No
Good Deed Goes Unpunished
Or,
I Easily Can Laugh at Myself !J
The other day I was researching a Fannie Mae issue and
came across an investors’ website thick with Fannie Mae commentary.
I noticed several posts by somebody self-identifying as
“TimothyHoward” and many accolades for that “TimothyHoward.”
Knowing that my friend doesn’t communicate in that manner,
but needing to make sure, I contacted Tim and asked if he was “broadsiding” on
the Internet. He confirmed that he wasn’t on any website commenting on GSE or Fannie
issues and I was free to say that.
So, I went on the board, identified myself as a “blogger,
friend of the real Tim, etc. etc.” and assured posters “the” Tim Howard, former
Fannie CFO and author of the “The Mortgage
Wars,” was not on the board and that someone was pretending to be him.
Shortly, I received the following from a board poster:
Hi Bill
I'm new here and you (sic) a big shot blogger but I read your blog and I suggest you change name to Bill Malarkey.
I'm new here and you (sic) a big shot blogger but I read your blog and I suggest you change name to Bill Malarkey.
Thanks for your time.
Mr. or Ms. Martz, you are welcome and I suspect you are
part of a not very exclusive club! But, your funny post made my day and I shared
it with several others.
Treasury
Happy With F&F Revenue
In an unusual release, Treasury publicly
lauded Fannie and Freddie for their quarterly dividend payments, which allowed
the US government to run a $53 Billion December 2013 surplus, compared to a 1.9 Billion
deficit in December 2012, yet another sign of a strengthening economy (but you
wouldn’t hear that on Fox Network News).
See story linked below.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-01-13/u-s-posts-record-december-budget-surplus-on-fannie-mae-payments.html
As this blog often has discussed, Fannie
and Freddie shortly will give back more in dividends than the $187 Billion Treasury
initially invested in the two.
Unless turned over by Treasury regulation
or statute—or possibly even a court decision in the major pending lawsuits--the
“send all F&F revenue to the General Fund, over minimum capital” will
persist for as long as F&F exist (which some in Congress would make a rather
brief interlude).
The well-established F&F cash importance
to the federal government, for me, calls into question the logic and viability
of the Administration’s call to abolish the two.
Some in the nation’s capital believe
that the steam already is running out of the Bob Corker (R-Tenn.)-Mark Warner (D-Va.)
legislative campaign, which also would do away with F&F.
Of course, reportedly a Senators Tim Johnson
(D-SD)-Mike Crapo (R-Idaho) version of the bill is waiting in the wings, kind of
making it C-W 2.0.
In a related note, last week, Sen.
Corker suggested that there is some virtue in the claims of Fannie deferred and
common shareholders, but he walked back
that statement the following day.
Interestingly, Inside Mortgage Finance,
two days after Corker pulled back his statement, published the following (Repeated here with the permission of IMF
publisher, Guy Cecala).
By Charles Wisniowski
In 2014, lawmakers and
the Obama administration will no longer be able to avoid confronting claims by
GSE shareholders seeking recovery, according to one industry expert.
At the recent Financial
Services Roundtable Housing Policy Council forum on GSE reform, financial
industry consultant Bert Ely quizzed Sens. Bob Corker, R-TN, and Mark Warner,
D-VA, about GSE securities. Specifically, Ely sought their positions on the
merits of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac preferred and common shareholders’ claims
that there should be a mechanism for recoveries on those securities.
Corker replied that he
and other lawmakers are drafting an enhanced version of the GSE reform bill he
and Warner filed last year and recognize that “somehow or another, that has to
be dealt with.”
“What I think their
answer did was bring home to folks the extent to which there is a linkage
between these residual stock interests and some kind of eventual restructuring
of government guaranties in housing finance,” Ely told Inside The GSEs
after the event.
GSE common shareholders became entangled in a
financial limbo of sorts when Fannie and Freddie were placed into government
conservatorship in September 2008. For more details on the legal outlook, see
the new edition of Inside The GSEs.
Could Corker and Warner be trying to address
shareholder matters in the draft bill being readied for the Banking Committee’s
Chairman and Ranking Republican?
Once again, it’s worth a clarification.
As I write this, three junior House Banking
Committee Democrats, announced plans to introduce a bill to sell Fannie and
Freddie and keep the entities functioning in the mortgage market, sans any
federal backup.
Good thinking guys and good luck.
My Poker Game
There was a slightly heated, funny--and
far from dispositive-- discussion at my poker game last week about NJ Governor
Chris Christie.
The verbose poker playing R’s
claimed that would-be 2016 GOP presidential candidate Christie “will be fine
politically” and the public will forget the bridge mess in a few weeks. The D’s—younger and
more handsome to a man--said people will
not forget or forgive and that Christie comes off as a hollow fool for
being manipulated by his staff or a run of the mill liar.
I believe that Christie’s “political
momentum” has been side tracked and he made himself vulnerable and subject to
additional scrutiny and inquiry, which is not something the GOP needs as it
tries to settle on a candidate to do battle with Hillary Clinton or whomever
the Democrats nominate in 2016.
No matter what one thinks, the
following Bruce Springsteen/Jimmy Fallon video was one of the more creative responses to Christie’s troubles.
Warner Gets Whacked
and a Challenger
Senator Mark Warner (D-Va.) earned a whole lot of
grief in a Huffpost article by Michael Lux, charging the Senator with dumping
on the middle class and “benefiting Wall Street banks,” for his part in the
Corker-Warner bill to abolish Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. (Linked below.)
About the same time, Warner picked up a new Republican opponent,
Ed Gillespie, longtime GOP lobbyist and insider, who must win the GOP primary
before he can get at Warner.
One irony in Gillespie is that years ago, he once
represented the forces that went to battle with Fannie and Freddie, but
Gillespie—if he survives his primary run—or any other primary or general
election Warner opponent, wouldn’t have to do very much to get to Warner’s “left” in a
competitive spat involving Warner’s Fannie/Freddie exploits.
That challenger only would have to support something short of killing off the two mortgage entities
and if Warner persists, he could find himself facing a determined, angry,
vengeful bunch of Freddie Mac employees, who reside and vote in Virginia and
who have the time and resources—and now motivation--to invest themselves in a political campaign.
Not
to mention the few thousand additional Fannie employees who live in the “Old
Dominion” and would be stirred by the same set of facts.
Unless he’s ready to retire, a serious political
challenge might cause “Mark “30-1” Warner to deal more fairly with possibly
10,000 F&F workers (and their families) whose careers he would destroy and
who Warner would cast in the street.
Most US Senators like to brag about how many constituents
they helped get jobs, not how many constituent jobs their legislation destroyed.
Senator Warner won’t want to talk about how many Virginians his Corker-Warner bill
could “unemploy,” how much in local goods and services those families stopped
buying, and how much in state income taxes they no longer can send to Richmond.
A smart opponent easily could develop those numbers. (I
doubt if the impact in Tennessee would be that dramatic.)
There still is time to wise up Senator “30-1” and consider the consequences
of your legislation, which does a swell job for the nation’s behemoth banks, but--unless those banks move in and hire thousands of ex-Freddie and Fannie Virginia workers--your constituents will get the short end of this deal.
What
Others are Saying
Richard
Leong in Reuters discusses possible front running
of Fannie and Freddie swaps by Wall Street traders.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/01/14/us-usa-swaps-probe-idUSBREA0D04N20140114
Maloni,
1-17-2014
11 comments:
The three House Banking Democrats, who say they will drop in the "sell and maintain" Fannie/Freddie bill are Reps. John K. Delaney (MD), John Carney (Del), and Jim Himes (CT).
Bill, Thanks for calling attention to the fact that Fannie Mae is in Senator 30:1 District. BTW that is an excellent name for him.
Bill it is disgusting that Senator 30:1 is throwing his constituents under the bus all in the name of a cash grab. Take a look at his and Mr. Tennessee's major campaign contributors and then connect the dots.
I don't like the new ideas of a privatization plan. Someone needs to expose the real truth of the matter outlined in Tim Howard's book. Thanks again for your blog.
Keep hitting!
Delaney/Carney/Himes press release:
http://himes.house.gov/press-release/delaney-carney-and-himes-announce-housing-finance-reform-proposal-plan-introduce
Continued thanks for your continued efforts!
Note: It's Freddie which is HQ'd in McLean, Virginia. But Fannie, with corporate offices just a few miles away in DC, has plenty of employees who live and vote in Virginia and who would be
moved to oppose Warner, if he keeps up his attacks.
Rough estimate, probably a bit low, between the two work forces, they have 7,000 to 10,000 Virginia resident employees.
On the new bill, three young Dems are not going to move Hensarling and his gaggle, but it provides grist for other alternatives and in this case, which keep F&F functioning in some market capacity.
There is value here. Concerned that a post-legislation F&F still could dominate, the bill's sponsors would limit F&F to a future 30% market share.
Again, goes in a different direction (think "Millstein") and will garner some attention.
Reading another website this morning, I think someone misinterpreted my "good luck" wish to the three House D's and their new mortgage reform bill.
My wish was legitimate not sarcastic.
I welcome any new idea or plans in this arena and noted their planned bill would keep F&F alive, in some capacity.
The needed "luck" comes with trying to convince Chairman Hensarling and the committee's majority R's that the sponsors idea for a major federal role in mortgage finance is desirable.
Bill, thanks for that clarification of the Senate districting. Please research the top campaign contributors to Senator 30:1. and Mr. Tennessee and you will completely understand their intentions. http://www.opensecrets.org/orgs/summary.php?id=D000000103
I have no doubt about their motives..and tactics.
Bill,
It looks like the Washington Post may be listening, at least a little bit. Finally have a pretty favorable story, with several references to Tim's book:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/refighting-the-mortgage-wars-could-bring-new-risks-to-the-housing-market/2014/01/17/7404c8a4-7e25-11e3-9556-4a4bf7bcbd84_story.html
Yes, that was a positive review of Tim's book, but....(I'll touch on the "but clause" in my next blog).
Hey Bill, I just now saw your interview for the first time on Fox News back in 2010. The interviewer was trying hard to beat the crap out of you but you held your cool and you responded like a perfect gentleman. What's most intriguing is that the answers are now in fact proven true over time since that interview. I was wondering if there was any interest in another interview since?
One more question, have you ever looked into the Financial Services Roundtable /HPC group members? There is a lot of shadiness there.
Thanks Anon.
I generally make myself available to anybody interested in these issues, because I was around for most of the action and/or know the principals and the issues.
I try and educate reporters and congressional staff (either party)--who may feel I bug them--and do a variety of conference calls or make speeches when invited.
But, if nobody asks, I can't emote except in my blog.
Short answer is "Yes" on the FSR and meeting with their new exec former Gov. Tim Pawlenty is in my plans. I want to see if some of Pawlenty's comments about seeking new policy options is legitimate. (Last I heard, the association was seeking a new chief lobbyist, so if you know anybody job hunting......)
A hundred years ago--at the old Federal Home Loan Bank Board and before I went to Volcker's Fed--I worked with/for John Dalton, who is the FSR's head of housing matters and who hosted the conference recently which had Senators Corker and Warner speak.
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