New York state will offer first-time homebuyers a new tax credit worth one-fifth of their yearly mortgage interest costs, building on the U.S. government’s program to spur the housing market, Governor David Paterson said on Monday.

The state’s mortgage agency, which helps low- and moderate-income individuals buy homes, will run the new Mortgage Credit Certificate program. The tax credit will only be offered to people who qualify under the agency’s income and purchase price limits, the Democratic governor said in a statement. People who get their mortgage from the state agency will not qualify.

 The federal $8,000 tax credit for people who are buying their first home expires on November 30.
New York’s metropolitan housing market has held up better during the downturn than others around the nation.
The New York index is still more than 73 percent higher when compared to January 2000, according to Standard & Poor’s/S&P Case-Shiller Home Price indices for May, although it has fallen nearly 20 percent from the June 2006 peak.
New York is the first state to offer this kind of tax credit, a Paterson spokesman said, though other states offer extra help to home buyers. For example, California in March began offering a $10,000 credit for new home purchases.
A New York homeowner paying 5.5 percent interest on a $150,000 mortgage would pay about $8,200 in interest in the first year, according to Paterson’s estimates. The new state tax credit would be worth $1,640, he said.
The remaining 80 percent of the mortgage interest will still qualify as an itemized tax deduction on federal returns.
New York will use about $80 million of its private activity bond program to pay for $20 million of the certificates.
The Internal Revenue Service sets limits on how much tax-free debt states can sell for private activities.

 http://www.reuters.com/article/GCA-Housing/idUSTRE5794HT20090810

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ROYAL Bank of Scotland has promised customers six months grace if they struggle to meet mortgage repayments.

 The NatWest owner said it wanted to “lift the pressure” on homeowners. A spokesman said: “We want to reassure customers.”
The Government last week urged lenders to grant a minimum three months breathing space.
RBS sold a near 60 per cent stake in the business to the Government last Friday - in exchange for a £20billion bailout.

www.thesun.co.uk

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THIS is the £11million luxury home lost by a former banker and tycoon in what is believed to be the biggest ever repossession in Britain.

Robert Bonnier, 38, splashed out £3million more than the property’s asking price last year.

 He and wife Irene had planned to redevelop the home in West London’s exclusive Holland Park with a huge extension, an indoor swimming pool and cinema.

But the credit crunch has wiped 20 per cent off its value.

Bonnier - who made and lost a £150million fortune on a dotcom enterprise before going into banking - has racked up debts said to be around £15million.

His agent said: “You only have to look to see what’s happened to him to understand why the house has been repossessed.”

The Council of Mortgage Lenders said it had never heard of repossession of such an expensive property.

www.thesun.co.uk

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THOUSANDS more Brits than usual face home repossession this year as the credit crunch costs jobs.

One of them is IT consultant James Cousins, 41, from Sittingbourne, Kent, who lost his job with Lloyds TSB eight months ago.

As James, married to Bev, 48, struggled over the next few months to find work to pay his bills, his mortgage lender began the process of claiming back his three-bed house.

Here, CAROLINE IGGULDEN brings you his diary of the fight for his home…

February 1 2008: Negotiate a fixed-rate mortgage for two years at 5.99 per cent with Mortgage Express, owned by Bradford & Bingley.

Payments on the £190,000 loan will be £956 a month plus £100 to repay arrears from November 2007, when I was jobless for a month.

March 1: Start a new contract as an IT consultant with Lloyds TSB, on £40,000 a year.

September 1: Contract with Lloyds TSB ends but I have another job to go to.

September 5: New position withdrawn due to downturn. Gutted.

September 8: Phone Mortgage Express to explain I have lost my job. Pay £800 on mortgage.

October 1: Receive a standard letter from Mortgage Express highlighting my arrears, which means £30 monthly admin fee.

October 27: Start a new IT job.

December 1: Lose job after just five weeks. Can’t believe it.

December 2: Tell lender about losing my job but manage mortgage payment of £956.

April 3: Mortgage Express call to say the next stage of repossession will start soon as my arrears are now around £4,500.

April 6: My wife is doing double shifts at Sainsbury’s.

April 17: Receive a letter from Mortgage Express saying legal proceedings will begin to repossess my home. I mention Shelter said I should be eligible for the Mortgage Rescue Scheme announced in the Budget.

May 3: Fantastic news. My lender and I have an agreement: For five months they will suspend repossession as long as I pay £300 per month. If, after five months I still haven’t got a job, I would be eligible for the Government’s Homeowner Mortgage Support Scheme for two years, where the Government pays 66 per cent of mortgage interest.

Not out of the woods yet but at least I can concentrate on my job search without worrying myself sick.

JAMES’S REPO TIPS

Talk to your lender, keep them informed of your situation

  • Pay whatever you can towards your mortgage, your lender will see you in a better light

  • Don’t be afraid to seek advice from organisations. Shelter have offered me brilliant advice

  •  Don’t be ashamed. Talk to people, such as your local MP, who might be aware of help you are entitled to

  • December 5: Hear about a mortgage rescue scheme but can’t find details on Gov website.

    December 15: Apply for dozens of jobs, like I do every day now.

    January 3 2009: Make a £200 payment towards mortgage.

    January 10: Start a part-time taxi-driving job for extra cash.

    January 26: Wife Bev is made redundant by Clinton Cards.

    February 13: Mortgage Express have told an agent from their pre-litigation team to visit me, which will cost me £94.

    February 20: The pre-litigation agent arrives unannounced. He asks me to fill in an income/ expenditure form.

    February 28: Stressed, so visit my doctor, who prescribes anti-depressants. I’ve worked for 20 years and never thought I could fall in to such a desperate situation as I am in now.

    March 10: Call the UK’s leading debt charity, CCCS, for advice. They say I could file for full bankruptcy to release me from all debt but I would lose everything.

    March 14: This month we managed to pay £600 to Mortgage Express because Beverley worked as many hours as possible before her job ended and my stepdaughters Sharrona, 24, and Chantelle, 21, paid extra housekeeping.

    March 31: Job interview for the NHS in Cambridge (125 miles from home). They say no thanks.

    www.thesun.co.uk

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    Despite Government promises to help keep people in their homes in the downturn, repossessions are soaring. More than 100 homes a day are being seized by lenders - that’s a massive 50 per cent up on last year and the highest level since the early Nineties.

    But as RICHARD DYSON explains, not everyone is a loser.

    The investors - making a killing

    The dinner-jacketed staff are welcoming, the sales patter slick, the surroundings plush. Welcome to the first auction of repossessed homes by American firm REDC (Real Estate Disposition Corporation).
    Tempted by the growing number of home repossessions in Britain, REDC launched its UK arm, auctiontoday.co.uk, last month to offer a ‘wide selection of properties at auction prices’. More than 400 homes are listed on its website - all repossessions.
    The function room at the Hilton Hotel in Gateshead near Newcastle upon Tyne is packed with eager bidders keen to pick up a bargain.

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk

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    Home sales in the Orlando market jumped nearly 48 percent, but values fell by nearly 40 percent, according to the March report from the Orlando Regional Realtor Association.

    Association members reported 1,653 existing home sales in March, compared with 1,120 in the same month a year prior. Realtors also put 2,956 homes under contract last month, a far cry from March 2008’s 1,679.

    The median price of all Orlando homes resales fell 37.7 percent from $217,000 in March 2008 to $137,000 last month. The area’s average interest rate fell to a record low 4.67 percent.

    Association members also reported 4,906 pending sales — considered a leading indicator of future sales — in March, more than double March 2009’s 2,398.

    March home resales in the Orlando area — Lake, Orange, Osceola and Seminole counties — jumped nearly 58 percent, from 1,354 homes last year to 2,139 homes this year.

    http://www.bizjournals.com/orlando/stories/2009/04/13/daily7.html

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    Single-family house prices in the state dropped about 17.1 percent in February compared to the same month in 2008, making it the fifth consecutive month that median prices have dropped by double-digit margins, according to the Warren Group, publisher of the Commercial Record.
    “We didn’t see such a period of price slumps during Connecticut’s last housing downturn in the early 1990s,” said Timothy M. Warren Jr. in a statement. Warren is the chief executive of the Warren Group. “Prices won’t level off until sales activity picks up substantially for several months straight.”
    The local results are mixed and the most promising news could be in Meriden.

    http://www.myrecordjournal.com/site/tab1.cfm?newsid=20289419&BRD=2755&PAG=461&dept_id=592709&rfi=6

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    There was something that always bothered Rene Galvin when she walked in the front door of her new condo - an eye-watering, rotten egg smell that clung to the four walls and everything contained within them, from the furniture to her carpet and clothes.
    She could never quite put her finger on the cause of the foul odor that seemed to pervade every pore. “I’d just stand there, look around and say to myself: ‘One day, I’ll find out whatever it is that died inside these walls’,” she says.
    But there were further problems to come; mirrors that corroded around the edges, drains that rusted on the baths, pitted faucets, the television, computer, dishwasher, coffee pot, telephones, and air-conditioning system that all inexplicably broke down. Even the treasured gold-dipped necklace she wore around her neck turned black. Then there were the headaches, throat and sinus troubles.
    “I had no idea what was going on. I thought ‘Boy, the Florida air sure is bad’,” she says with a wry laugh.
    Humour, though, is not something that comes easily these days when she talks about her $500,000 home in Bonita Springs, Florida, that now sits empty after it was found to contain contaminated drywall from China.
    The discovery of sulfur-emitting compounds within the imported construction materials has sparked a national investigation, numerous lawsuits, and a scandal that is feared to have affected as many as 100,000 homes, a majority so far in Florida. Reparations could run into the billions of dollars.

     

    http://www.csmonitor.com/2009/0404/p99s01-usgn.html

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    The number of people struggling to pay their mortgage is growing by almost 740 a day, raising fears of another surge in repossessions
    Another 68,000 homebuyers fell into arrears in the final three months of 2008, according to grim data from the Financial Services Authority. It took the total to almost 377,000 - a 31% leap in 12 months. The average debt has also risen almost 20% to £5,473.
    Repossessions actually dipped slightly in the quarter to 13,028 as lenders bowed to Government pressure to make it the last resort. But the 46,750 total for last year - 128 a day - was still up 68% on 2007.

    Adam Sampson, of housing charity Shelter, urged the FSA to force lenders to give more help to struggling families.
    “With tens of thousands of families living in the shadow of repossession, the FSA must ensure that lenders treat struggling borrowers fairly,” he said. “The rise in arrears and repossessions has been fuelled by irresponsible lending.
    “The FSA and Government must re-write the rule book to ensure the days of feckless lending are never repeated.”
    Housing Minister Margaret Beckett said: “We are determined to do everything possible to ensure repossession is always a last resort, and have taken decisive action to help households facing difficulties right now.
    “As well as agreeing a three-month minimum period before lenders seek to repossess, we have put in place more free debt and legal advice, and have increased support to help people pay their mortgage if they lose their job.”

    This was found: http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/city-news/2009/03/18/repossession-fears-grow-as-740-more-people-a-day-can-t-pay-their-mortgages-115875-21207351/

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    A HOMEOWNER who is losing £12,000-a-month while trying to sell his £1million property hopes to beat the credit crunch by selling it in a RAFFLE. Brian Wilshaw, 64, is selling 46,000 tickets at £25 each for a chance to win his 11.5 acre Oldborough Retreat. The estate comes with a five-bedroom house, four two-bedroom holiday lodges, 9.5 acres of woodland and a two-acre fishing lake.

    Situated in countryside near Morchard Bishop near Crediton, Devon, the estate is a former holiday complex but Brian is now retiring and wants to sell-up. Winner The dad-of-three decided to raffle the retreat because the housing market and credit crunch have seen the market stagnate. If you would like to buy a ticket please see link at the bottom.

    Brian said: “This has been our dream home but now we are retiring we want to let ordinary people have the chance of a lifetime to live here. “Rising house and land prices have put property like this one way out of the reach of most people. “We put the house on the market last year but it was already becoming obvious that the market was slowing down. “We’ve had this idea for a number of years now. Everyone who came here on holiday used to say ‘If I had the money I’d buy this place’.

    “I would absolutely love to see the face of the person that wins it when they walk in because it’s going to change their life.” The house has two ensuite bedrooms, one master bedroom, whirlpool bath, a double garage and a large lounge, small study, dining room and kitchen. Nearby are four holiday lodges each boasting two double bedrooms, a bathroom, a kitchen and dining area, which can be rented out or sold off individually. All five properties are situated in woodland with a private drive, gates and a lake with carp, tench, perch, roach, rudd and eels. Heating engineer Brian and his wife Wendy, 49, bought the estate 14 years ago and ran it as a small holiday park until 2006.

    Advertisement Brian said: “It’s well worth £25 a ticket. At 46,000-to-one our odds are a lot better than winning the Lottery.

    For more: http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/article1349439.ece

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