Thursday, July 25, 2013

House bill would extend tax break on forgiven mortgage debt


WASHINGTON — A bill offered Tuesday in the House would extend a tax break for homeowners who obtain adjustments on troubled mortgages or complete short sales for their homes.
The measure by Rep. Joe Heck, R-Nev., would continue through 2015 a law that waives taxes on mortgage debt that is forgiven through various forms of loan assistance.
The tax break, which was created in 2007, otherwise expires at the end of this year. Under previous law, the Internal Revenue Service regarded the money saved through loan forgiveness as income and taxed it.
“Struggling homeowners who are underwater cannot afford to be taxed on money they never actually receive,” Heck said “Many of these distressed homeowners are going through refinancing and short sale proceedings because they can no longer afford to stay in their homes.
“This additional tax on shadow income would only prolong their suffering and make it all the more difficult for the Nevada economy and housing market to fully recover,” Heck said.
A similar bill has been introduced in the Senate by Sens. Dean Heller, R-Nev., and Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich.
Gov. Brian Sandoval this week urged Congress to pass the legislation, as Nevada this fall will begin its “Home Means Nevada” program that will offer homeowners a chance to reduce the principal on troubled mortgage loans.
Extending the federal tax break “will ensure those Nevadans are not penalized for their participation in the program,” Sandoval said.
“It simply does not make sense to tax Nevadans for income they never earned, especially when they are already struggling with overwhelming mortgages,” the governor said.
Contact Stephens Washington Bureau Chief Steve Tetreault atstetreault@stephensmedia.com or 202-783-1760. Follow him on Twitter @STetreaultDC.

Thursday, July 11, 2013

Foreclosure starts reach lowest level since 2005


For the first six months of 2013, RealtyTrac reported a total of 801,359 U.S. properties with foreclosure filings, which include default notices, schedules auctions and bank repossessions. This is down 19% from the previous six months and a 23% drop from the first half of 2012. 
The RealtyTrac report also revealed that 0.61% of all U.S. housing units — one in 164 — had at least one foreclosure filing in the first six months of the year.
In June, a total of 127,790 U.S. properties had foreclosure filings, down 14% from the previous month and a 35% decline from one-year prior. This marks the lowest monthly level since December 2006. 
What's more, foreclosure starts in June fell 21% from the month before and were down 45% from a year ago, falling to the lowest monthly level since December 2005. 
Year-to-date, 409,491 foreclosure starts have been filed throughout the country, on pace to reach more than 800,000, which would be down from 1.1 million foreclosure starts in 2012. 
"Halfway through 2013 it is becoming increasingly evident that while foreclosures are no longer a problem nationally they continue to be a thorn in the side of several state and local markets, particularly where a backlog of delayed distress has built up thanks to a lengthy foreclosure process," said Daren Blomquist, vice president at RealtyTrac. 
In June, foreclosure starts dropped from the month before in 38 states, with the biggest declines being Nevada and Colorado, down 84% and 62%, respectively.
REOs in June dropped 9% from the previous month and were down 35% from one-year prior. In the first six months of 2013, a total of 248,538 bank repossessions have occurred nationwide. This is on pace for nearly 500,000 for the year, which would be down from more than 671,000 in 2012. 
In June, REOs fell from one-year prior in 34 states, but there were some notable exceptions, where bank repossessions actually increased from a year ago. The biggest exceptions were Arkansas and Oklahoma, up 143% and 103%, respectively.
Judicial foreclosure auctions increased less than 1% from May, with 28,296 judicial foreclosure auctions scheduled in June. However, this was up 34% from June 2012. New Jersey and Florida were the most notable increases, up 103% and 100% annually.
Blomquist added, "The increases in judicial foreclosure auctions demonstrate that these delayed foreclosure cases are now being moved more quickly through to foreclosure completion. Given the rising home prices in most of these markets, it is an opportune time for lenders to dispose of these distressed properties, either at the foreclosure auction to a third-party buyer, or by repossessing the property at the auction and subsequently selling it as a bank-owned home."
Florida, Nevada, Illinois, Ohio and Georgia posted the top five state foreclosure rates for the first half of the year, while five Florida cities posted the top five metro foreclosure rates: Miami, Orlando, Jacksonville, Ocala and Tampa.

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Las Vegas, Amanda Brown real estate prices going up, 702-496-7416


Median single-family home price in Las Vegas continues to rise

Statistics being released today by the Greater Las Vegas Association of Realtors show existing home prices continuing to rise as the supply of houses available for sale also increased. 
The median price of an existing single-family house sold in Southern Nevada during June was $175,000, up 2.9 percent from $170,000 in May and up 32.8 percent from $131,785 one year ago.
In a statement, Realtors Board President Dave Tina said the median existing local home price “is still a long way from our peak” of $315,000 in June 2006.
The median price of local condominiums and townhomes sold in June was $86,000, down 3.4 percent from $89,000 in May but up 24.6 percent from $69,000 one year ago.
In June, 31 percent of all existing local home sales were short sales, down from 31.8 percent in May. An additional 9 percent of all June sales were bank-owned properties, down from 10.3 percent of all sales in May. The remaining 60 percent of all sales were the traditional type, which was up from 57.9 percent in May.
The total number of properties listed for sale on GLVAR’s Multiple Listing Service generally decreased in June, with 13,750 single-family houses listed for sale at the end of the month.
That’s down 0.5 percent from 13,814 single-family houses listed for sale at the end of May and down 18.8 percent from last year.
The Realtors group reported a total of 3,448 condos and townhomes listed for sale on its MLS in June, up 1.8 percent from 3,386 listed in May but down 7.1 percent from one year ago.
The group reported more available houses listed for sale without any sort of pending or contingent offer. By the end of June, it reported 3,828 single-family houses listed without any offer. That’s up 16.1 percent from 3,297 such houses listed in May and up 3.7 percent from one year ago.
For condos and townhomes, the 1,464 properties listed without offers in June represented a 14.6 percent increase from 1,277 such properties in May and a 35.2 percent increase from one year ago.
The group reported that in June, 55.3 percent of all existing local houses sold were purchased with cash. That’s down from 57.9 percent in May and down from the peak of 59.5 percent set in February. 
It reported that the median price of bank-owned single-family houses sold in June was $163,750, up from $154,900 in May.
The median price of single-family houses sold as part of a short sale in June was $145,600, up from $140,100 in May.
GLVAR statistics include activity through the end of June.
The Realtors group distributes the statistics each month based on data collected through its MLS, which does not necessarily account for newly constructed homes sold by local builders or for sale by owners.

Friday, July 5, 2013

Anyone else hear housing bubble inflating?


State and federal policies that were supposed to support home ownership have backfired and become anti-homeowner. The policies have locked out future Las Vegas homeowners.
AB 284, enacted in 2011, had good intentions, but the results have been disastrous for the Las Vegas real estate market. Most bank servicers have not been able to file notices of default since October of 2011. This has created an artificial shortage that is unprecedented.
There are now 380 bank-owned homes available on the market, 466 short sales on the market and 2,290 traditional sales. These traditional sales are mostly flips and investors unloading near the peak. Fifty-nine percent of mortgages are still underwater in Southern Nevada.
What’s so astonishing about those figures is there is no real shortage. There are 50,000 vacant homes in the valley and average owner-occupants have slim to no chance of winning their offers.
After the passage of AB 284, many homeowners realized they could live for free for long periods. Thousands of homeowners are on years three and four without making a mortgage payment. Lender Processing Services reported a few months ago that the average person who stopped paying has been in his home more than 24 months.
The banks were slow to foreclose before AB 284. Now, it has come to a virtual standstill. The mortgage bankers association report showed that more than 74,000 homeowners were 30 days late or more. According to a recent report from the Federal Reserve out of Atlanta, laws that delay the foreclosure process actually decrease successful loan modifications and short sales because “Homeowners find it more lucrative to live for free for years than participate in a program.” This is why the short sale figures have begun to fall and strategic defaults are increasing.
It’s quite obvious the state law has artificially reduced the supply. Now we can add something else to the mix: Major hedge funds have swept into Las Vegas with cash to buy as many homes priced below $250,000 as possible and rent them out, stomping on any owner-occupant offer in their path. Traditional residential real-estate had no interest from Wall Street, but because of the extremely low interest rates engineered by the Federal Reserve, investors are starving for a return on their money. The cash flow from rentals are filling a void that the low-interest environment has created.
The ironic part of this policy is the Fed pushed down rates intending to promote home ownership by allowing homeowners affordable mortgages. Instead the policy has fueled the major hedge funds to purchase homes with cash above current market value. Then the funds will rent the home to the same people who were trying to buy the home. The result is renters pay twice what their mortgage payment would be if they had access to inventory.
There is no hurry to fix this problem anytime soon.
The flip side of the coin? Las Vegas is enjoying a miniboom again. Having close to 80,000 homeowners not paying their mortgages has given a big boost to our local economy. Approximately 80,000 x $1,200 (average rent or mortgage) = $100 million a month going into our economy. This money ordinarily would not be disposable income. That’s $1.2 billion a year being pumped into our economy, and that is far more efficient than any government stimulus. It goes directly to retail, new cars, restaurants, etc. No red tape in the way.
Ninety days after AB 284 became law, retail sales were up 13 percent, even with a slightly smaller job base than 90 days previous. That shows the boost in spending from locals that stopped paying. Builders’ sales doubled six months after AB 284 and values have shot up, a la 2005.
It’s not rocket science to predict what will happen next. We will see another 20 percent appreciation in prices over the next nine months. AB 284 will be amended, the national settlement servicers will have sold most of their loans to new servicers who don’t have to follow the same guidelines. Vacant homes and delinquent loans will be converted to available inventory in the second half of 2014. The second bubble pop in less than a decade will begin.
And what of those hedge funds that are buying up homes with cheap money? Well, with tens of thousands of homes being converted to rentals, rents will drop, making the rent-to-price ratio fall. Housing yield will become far less attractive. The funds will find the homes are not generating the cash flow they had told their investors they would. The next step will be to sell off quickly and cash in on the higher price and 40 percent capital appreciation. Nobody wants to be holding the last bag when the sell button is hit.
If that all sounds familiar, it should. The mortgage-backed securities exaggerated the borrowers’ income during the first bubble. This time the rents on the homes are being exaggerated. Just as there was a fire sale on the mortgage-backed securities to get top dollar before they dropped, so it will be with the homes. In fact, most funds are predicting to sell in 18 to 45 months.
Nevada has an opportunity to capitalize on the great California Exodus. This is a once-in-a-generation event. Companies are fleeing California to Arizona and Texas. This is happening now. Nevada has taken itself out of the selection process. The lack of available housing is a top factor in corporations relocating, and we finish last in that category.
The first step in this process is to open the closed housing market. Release the 50,000-plus vacant homes now. Make housing available to the average American again. Allow Nevada to diversify, and unleash the state’s pent-up economic capacity before it’s too late.
This valuable information is brought to you by Amanda Brown, Platinum Real Estate Professionals, 702-496-7416. 


Tuesday, July 2, 2013