Dear friends and customers:   This is such great news, that it deserves its own space.  I have received numerous inquiries on how to obtain the $7,500.00  tax credit.   I am on a mission to find that answer.  If anyone  has information that you could share regarding this tax credit and how to apply for it, please contact me and I will be happy to disperse with the rest of the readers.

 Make it a great day,

 Maria Elena, CEO
Meyling Calero , VP

Real Estate Outlook: Housing Bill Approved

by Kenneth R. Harney/'Realty Times'

With home sales and prices down and unsold inventory up in many areas, the real estate market could use a jolt of good news -- and Congress just provided it.

The massive, 690-page housing bill just approved on Capitol Hill has plenty of mortgage-related provisions in it, but it also has an important stimulus program designed to jump-start housing sales: It's a tax credit, effective immediately, that could cut up to $7,500 off the federal tax return of anyone who buys a house before the end of next June, when it expires.

Buyers have to be first-time purchasers, or renters who haven't owned a house anytime in the past three years. The "credit" is actually more like an interest free loan, repayable over 15 years. Single taxpayers can only qualify for a $3,750 maximum credit. But it still puts thousands of after-tax dollars of incentives into home purchases -- money that wasn't there before.

Starting this week, hundreds of thousands of potential buyers who've been on the sidelines can purchase a new or resale house and qualify for the credit. The National Association of Realtors estimates that up to two million sales could be stimulated by the credit in the coming 11 months, and the National Association of Home Builders anticipates a "multiplier effect" in the move-up segment of the market.

That's because people who sell houses to buyers using the credit will then often need to go out and find replacement homes for themselves -- effectively rippling the impact of the credit upstream, triggering even more sales.

Since there's no Congressional limit on how many buyers can take advantage of the new incentive, it could prove to be huge. It all depends on whether Realtors, builders and individual sellers educate potential buyers about how to factor the credit into affording a new home.

In other economic news this week, mortgage rates jumped to their highest level in nearly a year, 6.6 percent for 30-year fixed rate conventional loans, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association of America.

On the plus side, the University of Michigan's Consumer Sentiment survey -- a key economic barometer affecting consumers' willingness to spend - rose a surprising five points last month.

And still another surprise: The national home ownership rate -- defying all gloom and doom predictions -- jumped to 68.1 percent in the latest quarter, up from 67.8 percent.

Published: July 31, 2008

 
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6 Comments on Real Estate Outlook: Housing Bill Approved

JUL
31
2008
279,464 Points Outside Blog

Meyling, I too am on a mission and reading up on this new bill. Thanks for sharing your findings.

7:44am • #1

If you find out, make sure to respond to your blog. 

I am puzzeled as to how a tax credit givin at tax time is going to Stimulate the buyers to buy now.  They are taking away DAP programs with this bill and requiring more money to put down.  This will deture over 7,000 people a month as of October 1st.

 I want to feel positve about this bill, but I am on the fense right now.

Check out this blog.  They outline it a little better. 

http://activerain.com/blogsview/617818/HR3221-Important-Tax-Credit

 

8:00am • #2

Does anyone have a link to the bill, we can read online?

8:26am • #3

Go to WWW.Colonialtitle.us and click on daily news and advice. You will be direceted to all the links for futer reading.

8:46am • #4

http://activerain.com/blogsview/613524/HR-3221-Housing-and

I have it on my blog.  It is overwhelming how big it is!

8:47am • #5

The best item in the bill is the moratorium on the risk-based pricing for FHA.  I have to readt the bill in detail to see how it impacts the UFMIP and annual MI, but at least the adjustments for FICO in terms of the interest rate are to go away.  Additionally, the expectation is for mortgage rates to continue to improve.  We have seen marginal improvements over the past few days.  With the bill lessening the risk seen by FNMA and FHLMC as well as FHA, it seems logical that effective October 1st and into the winter that we should see even better pricing for home loans. The question is where exactly will we see the improvements?  Which loan types, etc.

10:28am • #6

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Meyling Calero

Miami, FL

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Colonial Guaranty & Title, Inc.

Office Phone: (305) 827-0500

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