fannie freddie

The Fannie Mac Daddy: Fannie Freddie To Merge Select Operations

In what we are sure will be a BLS job creating moment, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will create a common platform for issuing MBS as they wind down operations and plan for a future in which the two companies no longer exist. Big is about to get bigger as Bloomberg reports, these two GOEs will start sharing risk with private financiers in the single-family loan market. FHFA head Ed DeMarco comments that they are beginning to move to a “post-conservatorship world,” though we assume still as explicitly and implicitly guaranteed by the good taxpaying public of America. The merger and creation of a joint securitization company with the goal of executing $30bn each in transactions partnered with the private sector will attempt to reduce that taxpayer load and “ease the transition from where we are today to wherever lawmakers decide the country ought to ultimately go.”

Via Bloomberg,

Fannie Mae (FNMA) and Freddie Mac will create a common platform for issuing mortgage-backed securities as they wind down operations and plan for a future in which the two companies no longer exist, their regulator said today.

The government-owned enterprises also will start sharing risk with private financiers in the single-family loan market, aim to reduce their multifamily housing business by 10 percent and continue raising fees they charge to guarantee securities, Edward J. DeMarco, the Federal Housing Finance Agency’s acting director, said on a conference call with reporters.

DeMarco unveiled his agency’s goals for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac as the two companies head into their fifth year under U.S. conservatorship. FHFA is shrinking operations while waiting for President Barack Obama and Congress to move forward with a broader overhaul of the nation’s housing-finance system.

“One of the challenges that everyone has in conceiving of housing-finance reform and moving to a post-conservatorship world is, where’s the plumbing? Where are the rules? Where are the standards?” DeMarco said. “What we’re trying to do with these strategic goals is to build out that infrastructure and those standards so it would ease the transition.”

Washington-based Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac of McLean, Virginia, buy mortgages and package them into securities on which they guarantee principal and interest. The companies, seized by federal regulators amid soaring losses in 2008, returned to profitability last year after drawing $190 billion in taxpayer aid.

Single Standard

Their new joint securitization company will have its own chief executive officer and chairman, and will be funded by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac (FMCC), DeMarco said today. It will create a single standard for issuing securities that could survive independently if the two companies no longer exist, he said.

The two enterprises this year also will aim to execute $30 billion each in transactions in which they share the risk of backing single-family loans with private participants in the market. Those could involve mortgage insurance or include the issuance of different types of securities.

“What we’re looking for is to have some portion of the risk sold off to private owners and that way reduce the exposure of the taxpayer and demonstrate the viability of these types of transactions,” DeMarco said on the call.

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will also try to reduce their backing of multifamily loans by 10 percent this year, largely through raising prices and tightening underwriting, he said. They’ll also attempt to sell off at least 5 percent of the illiquid assets in their retained portfolios.

SOURCE: http://www.zerohedge.com

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