Posts Tagged ‘House Financial Services Committee’

Fannie and Freddie to Marry?

Tuesday, August 2nd, 2011

Mortgage finance giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac might find themselves merged into a single government-run entity.  Representative Gary Miller (R-CA) is set to unveil a bill that would create a utility-like entity and phase out government-controlled Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.  The new company would buy mortgages and repackage them as government-backed securities.  The major difference from Fannie and Freddie lies in the fact that it would not have shareholder investors.  The National Association of Homebuilders and the National Association of Realtors are expected to support the proposal, which reflects concerns by the industry, consumer groups and some policymakers that a complete withdrawal of government support for home lending could make the housing recession go further downhill.

A competing proposal by Representatives Gary Peters (D-MI) and John Campbell (R-CA) would create a minimum of five private companies to replace the two co-called government-sponsored enterprises, or GSEs.  The point of contention for many lawmakers is whether to provide a government backstop for mortgages and on what terms to provide the guarantee.  House Financial Services Committee Chairman Spencer Bachus (R-AL) is trying to forge a consensus among Republican members.  Any bill that is generated by Bachus’ committee and is passed by the Republican-led House would likely still be in jeopardy once it reaches the Democratic-controlled Senate.

“There was the idea that people were so tired of taxpayer losses related to housing that the traditional housing lobby would not be able to retaliate effectively,” said Jim Vogel, chief of agency debt research at Memphis-based FTN Financial. “It’s time to start waving the housing flag again.”

That would represent a sea change from February, when the Treasury Department recommended selling off Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac holdings within 10 years; Jeb Hensarling (R-TX) wanted to do it in half that time.  Since then, homebuilders, real estate agents, investment banks, civil rights leaders and consumer advocates have lobbied to retain a government role — including the unspoken federal guarantee behind Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.  Congress created the programs as private companies to expand home ownership.

Already, the government is slowing its efforts to prop up the housing market.  Beginning this fall, the cap on Fannie and Freddie-backed mortgages — loans where taxpayers are on the hook if borrowers don’t pay — will decline in some regions.  At the height of the housing crisis, Congress raised the cap to $729,750 in areas where homes are most expensive.  After October, that will fall to $625,500.  The limit varies by county.  Mortgages that are too expensive to get backing from Fannie and Freddie are called jumbo loans and usually have higher interest rates and require larger downpayments.  That maximum was set by Congress in 2008 in an attempt to ensure that borrowers could continue to obtain loans in particularly expensive housing markets during the credit crunch, especially in prime real estate locations, such as New York, Los Angeles and Washington, D.C.

The Deal Book column in the New York Times thinks that the idea of merging Fannie and Freddie is not as outrageous as it may at first seem.  “Consider the math: For the first six months of this year, both companies spent $1.825 billion in overhead costs combined; on an annualized basis, that means the companies are spending about $3.65 billion.  Given that the companies do pretty much the same thing – buying mortgages from banks, insuring them and creating mortgage-backed securities – there might be opportunities for savings if many of their managers and staff are, to put it politely, redundant.  Conservatively, a combined Fannie and Freddie could probably cut a third of its overhead and staff, saving some $1.2 billion annually.  The way Wall Street values companies, that means – presto – billions more in value, perhaps as much as $18 billion or $19 billion, could be created overnight.”

“It would instill a huge amount of confidence. The market will know that both entities combined will have much more consistent, stable margins,” John Lekas, chief executive of Leader Capital, an investment firm, said on CNBC last week. He added that it “doesn’t cost taxpayers one nickel.”

Additionally, Fannie and Freddie are on track in 2011 to spend about $1.8 billion on what is known as “foreclosure costs,” which means maintaining and selling thousands of homes that became part of their ownership portfolios after the owners were unable to pay the mortgage.  The costs are staggering, given that Fannie and Freddie together own approximately 153,000 foreclosed homes. “This is just one of the costs that Fannie and the rest of us will pay to dig out of a very big hole,” says Karen Petrou, of Federal Financial Analytics.  When she says “the rest of us,” she is telling the truth.  Fannie Mae’s tab to American taxpayers is up to $86 billion since September 2008 when it was taken into government conservatorship.  During the 1st quarter of 2011, Fannie racked up $488 million in foreclosure-related expenses, including holding costs (insurance, taxes and maintenance); valuation adjustments for changes in market value; gains/loss when the property is sold; legal fees; eviction costs; weatherization costs to prevent pipes from bursting; costs to secure the property; and repair costs.

“We want to make sure that we’re comparable with the market or with the neighborhood,” said Elonda Crocket, a Fannie Mae executives who is part of the management team of its massive portfolio of foreclosed properties.  The goal is to stabilize the neighborhoods where there are foreclosed homes and get the properties to a condition where first-time homebuyers want to purchase them.  “We want to make sure that we can maximize our return on the investment,” she said.  In 2010, Fannie Mae repaired 87,000 foreclosed homes.

“It makes them — I think — indisputably the largest purchaser of paint and general appliances for these homes they’re fixing up,” said Guy Cecala, publisher of Inside Mortgage Finance.  “If they don’t maintain the houses, then the neighborhoods go downhill, other people are put at risk and the housing crisis gets worse because you have still more downward pressure on overall house prices,” Petrou said.

Many Americans Spend Half of Their Income on Housing

Wednesday, May 25th, 2011

American renters who pay more than 50 percent of their income on housing has peaked at the highest level in 50 years, according to a report from the Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies. Approximately 26 percent of renters – that’s more than 10 million people – are spending more than 50 percent of their pre-tax income on rent and utilities because salaries have fallen significantly amid rising rents.  An analysis conducted by the Washington Post found that rents in the nation’s capital, for example, had risen 22 percent in 2009 over the past 10 years.

“It’s a real squeeze for the lower-income and moderate-income families, and we’re even starting to see it affecting middle-income families, too,” according to Erick Belsky, managing director of Harvard’s Joint Center for Housing Studies.  “The prospects for improvement any time soon are dim.”  In other words, finding an affordable house or apartment to rent can be difficult.

When the economy went south in 2008, developers stopped building new apartments at a time when foreclosures were pushing many Americans into the rental market.  Because supply and demand were at odds with each other, rental rates climbed and are expected to remain high for the foreseeable future.  “In real terms, it means more people have less money to spend on household necessities such as food, healthcare, or savings,” Belsky, said.  Households that spend half or more of their income on rent also spend almost 40 percent less on food and more than 50 percent less on healthcare than households with more affordable rent.  “In the last decade, rental housing affordability problems went through the roof,” Belsky said.  “And these affordability problems are marching up the income scale.”

The report notes that – in a perfect world – renters should not have to pay more than 30 percent of their income on housing.  Over the last 10 years, low-income renters have experienced difficulty staying within that limit.  In 2009, 7.5 percent of moderate-income renters had to spend more than 50 percent of their salaries on rent, double the number reported in 2001.

According to the report, 28.6 percent of metropolitan Chicago renters are severely burdened by their rental costs.  Ten years ago, only 20.4 percent of area renters paid that high a percentage of their incomes.

With the number of renters growing, the Low Income Housing Coalition says it’s time for policymakers to put more money into rental assistance and affordable housing.  Throughout the housing crisis and recession, lawmakers have placed resources primarily on helping troubled homeowners avoid foreclosure; but approximately 40 percent of foreclosures also displace renter households.  The coalition has asked Congress to fund the National Housing Trust Fund, which creates a permanent funding source to construct, renovate and preserve 1.5 million units of rental housing for low-income families over the next 10 years.  Although the trust fund legislation passed in 2008, Congress hasn’t funded it because of the economic downturn.  The fund will not increase government spending or taxes because it was designed to be funded through contributions from Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Housing Administration.

Sheila Crowley, the president of the coalition, said now was the time to act.  “Providing $1 billion for the National Housing Trust Fund will help address the growing shortage of affordable housing, which is one of the most serious economic problems facing the country,” she said.  Crowley expects the House of Representatives to begin debating the Section 8 Voucher Reform Act, which passed the House Financial Services Committee last summer.  “We are very much hoping that the Senate will take it up as well,” she said.  The bill would provide rent subsidies for 150,000 low-income families, , and the coalition is seeking another 2 million Section 8 housing vouchers over the next decade, doubling the current number.

Dodd-Frank Bill Collides Head On With Deficit Realities

Wednesday, February 9th, 2011

Implementation of the historic Dodd-Frank bill – which President Barack Obama signed into law last July to regulate Wall Street against the excesses that led to the Great Recession — is in danger of being gutted if Republicans’ proposed deep spending cuts become a reality.  Representative Barney Frank (D-MA) pointedly criticized Republicans’ proposal to slash government spending to 2008 levels. According to Frank, that is not an option because the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) need funding to hire hundreds of employees to write and issue regulations to give the new law teeth.  Frank co-sponsored the bill with former Senator Christopher Dodd (D-CT).

Unfortunately, the positive things that Dodd-Frank was designed to accomplish have run head on into the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office’s (CBO) bleak warning about the direction of the nation’s debt.  According to NPR  Planet Money correspondent David Welna, “It was not a pretty picture that CBO director Douglas Elmendorf painted as he sat before the budget committee”. This year’s deficit, he said, will be nearly $1.5 trillion dollars, nominally the largest in history.  And if the tax breaks that got extended this year continue throughout the next decade, Elmendorf said the nation’s debt would grow to be the size of its economy, something that hasn’t happened since the end of World War II.  The time to do something about it, he told the grim-faced panel of senators, is now.”

Elmendorf warned that “The longer the necessary adjustments are delayed, the greater will be the negative consequences of the mounting debt, the more uncertain individuals and businesses will be about the future government policies, and the more drastic the ultimate policy changes will need to be.”  Senator Kent Conrad (D-ND), chairman of the Senate Budget Committee, said “The thing that makes the most sense is there is a summit between the White House, leaders in the House and the Senate, because at the end of the day, the White House has got to be at the table. And unfortunately, during the budget process, the president is left out.”  NPR’s Welna continues, “The revenue side of the equation, of course, is taxes and raising them has been a taboo topic for most in the GOP.  But the likely need for more revenues was underscored toward the end of today’s hearing when Conrad noted that the Social Security surplus that lawmakers have been raiding for years disappeared this year and instead, Social Security has started cashing in its IOUs with the Treasury.”  Social Security will post nearly $600 billion in deficits over the next 10 years as the economy recovers and millions of baby boomers begin retiring, according to new congressional projections.

House Republicans, led by Representative Scott Garrett (R-NJ), chairman of the House Financial Services Subcommittee on Capital Markets and Government-Sponsored Enterprises, wants to cut $55 to $60 billion in non-defense spending during fiscal year 2011.  “A dramatic spending increase to fund the SEC and CFTC, as envisioned by the authors of the Dodd-Frank legislation, would further the mindset that our nation’s problems can be solved with more spending, not more efficiency,” according to Garrett.  Frank countered that Garrett’s comments only reinforce his “fear that Republicans are attempting to cripple regulation by failing to fund it.  I had thought even among people in the Tea Party that credit default swaps were not that popular.  We’re arguing the security of the average American was far more endangered by the financial crisis than by a lot of other things that our military does.”

If the cuts are put into place, the SEC and CFTC would be frustrated in their mandates, such as setting up a new office of municipal securities, according to Frank.  The Republican response to Democratic concerns is that their goal is to make federal regulators more efficient.  Representative Spencer Bachus (R-AL), chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, said “Past experience indicates that a few investigative reporters have been more effective than the many employees at the SEC in addressing and exposing financial wrongdoing.”

Volcker Rule Seeks to Regulate Financial Markets

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

President Obama’s proposed Volcker Rule financial regulation bill faces an uncertain future on Capitol Hill.  A draft of President Barack Obama’s financial reform legislation has been sent to Congress.  Dubbed the Volcker Rule in honor of the former Federal Reserve chairman’s  aggressive pursuit of these regulations, the five-page proposal will ban proprietary trading and mergers that give banks more than a 10 percent market share as measured by liabilities that are not insured deposits.  Passage of the bill would bar banks from owning or investing in private equity firms and hedge funds.

The rule, designed to reduce the possibility of another financial crisis, exempts mergers that exceed the market-share limit in instances where a firm takes over a failing bank so long as regulators approve.  Also exempted are trading in Treasury and agency securities, including debt issued by Ginnie Mae, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

The legislation, which has been criticized by both Republicans and Democrats, would reduce banks’ ability to take risks.  It is a reaction to the more than $1.7 trillion in writedowns and credit losses that followed the subprime mortgage meltdown in late 2007.  Congressman Barney Frank (D-MA), chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, prefers a five-year transition period rather than the two years suggested in the president’s proposal.

Chris Rupkey, chief financial economist at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd. in New York says the exemptions may help avoid market disruptions that could impact small investors.  “The market is made up of many unseen hands with different objectives and investment horizons, and if you pull out the speculators making short-term bets, like prop trading banks, then” the individual investor is “going to be the one who suffers.”

Barney Frank: Scrap Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

Congressman Barney Frank (D-MA) wants to scrap Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in favor of an entirely new mortgage-financing system. According to Frank, Chairman of the House Financial Services Committee and who previously supported the programs, “The committee will be recommending abolishing Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in their current forms and coming up with a whole new system of housing finance.”Congressman Barney Frank wants to start an entirely new mortgage-financing system.

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which back a majority of the nation’s home loans, buy mortgages from lenders, insure them against default and supply new money to create new loans. Thanks to growing losses on these loans that threatened the health of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the federal government took control of the programs in September 2008.  Since their seizure, Fannie and Freddie have been run by regulators and kept alive by $110.6 billion in taxpayer money.  Frank says that Congress needs to decide what to do with Fannie’s and Freddie’s remaining shareholders, as well as investors in the companies’ $5.4 trillion in mortgage bonds and $1.7 trillion in unsecured corporate debt.

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac profit by financing mortgage-asset purchases with low-cost debt and on guarantees of home-loan securities they create out of loans from lenders.  They currently own or guarantee more than $5 trillion in U.S. residential debt, and were responsible for as much as 75 percent of the new mortgages made in 2009.

“We’re going to look at the whole question of housing finance,” Frank said.  “Sorting out the function of promoting liquidity in the market, and also the secondary market in general but then also doing some kind of subsidy for affordability.”

Fannie/Freddie were caught in the eye of the subprime meltdown.  In February of 2007, the residential mortgage-backed securities market crashed with sales plummeting 90 percent.  While reform is needed, Fannie and Freddie operate like a public option – by making home ownership more affordable and creating competition to commercial banks.  A positive step is the Deed for Lease program.  After foreclosure – at 57,000 homes in the first half of 2009 – the new program allows owners to lease their homes and avoid foreclosure.

Artificially creating/guaranteeing a market for home loans has lost billions. Hopefully, whatever entity replaces Fannie and Freddie will be prohibited from contributing to congressional campaigns and PAC’s.

Bernanke Report to Congress: Signs of Stabilization

Friday, July 24th, 2009

In his semi-annual testimony before the House Financial Services Committee, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said that although the economy is exhibiting “tentative signs of stabilization,he plans to maintain a “highly accommodative” monetary policy for the time being.  According to Bernanke, “The pace of decline appears to have slowed significantly.  In light of the substantial economic slack and limited inflation pressures, monetary policy remains focused on fostering economic recovery.”

A Fed report related to Bernanke’s testimony notes that policy will be “tightened” as the labor market improves, as the economic recovery begins and as pressures limiting inflation “diminish”.  Bernanke also defended the central bank’s moves to restore financial stability and urged lawmakers to make plans to rein in the deficit.  The Federal Open Market Committee is keeping interest rates “exceptionally low”, with the benchmark lending rate in the zero to 0.25 percent range.

bernankefaithThe Fed is planning to purchase as much as $1.25 trillion of mortgage-backed securities, $200 billion of federal agency debt by the end of 2009, and $300 billion in long-term Treasuries by September.  Bernanke believes that some of these assets may remain on the Fed’s books for an undetermined period of time.

“Aggressive policy actions taken around the world last fall may well have averted the collapse of the global financial system,” Bernanke noted. “Many of the improvements in financial conditions can be traced, in part, to policy actions taken by the Federal Reserve.”

Bernanke’s comments point to the enormous influence of the Fed worldwide, not least of which is countries pegged to the U.S. dollar – like Kuwait – or that claim the dollar as their currency – like Panama.