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  <title>Rich's Real Estate</title>
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  <updated>2009-11-06T08:00:46.2179046-07:00</updated>
  <author>
    <name>rtemen 9/6/09</name>
  </author>
  <subtitle>North Scottsdale and North Phoenix Real Estate</subtitle>
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  <generator uri="http://dasblog.info/" version="2.1.8102.813">DasBlog</generator>
  <entry>
    <title>The 'new'   Home Buyer Tax Credit</title>
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    <published>2009-11-06T08:00:46.2179046-07:00</published>
    <updated>2009-11-06T08:00:46.2179046-07:00</updated>
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The much anticipated home buyer tax credit looks to be on its way! The Senate passed
it 98 to 0 and now it has passed the House. The next step is for President Obama to
sign it and then it will be in place. Current rules are: 
</p>
        <ul>
          <li>
Buyer to sign purchase agreement by April 30, 2010</li>
          <li>
Purchase to close by June 30, 1020</li>
          <li>
Max purchase price to be $800,000</li>
          <li>
Vacation Homes not eligible</li>
          <li>
Income limit for single taxpayer is $125,000</li>
          <li>
Income limit for joint taxpayers is $225,000</li>
          <li>
Move Up Buyers will need to have owned a home for 5 years</li>
        </ul>
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  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>More signs of a housing revival</title>
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    <published>2009-09-17T08:46:18.3941806-07:00</published>
    <updated>2009-09-17T08:46:18.3941806-07:00</updated>
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Government report shows better-than-expected increase in starts last month. NEW YORK
(CNNMoney.com) -- New home building increased in August, a government report said
Thursday, further signaling that home builders are regaining their confidence in the
housing market recovery. The Census Bureau reported Thursday that builders broke ground
for 598,000 new homes during August, up 1.5% from a revised 589,000 in July. That
was considerably higher than industry experts were predicting: The consensus analyst
forecast compiled by Briefing.com was for 583,000 new starts. Building permits rose
2.7% to 579,000 from a revised 564,000 in July. On Wednesday, the National Association
of Home Builders reported their index of homebuilder confidence had risen a point
to 19, its highest level since May 2008. Helping to boost demand for new homes has
been the first-time homebuyer tax credit, which has enabled many builders to reduce
their inventories of unsold homes. "Many builders have not only reduced excess inventory,
but now are actually reporting such low inventory that they need to start more homes
to replace those they've just sold," said Brad Hunter, chief economist for Metrostudy,
a real estate analytics firm. Both starts and permits are still well off from their
levels of a year ago. The number of starts is down 29.6% from 849,000 last August,
and permits dropped 32.4% from 857,000 last year. The housing starts report was the
latest in a series of releases that indicate that the market may have bottomed. These
include improvement in new home sales, existing home sales and housing prices. There
are some clouds on the horizon. Foreclosures continue to trouble many markets; another
76,000 homes were repossessed by banks in August. That was actually an improvement
over recent months, but the expectation is that the rate of foreclosures will begin
rising again. That's because a great number of non-conventional mortgage loans, including
interest-only mortgages and option ARMS, will reset over the next year or so, yielding
substantial increases in the monthly mortgage payments for homeowners. Many people
will not be able to afford the increases. With interest-only loans, homeowners pay
just the interest for a fixed number of months, usually 60, before they have to start
paying off the mortgage at fully amortizing rates. There was an explosion of these
mortgages issued in 2005, so many will reset in 2010. Option ARMs are loans in which
borrowers are permitted to make minimum payments every month, payments that are less
than their monthly interest charges. Many borrowers use that option for as long as
they can, but once the mortgage balance reaches between 110% and 125% of the original
loan balance, the loans reset into a fully amortizing mortgage -- and payments rise
steeply since the balances themselves have also gone up. Real estate analysts predict
a spike in these resetting loans, which might force another wave of homeowners into
foreclosure. The fear is that all these foreclosed homes will flood the market and
drive down prices even more for existing homes, making it harder for new-home builders
to compete. First Published: September 17, 2009: 8:54 AM ET 
</p>
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  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>Pending Home Sales On A Record Roll</title>
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    <published>2009-09-06T17:17:28.279-07:00</published>
    <updated>2009-09-06T17:27:28.450853-07:00</updated>
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        <h2>Pending Home Sales on a Record Roll
</h2>
Contract activity for pending home sales has risen for six straight months, a pattern
not seen in the history of the index since it began in 2001, according to the National
Association of REALTORS®. The Pending Home Sales Index, a forward-looking indicator
based on contracts signed in July, increased 3.2 percent to 97.6 from a reading of
94.6 in June. It is 12 percent higher than July 2008 when it was 87.1. The index is
at the highest level since June 2007, when it was 100.7. 
<h2>Affordability at Record High
</h2>
Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist, says the housing market momentum has clearly turned
for the better. “The recovery is broad-based across many parts of the country. Housing
affordability has been at record highs this year with the added stimulus of a first-time
buyer tax credit,” he says. “Other buyers are taking advantage of low home values
before prices turn higher," Yun says. "Nationally, the typical mortgage payment now
takes less than 25 percent of a middle-income family’s monthly income to buy a median
priced home, with payment percentages so far in 2009 being the lowest on record dating
back to 1970. As long as home buyers stay within their budget, mortgage payments will
be very manageable." 
<h2>First-Time Buyers
</h2>
NAR estimates that about 1.8 to 2 million first-time buyers will take advantage of
the $8,000 tax credit this year, with approximately 350,000 additional sales that
would not have taken place without the credit. Buyers have little time to act because
they must complete the transaction by Nov. 30 to qualify for the credit. Unless extended,
contracts signed but not completed by that date will not be eligible – it is taking
approximately two months to complete home sales in the current market. 
<h2>By Region
</h2>
Northeast: The Pending Home Sales Index declined 3 percent to 78.8 in July but is
4.7 percent higher than July 2008. Midwest: The index slipped 2 percent to 88.1 but
is 8.1 percent above a year ago. South: Pending home sales activity rose 3.1 percent
to an index of 103.8 in July and is 12 percent above July 2008. West: The index jumped
12.1 percent to 112.5 and is 20 percent above a year ago. 
<h2>"Keep the Momentum Going"
</h2>
NAR President Charles McMillan says Congress needs to keep the momentum going. “Even
with a good recovery taking place, the market is not yet back to normal. With a gradual
absorption of inventory, we are on the cusp of a general stabilization in home prices,”
he says. “To ensure that housing has a broad stimulus to the overall economy and stays
on sound footing, we’re encouraging Congress to extend the tax credit into 2010, and
to expand it to all buyers of primary residences. The faster we stabilize home prices,
the fewer families will face foreclosure and the quicker credit can be extended to
other sectors of the economy.” NAR’s Housing Affordability Index stood at 158.5 in
July, below the peak set in April but is still 36 percentage points higher than a
year ago. The HAI is a broad measure of housing affordability using consistent values
and assumptions over time, which examines the relationship between home prices, mortgage
interest rates, and family income. Yun expects existing-home sales to rise through
the fourth quarter. “Unless the tax credit is extended, no one should be surprised
to see home sales drop in the first quarter of next year,” he says. “However, the
fundamentals of the housing market and the economy are trending up, and we expect
home sales to generally pick up in the second quarter of 2010. The buyer psychology
may be shifting from, ‘Why buy now when I can purchase later?’ to ‘I don’t want to
miss out on a recovery.’” Source: NAR 
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