimates it will collect about $34 million less in taxes as a result of the bill in this and coming years. The bill will grant relief to about 100,000 taxpayers statewide from now through 2012, agency spokeswoman Brenda Voet said Thursday. The tax board couldn’t estimate Thursday how many of those would be in the Sacramento region.

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Posted in Commercial Property Real Estate News, Real Estate News, Residential Homes Real Estate News1 Comment

Taxes on Foreclosure or Short Sale?

Taxes on Foreclosure or Short Sale?

By Les Christie, staff writer April 8, 2010: 1:30 PM ET

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) — Did you lose your house to foreclosure this year? Did your lender forgive some of your mortgage debt because you sold it for less than it was worth? If so, you could be facing a big tax hit.

It is IRS policy to tax forgiven debt you are personally responsible for as if it is income. Say, for example, your credit card company settled a $10,000 debt for 50 cents on the dollar. You’d have a debt forgiveness of $5,000, which the IRS would count as income, just like your wages.

The same policy held true for most mortgage debt until 2007, when Congress passed the Mortgage Forgiveness Debt Act. That ended the liability for many homeowners — but not all.

In general, if you lose your home to foreclosure or short sale, where you sell your home for less than you owe, the IRS won’t add insult to injury by counting the difference as income. At least until 2012.

There are four major exceptions to the rule:

1. You did a cash-out refinance and splurged.

Many homeowners took cash out when they refinanced their homes and used the extra dough to pay for new cars, boats or vacations. Say you did that and then got into trouble, losing the house through a foreclosure or short sale. Even if your lender waived the remaining debt, the IRS will treat as income the portion of the forgiven debt that you took out as cash and spent. Only the funds used to actually improve your home won’t be taxed. Yes, even if you spent the money on paying off your student loans or credit cards.

The IRS’ reasoning is that only the money spent on home improvement actually added to your home’s value. And that, presumably, diminished the difference between what you owed on your mortgage and the value of your home when it was foreclosed.

Beware: Some lenders made refinancing offers contingent on homeowners paying off credit card debt, according to Kent Anderson, a Eugene, Ore.-based attorney and tax expert. If you took one of those deals, the refinance money will be reported to the IRS and you will owe taxes on it.

2. You have a home-equity line of credit.

During the boom years, many homeowners tapped soaring home equity to make all sorts of consumer purchases. But the same rules that apply to refinancings also apply to home-equity loans: The IRS will only forgive the tax liability if the loan money was spent improving your home. And, tax experts advise, you’ll need to show receipts to prove you did.

3. You lost your vacation home or investment property.

So the market tanked and you lost your vacation home. Unfortunately, if you didn’t use it as your primary residence for at least two of the previous five years, you’re going to pay the tax man.

More common, however, may be the case of investment properties gone sour. During the housing boom, buying homes for investment purposes soared, accounting for 28% of all sales during 2005, according to the National Association of Realtors. (Vacation homes made up 12%.) And many of these purchases were made with little down payment.

When the bust hit, second home prices cratered. The median price paid for investment properties fell 43% to $105,000 in 2009, from $183,500 in 2005, according to NAR. For vacation homes, the median price paid dropped 17% to $169,000.

If an investor bought a property in 2005 at the median price and sold it in 2009, he could have run up $75,000 or so in forgiven debt. If the investor is in the 25% income tax bracket, that would add nearly $19,000 to their tax liability. Ouch!

4. You owned a multi-million-dollar home.

It may be hard for Americans struggling in this weak economy to sympathize with anyone wealthy enough, at one time, to afford a multi-million-dollar home. But owners losing one could be on the hook for a huge tax bill.

Only the first $2 million in forgiven debt will be voided under the relief act; all the overage is taxable as income.

So, say, for example, you’re Scarlett Johansson. You paid $7 million for your Hollywood Hills villa in 2007. (With a 100% mortgage; this is hypothetical, remember.) But now, you have it on the market for $4.59 million.

Say you can’t unload it, your movies tank and you have to a short sale. (Hey, it happened to Nicholas Cage; he went into foreclosure.) If you sell it for $4 million, leaving a $3 million balance, the IRS would forgive the first $2 million. But the remaining million? You better hope you have a good accountant and a lot of deductions.

The good news? Even if you fall under any of these four scenarios, you may have a way out, according to Anderson. “If the taxpayer was insolvent at the time of the foreclosure, the forgiven debt can be excluded for tax purposes,” he said. “It can also be discharged in a bankruptcy and approved by court order.”

And then there is California
While most states follow the IRS lead and don’t tax most forgiven mortgage debt, California still makes you pay. The state legislature hopes to change that before April 15, but right now California taxpayers are legally liable for paying state income taxes on forgiven mortgage debt.

The state, which has endured some of the worst price declines and foreclosure rates in the nation, did follow the federal lead when it passed the original debt forgiveness bill, but the state only authorized the relief for the 2007 and 2008 tax years. There have been successive legislative efforts to extend relief through 2009, but none have succeeded.

One attempt at passing an omnibus “conformity” bill resulted in a veto by Gov. Schwarzenegger for reasons having nothing to do with mortgage debt forgiveness. The governor objected to a different provision covering erroneous tax reporting by businesses.

Confusion and anxiety is running high, according to Rocky Rushing, chief of staff for democratic state Sen. Ron Calderon, who is spearheading new legislation. His office has fielded many calls from unhappy taxpayers.

“We’ve heard about tax bills in the thousands of dollars,” he said

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