How The Government Would Bail Out Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac

digg Share this on Facebook Huffpost - How The Government Would Bail Out Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac stumble reddit del.ico.us RSS

MARTIN CRUTSINGER and ALAN ZIBEL | July 14, 2008 07:17 PM EST | AP

Compare other versions »
I Like ItI Don’t Like It
In this Thursday, July 10, 2008 picture, U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington before the House Financial Services Committee hearing on systemic risk and the financial markets. The U.S. Treasury and the Federal Reserve announced steps Sunday, July 13, 2008 to shore up mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

WASHINGTON — Now that the federal government has thrown a lifeline to mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, taxpayers could be on the hook for billions more if the crisis of confidence spreads.

There were encouraging signs Monday for the rescue plan, but also signs of concern _ notably on Wall Street, where shares of the two companies slumped further _ that the plan won't be enough.

Other banks are already teetering: National City Corp. shares fell nearly 15 percent on rumors of financial trouble, even though it said it was experiencing no unusual depositor or creditor activity. And Washington Mutual Inc.'s shares fell 35 percent, to a paltry $3.23 amid worries about whether it had enough cash to handle the mortgage market downturn. WaMu said that it did.

And worried customers lined up Monday to pull cash out of their accounts at IndyMac Bank, seized on Friday by the federal government.

Some critics said they fear the Fannie-Freddie rescue effort will make more bailouts inevitable by sending a message that some institutions are too big to fail and thus encouraging risky behavior.

"It sends the wrong message to the world," said Joshua Rosner, managing director of research firm Graham, Fisher & Co. in New York.

Sung Won Sohn, an economics professor at The Smith School of Business at Cal State Channel Islands, cited soaring oil costs, a weakening economy and an unstable housing market that he said will only get worse.

"I don't think these steps are enough to arrest the deterioration," he said.

Story continues below

As long as more homeowners default on mortgages, losses to financial institutions will mount. Those losses already exceed $400 billion, and some analysts believe they will top $1 trillion before the housing carnage is over.

By comparison, Congress has authorized $650 billion so far to fight the Iraq war.

The Bush administration and the Federal Reserve announced an emergency rescue plan Sunday to bolster Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which hold or guarantee more than $5 trillion in mortgages _ almost half of the nation's total.

The plan would temporarily increase a long-standing Treasury line of credit that could be provided to either company. Treasury also said it would, if necessary, buy stock in the companies to make sure they have enough money to operate.

The Fed also announced it would allow Fannie and Freddie to get loans directly from the Fed _ a privilege previously granted only to commercial banks until this March, when the Fed extended the borrowing to investment banks to deal with the collapse of Bear Stearns.

House Financial Services Chairman Barney Frank, D-Mass., predicted Congress would grant approval for the extended line of credit as part of a broader housing measure that he believes President Bush could sign by the end of next week.

In a letter to Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke and Timothy Geithner, the president of the Fed's New York regional bank, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said Monday that he saw any Fed loans as an interim step designed to serve as a bridge to legislation. He added the administration is pursuing legislation "urgently" with Congress to increase Treasury's lending authority to the two institutions.

Monday began with a good sign for Freddie Mac: It attracted more bidders than it had all year for one of its regular debt auctions which raised $3 billion in short-term securities.

Fannie and Freddie stock rose early in the day but gave up the gains. Fannie closed down about 5 percent, at $9.73, and Freddie closed down about 8 percent, at $7.11.

Meanwhile, hundreds of worried customers lined up Monday to pull their money out of IndyMac bank, seized by the government Friday in the second biggest bank failure in U.S. history.

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. estimated the IndyMac failure, the largest since the collapse of Continental Illinois in 1984, would cost between $4 billion and $8 billion out of the agency's $53 billion insurance fund.

Analysts do not expect the volume of bank failures that happened from 1990 to 1992, when 834 of them folded. But the FDIC does plan to review whether to raise the fees it charges banks to beef up its insurance fund.

Brian Bethune, chief U.S. financial economist at Global Insight, called the troubles at Fannie and Freddie a "potentially dangerous turn of events" for the U.S. economy.

He said they needed to be addressed quickly with an infusion from the government _ read "taxpayers" _ of as much as $20 billion in new capital for both institutions.

Right now, the Treasury can extend up to $2.25 billion in loans each to Fannie and Freddie. Officials refused to discuss what the new limit might be but dismissed one report of a $300 billion limit as too high.

Treasury officials also said directly buying Fannie and Freddie stock would be a last resort.

Substantial sums are involved in any event. Analysts say the economic risks of doing nothing are just too great.

"If the government hadn't moved and Fannie and Freddie failed, the cost to taxpayers and the overall economy would be enormous," said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Economy.com.

In Fannie and Freddie were unable to play their huge roles in financing new mortgages, the housing market would only suffer more, he said _ not to mention the turmoil for the financial institutions around the world that invest in Fannie and Freddie's debt securities.

Critics have warned for years that Fannie and Freddie had grown too large, with not enough of a financial cushion.

"They have been allowed to grow out of control to the point where they must be backed by the U.S. government," said Peter Wallison, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and a longtime critic. "We have just ... allowed ourselves to become hostage to these two institutions."

Fannie and Freddie's financial reports remain difficult to understand, even after accounting scandals that came to light five years ago forced the companies to restate several years of earnings and oust top executives.

Wall Street analysts were spooked in May when one measurement of Freddie Mac's total assets fell to negative $5.2 billion at the end of the first quarter, a huge swing from positive $12.6 billion at the end of last year.

The company downplayed the figure, saying it reflected a frozen market for mortgage investments, and said those assets would eventually rebound in value.

The next few weeks _ in which Fannie and Freddie post their second-quarter results and may attempt to raise a bigger capital cushion _ are key, Zandi said. He said in the best possible outcome is if the rescue plan helps the two companies stabilize their finances on their own without any loss of government loans.

"At the end of the day, with a little bit of luck, it won't cost taxpayers a dime," Zandi said.

WASHINGTON — Now that the federal government has thrown a lifeline to mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, taxpayers could be on the hook for billions more if the crisis of confidence spr...
WASHINGTON — Now that the federal government has thrown a lifeline to mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, taxpayers could be on the hook for billions more if the crisis of confidence spr...
Filed by Dave Burdick  |  Report Corrections
 
Comments
108
Pending Comments
0
iPhone App Promo

Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to

View Comments:
Page: « First ‹ Previous 1 2 3 4 Next › Last » (4 pages total)
- dolphy I'm a Fan of dolphy 46 fans permalink

Didn't he say late last that a bailout wasn't needed? Oh, I forgot, when Rethugs move their mouths, they're lying. Forgive my temporary loss of memory.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:14 PM on 07/14/2008
- WIpatriot I'm a Fan of WIpatriot 36 fans permalink
photo

Tatoo it to the back of your eyelids so you see it every time you blink...that will help you remember.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:48 AM on 07/15/2008

Synchronized Debt Default

Google this: economic saturation, macroeconomic saturation, fractal economic decay.......
Saturation macroeconomics is a new science; it is real and can be validated,; it demonstrates economics to be a true science governed by simple quantum fractal mathematical formulas of ongoing asset valuations and operates in a self limiting system of wages, credit parameters, and asset valuations. One element influencing credit parameters, albeit very large, is the central bank. While it can extend, it can not change the limiting laws that govern the system.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:10 PM on 07/14/2008
- Veri I'm a Fan of Veri 22 fans permalink

Now pick stocks. They should all be winners.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:46 PM on 07/14/2008
- WIpatriot I'm a Fan of WIpatriot 36 fans permalink
photo

You owe me a new hot chocolate, Veri.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:54 AM on 07/15/2008
- dolphy I'm a Fan of dolphy 46 fans permalink

I haven't heard a peep from the MSM how this banking debacle was brought to us by the other Dr. Phil (Gramm), the sleaziest of them all Rethugs.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:03 PM on 07/14/2008
- Veri I'm a Fan of Veri 22 fans permalink

Friends helping friends.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:47 PM on 07/14/2008
- WIpatriot I'm a Fan of WIpatriot 36 fans permalink
photo

Economic terrrrsts, all, should be tried for treason, but not by Congress. Congress should be next....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:54 AM on 07/15/2008

Who is in charge of freddie mac ?daniel mudd who was the chief exec officer of G E capital in asia.He also sits on the board of fannie may.
Top 5 foreign investors; 1.china 2.japan 3.cayman islands4.luxemborg 5.belgium
markey watch had an intrview with freedom works pres. mark kibbe who said "A bailout of G S E bond holders would be perhaps the GREATEST TAXPAYER RIPOFF IN AMERICAN HISTORY".Have a nice day!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:43 PM on 07/14/2008

Dick Syron is the CEO of Freddie Mac...in 2003 they ousted the previous CEO and President and annointed Dick who per his Freddie Mac bio he has just a few inside connections with the Fed and the Treasury:

Syron held senior posts in the banking sector including top positions at the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston and at the Federal Home Loan Bank of Boston. During his time at the Federal Reserve from 1989 through 1994, Syron helped shape monetary policy as a member of the Federal Reserve Board's monetary policy making Federal Open Market Committee.

Before joining the Federal Home Loan Bank of Boston as president in 1986, Syron held a number of policy and staff positions with the Federal Reserve System, including assistant to the chairman of the Federal Reserve Board Paul Volcker beginning in January 1981 through early 1982.

Prior to being named the assistant to Volcker, Syron was deputy assistant secretary of the United States Treasury with responsibility for developing the department's position on all domestic economic policy issues, and extensive interaction with other executive branch agencies, Congress and the public.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:57 PM on 07/14/2008
- Veri I'm a Fan of Veri 22 fans permalink

CrazyDogLady, I can give you credit where credit is due. Insightful on The Fed and their grubby paws on Fannie and Freddie. In other words, the put a puppet in to do their bidding.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:48 PM on 07/14/2008
- Kong I'm a Fan of Kong 2 fans permalink

Eight more years! Eight more years! Eight more years!
Eight more years! Eight more years! Eight more years!
Eight more years! Eight more years! Eight more years!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:22 PM on 07/14/2008
- SirReal1 I'm a Fan of SirReal1 65 fans permalink

I'm glad to see that I'm not the only one who views this news with a great amount of skepticism and trepidation.

One comment asked: "It SEEMS TO ME THIS BAIL-OUT SMELLS, WHO MOSTLY OWNS FRANNIE MAE AND FREDDIE MAC?"

And the response was "China and other foreign nations".

I have my doubts on that. These two institutions have been a "Republican Charity" since their inception (along with a large number of "centrist" DLC members and other "well off" Democratic supporters).

My general method for determining the rationale behind "Government Programs" is; FOLLOW THE MONEY! Someone is going to benefit from this, the question that I would like to see answered is "WHO"? (Perhaps "Bondad" can do an analysis on this).

During the "Great Depression" the collapse was not the result of "America" going broke, it was the result of the consolidation of wealth amongst the top 5% while everyone else was left either holding worthless paper (money) or more debt than they could hope to pay-off.

Sound familiar?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:39 PM on 07/14/2008
- SirReal1 I'm a Fan of SirReal1 65 fans permalink

In a related article, yesterday, I read that as recently as "the first three months of this year, Freddie and Fannie were buying up as much as 66 % of the new mortgages in the U.S.

Does this sound like a company that is "cash strapped"?

Does this sound like a company that is in need of a "Government Bail-out"?

Throw in the "Government seizure" of Indy-Mac, (I wonder who they are going to sell that to), the nations #3 lender, and you have a consolidation of incredible proportion.

Now the Government says they will not bail out any other banks or lenders (after they give Billions to Freddie and Fannie) even though analysts predict that large numbers of institutions WILL FAIL in the next year.

Think any of this "Government Bail-out" money (provided at OUR EXPENSE) might find its way into future buy-outs of defaulting banks and lenders over the next year?

Freddie and Fannie are poised to become THE CENTRAL FINANCIER of AMERICA!

So the question again is "Who is going to benefit the most from this"?

I would truly like to see a list of the largest "investors" of these two Corps. Who sits on their board? Who holds the biggest amount of their stock?

Somehow, I wouldn't be surprised if there were "ties" to many people with names that begin in a "B" or a "C" or any host of other top "Government officials".

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:16 PM on 07/14/2008

Sort of seems like a plan doesnt it?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:18 PM on 07/14/2008
- Grannysue I'm a Fan of Grannysue 133 fans permalink
photo

Remeber IT'S ALL IN OUR HEADS, AND WERE WHINNERS!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:30 PM on 07/14/2008
photo

"Take the money and run" Isn't that a song?

Oh, and one more thing: I have $30,000 in credit card debt. I can haz bailout?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:20 PM on 07/14/2008
- WIpatriot I'm a Fan of WIpatriot 36 fans permalink
photo

Got a Wall Street address?
Then, no.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:50 AM on 07/15/2008
- Ron I'm a Fan of Ron 10 fans permalink

The start of the Great Bush Depression, with the only people unwilling to admit they were the cause of it is George W Bush. The greatess failure of a president and administration in this country's history. The waste on the war, overprinting trillions of dollars to devalue our currency, ignoring the invironment, etc., etc. .

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:11 PM on 07/14/2008
- SirReal1 I'm a Fan of SirReal1 65 fans permalink

Ron,

Failure?

As King W stated at a fund raiser prior to the 2000 election (or theft, depending on your perspective), he has served his "base" in every way. He lowered their taxes, set up their profiteering from an illegal war, consolidated their wealth, opened up the markets to their manipulation, sent their Oil investments soaring, reduced their overhead by shipping American Jobs overseas, held the line on spending for "social programs" for the (90%) rest of the populace, and insured that our children would be "left far enough behind" to not be able to resist future directives from the "ELITE".

I'd say that is a tremendous SUCCESS!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:30 PM on 07/14/2008
- WIpatriot I'm a Fan of WIpatriot 36 fans permalink
photo

In no uncertain terms.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:50 AM on 07/15/2008

Comrades, let us nationalize everything in the country on behalf of the people and then appropriate it share it amongst ourselves so we can be oligarchs like our former Soviet comrades.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:05 PM on 07/14/2008
- noen I'm a Fan of noen 4 fans permalink

Sure, but first we need to storm the castle and behead the king. First things first you know.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:28 PM on 07/14/2008
photo

test

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:03 PM on 07/14/2008
photo

these markets appear rigged.

first by big brokerages/investment firms, which orchestrate lucrative schemes to benefit the wealthy and institutional investors - until they explode/implode - inflicting pain and sorrow, far and wide.

by unscrupulous investors, who ‘game’ the markets and take unfair advantage of their ‘insider’ status.

by the financial media, who seem perennially preoccupied with shilling for their personal favorites, at the expense of honest, accurate reporting.

also by politicians, whom cast aside concerns for the public’s best interests - their one legitimate constituent - in favor of their own best interests and the endless flow of corruptible money that comes from favor-seeking contributors.

and by regulators responsible for exercising oversight on these greedy, self-centered bastards in the first place. the fed is only concerned with ‘the economy' - that large and largely opaque environment where commerce operates - not ‘the little people’ who must endure it, day after day. And the sec’s priority is protecting investors - not ‘the common folk’ who need to “stop whining” and pick up the pieces of their shattered lives when it all goes wrong.

so - who does advocate for the public - the people who always have to foot the bill for these extravaganzas to which they themselves are rarely invited?

nobody.

the people are left to fend for themselves. the people be damned. their primary value in this dysfunctional, consumeristic nightmare we call capitalism is their willingness to suffer the relentless manipulation and exploitation visited upon them by their masters.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:53 AM on 07/14/2008
photo

attention huffpo - gotta point out that most of the "quotation marks" shown in my comment above were actually entered as 'apostrophes.'

this is not the first time this has happened to me here, either. whats up?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:46 PM on 07/14/2008
- SirReal1 I'm a Fan of SirReal1 65 fans permalink

philip,

Your comment: "these markets appear rigged."

Ya' think?

As for the rest; NICELY STATED!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:21 PM on 07/14/2008
- Shaddup I'm a Fan of Shaddup 16 fans permalink
photo

The fed is a private bank. There should be no bailout. Why must it always be Free Market for the people, and Socialism for the corporations?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:51 AM on 07/14/2008
- studlyguy I'm a Fan of studlyguy 11 fans permalink

Welcome to the second great economic depression,

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:50 AM on 07/14/2008
- drkazmd65 I'm a Fan of drkazmd65 55 fans permalink
photo

A bit overstated studlyguy,.... but only a smidgen so.

We aren't quite there yet,... but give us an other year of the occupation of Iraq, threatening to blow up Iran, and sending jobs overseas and we will be there.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:05 PM on 07/14/2008
- SirReal1 I'm a Fan of SirReal1 65 fans permalink

DrK,

I don't think studly overstated it at all.

His comment was "Welcome"; as in "Come on in, the party has just begun".

I'd say that is pretty accurate.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:23 PM on 07/14/2008
- emerywood I'm a Fan of emerywood 4 fans permalink

If the economy continues it's downward trend, no amount of help from the government to the investment banks and Fannie/Freddie mortgage giants would stop the erosion of value of the mortgage securities which are substantial and held worldwide. It would just continue it's downward spiral from increasing defaults. The economy should come first, in my view, so people can afford to pay their mortgages or at least avoid defaults and repossesions. Blood transfusion is no cure for a massive hemorrhage. We have to stop or slow the hemmorrhage first. How do we revive the economy in the presence of high oil prices is the main question. And yet, the government is doing nothing in this regard.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:45 AM on 07/14/2008
Page: « First ‹ Previous 1 2 3 4 Next › Last » (4 pages total)
Comments are closed for this entry

 You must be logged in to comment. Log in  or connect with 

Connect