Posted in General on May 19th, 2009 at 5:44 PM
Buyer Tax Credit Loan Guidance Coming Soon
- May 18th 2008
Detailed guidance on the federal
government's plan to provide short-term loans to borrowers using the
First-Time Homebuyer Tax Credit is expected to be out shortly, but a
spokesperson from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development,
which is writing the guidance, couldn't give a firm release date.
HUD policy staff are "still working out the details on it," HUD spokesperson Lamar Wooley told REALTOR® Magazine today. "So we expect it to be published shortly."
The short-term loan program, which would effectively monetize the first-timehomebuyer
tax credit by permitting eligible lenders to make bridge loans
collateralized by the borrower's expected tax credit, was announced by
HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan at the Real Estate Summit NAR hosted on the
opening day of its 2009 Midyear Legislative Meetings in Washington last
week.
At the summit, Donovan said the loans would
enable FHA consumers to access the tax credit funds when they close on
their home loans so that the cash couldbe used as a downpayment.
"FHA will permit trusted FHA-approved
lenders and HUD-approved nonprofits, as well as state and local
governmental entities to 'monetize' the tax credit through short-term
bridge loans," Donovan said.
"We think the policy is a real win for everyone, ensuring that
borrowers can tap into the numerous organizations that are already part
of the FHA network to receive this additional benefit. FHA will be
publishing the details shortly."
It's unclear at this point what shape the
guidance will take and whether authorization for the loans will be
available across the board or only in states in which the state housing
finance agency already has a tax credit bridge-loan program in place.
There are 10 states today that have such a
loan program, according to the National Council of State Housing
Agencies: Colorado, Delaware, Idaho, Kentucky, Missouri, New Jersey,
New Mexico, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Tennessee.
You can access details of these loan programs on the NCSHA's Web site, "First-Time Homebuyer Tax Credit Loan Programs."
When it's released, the guidance is
expected to be issued as a HUD Mortgagee Letter and will likely discuss
which federal, state, and local governmental agencies and nonprofit
organizations will be permitted to make the loans, and whether lenders
such as FHA-approved mortgagees will be permitted to make the loans.
The guidance could also cover how loan
amounts will be limited, what happens if repayment problems occur, and
what repayment terms would look like.
REALTOR®
Magazine will be checking with HUD regularly on the status of the
guidance and will report its availability as soon as it's issued.
—By Robert Freedman for REALTOR® Magazine
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