*Bill would boost tax credit to $15,000*

*All borrowers would be able to claim homebuyer credit*

By Inman News, Thursday, June 11, 2009.

Inman News <http://www.inman.com/>

Sen. Johnny Isakson -- the Georgia Republican whose previous attempt to
boost the first-time homebuyer tax credit to $15,000 was shot down in the
House -- hasn't given up on the idea.

Isakson, the former president of Northside Realty, has introduced a bill
that would not only raise the tax credit's current $8,000 cap but make it
available on any purchase of a primary residence -- not just to first-time
homebuyers. The bill,
S.1230<http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/z?d111:s.01230:>,
would also eliminate the current income ceilings of $75,000 for individuals
and $150,000 for couples.

In a press release <http://isakson.senate.gov/press/2009/061009housing.htm>,
Isakson claimed bipartisan support for the bill. Although Sen. Chris Dodd,
D-Conn., was the only Democrat named among the nine co-sponsors, Dodd
carries considerable weight as chairman of the Senate Banking Committee.

The Senate got behind a previous Isakson amendment that would have expanded
the tax credit as part of the economic stimulus bill passed in February. But
the amendment was stripped from the bill before it was approved by the
House.

As originally enacted by Congress in 2008, the tax credit was equal to 10
percent of the purchase price of a primary residence, maxing out at $7,500.
Last year, the credit functioned more like an interest-free loan, since it
had to be repaid over a 15-year period.

Although the Isakson amendment was stripped from the bill, The American
Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 did raise the cap from $7,500 to
$8,000 for homes purchased before Dec. 1 of this year, and eliminated the
repayment requirement unless a home is resold within three years.

A preliminary review of tax returns suggests as many as 1.4 million
homebuyers claimed the first-time homebuyer tax credit on their 2008 tax
returns, putting it in on track to reach a target of helping 2 million
borrowers by the time the tax credit expires on Nov. 30 (see
story<http://www.inman.com/news/2009/04/21/first-time-buyer-tax-credit-a-hit>
).

In addition to expanding the tax credit, Isakson's bill would extend its
availability for one year from the date of enactment, and allow homebuyers
to claim it on their 2009 tax return for purchases made next year.

The tax credit has made a difference, Isakson said. But allowing all buyers
of primary residences to claim it -- not just first-time homebuyers -- would
help existing homeowners trade up, he said.

"First-time homebuyers used it and the market stabilized, but we don't have
a recession in first-time homebuyers. We have a recession in the move-up
market," Isakson said in a statement.

Expanding the tax credit is one of five
recommendations<http://businessroundtable.org/sites/default/files/2009.06.10.HWG%20Policy%20Recommendations%20Release%20FINAL.pdf>put
forward by a Housing Working Group made up of members of The Business
Roundtable, an association of chief executive officers of large U.S.
companies.

The Housing Working Group, chaired by Richard A. Smith, president and chief
executive officer of Realogy Corp., is also urging the government to take
additional steps to keep mortgage rates "at historically low levels for at
least one year" and to make permanent increases in the conforming-loan limit
in high-cost housing markets.

The National Association of Realtors said it backs the working group's
recommendations.

"NAR has called on Congress and the Obama administration to expand the
first-time homebuyer tax credit to all homebuyers, regardless of income,"
NAR said in a 
statement<http://www.realtor.org/press_room/news_releases/2009/05/renew_stabalization?lid=ronav0022>.
"In addition, it is imperative to maintain mortgage interest rates below 5
percent, make the loan limit increases permanent, and strengthen foreclosure
mitigation and loan modification efforts."

The Federal Housing Administration last month issued
guidelines<http://portal.hud.gov/pls/portal/docs/PAGE/FHA_HOME/LENDERS/MORTGAGEE_LETTERS/2009_MORTGAGEE_LETTERS/09-ML-15%20USING%20FIRST-TIME%20HOMEBUYER%20TAX%20CREDITS.PDF>for
applying the tax credit toward the down payment and closing costs on
the
purchase of a home with an FHA-backed mortgage. The tax credit can't be used
to meet the FHA's 3.5 percent minimum down-payment requirement, except by
borrowers tapping down-payment assistance loans offered
by<http://www.ncsha.org/section.cfm/3/34/2920>some state housing
finance agencies.

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