Posts Tagged ‘first time home buyers’

Hillary Gets Serious-Aliso Viejo Short Sale-Real Estate Video Home Tour

http://www.LagunaBeachRealEstateMarketBlog.com
http://www.TheCoastalPropertyExperts.com/Short-Sales.php

Don’t miss out on this fabulous Short Sale opportunity in the city of Aliso Viejo, California. This end unit condo, over 1200 square feet, is located in an award winning complex, a short walk from Soka University. The owner has taken great care of this home and a lucky new owner will just need to bring their toothbrush…it’s that clean!

Location: 37 La Mirage, Aliso Viejo
Priced: $327,000
Listed by Candice Burroughs of Prudential California Realty
Call Hillary to view this property or put in your offer! 949-922-8490

Duration : 0:3:51

Read the rest of this entry »

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Seattle Real Estate-Escrow in a Nutshell-Seattle First Time Home Buyers

This is a video providing an informational overview to Seattle First Time Home Buyers about the purpose of the Escrow Company in the Home Buying process

Duration : 0:3:25

Read the rest of this entry »

Technorati Tags: , , , , , ,

Extension of the $8K Tax Credit

I know that alot of buyers were scrambling to get into there deal about now so they could close by the deadline of Dec. 1st. This was helping the local housing market tremendously. I’m glad to see this as it will give more incentive to try and stimulate our local home values a bit more. And it looks like not just first time home buyers are affected. Now move up buyers can get a boost too.

Here are the details from the Wall Street Journal.

Mill Creek Foreclosure

Mill Creek Foreclosure

By WSJ Staff

NIck Timiraos and James R. Hagerty report:

The Obama administration blessed the proposed extension of the $8,000 tax credit for first-time home buyers on Thursday as the Senate neared a compromise that would extend the credit to more potential buyers.

Here’s a primer on who might be able to get the expanded credit, and what it might do for the housing market:

Who gets the credit, and how much can they claim? First-time home buyers are eligible for up to $8,000 on the tax credit, which is the same as the current credit. The Senate version of the bill creates a new credit of up to $6,500 for homeowners who have lived in their homes for five years. That provision would start on Dec. 1.

How long will it last? The tax credits would expire on April 30, 2010, but home buyers under contract by April 30 would be able to qualify as long as they complete the sale within 60 days. Keep in mind, this would be the third iteration of a home buyer tax credit that has been in place since mid-2008. Sen. Johnny Isakson, the Georgia Republican who has been a staunch advocate of the credit, promised that this would be the “last extension” of the credit, according to Dow Jones Newswires’ Corey Boles. “Tax credits like this only work by creating the sense of urgency to take advantage of it,” Sen. Isakson said.

Will the tax credit do anything for the high-end of the market? Probably not. The tax credit phases out for home buyers with incomes above $125,000 for single filers and $225,000 for married couples. Also, homes that cost more than $800,000 aren’t eligible for the credit. Overall, the tax credit is likely to generate only a modest further increase in home sales, says Tom Lawler, an independent economist in Leesburg, Va. For many well-paid people, he says, it won’t make a big difference: “A household earning around $150,000 is likely to buy a home of $500,000 plus, so a $6,500 credit won’t be much of a factor in pushing such households off the fence.”

What other limits does the credit have? Toddlers are out of luck. Last week’s congressional hearings spotlighted concerns about misuse of the credit, including some 500 tax filers under age 18 who had claimed the credit.

So will the expanded tax credit help sales? That’s a point of debate among housing analysts and economists. Alec Phillips, economist at Goldman Sachs, notes that expanding the credit to people who already own homes doesn’t necessarily make a big dent in the supply of housing on the market. “If these ‘step-up’ buyers already own a home and sell it to finance the new one, that hasn’t reduced the amount of inventory for sale,” he says.

But Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Economy.com, thinks the extension is a big deal. Based on a preliminary analysis, he said it should mean at least 500,000 in additional sales, atop the 400,000 he estimates already have been generated by the tax credits (twice the Goldman estimate). “The tax credit is not a very efficient tax cut, but not extending it would do significant damage to the still fragile housing market,” Mr. Zandi said.

Readers, what do you think? Is this going to help the market, or is it simply reinflating a bubble?

Give me some feedback K guys.
Jim

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Chat M-F 9am – 5pm
Financial & Credit Restoration
Mortgage Calculator
MortgageLoan

$

years

%

Loan Calculator
Free Great Deal Hot Sheet
FREE!!! Great Deal Hot Sheet Customized to Your Own Criteria
*
*
This will save you HOURS of searching, and its totally FREE!!! Never an Obligation of Anykind. Fill in Name, Email and Submit, Then fill in your criteria and your Hot Sheet will be on its way.