Archive for the ‘Miami Real Estate News’ Category

New rule says banks must prove ownership before foreclosing

Tuesday, June 15th, 2010

New rule says banks must prove ownership before foreclosing

BY KIMBERLY MILLER

Palm Beach Post

Foreclosure filings have backed off this year compared to 2009, but it may not be a brightening economy causing the decline.

A new Florida Supreme Court rule requires lenders to verify they are the actual owners of a home before making the initial case for foreclosure.

Show me the “note,” in other words.

The problem is the notes — legal promises from borrowers to repay a debt — have been sold and resold, bundled into securities, scanned into computers, sealed in unknown vaults and lost in various other ways as homes got caught up in the puzzling markets of the real estate boom.

“The original note is something very significant, and they just seem to have lost thousands of them,” said Boca Raton attorney Marlyn Wiener, who handles real estate cases. “Nobody knows where the stuff is.”

The new rule was approved in February with the intention of unclogging the foreclosure courts, which have an estimated statewide backlog of 500,000 cases. It also gives judges power to sanction plaintiffs who make false accusations on the ownership of notes, or missing notes.

Law firms handling the foreclosure overload, sometimes called foreclosure mills, have routinely filed a “lost note” claim with the original default notice, regardless of whether they looked for the note, said Miami-Dade Circuit Court Judge Jennifer Bailey.

The legal move gives lenders a statutory out if the original note truly can’t be located. When asked what efforts were made to find the note, however, such excuses as “searched file cabinet” and “searched fire proof safe” have appeared on several court records.

“It was very confusing. How can you foreclose on the note if the note is lost?” Bailey said. “The judges would be trying to track the note and they’re saying they own it, but don’t have it and don’t know where it is.”

But if a borrower didn’t protest the foreclosure, the cases often sailed through.

Judges were also finding, according to a statewide foreclosure task force that recommended the verification rule, that two different lenders would sometimes file suit on the same note at the same time because it wasn’t clear who the true owner was.

Defense attorneys, too, got keyed in on the lost note strategy, challenging the veracity of a lender’s claim to a home, and further stalling the process.

“There was just an abuse of the lost note statute,” said Scott Hast, an attorney with LaBovick & LaBovick, which has offices in Jupiter and West Palm Beach.

Hast said at least half of his foreclosure defense cases include lender pleas of lost notes. He almost always asks for evidence of the original document.

“They can say it’s a stalling tactic, but how can I not defend my client and seek out every route in his defense?” Hast said.

“Now the courts are saying you have to do your due diligence before filing,” he added.

Anthony DiMarco, executive vice president for government affairs for the Florida Bankers Association, said he doesn’t believe the new rule is causing the slowdown.

He attributes it more to an increase in loan modification workouts between borrowers and banks, and banks’ increased willingness to approve short sales.

It is another hoop for banks to jump through, he acknowledged, but something that was supposed to be happening all along.

Bailey, who was on the foreclosure task force, said the rule wasn’t needed before the real estate boom when home loans were more straightforward and foreclosures fewer.

“There’s some weird stuff going on,” she said.

High end luxury Real estate boom! $35 million in 3 sales in less than 30 days!

Tuesday, June 15th, 2010

$35 million in 3 sales in less than 30 days!

So when we thought that the sale of the Fontainebleau II’s Penthouse at $9,000,000 would be the highest sale of the year http://www.celekt.com/articles/miami-beach-highest-condo-sale-since-2007-9000000/, we should have thought twice…

- By the end of May 2010, an other record sale was recorded: http://sef.mlxchange.com/Pub/EmailView.asp?r=1668817485&s=SEF&t=SEF

SANTA MARIA  #4901 Sold for $11,000,000

SANTA MARIA #4901 Sold for $11,000,000

Unit #4901, a 7 BR Penthouse at the Famous Santa Maria condo was sold for $11,000,000.  This unit was bank owned and closed very very quick…… maybe too quick but my comments will stop here.

2 weeks later, Penthouse B at the Setai South Beach closed as the number one highest re-sale in the condo Market in Miami Beach and in all Miami Dade.

Setai South Beach Penthouse B sold for $15,000,000

Setai South Beach Penthouse B sold for $15,000,000

Penthouse B listed at $19,999,999 closed at $15,000,000 with a closed price per square foot over $2,400…. never seen before!

Previous owner, a partner at Barroway Topaz Kessler Meltzer Check, LLP, with over 80 attorneys, one of the largest firms specializing in the prosecution of complex class action litigation, has found a buyer for his only ones of its kind property.

Those unique listings sold back to back ( not including an $8 million + Penthouse at the One Bal Harbour Condominium last month) show how the very high end market has regained confidence into the Miami Beach Real Estate Market. The big players are putting back their money in Real Estate. Definitely, a very distinctive and exceptional Micro Market with Matchless properties but a positive force for the overall market.

South Beach’s LNR Property to sell $1 billion in loans

Saturday, June 5th, 2010

South Beach’s LNR Property to sell $1 billion in loans

The South Beach-based firm LNR Property is trying to sell about $1 billion of defaulted loans.

BY DAN LEVY, JONATHAN KEEHNER AND DAKIN CAMPBELL

Bloomberg News

LNR Property, a Miami Beach company that is the leading administrator of troubled commercial mortgages sold on Wall Street, plans to sell about $1 billion worth of distressed loans and real estate, sources said.

Wells Fargo is also seeking to sell about $1 billion of distressed U.S. commercial real estate loans and assets, according to people briefed on the offerings.

LNR, the largest special servicer of commercial mortgage-backed securities, is trying to sell about $1 billion of defaulted loans, two sources said.

Wells Fargo of San Francisco, the biggest U.S. commercial real estate lender, is taking bids on $500 million to $1 billion of office and hotel mortgages and properties, said four people, who asked not to be identified because the sale is private.

“The availability of capital and better prices than a year ago are driving sellers to move things off their balance sheets,” Matthew Anderson, managing director at research firm Foresight Analytics, said in an interview.

U.S. banks and special servicers hold about $185 billion in distressed loans, according to the Oakland, Calif.-based firm. Wells Fargo had $12.9 billion in nonperforming commercial property loans in the first quarter, the firm said, while LNR is the special servicer on $24 billion of delinquent assets, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Financial institutions were saddled with real estate debt after the global credit crisis and recession sent U.S. commercial property values down 42 percent from the October 2007 peak, making it difficult for owners to sell properties or refinance loans. When commercial mortgages are packaged into securities, a special servicer is assigned to manage the assets and help direct a restructuring if the loans become troubled.

Wells Fargo inherited most of the assets it’s trying to sell from Wachovia, the Charlotte, N.C.-based lender it purchased in October 2008, said two of the people. Wachovia’s loans make up about 60 percent of the combined company’s nonperforming total, Anderson said.

Eastdil Secured, the real estate investment bank owned by Wells Fargo, is advising Wells Fargo and LNR Partners on the sales, said two of the people.

Elise Wilkinson, a spokeswoman for Wells Fargo, referred questions to Eastdil. Martha Wallau, a senior managing director at Eastdil in New York, declined to comment, as did Jen Brown, a spokeswoman for LNR.

“We’re certainly aggressive in terms of liquidating the portfolio,” David Hoyt, head of Wells Fargo’s wholesale-banking business, said at a May 14 meeting of investors, according to a transcript. “At the moment there is a lot of liquidity in the market to resolve problems.”

LNR, based in South Beach, is the administrator or “special servicer” on $181 billion of securitized real estate debt, according to Bloomberg data. The loans it has up for sale average $3 million and are all in default, one of the people said. They are on office and retail properties, mobile homes and apartment buildings. It’s not known if the LNR portfolio includes South Beach’s Sagamore or Shore Club hotels, two properties LNR is trying to foreclose on and whose loans LNR administers.

The firm’s plan to sell loans was reported by the South Florida Business Journal in March.

LNR, owned by Cerberus Capital Management LP, hired Lazard Ltd. to help restructure as much as $1 billion of debt, people with knowledge of the matter said on Jan. 14

Read more: http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/05/22/1642148/south-beachs-lnr-property-to-sell.html#ixzz0q151KSec

Icon Brickell Towers – Over $110 Million in contracts!

Friday, May 14th, 2010

Icon Brickell closed 500 contracts

Icon Brickell Condo

Miami Today – Miami in the Past

Wednesday, April 21st, 2010

SOME HISTORY ABOUT MIAMI

1921 - Hardie's Bathing Casino on Miami Beach

1921 - Hardie's Bathing Casino on Miami Beach


Miami is the youngest major city in the U.S. Its history is very unique and knowing this helps understand what is Miami about. The first inhabitants came to the region 10,000 years ago and erected settlements on the Bay and on the river. They named this settlement Mayami. The powerful Spanish claimed this land as theirs until 1821 when the United States decided to acquire it as another state we know now as Florida. At the same time Bahamian seamen as well as the Seminole Indian tribe, which had been pushed away from their land in other U.S. states, also establish their home in Florida. During this time the area known as Mayami was nothing but a wild empty tract of undeveloped land.
In the beginning Miami, as we know it, started with the work of visionaries whom predicted decades in advance what this unfriendly land would become. Because Miami was such a remote location, it was a crucial factor to provide an easier access. Julia Tuttle arrived in Miami from Cleveland in 1891 and was the owner of 640 acres in Miami. She was the neighbor of other visionaries that believed like her in the future of Miami. Her move was followed by other families such as The Brickells, the Flaglers, the Merricks and the Fishers. Mary and William Brickell owned 2,500 acres of land in Miami which at time was considered very inhospitable. Julia Tuttle pledged half her land to Henri Flagler in order to get him to extend his railway to Miami and to start building a new city from scratch.

The first train reached Miami in 1896; soon after the new city was incorporated. By the beginning of the 20th century, Miami had become a small town that was attracting the wealthiest people whom were willing to be part of a great adventure; this was the birth of Miami Beach.

In the 20′s, Miami was in the midst of an intense expansion and real estate development. During this time George Merrick, the legendary real estate developer created Coral Gables, the first planned community. Carl Fisher developed luxurious hotels and all the required playgrounds including polo and golf courses to please his rich clients.

In September 1926, a killer hurricane almost wiped out the newly resurrected City of Miami Beach. The development recovered in 1935 and new hotels and new apartment buildings broke grounds to create what is known as the art deco district. Shortly after this, World War II erupted and Miami was taken over by the U.S. army to accommodate the war needs. Veterans came back after the war and contributed to the development of this new city and once again the Miami was raging again. New Miami Hotels were built and new luxury hotels such as the Fontainebleau and the Eden Roc came to life.

When Castro came to power in Cuba and the wave of immigrants reached the shores, Miami’s profile changed once again. It is estimated that from the 60′s to the 80′s half million Cubans moved to Miami. With the mass movement of Cubans a Latin universe was created which was an instrumental in transforming Miami into a truly international city. The following wave of immigration from the Caribbean and Latin America further transformed the city. They were all key participants in the building of this magic city, Miami. Miami constant development and its ever expanding skyline is testimony of its dynamism.

Nowadays, Miami Florida is a multicultural city that has a growing economy based mostly in the tourism industry. Our magical city is certainly a beach paradise, with lots of attractions and nightlife , many hotels to welcome all visitors interested into enjoy our great weather and see beautiful people.

SOME GREAT PICTURES ABOUT MIAMI


Miami Real Estate Market Focus April 2010

Tuesday, April 13th, 2010

Miami-Dade Pending Single-Family Home Sales Increase 7.5 Percent in One Month

 

Miami, FL – Total pending home sales – including single-family and condominiums – in Miami-Dade

County increased 6.4 percent in March, from 9,164 to 9,751, compared to the previous month and 71.7

percent compared to March 2009. In addition to international buyers taking advantage of favorable

exchange rates and local market opportunities, first-time and existing buyers are benefiting from recordsetting

affordability conditions, the expanded and extended home buyer tax credit, and a wide selection of

properties to choose from according to the Realtor Association of Greater Miami and the Beaches (RAMB)

and the Southeast Florida Multiple Listing Service. The increase of pending sales coupled with rising closed

sales each of the last 19 months is indicative of a strengthening market.

 

Pending sales of single-family homes in Miami-Dade County performed better than that of condominiums in

March, up 7.5 percent from the previous month, from 4,042 to 4,345. Pending condominium sales in March

rose 5.5 percent from 5,122 to 5,406. In the last year, Miami-Dade pending sales of condominiums

increased 81.5 percent, while pending sales of single-family homes rose 47.7 percent.

 

“We continue to see a surge in pending home sales in South Florida,” said Terri Bersach, RAMB Chairman

of the Board. “This is good news for the South Florida market as it points to increased future sales and

necessary inventory absorption and emphasizes the fact that the local market has recovered. As a result

prices have clearly stabilized, so we now have the missing piece of the puzzle for a strengthening market.”

 

Broward County Pending Sales


In Broward County pending home sales increased 4.9 percent, from 7,791 to 8,173 in March. Pending sales

of condominiums in rose 4.1 percent from 4,343 to 4,522. Pending sales of single-family homes rose 5.9

percent in March compared to the previous month, from 3,448 to 3,651.

 

 

In the last year, Broward pending sales of single-family homes rose 44.4 percent, while pending sales of

condominiums increased 97.1 percent. The total number of pending sales increased 69.5 percent.


Price Stabilization as April 30th Tax Credit Deadline Nears


As real estate prices stabilize, the types of discounts buyers had grown accustomed to during the market

recovery may soon be a thing of the past.

 

“Buyers interested in taking advantage of favorable market conditions need to act now,” said Oliver Ruiz,

RAMB Residential President. “There are now less than 25 days left for buyers to enter into contracts and

take advantage of the current tax credit. The market is a lot more competitive now and is resulting in bidding

wars reminiscent of the recent real estate boom. Buyers who may be thinking about buying should not waste

time because they will be competing with more buyers bidding on the same listings.”

 

The deadline for buyers to enter into contracts and still qualify for the tax credit is April 30, 2010. Buyers

who enter into contracts by the deadline will have an additional 60 days to close.

 

A sale is listed as pending when the contract has been signed but the transaction has not closed, though the

sale usually is finalized within one or two months of signing. Increased pending sales are an indication of

increased future sales.

 

“Copyright RAMB, Reprinted with permission.”

 

Miami Existing Condominium Sales Spike 35 Percent

Prices Continue to Stabilize

 

Miami, FL – In the Miami metropolitan statistical area (MSA), there was a 35 percent

increase of condominium sales in February 2010 compared to the same month the

previous year and a 130 percent increase compared to two years ago, according to the

Realtor Association of Greater Miami and the Beaches and the Southeast Florida

Multiple Listing Service (SEFMLS). The sales of existing single-family homes in the

Miami MSA increased 9 percent in February 2010 compared to February 2009 and

increased 80 percent compared to February 2008. The Miami real estate market has

experienced a surge in sales since August 2008, posting increases each of the last 19

months

 

Nationally, sales of existing single-family homes, townhomes, condominiums, and coops

dropped 0.6 percent from the previous month but increased 7.0 percent from

February 2009.

 

The median sales price for single-family homes reported in Miami-Dade in February

2010 was $191,900, down only 2 percent from the previous year. The median sales price

for condominiums was $126,100, down only 14 percent from the previous year.

 

Average Home Sales Price Increases


According to the SEFMLS, the average sales price for residential properties that sold in

Miami-Dade County in February actually increased 12.9 percent to $282,136 for single family

homes and decreased 10.9 percent to $212,038 for condominiums.

 

“The fact that the drops in home prices are now negligible is excellent news for the South

Florida real estate market,” said Terri Bersach, 2010 Chairman of the Realtor Association

of Greater Miami and the Beaches. “We knew that it would take some time for prices to

catch up with increasing sales, but now that appears to have happened and should result

in further strengthening of the market.”

 

Tax Credit Deadline – April 30th


To qualify for the current  home buyer tax credit, consumers must enter into a contract by

April 30, 2010. First-time buyers are eligible for up to an $8,000 tax credit, while some

current homeowners are eligible for up to $6,500. Visit www.irs.gov and click on Form

5405 for more information.

 

“The tax credits and other market fundamentals have helped the market recover,” said

Oliver Ruiz, RAMB 2010 Residential President. “But those interested in purchasing

need to make sure they are in a contract by April 30th to avoid missing out on the tax

credits for first-time buyers and some existing homeowners.”

 

Days on the Market and Inventory Levels


Inventory levels continue to decrease substantially, another indicator that supports the

local market’s strengthening. The inventory of listings in Miami-Dade County

according to the Southeast Florida Multiple Listing Service has dropped 42.5 percent in

the last 19 months – from 43,095 to 24,792 – and February 2010 brought a .51 percent

decrease in just one month. Nationally, total housing inventory at the end of February

rose 9.5 percent from the previous month.

 

“Copyright RAMB, Reprinted with permission.”

 

 

SOME POSITIVE ARTICLES ABOUT THE MIAMI REAL ESTATE FROM MAJOR LOCAL NEWSPAPERS:

 

S. Fla. Real Estate Showing Signs Of Stabilization   http://cbs4.com/CBS4yourmoney/real.estate.improvement.2.1615203.html

 

Buyers hustling to close on homes before tax credit expires    http://www.miamitodaynews.com/news/100408/story7.shtml

 

Pending home sales in Broward, Miami-Dade show market on the mend     http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/04/06/1564851/pending-home-sales-in-broward.html

 

Home buyers credit nets $936 million for Florida residents    http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/04/07/1568072/home-buyers-credit-nets-936-million.html



Icon Brickell: Hot Developer deals sour condo Mania in Miami

Thursday, March 18th, 2010

Miami Real Estate was featured on national television NBC’s “Today Show”.

Miami Developers are now seeing inventory moving and buyers are finding great opportunities with discounted price from 30% to more than 50% off the original developer prices.

 

Watch the video including Icon Brickell Development:

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

 

 

 

 

Icon Brickell Available Inventory, Celekt Deals:

( Most units come designer ready/no flooring – celekt has a selection of a few listing with flooring already installed and ready to be rented out)


Icon Brickell condo virtual tour, click here to check out this great condo

 

TOWER UNIT |  TYPE FLOOR PLAN  |  SQ. FT. | PRICE | PRICE/SF                        

  • T I                       #2110  STUDIO L                           640           $241,430 $377.00     
  • T I                       #3010 STUDIO L                            640           $265,530  $414.89             
  • T I                        #1504 JUNIOR 1/1 K                    726           $309,930  $427.00         
  • T I                        #3504 JUNIOR 1/1 K                    726           $273,630  $377.00              
  • T I                        #4704 JUNIOR 1/1 K                    726           $292,530  $403.00             
  • T II                       #1706 JUNIOR 1/1 H                    732           $261,030  $356.60                
  • T II                       #3008 JUNIOR 1/1 H                   732           $300,230  $410.15           
  • T II                       #3308 JUNIOR 1/1 H                    732          $294,630  $402.50                  
  • T I                        #914 1/1 H                                         947          $327,530  $345.86           
  • T I                        #2612 1/1 HREV                              947          $338,730  $357.69   
  • T I                        #2611 1/1 J                                        940          $321,230   $341.73                 
  • T I                        #506 1/1 JREV                                 940          $307,530  $327.16                  
  • T I                        #1707 2/2 C                                     1461          $527,730   $361.21                 
  • T I                        #702 2/2 D                                      1433          $536,130  $374.13       
  • T I                        #3105 2/2 BREV                            1503          $585,000  $389.22               
  • T I                        #5505 2/2 BREV                            1503          $678,230   $451.25                 
  • T I                        #3509 2/2 B                                     1312          $500,530   $381.50               
  • T I                        #3115 2/2 E                                     1312          $552,000   $420.73    
  • T I                        #1802 2/2 D                                    1433          $571,830    $399.04               
  • T I                        #4713 2/2 G                                   1144          $464,030    $405.62     
  • T I                        #501 3/2.5 AMOD                         2236          $751,730    $336.19      
  • T I                        #1801 3/2.5 A                                2044          $816,130    $399.28   
  • T II                      #2401 3/2 A                                    1870          $846,230    $452.53    

You can also check our website to find listings for sale or for rent by Maps http://www.celekt.com/area-map-search/

Homebuyers assistance programs $8,000 Tax Credit

Saturday, March 6th, 2010

Home buyer Tax Credit:

On Nov. 6, 2009, President Barack Obama signed into law an extension and expansion of the $8,000 first-time homebuyer tax credit. Among other provisions, the extension adds money for certain move-up buyers; creates one deadline for signing a contract and a later deadline for closing; changes income requirements; and limits a purchased home’s cost to $800,000.

WATCH A SHORT VIDEO

Having difficulties watching this video?  Please click on the following link: $8,000 Credit Video

 

First-time Homebuyers

 

Most details for first-time homebuyers remain the same. The maximum tax credit is still $8,000 ($4,000 for married individuals filing separately), and anyone who has not owned a home within three years is considered a “first-time buyer.”

• A purchase must be under contract by April 30, 2010, and must close no later than June 30, 2010.

The maximum home value purchased cannot exceed $800,000.

• After Dec. 1, 2009, income limits rise to $125,000 for singles and $225,000 for married couples; up from the previous limits of $75,000 for singles and $150,000 for married couples. The tax credit phases out incrementally at each $20,000 increase in income.

Current Homeowners

An existing homeowner who purchases another home may now claim a tax credit of up to $6,500. To qualify, that owner must have owned and used the same residence as a principal residence for any consecutive five-year period in the previous eight years.

• Personal income limits, maximum home value, and contract/closing deadlines are the same as those for first-time homebuyers.

The tax credit does not have to be repaid if the buyer stays in the home at least three years. If the home is sold before that, the entire amount of the credit is recaptured on the sale.

Understanding the Homebuyer Tax Credit

• As part of the extended and expanded tax credit, a buyer now is required to attach documentation about the home purchase to his income tax return. To minimize tax abuse going forward, buyers won’t receive the credit without submitting proof to the IRS.

• The homebuyer tax credit is collected as part of the normal income tax process. As a credit, it’s calculated separately from an individual’s income tax, and paid regardless of taxes owed or withheld from income. For more information on the tax credit, go to the IRS website at: www.irs.gov. For specific advice on the tax

THE BASICS

Q. What is the new tax credit, and what is the new qualifying period?

A. The temporary credit is equal to 10% of the cost of the home, up to a maximum of $8,000. It is only available

for home purchases that go to contract by April 30, 2010, and that close no later than June 30, 2010.

Q. How does a tax credit work?

A. Every dollar of a tax credit reduces income taxes by a dollar. Credits are claimed on an individual’s income tax return. A qualified purchaser figures out the total tax owed and then the tax credits are applied to reduce the total tax bill; i.e. if a person has a total tax liability of $9,500, an $8,000 credit would wipe out all but $1,500 of the tax due.

Q. So what happens if the purchaser is eligible for an $8,000 credit but their entire income tax liability for the year is only $6,000?

A. If the total tax liability before calculating the credit was $6,000, the IRS would send the purchaser a check for $2,000. The refundable amount is the difference between the $8,000 credit amount and the amount of tax liability, determined by tables the IRS prepares each year.

Q. Is there an income restriction on the new tax credit?

A. Yes. The income restriction is based on the tax filing status the purchaser claims when filing his/her income tax return. Individuals filing as Single (or Head of Household) are eligible for the credit if their income is no more than $125,000. Married  who file a joint return may have income of no more than $225,000.

Q. Do individuals with higher incomes lose all the benefit of the credit?

A. Not always. The credit phases down for those earning more than the income guidelines, and isn’t available for those with an income above $145,000 (or $245,000 if filing jointly.) The law provides a formula to gradually withdraw the credit.

Q. How is “principal residence” defined?

A. A principal residence is where an individual spends most of his/her time (generally defined as more than 50%). Also defined as “owner-occupied” housing, it includes single-family detached housing, condos or co-ops, townhouses or any similar type of new or existing dwelling.

Q. How does the existing homeowner tax credit work?

A. Existing homeowners who have lived in their current homes for five consecutive years out of the past eight are eligible for up to a $6,500 tax credit when they buy another home within the qualifying period. The qualified buyer may be a move-up buyer, downsizing and/or a repeat buyer. Repeat buyers do not have to purchase a home that is more expensive than their previous or current home to qualify for the tax credit.

Understanding the Homebuyer Tax Credit

• As part of the extended and expanded tax credit, a buyer now is required to attach documentation about the home purchase to his income tax return. To minimize tax abuse going forward, buyers won’t receive the credit without submitting proof to the IRS.

• The homebuyer tax credit is collected as part of the normal income tax process. As a credit, it’s calculated separately from an individual’s income tax, and paid regardless of taxes owed or withheld from income. For more information on the tax credit, go to the IRS website at: www.irs.gov. For specific advice on the tax credit and your own tax situation, you should always consult a tax professional.

THE PROCESS

Q. How do I claim the tax credit?

A. All eligible purchasers simply claim the credit on their federal income tax return. Specifically, the credit will be reflected on a new IRS Form 5405 that will be attached to the IRS Form 1040 tax return. You cannot claim the credit on Form 5405 for an intended purchase for some future date; it must be a completed purchase. Homebuyers must attach a copy of their HUD-1 settlement form (closing statement) to Form 5405 as proof of the completed home purchase. Form 5405 can be found at: www.irs.gov

Q. Can I use it as part of my down-payment?

A. No. Congress tried to find a way to make the funds available for closing costs, but found that pre-funding would, in effect, bring the IRS into the purchase and settlement phase of the transaction. However, the Florida Homebuyer Opportunity Program has a $30.1 million budget. And, the law implementing the program allows it to be automatically extended if the federal tax credit is extended; therefore, the Florida Homebuyer Opportunity Program can continue to help with downpayment assistance for those who qualify for the extended federal $8,000 first-time buyer tax credit as long as funding is available. But the Florida program is restricted to first-time buyers, and the previously established income limits of $75,000 for a single tax filer and $150,000 for those filing jointly still apply.

MAKING IT WORK

Q. If I buy a home in 2009 or 2010, can I apply the credit against my ’08 or ’09 return?

A. Yes. The law allows taxpayers to “elect” to treat qualified home purchases in 2009 or 2010 as if the purchase happened on Dec. 31, 2008 (or if in 2010, on Dec. 31, 2009.) This means that the previous year’s income limit applies and the election accelerates when the credit can be claimed. A benefit of this is that a homebuyer in 2009 or 2010 will know their prior year income limit, which helps the buyer know whether the income limit will reduce their credit amount. A taxpayer buying a home who wants to claim it on his previous year tax return, but who has already submitted the return to the IRS, may file an amended return claiming the tax credit using Form 1040X. Consult a tax professional to find out the appropriate steps.

Q. Will I ever have to repay the credit?

A. If you claim the credit but then sell the property within three years of the date of purchase, you’re required to pay back the full amount of any credit, including any refund you received from it. A few exceptions may apply.

Source: National Association of Realtors®; National Association of Home Builders

NOTE: This document is for informational purposes and should not be construed as tax or legal advice.

For specific advice, consumers should always consult a qualified tax professional. credit and your own tax situation, you should always consult a tax professional.

Murano Grande Miami Beach Condo for Sale – Rapper Lil Wayne’s Condo?

Thursday, March 4th, 2010

lil-wayne

The buzz around town is that Lil Wayne’s Luxury Condo located at the  Murano Grande in Miami Beach is for sale since the beginning of February. Located right next door to Icon South Beach, the Murano is one of  the Top condominiums in SOFI.

This particular 4 Bedroom, 5.5 Bathroom of 4,000 Sq Ft  wrap around condo features a stunning 270 degree views of the ocean, Miami Beach, Fisher Island and downtown Miami. The view is spectacular from the three terraces of this 26th floor unit without forgetting direct access to the unit with a private elevator.

This unit is the Best Priced 01 Line 4 Bedroom at the Murano Grande Condominium. The average  price  per square Foot is about $700/sq ft. The listed price is a bit lower that what the owner paid in late 2007.

Coming back to the owner, is Lil Wayne really the owner?

According to Miami Dade records, the owner is Bryant Cortez AKA “Tez” in the Music Industry. He is Lil Wayne and Drake’s manager and Young Money CEO.

When all is said and done, Enjoy those gorgeous views from this unit at the Murano Grande Condo in Miami Beach:

Murano Grande

Murano Grande 1