Sunday, December 23, 2007

Fact Sheet: The Mortgage Forgiveness Debt Relief Act of 2007

President Bush Signs Legislation Protecting American Families From Higher Taxes When They Refinance Their Homes

"When your home is losing value and your family is under financial stress, the last thing you need is to be hit with higher taxes. So I'm working with members of both parties to pass a bill that will protect homeowners from having to pay taxes on cancelled mortgage debt."
─ President George W. Bush, 9/1/07


Today, President Bush signed the Mortgage Forgiveness Debt Relief Act of 2007, which will help Americans avoid foreclosure by protecting families from higher taxes when they refinance their home mortgages. This Act will create a three-year window for homeowners to refinance their mortgage and pay no taxes on any debt forgiveness that they receive. Under current law, if the value of your house declines, and your bank or lender forgives a portion of your mortgage, the tax code treats the amount forgiven as income that can be taxed.

This Act will increase the incentive for borrowers and lenders to work together to refinance loans and allow American families to secure lower mortgage payments without facing higher taxes.

This Act Is A Good Step To Address The Housing Market, But Congress Has More Work To Do

Congress needs to complete work on responsible legislation modernizing the Federal Housing Administration (FHA). This bill will give FHA the necessary flexibility to help hundreds of thousands of additional families qualify for prime-rate financing.

Congress needs to pass legislation permitting State and local governments to help troubled borrowers by issuing tax-exempt bonds for refinancing existing home loans. Under current law, cities and States can issue tax-exempt bonds to finance new mortgages for first-time homebuyers.

Congress needs to pass legislation to reform Government Sponsored Enterprises (GSEs) like Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae. GSEs provide liquidity to the mortgage market that benefits millions of homeowners, and it is vital that they operate safely and soundly. The President has called on Congress to pass legislation that strengthens independent regulation of the GSEs and ensures they focus on their important housing mission.

The Administration Has Moved Forward On Targeted Actions To Assist Homeowners That The President Announced In August

The President and his Administration have launched a new initiative at the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) called FHASecure. FHASecure expands the FHA's ability to offer refinancing by giving it the flexibility to work with homeowners who have good credit histories but cannot afford their current payments. By the end of 2008, the FHA expects this program to help more than 300,000 families refinance their homes.

Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and Housing and Urban Development Secretary Alphonso Jackson have assembled the private-sector HOPE NOW alliance. HOPE NOW recently mailed hundreds of thousands of letters to borrowers falling behind on their payments and is supporting a toll-free mortgage counseling hotline, 1-888-995-HOPE.

HOPE NOW has developed a plan under which up to 1.2 million homeowners could be eligible for assistance. The HOPE NOW plan will help subprime borrowers who can afford the current, starter rate on a subprime loan, but would not be able to make the higher payments once the interest rate goes up.

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Friday, December 14, 2007

A Glimmer of Hope for LV housing

Sales stats seen as indication bottom of slump is near
By HUBBLE SMITH
Dec. 12, 2007
Las Vegas Review-Journal

Nobody's ready to declare that the Las Vegas housing market has reached bottom, but some real estate experts are convinced the floor is at least being established.

The inventory of homes for sale receded slightly in November to 23,494, about 400 fewer than the previous month, and sales remained below 1,000 for the third consecutive month, the Greater Las Vegas Association of Realtors reported.

Inventory is up 19.1 percent from a year ago and sales are down 37.4 percent, but the hard numbers have leveled off over the past few months.

"It appears we have reached the bottom everyone is waiting for," Robin Camacho of American Realty & Investments said. "December is looking horrible, but it's December and it's always the worst month. November did finish flat. Pending sales were rising, then stalled. Now they are rising again, which means in 30 to 60 days, sales should be rising.

"Unfortunately, foreclosures and short sales are still rising. But listings are decreasing and pending sales are rising. These are the positive signs we've been watching for."
The number of condominiums and townhomes listed for sale fell 0.9 percent in November to 5,989.

Read Full Article

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

Overview of the Las Vegas Nevada Real Estate Market

Information updated November 28, 2007.



The thrust of economic development in Las Vegas, Nevada is greater than anywhere in the United States, and greater than anywhere on the planet earth. The gaming industry alone has spent 20 billion dollars over the last 14 years. This incredible economic growth, combined with available land, water and a political climate favorable to development has led a very strong market for both new and resale homes.



There is tremendous development activity on and around the strip. It is estimated that with the projects in place, 45,000 more hotel rooms will be added to the strip area by 2012. Deutsche Bank Securities estimates the casino industry will need to hire 113,500 workers for the positions being created. The projects underway include the 6 billion dollar project CityCenter, 1.8 billion dollar Palazzo and the 1.4 billon dollar Encore. In addition, Boyd Gaming is preparing the closed Stardust site for their Echelon Place, a 4 billon dollar project. Station Casinos has broken ground in February on their 600 million dollar hotel casino in North Las Vegas. Additional projects scheduled to open in the 2008-2009 period include Turnberry Associates Fontainebleau and the Trump International Hotel and Tower.



Downtown is also turning into a hot bed of development. Union Park, a 61 acre development just west of Fremont, is becoming a reality. The Lou Ruvo Brain Institute has broken ground and the Smith Center for the Performing Arts scheduled to break ground in 2008. The World Jewelry Center with 1 million sq. ft. is in the planning stages as well as a number of retail and residential projects. The World Market Center, just to the west of this is partly finished and in operation. The World Market center will have over 12 million sq. ft. of floor space when completed. Three new residential high-rise developments are under construction, Streamline Towers, Newport Lofts and Juhl. Soho Lofts is now completed. An number of upscale bars, shops and restaurants are moving into the area.



A recently released study of the local market, commissioned by the Southern Nevada Homebuilders Association and done by Applied Analysis, forecasts the following: "the largest wave of openings (strip area projects) in the regions history is set to begin....later this year. We estimate that this and other contributing factors will stimulate demand for 177,400 housing units between 2008 and 2012, a 13.3% increase over the demand reported during the preceding five-year period (ie., 2003 through 2007)." This 75 page study predicts that housing supply will peak late 2007/early 2008. They estimate that cutbacks in permitting activity combined with this increased demand could possibly create a housing shortage by late 2009.



by Millie Fine
Thanks to
Kristy Pentoney-Frias
Title One

Nevada Mortgage Crisis Rebound Predicted

December 04, 2007 - CARSON CITY, Nev. —

Nevada's economy should be so strong by 2009 that a housing shortage may be the big concern rather than the current mortgage crisis and heavy surplus of homes for sale, an economist told lawmakers.

While Nevada now has the highest home loan foreclosure rate in the nation, Jeremy Aguero of Las Vegas-based Applied Analysis told a legislative panel studying the state's mortgage problems that it's "a great fallacy" to have doubts about another economic boom in the state.

With some $36 billion in megaresort construction occurring in Las Vegas in the next few years, Aguero said Monday the people holding new jobs created by the building activity will buy up homes now available on the market and probably need more.

"You won't have enough housing stock for all the jobs in the near-term pipeline," Aguero said after the legislative hearing, adding, "How many markets can you point to with a $36 billion investment in their core industry alone that have long-term housing problems? Very, very few."

While a turnaround is on the horizon, Aguero and other economists and experts told the legislators that Nevada's problems related to foreclosures and overbuilding are likely to get worse during 2008.

Douglas Duncan, chief economist for the Mortgage Bankers Association, predicted that the problems with Nevada's foreclosure rate and other housing industry woes won't bottom out until late October in 2008.

Keith Schwer, director of the Center for Business and Economic Research at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, added that a drop in building permits should continue in 2008. But he said the upcoming resort expansion should cut deeply into the number of vacant housing units _ more than 27,000 _ now on the market.

Mendy Elliott, director of the state Business and Industry Department, recommended against a state "bailout fund" to help deal with subprime loans. Former state Sen. Joe Neal of North Las Vegas agreed, but said a freeze on subprime loan rates would help consumers.