In a heavily redacted draft memo released to the public, the Inspector General of FHFA found that while the agency had reviewed and examined the GSEs’ executive compensation, it did not keep close tabs on "non-executive senior professional compensation practices."
Bank and thrift MBS holdings fell by 4.6 percent during 2013, and by the end of the year, they were down 7.8 percent from the all-time high of $1.634 trillion reached at the end of March 2012.
The capital markets risk-sharing transactions completed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in the past year are seen by some as a model for reform of the government-sponsored enterprises. However, the GSEs are taking on significantly more risk in the transactions than the non-agency first-loss requirements contemplated in legislation pending in Congress. Analysts at Barclays Capital project that after Congress approves mortgage-finance reform legislation, it would take at least 10 years to transition smoothly to a new system. Bills in Congress contemplate a five-year transition timeline, but raising enough private capital to fund the new system in that timeframe could be difficult. Industry analysts predict...
The GSE chief credited Fannies strong performance to a wide array of factors, including improving home prices and lower delinquencies, but also tighter underwriting standards which have created a pristine book of business for the company.
In whats claimed to be the third-largest settlement of a class-action suit by investors in non-agency MBS, Royal Bank of Scotland agreed to pay $275 million in cash. Investors led by the New Jersey Carpenters Vacation Fund claimed that RBS did not disclose that loans included in Harborview MBS that it sold failed to meet the deals underwriting guidelines. The settlement is awaiting approval by U.S. District Judge Harold Baer in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York. Separately, the remains of Lehman Brothers settled...
Although some regulators have anxiety problems with nonbank servicers, Fannie Mae apparently does not. Meanwhile, a large mortgage vendor M&A deal could be revealed late Friday.
Fannie Mae reported net earnings of $6.5 billion in the fourth quarter late this week, revealing that the companys total dividend payments to the U.S. Treasury will exceed the $116.1 billion that the GSE has drawn since being put into conservatorship in late 2008. The company will pay the Treasury $7.2 billion in dividends in March. With the March dividend payment, Fannie will have paid a total of $121.1 billion in dividends to the Treasury the equivalent amount of its entire draw plus an additional $5.0 billion.
A recently unearthed Treasury Department action memorandum from 2010 makes clear the White Houses commitment to ensuring that common shareholders in Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac should never have access to any positive earnings from the GSEs in the future. The memo, approved by then-Secretary Timothy Geithner, asks that Treasury waive the GSEs periodic commitment fee for 2011.
Some five and a half years after it filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, the remains of Lehman Brothers settled the legal claim by Freddie Mac stemming from $1.2 billion in loans made by the GSE to the investment bank just before the financial collapse. Judge Shelley Chapman of U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan approved this week the settlement that would see Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. pays $767 million to the GSE to close out Freddies bid to collect on the unpaid loan.
The call for housing-finance reform and a legislative solution to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac continues to grow among policymakers, but as the clock runs down some industry observers say it is already too late for effective action this year. Senate Banking Housing and Urban Affairs Committee Chairman Tim Johnson, D-SD, and Ranking Member Mike Crapo, R-ID, reportedly remain close to unveiling a housing finance reform bill.