|
September
2, 2009
Tips & Trends
From
Rory S. Coakley on some of the latest real estate news and
happenings.
Act fast! Homebuyer tax credit ends soon
There's
barely three months left before the $8,000 tax credit for
first-time buyers ends -- and it can take that long to close
on your new home.
Use any metaphor you want: the ticking clock, sands running
through the hourglass or pages falling away from the calendar.
The fact is, time is running out to claim the $8,000 first-time
homebuyers tax credit.
Passed earlier this year as part of the economic stimulus
package, the credit is good for up to $8,000, or 10% of
the purchase price, and applies to people who have not owned
a home in the previous three years. (There are some income
restrictions.) The best part: Unlike a similar program from
2008, the credit does not have to be repaid.
The bad part: It ends on Dec. 1.
Because it usually takes around 90 days to close on a house
after a contract is signed, buyers have very little time
left to act. As of Thurs., Aug. 27, there were only 96 days
left before the credit ends.
"Buyers have to get a home under contract very, very soon,"
said Tom Kunz, CEO of Century 21. "They probably should
get out looking."
Sense of urgency
What they will find may surprise them: Many of the prime
properties have already been snapped up. Home sales have
been on the upswing, and inventories are so depleted in
hot markets that first-time buyers are struggling to find
homes in their price range.
In
Whittier, Calif., for example, there are few repossessed
homes for sale. Those are easy to buy because there isn't
a lot of red tape and the bank wants to get rid of them
as quickly as possible. Instead, most of the properties
are short sales, where the sellers have to convince their
lender to let them sell the house for less than they owe.
"That's why there's such a sense of urgency now," said Irma
Tapper, a Century 21 real estate agent in Whittier. "The
banks have to approve short sales, and they're taking three
to six months to do that."
That means a first timer putting a bid on a short-sale might
not get an answer form the bank until well after the Dec.
1 deadline for the tax credit. So when an actual repossession
listing hits the markets, it creates a feeding frenzy.
Chuck Whitehead, who runs the Coldwell Banker agency in
Temecula, Calif., said one recent listing hit the market
on a Friday and by Monday there were 57 bids.
The National Association of Realtors attributes much of
this activity to the first-time buyer tax credit. It estimates
that 1.8 million buyers will file for the credit, and 350,000
of them wouldn't have been able to buy without it.
"It makes a big difference because most of these clients
are in a lower price range," said Michelle Edmunds, an agent
with Coldwell Banker in Temecula, Calf., who has closed
sales for six first-time buyers. "The houses they buy need
work and normally they wouldn't want to move in because
of the [less than perfect] conditions the homes are in."
That is true for Wesley Forsythe. This June, the 30-year-old
computer consultant and his girlfriend bought a row house
in the Fishtown section of Philadelphia. Since he paid just
$80,000 for the three-bedroom, two-bath place, the credit
acted like a 10% discount.
"It allowed us to expand our price range and plan additional
renovations," he said. "My mortgage is several hundred dollars
less than what my new rent would have been."
Forsythe applied for the credit immediately after closing,
filing an amended 2008 tax return. The IRS cut him a check
in less than seven weeks. He's spending it now on new hardwood
floors, repainting most of the interior and renovating a
bathroom. He's stretching the cash by doing much of the
work himself.
Cash for Clunkers effect
Of course, analysts worry that this frenzy will dry up once
the tax credit expires. They argue that without the incentive,
much of the pressure on homebuyers to act quickly will vanish,
and the nascent housing recovery could slump.
In many ways the tax credit is similar to the Cash for Clunkers
program that ended this week. Already, auto dealers are
anticipating that car sales will evaporate after accelerating
during the program.
"It's just like Cash for Clunkers," said Robert Dye, a senior
economist for PNC Financial Services Group. "It runs the
risk of a let-down as the program runs its course."
Johnny Isakson, R-Ga., who is a former real estate broker,
is pushing legislation to extend the tax credit through
next year, increase it to $15,000, include non-first-time
homebuyers, and remove income restrictions.
The effort has drawn strong industry support.
"We need to stimulate the move-up buyer," said Century 21's
Kunz, "so it works its way up the pricing food chain. That's
what we need to get inventory moving again."
Source:
Les Christie, CNNMoney.com staff writer
If
you would like to suggest a topic for comment in one of
our future emailers, please let me know. You can always
reach me at rory@coakleyrealty.com
or by phone (301) 340-8700 ext. 101. I look forward to hearing
from you!
Rory
S. Coakley
Coakley Realty, Inc.
20 Courthouse Square - Suite 106
Rockville, MD 20850
www.coakleyrealty.com
|