Home Sales Show Big Monthly Increase Due To Expiring Tax Credit

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ALAN ZIBEL and ALEX VEIGA | 10/23/09 11:57 PM | AP

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WASHINGTON — Racing to complete their purchases before a tax credit for first-time owners expires, homebuyers pushed sales up last month by the largest amount in more than 26 years.

After jumping 9.4 percent in September, home resales are up nearly 24 percent from the bottom in January, the National Association of Realtors said Friday. But the housing market's momentum could easily peter out if Congress doesn't extend the credit of up to $8,000 for first-time buyers beyond its current Nov. 30 deadline.

John Kindschi, a 33-year-old aircraft mechanic who lives north of Seattle, didn't want to miss out. After a yearlong search, he and his family bought a three-bedroom house for $206,000, completing the purchase last week.

"It was getting down to crunch time," he said. "We had no idea if the credit was going to be extended."

Nationwide sales rose to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.57 million last month, from a downwardly revised pace of 5.1 million in August. It was the strongest month in two years and beat economists' forecast of 5.35 million, according to Thomson Reuters. Sales, however, are still down 23 percent from their peak four years ago.

In another positive sign, the inventory of unsold homes on the market fell almost 8 percent to 3.6 million. That's less than an eight-month supply at the current sales pace, and the lowest level since March 2007.

The competition for low-priced foreclosures has become fierce in places like Las Vegas and Southern California. Aldo Martin, 28 of Covina, Calif., had to put offers on 16 houses before having one accepted this week.

"We'd go look at eight houses and if we liked five of them, make offers," said Martin, a sales supervisor. "Your odds are better. We got aggressive."

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Marty Rodriguez, owner of a Century 21 real estate brokerage east of Los Angeles, said half of her transactions last month were low-priced foreclosures and short sales, where the sales price is lower than the mortgage balance.

"You have so many buyers in that lower price range," she said. "Sometimes my agents are writing five offers for one buyer on different properties just trying to get one property – and not getting accepted. It's a little crazy."

Still, economists caution that the pain from the worst housing bust since the Great Depression probably isn't over yet.

While home sales and housing construction have risen steadily after hitting bottom earlier this year, most economists believe that prices, which recently stabilized, will resume their descent. The median sales price last month was $174,900, down almost 9 percent from $191,200 a year earlier, and slightly lower than August's median of $177,300.

The main reasons prices are weak: Unemployment and foreclosures are still rising. With the current 9.8 percent jobless rate expected to rise as high as 10.5 percent next year, foreclosures will continue to set records.

Nationwide, more than 3 million households are either three months behind on their payments or in foreclosure, according to First American CoreLogic, a research firm.

Many delinquent borrowers are still being evaluated for help under the Obama administration's mortgage assistance plan. If they don't qualify, the odds are high they will lose their homes.

Fears about job losses are stifling some sales, said David Hudson, an agent with Exit Realty Platinum outside Atlanta.

"Buyers are still nervous," he said. "They're worried about buying a house, and then all of a sudden, I might not have a job."

A steady job as an operating room nurse is one reason Hope Carson, 41, is able to buy a home. She's planning to make an offer next week on a foreclosed property outside Atlanta and is hoping the deal will close in time for her to qualify for the tax credit.

After searching for about a month in a price range of about $140,000, she has narrowed her choices to two homes, both in foreclosure.

"Is there a little bit of guilt behind that? Absolutely," she said. "You know that somebody was forced to move out."

To entice more buyers like Carson, Senators Johnny Isakson, R-Ga., and Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., want to extend the tax credit through June 30, and expand it to include all home buyers, at an estimated cost of $16.7 billion.

Realtors and homebuilders are loudly in favor, arguing that the tax credit is crucial to get the housing market back on its feet.

"We are not there in terms of removing the consumer fear factor," said Lawrence Yun, the Realtors' chief economist.

However, some analysts say the tax credit may not be as critical to the housing market as real estate agents suggest. The Realtors association has "an incentive to talk up the effects of the credit as it is urging Congress to extend it, and it therefore may be exaggerating the credit's effects," wrote Nomura Securities economist Zach Pandl.

One potential roadblock to an extension also emerged this week.

There are concerns that some of the 1.5 million applications for the tax credit are fraudulent. The Treasury Department's inspector general for taxes questioned the legitimacy of some 100,000 claims for the credit, potentially including some illegal immigrants and 580 people under 18.

___

Alex Veiga reported from Los Angeles.

WASHINGTON — Racing to complete their purchases before a tax credit for first-time owners expires, homebuyers pushed sales up last month by the largest amount in more than 26 years. After jumpi...
WASHINGTON — Racing to complete their purchases before a tax credit for first-time owners expires, homebuyers pushed sales up last month by the largest amount in more than 26 years. After jumpi...
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If the government pays people to buy house they will buy them. If the government pays people to buy cars they will buy them. When the government stops paying the people will stop buying. Central planning was the fatal weakness of the old Soviet Union.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:34 AM on 10/25/2009

i absolutely do not believe that the housing market is picking up. these numbers are skewed and they are lying. the banks are not lending and if anyone believes that they are fooling themselves.

anyone who buys a house right now is loco. your jobs are in jeopardy. be careful. i would not purchase until the market starts to recover.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:41 AM on 10/24/2009
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NAR is working tirelessly to continue &/or expand the tax credit ... thus the numbers which are an attempt to support their position.

I think the tax credit should be allowed to expire & let the market do what it will naturally. We have been artificially supporting the real estate market and the stock market for too long. It's time to stop propping these industries up & see what happens. And it's not going to be pretty. But, we may have to stop putting good (and that's a very loose term here) money against bad & let the market forces prove what I fear, all of the increases at Wall St. are aritificial and those bonuses that we're all talking about will be proven to be less like a bonus and more like theft.

Risky, I know, but it may be time.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:43 AM on 10/24/2009
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Tell that to my husband and the rest of his co-workers who rely on consumers buying homes to support their families. Tell me, where does your support come from? It must not depend on what the economy is doing. I've watched my husband's employer go from having over 1,000 employees to barely having 200 employees, and everyday the ones that managed to hang on have to compete for their spots. I guess your not into helping your fellow man, which is what our country is all about.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:18 PM on 10/26/2009
- AngusC I'm a Fan of AngusC 16 fans permalink
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If this credit goes away the market will tank even worse.
I have been looking at buying a different home, preferably a foreclosure because they are so cheap now and in the last month, they are all selling very quickly which I attribute to the credit expiring soon.
However, if the credit ends, I predict those sales will come to a screeching halt.

Personally I am hoping they extend the credit, raise it to $15,000 and make it available for all buyers and I will definitely buy a new home.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:38 AM on 10/24/2009
- FogBelter I'm a Fan of FogBelter 265 fans permalink

"Existing Home Sales fell 5.4% last month, despite the nonsense you have read elsewhere.

NAR continues to bullshit America with their garbage data and spin, month after month, with few people calling them on it. Well, I’ve had it up to here with their garbage:.

Big Rebound in Existing-Home Sales Shows First-Time Buyer Momentum

Existing-home sales bounced back strongly in September with first-time buyers driving much of the activity, marking five gains in the past six months, according to the National Association of Realtors

No, home sales did not rebound — that was purely the result of SEASONAL ADJUSTMENTS."

http://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2009/10/existing-home-sales-fall-in-september-09/

Let's remember where we are here, shall we? Millions of mortgage resets are coming up next year followed by millions of foreclosures if the Obama Administration and Congress don't get serious about addressing the housing nightmare. They need to reduce principal and keep people in the houses. The people lose their homes, the property values drop, more neighboring homeowner's mortgages are underwater, more stress on the Banks, more stress on the Credit Market, more backdoor cash infusions from the Fed to the Banks ... but NAR wants you to get into a house while things look rosy and before the property loses 10-20% more of its value.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:05 AM on 10/24/2009
- olephart I'm a Fan of olephart 104 fans permalink

“rose to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.57 million last month, from a downwardly revised pace of 5.1 million in August”

Note the term “seasonally adjusted”. This means the numbers quoted are not the actual figures but are adjusted for the normal seasonal variations. The actual non-seasonally adjusted numbers show a decline of 5.2% from August to September.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:53 PM on 10/23/2009
- olephart I'm a Fan of olephart 104 fans permalink

Band aids and morphine for cancer treatment. The economy and the middle class are dying after 30 years of Reaganomics and we’re offered a subsidy to keep up the appearance of prosperity. The figures show that only 15% of the subsidies were the deciding factor in the home purchase. That cost taxpayers $42,000 per increased unit sale. Further, the FHA was going back to the bad old days of writing mortgages with little or no down considering the tax subsidy. This only sets up people who are marginal buyers to fail and be foreclosed on down the road.

The numbers are being distorted. Look as any calendar year and track home sales. They bottom in January, peak in the summer and drift down in the Fall. Of course home sale are umpteen % higher in September than in January, they are every year. The telling statistic is home prices, they kept falling.

Now there is talk of an expanded subsidy Bill. This one, written by a former Real Estate Broker, would increase the payment to $15,000 and make it available to everyone earning up to $300,000 per year. The estimates on costs to the taxpayer run from $150,000 to $292,000 per increased unit sale.

It would be fairer to all Americans to just give everyone a debit card good for $15,000 and let each of us decide what we want to spend it on.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:10 PM on 10/23/2009

On one hand that sounds good . . . on the other the tax credit has wasted about $500 million dollars with fraud because the Government couldn't police it and even a 4-year old was given the $8,000.

Do we believe that reinflating the housing bubble is the smart move on this one?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:05 PM on 10/23/2009

The American economic quagmire begins and ends with mainstream American employment. Problem solution quick fixes are temporary solutions that grow into enormous, future societal problems, ECONOMIC ENTRAPMENT! Specialized credit card and mortgage solution quick fixes for mainstream American income inadequacies point to many decades of illogical private and public sectors employment policies.

America's economic engine is not firing on all cylinders, and we install suspension components to correct engine ignition problems. Clever economic gimmicks invariably explode into future disasters that leave mainstream America in worse economic condition, ECONOMIC ENTRAPMENT! Successful, future American economic problem solving will address the source of mainstream America's economic problems, EMPLOYMENT AND EMPLOYMENT INCOME STREAM!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:07 PM on 10/23/2009

The America's economic quagmire begins and ends with mainstream American employment. Problem solution quick fixes are temporary solutions that grow into enormous, future societal problems, ECONOMIC ENTRAPMENT! Specialized credit card and mortgage solution quick fixes for mainstream American income inadequacies point to many decades of illogical private and public sectors employment policies.

America's economic engine is not firing on all cylinders, and we install suspension components to correct engine ignition problems. Clever economic gimmicks invariably explode into future disasters that leave mainstream America in worse economic condition, ECONOMIC ENTRAPMENT! Successful, future American economic problem solving will address the source of mainstream America's economic problems, EMPLOYMENT AND EMPLOYMENT INCOME STREAM!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:03 PM on 10/23/2009
- Rmath I'm a Fan of Rmath 57 fans permalink
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If the tax credit is foolishly allowed to expire, housing will go into the dumpster.

Look at the numbers of sales that wouldn't have happened without this credit. The housing market is still way too weak to function on its own, without some degree of help.

The credit has created liquidity in housing where there was none. Without it, the backlog of unsold home inventory nationwide will grow out of control like a tumor.

By the way, lenders and real estate agents don't apply for the credit on behalf of their clients. That is the buyer's responsibility after the sale is closed. It has nothing to do with "lenders and real estate agents doing their jobs".

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:00 PM on 10/23/2009
- vindrag I'm a Fan of vindrag 5 fans permalink

So economic stimulus does work if you give the money directly to the people (instead of give it to Goldman Sachs). What a concept. Imagine how much better we would be doing, how many jobs would be created if we have given the $700 billion to the taxpayers in the form of tax rebates. Mortgages would be paid off, new cars and other consumer products would be bought, etc., etc. Sounds like progress to me.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:52 PM on 10/23/2009

Tax incentives and investment credits I believe work much better to stimulate the economy than direct rebates.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:46 AM on 10/24/2009
- janehenry I'm a Fan of janehenry 90 fans permalink

Since the current tax credit is due to expire soon we'll see what impact it had on the housing market soon.

As far as the tax credits going to kids or illegals, how could that happen if the lenders and real estate agents are doing their jobs?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:17 PM on 10/23/2009
- tbirdalum I'm a Fan of tbirdalum 22 fans permalink
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And the IRS as well. I believe they dropped the ball too.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:07 PM on 10/23/2009
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What will happen after tax credits...will housing sales go down? I hope the new home owners don't lost their jobs...they could find themselves out on the street.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:46 PM on 10/23/2009

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