The bipartisan legislation to replace Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac thats taking shape in the Senate would leverage key reform projects already underway at the government-sponsored enterprises, but it doesnt tackle some of the key transition issues the market would face by putting the GSEs out of business. The reform plan being put together by Sens. Bob Corker, R-TN, and Mark Warner, D-VA, has at its core the risk-sharing projects currently being designed by the GSEs, according to a copy of the draft legislation provided to Inside MBS & ABS. The Secondary Mortgage Market Reform and Taxpayer Protection Act of 2013 would also implement the common securitization platform that Fannie and Freddie are building under the direction of the Federal Housing Finance Agency. The legislation would put...
A slowdown in production at Freddie Mac was the main factor behind a decline in total agency MBS issuance in May, according to a new Inside MBS & ABS ranking and analysis. A total of $148.28 billion of single-family agency MBS were issued last month, down 2.6 percent from Aprils level. May was the slowest month for agency MBS issuance so far in 2013, with slightly less volume than Marchs $148.35 billion. Freddies production was...[Includes one data chart]
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac out of existence, the two GSEs arent going anywhere for the near-future, say industry observers. Two bills one by a Republican GSE hawk filed two weeks ago, the other a bipartisan proposal soon to be submitted that would wind down and replace Fannie and Freddie over a period of 5 to 10 years have cranked up the volume of chatter about the prospects of GSE reform on Capitol Hill. Dont hold your breath because nothing has changed, according to financial industry consultant Bert Ely.
When Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were placed in government conservatorships in September 2008, roughly 600 banks and thrifts saw $8 billion of their preferred stock investments in the two GSEs evaporate. With both firms now wildly profitable, there is increasing hope and speculation that buyers of the junior preferred stock are in for an eventual payday. No one is more optimistic about that happening than the Independent Community Bankers of America. For the ICBA, the question boils down to how much on the dollar its members will receive for the shares they still own. Its also a complicated question. When Fannie and Freddie hit the skids at the nadir of the housing bust, many banks and thrifts sold their preferred shares at market rates, that is, at something close to zero. In other words, they no longer have the stock certificates and any ownership rights. Speculators and bottom feeders do.
As Fannie Maes and Freddie Macs portfolios wind down, the two GSEs should maintain sufficient balance sheet space to allow for the aggregation of loans from smaller lenders who are not yet ready to securitize, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association. The MBAs concept paper released this week also calls for the Federal Housing Finance Agency common securitization platform initiative to include plans for the acceptance of small lot deliveries into multi-lender pools.