Archive for the Category ◊ Housing Market ◊

11 Mar 2010

02 Apr 2010 First Quarter Update of the New Decade
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April Real Estate Update



Mortgage Rates Inch Up

      In Freddie Mac’s results of its Primary Mortgage Market Survey the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 4.99 percent for the week ending March 25, 2010 – up from the previous week when it averaged 4.96 percent. Last year at this time, the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 4.85 percent.

    “Mortgage rates inched up slightly this week as bond yields rose even further,” said Frank Nothaft, Freddie Mac vice president and chief.

Mortgage Rates

Source: Realty Times



U.S. averages as of March 25, 2010:

30 yr. fixed:   4.99%
15 yr. fixed:   4.34%
1 yr. adj:        4.20%


economist. ”Interest rates on 30-year fixed mortgages, however, were still below 5 percent for the fourth consecutive week.”

The Extended Home
Buyer Tax Credit


    You’ve decided to purchase a home and take advantage of the Extended Home Buyer Tax Credit. Here’s what you have to do to get your benefit:
Close on your home purchase between November 7, 2009 and April 30, 2010, or have a binding written contract in place by April 30, 2010 with a closing date no later than June 30, 2010.
Decide whether to:  apply the credit to your 2009 tax return, filed on or before April 15, 2010;  file an amended 2009 return; or,  apply the credit on your 2010 return, filed on or before April 15, 2011.
Homeowners filing for the home buyer tax credit are not allowed to use electronic filing and must file hard copies due to special documentation requirements.

Mortgage Rates Inch Up

      In Freddie Mac\\\’s results of its Primary Mortgage Market Survey the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 4.99 percent for the week ending March 25, 2010 – up from the previous week when it averaged 4.96 percent. Last year at this time, the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 4.85 percent.

    \\\”Mortgage rates inched up slightly this week as bond yields rose even further,\\\” said Frank Nothaft, Freddie Mac vice president and chief.

Real Estate Outlook:
Steady Growth Expected

    Harsh weather conditions held back home sales in February — leading to some renewed gloominess by Wall Street analysts.
     But several new economic reports, including on employment, suggest that during the coming several months we’re likely to see steady but unspectacular national economic growth, and some pretty good housing rebound numbers.
     Even the February home sales numbers were nowhere near as negative as you might expect under the circumstances.
     Existing home sales were down slightly for the month – by six tenths of a percent – but were still clicking along at more than 5 million on an annualized basis.
     New home sales were harder hit – down by 2.2 percent for the month. But median prices on new homes sold for the month jumped by six percent over January and were up five percent year over year, according to the Commerce Department.
     A new study by economists at the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp (or FDIC) also provides a positive take on where we’re headed.
     The United States housing market, according to the FDIC, is showing “tangible signs of improvement”.
     Affordability – which is obviously a crucial factor in whether households can buy or not – is at “historic high levels,” says the report.



Equal Housing
Opportunity
Bonnie Fagoh
813-390-7606
bonniefagoh@gmail.com
http://www.TampaCoastalHomes.com
Century 21 Beggins Enterprises
813-658-1344
6542 U. S. Hwy. 41 N.
Apollo Beach, FL 33572

Bonnie Fagoh is a 40 year resident of Tampa Bay. Bonnie is married to Mark Fagoh and together Mark and Bonnie have 3 lovely children. Bonnie is the owner of www.TampaCoastalHomes.com and is a local Apollo Beach #1 Expert for Century 21 Beggins. During the most challenging years ever recorded 2008 and 2009 Bonnie Fagoh earned the coveted “Masters” awards she can be reached at 813 390-7606

01 Mar 2010 Do Not Loose your Homebuyer Tax Credit
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  Under the new and expanded home buyer tax credit rule , the credit is worth up to $8,000 for first-time home buyers and up to $6,500 for qualifying existing home buyers, in both cases, who buy a primary residence or have one built. The tax credit is refundable. A credit that is larger than the taxes owed is returned to the taxpayer in the form of a refund.   The home can cost no more than $800,000 and qualifying income is limited to a maximum of $125,000 for single taxpayers and $225,000 for joint taxpayers.

Get the full scoop online from the IRS\’ \”First-Time Homebuyer Credit\” page online.
      All taxpayers (first time and move up buyers) seeking a credit or refund, must use the new IRS Form 5405 \”First-Time Homebuyer Credit and Repayment of the Credit\” (Taxpayers must pay back the credit if they sell the home within three years). The instructions, which teach taxpayers what documents are required, are available on IRS FORM i5405. In addition to Form 5405, also include at least one of the following documents:               
 A copy of the HUD-1, Settlement Statement, showing all parties\’ names and signatures, property address, sales price, and date of purchase.
 For mobile home buyers who don\’t get a settlement statement, a copy of the executed retail sales contract showing all parties\’ names and signatures, property address, purchase price and date of purchase.
 For new home buyers who don\’t get a settlement statement, a copy of the certificate of occupancy showing the owner’s name, property address and date of the certificate.

      Homeowners filing for the home buyer tax credit are not allowed to use electronic filing and must file hard copies due to special documentation requirements.   Earlier this year, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) deployed new home buyer tax credit forms and instructions requiring forms that will force taxpayers to file on paper, rather than electronically.     The new home buyer tax credit filing rules are to ward off a repeat of 90,000 taxpayers who fraudulently claimed the credit, according to the U.S. Treasury.

      Existing home owners applying for the $6,500 maximum tax credit must additionally prove they lived in their old home for the required period.
      To do so, options are:
 File IRS Form 1098, “Mortgage Interest Statement.” IRS Form i1098 offers the instructions.
 Also, supply mortgage interest statements or property tax records or homeowner’s insurance records.
      Again, because some of the documents required are not standard tax forms, taxpayers seeking the credit cannot file electronically.
      They can, however, use off-the-shelf tax software or the IRS Free File online software to prepare returns, but they must still print out the return and mail it in with the required documents.
      In addition to accuracy and compliance, the only other way to speed up any refund is to request, with the return, that the home buyer tax credit refund be deposited directly into a bank account.

28 Feb 2010 Mortgage Bankers Association’s new Concept to Help HomeOwners??
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MBA proposes forbearance program

The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) says it has developed a concept for a new forbearance program that would allow qualified borrowers who had lost their jobs to remain in their homes while they seek new employment.  According to the proposed program, loan servicers would reduce the borrower’s mortgage payment to an affordable amount for up to nine months while the homeowner looked for employment.  “The vast majority of new distressed borrowers we are seeing involve the loss of income,” said John A. Courson, MBA’s President and CEO.  “This program is designed to buy those borrowers time to find a new job, after which they could hopefully qualify for a loan modification.” Loan servicers who participate in this program would reduce monthly payments to an affordable level based on household income, and borrowers would be initially evaluated for the forbearance program using a model that assumes the borrower will be reemployed within nine months of losing his or her job at 75 percent of the borrower’s previous salary.  The borrower would be reevaluated as to employment and income status every three months for a total forbearance of nine months.   Once reemployed, the borrower would be evaluated for a modification under the Obama Administration’s Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP). “Recent statistics show that the average unemployed U.S. worker stays unemployed for between six and seven months,” added Courson.  “That is a long time for a borrower with a dramatic drop in income to stay current on their mortgage.  Further, borrowers with such a precipitous drop in income can’t qualify for most loan modification programs, so we are looking for ways to allow those borrowers to keep their homes while they look for another job.”

Tax credit lures nearly half of all first-time buyers

According to a survey conducted by Harris Interactive on behalf of Zillow.com, 18% of prospective first-time homebuyers said extending the credit from Dec. 1, 2009 to Nov. 30, 2010 would be the “primary influence” in their decision to purchase a home.  An additional 25% said it would be a “significant influence,” 27% said it would have “some influence,” and 31% said it would have “no influence.”  Zillow projects 1.86m homebuyers stand to take advantage of the program if it is extended, and if all potential buyers took the full tax credit, extending the program could cost $14.86bn.  Zillow.com chief economist Stan Humphries said of all homebuyers expected under the 12-month extension through 2010, only one in five homebuyers will enter the market specifically because of the extended tax credit.  In other words, 334,000 mortgages will open because of the tax credit extension.  “While 334,000 may seem like a small number relative to the total number of homebuyers who would claim the credit, their addition to the market next year could make the difference between a robust annual increase in home sales next year and a flat or negative change in home sales relative to this year,” Humphries said.

Mortgage rates to rise?

The Fed has been buying mortgage-backed securities since late 2008. But next month it plans to finish its purchase of $1.25 trillion in mortgages, and that could be bad news. There is wide agreement that the removal of this support will mean higher mortgage rates, which could hit housing prices and sales hard. Some even worry that it could cause the broader economic recovery to stall.  The program was the largest single injection of cash into the economy by the Fed during the financial crisis, and it will be the longest-lasting source of funds as well. Even though the Fed intends to stop buying mortgages, few people expect that the central bank will start selling them to private investors any time in the next few years.  even if the Fed holds onto the mortgages it has already purchased, the act of no longer buying additional mortgages is likely to raise mortgage rates in the coming weeks.

Experts say a jump of at least a quarter to a half percentage point is likely.  San Francisco Federal Reserve President Janet Yellen warned of higher rates in a speech Monday.  Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke is likely to take questions about the Fed’s mortgage program when he testifies about economic conditions on Capitol Hill Wednesday and Thursday.  The worries about the Fed pulling back support for housing are compounded by the end of up to $8,000 in tax credits for home buyers. To qualify, buyers face an April 30 deadline to sign a sales contract.  Dean Baker, co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, argues that the Fed’s program and tax credit for home buyers “ended the free fall in home prices.”  But he thinks that the removal of this support could mean that home prices could start to drop by as much as 1% a month again. He also thinks mortgage rates could climb by as much as a percentage point in the coming months.

Jobs bill passes

The Senate voted Monday to push forward a $15 billion jobs creation bill that would give businesses a tax break for hiring the unemployed. The 4-prong bill will:  Exempt employers from Social Security payroll taxes on new hires who were unemployed; Fund highway and transit programs through 2010; Extend a tax break for business that spend money on capital investments like equipment purchases; and Expand the use of the Build America Bonds program, which helps states and municipalities fund capital construction projects.  The final legislation is a scaled-down version of an $85 billion bipartisan draft bill that was crafted by Sens. Max Baucus, D-Mont., and Charles Grassley, R-Iowa.  However, the bill does not extend the deadline to apply for unemployment benefits and the COBRA health insurance subsidy. Some 1.2 million people will run out of benefits after Feb. 28 if the deadline is not extended. Lawmakers are looking to pass a separate, 15-day extension to give them time to enact a longer fix.  And unlike the House’s bill, the Senate measure does not provide additional assistance for states. Many governors, who are holding their annual meeting in Washington, want the Obama administration to send more federal dollars their way so they can cope with yawning budget gaps.  Labor leaders and left-leaning think tanks all say the Senate must do more to spur job creation – as if the Senate can fabricate jobs out of thin air somehow.

House prices up for the month, down for the year

S&P/Case-Shiller composite index of house prices in 20 metropolitan areas rose 1.6 percent in July from June — more than triple the estimate of a 0.5 percent rise found in a recent Reuters poll.  The monthly price increases helped the annual rates, with the yearly pace of declines in home prices slowing to a 12.8% drop in the 10-city index and 13.3% downturn in the 20-city index.  “These figures continue to support an indication of stabilization in national real estate values, but we do need to be cautious in coming months to assess whether the housing market will weather the expiration of the Federal First-Time Buyer’s Tax Credit in November, anticipated higher unemployment rates and a possible increase in foreclosures,” said David Blitzer, chairman of the index committee at S&P.  Despite the overall improvement, annual rates for all metro areas and the two composites remain in negative territory, with 14 of the 20 metro areas and both composites in double digits, S&P said.

Tax credit lures nearly half of all first-time buyers

According to a survey conducted by Harris Interactive on behalf of Zillow.com, 18% of prospective first-time homebuyers said extending the credit from Dec. 1, 2009 to Nov. 30, 2010 would be the “primary influence” in their decision to purchase a home.  An additional 25% said it would be a “significant influence,” 27% said it would have “some influence,” and 31% said it would have “no influence.”  Zillow projects 1.86m homebuyers stand to take advantage of the program if it is extended, and if all potential buyers took the full tax credit, extending the program could cost $14.86bn.  Zillow.com chief economist Stan Humphries said of all homebuyers expected under the 12-month extension through 2010, only one in five homebuyers will enter the market specifically because of the extended tax credit.  In other words, 334,000 mortgages will open because of the tax credit extension.  “While 334,000 may seem like a small number relative to the total number of homebuyers who would claim the credit, their addition to the market next year could make the difference between a robust annual increase in home sales next year and a flat or negative change in home sales relative to this year,” Humphries said.

Tampa Coastal
Tampa Coastal Homes

31 Jul 2009 Tampa Bay Waterfront Real Estate Update

Early, Early August 2009 Follow Up!!

You heard it hear on June 6 roughly 2 months ago about the housing market now here is more of the proof and actual physical results:

USA todayscan0001

As you can see from these late July results some markets are actually experiencing price increases.
At Bella Sol Luxury Villas on Tampa Bay we have gone to contract on 4 units in the last 60 days. Upscale savvy buyers are scooping up the most choice villas in fact I only have one Penthouse left!!

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07 Jun 2009 This just in: Washington and Bloomberg Report Home Sales Up 6.7%

WELCOME TO NEW TAMPA!
JUST OUT – Tuesday June 3 on fast Money CNBC from Washington….pending home sales increase 6.7% in April month-to-month. That is the 3rd straight month of rises in the pending homes sales index. Buyers are responding to favorable market conditions such as: 1) Increased affordability, 2) The first time home buyer tax credit and 3) Low, low mortgage rates.
This is backed up by Bloomberg’s News Article dated May 27 which stated the following:
Home resales in the US rose for the second time in 3 months in April as foreclosure auctions and cheaper prices spurred bargain hunters, supporting the case for an end to the industry’s slump this year. “The housing market is beginning to stabilize,” Fed Chairman Ben S Bernanke said in congressional testimony on May 5. “We continue to expect economic activity to bottom out, then turn up later this year.”

Locally, a pick up in sales has helped trim the glut of unsold homes, with the most desirable homes being the first to sell. This decrease in inventory leaves the buyers who are waiting for “the bottom” (who knows when that will be, but it’s close) finding that the less-than-desirable properties remain. Compound that with the risk of mortgage rates increasing and you have even more reason to BUY NOW. For first time homebuyers, the $8,000 tax credit applies to purchases completed before Dec 1, 2009. Short sales (a large part of our current market) can take 90 to 120 days or more to close, so first time homebuyers need to BUY NOW. Multiple bids are now common on foreclosure sales and even short sales, so you may have to make several offers before getting a contract, so BUY NOW to get the best deal on a great home!
New Tampa currently has 548 active listings, with 394 sales from Jan-May. At this rate there is only a 7 month supply of inventory!
Search all Tampa Bay properties at www.TampaCoastalHomes.com or better yet,
call me for your FREE boat tour! Call (813) 390-7606

Thanks,
Bonnie

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