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Between the lines: Bush faces dilemma over fate of Fannie and Freddie



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Published Date: 20 August 2008
REFERENCES to the wonderfully nicknamed Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the main backers of US home mortgage finance, are apt to produce ribald comments rather than financial concern in Britain. But think again: the collapse in the share price of both organisations in the past few days presages yet another twist in the credit crunch saga. Fannie and Freddie are about to become the US equivalent of Northern Rock for the Bush administration.
At the weekend, Barron's, the authoritative US financial weekly, stoked shareholder fears about both companies by suggesting that the Bush administration was about to take them over. Both mortgage lenders have been battered by record delinquencies an
d rising losses as the US housing market slumped. Their recent losses total $15 billion, causing shares to drop by around 90 per cent this year.

But why should the markets react adversely to the announcement that the US Treasury is going to save Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac? Indeed, following the Barron's article, US bank shares have nosedived across the spectrum.

First, some history. The Federal National Mortgage Association – abbreviated to FNMA, hence the sobriquet – was set up in 1938 under Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal to make homes more affordable for working-class Americans. Fannie Mae does not provide home loans itself. Instead, it deals in the secondary market, buying mortgages from the direct lenders and so shouldering the risks of default.

This allows the lending banks to provide even more mortgages. In theory, this is very efficient way of socialising risk and smoothing out bumps in private mortgage provision. But it contains the implicit moral hazard of allowing private mortgage suppliers to make risky loans and pass them on. In retrospect, the only surprise is how long it took for this to occur.

In the late Sixties, Fannie Mae was taken off the US government books as a way of removing its liabilities from appearing in the national debt – a classic political fiddle. Instead, Fannie was turned into a private company with shareholders – but termed a "government sponsored enterprise".

This vague phrase was meant to imply a government guarantee of Fannie's liabilities, but nothing was legally binding. Fannie Mae, though now private, also received privileges denied to other lenders: exemptions from state and local taxes, reduced capital requirements, and the ability to borrow money cheaply. The profits rolled in.

Excited by this seemingly costless way of funding home-ownership, Congress set up a duplicate organisation, Freddie Mac, in 1970. This gave the impression of competition. Today the two companies own or guarantee half of America's $12 trillion in mortgage debt. Given their aura of public service and federal "sponsorship", Fannie and Freddie often avoided serious scrutiny. Latterly, they became key actors in creating the subprime mortgage scandal and the ensuing credit crunch.

In the boom of the 1990s and early 21st century, Fannie and Freddie formed an overly-cosy relationship with Wall Street, which made fat fees from issuing debt for the two companies, or from selling them mortgages of dubious quality.

At the same time, Fannie and Freddie's vast lobbying machine in Washington hired politicians, or their family and friends, in a bid to discourage any regulations that might involve undue oversight of their business practices.

In 2004, Fannie's senior management was caught engaging in questionable accounting practices that led to an overstatement of its earnings and an understatement of its risk. An investigation review by the Securities and Exchange Commission confirmed the allegations.

As the subprime crisis unfolded last year, it became obvious that Fannie and Freddie had been left holding the parcel of defaulting mortgages. Few will cry for the shareholders who had made easy money in the good times. But if Fannie and Freddie run out of cash, they cannot underwrite the US mortgage market and the housing crisis will turn into a catastrophe.

As it is, with most interbank lending frozen, Fannie and Freddie have issued the vast majority of mortgage securities sold in the US market in the last six months. To help, in March, the Bush administration eased the regulatory regime on Fannie and Freddie, a move which would allow the two companies to invest a staggering $200 billion extra in mortgages.

However, to do so, Fannie and Freddie will have to get the cash from somewhere. But as their losses mount, raising those funds looks increasingly problematic. Even finding the cash to cover growing liabilities may be difficult. On 7 July, a Lehman analyst's report claimed that, if normal accounting rules were applied, the companies needed to raise $75 billion. The inference was that Fannie and Freddie were technically insolvent.

In a bid to help, in mid July, Congress approved a rescue package that empowers the Bush administration to inject billions of federal dollars into the companies. In effect, renationalise them and plug the hole in the balance sheet with massive amounts of taxpayers' cash. However, this was actually all smoke and mirrors. Bush does not want to take over Fannie and Freddie.

For a start, after signing so many blank cheques in the past year, it is unlikely that the federal budget could take on financing the whole US mortgage market, which is what Fannie and Freddie do. Second, nationalising Fannie and Freddie will put their combined debts back on the federal balance sheet. Instead, Bush hoped this show of support for Fannie and Freddie would help restore market confidence in the two companies. It seems to have done the opposite.

When push comes to shove, Bush will nationalise Fannie and Freddie and let Obama deal with the mess. However, the real impact of the unravelling of the two companies lies in the further corrosion of confidence in the US financial system. Hence the latest fall in bank shares.

It will be difficult to avoid a restructuring of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. But rather than react to events, it would be better to act now and trade federal refinancing for a major overhaul of their role and management. The obvious long-term solution is to break up Fannie and Freddie and pave the way for a secondary mortgage market free from federal apron strings. When private risk is palmed off on the public purse, financial disaster always lurks round the corner.




The full article contains 1054 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 19 August 2008 8:44 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

A Friend of Fernando Poo,

20/08/2008 12:42:18
I recall that 4 years ago I was in a hot tub in Vail after a hard day's skiing. An American Paediatrician got to chatting to me about finance, and it transpired he had all his pension savings in Fannie Mae, which he regarded as a blue-chip and entirely safe company.

I allowed as how the credit cycle was certain to end soon and that I thought Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae would be Ground Zero in a housing crash that would ultimately see credit so tight, houses would trade largely for cash. I counselled that when he got home, he should run, not walk, to his broker and get out of Fannie Mae.

In what's an unprecedented situation for me, he emailed a couple of weeks later to confirm he'd taken my advice to heart. Fannie Mae had then dropped to just under 80 Dollars per share that week, but were under 60 a couple of months later.

That was the last contact I had with him, but with Fannie at 6 Dollars per, at least I've saved one person's retirement fund. I'm thinking that Fannie and Freddie will have been half-nationalised by xmas and that will usher in Phase Two of the credit bust - something that will make what's happened up to now look like a tsunami of credit availability.
2

JoeMcT,

BlairsFantasyIsland 20/08/2008 12:50:45
#1 Good post!

The US Economy is about to slip over a Cliff edge and Bush has caused the virtual Bankruptcy of the entire USA.

Not that He would worry of course as in a few short months he will slip off to his "Ranch" and disappear....
3

A Friend of Fernando Poo,

20/08/2008 12:53:02
The article is a good analysis. Fannie and Freddie didn't directly create the subprime market. However, due to an assumed government backing for their bonds, they could easily beat any competitors in the prime mortgage markets and ended up controlling over 90% of it, hence the 12 trillion debt backed only by a few tens of billions in equity (if indeed they don't have negative net worth).

Their competitors responded by effectively creating the subprime mortgage markets just to give themselves something to sell. Fannie got greedy though, and started buying bonds from the subprime market just to keep the competition under pressure. They also got involved in the Alt-A market (between prime and subprime) and have racked up losses there too.

Subprime is hitting 19% of mortgages in default and Alt-A 11%. What's worrying is that defaults in prime mortgages in the US are also climbing and have reached 2.5% As there are a lot more prime mortgages, the banks could take a huge hit from these problems.

Credit Suisse recently estimated that by the time we're through the credit bust, one in eight US mortgages will have been foreclosed (reposessed).

The only conclusion is that the banks have a lot more trouble ahead and the credit bust has years to run yet.
4

A Friend of Fernando Poo,

20/08/2008 14:47:57
New lows for both Freddie and Fannie on Wall Street today - can't be long now...
5

A Friend of Fernando Poo,

20/08/2008 15:24:47
#2: The irony was that he was leery of contact with me afterwards because once Fannie started to pile down, he started worrying that my comments to him had been insider trading. I guess he couldn't get his head around the idea that I was interested in Freddie and Fannie as part of a hobby.
6

ubab,

20/08/2008 17:33:55
Hi A friend of Fernando Poo
When do you think it would be a good time to buy a property in Southern california Orange county considering the housing meltdown. Basically i want to figure a reasonable bottom time to buy it so that I get a good home and a good price.
7

A Friend of Fernando Poo,

20/08/2008 17:51:33
#6: Good question. If we could time the top of a bubble, we'd all get out the day before, and the top would move 24 hours back too. The problem of timing markets is hence a tricky one and by definition, since there's a buyer for every seller, at the very most, only half can get it right. Usually only a handful get it exactly right in a way that makes them rich. Sadly most people who make paper gains in the bubble, ride the bust down far enough to see it all vanish again.

Spotting bottoms of the big bubbles is perhaps easier, since prices usually trundle around the bottom far longer than they hang around the top. That said, I don't think anyone can put anything like a hard date on when it will be.

For guidance though, in the larger credit bubbles, prices of the primary assets generally fall by around two-thirds from peak. More than that in the larger bubbles and less in the smaller ones. Helpfully, this is the largest credit bubble in history. Alternatively they retrace about two-thirds of the bubble in time, and this one started around when we came out of recession in 1982.

There are other markers of a bottom. Just as the bubble pops when the last bear capitulates, it will bottom when the final bull despairs that the bust will last forever. Prior to that there will be a "capitulation" where prices fall faster than before - the mirror of the final blowoff rise at the top.

There's also "credit revulsion" at the bottom, where people burned by debt refuse to countenance it again in their lives and lenders funds are so destroyed they cannot and will not offer credit.

The long and the short of it is that where the bubble drove prices up, you can expect stress sales at 50%, 67%, and if we're lucky, 90% discounts. The only caveat is that you'll need cash in hand to pick up a bargain.

Andrew Carnegie, one of the most successful Scottish investors, adopted this tactic to buy steel mills at 90% discount and never looked back.
8

A Friend of Fernando Poo,

20/08/2008 18:08:14
btw #6: If we go into deflation, which is a common result of large credit bubbles, then nominal house prices will fall at a rate which will astonish even those Californians who've seen 30% year-on-year falls already.

The Daily Telegraph had an article on Sunday indicating that M3 figures in the US are dropping at an extremely fast rate - something which may augur deflation some months from now.

 

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