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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: insurance + mortgage + support  Related to the article below (Last Update: 12/7/2008)

 News results: Standard Version | Text Version | Image Version Results 1 - 10 of about 21,884 for insurance mortgage support. (0.37 seconds) 
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ABC News
Mortgage 'fix' not helpful to troubled homeowners
San Diego Union Tribune, CA -
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., under the leadership of Sheila Bair, has crafted a plan to reduce the monthly payments of troubled homeowners to just ...
Crisis Makes High-Risk Mortgages Obsolete Washington Post
Will Someone Please Tell Our Government You Can't Legislate High ... Seeking Alpha
Rate drops are of little help to many in California Los Angeles Times
On Wall Street - Christian Science Monitor
all 1,031 news articles »  FNM - FRE

stv.tv
What Happens When Gordon Pulls the Plug? asks Burgesses
PR Web (press release), WA -
Grabbing more headlines than all of the above is Gordon Brown's unexpected announcement of the Homeowner Mortgage Support Scheme, which comes on top of the ...
Anxious wait for mortgage rate cuts Scotsman
Q&A: Help for struggling homeowners BBC News
British Homeowners to Get Help Washington Post
Telegraph.co.uk - MyFinances.co.uk
all 645 news articles »
Medical Bills Add to Pain as Firms Fail
Wall Street Journal -
... no insurance," says Ms. Griffin. Now, the Griffins say they have $40000 in medical bills, are two months behind on the mortgage and are selling the BMW. ...
Things to do when your mortgage is paid
San Francisco Chronicle,  USA -
Here are two more things you should do: First, if your lender has been reserving funds to pay your real estate tax and insurance, make the appropriate ...
Lenders facing new disclosure rules Austin American-Statesman
all 3 news articles »

BBC News
Bernanke says home price insurance would be costly
Reuters - Dec 4, 2008
WASHINGTON, Dec 4 (Reuters) - An idea floated by some economists to encourage home buyers to purchase home price insurance would be costly in the current ...
Bernanke Says US Must Step Up Foreclosure Efforts (Update1) Bloomberg
Spreads, costs rise on debt -- unless Uncle Sam is a buyer MarketWatch
Bernanke: more action needed to cut foreclosures The Associated Press
International Herald Tribune - Times Record News
all 1,345 news articles »

Boston Globe
Mortgage proposal has faced conflict
Houston Chronicle, United States - Dec 2, 2008
By ALISON VEKSHIN BLOOMBERG NEWS Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Chairman Sheila Bair said she?s frustrated by a lack of support from the Bush ...
Customer Trust at Stake in Crisis, Bair Tells Gala US Banker
Encouraged that Obama will support $24.4-billion foreclosure ... MarketWatch
Give owners 5% mortgage and watch economy thrive Atlanta Journal Constitution
The Associated Press - CNNMoney.com
all 97 news articles »
Financial Q&A: Postbankruptcy mortgage, but stuck at a high rate
Christian Science Monitor, MA -
As for FDIC coverage, funds deposited into an account owned by a revocable living trust may qualify for more insurance coverage than an account owned by an ...
Says House should reject $350 billion to Treasury without loan ...
MarketWatch - Dec 4, 2008
Frank said Bair has support in Congress. "I think she should stay on and I think she should be given a broader role on formulating policy on mortgage ...
Rep Frank: TARP Funds Must Be Used For Foreclosure Relief EasyBourse.com
all 22 news articles »

Javno.hr
First Georgia Community Bank Closed, Boosting 2008 Toll to 23
Bloomberg - Dec 5, 2008
?Deposits will continue to be insured by the FDIC, so there is no need for customers to change their banking relationship to retain their deposit insurance ...
Regulators Close Another Bank Washington Post
Georgia bank shuttered by regulators CNNMoney.com
FDIC shuts failed bank in Georgia The Associated Press
all 272 news articles »
First Defiance Financial Corp. Receives $37 Million in Capital ...
MarketWatch - Dec 5, 2008
These forward-looking statements involve numerous risks and uncertainties, including those inherent in general and local banking, insurance and mortgage ...
First Defiance Financial Corp. Receives $37 Million in Capital ... International Business Times
all 24 news articles »  FED - FDEF
Source: Google News

 
 

Mortgage-insurance deduction measure is gaining support

WASHINGTON — The Capitol Hill campaign to make home-mortgage insurance premiums tax-deductible took a giant step last week with the introduction of a bipartisan bill co-sponsored by key members of the tax-writing House Ways and Means Committee.

The bill (H.R. 1336) would affect the mortgages of an estimated 12 million-plus American homeowners, and reverse a decades-old IRS prohibition against write-offs of mortgage insurance payments.

Co-sponsored by Reps. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., and William Jefferson, D-La., the bill would apply to home loans with private mortgage insurance, Federal Housing Administration insurance, veterans guaranty coverage and Rural Housing Service mortgages.

 

Besides the co-sponsorship of six other tax-committee members, the measure has drawn endorsements from an unusual collection of 21 interest groups ranging from the National Urban League to the National Conference of Black Mayors, the National Taxpayers Union, the National Education Association, the National League of Cities, the Consumer Federation of America and the Mortgage Bankers Association of America.

Minority-housing advocacy groups support the measure because mortgage insurance in its various forms covers an estimated 57 percent of all home purchase loans made to African American and Hispanic borrowers.

 

Consumer and union groups back the bill because it provides tax relief to middle-income borrowers — an estimated 54 percent of whom use private or government-backed insurance with their home purchases.

In a statement last week, Ryan said "the people who use mortgage insurance are policemen, firemen, teachers and veterans," yet under current IRS rules "they cannot deduct the cost of these (premium) payments for federal tax purposes." Ryan estimated that his bill would also lower the after-tax costs of mortgages enough to enable 300,000 additional renters per year to buy a home.

 
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Mortgage insurance, whether private or government-backed, allows borrowers to take out a home loan with a minimal downpayment, frequently 3 percent or less.

Private mortgage insurance is required by lenders on any loan where the downpayment is lower than 20 percent. FHA mortgages are aimed at buyers who can afford even smaller downpayments and may have imperfect credit histories.

Most mortgage insurance premiums are paid monthly as add-ons to the principal, interest, insurance and tax escrows. They range in size from under $50 a month to $150 or more, depending on the size of the mortgage and depth of the insurance coverage.

The premium payments are designed to reimburse lenders for the costs associated with borrower defaults or foreclosures. The payouts for mortgage insurance claims never go to the borrowers themselves, only to lenders after they submit claims. The IRS has prohibited tax deductions of mortgage-insurance premiums by homeowners because it considers the premiums to be loan-related "service" expenditures — such as an appraisal or credit report — rather than as an integral part of the cost of mortgage money, such as interest charges.

However, private tax-law experts argue that by all tests, mortgage-insurance premiums function like interest payments, benefit the lender alone, and should be tax-deductible.

The new House bill contains an income "phaseout" provision that would limit most tax write-offs to borrowers with household incomes below $100,000. Borrowers below that threshold could deduct 100 percent of their monthly insurance premiums.

Borrowers with incomes above $100,000 would lose 10 percent of their deduction for each $1,000 that their income exceeds $100,000. Married homeowners filing separately would have a $50,000 income threshold and would lose 10 percent of their deduction for each $500 their income exceeded $50,000.

An estimated 7 million-plus homeowners pay premiums on FHA-insured home loans. Another 5.5 million pay private mortgage-insurance premiums. Presumably not all would take advantage of the new tax-deductibility provision, either because their household incomes exceed the limit or more likely because they do not itemize on their tax returns. A family with a $150 monthly insurance premium would be eligible for a new deduction of $1,800 per year. A family paying $50 per month in premiums would get a $600 write-off.

What's the outlook for the bill, and when might homeowners get the green light to start taking deductions? The bipartisan backing of eight Ways and Means Committee members, including the third-ranking Republican, Rep. Clay Shaw Jr. of Florida, suggests there is serious interest in moving the bill this session.

As to timing, mortgage-insurance premiums would become deductible as soon as the bill is signed into law. That means that if the bill passed both the House and Senate later this year, premiums paid after the date of enactment would be deductible on the next federal tax return filed by homeowners — next year for most taxpayers.


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