Thursday, December 11, 2008

IRS RELEASES NEW MILEAGE RATES

If you drive a car, truck or van for work, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has announced news that impacts you. That's because the IRS has released the new standard mileage rates for 2009. The rates will be used to calculate deductible costs for driving an automobile for business, charitable, medical and moving purposes. The new mileage rates for business, medical and moving purposes will be slightly lower than the rates for the second half of 2008, which were raised in the middle of last year due to spiking gas prices. The rate for charitable driving, however, is set by law and will remain unchanged from 2008.


Beginning January 1, 2009, the standard mileage rates for 2009 are as follows:
Businesses = 55 cents per mile driven
Medical or moving = 24 cents per mile driven
Charitable organizations = 14 cents per mile driven



Overall, these rates reflect the higher transportation costs compared to a year ago. However, the rates are slightly lower than the second half of 2008 to factor in the recent drop in gasoline prices. While gasoline is a significant factor in the mileage rate, other fixed and variable costs, such as depreciation, also enter the calculation.


But before you calculate your deduction, make sure you qualify. The IRS reminds taxpayers that they cannot use the business standard mileage rate for a vehicle after using any depreciation method under the Modified Accelerated Cost Recovery System (MACRS) or after claiming a Section 179 deduction for that vehicle. In addition, the business standard mileage rate cannot be used for any vehicle used for hire or for more than four vehicles used simultaneously.
Remember, you don't have to use the standard rate! Although the IRS provides the standard mileage rate for ease and convenience, you're not required to use it. If you choose, you have the option of calculating the actual costs of using your vehicle instead of using the standard mileage rates. So keep that in mind as you calculate your automobile usage for business, medical, moving, or charity driving in 2009!


Send me your comments or questions: Email: jliubaker@gmail.com
http://www.socalifgatedcommunities.com/
Jane Liu-Baker
(310) 994-4188

Home Maintenance Tips

There are some simple and effective home maintenance tips to consider at this time of year. Bringing your home up to weather efficiency will save both energy and money.

  1. In warmer climates, reduce watering times on your irrigation controller and be prepared to turn the irrigation controller “off” during prolonged rainy periods. Reducing your water usage is conservation of a limited resource - and it also reduces your water bill.
  2. Check all your yard drains and swales. Make sure they are functioning properly and taking runoff away from your house. Water intrusion to the home may be caused by runoff pooling against or under your foundation. Direct runoff water away from your home and into a local storm drain. The same goes for rain gutters - make sure the gutter is clear of debris and that the drain leads the runoff away from your home.
  3. Check the weather-stripping on all exterior doors. Does it form a tight and unbroken seal? If not, replace the weather stripping. Inefficient weather stripping allows that nice warm air from your heater to escape outside - increasing your energy bill.
  4. Speaking of your furnace, when was the last time you checked the air return filter? A dirty filter makes your heater work harder and spreads dust throughout your house. A clean filter allows your heater to work more efficiently, saving you money.
  5. Check your windows. Are the tracks clean? Dirt and dust in window tracks can cause damage to your windows and/or create paths for the warm air inside to leak outside.
  6. And, while you are checking your windows, look at the caulking around the window frame. Broken or missing caulking can let water in to your home or warm air out. A tube of caulking is relatively inexpensive compared to the damage water can cause or the cost to heat your home.
  7. If you have a wood burning fireplace, make sure the damper is open before you light the fire. And, always close the glass doors to keep embers from escaping the fireplace box. Burn only manufacturer-approved materials and wood types in your fireplace. Trash, gift-wrappings and compressed logs should never be burned in your fireplace.

Send me your comments or questions: Email: jliubaker@gmail.com

http://www.socalifgatedcommunities.com/

Jane Liu-Baker

(310) 994-4188

Friday, November 21, 2008

So It Will Never Happen....

Here's an old editorial I found dated October 15, 2006 from the LATimes.

NATION'S HOUSING
Some robust stats contradict the market-gone-bust reports
By Kenneth R. Harney, Washington Post Writers GroupOctober 15, 2006

WASHINGTON — With all the dismal reports about the home real estate market, don't lose track of something critically important: Mortgage interest rates have been falling quietly but steadily for months and are now at their lowest level in half a year, barely a percentage point above 40-year lows.

New mortgage applications are up sharply, the number of pending home sales is up, the national economy continues to expand moderately, and the rate of unemployment just declined again — to 4.6%.

All of which begs the question: Just what kind of housing bust is this anyway? With gloom-and-doom purveyors forecasting imminent crashes in dozens of metropolitan areas, how could such key fundamentals as jobs, interest rates and even pending home sales simultaneously be trending in the opposite direction?

Donald L. Kohn, the Federal Reserve's vice chairman, took a stab at that seeming conundrum in a recent speech at New York University. His views are worth keeping in mind if you want to put the negative news on home prices and sales in perspective.

To begin with the fundamental point: Kohn sees no imminent bust or crash in housing. It is a "correction" that's underway — a cyclical re-balancing of a marketplace that got too hot for too long in some parts of the country and is now heading back toward more "normal" conditions, where prices are more in line with what consumers can afford.

"The reported declines in house prices in a number of areas should help to facilitate the re-balancing of supply and demand in those markets," Kohn said. Not all home sellers have fully grasped the altered realities in their own local markets — that they've got to reduce their asking prices if they truly want to sell. So the process is still unfolding. Re-priced houses, in turn, should stimulate greater numbers of potential buyers to get off the sidelines and make offers. The unexpected 4.3% increase in the latest monthly number of pending home-sales contracts heading for closing nationwide reported Oct. 2 by the National Assn. of Realtors could be a sign that Kohn's prediction is already taking shape.

Second, said Kohn, the housing correction — expressed through new-home starts — suggests we are well on our way toward bottoming out and eventually returning to positive growth in new-home starts and resales.

Now to interest rates. Today's "unusually low" long-term mortgage rate environment "stands in sharp contrast to some past downturns in the housing market that followed actions by the Federal Reserve to tighten credit conditions significantly." Translation: Affordable mortgage money should help shorten the current housing down cycle compared with credit-squeezed periods in the 1980s, when mortgage rates sometimes exceeded 16% for fixed-rate loans.

A final key factor, according to Kohn: "Continuing growth in real incomes should underpin the demand for housing and, as home prices stop rising, help erode affordability constraints."

Add it all up: Lower asking and selling prices on houses are integral parts of the correction. Lower interest rates should make those lower prices affordable to a broader number of potential buyers. That could become an even more important factor if mortgage rates dip below 6% in the coming months, as some Wall Street capital market analysts expect.


5.75% a possibility

James Glassman, a managing director at JP Morgan Chase, says 30-year fixed-rate mortgages at 5.75% are a distinct possibility if long-term rates in the global bond market continue to ease.

So, what's the source of some of the confusion about just where housing is headed? Mike Moran, chief economist of Wall Street's Daiwa Securities America, minces no words: The financial press and TV news shows are over-dramatizing what is a normal and long-predicted cyclical re-balancing, and "portraying it as a catastrophe," he said Housing "is going through a correction that's badly needed," he said. "The key issue is whether it is orderly or disorderly" — and all signs point to a continued orderly process, not a breakout bust or panic.

Doug Duncan, chief economist of the Mortgage Bankers Assn., points out that national housing sales numbers are merely rolling back to 2003 levels — "and that was a record year." Serious sellers and buyers shouldn't be misled by predictions of imminent crashes, Duncan said. Not only do the doom reports ignore the positives out there in the marketplace — mortgage rates in particular — but also "the rhetoric is just way overwrought."

Kenneth R. Harney


Send me your comments or questions: Email: jliubaker@gmail.com
Jane Liu-Baker http://www.socalifgatedcommunities.com/ (310) 994-4188

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Ask The Real Estate Expert - Do you have a real estate question? Ask me.

Here's some info about me and my experience.

Trusted Experience, Proven Results
  • Full-Time REALTOR
  • CA Lic Real Estate Broker since 1998

Service Areas: South Bay and adjacent cities

  • Residential properties
  • Gated communities
  • Age 55+ properties
  • 1031 Exchange
  • Beach properties
  • Residential
  • Income properties
  • Vacant land

National Association of REALTORS Designations:

  • Graduate REALTOR Insitute (GRI)
  • Seniors Real Estate Specialist (SRES)
  • Certified Residential Specialist (CRS)
  • At Home with Diversity

Memberships:

  • Certified Residential Specialist Relocation Network
  • National Association of REALTORS
  • California Association of REALTORS
  • South Bay Association of REALTORS
  • Greater South Bay Multiple Listing Service
  • Alliance Multiple Listing Service

Continuing Education:
I keep up to date on current issues in real estate. A short list of advanced course she has completed since 1998:

  • Legal Issues in Real Estate Disclosures
  • Stratiegies for Success
  • Technology Applications in Real Estate
  • Listing, Pricing and Marketing Properties
  • Residential Real Estate Financing
  • Marketing, Financing and Manageing Investment Properties
  • Investment Property Analysis
  • Environmental Concerns, Construction Overview and Land Use
  • Real Property, Tax and Exchanging
  • Foreclosure & REO Properties: Find, Purchase and Sell

Jane Liu-Baker http://www.socalifgatedcommunities.com/

Email: jliubaker@gmail.com

(310) 994-4188

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