Mortgage Short Sale: Forgiveness of Debt and the 1099

December 7, 2007 by A.B. Dada  
Filed under Housing Bubble




There’s talk of the Federal Congress working for a law that would remove the tax burden from the short sale of a home when the owner can’t make the mortgage, and can’t sell it for the remainder of the mortgage. What is happening now is the option of the mortgage lender to “gift” the difference between the mortgage value and the sale price of the home, with the lender optionally giving the borrower a 1099 for that price difference. If you have US$200,000 remaining on a loan, and the home short sells for US$150,000, the lender is gifting you US$50,000, and issuing you a 1099 since the gift is considered income.

If the bill passes, the lender will be unable to give you that 1099, which would supposedly “help” the short seller by not having the tax burden from such a big gift. While I am vehemently against the IRS and the Federal Income Tax at every level, this new proposal creates a loophole that I believe many wealthy people will use.

Read the rest of this article at the housing bubble site.

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  4. Scary Housing Bubble Mortgage Calculator
  5. SEC decides to stop short selling for certain bank stocks
  6. Foreclosures, and more bad government ideas
  7. Looking for a Starter Home? Rent.
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  9. What if no one can afford to live there?
  10. A lifetime of debt is not ownership

Comments

2 Responses to “Mortgage Short Sale: Forgiveness of Debt and the 1099”
  1. Craig says:

    I don’t believe the Bush Mortgage Rescue Plan fix the problems within the housing market. The % homeowners that will benefit from this compensation will be less then the Administration thinks. Thereby the people that need help most are not covered by this plan because they usually already have big mortgage paying problems. I read a interesing article on a other blog about The Bush Subprime Rescue Plan: http://www.housepricesdrop.com/houseprices/2007/12/06/bush-announces-mortgage-plan-to-help-homeowners/“>

    Is it delaying the public execution on the housing market? Or has it chance of succes…….

  2. adam.dada says:

    test

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