The #1
Real Estate Investing
Community

Fri, Dec 05, 2008 
TCI Shopping
Featured TCI Properties
N' Side Beauty 2/1
Jacksonville, FL
Price: $40,900
FMV: $85,000
Topics 'N Comments
Forum Topics
* Top 3 Affirmative Defenses.
* Foreclosure Purchase Business Plan
* Is An Annuity And A 401k Protected In A Foreclosure?
* 3 Properties In 1 Loan: How Do I Report Interest?
* Property Management 101 For A Real Estate Brokerage
* Finding Lien Amounts
* 1031 Options
* Marinas
* What Are Your Top 5 Best Deal Sources?
* 2 Weeks For Auction

Comments
* Jeez, I must be...
* Optimism is a great...
* That is a great...
* Great advice. Thanks...
* Fortunately I...
* Thanks for sharing....
* Many of the...
* Good list. I have...
* Thank you gentleman...
* I cant take any of...
Contact Us
703-778-5755
Login Problems?
Sales
Support
Feedback
Recommend Us
History and Purpose of TCI


Advertise on our site
Advertising Login
Sell Your Product Here!
Official PayPal Seal
Send this to:                            

Tax Law: NO PMI deduction / Closing Investors Capital Gains Loophole

Sunday, October 31, 2004 @ 09:30 PM EST Printer Friendly Page  Printer Friendly Page
Send this Story to a Friend  Send this Story to a Friend

Contributed by: Ford Group

Ford Group Properties

Read more archived articles about Tax Strategies

Oct. 30, 2004

By Kenneth Harney
WASHINGTON - The behemoth $136 billion pre-election tax bill signed into law by President Bush on Oct. 22 sprinkled financial goodies over a wide swath of corporate America, from NASCAR racetrack owners to Hollywood filmmakers and importers of Chinese ceiling fans.

But for ordinary homeowners and buyers, the bill turned out to be a bust. It's more notable for what it left out -- and what it took away -- than for anything it added.

What it didn't do: The final version of the
 
Advertisement
American Jobs Creation Act of 2004 omitted a popular, Senate-passed tax code change that would have allowed millions of home buyers to deduct their mortgage insurance premiums. Not only had the plan been approved by the Senate, but it had the bipartisan cosponsorship of more than half the members of the House. Plus, it had the endorsements of an unusually diverse coalition of labor, business, banking, civil-rights and consumer-advocacy organizations.

The Senate-passed provision would have nullified a ban by the IRS against mortgage insurance deductions on federal income tax filings. It would have sanctioned full write-offs of Federal Housing Administration (FHA) insurance payments, private mortgage insurance (PMI) premiums, and Veterans Affairs (VA) guaranty payments for households with annual incomes up to $100,000. Households with incomes above that threshold would have been limited to partial write-offs under a phaseout formula.

Deductibility of mortgage insurance is an issue with significant social as well as financial implications. That's because mortgage insurance premiums are paid for primarily by home buyers with modest incomes and insufficient savings to make a conventional down payment.

FHA mortgage insurance, which allows buyers to make minimal 3 percent down payments, predominantly serves first-time and minority purchasers. Private mortgage insurance serves a similar group of modest-income consumers.

In 2001, according to industry estimates, mortgage insurance covered more than half of all new loans made to African American and Hispanic home purchasers, and 54 percent of all mortgages extended to borrowers with incomes below the median for their areas.

Proponents of deductibility argued successfully in the Senate that mortgage insurance premiums are the functional equivalent of mortgage interest payments, which are deductible for homeowners on up to $1.1 million in mortgage debt. Why not allow less-wealthy buyers to write off premiums that get tacked onto their monthly principal and interest payments solely because they couldn't make a 20 percent down payment? Even the IRS acknowledges this: When a lender incorporates a borrower's mortgage insurance premiums into the note rate -- bumping it up by a quarter of a percentage point or more -- the IRS permits the rolled-in premiums to be fully deducted, just like interest.

What happened to deductibility in the final $136 billion tax bill? Good question.

The Senate and House went to conference -- the proverbial smoke-filled room on Capitol Hill. The Senate bill contained a deductibility plan limited to one year, with the tacit understanding that it wound be extended in future tax legislation. The estimated revenue cost was $452 million -- hardly a budget-buster by high-roller federal tax bill standards.

The House bill contained no deductibility provision despite the support of 220 House members who cosponsored a separate bill sanctioning the write-offs. When the smoke cleared and the tax bill rolled out of conference, it contained new tax subsidies for dozens of congressional pet projects, but nothing for moderate-income and minority home buyers. The House conferees had won the day by excluding the Senate's plan and presumably devoting the revenue savings to other, more vocal constituencies.

Proponents of the deductibility concept say they will be back. "Obviously we are disappointed," said Jeff Lubar, spokesman for the Mortgage Insurance Companies of America. "With the heavy support we enjoyed, we had hoped for" a place in the final tax bill. "Now we will have to re-evaluate our strategy" to get passage in both houses of the new Congress.

Another little-noticed home real estate tax provision in the $136 billion bill: Congress amended the capital gains rules to narrow a loophole that allowed some savvy investors to turn commercial property gains into tax-free home sale gains. Under the amended law, taxpayers who acquire an investment property through a "Section 1031" tax-deferred exchange, and convert the property into a principal residence, will not be able to use the standard $250,000-$500,000 tax-free principal home sale exclusion on gains until they've owned and used the converted property for five years.

Previously some taxpayers were using the principal home sale exclusion rules to shelter gains actually racked up on investment real estate. Now they'll have to wait a little longer to do that.






Word Cloud:
extended under revenue law: plan investors homeowners 2004 minority they limited would senate down support home been because households property write-offs loophole than investment mortgage buyers bill house contained premiums real half financial /> proponents more oct. will provision when percent tax-free taxpayers make /> the federal deduction payments, billion final have american serves /> what some allowed incomes senate-passed private closing capital into sale principal million rules gains savings $136 members amended exclusion which what deductibility insurance payments interest with

 
Username or Email

Password

Remember Me:

Join 232,656 other
members FREE!
· More about Tax Strategies
· Other articles by Ford


Most read story about Tax Strategies:
1031 Exchange Basics (Concise Overview)

Average Score: 4.4
Votes: 5


Please take a second and vote for this article:

Bad
Regular
Good
Very Good
Excellent



Printer Friendly Page  Printer Friendly Page

Send this Story to a Friend  Send this Story to a Friend

Threshold
  
Logged In members can moderate all comments.
Real Estate News | Real Estate Investing Articles | Real Estate Investing Gurus | Real Estate Forums | Real Estate Lenders | Real Estate Investing Groups | Real Estate Course Reviews | Real Estate Services | Real Estate Courses | Investment Properties | Real Estate Search | Commercial Properties | Land For Sale | Houses For Sale | Houses For Rent | Real Estate Comps | Sell House Quick | Sell House Fast

The Creative Investor web site was created for Landlords, Property Managers and Real Estate Investing community.
Through using our forums, investors will be able to talk about finance, no down payment purchases, debt payoff, purchase strategies and current real estate news.
Privacy Agreement and Terms of Use. All logos and trademarks in this site are property of their respective owner.
The comments are property of their posters, all the rest 2002 by PropBot.com L.L.C.