Three former Fannie Mae executives, including the companys one-time CEO, have petitioned a federal judge to toss the securities fraud case the government filed against them late last year. Filed last week in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, the motion to dismiss contends the Securities and Exchange Commission is thin on proof that the GSE, at the direction of the then top executives, failed to disclose to investors the companies exposure to subprime mortgages prior to the 2008 housing market crash.
Although it questions the appropriateness of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac funding charitable activities while the two companies remain under government conservatorship, the Federal Housing Finance Agencys official watchdog has concluded that the FHFA has the dissolution of the GSEs charity funds in hand. The recent report by the FHFAs Office of Inspector General noted that at the time the conservatorships were established 3½ years ago, both companies had long-standing mechanisms in place to make substantial contributions to charitable organizations. In 2008, both GSEs charitable giving totaled $73 million.
Roughly one out of every 14 banks in the country suffered significant investment losses following the September 2008 government takeover of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, according to a new Federal Reserve discussion paper. The paper, When Good Investments Go Bad: The Constriction in Community Bank Lending After the 2008 GSE Takeover, details how financial institutions took a bath when the two companies were placed into conservatorship and dividend payments on common and preferred shares were suspended.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency expects to finish its latest assessment of principal reductions on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac loans sometime this month against a backdrop of intensifying public debate over the issue. The Treasury Department this week fought back against claims that its proposed incentive payments to the government-sponsored enterprises, if they agree to principal reduction loan mods, would be a backdoor bailout for banks that service these loans. Treasury earlier this year offered to pay the GSEs the same incentives that other investors get for principal reduction loan mods under...
The Federal Housing Finance Agency is calling for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to conduct an analysis of the viability of each companys multifamily operations without government guarantees, suggesting the possibility of separating the two government-sponsored enterprises multifamily and single-family businesses. The GSEs mandated review of their multifamily operations is part of the FHFAs 2012 conservatorship scorecard unveiled two weeks ago, which outlines the specific objectives and timelines for the Finance Agencys strategic plan for the conservatorships of Fannie and Freddie. The multifamily...
The Federal Housing Finance Agency is looking for two good chief executives who are willing to work a thankless job for substantially reduced pay and the chance to oversee the transition of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac from private companies to government entities and perhaps eventually out of business altogether. Working closely with the two GSEs, the Finance Agency is in the midst of discussions with candidates to fill the CEO vacancies at both Fannie and Freddie, according to FHFA Acting Director Edward DeMarco.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency is reportedly attracting some big investors as it proceeds with its initiative to dispose of GSE and government-held real estate-owned properties, but some industry observers question whether the fledgling program can be modeled in a way that makes business sense. Earlier this month, the FHFA announced the first pilot transaction under its REO initiative, which is targeted to the country’s “hardest-hit” metropolitan areas, including Atlanta, Chicago, Las Vegas, Phoenix and
The Home Affordable Refinance Program recorded a significant decrease in December despite the implementation of some new HARP 2.0 standards that took hold during the final month of 2011, according to the Federal Housing Finance Agency. The FHFAs latest foreclosure prevention and refinance report released this week noted that all HARP refis fell 36 percent to 23,323 in December from 36,304 in November.
Unless Congress takes legislative action by the end of the year, Fannie Mae and Freddie Macs unlimited pipeline of cash support from the U.S. Treasury will be significantly dialed back, a paper by Deutsche Bank cautions. Although agency mortgage market observers have assumed that the Treasury will extend the taxpayers unlimited line of credit to the GSEs before the Dec. 31 deadline, a close reading of the authorizing legislation suggests that the Treasury may not be able to extend unlimited support without the approval of Congress, noted Deutsche Bank.
Although the Federal Housing Finance Agency has taken steps to ensure that the GSEs mortgage purchases conform to certain underwriting standards, the Finance Agencys oversight of underwriting standards is limited and requires more attention, the FHFAs official watchdog concluded this week. The FHFAs Office of Inspector General found in its audit of FHFA oversight of Fannie Maes single-family mortgage underwriting standards that the agency lacks a formal process for reviewing underwriting standards and variances. Instead, it informally reviews and comments on Fannies proposed credit policy changes.