Saturday, February 28, 2009

DO-IT-YOURSELF PROJECTS

Some great Do-It-Yourself projects featured on the NBC Today Show




If you have any questions regarding purchasing property in the greater Charleston area, or selling your property, please feel free to call or e-mail, 843-224-5398 or Owen@OwenTyler.com.

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Tax Breaks for Real Estate Investors


Stimulus bill contains tax breaks for real estate investors

Thursday, 19 February 2009


By James T. Hammond SCBIZ Daily Staff


GREENVILLE -- Real estate investors and business owners can reap tax advantages by speeding up new investments and purchases into the current tax year.


Foremost among the new laws, says Mark Cooter, head of the real estate group at Elliott Davis LLC, are reinstated bonus depreciation rules. Set to expire Dec. 31, 2008, the bonus depreciation rules have been extended for one year, to now end Dec. 31, 2009.


The provision allows business and individuals a 50% bonus over standard IRS depreciation allowances, to encourage people to purchase fixed assets, Cooter said.


The tax benefit is large enough that it “will definitely change some behavior,” Cooter said.


Other tax provisions in the new stimulus bill include:


• Extended increases in IRS Code, Section 179, for claiming small business expenses. Up to $250,000 can be claimed on certain fixed assets placed in service during 2009.

• Increased net operating loss carry-back provisions. NOL losses in 2008 can be carried back five tax years, to 2003, and tax refunds for those years could be made possible under the provision. Previously, carry-backs were only allowed for two years.

• Cancellation of indebtedness. If a bank forgives a portion of a debt, such as a mortgage loan, a taxpayer must report the amount of debt cancelled as income. The new provision allows that new income to be spread over five years, until 2014, for tax purposes.

• New markets tax credits. The provision aim to promote capital spending in certain areas, such as poor urban areas. “It’s a very complex provision and few people will take advantage of it,” Cooter said.

• New home buyer’s tax credit. The new law allows a first-time homebuyer an $8,000 tax credit for the purchase of a new home.


Cooter predicted the tax credit for first-time homebuyers will not change many people’s behavior. If they had the money to buy a house, they’ll do it anyway. If they did not have the money to buy a house, it’s not enough money to help them qualify, he said.
Published Feb. 19, 2009

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Charleston, a Great Place to Be

One of the Top 25 Housing Markets, by Forbes.com (2009)

"Best Performing City: Where America's Jobs are Created" by Milliken Institute (2008)


"50 Best Places to Live: The Next Great Adventure Towns" by National Geographic Adventure (2008)


Ranked 6th among mid-size metros in Inc.com's "Top US Cities for Business" (2008)


One of the nation's "Top Arts Destinations" by American Style (2008)
If you have any questions regarding purchasing property in the greater Charleston area, please feel free to call or e-mail, 843-224-5398 or Owen@OwenTyler.com.

Monday, February 16, 2009

First Time Homebuyer Stimulus


The new stimulus package provides first time homebuyers with an $8,000 tax credit that would be available for the purchase of a principal residence on or after January 1, 2009 and before December 1, 2009.

The credit does not require repayment. Most of the mechanics of the credit will be the same as under the 2008 rules: the credit will be claimed on a tax return to reduce the purchaser's income tax liability. If any credit amount remains unused, then the unused amount will be refunded as a check to the purchaser.

If you have any questions regarding the new stimulus package or want to explore purchasing your first home, please feel free to call or e-mail, 843-224-5398 or Owen@OwenTyler.com.

Thursday, February 12, 2009

ABC News 4 Report from Wednesday

Home Sales Down, But Interest In Buying Homes Booms in Lowcountry



Charleston, SC - Home sales in the Lowcountry are still down, but sellers are getting more knocks on their doors.

Kimberly Beasley has a new routine.

“I wake up every morning and make sure the house is just in perfect condition,” Beasley explained. 4 Interact:
Click Here to Comment on this Story

Beasley's West Ashley house is for sale during a time many homes are just not selling.

In Charleston County, 193 homes sold in January, down from 236 in December.

“A little bit of worry and just wondering what the time line would be, how long it would take to sell,” Beasley said.

But in the last three weeks the home has been on the market and Beasley has mastered the home tour.

“We had three showings in one day,” Beasley said.

The number of interested buyers is on the rise around the tri-county. In January, there were more than 18,000 showings, nearly double the number from December.

With so many houses on the market, some real estate agents say they are surprised so many people are interested in looking for their next home.

“With everything that’s going on with the global economy, we just really weren’t too sure with what to expect,” President and C.E.O. of Carolina One Realty Patty Scarfile said.

There's a reason for the peak Scarfile said.

“What buyers are looking for are the homes that are particularly well priced or competitively priced,” Scarfile said.

People are starting to think about taking advantage of the lower prices, making home sellers get creative, she added.

“We have our home on viewthishome.com. It’s kind of a YouTube for real estate. We shot our own video of the house and uploaded it up to the website,” Beasley said.

Anything she can do to get a potential buyer's foot in the door.

There are currently almost 10,000 homes listed for sale with the Charleston Trident Multiple Listing Service.

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Fannie Mae Guideline Changes on the Way

Hopefully the new Fannie Mae changes will bring investors back to the real estate market.
Many investors have been stopped in their tracks with current Fannie Mae requirements that do not allow a purchaser of investment/income producing properties to have more than 4 financed properties.

Multiple Mortgages to the Same Borrower and Reserve Requirements Changes
Fannie Mae has issued Announcement 09-02, Updates to Multiple Mortgages to the Same Borrower Policy, Reserve Requirements, Reserves Definition, and Form 3170.
Multiple Mortgages to the Same Borrower
To help support housing recovery, we are introducing an expanded policy regarding multiple mortgages to the same borrower. Fannie Mae is committed to providing financing opportunities for high-credit quality, bona fide investors. Experienced investors play a key role in the housing recovery and Fannie Mae’s continued support for investor borrowers is consistent with our mission to provide stability, liquidity, and affordability to the nation’s housing system.

To support prudent lending for housing investment, Fannie Mae is changing our current limit of four financed properties per borrower when the mortgage being delivered to Fannie Mae is secured by an investment property or second home. We will allow five to ten financed properties per borrower, with certain eligibility and underwriting requirements, including a 720 minimum credit score and 70–75% maximum LTV/CLTV/HCLTV (depending on the transaction and property type). The requirements apply to any investment property or second home loan being delivered to Fannie Mae, regardless of whether Fannie Mae is the investor on the borrower’s other mortgages.

Second home and investment property loans to borrowers with five to ten financed properties will be accepted for whole loan purchase or delivery into MBS with purchase dates on or after March 1, 2009, and new Special Feature Code 150 will be required at delivery.

Desktop Underwriter® (DU®) will be updated in the DU Version 7.1 April Update release to issue a message on all second home and investment property transactions reminding lenders of the requirements for borrowers with multiple financed properties. A Supplement to the Release Notes for the April update has been issued to provide details (link below).

Reserves Definition and Policy Requirements

We also are updating our definition of liquid financial reserves to include all components of the monthly housing expense – which will now be known as PITIA – including homeowners’ association dues, special assessments, ground rents, and subordinate financing payments.

For loans on second homes and borrowers with multiple financed properties, we are implementing new reserve requirements (refer to Announcement 09-02 for details).

Assignment of Rents

Investment property borrowers are required to execute a Multistate 1–4 Family Rider (Assignment of Rents) (Form 3170, or 3170.53 for Puerto Rico) to authorize transfer of rental revenues to the lender. We are reiterating this existing requirement, and have updated the Summary documents for the Riders to delete the requirement for rent loss insurance.

If you have any questions regarding the Fannie Mae change or want to explore purchasing an investment property or second home, please feel free to call or e-mail, 843-224-5398 or Owen@OwenTyler.com.

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

As Affordability Increases, Potential Buyers Show Interest

BUYER INTEREST ON THE RISE, DESPITE WEAK SALES IN JANUARY

CHARLESTON, SC—(February 10, 2009) Sales and median home values slipped in the month of
January, though potential buyer activity increased significantly. According to data from Centralized Showing Service (CSS), residential showings were up 74% over last month, with 18,112 showings for the month.

A total of 372 homes sold in the tri-county area during the month of January, with a median price of $176,750. The most active price range was the $120-180,000 bracket, with 127 sales at that level. Charleston County posted the highest sales, with 193 closed transactions and a median sale price of $235,000.

Berkeley County closed the month with 96 sales and a median sale price of $172,000. Dorchester
County shows a median price of $151,500 based on 69 closed transactions.
Downtown Charleston residential properties continued to show the promise of a rebound, posting the second consecutive month of gain, with a median price of $465,000. James Island and West Ashley also saw median price increases from December, up 19% and 8%, respectively.

There are 9,903 homes currently listed for sale with the Charleston Trident Multiple Listing Service.

With approximately 3,800 members, CTAR’s mission is to promote the highest standards of professionalism, ethics, education and technology, and to ensure that its members are the primary source for real estate services in the South Carolina Low Country. Only those who are members of the Association of REALTORS ® and its parent organizations are called REALTORS®.

If you have questions regarding real estate in the Lowcountry, please feel free to call or e-mail.

Monday, February 9, 2009

Senate's Homebuyer Tax Credit


Bloomberg.com posted a great comparison on the Homebuyer tax credit that passed the Senate.

Senate’s Tax Credit Favors Higher-Income Homebuyers (Update1)
By Ryan J. Donmoyer

Feb. 7 (Bloomberg) -- The U.S. Senate is working to boost home purchases among six-figure-income households, turning away from Bush administration policies that helped fuel a property bubble.

By replacing a $7,500 tax credit for first-time homebuyers earning less than $150,000 with a $15,000 break for all income groups as part of the economic stimulus package, senators are encouraging purchases by higher-income households with a reduced risk of default.

A sponsor of the measure, Republican Senator Johnny Isakson of Georgia, said the credit is aimed at helping restart the stalled housing market. It would do so without the “far too loosey-goosey” underwriting standards of recent years that spurred an explosion of defaults by unqualified borrowers, he said.

“By doing it the way we did, people making $120,000 are more likely to be motivated to buy a house,” Isakson said.

Unlike the current law, the $35.5 billion provision wouldn’t be restricted to first-time homebuyers. It also would end homebuyers’ ability to claim the full credit if it exceeds the amount they owe in taxes.

The effect would be to wipe out the $15,000 of income tax a family of four earning about $122,000 would otherwise owe this year if they bought a house. A family earning half that amount would get about $2,300 less in tax benefits for buying a home than they would under current law.

Stimulus Package

The Senate credit, approved Feb. 4, is included in a broader $780 billion stimulus package the chamber may vote on Feb. 10. The provision faces an uncertain future because it would have to win support in the House of Representatives to be included in the final economic stimulus plan. If enacted by Congress, it would take effect the day President Barack Obama signed it into law. Obama, 47, said this week in an interview with Fox News that tax cuts for people who buy homes or businesses “has some potential and I’m willing to take a look at it.”

Some lending experts said it isn’t clear whether the tax credit would jumpstart the housing market, especially while the broader economy is still in recession.

Concerns on Economy

“There are stronger forces at work here,” including fears about the economy, fears that housing prices remain too high, and expectations that Congress may still subsidize mortgage rates, said Ricardo Kleinbaum, a credit analyst at BNP Paribas in New York. “If you can’t afford a house today, it’s not going to make much of a difference.”

The credit, which is worth the lesser of $15,000 or 10 percent of a house purchase price, was added to the stimulus bill along with a break to spur car purchases. That provision gives a credit to people who have bought a new car since Nov. 12, 2008, or buy one before Dec. 31, and also gives the biggest savings to higher-income earners.

The Senate-passed credit for homebuyers, unlike the existing $7,500 credit, isn’t refundable, which means house purchasers who owe less than $15,000 in federal income tax won’t get the full benefit in a single year.

Instead, the Senate provision would allow homeowners to split the $15,000 into two separate tax credits of $7,500 to be taken in successive years. To pay $7,500 in federal taxes, a family of four would have to earn about $92,125, according to Internal Revenue Service tax tables.

No Refund

Lower-income people whose taxes over two years don’t total $15,000 won’t get the full benefit and in many cases would get a better deal under current law, which requires the government to send a check for the difference between taxes paid and the $7,500 credit.

Under existing law, the $7,500 has to be repaid. The Senate bill wouldn’t require the $15,000 credit to be repaid. In its version of the economic stimulus bill, the House agreed only to waive the repayment requirements, though it left the refundable credit at $7,500 and preserved income limits for eligible users.

Roberton Williams, a senior fellow at the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center in Washington, said the new housing credit would stabilize housing prices, though he questioned whether such intervention is necessary.
“This is saying we’re going to put a floor underneath how far housing prices are going to fall,” Williams said. “It may well induce a lot of people to buy houses who otherwise might not have,” he said.

‘Awful Lot of Money’

At the same time, Williams said, the measure may not have a big effect because a large number of people would still buy a house even without the benefit. “If they’ve really given it to everybody then its spending an awful lot of money on activities that will already happen,” he said.

Stephen Fuller, a housing economist at George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia, said the credit is similar to a $5,000 break enacted in 1975 for buyers of newly constructed, never-occupied homes that reduced backlogged housing inventories to the point where demand for new construction was stimulated.
“The logjam right now is in the trade-up market,” Fuller said. “There’s a lot of pent-up demand. They’re ready and able once they get the go-ahead signal; this may be that kind of signal.”
Dean Baker, co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington, said the risk is the tax credit will act as an incentive for people who don’t need one, because the Senate measure favors higher-income earners.

“It’s close to the craziest thing I could think of,” Baker said. “The vast majority of users will just be people shuffling houses.”

‘Game the System’

In some cases, he said, people will try to “game the system” and engage in sham sales with trusted relatives or business partners to claim the credit, although tax lawyers said anti-abuse rules in the tax code may limit such fraud.

The breaks for car purchases, championed by Maryland Democratic Senator Barbara Mikulski, are limited to families that earn less than $250,000 that spend less than $49,500 on a new car. A 6 percent sales tax on a $25,000 minivan would be $1,500; deducting that would save a family between $150 and $495 in federal taxes, depending on their income-tax bracket. Tax savings from interest deductions also would vary depending on tax brackets.

“The deduction for the automobile purchases is going to be more valuable for middle-income and higher-income people,” said Robert Carroll, vice president for economic policy at the Tax Foundation, a Washington research group.

Carroll questioned the wisdom of both breaks, saying they would artificially prop up failing industries while encouraging overleveraged taxpayers to borrow more.

“Propping up a failing industry is certainly outside the scope of stimulus,” he said. “Households who are overleveraged and businesses that are overleveraged are much more susceptible to financial distress. You’d think Congress would know better.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Ryan Donmoyer in Washington at rdonmoyer@bloomberg.net;

Last Updated: February 7, 2009 13:04 EST

Friday, February 6, 2009

Charleston REALTORS® Launch Smart Growth Site


The Charleston Trident Association of REALTORS® has launched a new Web site designed to engage Lowcountry residents in discussions related to smart growth and community development.

PreserveOurLowcountry.com will engage the public to get involved in the decision-making process related to how the Lowcountry can grow, maintain and preserve its sense of identity while still being an attractive place for newcomers.


If you have any questions or would like to discuss the possibility of having me represent you on the sale of your home or the purchase of a home, you can contact me directly at 843-224-5398 Owen Tyler Realtor® Carolina One Real Estate.

Sunday, February 1, 2009

Help for Renters in Foreclosed Properties


On January 13th, Fannie Mae announced the establishment of a new National Real Estate Owned (REO) Rental Policy that will allow qualified renters in Fannie Mae-owned foreclosed properties to stay in their homes. Currently, Fannie Mae has an eviction suspension in place through the end of January, which will allow for the new policy to be fully operational prior to that program concluding.

The new policy applies to renters occupying foreclosed properties at the time Fannie Mae acquires the property. Renters occupying any type of single-family property will be eligible including residents of two- to four-unit properties, condos, co-ops, single-family detached homes and manufactured housing. Eligible renters will be offered a new month-to-month lease with Fannie Mae or financial assistance for their transition to new housing should they choose to vacate the property. The properties must meet state laws and local code requirements for a rental property.