The Mortgage Meltdown
was created by Congress, who passed anti-discrimination rules that required
lenders to give mortgages to unqualified buyers. The primary culprits to
guarantee this disaster were the Community Reinvestment Act of 1993 and HUD
anti-discrimination rules. These laws
have still not been repealed and they need to be repealed.
What
Was the Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac Bailout?
What Led to the Bailout - Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were two government-sponsored enterprises that bought mortgages from banks, a process known as buying on the secondary market. They packaged these into mortgage-backed securities, and resell them to investors on Wall Street. The entire financial system depends on trust. The subprime mortgage crisis decimated it.
What Led to the Bailout - Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were two government-sponsored enterprises that bought mortgages from banks, a process known as buying on the secondary market. They packaged these into mortgage-backed securities, and resell them to investors on Wall Street. The entire financial system depends on trust. The subprime mortgage crisis decimated it.
By
Kimberly Amadeo, 10/9/18.
The Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac bailout
occurred on September 7, 2008. The U.S. Treasury Department was authorized to purchase up to $100 billion in
their preferred stock and mortgage-backed securities. As a result, they were put into
conservatorship by the Federal Housing Finance Agency.
Keeping the two afloat cost
taxpayers $187 billion over time. Treasury paid $116 billion for
Fannie and $71 billion for Freddie. In August 2012, the Treasury decided it would send all Fannie and Freddie
profits into the general fund. Since then, the bailout has been paid back
with $58 billion in profit. Fannie remitted $147 billion and
Freddie paid $98 billion.
The Fannie and Freddie bailout was
greater than the 1989 saving and loan crisis, which cost the taxpayers $124 billion. It was on par with
the subsequent bailout of AIG,
which started at $85 billion but grew to $182 billion. Both were small potatoes
compared to the $700 billion bailout of the U.S. banking system, even
though only $439.6 billion of that was ever spent.
The bailout kept Fannie, Freddie,
and the American housing market functioning. It was supposed to be
temporary. But economic conditions never improved enough to allow the
government to sell the shares it owned and return Fannie and Freddie to private
ownership.
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were two government-sponsored enterprises that created, and remain highly
involved in, the secondary market for mortgage-backed
securities. Before the subprime mortgage crisis, they owned or guaranteed
$1.4 trillion, or 40 percent, of all U.S. mortgages. They only held $168
billion in subprime mortgages, but it was enough to capsize the two. The two GSEs
supported the secondary market, which helped American families realize the dream of homeownership. But they also
helped turn that dream into the nightmare of the subprime mortgage crisis.
It led to the 2008 financial crisis and caused the Great Recession.
The government tried to avoid taking
over the two GSEs, which were supposed to act as private corporations with a
government guarantee. That set-up didn't work and was part of the problem.
Fannie and Freddie took excessive risks to boost their stock prices, knowing
they would be bailed out if the risks turned south.
In August 2007, Fannie Mae announced
it would skip a benchmark debt offering for the first time since May 2006.
Investors rejected even the highly-rated mortgage-backed securities offered by
the GSEs. Most investors thought Fannie had enough cash to allow it to
wait until the market improved. By November 2007, Fannie declared a $1.4
billion quarterly loss and announced it would seek $500 million in new funds.
Freddie then disclosed a $2 billion loss, sending its stock price down 23 percent.
On March 23, 2008, federal regulators
unwisely agreed to let Fannie and Freddie take on another $200 billion in
subprime mortgage debt. The two GSEs were desperately trying to raise
enough cash to keep themselves solvent. Everyone at the time thought the
subprime crisis was restricted to real estate and
would correct itself soon. Perhaps they didn't realize how derivatives had
exported the subprime mortgage defaults throughout the entire financial world.
As it turned out, this was another $200 billion the government had to bail out
later that year.
On March 25, 2008, the Federal Housing
Finance Board agreed to let the regional Federal Home Loan Banks take an extra
$100 billion in mortgage-backed securities for
the next two years. Fannie and Freddie guaranteed those loans as well. In just
a week, the two GSEs had $300 billion in bad loans added to their already shaky
balance sheets. The Federal Reserve agreed
to take on $200 billion in bad loans from dealers (actually, hedge funds and
investment banks) in exchange for Treasury notes.
Last, but certainly not least, the Fed had already pumped $200 billion into
banks through its Term Auction Facility.
In other words, the Federal government
had guaranteed $730 billion in subprime mortgages, and the bank bailouts were
just getting started.
On April 17, 2008, Fannie
and Freddie made further commitments to help subprime mortgage holders
keep their homes. Fannie Mae developed a new effort
called HomeStay, while Freddie modified its program called
"HomePossible." Those programs gave borrowers ways to get out from
under adjustable-rate loans before interest rates reset at a higher level and
make monthly payments unaffordable. Unfortunately, it was too little and too
late.
On July 22, 2008, U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson asked
Congress to approve a bill allowing the Treasury Department to guarantee as much as $25 billion in subprime
mortgages held by Fannie and Freddie. The two GSEs held or guaranteed more than
$5 trillion, or half, of the nation's mortgages. The $25 billion guarantee was
more to reassure investors. It didn't work for long. Wall Street investors
continued to pummel the GSEs stock prices, to the point that they couldn't
raise the cash needed to pay off the loan guarantees they held.
Wall Street was savvy enough to realize
that a $25 billion infusion by the Federal government wasn't going to be
enough. Stockholders wanted out before the government nationalized Fannie and
Freddie and made their investments worthless.
Wall Street's fears that the loans would
default sent Fannie's and Freddie's shares plummeting. It became impossible for
the private companies to raise the additional capital needed
to cover the mortgages.
Most people don't realize that the July
bailout also included:
·
$3.9
billion in CDBG grants to help homeowners in poor neighborhoods.
·
Approval
for the Treasury Department to buy shares of Fannie's and Freddie's stock to
support stock price levels and allow the two to continue to raise capital on
the private market.
·
Approval
for the Federal Housing Administration to guarantee $300 billion in new
loans to keep 400,000 homeowners out of foreclosure.
·
About
$15 billion in housing tax breaks, including a credit of up to $7,500 for
first-time buyers.
·
An
increase in the statutory limit on the national debt by $800 billion, to $10.6
trillion.
·
A
new regulatory agency to oversee Fannie and Freddie, including executive pay
levels.
Treasury Secretary Paulson
wanted to reassure financial markets that
the banking system was reliable despite the failure of IndyMac Bank.
Paulson appeared on television
throughout the weekend. He warned that the economy would go through months of
challenging times. As it turns out, it's been years of challenging
times. He admitted, "The three big issues we're facing right now are,
first, the housing correction which is at the heart of the slowdown; secondly,
the turmoil of the capital markets; and thirdly, the high oil prices,
which are going to prolong the slowdown."
However, he added "...our economy
has got very strong long-term fundamentals, solid fundamentals. And you know,
your policy-makers here, regulators, we're being very vigilant."
Unfortunately, they should have been more vigilant years earlier, when the
subprime derivatives were
being bought and sold in an unregulated market.
Despite the bailout, mortgage rates
continued to rise. By August 22, 2008, rates on a 30-year mortgage were 6.52
percent. That was a 30 percent increase since March and the same as a year ago.
Rates rose despite a decline in U.S. Treasury bond yields. Those fell as investors fled to the
safety of government-backed bonds. (Bond yields fall when demand for the
underlying bond rises.)
Fixed mortgage rates usually closely
follow that of Treasury bond yields, since the same type of investors like
both. Since Fannie and Freddie were in crisis, investors were leery of
mortgage products, and have chosen Treasuries instead. Hence,
mortgage rates rose, and Treasury yields fell.
That forced Paulson to nationalize
Fannie and Freddie.
Nationalization meant the Treasury would
take over the GSE's entirely, essentially wiping out stockholders' wealth. Fannie
and Freddie's stock prices were declining due to fears of nationalization. That
only made it harder for the GSE's to raise capital, thus creating a
self-fulfilling prophecy. The other option would be for the Treasury to start
injecting large sums of cash to an essentially private company. That would make
stockholders happy but continue the precedent set by the Federal
Reserve's bailout of Bear Stearns.
Many banks were still in jeopardy since
they also owned much of the $36 billion in preferred shares of
Fannie and Freddie. These became worthless when the government took the
next step, putting the GSEs into receivership.
The Federal government stepped in to
restore that trust by promising to bail out bad loans. It was meant to keep the
housing slump from getting worse. Unfortunately, it was all funded by the U.S.
Government, which already had a $9 trillion national debt. In fact, the provision to allow the
debt level to be raised to over $10 trillion acknowledged who exactly footed
the bill for the bailout. Global concerns about the sustainability of U.S. debt
kept downward pressure on the dollar. However, the greater threat from
the eurozone debt crisis created a flight to safety.
When the world is in turmoil, the dollar
looks strong, despite the high debt-to-GDP ratio of
the United States. (Source: "Fannie Mae Will Not Issue Benchmark
Notes in August," Fannie Mae Web Site, August 20, 2007. "The
Cracks Are Spreading," The Economist, November 21, 2007. "House
OKs Rescue for Homeowners, Freddie, Fannie," Associated
Press, July 23, 2008. "Paulson Braces Public for Months of Tough
Times," Associated Press, July 21, 2008.)
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party
Leader
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