One of the 'landmark' moments in this financial crisis along with the failure of Bear Stearns Bank has been the near collapse of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Despite warnings as far back as 2004, these two behemoths continued to guarantee bad loans, effectively exacerbating the crisis to the point where they now threaten to spark a meltdown in the credit markets should they fail to meet their obligations.
Obviously, this cannot be allowed to happen. However, a government bail out, whilst temporarily offering respite could lead to a further lack of confidence should they not be there with a blank cheque the next time that they or another beleaguered institution faces a crisis of confidence.
This brings us to the issue of 'corporate socialism' in a capitalist society. Should failing companies be allowed to die natural deaths or should they be given billions of dollars worth of taxpayers oxygen? Unfortunately, it is not simply a matter of a badly run corporation going bankrupt but of the tsunami effect that that corporations collapse will have on those who inhabit it's ocean.
Can we afford an illiquid America where lending becomes the exception and no longer the rule? Could a country like the US with its negative saving rate, survive without credit or could it's entire financial infrastructure collapse under a credit crunch if there were to be no handouts for the banks?
The primary obligation of government is to protect the people from adversaries within and without. If our economies merely reflect who we are as people, then have we not become our own worst enemies?
Unfortunately, the probable consequence of this crisis is that we will find it much more difficult to take out personal loans in the future. Mortgage lending will initially be ultra conservative, relaxing only when profitability returns to the structured lending market.
So like children suitably admonished, the mortgage lending industry will revert back to lending money to qualified people who can afford to service loans. The effect of this will be to cool inflation as less properties will be built because demand will drop.
The upshot of this is that with almost a moritorium on lending, the savings rate will increase. The downside is that it won't last. The banks, seeing increases in certified deposits will begin to re-offer loans to those who previously they ignored and rejected, ease their lending criteria and begin a new cycle.
The past truly is prologue.
Below is a particularly adroit article from Jonathan Laing of Barrons:=
The Endgame Nears For Fannie and Freddie By Jonathan R. Laing
The almost inevitable government recapitalization of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will likely wipe out investors—and management.
It may be curtains soon for the managements and shareholders of beleaguered housing giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac . It is growing increasingly likely that the Treasury will recapitalize Fannie and Freddie in the months ahead on the taxpayer's dime, availing itself of powers granted it under the new housing bill signed into law last month. Such a move almost certainly would wipe out existing holders of the agencies' common stock, with preferred shareholders and even holders of the two entities' $19 billion of subordinated debt also suffering losses. Barron's first raised the possibility of a government takeover of Fannie and Freddie in a March 10 cover story, "Is Fannie Mae Toast?"
Many of Fannie's and Freddie's credit losses come from
risky mortgages that the agencies bought or
guaranteed in recent years to boost their market share.
Heaven knows, the two government-sponsored enterprises, or GSEs, both need resuscitation. Soaring mortgage delinquencies and foreclosures have led the companies to gush red ink for the past four quarters, and their managements concede the outlook is even grimmer well into next year. Shares of Fannie Mae (ticker: FNM) and Freddie Mac (FRE) have lost around 90% of their value in the past year, with Fannie now trading at $7.91, and Freddie at $5.88.
Similarly, the balance sheets of both companies have been destroyed. On a fair-value basis, in which the value of assets and liabilities is marked to immediate-liquidation value, Freddie would have had a negative net worth of $5.6 billion as of June 30, while Fannie's equity eroded to $12.5 billion from a fair value of $36 billion at the end of last year. That $12.5 billion isn't much of a cushion for a $2.8 trillion book of owned or guaranteed mortgage assets.
What's more, the fair-value figures reported by the companies may overstate the value of their assets significantly. By some calculations each company is around $50 billion in the hole. But more on that later.
Bringing Fannie and Freddie to heel will be difficult for the Bush administration, despite the GSEs' (Government-Sponsored Enterprises') parlous financial condition. Consider their history. In the early 1980s Fannie was effectively insolvent, but the government allowed it to continue operating. Eventually long-term interest rates dropped, bolstering the value of the company's mortgages and bringing it back from the brink. Earlier in the current decade Fannie and Freddie successfully fought a full-scale attempt by the White House and some brave Republican legislators to clamp down on their operations, after they were caught perpetrating accounting frauds.
Note, too, that Fannie and Freddie have nonpareil lobbying operations and formidable political strength, owing to their hefty donations and penchant for hiring former political operatives. Besides, the agencies claim they've landed in their current predicament through no fault of their own. As Freddie Mac Chairman and CEO Richard Syron recently put it, the GSEs have been hit by a "100-year storm" in the housing market, accentuated by some higher-risk mortgages that they were forced to buy to meet government affordable-housing targets.
The latter contention is more than disingenuous. A substantial portion of Fannie's and Freddie's credit losses comes from $337 billion and $237 billion, respectively, of Alt-A mortgages that the agencies imprudently bought or guaranteed in recent years to boost their market share. These are mortgages for which little or no attempt was made to verify the borrowers' income or net worth. The principal balances were much higher than those of mortgages typically made to low-income borrowers. In short, Alt-A mortgages were a hallmark of real-estate speculation in the ex-urbs of Las Vegas or Los Angeles, not predatory lending to low-income folks in the inner cities.
In the current bailout the Bush administration is playing from strength. Not only have the GSEs' stocks been decimated, but trading in their debt -- whether the $1.6 trillion of corporate obligations or $3.6 trillion of mortgage-backed securities the two have guaranteed -- would have been in disarray had the recent housing bill not made explicit the U.S. government's backing of that debt. Even so, GSE debt spreads are starting to widen, relative to Treasury yields.
An insider in the Bush administration tells Barron's Fannie and Freddie are being jawboned by the Treasury Department and their new regulator, the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), to raise more equity. But government officials don't expect the agencies to succeed. For one thing, only a "capital raise" of $10 billion or more apiece would have any credibility. Yet, what common-stock investors would advance that kind of money to entities that have market capitalizations of $8.5 billion (Fannie) and $4 billion (Freddie), especially as the FHFA will use its new powers to boost dramatically the regulatory capital the GSEs must have in coming years?
Just as disconcerting for prospective shareholders, all but $300 million of the $7.2 billion in equity Fannie raised in the second quarter was lost in the very same quarter, according to its fair-value balance sheet. With credit losses surging at both agencies, $20 billion in new common equity wouldn't last long.
The cost of selling new preferred stock, meanwhile, would seem to be prohibitive for Fannie and Freddie. The dividend yields on their preferreds have soared to around 14%, in part because of a recent rating downgrade by Standard & Poor's. Yields that high would blight the future earnings prospects of both concerns.
Should the agencies fail to raise fresh capital, the administration is likely to mount its own recapitalization, with Treasury infusing taxpayer money into the enterprises, according to our source. The infusion would take the form of a preferred stock with such seniority, dividend preference and convertibility rights that Fannie's and Freddie's existing common shares effectively would be wiped out, and their preferred shares left bereft of dividends. Then again, the administration might show minimal kindness to preferred shareholders; local and regional bankers have been lobbying the Bushies not to wipe out the preferred since the bankers own a lot of that paper and rely on the bank preferred-stock market for much of their own equity capital.
An equity injection by the government would be tantamount to a quasi-nationalization, without having to put the agencies' liabilities on the nation's balance sheet, and thus doubling the U.S. debt. Treasury would install new management and directors at both, curb the GSEs' sometimes reckless investment and guarantee operations, and liquidate in an orderly fashion the GSEs' troubled $1.6 billion in on-balance-sheet investments. Then the companies could be resold to the public without their explicit government debt guarantees, or folded into government agencies like Ginnie Mae or the FHA.
Should the Bush administration lose its nerve and kick the GSE bailout forward to the next administration, a similar scenario still might unfold. In a column last month in the Financial Times, Lawrence Summers, Treasury Secretary in the Clinton administration and an important economic adviser to Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama, opined that in view of the sad financial condition of Fannie and Freddie, both should be thrown into government receivership to protect the U.S. taxpayer. Republican presidential contender John McCain, for his part, fulminated in a recent op-ed in the Tampa Bay Times that if a dime of taxpayer money is used to bail out the companies, "the managements and the boards should immediately be replaced, multimillion-dollar salaries should be cut, and bonuses and other compensation should be eliminated."
THE WHITE HOUSE BEGAN to worry about Fannie's and Freddie's solvency in February, when both agencies reported capital-shredding losses for the fourth quarter of 2007. Adding to the official concern was the deepening turmoil in the residential- mortgage market, and the need for the agencies to keep mortgage money flowing.
The White House dispatched Treasury's then-Undersecretary for Finance Bob Steel to cut a deal with both Fannie and Freddie. In return for the pair doing its best to raise $10 billion each in new equity, the administration would eliminate the cap on mortgage paper the agencies could put on their balance sheets, and lower the increased minimum regulatory capital requirements imposed on the GSEs after their previous accounting scandal.
According to our source, both agency managements seemed amenable to the March deal, though they demurred on raising new capital immediately. They thought, and Treasury agreed, that any share flotation would have to wait until May, when first-quarter earnings were scheduled to be announced, providing investors with material information. Come May, Fannie kept its side of the bargain by raising $7.2 billion in mostly common equity. But Bush officials were shocked when Freddie failed to follow suit on an announced $5.5 billion equity raise.
According to our source, Freddie's Syron offered a variety of excuses. He said neither he nor several senior board members wanted to dilute current shareholders since the stock had fallen from 67 in the summer of 2007 to around 25 in May. He also insisted Freddie could do nothing on the core capital front until it had completed its formal corporate registration with the SEC under the 1934 Act. That argument seemed fishy, since Freddie had raised $6 billion in preferred capital the previous November, and like Fannie has an exemption from registering stock issues with the SEC. A Freddie Mac spokesperson says the company was acting according to legal advice.
Freddie succeeded in exploiting the Prague Spring of regulatory forbearance. Monthly statements show it bought even more mortgages, gunning the growth in its retained, on-balance-sheet portfolio by 11% in the second quarter. By reducing its hedging costs, it also doubled its vulnerability to loss from interest-rate moves. It appears Freddie was hoping a Hail Mary Pass with the portfolio would somehow reduce its spiraling operating losses.
In retrospect, the agency meltdown seemed inevitable as the housing crisis deepened and credit losses mounted. On July 7 an analyst report claimed both agencies might have to raise substantially more capital because of a change in accounting regulations. Both stocks went into free fall, tumbling nearly 50% on the week.
The Bush administration feared the stock collapse would signal that the companies were heading for insolvency, and thus call into question the safety of their $5.2 trillion debt and guarantee obligations, despite the government's implicit guarantee of that paper. The impact of a failed GSE debt auction would be global and catastrophic, since foreigners, including many Asian central banks, owned $1.5 trillion in Fannie and Freddie paper.
After a frantic weekend meeting, Treasury Secretary Paulson announced on July 13 a rescue plan under which the Fed, and ultimately the Treasury, would backstop all Fannie and Freddie debt, and buy equity in the companies should that be necessary to bolster them. The omnibus housing bill passed and signed into law several weeks later codified all this in addition to establishing a new regulator for the GSEs with strong receivership powers.
In the weeks since, Freddie has continued to put off raising capital, even though it finally completed its registration as a corporation with the SEC. Syron said when second-quarter earnings were released Aug. 6 that the company was waiting for a more "propitious" time. One might argue it came in May, when the stock was 25, not 6.
BOTH GSES CONTINUE TO NOTE their so-called core or regulatory capital levels remain comfortably above the minimum required by federal regulation. This ignores what would happen, however, if their balance sheets were marked to fair value -- or if their fair-value estimates were hugely inflated, as indeed may be the case. Both balance sheets, for one, contain an entry called deferred tax assets that bulks up Fannie's fair-value net worth by $36 billion and Freddie's by $28 billion. These assets don't represent real cash but tax credits the agencies have built up over the years that can be used to offset future profits. But, since the tax assets can't be sold to a third party, or disappear in a receivership or sale of the company, they are disallowed in the capital computations of most financial institutions. Ironically, the worse a company does, the more capital cushion this asset creates.
The Bottom Line
A quasi-nationalization of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac could involve the issuance of new preferred stock. The companies' assets may be worth negative $50 billion each.
The companies also appear to have boosted their capital ratios by sharply curtailing their repurchase of soured mortgages out of the securitizations they've guaranteed. In the fourth quarter of last year, for instance, Freddie Mac took a loss of $736 million on loans repurchased. In this year's first quarter that figure dropped to $51 million -- a stunning decline in view of the continued deterioration of the housing and mortgage markets. Instead, the company made the interest payments to bring the mortgages current -- a much smaller outlay, but a tactic that only pushes an inevitable loss forward into future quarters. In Fannie's case, by postponing the buyback of bad loans the company avoided more than $1 billion in second-quarter charge-offs and a hit to its net worth.
Other numbers also give pause. Less generous marks to Freddie's $132 billion investment holdings in private-label subprime and Alt-A securities would lop another $20 billion off its net worth. And, more than likely, Fannie's credit reserves of $8.9 billion won't fully protect it from future losses on $36 billion of seriously delinquent mortgages on its $2.8 trillion book.
After accounting for deferred tax assets and generous asset marks, Fannie and Freddie each may have a negative $50 billion in asset value, and little prospect of digging themselves out of the hole. Whether Fannie and Freddie are liquidated or nationalized as a prelude to privatization, in their current form they won't be missed.
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