09/06/08
-- The government is expected to take over
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac as soon as this
weekend in a monumental move designed to
protect the mortgage market from the failure
of the two companies, which together hold or
guarantee half of the nation's mortgage
debt, a person briefed on the matter said
Friday night.
Some of the details of
the intervention, which could cost taxpayers
billions, were not yet available, but are
expected to include the departure of Fannie
Mae CEO Daniel Mudd and Freddie Mac CEO
Richard Syron, according to the source, who
asked not to be named because the plan was
yet to be announced.
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke,
Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and James
Lockhart, the companies' chief regulator,
met Friday afternoon with the top executives
from the mortgage companies and informed
them of the government's plan to put the
troubled companies into a conservatorship.
The news, first reported
on The Wall Street Journal's Web site, came
after stock markets closed. In after-hours
trading Fannie Mae's shares plunged $1.54,
or 22 percent, to $5.50. Freddie Mac's
shares fell $1.06, or almost 21 percent, to
$4.04. Common stock in the companies will be
worth little to nothing after the
government's actions.
The news also followed a report Friday by
the Mortgage Bankers Association that more
than 4 million American homeowners with a
mortgage, a record 9 percent, were either
behind on their payments or in foreclosure
at the end of June.
That confirmed what investors saw in Fannie
and Freddie's recent financial results:
trouble in the mortgage market has shifted
to homeowners who had solid credit but took
out exotic loans with little or no proof of
their income and assets.
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac lost a combined
$3.1 billion between April and June. Half of
their credit losses came from these types of
risky loans with ballooning monthly
payments.
While both companies said they had enough
resources to withstand the losses, many
investors believe their financial cushions
could wither away as defaults and
foreclosures mount.
Many in Washington and on Wall Street hadn't
expected Paulson to intervene unless the
companies had trouble issuing debt to fund
their operations.
This summer, Congress passed a plan to
provide unlimited government loans to Fannie
and Freddie and to purchase stock in the two
companies if needed.
Critics say the open-ended nature of the
rescue package could expose taxpayers to
billions of dollars of potential losses.
Supporters, however, argue the Bush
administration had little choice but to
support Fannie and Freddie, which together
hold or guarantee $5 trillion in mortgages —
almost half the nation's total.
Representatives of Fannie and Freddie
declined to comment on the government
assistance plan.
Treasury spokeswoman Brookly McLaughlin said
officials "have been in regular
communications" with Fannie and Freddie, but
refused to comment saying, "We are not going
to comment on rumors."
Concern has been growing that a government
rescue of Fannie and Freddie could not only
wipe out common stockholders, but also be
costly for scores of investment, banking and
insurance companies that hold billions of
dollars in their preferred shares.
Paulson has been in contact in recent weeks
with foreign governments that hold billions
of dollars of Fannie and Freddie debt to
reassure them that the United States
recognizes the importance of the two
companies.
The two companies had nearly $36 billion in
preferred shares outstanding as of June 30,
according to filings with the Securities and
Exchange Commission.
Fannie Mae was created by the government in
1938, and was turned into a
shareholder-owned company 30 years later.
Freddie Mac was established in 1970 to
provide competition for Fannie.
A government takeover could cost taxpayers
up to $25 billion, according to the
Congressional Budget Office.
But the epic decision
highlights the size of the threats facing
the housing market and the economy. On
Friday, Nevada regulators shut down Silver
State Bank, the 11th failure this year of a
federally insured bank. And earlier this
year, the government orchestrated the
takeover of investment bank Bear Stearns by
JP Morgan Chase.
source: CNBC