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The Clock is Ticking on Some Now-Or-Never Tax Breaks

Despite the stock market's wild ride this year, 2007 is expected to be a record year for mutual fund distributions, according to Tim Roseen, of Lipper, a mutual-fund analysis firm. Now is a good time to scour your portfolio in search of losses you can use to offset taxable gains. If your investment losses exceed your profits, you can use them to offset up to $3,000 of ordinary income and carry over any unused losses into future years.

Normal year-end tax planning calls for paying next year's deductible expenses, such as January's mortgage interest, property taxes and state income taxes, in the current year. But you don't want to do that if you are subject to the alternative minimum tax. The AMT, a parallel tax system with its own set of rules, does not permit deductions for state and local taxes, home-equity loan interest (unless the borrowed money was used to finance home improvements) or personal exemptions -- worth $3,400 this year -- for yourself, your spouse and your children.


Ask Noel

My husband bought an investment property in 2003 for $182,000 with a mortgage of $160,000; the property is now worth $330,000. In 2004 we bought a family home for $385,000 with a mortgage of $300,000. The value of our family home is still steady and not increasing like our investment property. We are planning to get a $180,000 business loan within the next two years. Is there any way to get the business loan without selling any of our properties?

Your total equity in the properties is about $255,000, so you will be pushing to get an additional loan of $180,000 from your bankers unless you can show the business you are buying has a very good cash flow. I suggest you pour all your resources into reducing the non-deductible debt on the family home, so you will be in a better position when the time comes to apply for the business loan.


ALL BUSINESS: Banks face more woes from rising delinquencies on second ...

Contrarian investors who think now is the time to start buying beaten-down banking stocks could be in for a shock if they don't carefully review those companies' distressed home-equity loan portfolios.

Massive losses tied to subprime-mortgage investments knocked down bank earnings over the last year, spurring investors to flee those stocks. But that could be only the start: Rising delinquencies in home-equity loans and other second mortgages could keep the banks' results from improving anytime soon.

In recent days, executives at Citigroup Inc., JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Wells Fargo & Co. said missed loan payments were a factor in their quarterly earnings declines. Most said the problem would only get worse.

Why? A so-far small, but growing, number of homeowners who used their homes like an ATM to fund their spending and investment bets are finding themselves in a financial pinch.


Low Interest Rates Spur Mortgage Refinancing

Homes sales may get a boost when the fed's recent interest rate drop translates into mortgage rates. The cut will make it easier for many people to get into a new home and will also enable people to refinance to avoid future hardship.

Several loan officers and mortgage lenders all say the same thing -- now is the time to refinance your home. But before you do, consumers need to understand the process is not cut and dry.

Loan officers around the valley say more and more homeowners need to look into refinancing to take advantage of the low interest rate. Different loans can either lower your monthly payment or even shorter your term

But it's not that simple. In order to refinance, you have to have decent credit and have some equity built up in your home.


How the failure of subprime mortgages hurts the overall economy

Given the huge piles of consumer and business debt out there, many U.S. residents seem to think easy credit is their birthright. That cozy feeling that a loan is always within reach is getting rudely shaken. An international credit crunch is upon us. The subprime mortgage crisis spawned it, but everything from home-equity loans to business lines of credit may be touched before it's over.

Sectors as disparate as auto-parts suppliers and developers of riverfront condos in Detroit are feeling the pinch of tighter credit, battering an already weak Michigan economy. "The unwinding of debt is all encompassing. It's from the little homeowner out there to the big corporation," said Larry Moss, senior vice president for the Raymond James investment firm in Birmingham.

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