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Tax credit extension will depend on the fate of unemployment extension

Another tax credit extension to keep the moribund U.S. housing market from getting even worse was being considered by Congress. The deadline for real estate closings to be able to qualify for a federal home buyer tax credit worth up to $ 8,000 is 11:59 p.m. Wednesday. The House voted to extend the tax credit closing deadline to Sept. 30 for buyers who met the April 30 deadline to have a signed contract. But within the Senate the measure is part of a larger bill that also would extend unemployment insurance. If the tax credit extension is not approved, thousands of potential home buyers could be left within the lurch.

180,000 deals affected by tax credit extension

Stakes are high for the real estate industry as Congress fiddles with the tax credit extension. To be eligible, home buyers needed to have a contract in place by April 30. At first, the closing date was June 30. But it was reported by MarketWatch the National Association of Realtors estimated about 180,000 buyers could kiss $ 8,000 goodbye if the original tax credit closing deadline is upheld. A big problem for buyers has been getting the mortgage approval on time as mortgage lenders work through thousands of applications.

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When the contract signing deadline expired April 30, the last-minute home-buying rush overwhelmed the companies responsible for handling the sales, including mortgage lenders, appraisers, title insurers and real-estate brokers. The Wall Street Journal reports that the bottleneck has especially affected short sales, where a lender allows a home to sell for less than the amount owed. Unlike normal sales, where only two parties negotiate the price, short sales, resulting from the epidemic of foreclosures, are more time-consuming because they require all note-holders to agree on price. Realtors say the short sale bottleneck is even putting normal sales at risk.

Critical is the unemployment extension

Nearly 3 million taxpayers successfully claimed the home buyer tax credit through Might 22 — totaling more than $ 21 billion — as outlined by the Treasury Department. It was reported by the Associated Press that Senate Democrats have combined the tax credit extension with an unemployment extension for laid-off workers whose benefits are being phased out to the tune of more than 200,000 a week. Democrats are trying for weeks to pass the unemployment extension as part of a larger tax and spending package, but the bill died in the Senate last week. Republicans opposing the measure want to pay for the unemployment extension with money that has yet to be spent from last year’s massive economic recovery package.

Extension won’t help U.S. housing market

The tax credit extension seems like it might help homebuyers waiting to close their deals, but it can have little to no effect on a U.S. housing market that seems to be withering on the vine. The home buyer tax credit was the catalyst that boosted existing home sales in April by 23 percent from just one year before. New home sales increased 47.8 percent. But when the homebuyer tax credit expired at the end of April, home sales in Might fell to the lowest levels since the Commerce Department began tracking home sales statistics in 1963.

Discover more about this topic here:

Marketwatch.com
marketwatch.com/story/new-deadline-for-home-buyer-credit-nears-approval-2010-06-30?reflink=MW_news_stmp
Wall Street Journal
online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703627704575298610215024500.html?mod=WSJ_latestheadlines
Associated Press
google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5hLKyB9H7lUpiALFVlU7RRJa9-EfwD9GLKOT80

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