Take a Load Off Fannie - Salvaging the Mortgage
Giants Without Bankrupting the
Taxpayers
Recommended
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac own or guarantee nearly half the $12
trillion U.S. mortgage market. Not long ago, they were the darlings
of Wall Street, ranking next to U.S. bonds as among the safest and
most conservative investments in the world. Preferred shares of
these GSEs ("government-sponsored enterprises") were considered so
safe that banking regulators let banks count them in the capital
required as a cushion against loan losses. The shares were safe
until this year, when both the common and preferred shares of the
distressed duo suddenly plunged. Between May 15 and August 25,
Fannie's common shares lost 77% of their value, and its preferred
shares lost 58.8% in that short time. Freddie Mac's preferred shares
plunged even more, down 65.5%.
In July 2008, the U.S. Treasury sought and was granted a rescue
package involving an unlimited credit line for Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac, along with the authority to buy their stock, partially
nationalizing them. Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson said the package
was just insurance. "If you have a bazooka in your pocket and people
know it," he said, "you probably won't have to use it." But bazookas
can spook the very people they were supposed to reassure. After the
plan was approved, foreign central banks slashed their Fannie and
Freddie bond purchases by more than 25%, and shareholders rushed to
dump their stock. On August 22, Moody's downgraded Fannie and
Freddie's outstanding preferred stock by a full five notches, from
A1 to Baa3 (or slightly above "junk").
On September 7, Secretary Paulson pulled out his bazooka and
fired, announcing that Fannie and Freddie would be taken under a
conservatorship (similar to a bankruptcy). The Treasury would
underwrite the GSEs' debt and would re-capitalize the corporations,
in return for a new issue of preferred stock. On Monday, September
8, Fannie and Freddie share values were virtually wiped out,
dropping 99% from their 52-week highs. That could be a disaster for
many banks, which are loaded to the gills with these preferred
shares. Banks already reeling from losses on mortgages and
mortgage-backed securities are now being hit at the core, shrinking
their capital base. Loss of bank capital works as leverage in
reverse: at a capital requirement of 10%, $1 lost in capital wipes
out $10 in loans. Millions of ordinary investors have also been hit
hard, through mutual funds, 401K plans, pension funds and annuities
that have large holdings in Fannie and Freddie.
There are other aspects of Paulson's bailout plan that could be
giving policymakers Maalox moments. As noted in a July 17 Economist
article:
"[N]ationalisation . . . would bring the whole of Fannie's and
Freddie's debt onto the federal government's balance sheet. In terms
of book-keeping this would almost double the public debt, but that
is rather misleading. It would hardly be like issuing $5.2 trillion
of new Treasury bonds, because Fannie's and Freddie's debt is backed
by real assets. Nevertheless, the fear [is] that the taxpayer may
have to absorb the GSEs' debt . . . . That suggests yet another
irony; the debt of the GSEs has been trading as if it were
guaranteed by the American government, but the debt of the
government was not trading as if Uncle Sam had guaranteed that of
the GSEs."2
The U.S. federal debt is already up to nearly $10 trillion,
putting the country's own triple-A credit rating in jeopardy. If the
government assumes the GSEs' weighty liabilities as well, the
government could lose its own triple-A rating, prompting foreign
lenders to withdraw their massive infusion of funds.3 But if the
U.S. does not back the GSEs' debt, the result could be the same.
China's $376 billion of long-term U.S. agency debt is mostly in
Fannie and Freddie assets. Yu Yonding, a former adviser to China's
central bank, warned on August 21:
"If the U.S. government allows Fannie and Freddie to fail and
international investors are not compensated adequately, the
consequences will be catastrophic. If it is not the end of the
world, it is the end of the current international financial
system."4
THE ENDGAME NEARS
It could be the end of the international financial system either
way, but let's think about that. Would the end of the current
financial system really be so bad? The international financial
system is now controlled by a network of private central banks that
print national currencies and trade them with sovereign governments
for government bonds (or debt). The bonds then become the basis for
creating many times their value in loans by commercial banks. At a
10% reserve requirement, banks are allowed to fan $1 worth of
reserves into $10 in loans, effectively delivering the power to
create money into private hands. The price exacted by this private
money-creating machine is compound interest perpetually drawn off
the top, in a Ponzi scheme that has now reached its mathematical
limits. The chief role of Fannie and Freddie has been to keep the
Ponzi scheme alive by adding "liquidity" to markets, something they
do by buying mortgages and bundling them together as securities that
are then sold to investors. Old loans are moved off the banks'
books, making room for new loans, further expanding the money supply
and driving up home prices. As economist Michael Hudson noted in
Counterpunch in July:
"Altruistic political talk aside, the reason why the finance,
insurance and real estate (FIRE) sectors have lobbied so hard for
Fannie and Freddie is that their financial function has been to make
housing increasingly unaffordable. They have inflated asset prices
with credit that has indebted homeowners to a degree unprecedented
in history. This is why the real estate bubble has burst, after all.
Yet Congress now acts as if the only way to resolve the debt problem
is to create yet more debt, to inflate real estate prices all the
more by arranging yet more credit to bid up the prices that
homebuyers must pay.
". . . The economy has reached its debt limit and is entering its
insolvency phase. We are not in a cycle but the end of an era. The
old world of debt pyramiding to a fraudulent degree cannot be
restored . . . . The class war is back in business, with a
vengeance. Instead of it being the familiar old class war between
industrial employers and their work force, this one reverts to the
old pre-industrial class war of creditors versus debtors. Its
guiding principle is 'Big Fish Eat Little Fish,' mainly by the debt
dynamic that crowds out the promised economy of free choice.
". . . No economy in history ever has been able to pay off its
debts. That is the essence of the 'magic of compound interest.'
Debts grow inexorably, making creditors rich but impoverishing the
economy in the process, thereby destroying its ability to pay.
Recognizing this financial dynamic most societies have chosen the
logical response. From Sumer in the third millennium BC and
Babylonia in the second millennium through Greece and Rome in the
first millennium BC, and then from feudal Europe to the Inter-Ally
war debts and reparations tangle that wrecked international finance
after World War I, the response has been to bring debts back within
the ability to pay.
"This can be done only by wiping out debts that cannot be paid.
The alternative is debt peonage. Throughout most of history,
countries have found again and again that bankruptcy - wiping out
the debts - is the way to free economies. The idea is to free them
from a situation where the economic surplus is diverted away from
new tangible investment to pay bankers. The classical idea of free
markets is to avoid privatizing monopolies, such as the unique
privilege of commercial bankers to create bank-credit and charge
interest on it."5
Under current law, if the GSEs' capital falls too far below
required levels, the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight
(their regulator) is authorized to take control of the firms and
impose a form of bankruptcy called a conservatorship. What happens
in a conservatorship was explained by former Federal Reserve
consultant Walker F. Todd in a July 23 article:
"Traditionally, conservatorship freezes existing bank accounts
and then allows limited withdrawals until authorities determine how
much of those frozen accounts may be distributed pro rata to the
claimants. After the appointment of a conservator, new deposits and
other funds received as well as new investments would be fully
protected."6
Claims of creditors are not imposed on the taxpayers but are
satisfied from the corporation's existing assets. Claimants take
according to seniority, with lenders being senior to shareholders,
and the proceeds from any new business being kept separate. Fannie
and Freddie investors would take some losses under this scenario,
but the available pot for settling claims is quite large. Most of
the GSEs' mortgages are not junk but are genuine and are being paid.
Nouriel Roubini, who is Professor of Economics at New York
University and has a popular website called Global EconoMonitor,
estimates that the "haircut" for securities holders would be a
modest 5% ($250 billion on $5 trillion). He notes that securities
holders are getting a subsidy of $50 billion a year over what they
would earn if they had invested in U.S. Treasuries, specifically
because Fannie and Freddie carry more risk; and risk means the
occasional haircut. Roubini concludes:
"It is . . . time to put a stop to the coming 'mother of all
bailouts' starting with a firm stop to the fiscal rescue of Fannie
and Freddie, institutions that have behaved for the last few years
like the 'mother of all leveraged hedge funds' with their reckless
leverage and reckless financial activities.
". . . [L]et's call a spade a bloody shovel: nationalise Freddie
Mac and Fannie May. They should never have been privatised in the
first place. . . . Increase taxes or cut other public spending to
finance the exercise. But stop pretending. Stop lying about the
financial viability of institutions designed to hand out subsidies
to favoured constituencies."7
NATIONALIZATION WITHOUT TAXATION: SUCCESSFUL HISTORICAL
MODELS
Roubini suggests that full nationalization of Fannie and Freddie
would require an increase in taxes or cuts in other public spending,
but there are other possible funding solutions, ones with quite
successful historical precedents. If the multiple layers of
profiteers, speculators, derivatives, commissions, bonuses, fees and
general fraud were eliminated from the mix, a nationalized
Fannie/Freddie could finance itself. This was proven in the 1930s
with the Home Owners' Loan Corporation (HOLC), a government-owned
agency set up to reverse a disastrous wave of home foreclosures. The
HOLC was funded by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation (RFC),
another wholly government-owned agency that performed the functions
of a public bank. The RFC successfully funded not only the New Deal
but America's participation in World War II. In a February 2008
article in The New York Times, Alan Binder recommended a return to
the HOLC model as a way out of the current mortgage crisis.
He wrote:
"The HOLC was established in June 1933 to help distressed
families avert foreclosures by replacing mortgages that were in or
near default with new ones that homeowners could afford. It did so
by buying old mortgages from banks . . . and then issuing new loans
to homeowners. The HOLC financed itself by borrowing from capital
markets and the Treasury.
"The scale of the operation was impressive. Within two years, the
HOLC granted over a million new mortgages. (Adjusting only for
population growth, the corresponding mortgage figure today would be
almost 2.5 million.) Nearly one of every five mortgages in America
became owned by the HOLC. Its total lending amounted to $3.5
billion. . . . (The corresponding figure today would be about $750
billion.)
"As a public corporation chartered for a public purpose, the HOLC
was a patient and even lenient lender. . . . But times were tough in
the 1930s, and nearly 20 percent of the HOLC's borrowers defaulted
anyway. So the corporation eventually acquired ownership of about
200,000 houses, nearly all of which were sold by 1944. The HOLC
closed its books in 1951, or 15 years after its last 1936 mortgage
was paid off, with a small profit. It was a heavy lift, but the
incredible HOLC lifted it.
"Today's lift would be far lighter. . . . Given current low
interest rates, a new HOLC could borrow cheaply and should find it
easy to earn a two-percentage-point spread between borrowing and
lending rates, for a gross profit of maybe $4 billion to $8 billion
a year."8
The RFC initially capitalized the HOLC by buying all of its stock
for $200 million. The HOLC was then authorized by statute to issue
ten times that sum (or $2 billion) in tax exempt bonds. In the same
way, in 1937-38 the RFC created and funded Fannie Mae as a wholly
government-owned agency, for the purpose of injecting money into the
banking system so that banks could increase the volume of home
mortgages. The RFC and its agencies funded their operations by
selling bonds at a modest interest to the Treasury and the public,
then relending the acquired funds at a slightly higher interest. The
"spread" was sufficient to cover operating costs and losses from
default and still turn a modest profit.
How did the HOLC manage to reverse a far worse foreclosure crisis
than we have today and still turn a profit, when Fannie and Freddie
- which also raise their loan money by selling securities to
investors - have become hopelessly bankrupt in that pursuit? The
difference seems to be that the HOLC was a public institution
operated as a public service. Fannie and Freddie are private,
profit-making ventures designed to make money for their investors
and political exploiters. As Professor Roubini observes, "These GSEs
were designed to make losses. They are expected to make losses. If
they don't make losses they are not serving their political
purpose." When the profiteering is taken out and the business is run
as a public service, the math works.
There is another American model that is even older than the HOLC,
which presents even more exciting possibilities. In the first half
of the 18th century, the province of Pennsylvania completely funded
its government without taxes or debt, through a publicly-owned bank
that issued paper currency and lent it to farmers. The bank did not
have to borrow capital before it made loans; it just created the
currency on a printing press. The money was lent rather than spent
into the economy, so it came back to the government in a circular
flow, avoiding inflation; and interest on the loans was sufficient
to fund the government's operations without taxation. Such a public
bank today could solve not only the housing crisis but a number of
other pressing problems, including the infrastructure crisis and the
energy crisis. (See E. Brown, "Sustainable Energy Development: How
Costs Can Be Cut in Half," webofdebt.com/articles, November 5,
2007).
Once bankrupt businesses have been restored to solvency, the
usual practice is to return them to private hands; but a better plan
for Fannie and Freddie might be to simply keep them as public
institutions. In the August 8 London Tribune, British MP Michael
Meacher proposed this alternative for Northern Rock, a major British
bank that was recently nationalized after becoming insolvent. He
wrote:
"[W]hen the banks have failed the public interest so badly and
still even now continue to pursue so single-mindedly their
commitment to privatise their gains whilst socialising their losses,
would not a publicly owned bank be the most effective way of
changing the current corrosive financial culture of short-termism,
lower investment, house price inflation, and insider enrichment at
the expense of systemic fragility for everyone else? Perhaps we
should not return Northern Rock to the private sector after
all."9
Perhaps we should not return Fannie and Freddie either.
Ellen Brown, J.D., developed her research
skills as an attorney practicing civil litigation in Los
Angeles. In "Web of Debt," her latest book, she turns those
skills to an analysis of the Federal Reserve and "the money
trust." She shows how this private cartel has usurped the
power to create money from the people themselves, and how we
the people can get it back. Her websites are http://www.webofdebt.com/
and http://www.ellenbrown.com/
Her eleven books include the bestselling "Nature's Pharmacy,"
co-authored with Dr. Lynne Walker; "The Key to Ultimate
Health, co-authored with Dr. Richard Hansen; and "Forbidden
Medicine."