Emac's Stock Watch | Fox Business
  • August 5, 2008 09:03 AM EDT by Elizabeth MacDonald

    More Losses Expected for Fannie and Freddie

    As the one-year anniversary of the housing and credit crunch approaches, investors in Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have nothing to celebrate. They won't see an end to the losses at these mortgage finance giants until after next year.

    Moreover, a report from the regulator of the two mortgage finance giants gives embarrassing new detail on how Fannie (FNM) and Freddie (FRE) were mindlessly gunning the securitization engines well after the housing bubble had burst and Wall Street backed off.

    Freddie Mac will report its second-quarter financial results Wednesday. Fannie Mae will release its results on Friday. Freddie Mac's shares are down 88% this year, while Fannie's shares have dropped 83%. More losses and writedowns for the two are likely on the way.

    The Office of Housing Enterprise and Oversight says in a new report that the two combined own about $217 bn in securities minted by Wall Street firms that are backed by the shakiest home mortgages dating to 2004 and 2005, the height of the housing bubble.

    The mortgages here are subprime and Alt-A loans, just a notch above subprime. To the extent that Wall Street firms book fair value losses on this pool, "Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac may have to do so as well," OFHEO says.

    As delinquencies and defaults on subprime loans continue, and increasingly even prime loans bellyflop, Fannie and Freddie will continue to book losses into 2009, says Credit Suisse. Some analysts say they may lose an additional $24 bn or more.

    This should alarm both taxpayers and investors across the country.

    Elected officials enacted a $300 bn housing bailout bill that gives these two carte blanche without any statutory limits on their colossal $5.3 tn book of business (Lehman Bros says the two have another $3.3 tn in hedges, among other items, off the balance sheet). The two have reported more than $11 bn in pre-tax losses over the last three quarters and have a history of accounting misdeeds (on a fair value basis, Fannie incurred a loss of $13.3 bn, Freddie, $24.7 bn, OFHEO says).

    The housing rescue now lets the government inject tens of billions of taxpayer dollars into these two publicly traded companies, who clearly have failed in their fiduciary responsibilities. The government can now use tax dollars to buy unlimited equity stakes in the companies and their bonds if needed.

    The thinking is, the Treasury will simply mint more debt and use that resulting capital to inject more liquidity into Fannie and Freddie, despite their history of accounting misdeeds, losses, misstatements and repeated dilutive equity raises that prove that these two companies do not know what they are doing. Also, the two can now borrow at the Federal Reserve.

    Fear is now rampant that if the rescue doesn't work, the US government must spend more than what the Congress said it would cost to bolster Fannie and Freddie, $25 bn, a sum it cooked up in order to sell the $300 bn housing bailout bill.

    Remember, the government's estimate of the cost to taxpayers for the S&L crisis rose from an initial $50 bn to more than $124.6 bn (not inflation adjusted).

    More importantly, Congress spitballed that $25 bn number even though just this past month it sent in bureaucrats from the Federal Reserve and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency to go find out what the heck is really sitting on Fannie and Freddie's books, as it clearly doesn't believe the management at these two levered up examples of crony capitalism.

    The fear is, too, that the government may have to swallow these two obesities, causing the US dollar to plunge in anticipation of the need to mint more dollars, creating more inflation (not to mention the $99 tn in unfunded liabilities at Social Security and Medicare, according to Fed stats).

    In effect, US taxpayers have been loaded into the backseat of Congress's spaceship pointed directly at the center of the sun.

    Because the market believes the US government has given Fannie and Freddie an "implicit guarantee"of their debt, for years both have used that backing to execute a sweet carry trade, where they can borrow money much more cheaply than banks and then turn around and use that money to buy things such as higher-yielding mortgage-backed securities from lenders, in turn injecting liquidity into the lending system to make more loans. The two also sell guarantees against defaults on loans for a fee.

    For years, Wall Street believed their obligations were "nearly as good as Treasurys themselves," notes Dennis Gartman of The Gartman Letter. Indeed, their securities traded as if the government backed them, and US government debt traded as if the government did not back them.

    Fannie Mae was born in 1938 as part of FDR's New Deal to get the country out of the Great Depression and provide home ownership. Back then, millions of Americans were struggling to buy homes, and also faced foreclosures, as banks weren't lending and mortgage money had dried up.  

    For years Fannie sat on the government's books, helping to expand the real estate industry. In 1968, the LBJ administration, worried about the effect of the Vietnam War on the federal budget, moved Fannie Mae off the government's books, and Fannie became a publicly traded company. 

    When the savings-and-loan industry wanted its own mortgage financing creature to play with beginning in 1968, Congress obliged and in 1970 Freddie Mac was born. The two quasi-socialist mortgage finance giants then became to the US economy what off-balance sheet vehicles were to Enron, Gartman says.

    When Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae were limited in the dollar amount of mortgages they could buy and securitize, to $417,000, in the ‘90s, Wall Street stepped in to securitize these loans.

    Wall Street then manufactured all sorts of subprime paper, paid the credit ratings agencies to get rosy ratings, and then sold this drunken daisy chain of paper to all sorts of unwitting investors from here to the Arctic Circle, now sitting as landfill in portfolios run by pension funds, hedge funds and local governments.

    Wall Street firms then kept a sizable slug of this bad paper off their balance sheets to keep financial results rosy, and then wrote themselves sweet bonus checks off the goosed-up numbers.

    So Wall Street, with the help of Fannie and Freddie, shot these risky loans into the ether, thus breaking the bond between the overseer, meaning the lender, and the borrower. Why care about monitoring a borrower who has no skin in the game with a zero-down mortgage when you've entirely offloaded that loan as a security?

    As far back as 1987 the Financial Accounting Standards Board warned there was no adequate way to value these derivatives, and now Frankenstein derivatives are sluicing financial poison through the system.  

    Then Fannie and Freddie itself started buying Wall Street's mortgage backed securities, securities backed by zombie loans given by banks such as Countrywide Financial (CFC), which already had pointed its conveyor belt of bad loans at Wall Street.

    When the credit markets seized up in 2007, Wall Street stopped doing much of these securitization deals as its recycling machine for these cut and paste jobs had sand thrown in its gears.

    But as Wall Street stepped back, check out how Fannie and Freddie stepped in big time.

    OFHEO says in its recent report that while the volume of single-family mortgatges securitized in 2007 fell by 8% to $1.9 tn, as the number of single family mortgages originated declined, "Fannie Mae's and Freddie Mac's combined share of MBS [mortgage-backed securities] issuance rose substantially to 61.6% from 46.7% in 2006."

    Indeed, OFHEO says Fannie and Freddie "increased their MBS issuance by nearly one-third in 2007 as competition" from Wall Street "virtually ceased in the second half of the year," though OFHEO says the two started to curtail their purchases of securities backed by shoddy loans. Too little too late.  

    Now teetering atop Fannie's and Freddie's painfully razor thin $54 bn in net worth is a pyramid of $5.3 tn in debt that is nearly half the size of the US gross domestic product. The two have much higher leverage ratios than banks or hedge funds, but lower borrowing costs due to their implicit government backing. The two whittled down their capital cushions after they gunned their lobbying engines on Capitol Hill, showering elected officials with money.

    JPMorgan Chase (JPM) or Bank of America (BAC), for example, have almost as much bank-level capital as these two "combined supporting one fifth of the commitments," says the research website The Institutional Risk Analyst, published by Lord, Whalen LLC.

    So the fear is that, as mortgages belly flop right and left and an increasing number of homes go into foreclosure, the two are insolvent. Former Fed official William Poole has said as much of Freddie Mac.

    But instead of reining in their colossal, outsized portfolios which has caused such danger to taxpayers, the new housing rescue legislation went in the opposite direction. It would increase the statutory limit on the national debt by $800 bn, to $10.6 tn, as the two would now get to buy and back jumbo loans worth $625,000.

    And as economist Edward Yardeni points out (his reports are a must-read), both "have been scrambling to plug all the holes in their huge mortgage portfolios." Citing the Wall Street Journal, Yardeni notes that at the end of last year, the two "started guaranteeing payments on loans that back mortgage securities held by others to delay recognizing losses on some delinquent loans."

    Yardeni adds that "earlier this year, in their most shocking (desperate) tactic to reduce losses, Fan and Fred started making loans of up to $15,000 to people who have fallen behind on their mortgage payments."

    Here are the stink bombs, potholes and steam pipes bursting in these two reckless publicly traded companies:

    *Both have a total of a microscopic--did you see it, did you catch it?--$54bn in net worth, generally assets minus liabilities (don't listen to the $81 bn figure tossed around for their total capital, that's a pro forma fake number that doesn't include certain losses).

    *Teetering atop that razor thin wedge is a pyramid of $5.3 tn in debt.

    *One stink bomb is the total of $260 bn in securitized assets backed by subprime and Alt-A loans, loans which sit in between subprime and prime. Those sums dwarf their capital positions.

    *Freddie has $156.8 bn in level three assets, those illiquid securities it can't get a pricetag on because no one wants them now. Remember, under US accounting rules, it gets to assign its own values to these assets, they could be worth more, they could be worth less.

    *Fannie has $56.1 bn in level three assets, or about a seventh of its fair valued assets.  

    *Fannie and Freddie have combined debts of $1.59 tn, borrowings they made merely to operate their businesses. Again, that's against just $54 bn in total net worth. Their guaranteed liabilities were 29 times their net worth at the end of the first quarter.

    *They each have $2.25 bn pipelines into the Treasury, which the government now wants to expand.

    *Forty years ago, when they went public, Fannie had debt of about $15 bn. Do the math against Fannie's $804 bn in liabilities today, and the pipelines should be about $120 bn each.

    Still believe that $25 bn figure Congress is selling you?

Robert

Let's see, my mortgage is 400K at 6.25%, meaning I pay $2083 to FNMA. FNMA now receives its money from the FED at 2.25%, meaning they pay just 750 per month .... generating a spread of $1,333 per month PROFIT on just my loan? 6.5 / 2.25 / 3.00 should be the new Mission Statement for FNMA: Lend at 6.5 Borrow at the taxpayer subsidized rate of 2.25 Everyone on the GOLF COURSE by 3:00 (PM) and BIG BONUSES for EVERYONE in Management by year end! What a J O K E, at the expense of nightmarish fed.deficits, to fund all this monkey business. There's a sucker (tax payer) born every minute and FNMA / FHLMC were given the Government muscle to ‘take em’.

August 5, 2008 at 5:46 pm

James E. Bennett

Well I think this column basically sizes everything up in a Nutshell, Wonder if any Politicians will read it, Doubt it

August 5, 2008 at 1:39 pm

Greedom

Is it even possible someone could surgically carry out a mission to suck a few hundred billion out of the US tax payers and into companies that just out and out claimed a 'loss' and then cried 'but, if we go down, the entire nation follows us' ? I don't know about you, but what would someone do for say - a billion dollars - or 10 billion too much speculation

August 5, 2008 at 9:42 am

Greedom

What Exxon, Bush and the Ken Layes of the world, including Exelon (and hey, let's bring in Enron too) can realize is, winning systems win, and the greater the power ? my attitude ? the less the control. This admin is laden with holes - resignations - complete denials of access to information, complete denials - heck, just flat out denial as a premise, good ole fashioned lawyer style - deny - force proof, but deny access to any incriminating documents. What was it Ken Laye had done ? Was it ? denying access to incriminating documents ? through shredding ? Odd, I wonder if they had a shredder by the same manufacturer with adjacent serial #'s on the Bush campaign jet - where Ken Laye was the #2 user. That would be somethin'

August 5, 2008 at 9:41 am

Greedom

Almost makes me think 40 billion in profits from Exxon isn't that much after all - compared to the free 100's of billions being dished out by the taxpayers to this un-General Motors bailout. Mention of the Savings and Loan thievery in this article I see. Reminds me of the days of Bush's brother - Neal, I still leave room that instead of the Savings and Loan being looted round 1, that it is entirely possible this is round 2, and the goal was to loot the entire US mortgage sector ! okay- that's not going to happen, but you can't shake your head at hundreds of billions just given out as corporate welfare and pretend it's not real. Oh wait, IS IT ? real money ? heh- I guess we'll have to find out with our friend inflation hiding in the closet as a monster at night, whether any of this money is even WORTH anything. If there was a clause in these new laundering schemes that said 'oh yeah, and Freddie/Fannie are to be bailed out in Euro's' ? I'd think twice for sure this is Savings and Loan part deux. I always liked that line from Blair Witch Project "No redneck is this smart" When they find someone keeps moving the rocks. Fox should have been covering, 'Dude, where's my ARM brokered house gonna be in 5 years' instead of 'Where's Natalie' hmm - an entire national disaster, or missing girl in aruba - responsible journalism says ? Go with the tabloid item with 'dolled up' reporters ? ugh! Liz, I'd think about moving on from Fox before you end up tarnishing your integrity, I suppose you can sue on that, but it's going to be tricky, you'd have to prove you knew ahead of time what's coming legally for Fox which WILL make Fox News - this includes all who are involved in laying foundations set for FBN - nearly a four letter word. Even if the 'Judge' had a degree from Bush's stomping grounds, it's unsavable I think, Fox that is. Maybe FBN will just go full tilt on the paid TV advertisements, and instead of running them from midnight to 5 am, they could just run them all day long, promoting whatever stocks they want people to move on for whatever reason ? I'd say promoting any stock using a global audience as FBN does is dangerous with a conservative SEC chair, I don't think the SEC realizes how 'out of the picture' they even are. It's to the point where instead of another Bear Stearns house arrest early morning, I have to wonder if we will also see some SEC folks who are part of the problem, removed in a similar fashion. I'll stick with 'No redneck is this smart' or are they ? Heck, we might as well all fear the unseen, faceless Blair Witch over some nameless faceless 'terrorist' lurking in our neighborhoods, justifiably profiled according the Fox n' Friends suggestions on how to properly profile ? Oh well - eeks - I wonder about the demographics for Fox News - seems high elderly population, and spooking the elderly in my book is a crime. Now, keeping the elderly in a fuss over Natalie - or the runaway bride - or that shock and awe pilot TV program Fox ran - whatever happened to Shock and Awe - I thought that would be a thursday nighter for sure every week, all I got was Ollie North- sheesh, what are the odds he's caught up so close to Iran again ? Let alone another Noriega esque region only this time heroin, instead of cocaine. hmm... Just what kind of integrity being maintained over there at Fox ? I guess it doesn't matter now if Rove's aides have turned on him - my oh my - sometimes ? I bet a gag order is more newsworthy that the sentence that accompanies violating it. No, no redneck was smart enough to pull this off, amazing odds on Neal Bush though being at the helm of such a similar criminal act as with the Savings and Loan.

August 5, 2008 at 9:36 am