Posts Tagged ‘the mortgage’

Mortgage Interest Deduction Will Be Capped, and That’s (Probably) a Good Thing

Thursday, December 6th, 2012

Roy Oppenheim’s commentary was originally published on Yahoo! Homes and is being republished on South Florida Law Blog with their permission.

There is a fair share of hyperbole and panic behind all the discussion about the fiscal cliff, whether it is real or just another made-for-TV drama a step away from a new “Real Housewives” spin-off. But that does not mean some of it is not justified.

The fiscal cliff contains many, many moving parts, which sometimes tend to get lost in a sea of white noise. But behind all the political grandstanding and theatrics, there are real Main Street issues at play.

Here is the reality. Regardless of what happens with the fiscal cliff negotiations, the real estate market is going to take a hit, particularly at the higher end of the market. It is just a matter of how substantial; whether it is a bump in the road or a major setback.

When it is all said and done, there will be some sort of tinkering or tweaking of the mortgage interest deduction that has become the vanguard of the real estate industry.

If in fact the deduction is eliminated, and taxpayers are unable to deduct their mortgage interest at all, as they are now for up to a million dollars of principal, the impact will be substantial on the real estate industrial complex, and it will place a drag on the gross domestic product.

That complex of course includes Realtors, lenders, developers, contractors, real estate attorneys, surveyors, plumbers, gardeners, and anyone else remotely involved, even people who sell furniture; and of course we can’t forget the banks who make the loans!
(more…)

Mortgage Settlement Payouts Are Another Blown Call

Monday, October 1st, 2012

Roy Oppenheim’s commentary was originally published on Yahoo! Homes and is being republished on South Florida Law Blog with their permission.

Green Bay Packers vs Seattle SeahawksWell the long national nightmare is over. No, not the fraudclosure crisis. Sad to say that legal mess is still being cleaned up years after the bubble burst.

I’m talking, of course, of the NFL referees lockout.

Believe it or not, as I watched the backpedaling by Goodell and Friends after the Monday Night debacle, I found an odd comparison with the latest installment of what I like to call “As the Mortgage Settlement Turns”.

Here in Florida, and in several other states across the country, thousands of homeowners are about to get notices in the mail, stating they too might be able to claim a piece of the settlement pie.

The basic premise is this, if you lost your home to foreclosure, you’ll get a claims form, if you fill it out and you’re deemed eligible, you could get some money for your troubles.

When you take a long hard look at this process, you’ll probably see, as I have, that this process is inherently flawed from the get-go.

It’s why I’m not assisting my clients fill out these forms. I am not getting involved.

So how does this relate back to the NFL? Well since the lockout started every statement that came from the League was a complete and utter whitewash of the problems caused by the use of the replacement referees.

Rather than apologizing or even acknowledging their mistake, a mistake millions of people saw with their own eyes, the NFL just stuck to a hollow narrative and hoped we’d just accept it and move on. Just as the government and the banks are trying to do now with this flimsy settlement.
(more…)


PHP/MySQL Components, WordPress Plugins, and Technology Opinions at TravisWeston.com

Bad Behavior has blocked 2357 access attempts in the last 7 days.