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You'll have to give me a link to prove your position, I can't see it.
The bank doesn't purchase the property. The investor does and it doesn't matter if he uses cash or money borrowed from a bank or Obama's stash. They are two distinct transactions. If the bank "forgives" a loan, a 1099 is issued. If the investment property lost value, he has a loss he can claim upon disposal of the asset. So Joe Millionaire gets a 1099 for cancellation of debt (shows as income) but turns around and claims the loss on the property (assuming it is disposed of either through sale, foreclosure, nuclear strike, or whatever).
My point is that the debt forgiveness act gives a "similar" benefit to a homeowner that an investor already has and will probably have forever. This was never a problem for a homeowner until the housing market tanked as "homes always go up in value - buy now before you are priced out of the market!"
This sort of reminds me of Chrysler ads back a few years ago. You could get a cheap lease..real cheap..but the final payment of it was easily at least 5x-8x a regular payment. If you don't pay it then they repossess the car and of course it probably acts as a R9 chargeoff.
I've been following this too. Once it ends in 2012
the number of walkaways will drop like a rock.
banks could be waiting for that to ensure that unloading foreclosures doesn't creating a ripple effect. As a side benefit the deadbeats who are squatting get hit with a massive tax bill.
win-win.
The people in California who both walked and didn't refinance will be fine since California mortgages for an initial purchase are non-recourse debt which doesn't turn into taxable income as long as you don't retain the collateral.
But that doesn't help people who refied with cash out or who took out 2nd or 3rd mortgages after the initial purchase and didn't use it for the house. Read IRS publication 4681 if you have additional questions: http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p4681.pdf
So, HELOCs are counted as income when one defaults on them?
Yes, if they are not put back into the house.
I don't see why everyone thinks the debt forgiveness act (or whatever it is called) is unfair as it basically treats homeowners the same way investors are treated when their asset drops in value.
No, it doesn't. When you get a mortgage, you are getting cold hard cash. Cash does not drop in value. When your indebtedness is written off, it's nothing like a regular investment asset dropping in value. [N.B. See criticism below and my explanation. Inflation is another issue. I'm saying that $1000 cash is literally $1000 cash even 20 years later.]
Do you really think they won't extend it? Has anybody seen any will from the California and Federal government to not pretend and extend the housing bubble?
actually they probably wont extend it. Since it takes about 6 months to do a short sale. Starting about 6 months from now anyone who forecloses or short sells their house is at risk of seeing a massive tax bill.
No, it doesn't. When you get a mortgage, you are getting cold hard cash. Cash does not drop in value. When your indebtedness is written off, it's nothing like a regular investment asset dropping in value.
Yes it does.
While I'd love for the Consequence Hammerâ„¢ to come crashing down on everyone, Congress will likely step in and extend the bill.
The timing of foreclosure sales has nothing to do with the tax consequences to a borrower of forgiven debt. Foreclosure sales are timed to maximize the tax consequences to the foreclosing banks.
The bank takes a gain or loss on its loan at the time of the sale ---- these day, usually a loss. The loss is calculated from the amount of the bank's credit bid. If a bank makes a "full" credit bid for the property, ie., the amount of its unpaid loan, the bank is deemed to have been paid the loan in full even if the house it received as "payment" is worth much less. Only upon REO resale of the house does the bank take the loss.
Alternatively, if the bank bids less than the unpaid balance of the loan, it can take a loan loss at the time of sale equal to the difference between the unpaid balance and the amount of its credit bid for the home.
BTW, this is how banks are using foreclosure sales to hide their losses. They are bidding more for their foreclosed homes than they are worth, thereby delaying the ultimate loss to later quarters. It helps them pay larger bonuses this quarter and helps the regulatory agencies by making it appear the losses are small this quarter and the housing market appear to be stabilizing.
The loss is calculated from the amount of the bank's credit bid. If a bank makes a "full" credit bid for the property, ie., the amount of its unpaid loan, the bank is deemed to have been paid the loan in full even if the house it received as "payment" is worth much less.
goodrich, I'd been wondering about this; thanks for the thoughtful analysis. In the case that a third party buys the house at auction for less than is owed, does the loss get recorded differently on the banks books if the owner gets a 1099 (which is what Debt Forgiveness is all about). Or is the 1099 immaterial (to the bank, of course)?
If a bank makes a "full" credit bid for the property, ie., the amount of its unpaid loan, the bank is deemed to have been paid the loan in full even if the house it received as "payment" is worth much less.
So, you are saying, if I owe $200k, the house is worth $100k, and the bank bids $200k the borrower has no 1099 cancellation of debt income? Pretty sure that isn't how it works so you must be talking about the bank-side of the books.
My laugh for the day.
It is quite obvious that I'm not talking about inflation in this case, but rather a comparison to asset values and based on taxation issues. Context, people. The point is that cancellation of debt income is absolutely not the same as asset values dropping.
The point is that cancellation of debt income is absolutely not the same as asset values dropping.
It is not exactly the same but you fail to see the big picture. On a bottom line basis, without this act that everyone so gleefully hopes will not be renewed homeowners are screwed on their taxes in a way that an investor in a similar asset (i.e. a house) in a similar situation is not.
Really, if you think landlords are such scum I don't know why you are shilling so hard for them.
While I'd love for the Consequence Hammerâ„¢ to come crashing down on everyone, Congress will likely step in and extend the bill.
Either that, or write a new one that does the same thing in regards to those who walk away. The economy needs people spending, not enslaved to a tax burden so that all their income above the poverty level is taken in taxes.
just the possibility that they might not extend it means the number of short sales and NODs will likely drop off a cliff in 2012.
It is not exactly the same but you fail to see the big picture. On a bottom line basis, without this act that everyone so gleefully hopes will not be renewed homeowners are screwed on their taxes in a way that an investor in a similar asset (i.e. a house) in a similar situation is not.
Still not a similar situation, and you're the one missing the big picture. The only way to make it a similar situation is to have the investor leveraged. In that case, both parties would be in exactly the same position. If the brokerage wrote off the margin account, then it would be cancellation of debt income, just like for housing. Otherwise, no, it's absolutely not the same situation.
Still not a similar situation, and you're the one missing the big picture. The only way to make it a similar situation is to have the investor leveraged. In that case, both parties would be in exactly the same position. If the brokerage wrote off the margin account, then it would be cancellation of debt income, just like for housing. Otherwise, no, it's absolutely not the same situation.
You obviously don't understand what I'm saying. Take the leveraged situation out of both sides:
Joe Homeowners buys a house for $200k in cash. He later sells it for $100k. He just blew $100k on nothing and can't deduct the loss on his taxes.
Joe Investor buys a house he intends to rent for $200k in cash. He later sells it for $100k. He just blew $100k on nothing but can deduct the loss on his taxes as a consolation prize that Joe Homeowner doesn't get.
Add the leverage back:
Joe Homeowner convinces a bank to loan him 100% on a $200k house. For whatever reason he stops paying and is foreclosed and the 1099 shows the FMV as $100k and is issued $100k in COD income. Before the law, he was stuck with $100k in COD income that he had to pay taxes on.
Joe Investor convinces a bank to loan in 100% on a $200k house he is going to rent out. For whatever reason he stops paying and is foreclosed and the 1099 shows the FMV as $100k and is issued $100k in COD income. Lucky for him, he can claim $100k in loss offsetting the COD income and pays zippo in taxes on the COD income.
The debt forgiveness law allows the leveraged homeowner to not pay taxes on the COD income - in a similar way the investor doesn't have to pay taxes on the COD income due to the ability of writing off the decline in value.
I don't see why you have such a problem understanding this.
Joe Homeowners buys a house for $200k in cash. He later sells it for $100k. He just blew $100k on nothing and can't deduct the loss on his taxes.
Joe Investor buys a house he intends to rent for $200k in cash. He later sells it for $100k. He just blew $100k on nothing but can deduct the loss on his taxes as a consolation prize that Joe Homeowner doesn't get.
I believe I missed where you said that they were buying similar assets -- I was obviously talking about where they buy different assets. Nonetheless, you are talking about two different situations. The primary homeowner also pays no taxes if the house price goes up to $300K. The investor does. Should we eliminate that loophole too?
Rental properties have different basis rules than primary residences too. The passive loss activity rules also apply to the investor, so he/she can't deduct that whole amount all at once generally, unless he/she is also a real estate professional. Furthermore, if the debt is non-recourse, there is no COD income in either case.
You also can't talk about taxes without talking about timing. The foreclosure of the house triggers the loss with respect to housing value. However, if the debt is recourse, then the COD income doesn't occur until the bank writes off the debt. This can occur in different tax years.
It's like arguing that a 401(k) and a regular taxable investment account have different rules. Duh, they do. Furthermore, trying to make a principled taxation argument out of something that is largely political in nature (such as eliminating taxation on COD income in this scenario) is also somewhat difficult and can have pitfalls.
What about this hypothetical scenario:
Joe Homeowner has basis in a house of $100K. His loan is $300K because he did a cash-out refi during the housing boom. House sells at foreclosure for $150K. Homeowner has $50K in taxable income that is exempt from taxation. Homeowner has $150K of COD income.
Joe Investor has basis in a house of $100K. His loan is $300K because he did a cash-out refi during the housing boom. House sells at foreclosure for $150K. Investor has $50K in taxable income from the sale of the house. Investor also has $150K in COD income.
Should we still eliminate COD income for Joe Homeowner in this scenario?
What about this hypothetical scenario:
Joe Homeowner has basis in a house of $200K. His loan is $300K because he did a cash-out refi during the housing boom. House sells at foreclosure for $175K. Homeowner has $25K in loss that is not deductible. Homeowner has $125K of COD income.
Joe Investor has basis in a house of $200K. His loan is $300K because he did a cash-out refi during the housing boom. House sells at foreclosure for $175K. Investor has $25K in potentially deductible loss from the sale of the house. Investor also has $125K in COD income.
Should we still eliminate COD income for Joe Homeowner in this scenario? The problem is that you conveniently picked offsetting numbers, but that gave you an inconvenient example. What about when it doesn't offset?
This is all hypothetical which is why I picked offsetting figures to illustrate the difference because it is easy to understand. I also threw out depreciation, carry-over passive loss, etc, to show how an investor is treated tax-wise that a homeowner is not attempting to keep it simple.
Whoever used the house as an ATM deserves the COD income in any case because that money didn't (in general) go back into the property.
The passive loss activity rules also apply to the investor, so he/she can't deduct that whole amount all at once generally, unless he/she is also a real estate professional.
They can and do offset the COD with the loss. If you think about it, how can the gain be classified differently than the loss in the same situation/transaction? It is the same and it certainly will offset it. Whether or not it happens in the same tax year is somewhat immaterial as the bank waiting just pushes it out into the future. On a specific case it may matter in but in general it is a wash.
All thing aside, cashout REFI, if I understand correctly, isn't covered by the debt forgivenes law. I'm sure there are some nuances to it but someone that was bought-and-caught by the crash is eligible and a refi-ATM scumbag is not.
The primary homeowner also pays no taxes if the house price goes up to $300K. The investor does. Should we eliminate that loophole too?
I don't see why this provision is there in the first place. The trade-up rule covered people moving up already (similar to 1031 exchange, if I have the number right) and this really only helps the two-year flipper and empty nesters downsizing.
I don't see why this provision is there in the first place. The trade-up rule covered people moving up already (similar to 1031 exchange, if I have the number right) and this really only helps the two-year flipper and empty nesters downsizing.
I don't either, but it is very popular, both politically and among the general populace. However, it is the flipside of having COD income if the value goes down -- gains are not taxable unless they are greater than $250K for single/$500K for married. That is a huge loophole.
Anyway, the main point is that homeowners and property investors are treated completely differently by the tax code already. Trying to make this particular aspect consistent in a limited number of scenarios (but not others) does not really add that much robustness to the current system.
It's not really unprincipled to treat business homeownership and personal homeownership differently. We do this with other things in other parts of the tax code. For example, interest on business debt is now treated differently than interest on personal debt. All interest used to be deductible under the tax code back in the day, regardless of whether it came from personal debt or business debt. However, it used to be that we weren't such a debt-riddled culture, so that there wasn't that much personal debt (i.e. credit cards and auto loans), and the mortgage culture was different too (until the secondary mortgage market was created largely by the government, we used to have loans with bubble payments -- this was a big driver of the Great Depression in some ways). The main interest people might have paid was business interest on business debt and interest on people's mortgage. After Reagan's changes in 1986, we eliminated all deductions on personal interest, and we kept mortgage interest deductible because it was politically popular and perhaps there is some historical antecedent. That's also why we have a misguided cap on student loan interest, all of which should probably be deductible if we're going to maintain the mortgage interest deduction.
It's not really unprincipled to treat business homeownership and personal homeownership differently.
I agree with you but the debt forgiveness act is not there to let ATM-cashout morons off the hook which I think is the misconception. For most people their house WAS an investment (right or wrong) and the forgiveness act reflects this in my opinion. Like I said at first, it simply treats a homeowner in a similar manner that it would treat an investor when it comes to housing. It isn't some ludicrous "you ATM'ed a lot of money and you are off the hook" act. That would be wildly different.
I agree with you but the debt forgiveness act is not there to let ATM-cashout morons off the hook which I think is the misconception. For most people their house WAS an investment (right or wrong) and the forgiveness act reflects this in my opinion. Like I said at first, it simply treats a homeowner in a similar manner that it would treat an investor when it comes to housing.
I don't think you even have to consider the cash-out refi people. The reality is that even people who were paying purchase money via a loan were making stupid purchases at bubble pricing. It's not too difficult to say they should suck it up, especially since some of them were previously homeowners that received a windfall by selling their previous house during the bubble. If you are motivated by the bubble to buy a house, you assume the risk. If they had managed to flip the house before the bubble ended, they would have gotten a huge tax-free gain. Speculation works both ways.
Don't worry everyone. Congress will extend the law so that those who get foreclosed on don't have to pay taxes. Nothing to see here.
Man, that would be pretty interesting if they did owe taxes.
A little off the subject, I know that the conventional wisdom is that the greedy banks conned people into these risky mortgages.
How come the people whom I know personally who were foreclosed were all basically clueless, greedy deadbeats with a bad attitude?
So I take it that very few people are going to get hit with the "consequence hammer"?
you mean you?
they may have bought the house to live in but I think you underestimate the number of people NOW who think they can just ditch the house they overpaid for and go buy the bigger house across the street.
Something like almost half the houses sold in 2007 were sold as investment properties or at least not to be owner occupied (some were vacation homes for example).
Hot off the press from the researchers with the Federal Reserve Bank of New York:
More than a third of all U.S. home mortgages granted in 2006 went to people who already owned at least one house, according to the report. In Arizona, California, Florida and Nevada, where average home prices more than doubled from 2000 to 2006, investors made up nearly half of all mortgage-backed purchases during the housing bubble. Buyers owning three or more properties represented the fastest-growing segment of homeowners during that time.
I, for one, am shocked. Shocked! I tell ya...
So I take it that very few people are going to get hit with the "consequence hammer"?
you mean you?
I won't get hit with the C-Hammer since I have never held mortgage debt.
They probably weren't deadbeats, but they were certainly clueless and greedy. They are also big girls and boys who made their choices. Are you saying the "professionals" hunted these people down, dragged them into their offices, and held a gun to their heads? BS. People were camping out overnight to get the chance to put in down payments in places.
No one forced anyone to lie on their loan application or over commit to an arm loan that couldn't possibly be paid when the teaser rate expired because they would be able to flip at a big profit a year later. It's called gambling. Don't gamble with money you can't afford to lose.
Very true...especially in CA. The herd mentality was deafing to say the least from 1998- peak years. No matter how hard you tried to explain to the herd, RE do drop and drop big time.. it was ignored. Pure greed... and crazy irrational thinking fueled this bubble.
oh yeah here comes the real consequence hammer.
http://www.youtube.com/embed/jOTQBl3eUs0&feature=player_embedded
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http://www.ftb.ca.gov/aboutFTB/newsroom/Mortgage_Debt_Relief_Law.shtml
December 31st, 2012, the Mortgage Debt Relief Law expires. All of you deadbeats that walked away from your mortgage obligations will get your just due. Why do you think the banks have been stalling on foreclosing? They are waiting for the IRS to give you the shaft. Income over 100k is taxed at the 35% tax bracket. Housing peaked in California at a median average of 484k, now the median average is 244k. That's an 84k median tax bill that will be coming due in 2014, hope you saved all your pennies you dead beats.
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