Yet again, it pays to shut up.
For weeks.
Anyone who read the assertive and incisive comments over the last few months by Nouriel Roubini in the RGE Monitor, would have reacted with déjà vu on hearing about the impending implosion of the US organizations Fannie May and Freddie Mac.
In case you didn’t know, Fannie & Freddie are privately owned organizations operating under the mandate of the US Government. They perform a dual function.
Firstly, they provide funding for home loans, not by lending directly to the consumer, but by buying up tranches of mortgages from approved lenders, re-packaging them as investments and selling them off to Wall Street and internationally (sound familiar?).
Secondly, they are the guarantors of last resort of about half of all US home loans. That’s about US6 Trillion out of US12 Trillion at the moment. The figures start getting a bit silly at this level of debt.
The theory is that in their role as middlemen between mortgage lenders and investors, more money would be available at cheaper rates to allow people to buy their homes.
It’s their role as guarantors of an increasing number of crappy and defaulting mortgages that sent their share price plummeting, amidst fears that Fannie & Freddie would run out of cash. Both issued statements that their capital base is strong – although Freddie is scheduled to sell US3 Billion in short term debt right about now.
Predictably, the US Government made patriotic noises about how they must not be allowed to fail. Their line of credit was extended (about time too: Fannie has US800 Billion in debt, Freddie has US740 Billion in debt) and the US Treasury may even buy equity in them. It doesn’t get much sweeter than that. And who would ultimately be paying for all this? The dear taxpayer of course. And what would they get out of it? Nothing, except for continued intransigence and reluctance to lend to individuals and SMEs citing the “global credit crunch” as the excuse.
Problem was, as the New York Times pointed out, for years nobody in the US government would even acknowledge the existence of the line of credit, even though it amounted to an implicit guarantee that a Fed bailout would always be there, while in the meantime the Government didn’t have to show mounting losses on its Balance Sheet for what was in effect, a subsidy.
Again, as the New York Times put it on 13 July 2008:
The dominant role Fannie and Freddie play today is no accident. The companies, Wall Street firms, mortgage bankers, real estate agents and Washington lawmakers have built up an unusual and mutually beneficial co-dependency, helped along by robust lobbying efforts and campaign contributions.
Back in the real world of SMEs, there isn’t the luxury of government insulation that gives the business owner discounted rates on the money markets, covers up lousy management, arguably encourages “moral hazard”, imposed lax capital standards – which went unsupervised for years - and aided and abetted the packaging of toxic debt instruments to private investors. Since you can’t pay for lobbying, the best you can do is network.
Who really benefits from this? It ain't the consumer or the SME. It's those investors in collateralized debt instruments, originated by Fannie and Freddie, seeking to have their returns guaranteed by the state. Or, put it another way, a prime example in the sub-prime saga where profits are privatized and losses are socialized.
© 2008 Sanjeev Aaron Williams All Rights Reserved
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