HOUSING
Holiday complicates home-buyer credit rush
As if it weren't difficult enough for first-time home buyers to qualify by Nov. 30 for a tax credit, Thanksgiving will cut down on the number of work days available.
BY KIMBERLY MILLER
Palm Beach Post
First-time home buyers seeking the $8,000 tax credit aren't just racing a Nov. 30 deadline to buy a house; they're also competing with Thanksgiving, traditionally a three-day work week for financial institutions integral in closing a home deal.
Realtors and lenders say they doubt anyone was thinking of Thanksgiving when the deadline was set earlier this year with the approval of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009.
Nov. 30 is a Monday, meaning paperwork would mostly have to be completed the previous week, which includes the Wednesday before Thanksgiving, Thanksgiving Day, and the unofficial shopping holiday of ``Black Friday.''
A BAD TIME
``Really, the first-time home buyer deadline couldn't have come at a worse time,'' said Brian Colon, a mortgage loan officer for Bank of America in Boca Raton. ``Come Wednesday afternoon, people's mindset is all about leaving early. ''
It's possible the popular $8,000 credit, which has already benefited 1.4 million people nationally and 106,000 in Florida, will be extended.
There's bi-partisan support in Congress to make it available through next year, and senators last week agreed to extend it to first-time buyers who close on a home before the end of June.
The proposed legislation would also offer a credit of up to $6,500 to repeat buyers who have owned their current homes for at least five years.
But Realtors, lenders and title companies aren't banking on an extension from Washington.
``National City told me if you want someone to close by the end of the month, have a contract in by Monday [Nov. 2] or it's not going to happen,'' said Boynton Beach Keller Williams Realtor Yvonne Westerman. ``I absolutely know the short month is going to mess things up for a lot of people.''
Even during the best of times, home closings would take about 30 days from the time a contract is signed to the key exchange. Now, with short sales and foreclosures, the 30-day rule is more like 45 days or even several months.
``I wouldn't want to be a lending institution or a title company trying to close all these last-minute deals with the holiday coming,'' said Scott Agran, head of Lang Realty in Boca Raton. ``It's going to be chaotic beyond chaotic.''
`JOINT EFFORT'
So many institutions are involved in finalizing a closing that if one is closed or a lot of employees take off, a deadline could be missed.
``It really has to be a joint effort,'' Colon added.
The end of the month is traditionally the busiest time for closings. That's when leases expire for renters becoming home owners. It also means lower closing costs because the prepaid interest required on mortgages is less.
``What we've got is a double whammy,'' McDonough said, referring to the regular end-of-the-month traffic and the tax credit deadline.
Add Thanksgiving, and it's a triple.
Join the discussion
The Miami Herald is pleased to provide this opportunity to share information, experiences and observations about what's in the news. Some of the comments may be reprinted elsewhere in the site or in the newspaper. We encourage lively, open debate on the issues of the day, and ask that you refrain from profanity, hate speech, personal comments and remarks that are off point. In order to post comments, you must be a registered user of MiamiHerald.com. Your username will show along with the comments you post. Thank you for taking the time to offer your thoughts.




















My Yahoo
@Nyx.replyAnswerText@