What
I Think and Why?
My last blog about the President's speech stirred up a lot of static, which was my
hope, plus generated a challenge from a long time industry observer whose
opinion I value.
I’ll shorthand his comment—and throw in something he
didn’t say but I suspect he thought—and that was, “Why all of this talk of Fannie/Freddie
history? People want to know what you think
about Fannie and Freddie going forward, since nobody believes they can be
resurrected as they were and, frankly, few want that.”
Fair enough, although I’ll just say “maybe” to his last
point.
My complete response is to remind readers that to
understand what you want to build in the future, you need to comprehend what
happened in the past.
In the past few months, I’ve described my mortgage market
of the future and what a revived F&F might look like and do. But, it never
hurts to repeat it.
Let me start with something which should be obvious to
those who read my blog.
Concentrated commercial bank power, no matter what the market
endeavor, sets off my alarms, because I don’t think anyone—or certainly any US regulatory
agency—can stop the banks when they choose aberrance.
The PLS debacle--only a few years ago--proves that, as do
the more recent violations which I noted last week, manipulating LIBOR,
laundering Mexican drug cartel funds, cornering commodities to inflate prices,
and having financial dealings with sworn US enemies in the Muslim Middle East.
Control
the Banks
Banks exist to make money, nothing more. We need them,
they are near indispensable in a democracy.
But, as long as our nation and its public officials lack
true governors to control industry excesses, bank behavior requires vigilance
and scrutiny.
The US doesn’t have quality financial services regulation.
It may never have because the banks are too nimble, the regulatory process too plodding,
and some bank regulatory staff just act as industry cheer leaders and guardians.
I don’t want to get rid of bank home mortgage lending, I
just want it well policed.
So, the trick—for the “get rid of Fannie and Freddie, at
all costs, and let the banks control the market” crowd--is to put in place something
which the large commercial banks must fear/respect to engage in the mortgage lending
game.
Because of their secondary mortgage market position, the “old”
and even current Fannie and Freddie had/have that mortgage monitor’s role, setting
primary market underwriting standards, creating acceptable mortgage products, improving
operational delivery systems, helping create and pricing mbs (mortgage backed
securities) and therefore the underlying mortgages, etc.
That’s why they worked well pre-2005 and why they have
worked fabulously post-2008.
Not many mortgage market observers regularly acknowledge that
the major “problems”--most critics attribute to Fannie’s and Freddie’s
operations/existence--have been stamped out or are proscribed by their current
regulation, which is why the two have performed so well financially.
Wake up Congress! Congratulate yourselves.
The FHFA regulatory regime has solved much of the “GSE dilemma”
and you just don’t realize it. You are fighting issues which haven’t been in
place for years.
Post
2008 Improvements
Since 2008, the Federal Housing Finance Office (FHFA),
F&F’s current regulator has:
--- prohibited F&F from securitizing or dealing in
below market quality mortgages=no possible subprime investments:
---ordered F&F to reduce their existing portfolios by
5% annually=shutting down their riskier business activities and pushing them
into safer mortgage securitization;
---overhauled and reduced the onerous and confusing housing goals (which at one time required each to invest
55% of their business in mortgages serving “low, moderate and middle income
families, or those living in underserved areas”)= removing the role which few
policy makers understood or appreciated but which acted as a lightning rod for
critics and enemies;
--- Required Fannie and Freddie to increase their guaranty fees charged lenders (and ultimately
consumers) and the two now must hold higher capital, ironically which may be
too high given their tiny loss rates=more loss protection on their books to
deal with any business problems, which seep through stricter regulation, and create
more financial space for other mortgage investors.
These important operational changes are the reason for
F&F’s solid financial performance (ironically, with commercial banks
employing them happily and heavily) and F&F now sending billions of dollars
to the US Treasury.
--Even the old Democrats and political activists--who once
twisted GOP panties in a bunch--have long since moved from Fannie (and didn’t
exist at Freddie). Upwards of 60% of current staff are new since 2008.
And, I certainly haven’t heard complaints that there
isn’t plenty of fixed rate financing available for mortgagors from any lender
which does business with F&F.
How I
Would Remake F&F
To give the two entities and the nation’s home buying
public what will work for each, I would separate
F&F from the federal government and “reprivatize” them.
--Disjoin them from the federal government, over some
reasonable time period, and allow them to stand on their own (much like a bank
or insurance company), employing their own capital.
--Let Fannie and Freddie truly repay Treasury whatever they owe, a mechanism which Treasury
Secretary Jack’s Lew can approve on his own.
That functional crossover event will occur naturally in
the next few quarters, but Hank Paulson’s takeover deal prohibits GSE repayment.
--Have F&F pay
back more than they were given. so Treasury has additional revenue and can
argue that the American taxpayer made money from the F&F fix, especially
since most observers have failed or won’t monetizing all of the systemic
pluses F&F provided the nation for
the past 6 years.
--After repaying the Treasury some agreed upon figure
($200 Billion?) and--after paying taxes and allotting capital--permit Fannie
and Freddie to keep excess earnings as a capital
base for the future.
--In reprivatizing
F&F, keep their current regulatory
structure to insure the sufficiency of their capital formation and maintain
current limitation on the types (quality) of mortgages they can securitize;
--Finally, permit F&F to re-enter the mortgage
market—WITH NO FINANCIAL TIES TO THE FEDERAL
GOVERNMENT-- to perform whatever roles the market demands from them.
Despite fears to the contrary, that’s all Congress can
do, boldly make a statement that this Fannie/Freddie are different from the old
ones. The Congress can’t legislate away historical memories.
Why
Demolish a Valuable Asset?
Which Wall Street investment bank or major TBTF bank—with
their DNA all over the 2008 financial meltdown—did the Congress or any
Administration abolish?
The
answer is “not one.”
Why should
the Congress (especially the Democrats in each chamber) destroy the two
facilities which by law were put in place to provide mortgage liquidity to low,
moderate, and income families and have performed that mission quite well?
F&F
have succeeded in the past, they work now, and can continue to work well in the
future.
I noted that major steps already have been taken to
reduce whatever systemic risk their critics see or allege.
There
is no need to do away with Fannie and Freddie, save the Conservatives’ desire
to produce a scalp to wave around and satisfy some bizarre partisan political bloodlust.
The misguided Fannie/Freddie hostility is based on a
tranche of political lies and distortions so deep that the Congress, the media
and parts of the public never will be able to wade through and reach the truth.
Although more and more attention has been given in the past two years to exposing
those spurious political attacks which helped bring down the former GSEs.
If you read the NYT and Washington Post—including today’s
(Sunday) NYT editorial—you’ll see how much campaign money the financial services
industries heaps on Senate and House Financial Services Committee members,
especially the latter.
I worked at Fannie for 21 years and before that another
15 on Capitol Hill and in federal financial regulatory agencies. I know how and
why the various banks, investment banks, MI’s and insurance companies do what
they do. I know what Fannie did and more
importantly, I know what the company accomplished—given the congressional
mission it was given to spur homeownership—which many knuckleheads now try to
paint as tawdry and phony.
Reminder to all rushing to enshrine our nation’s banks as
the overseers of the primary and secondary mortgage markets: F&F were given
the “low income housing mission” in 1992 because the primary market lenders
balked at making those loans.
The 1992 statute put F&F at the “choke point” of the mortgage
delivery system. Congress wanted Fannie and Freddie to use their market pressure
to force banks, mortgage and savings banks and other lenders which were
“reluctant” (that’s the kindest interpretation) to make mortgage loans to poor and
minority families.
It worked, since before that law, all the fair lending and
liberal bleating failed to make that lending happen.
Fannie then was an
industry leader and a ball buster, at a time when that behavior was needed (and
welcomed by many in Congress on both sides of the aisle).
It still is needed and I have no idea if my “new Fannie”
can perform that function. But if future execs run it properly, Fannie still can
be a standard setter and market eyes which won’t allow lenders to cut corners, discriminate,
cheat, and take advantage of mortgagors.
Congress should give them a chance to reprise that role,
as many people start to wake up to the systemic implications of the various
proposals to do away with Fannie and Freddie.
Let
the Dogs Out
Abolishing Fannie and Freddie only serves the Conservatives’ desire to
produce a scalp to wave around and justify some bizarre partisan political
lust.
These now friendly house trained, pets haven’t bitten
anybody in 6 years. They are fenced in, hardly ever bark, fetch the paper,
guard the house, and are very productive.
Why kill them?
Hedgies
and Preferred Investors Take Notice, the Adults Are Here
Everyone knows about the Corker-Warner and Hensarling
bills, but two fresh F&F proposals—reportedly—are somewhere between the
conjuring and drafting stages.
One is from Sen. Jack Reed (D-RI.) and was recently week discussed last Friday in Inside
Mortgage Finance.
The second—according my poker group sources, quoting
senior committee staff--will be a “Tim Johnson (D-SD) and Mike Crapo (R-Idaho)
bill which will be “the only F&F bill
the Senate Banking Committee considers this year.”
Who knows what all of that means, save Reed is a more
potent committee player than either Senators Corker or Warner and, at the end
of the day, Committee Chairman Johnson and ranking member Crapo can control almost any
agenda.
What
Others Say
Maloni, 8-18-2013
Complements and thanks to the author for so eloquently stating what I have long felt but was never able to clearly articulate:
ReplyDelete"There is no need to do away with Fannie and Freddie, save the Conservatives’ desire to produce a scalp to wave around and satisfy some bizarre partisan political bloodlust."
I like that Crapo is involved with one. Any additional insight on what these two newer proposals might... propose?
ReplyDeleteThanks.
ReplyDeleteI was proud of this one (more than most) because I managed to get out a number of my thoughts and I think they hang together, make sense, and reveal stuff most people probably don't realize.
Nothing on Johnson-Crapo or even Jack Reed effort, which has been rumored for a whole. But, the first want means the Senate professional Committee staff (I use the term loosely), as opposed to personal staff, will work on the drafting and shepherding any bill the Chairman and Ranking Republican produce.
I haven't heard a solid reason articulated by the C-W sponsors why that destructive action is necessary and hope they see utility in some of my suggestions.
I left out that senior House GOP sources claims that Jeb Hensarling doesn't have enough R votes to get his bill on the floor, which is positive news..
I checked the ticker today at $1.31 lot of room for earnings. Could you share more information on these proposals? Blue Agent.
ReplyDeleteHappy to once I get any.
ReplyDeleteJust reliable rumors at this stage.
Don't bet your butter and egg money on any of this because things have a long way to go, but both peaks and valleys are ahead.
As I wrote, there is a mountain of lies, half truths, and political hatred stacked against these two entities and that won't go away easily.
As I remind people, I still am waiting for the Washington Post to report that the three Fannie execs falsely accused in 2004 of securities fraud were cleared of same last year by Federal Judge Richard Leon in three separate "summary judgment" opinions.
Hey Bill it also should be considered that the 117 billion dollars that Fannie Mae is close to paying back does contain a profit for the taxpayer.
ReplyDeleteThe 10 percent dividend amount that they owed on the outstanding balance was rolled over into the total amount as it was calculated. So it needs to be determined how much in dividends were rolled into the liquidation preference before the "Third Amendment" Profit Sweep Agreement happened in August 2012.
The taxpayers might already be in profit on their investment at this point overall.
You likely are absolutely correct but try explaining that concept to the media or the Congress.
ReplyDeleteSome of them still think you pronounce the "t" in mortgage!
Many reporters Monday night and Tuesday, wrote about a letter from the FHFA IG to Director Ed DeMarco--bitching at FHFA to taking too long to insist F&F implement a FHFA-changed accounting rule--and turned it into a "Fannie and Freddie underreport loan losses" news story.
This was a internecine cat fight between two segments of FHFA, but the letter/report became a F&F failure which never was the case.
It was a ludicrous/haphazard media performance with one or two exceptions, but that's the story which went out to the world and that's what a lot of people will think.
"The lie races around the world, while the truth slowly is putting on its shoes in the morning!"
Anonymous, if I understand your point correctly FnF includes all dividends paid since conservatorship.
ReplyDeleteFor example, Freddie paid $23.7b before the sweep, $41b total to date
Bill, why is this advisory bulletin even an issue? Besides the Post getting it wrong, of what impact would even a total loan loss of 2.77% of Fannie's $2.7t portfolio have, which is in no way realistic since they then own - and therefore can sell - the asset? Isn't that relatively chump change given its earnings?
As noted, it seems that Nick Timiraos, writing in the WSJ, had the story correct and it's not an issue. (Link below.)
ReplyDeletehttp://blogs.wsj.com/developments/2013/08/19/watchdog-fannie-freddie-should-expedite-accounting-changes/
Don't know why it was overwritten and headlined by the media.
I'm told the new "bank like" reporting system, which both F&F are implementing, won't change the number or earnings impact.
The real "story"--if there is one--is the cage rattling that the FHFA IG is doing at the expense of the FHFA staff and why Steve Linick is doing it.
One reporter, before she went on vacation after writing her article--which I questioned--said there is a "back story" here, which she couldn't get into.
All that i do know is that Linick, who reportedly is on the move to elsewhere in the federal government, has been jabbing DeMarco's FHFA (and DeMarco) continually with IG reports suggesting FHFA shortcomings.
Linick has been accused of "empire building" and wants to add hundreds of new lawyers to the IG staff. I already reported, months ago, about Linick's desire to have them "armed," as in carry guns!!
Calculated Risk had a good article on this.
ReplyDeleteLawler: The Washington Post (and Reuters) get it wrong again on the GSEs:
http://www.calculatedriskblog.com/2013/08/lawler-washington-post-and-reuters-get.html
Yes, Lawler "was" a fabulous Fannie quant and now writes a daily newsletter, which I tried to link, but--excuse this non-techie--it had one of those little green boxes containing his newsletter, which I don't know how to "link."
ReplyDeleteBut, Tom Lawler called out the Post for lousy reporting (ongoing) and noted specifically why (ditto Reuters whose wire service story the Post used) was way off.
Calculated Risk then picked up Tom's newsletter.
When the truth behind this inside FHFA "pissing contest" comes out, some reporters should have red faces.
If someone has it, please post a link to "Calculated Risk." (And I'll try and find one, too.)
Calculated Risk:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.calculatedriskblog.com/2013/08/lawler-washington-post-and-reuters-get.html
Wow, that was quick.
ReplyDeleteLet's see if I can do it again, "24year old, former Swedish airline stewardess, who loves old American men!"
If any of you have.......!
'Weathered' Bill. We're weathered
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteDo you remember the great scene in "The Directors," where "Inga" (Uma Thurman) comes to interview for the secretarial job?
ReplyDeleteI'm still holding out hope for "Inga!"
"Bialischtok and Bloom, Biali......."
Is that her last name?
ReplyDeleteBanks: http://tiny.cc/enx71w
ReplyDeleteThe stupid kerfluffle over the IG's letter already has spawned the first of "Are F&F as profitable as they claim?" articles.
ReplyDeleteWhat %$#@%& idiots, some people are.
After internal and external auditor review for accuracy and GAAP compliance, the companies issue their reports quarterly to the FHFA, which re-review them before they go out tot he SEC and the public.
S
With FHFA blessings and White House gobbling up and using the revenues in their debt squabbles, suddenly because of a wussy internal letter--reflecting some other agenda--people ask, "Are the companions really financially successful."
It's an indication what F&F advocates have to do working with a really dumb media.
"Wow, that was quick." Just trying to add value to found value. Matt beat me to it.
ReplyDelete"What %$#@%& idiots, some people are.
...
It's an indication what F&F advocates have to do working with a really dumb media."
Do you doubt there are strong hands actively working all channels against FnF? Where's the press coverage of Capuano?
I can only hope that rational heads will insist on a fact-based accounting before decisions are made; if gridlock assists in this, so be it!
Great write up Bill. Have you heard anything from the ICBA in DC re:GSE reform? I would have thought they would have some clout on both sides of the aisle (although not as much $$ as the TBTF banksters).
ReplyDeleteTheir 2013 GSE reform priorities seem to largely support reform only. Link-
http://www.icba.org/advocacy/index.cfm?ItemNumber=57559&sn.ItemNumber=1709
Two responses to the last two questions.
ReplyDeleteMedia only responds to what's out there; Capuano (D-Mass) has not done much touting of his won legislation, making me wonder if someone or something scared him off (reportedly a powerful former MoC from Massachusetts was making calls to former colleagues dampening their interest in F&F).
Possibly, Capuano if he's just gotten on to other issues.
Historically, the ICBA has been a positive force for Fannie and Freddie, and remain so because its membership is so concerned about being consumed by the TBTF banks and their large regional peers.
F&F give the community banks a "seat at the table" with the equal access they provide the small lenders.
I never am sure where Cam Fine, the ICBA current exec, is on most issues or if he has the congressional respect enjoyed by his predecessors.
But, Capitol Hill listens to the community lenders.
Thanks again for the insight Bill.
ReplyDeleteBill, why not recruit Ken Guenther to your cause? He is probably still the voice of community bankers.
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteGood idea and I've tried.
Very smart guy, excellent skills, email regularly with him, but .....
The next time you see him or talk to him, ask why he refuses all of Maloni importuning to put his name of GSE broadsides.
He did write a blog for a while after he left ICBA. But no longer.
I'll take a stab at that. Smaller Community banks are having a hard time producing profits with all the costly new rules and regulations so he's doing them a favor in not badmouthing their acquirers.
ReplyDeleteUnless I am wrong, most small bankers don't want to sell out and they cant' be preserved then we are back to only the very large and TBTF banks controlling the whole shooting match.
ReplyDeleteCongress always has tried to preserve a niche for the little depositories, because they reflect "home town and the little guy."
Congress will be loathe to approve anything which facilitates their demise; ditto the Congress' and ditto the Treasury via regs.
Robert, someone told me that you might be passing the hat in the shale oil fields to fund Bradley Manning's desired surgery. Do you have a website?? :-
Remember the scene from the end of Dr. Strangelove in which Slim Pickens rides an ICBM down to Armageddon? That is how the community banks like mine feel about our investments in Fannie and Freddie preferred.
ReplyDeleteICBA is seemingly on the sideline.
Is there any real or even potential prospect that that anything in the potential Reed/Johnson/Crapo legislation will benefit those of us who have not dumped and are still riding the GSE ICBM?
I'm sure new pals will oblige on the first part of her metamorphosis. Oh, so happily.
ReplyDeleteTo be realistic, Anounymous, that shit done already blowed up. I am curious to know how many preferreds are still owned by banks, though. I'd guess very little, but I don't know, either.
ReplyDeleteRecords on holdings are unreliable, and there was a thing called 'TARP' which would have moved the banks to sell. I mean, that was its specific purpose. But that would mean the treasury owns the majority of juniors, or at least a good chunk of them.
One man's perspective.
ReplyDeleteBecauyse of how Paulson manipulated then screwed the community bankers with the investments in preferred and then pulled the #$@&%* rug out from under them with the F&F takeover, I always felt the GOP owed the small banks something.
How the ICBA chooses to ask for that debt to be repaid is up to them.
But, I also believe that--for those holding the junior preferred--there will be peaks and valley, not with the former getting you $25 a share but with something more than it is today, because that price will rise and fall as the discussion about "what to do with F&F" gets closer to fruition.
With all due respect, what 'they' decide to do with FnF is immaterial. They don't own the two. If 'they' prefer to purchase the assets I own I would consider it as long as full redemption and an apology is given, but no less.
ReplyDeleteDon't believe the hype, Bill. And I'd say 14.9% of value is valleyish enough, thank you.
Full redemption or the stigma of the first corporate taking in US history. I'm sure Obama could live with that. Don't know about the others though.
"First corporate taking" only will occur to some "policy makers" if and if the courts find for one or more of the four plaintiffs in the current pending cases.
ReplyDeleteInside the Beltway people--and lots of media--never recognized them as companies and believe they were bad actors which deserved anything/everything which happened.
I like their arrogance. While they're at squashing the 1st govt taking of a private enterprise maybe they can squash other sordid events in America's past.
ReplyDeleteHiroshima? never happened
Slavery? never happened
Native Americans? "we have determined that this never happened"
Bill, history books won't give a rat's ass what MoC thinks is justified.
Nor will concerned capitalists, btw
ReplyDeleteRobert--We share much.
ReplyDeleteHistory is written by the winners and unless some of things I've been writing about and on which you and others have commented
are changed in the near term (mostly by the Congress and then the media), then the F&F epoch will stay inaccurate and incomplete.
Funny, a national journalist--whose name you would recognize--suggested, in my doggedness, I reminded him of one of those loyal but forgotten Japanese soldiers, hiding and still fighting on a Pacific island, years after the war had ended.
In the past few weeks, my emails to him originate "from my unnamed atoll."
But, I don't plan to be that old soldier he described.
To a shill....
ReplyDeleteThis is interesting. I have read Wiki's 'Fannie Mae' topic page many times in full, but this morning is the first time I noticed the following edit:
"The Administration PR effort was not enough, by itself, to save the GSEs. Their government directive to purchase bad loans from private banks, in order to prevent these banks from failing, as well as the 20 top banks falsely classifying loans as AAA, caused instability. Paulson knew that Lehman Brothers and other banks were in trouble and would soon require Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to purchase their toxic debt; this meant that he would need a fast method to bailout the banks, so he devised a method to use Fannie and Freddie as a backstop. Paulson's plan was to go in swiftly and seize the two GSEs, rather than provide loans as he did for AIG and the major banks; he told president Bush that "the first sound they hear will be their heads hitting the floor", in a reference to the French revolution, and the taking (fifth amendment) of their assets -- without compensation:.[39] The major banks have since been sued by the Feds for a sum of $200,000,000, and some of the major banks have already settled: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/03/business/bank-suits-over-mortgages-are-filed.html?_r=0 . In addition, a lawsuit has been filed against the federal government by the shareholders of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, for a) creating an environment by which Fannie and Freddie would be unable to meet their financial obligations b) forcing the executive management to sign over the companies to the conservator by (a), and c) the gross violation of the (fifth amendment) taking clause"
History being written....
Thanks, Robert, excellent find.
ReplyDeleteNow, if we could get everyone on "inside the Beltway" to read an believe Wiki, we'd be half way there to some support for the "GOEs", Government Owned Enterprises, my new name for F&F.
I've said if the plaintiffs get some headway, legally, I think a lot of embarrassing material could be exposed about Paulson cutting legal corners to do the deed, which also served a major GOP partisan objective.