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Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac Struggle A Year After Takeover

By ALAN ZIBEL   09/ 4/09 06:34 PM ET   AP

Fannie

Many questions remain about Fannie and Freddie's future, but several things are clear: The companies are unlikely to return to their former power and influence, the bailout is sure to cost taxpayers even more money and the government will have a big role in the U.S. mortgage market for years to come.

Fannie Mae was created in 1938 in the aftermath of the Great Depression. It was privatized 30 years later to limit budget deficits during the Vietnam War. In 1970, the government formed its sibling and competitor Freddie Mac.

The companies boomed over the past decade, buying mortgages from lenders, pooling them into bonds and selling them to investors. But critics called them unnecessary, arguing that Wall Street could support the mortgage market itself.

That argument has faded in the wreckage of the failed loans that led to the housing bust. Investors have fled any mortgage investment that doesn't have the government standing behind it.

"No longer is anyone arguing that the private sector can handle this on its own," said Jaret Seiberg, an analyst at Washington Research Group.

The government stepped in to take control of the two companies on the weekend of Sept. 6, after they were unable to raise money to cover soaring losses and their stock prices plunged.

A year later, the government controls nearly 80 percent of each company, and their problems are growing as defaults and foreclosures continue to skyrocket.

The percentage of homeowners who have missed at least three months of payments is normally under 1 percent for both companies. Now it's nearly 4 percent for Fannie and 3 percent for Freddie.

Fannie had nearly $171 billion in troubled loans as of June and had set aside $55 billion to cover those losses, while Freddie had nearly $78 billion in troubled loans and reserves of only $25 billion.

"It's much worse than anybody thought," said Paul Miller, an analyst with FBR Capital Markets.

It could be another year before the final taxpayer tab for Fannie and Freddie is known, and that outcome will depend on when delinquencies and foreclosures finally crest.

Barclays Capital predicts the companies will need anywhere from $160 billion to $200 billion out of a potential $400 billion lifeline, which the Obama administration expanded from the original $200 billion set last fall. Most analysts don't expect the money to be returned anytime soon, if at all.

"What will ultimately end up happening," said Barclays analyst Ajay Rajadhyaksha, "is that the U.S. taxpayer swallows the bill."

Despite federal control, Fannie and Freddie have recently surged on Wall Street. The companies said Friday that they now comply with New York Stock Exchange requirement for an average closing price of $1 a share or more. But most analysts still say the companies' stocks will be worthless in the long term.

The Obama administration doesn't expect to announce its plans for the two companies until early next year, but powerful interest groups aren't waiting until then. The Mortgage Bankers Association on Wednesday offered a detailed plan to replace Fannie and Freddie with several federally-regulated private companies.

That proposal still retained a big government role, giving those companies the ability to issue mortgage bonds formally guaranteed by the federal government.

In the meantime, both Fannie and Freddie have been drafted to implement the Obama administration's effort to attack the foreclosure crisis. Freddie Mac now has about 600 workers either modifying loans or monitoring compliance with the program's rules. Fannie Mae said it has added hundreds of employees to work on foreclosure prevention efforts.

The early results have been disappointing. For example, while Fannie or Freddie refinanced 2.9 million loans from January through July, only about 60,000 were taking advantage of an Obama administration plan to help "underwater" borrowers who owe more than their homes are worth.

At the same time, nearly 70 percent of U.S. mortgages made in the first half of this year went through Fannie or Freddie, up from 62 percent last year, according to Inside Mortgage Finance, a trade publication. That's a big change from three years ago, when the risky lending market was still alive and Fannie and Freddie's share was down to 33 percent.

"We've been the mortgage market," said John Koskinen, Freddie Mac's chairman. "Without that financing availability, people would not have been able to get a mortgage."

Fannie and Freddie don't directly make loans, but they exert enormous influence over the industry by issuing detailed standards for the loans they will purchase. Lenders must feed their borrowers into Fannie and Freddie's computer systems, which evaluate borrowers based on their credit scores and the size of their down payment.

Both companies, facing huge losses, have kept those standards tight, frustrating many. Eric Delgado, a mortgage broker in Rockville, Md., says there's zero flexibility with either company. Either borrowers qualify or they don't. No arguing. No excuses.

But some in the industry say the restrictions are long overdue after several years of lending excesses.

"You needed to bring some reality to the market," said Michael Moskowitz, chief executive of Equity Now, a New York-based mortgage lender, which does about 80 percent of its business with Fannie and Freddie.

Fannie Mae CEO Michael Williams declined an interview request, but said in an e-mailed statement that "it is not enough to help a borrower own a home. We must also help ensure that they will be able to stay in the home over the long term."

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04:38 PM on 09/09/2009
"Fannie Mae was privatized... to limit budget deficits during the Vietnam war." That worked out so well, we have now chosen to privatize the war to limit the budget deficits of the banks. Are you following this, younger readers ?
04:02 PM on 09/09/2009
It seems our efforts to achieve actual results with regards to reform in the banking & finance sectors are futile. In addition, the disconnect between reality and wall street keeps widening. The situation is frustrating.
hat tip: to http://www.iamned.com
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themodernleader
10:43 PM on 09/08/2009
The American Administration's committment to guarantee all the fraudulent loans paid by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac that were resold to investors all over the world as MBAs, was one of the most disastrous financial decisions in our history. Our currency is crashing because of the ignominious decisions made by Bush and Obama that provided short term redress at the loss of America's future as an independent nation-state. This country is being managed by incompetents and traitors.
Our only remedy is to rescind the previous guarantees while we withdraw and regroup. And our first priority must be the provisioning of jobs and protected productivity and growth.
Systemic fraud brought us to this imperiled condition. Our form of governance has totally broken down. How can there be reform when most of the reformers are the miscreants? To my everlasting regret, I see no constructive path out of this bankruptcy of human-knowledge and material-manufacturing loss.. Harry Truman was right when he wrote that when a country forgets its past of courageous, honorable leadership, leaders direct the Republic towards destruction and ruin.
02:33 PM on 09/08/2009
"Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac give the Treasury each 80% of their (common) stock and $1B (each).
The Teasury promises to keep Fannie and Freddie solvent according to GAAP by lending it money at 10% per year.Fannie Mae shares jumped from 58 cents at the end of July to $2.04 by Aug. 28; Freddie Mac soared from 62 cents to $2.40 in the same period.
The Treasury promises to keep Fannie and Freddie liquid by buying its MBSs, financing the purchase by selling more Treasury bonds, and then holding the GSE MBSs to maturity.
The Treasury, the Fed, and the FHFA will agree on an additional amount--a "commitment fee"--that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac must pay to the Treasury starting in March of 2010."

Read More: http://www.housingnewslive.com
02:08 PM on 09/08/2009
Who was it that said that Fannie and Freddie didn't need any stinkin' regulation, and that any call for increased oversight was simply a racist attack on Raines?

Mmm... right on the tip of my tongue. Oh well, it'll come to me.
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CaptD
Freedom From Nuclear Fascism...
01:55 PM on 09/08/2009
The Govt. should immediately restore the tax benefits that they just removed when they changed the tax code that allowed folks to take up to $500,000 tax free after living in a home for 2 of the last five years...

This change has caused many folks to dump second or vacation homes at the worst possible time and the trickle down effect of all those homes NOT being repaired/sold has caused the loss of all the construction jobs and equipment sales that they supported!

The housing market recovery is NOT "Rocket Science", here is an easy game plan for success:

1. Lenders should give folks a Yes or No answer to a contract offer in less than a week, not months.
2. Credit Companies need to stop "shorting" folks credit scores, "because they can"...
3. Mortgage holders need to assume "ownership" of all the homes they now control, and not be
allowed to keep huge numbers of homes in limbo, which hurts neighborhoods & all home prices.
4. Banks that received Govt. funds MUST make home loans available to folks that qualify or
give the money back with interest!
5. Restore the above tax credits for folks to encourage them to buy one of the homes on the market!
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dmsdzinr
Progression wit a twist of sarcasm.
01:44 PM on 09/08/2009
CLOSE 'EM DOWN!
yappnmutt
humping legs for liberty
01:24 PM on 09/08/2009
because of the leverage ratio finance companies begin to blow up at a 2% default rate. fannie and freddie are approaching a 4% default rate. they are burnt toast.
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comicpro
Stupid Should Be Painful
12:57 PM on 09/08/2009
Cant believe so few posts! Oh I get it a real issue! So here is my two cents. The blame can be seen on both sides of the aisle, banking, mortgage industry, real estate, appraisers, and last but not least the human consumption machine that of course DESERVES to have whatever they want. There was a bunch of collusion, greed and stupidity. Add all those ingredients and PRESTO Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, siesmic shift in the financial industry and now an economy in the crapper. BRILLIANT!!!!!!
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bettyx1138
12:55 PM on 09/08/2009
a naive question: why can't we let them fail? isn't that what's supposed to happen in a free market?
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OneTop
Uh, is that a beer hall?
02:16 PM on 09/08/2009
Not a naive question at all.

If you are a free market purist and in control (i.e. the power to decide) you would let them fail. Arguably it would have catastrophic results throughout the whole of the U.S. as well as financial markets world-wide.

It would also be a very bad Political move and as such, we now have what we now have.
02:55 PM on 09/08/2009
Also, arguably, the effects would have been minimal, as they get carved up piecemeal for wholesome consumption by smaller, less risky, better run organizations.
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11:56 AM on 09/08/2009
With ridiculous names like that, how good can they be?
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krm1255
Facts are not negotiable
11:40 AM on 09/08/2009
Well since no changes were made and Geithner and Bernanke are still in place, I really didn't expect a different outcome.

Change did not happen in the financial markets and I don't believe it's going to because our politicians get rich from the status quo.
11:20 AM on 09/08/2009
Government-run mortgage care - it's worked out so well. As Barney Frank said, "I'm ready to take the risk so that more people can own homes!". Politics and business decisions don't mix well. At least the Democrat Frank Raines walked away with hundreds of millions of money from when he (mis)ran Fannie Mae.
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mjeffn
Freedom's just another word 4 nothing left to lose
12:40 PM on 09/08/2009
Fannie May and Freddie Mac were privatized.
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02:30 PM on 09/08/2009
Secured by an implicit--now explicit, government guarantee.
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11:13 AM on 09/08/2009
Please take a moment to enjoy this nugget, from the estimable Maxine Waters:

>>Mr. Chairman, we do not have a crisis at Freddie Mac, and in particular at Fannie Mae, under the outstanding leadership of Mr. Frank Raines. Everything in the 1992 act has worked just fine. In fact, the GSEs have exceeded their housing goals. What we need to do today is to focus on the regulator, and this must be done in a manner so as not to impede their affordable housing mission, a mission that has seen innovation flourish from desktop underwriting to 100 percent loans. -- Congresswoman Maxine Waters (D-CA) in a September, 2003, hearing of the House Committee on Financial Services.
01:12 PM on 09/08/2009
Affordable housing for all sounds good until you learn the catch - the taxpayers will have to pay for it. How could our Congress members not have seen this?
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01:55 PM on 09/08/2009
Congress is willful ignorance, masquerading as wisdom. Cloaked, in a compassion they do not feel, financed by a bill they never personally recieve.
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mjtaylor22
10:57 AM on 09/08/2009
the markets corrpupte this entity, the lax lending standards caused these two to be left with the subprime bag of tricks and bad loans, they didn't make the laons they maybe subsidized these loans and created a market for secondary mortgages, all the private entities in htis field dried up, either thru their own deception and corruption or as a consequence of the fall out from private corruptionof this market.
i think they should work with hud and make these darn hoses section 8 houses, that waiting list is years long in many areas.