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. The two government sponsored enterprises (GSEs) own or guarantee almost half of the country’s $12 trillion in outstanding home mortgage debt. Treasury Secretary Henry Carlson said he hopes the move will lower FHA mortgage rates, increase home buying and slow down the drop in home values. The government plans to move these two mortgage giants into the FHA home loan division for the time being.
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. The news also follows 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. The FHA secure refinance loan was created for foreclosure prevention so this number may drop further in the next few months.
The number of new mortgage holders entering foreclosure in the second quarter stood at 1.19 per cent of all US mortgages, the Mortgage Bankers Association said Friday. This is the first time the rate has topped 1 per cent in the 29-year-history of the association’s record keeping. Fannie and Freddie have suffered 14.9 billion dollars in losses from the widening mortgage foreclosure crisis in the US that has rippled outward to foreign investors. The central banks of many countries, including those in Asia, hold considerable stock in Fannie and Freddie.
The US Treasury has plans to put Fannie and Freddie into a so-called conservatorship, House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank told Bloomberg financial news agency, after a briefing by Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson on Saturday. “What they are talking about doing are two things, one is conservatorship and two, putting some money into them. I think it’s an important combination,” Frank said.
Daniel H. Mudd, chief executive of Fannie Mae, and Richard Syron, his counterpart at Freddie Mac, are expected to step down from their posts eventually, the Wall Street Journal reported. The value of the company’s common stock would be diluted but not wiped out, while the holdings of other securities, including company debt and preferred shares, would be protected by the government, the Washington Post said. The Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), a new agency that Congress created this summer, will regulate Fannie and Freddie. Instead of giving each company a big capital infusion up front, the government plans to make quarterly infusions as the companies’ losses warrant, sources told the Washington Post late Friday. This would be an attempt to minimize the initial cost of the rescue, the paper said.
How is all this going to affect the housing market?
“I think it is probably a good thing. We could see the foreclosures were going to continue and something needed to happen. This will bring some cash to the organizations and I think it’s going to bring some stability,” said Greg Bauman, president of the St. Paul Area Association of Realtors.
Bauman said if the government would not have taken over, and Fannie and Freddie failed, the results would have been devastating. Now with the government in control and funding the organizations, and with new CEOs in place, Bauman said there will be more stability in the housing market.
Local mortgage brokers have commented that there is a void for down-payment assistance loans with FHA. However, local home buyers and sellers may not see that much of a difference. “I don’t think consumers are really going to see a real impact. I don’t think we will see a big change in interest rates and mortgages or the qualifying for them,” said Bauman.


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