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Effective DemandParticipant
Flippers are definetly alive and well, they use their pricing knowledge (what a home will sell for) combined with liquidity advantage to buy cheap, do trashout, paint and carpet (if needed) and sell quickly.
Even with the economy and values dropping it is hard to get it too wrong as long as you set a certain max percentage on your buy relative to market value and buy in the active part of the market where all the demand is.
Effective DemandParticipantFlippers are definetly alive and well, they use their pricing knowledge (what a home will sell for) combined with liquidity advantage to buy cheap, do trashout, paint and carpet (if needed) and sell quickly.
Even with the economy and values dropping it is hard to get it too wrong as long as you set a certain max percentage on your buy relative to market value and buy in the active part of the market where all the demand is.
Effective DemandParticipantFlippers are definetly alive and well, they use their pricing knowledge (what a home will sell for) combined with liquidity advantage to buy cheap, do trashout, paint and carpet (if needed) and sell quickly.
Even with the economy and values dropping it is hard to get it too wrong as long as you set a certain max percentage on your buy relative to market value and buy in the active part of the market where all the demand is.
Effective DemandParticipantFlippers are definetly alive and well, they use their pricing knowledge (what a home will sell for) combined with liquidity advantage to buy cheap, do trashout, paint and carpet (if needed) and sell quickly.
Even with the economy and values dropping it is hard to get it too wrong as long as you set a certain max percentage on your buy relative to market value and buy in the active part of the market where all the demand is.
February 5, 2009 at 8:04 PM in reply to: Senate OKs $15,000 tax break for homebuyers – I believe investors too eligible for this tax credit #341590Effective DemandParticipant[quote=esmith][quote=IONEGARM]I believe what is says is that people who get the benefit can elect to use it for a rebate on 2008 taxes.
But I think the eligibility for the program is the date of passage of the bill forward for 1 year.[/quote]
Section 25E (b) (1) explicitly says that the credit shall be allowed with respect to purchases made after December 31, 2008, and before January 1, 2010.
Interestingly, current amendment makes the previous $7,500 tax credit expire “on the day of the enactment of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Tax Act of 2009.” It seems to me that anyone who buys a house between January 1, 2009, and the day the “American Recovery and Reinvestment Tax Act of 2009” is signed into law (probably mid-February), will be entitled to get BOTH the $7,500 refundable credit and the $15,000 non-refundable credit.[/quote]
The Thomas one is different than the the Senator has on his site as an announcement for what has passed. They are very different:
http://isakson.senate.gov/Amdt_106.pdf
What IO said is correct based on this information. And you aren’t eligible for both. Also the 2008 date is merely a tax accounting trick so you can get a refund sooner rather than later.
February 5, 2009 at 8:04 PM in reply to: Senate OKs $15,000 tax break for homebuyers – I believe investors too eligible for this tax credit #341912Effective DemandParticipant[quote=esmith][quote=IONEGARM]I believe what is says is that people who get the benefit can elect to use it for a rebate on 2008 taxes.
But I think the eligibility for the program is the date of passage of the bill forward for 1 year.[/quote]
Section 25E (b) (1) explicitly says that the credit shall be allowed with respect to purchases made after December 31, 2008, and before January 1, 2010.
Interestingly, current amendment makes the previous $7,500 tax credit expire “on the day of the enactment of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Tax Act of 2009.” It seems to me that anyone who buys a house between January 1, 2009, and the day the “American Recovery and Reinvestment Tax Act of 2009” is signed into law (probably mid-February), will be entitled to get BOTH the $7,500 refundable credit and the $15,000 non-refundable credit.[/quote]
The Thomas one is different than the the Senator has on his site as an announcement for what has passed. They are very different:
http://isakson.senate.gov/Amdt_106.pdf
What IO said is correct based on this information. And you aren’t eligible for both. Also the 2008 date is merely a tax accounting trick so you can get a refund sooner rather than later.
February 5, 2009 at 8:04 PM in reply to: Senate OKs $15,000 tax break for homebuyers – I believe investors too eligible for this tax credit #342016Effective DemandParticipant[quote=esmith][quote=IONEGARM]I believe what is says is that people who get the benefit can elect to use it for a rebate on 2008 taxes.
But I think the eligibility for the program is the date of passage of the bill forward for 1 year.[/quote]
Section 25E (b) (1) explicitly says that the credit shall be allowed with respect to purchases made after December 31, 2008, and before January 1, 2010.
Interestingly, current amendment makes the previous $7,500 tax credit expire “on the day of the enactment of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Tax Act of 2009.” It seems to me that anyone who buys a house between January 1, 2009, and the day the “American Recovery and Reinvestment Tax Act of 2009” is signed into law (probably mid-February), will be entitled to get BOTH the $7,500 refundable credit and the $15,000 non-refundable credit.[/quote]
The Thomas one is different than the the Senator has on his site as an announcement for what has passed. They are very different:
http://isakson.senate.gov/Amdt_106.pdf
What IO said is correct based on this information. And you aren’t eligible for both. Also the 2008 date is merely a tax accounting trick so you can get a refund sooner rather than later.
February 5, 2009 at 8:04 PM in reply to: Senate OKs $15,000 tax break for homebuyers – I believe investors too eligible for this tax credit #342044Effective DemandParticipant[quote=esmith][quote=IONEGARM]I believe what is says is that people who get the benefit can elect to use it for a rebate on 2008 taxes.
But I think the eligibility for the program is the date of passage of the bill forward for 1 year.[/quote]
Section 25E (b) (1) explicitly says that the credit shall be allowed with respect to purchases made after December 31, 2008, and before January 1, 2010.
Interestingly, current amendment makes the previous $7,500 tax credit expire “on the day of the enactment of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Tax Act of 2009.” It seems to me that anyone who buys a house between January 1, 2009, and the day the “American Recovery and Reinvestment Tax Act of 2009” is signed into law (probably mid-February), will be entitled to get BOTH the $7,500 refundable credit and the $15,000 non-refundable credit.[/quote]
The Thomas one is different than the the Senator has on his site as an announcement for what has passed. They are very different:
http://isakson.senate.gov/Amdt_106.pdf
What IO said is correct based on this information. And you aren’t eligible for both. Also the 2008 date is merely a tax accounting trick so you can get a refund sooner rather than later.
February 5, 2009 at 8:04 PM in reply to: Senate OKs $15,000 tax break for homebuyers – I believe investors too eligible for this tax credit #342138Effective DemandParticipant[quote=esmith][quote=IONEGARM]I believe what is says is that people who get the benefit can elect to use it for a rebate on 2008 taxes.
But I think the eligibility for the program is the date of passage of the bill forward for 1 year.[/quote]
Section 25E (b) (1) explicitly says that the credit shall be allowed with respect to purchases made after December 31, 2008, and before January 1, 2010.
Interestingly, current amendment makes the previous $7,500 tax credit expire “on the day of the enactment of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Tax Act of 2009.” It seems to me that anyone who buys a house between January 1, 2009, and the day the “American Recovery and Reinvestment Tax Act of 2009” is signed into law (probably mid-February), will be entitled to get BOTH the $7,500 refundable credit and the $15,000 non-refundable credit.[/quote]
The Thomas one is different than the the Senator has on his site as an announcement for what has passed. They are very different:
http://isakson.senate.gov/Amdt_106.pdf
What IO said is correct based on this information. And you aren’t eligible for both. Also the 2008 date is merely a tax accounting trick so you can get a refund sooner rather than later.
Effective DemandParticipantYou can get a list of upcoming NTS sales from http://www.fidelityasap.com . It requires free registration. And for a couple of days after the sale has occured you can see what price it went for and if it went back to bene or actually sold at the court house steps. Not bad for free.
Effective DemandParticipantYou can get a list of upcoming NTS sales from http://www.fidelityasap.com . It requires free registration. And for a couple of days after the sale has occured you can see what price it went for and if it went back to bene or actually sold at the court house steps. Not bad for free.
Effective DemandParticipantYou can get a list of upcoming NTS sales from http://www.fidelityasap.com . It requires free registration. And for a couple of days after the sale has occured you can see what price it went for and if it went back to bene or actually sold at the court house steps. Not bad for free.
Effective DemandParticipantYou can get a list of upcoming NTS sales from http://www.fidelityasap.com . It requires free registration. And for a couple of days after the sale has occured you can see what price it went for and if it went back to bene or actually sold at the court house steps. Not bad for free.
Effective DemandParticipantYou can get a list of upcoming NTS sales from http://www.fidelityasap.com . It requires free registration. And for a couple of days after the sale has occured you can see what price it went for and if it went back to bene or actually sold at the court house steps. Not bad for free.
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