Friday, July 30, 2010

Top 6 Reasons to Buy Your First Home Today...
1. Affordability. Based on recent property declines and current interest rates, home affordability has not been higher since it was first tracked over 40 years ago. Your grandparents couldn't have received a better interest rate than you can today.
2. Tax Breaks. The IRS allows you to deduct the interest you pay on your mortgage, your property taxes and, in many cases for those who qualify, some of the costs to buy your home and mortgage insurance. Owning a home is a great way to lower your tax bill.
3. Build Wealth. Unlike paying rent, with each mortgage payment you make, you build equity and you decrease your income tax liability. Owning a home is still the best long-term investment.
4. Appreciation. As home prices have fallen precipitously in today's tough economy, the basis for realizing appreciation in future years is very strong. Historically, even with other periods of declining value, home prices have exceeded consumer inflation. From 1972 through 2005, home prices increased on average 6.5%, according to the National Association of Realtors®.
5. Stability. Knowing you can establish roots and raise a family in one location, free of the desires or needs of your landlord to sell the property you are living in. This is something no other investment provides. You can't live in a stock, and you can't raise your kids in a bond.
6. Independence. Enjoy the freedom to do what you want to your home. After all, it's yours to do what you wish. And, with any improvements you make, you have the ability to benefit from your investment. Try that with an apartment!

Thursday, July 29, 2010

How to End the Recession in a Week...
by John Adams, for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution
At the risk of offending my good friend Don Ratajczak, I am going to put on my economist hat and offer to solve our economic problems in one seven day period. News from the housing front is simply depressing, and the recovery, such as it was, seems stalled. Washington obviously needs new ideas, so here goes:
All agree that the real estate industry represents a huge sector of the economy, and when somebody buys a new house, it employs hundreds of people all over the USA. But people who are worried don’t buy houses, and a large segment of the workforce is either unemployed or worried.
Real estate led us into this recession, and it will have to be real
estate that leads us out. That’s the way it has worked for the past seven recessions in a row, so what do we need to do?
* On Monday, declare a national moratorium on all residential
foreclosures unless the lender has engaged in meaningful attempts at modification and has employed every reasonable strategy to keep the borrower in the house. Also, grant "safe harbor" status to servicers who grant modifications in good faith. That step alone will keep millions in their homes.
* On Tuesday, modify the Garn-St Germain Act to invalidate “due on sale” clauses used by federally chartered lenders to prevent buyers from taking over payments. This would allow thousands of owners to sell to buyers who are able to make the payments, but unable to meet new more stringent underwriting criteria. Lenders should still be able to require reasonable credit and income standards, but assumption should be quick and easy, and at no cost.
* On Wednesday, change the tax code to incentivize real estate investors. Eliminate all income taxes on profits derived on the sale of any home purchased as a bank-owned foreclosure, then renovated and resold within 12 months to an owner-occupant. This would cause bank-owned homes to become much more attractive to private investors, who would rush to buy them as soon as they became available. They would then renovate them with private money rather than looking for a government handout. And it would help stabilize neighborhoods by eliminating vacant houses and substituting owner-occupants.
* On Thursday, declare a six month “federal tax holiday” and simply stand back and watch the economy move into high gear. It is a fact that tax cuts create jobs, and that’s what the real estate market needs more than anything else.
* On Friday, take the day off, but notice that the stock market has recovered and every home in America has jumped in value by ten percent. Everyone will feel more confident, unemployment will decline, and the recession will officially be over.