In the News Presented by Prairie Title
December 21,
2017
Closing a Volatile Year
As 2017 comes to a close, I am hard pressed to think of a year in my
lifetime that witnessed so much Washington-based controvery since Vietnam coupled
with Watergate. Front and center on my mind at the end of a tumultuous year is
that state of the real estate economy and just how much real estate impacts the
U.S. economy as a whole.
An
interesting piece in Mortgage Professional
America recently spoke of the benefits to the real estate economy if a home
purchase tax credit were adopted, and a statistical note in the article really
stood out to me: “According to the Bureau of Economic Analysis, the GDP reached
$18.6 trillion in 2016. Of this amount, real estate chipped in $2.48 trillion,
or 13.3 percent. In comparison, manufacturing was worth $2.18 trillion, retail
contributed $1.1 trillion, and lawyers produced services worth $245 billion."
Clearly,
the need to promote real estate transactions through the tax code is
imperative. Thankfuly, the tax bill just passed in Congress ended up being less
unfavorable to real estate than previous versions. Some deductibility for
property taxes was maintained and the mortgage interest deduction was largely
preserved, while capital gains treatment on the sale of a primary residence was
preserved. Commercial real estate also should
benefit as pass-through entities such as LLCs will be treated more favorably in
the new tax environment.
For
my part, I am keeping an open mind on the possibilities for the real estate
market as the new tax laws come into greater focus during 2018.
CFPB Follies. There’s no need to
discuss the spectacle of the agency temporarily having two diretors, but there has
been movement onTRID disclosures since we last published.
On
Dec. 6, CFPB issued an updated version of the TRID Guide to the Loan Estimate
and Closing Disclosure forms, which did not really help solve disclosure issues.
More hopefully, there is some momentum behind a bipartisan effort in Congress to
legislate needed changes to the
disclosure rule. We hope the new year will bring good news in this arena.
Finally, We recently saw Mudbound, an early 2017 movie release
set in post World War II Mississippi. While I enjoyed the entire movie, one
scene struck me as it unfolded: A family arrives at a home they believe they
have rented (and indeed put $100 down on, quite a sum in those days) only to
find that the homeowner has sold the home in the interim and they are out their
money. The renter had made the deal on a handshake, with no paperwork, and
unfortunately paid the price for that mistake.
To
me, the scene was a reminder that real estate fraud has always been and always
will be with us, and the need for vigilance to guard against fraud and theft
remains and grows greater every day.
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