Extend The Home Buyers Tax Credit
The
tax credit has been a significant boost to sales. NAR reports that
sales have jump to 5.1 million from about 4.5 million annualized home
sold in the past few months prior to the stimulus.
The
tax credit has been a significant boost to sales. NAR reports that
sales have jump to 5.1 million from about 4.5 million annualized home
sold in the past few months prior to the stimulus. New home sales are
also up from mid 300,000 to 400,000.
The median existing home
price as of August was down 12.5% compared to nearly 20% fall early in
the year. Unfortunately the housing stimulus package is set to expire.
*A settlement, and not the contract signing to buy, must occur by the
end of November.
Consider that it was Bernanke that said one of
the causes of the great depression was stimulus and Government supports
being pulled too soon. We still have too big problems first bginning to
show. First the Option ARMs. These are mortgages taken during boom
times and designed to allow people to pay interest only or principal
only monthly payments. These mortgages will reset to market rates
between now and 2012. They can double the monthly payment and more
foreclosures are expected to come from this area, expected to be at
least as large as the sub prime market that imploded. Second, many
shopping centers and high rise office space is also being recast
between now and 2012. Same problem, evaporated equity made worse by
declining rental income. When we loss jobs companys either shrink
expenses or simply go out of business.
Realtytrac reports that
foreclosure filings totaled nearly 938,000 in the third quarter, up 23%
from the year-earlier quarter and up 5% from the second quarter. 1 in
every 136 U.S. housing units received a foreclosure filing during the
quarter. California accounted for more than a quarter of the country's
foreclosure filings in the quarter, up 19% from the year-earlier
quarter. Some commercial indexes are off 50% and the banks are not
really in a position to refinance these properties.
Extend the Home Buyers Tax Credit It Worked
NAR thinks the cost is about $10 billion if it was extended trough the middle of next year.
This would coincide with the expected recovery of housing prices and
help put a solid floor under that projection. 10 Billion isnt much when
you think about the amount of money thrown at the banks and insurance
companies. NAR rightfully points out that this doesnt include the job
growth or taxes collected from rising sales spurring more economic
activity.
NAR expects that the total picture is a revenue
positive income source for the federal and local governments. I dont
argue the need for the TARP to float the financial system, but I would
like to see a little come our way too.