
Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson Jr. on
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac Bail Out (full transcript)
Statement by Secretary Henry M.
Paulson, Jr. on Treasury and Federal Housing Finance Agency
Action to Protect Financial Markets and Taxpayers
09/07/2008 (gyungje.com / econ.la) - Good
morning. I’m joined here by Jim Lockhart, Director of the
new independent regulator, the Federal Housing Finance
Agency, FHFA.
In
July, Congress granted the Treasury, the Federal Reserve and
FHFA new authorities with respect to the
GSEs, Fannie Mae
and Freddie Mac. Since that time, we have closely monitored
financial market and business conditions and have analyzed
in great detail the current financial condition of the GSEs
– including the ability of the GSEs to weather a variety of
market conditions going forward. As a result of this work,
we have determined that it is necessary to take action.
Since this difficult period for the GSEs
began, I have clearly stated three critical objectives:
providing stability to financial markets, supporting the
availability of mortgage finance, and protecting taxpayers –
both by minimizing the near term costs to the taxpayer and
by setting policymakers on a course to resolve the systemic
risk created by the inherent conflict in the GSE
structure.
Based on what we have learned about these
institutions over the last four weeks – including what we
learned about their capital requirements – and given the
condition of financial markets today, I concluded that it
would not have been in the best interest of the taxpayers
for Treasury to simply make an equity investment in these
enterprises in their current form.
The four steps we are announcing today
are the result of detailed and thorough collaboration
between FHFA, the U.S. Treasury, and the Federal Reserve.
We examined all options available, and
determined that this comprehensive and complementary set of
actions best meets our three objectives of market stability,
mortgage availability and taxpayer protection.
Throughout this process we have been in
close communication with the GSEs themselves. I have also
consulted with Members of Congress from both parties and I
appreciate their support as FHFA, the Federal Reserve and
the Treasury have moved to address this difficult issue.
Before I turn to Jim to discuss the action he is taking
today, let me make clear that these two institutions are
unique. They operate solely in the mortgage market and are
therefore more exposed than other financial institutions to
the housing correction. Their statutory capital
requirements are thin and poorly defined as compared to
other institutions. Nothing about our actions today in any
way reflects a changed view of the housing correction or of
the strength of other U.S. financial institutions.
I support the Director’s decision as
necessary and appropriate and had advised him that
conservatorship was the only form in which I would commit
taxpayer money to the GSEs.
I appreciate the productive cooperation
we have received from the boards and the management of both
GSEs. I attribute the need for today’s action primarily to
the inherent conflict and flawed business model embedded in
the GSE structure, and to the ongoing housing correction.
GSE managements and their Boards are responsible for
neither. New CEOs supported by new non-executive Chairmen
have taken over management of the enterprises, and we hope
and expect that the vast majority of key professionals will
remain in their jobs. I am particularly pleased that the
departing CEOs, Dan Mudd and Dick Syron, have agreed to stay
on for a period to help with the transition.
I have long said that the housing
correction poses the biggest risk to our economy. It is a
drag on our economic growth, and at the heart of the turmoil
and stress for our financial markets and financial
institutions. Our economy and our markets will not recover
until the bulk of this housing correction is behind us.
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are critical to turning the
corner on housing. Therefore, the primary mission of these
enterprises now will be to proactively work to increase the
availability of mortgage finance, including by examining the
guaranty fee structure with an eye toward mortgage
affordability.
To promote stability in the secondary
mortgage market and lower the cost of funding, the GSEs will
modestly increase their MBS portfolios through the end of
2009. Then, to address systemic risk, in 2010 their
portfolios will begin to be gradually reduced at the rate of
10 percent per year, largely through natural run off,
eventually stabilizing at a lower, less risky size.
Treasury has taken three additional steps
to complement FHFA’s decision to place both enterprises in
conservatorship. First, Treasury and FHFA have established
Preferred Stock Purchase Agreements, contractual agreements
between the Treasury and the conserved entities. Under
these agreements, Treasury will ensure that each company
maintains a positive net worth. These agreements support
market stability by providing additional security and
clarity to GSE debt holders – senior and subordinated – and
support mortgage availability by providing additional
confidence to investors in GSE mortgage backed securities.
This commitment will eliminate any mandatory triggering of
receivership and will ensure that the conserved entities
have the ability to fulfill their financial obligations. It
is more efficient than a one-time equity injection, because
it will be used only as needed and on terms that Treasury
has set. With this agreement, Treasury receives senior
preferred equity shares and warrants that protect
taxpayers. Additionally, under the terms of the agreement,
common and preferred shareholders bear losses ahead of the
new government senior preferred shares.
These Preferred Stock Purchase Agreements
were made necessary by the ambiguities in the GSE
Congressional charters, which have been perceived to
indicate government support for agency debt and guaranteed
MBS. Our nation has tolerated these ambiguities for too
long, and as a result GSE debt and MBS are held by central
banks and investors throughout the United States and around
the world who believe them to be virtually risk-free.
Because the U.S. Government created these ambiguities, we
have a responsibility to both avert and ultimately address
the systemic risk now posed by the scale and breadth of the
holdings of GSE debt and MBS.
Market discipline is best served when
shareholders bear both the risk and the reward of their
investment. While conservatorship does not eliminate the
common stock, it does place common shareholders last in
terms of claims on the assets of the enterprise.
Similarly, conservatorship does not
eliminate the outstanding preferred stock, but does place
preferred shareholders second, after the common
shareholders, in absorbing losses. The federal banking
agencies are assessing the exposures of banks and thrifts to
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The agencies believe that,
while many institutions hold common or preferred shares of
these two GSEs, only a limited number of smaller
institutions have holdings that are significant compared to
their capital.
The agencies encourage depository
institutions to contact their primary federal regulator if
they believe that losses on their holdings of Fannie Mae or
Freddie Mac common or preferred shares, whether realized or
unrealized, are likely to reduce their regulatory capital
below “well capitalized." The banking agencies are prepared
to work with the affected institutions to develop capital
restoration plans consistent with the capital regulations.
Preferred stock investors should
recognize that the GSEs are unlike any other financial
institutions and consequently GSE preferred stocks are not a
good proxy for financial institution preferred stock more
broadly. By stabilizing the GSEs so they can better perform
their mission, today’s action should accelerate
stabilization in the housing market, ultimately benefiting
financial institutions. The broader market for preferred
stock issuance should continue to remain available for
well-capitalized institutions.
The second step Treasury is taking today
is the establishment of a new secured lending credit
facility which will be available to Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac,
and the Federal Home Loan Banks. Given the combination of
actions we are taking, including the Preferred Share
Purchase Agreements, we expect the GSEs to be in a stronger
position to fund their regular business activities in the
capital markets. This facility is intended to serve as an
ultimate liquidity backstop, in essence, implementing the
temporary liquidity backstop authority granted by Congress
in July, and will be available until those authorities
expire in December 2009.
Finally, to further support the
availability of mortgage financing for millions of
Americans, Treasury is initiating a temporary program to
purchase GSE MBS. During this ongoing housing correction,
the GSE portfolios have been constrained, both by their own
capital situation and by regulatory efforts to address
systemic risk. As the GSEs have grappled with their
difficulties, we’ve seen mortgage rate spreads to Treasuries
widen, making mortgages less affordable for homebuyers.
While the GSEs are expected to moderately increase the size
of their portfolios over the next 15 months through prudent
mortgage purchases, complementary government efforts can aid
mortgage affordability. Treasury will begin this new
program later this month, investing in new GSE MBS.
Additional purchases will be made as deemed appropriate.
Given that Treasury can hold these securities to maturity,
the spreads between Treasury issuances and GSE MBS indicate
that there is no reason to expect taxpayer losses from this
program, and, in fact, it could produce gains. This program
will also expire with the Treasury’s temporary authorities
in December 2009.
Together, this four part program is the
best means of protecting our markets and the taxpayers from
the systemic risk posed by the current financial condition
of the GSEs. Because the GSEs are in conservatorship, they
will no longer be managed with a strategy to maximize common
shareholder returns, a strategy which historically
encouraged risk-taking. The Preferred Stock Purchase
Agreements minimize current cash outlays, and give taxpayers
a large stake in the future value of these entities. In the
end, the ultimate cost to the taxpayer will depend on the
business results of the GSEs going forward. To that end,
the steps we have taken to support the GSE debt and to
support the mortgage market will together improve the
housing market, the US economy and the GSEs’ business
outlook.
Through the four actions we have taken
today, FHFA and Treasury have acted on the responsibilities
we have to protect the stability of the financial markets,
including the mortgage market, and to protect the taxpayer
to the maximum extent possible.
And let me make clear what today’s
actions mean for Americans and their families. Fannie Mae
and Freddie Mac are so large and so interwoven in our
financial system that a failure of either of them would
cause great turmoil in our financial markets here at home
and around the globe. This turmoil would directly and
negatively impact household wealth: from family budgets, to
home values, to savings for college and retirement. A
failure would affect the ability of Americans to get home
loans, auto loans and other consumer credit and business
finance. And a failure would be harmful to economic growth
and job creation. That is why we have taken these actions
today.
While we expect these four steps to
provide greater stability and certainty to market
participants and provide long-term clarity to investors in
GSE debt and MBS securities, our collective work is not
complete. At the end of next year, the Treasury temporary
authorities will expire, the GSE portfolios will begin to
gradually run off, and the GSEs will begin to pay the
government a fee to compensate taxpayers for the on-going
support provided by the Preferred Stock Purchase
Agreements. Together, these factors should give momentum
and urgency to the reform cause. Policymakers must view
this next period as a “time out” where we have stabilized
the GSEs while we decide their future role and structure.
Because the GSEs are
Congressionally-chartered, only Congress can address the
inherent conflict of attempting to serve both shareholders
and a public mission. The new Congress and the next
Administration must decide what role government in general,
and these entities in particular, should play in the housing
market. There is a consensus today that these enterprises
pose a systemic risk and they cannot continue in their
current form. Government support needs to be either
explicit or non-existent, and structured to resolve the
conflict between public and private purposes. And
policymakers must address the issue of systemic risk. I
recognize that there are strong differences of opinion over
the role of government in supporting housing, but under any
course policymakers choose, there are ways to structure
these entities in order to address market stability in the
transition and limit systemic risk and conflict of purposes
for the long-term. We will make a grave error if we don’t
use this time out to permanently address the structural
issues presented by the GSEs.
In the weeks to come, I will describe my
views on long term reform. I look forward to engaging in
that timely and necessary debate.