In Depth Analysis: CalculatedRisk Newsletter on Real Estate (Ad Free) Read it here.

Wednesday, April 09, 2008

Builder Tax Break in Jeopardy

by Calculated Risk on 4/09/2008 02:20:00 PM

Last month I reported on a home builder selling improved land for 15 cents on the dollar (of builder's total costs). What made the deal work was a tax provision that allowed the home builder to apply the losses to earlier profits (up to two years ago) and receive a nice tax refund.

Many home builders were already in trouble two years ago, and the Senate has proposed legislation to extend the loss carry-back period to four years, as opposed to the current two year period. This would mean the home builders could apply losses this year - like from a land sale - to the huge profits made up to four years ago, at the peak of the bubble, and get a large tax refund.

Now Dow Jones reports that that tax provision is in jeopardy: Builders Fearful As US House Shuns Beneficial Tax Provision

The possibility the U.S. House of Representatives' housing stimulus plan might not include a tax provision that would benefit home builders sent shudders across that industry Tuesday.
...
For the sector, the most significant part of the Senate package would allow companies to apply current losses to taxes paid four years ago, instead of the current two-year carry-back. Builders could apply losses against profits from the boom, and some could receive significant tax refunds.
...
John Burns, a California-based housing consultant, [said]: "This could be the difference between bankruptcy or not."
...
Added Fitch Ratings' Robert Curran: "This would help keep, potentially, some builders afloat."