The Stimulus Plan – How it impacts the Housing Market
Feb
20
Courtesy of Julian Hebron, a local mortgage banker (aka direct lender, which are handy guys to have on-call in this lending climate) and all around guy-in-the-know, here is an update on rates, and the direct impacts to the housing market from the newly signed ‘Stimulus Plan’.
STIMULUS SUMMARY—THE WHOLE BILLPresident Obama signed the $787 billion American Recovery & Reinvestment Act into law Tuesday, February 17. Funds will be allocated as follows, and consumers can track spending and time lines at http://www.recovery.gov/. The site is a pretty clever re-branding of the package that was branded as wasteful by a unified Republican minority in Congress. These categories aren’t fully defined on the site yet, and this doesn’t include a roughly $1 trillion bank rescue plan that’s forthcoming from Treasury. I cover the housing highlights in a separate section below.
Tax Relief: $288b. State and Local Fiscal Relief: $144b. Infrastructure and science: $111b. Protecting the Vulnerable: $81b. Health Care: $59b. Education and Training: $53b. Energy: $43b. Other: $8b.
STIMULUS SUMMARY—HOUSING PROVISIONS
Below are summaries of key housing provisions of the American Recovery & Reinvestment Act. Housing help that’s not in the Recovery Act explicitly but seems likely to fall in the “Protecting The Vulnerable” category** (unless it is part of the Treasury plan) is a $50b investment plan for borrowers who haven’t yet been late on mortgage payments but are struggling. This is great for individual homeowners and critical for housing overall to stop the foreclosure spiral and stabilize home prices—foreclosures are estimated to top two million this year.$729,750 Loan Limit Returns: FHA and Conforming loan limits we saw last year for high-cost areas have been restored. But please note that this change will take a few weeks for lenders to implement and price. Remember: the spreads between $417k-cap and $729k-cap loans were a lot wider than the current $417k vs $625k spreads. Note also that reverse mortgage limits have been increased from $417,000 to $625,500.First-time Home Buyer Tax Credit: The tax credit for first time home buyers was increased from $7500 to $8000 for homes purchased between January 1, 2009 and December 1, 2009. A tax credit is equivalent to money in your hand, whereas a tax deduction just reduces taxable income. The credit no longer needs to be paid back as long as you live in the home without selling it for 3 years. The $7500 version of the credit expired on July 1, 2009, and required home buyers to pay the funds back over a 15 year time frame. If you bought the home in 2008, the credit remains $7500, and it still needs to be paid back over a 15 year time frame beginning in 2011 when you file your 2010 returns. The credit phases out for couples making over $150k or singles making over $75k. The credit remains refundable. This means that first-time home buyers who owe less than $8000 in taxes for the year are still eligible for the full $8000 credit when they file their tax returns. In that case, the IRS will write you a check for the difference between $8,000 and your actual tax bill. The credit can be claimed on your 2008 tax returns that you file by April 15, 2009, even if you buy the home in 2009.Home Improvement Tax Credit: The tax credit for making energy efficient home improvements is now 30% of the cost of the improvements up to a maximum of $1500. Eligible improvements include energy efficient exterior doors and windows, insulation, heat pumps, furnaces, central air conditioners and water heaters. Generally, your home improvement contractor and/or the manufacturer selling the improvements issues a certification that clarifies whether the improvements meet the necessary standards for energy efficiency. Most modern windows, furnaces, and air conditioners meet these requirements.RATE UPDATEZero-points rates on conforming loans up to $417k and super-conforming loans up to $625,500 have improved to start this week as stocks have sold off and mortgage bonds have rallied—when bond prices rise in a rally, yields (or rates) drop. With the government participating in mortgage bond markets, lenders are pricing more conservatively than market levels might suggest because it’s harder than ever to predict which way markets will move. So we continue to see favorable terms on points: one point gets .625% to .875% lower in rate, so borrowers break even on a one-point buy down in 12-18 months. Jumbos 30yr fixed loans for SFR loans from $729k to $5m are looking good at 6.625%.
Julian Hebron works for RPM Mortgage and can be reached directly at Julian@rpm-mtg.com**Editors note – Washington Mutual/Chase has just set up a brand new department dedicated to recasting loans solely for borrowers who have not defaulted on their loans. I am told it is so new, many of the bank employees do not yet know of it. Being as I have many clients with Wamu loans, myself included, I’ll let you know if it works.




One small omission regarding the First-time Home Buyer Tax Credit: That credit is only up to 10% of the home’s purchase price. Not that that affects many people in the Bay Area, but I’m buying in a market (Northeastern Ohio) where it does.
Tom Geller at February 20th, 2009 at 6:27 pm ( )I was speaking with a Countrywide rep today and they said that only FHA loan limits were increased to $729k. Is that correct?
Anonymous at March 10th, 2009 at 1:24 am ( )This is from CAR (California Association of Realtors) site on the new laws put out this month.
What are the loan limits under the Recovery Act?
A The Recovery Act has increased the maximum conforming loan limit from $625,500 to $729,750 for FHA, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac loans. These higher loan limits are intended to ease the mortgage crisis of the late 2000s by helping homeowners and homebuyers get more affordable mortgage loans.
As background, the $729,750 loan limit was originally established in 2008, but dropped down to $625,500 on January 1, 2009. The new law reinstates the conforming loan limit to 125% of the 2008 local area median home price, not to exceed $729,750.
Meredith Martin at March 10th, 2009 at 5:43 am ( )