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Trump Admin’s Continued Fannie-Freddie IPO Musings Raise Key Questions
National Mortgage Professional ^ | September 4, 2025 | staff

Posted on 09/05/2025 5:11:14 AM PDT by Miami Rebel

The Trump Administration is once again putting Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac at the center of U.S. housing finance. According to Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) Director William J. Pulte, the government continues to consider floating a 5% stake in the two government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs) via an initial public offering.

The transaction, which could raise as much as $30 billion, would mark the most significant step toward releasing the GSEs from government conservatorship since they were seized in 2008 during the global financial crisis. The administration initially teased an IPO of that scope last month, suggesting it could happen in November, and has been eyeing the issue in a broader sense at least since May.

With a combined valuation of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae estimated at $500–$700 billion, even a sliver of public stock could have outsized market and political consequences. But the administration has eased off the idea of fast-tracking the deal somewhat.

“There’s no rush,” Pulte told Fox Business, stressing that President Trump will ultimately decide on the timing and structure. But whether the offering happens in months or years, the conversation is already raising fundamental questions about the future of mortgage finance in America, and some have opposed the idea of a Fannie-Freddie IPO itself and proposals to merge the two GSEs.

The core proposal centers on a 5% IPO, though reports suggest the administration has weighed offerings of up to 15% of combined equity. The offering could take several different forms:

Separate vs. Joint Offerings: Fannie and Freddie could be sold individually as distinct entities, preserving their historical competition, or bundled in a joint float that might simplify the sale but reduce clarity for investors.

Conservatorship Status: Both GSEs remain under FHFA conservatorship. Unless legislation changes, even a public offering would likely keep them tethered to government oversight. The administration has not yet clarified whether this IPO would be a first step toward full privatization or a more symbolic move to test investor appetite.

Investor Appetite: At valuations north of half a trillion dollars, the GSEs would be among the largest financial institutions in the world. But the offering raises questions of who would buy the stock and what implicit or explicit government guarantees would underpin it.

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent emphasized a “deliberate approach,” warning against a hasty decision that reports say could rattle bond markets.

The IPO would not resolve the fundamental policy dilemma: Should Fannie and Freddie remain quasi-public utilities that guarantee liquidity in mortgage markets?

Or should they become fully private financial companies competing on risk and return? This offering may be less about raising cash and more about testing the political and market waters for that larger debate.

Supporters of the IPO move see several clear advantages:

Government Windfall: A 5% IPO at current valuations could bring in $25–30 billion to federal coffers, which could help reduce the deficit and provide a political talking point for fiscal discipline.

Taxpayer Return: Since the government has already reaped more than $300 billion in dividend payments from the GSEs since 2008, an IPO could be seen as another way to return value to taxpayers.

Operational Discipline: Proponents like investor Bill Ackman argue that introducing private capital could impose greater efficiency and discipline in risk management, potentially streamlining operations.

Market Depth: A public float could diversify ownership and reduce political pressure by shifting part of the capital structure to private investors.

Critics warn that the potential downsides are at least as significant as what stands to be gained:

Mortgage Rates Could Rise: Senate Democrats have cautioned that moving Fannie and Freddie toward privatization might weaken the implicit federal guarantee that keeps borrowing costs lower. Without the same perception of government backing, investors in mortgage-backed securities could demand higher yields, pushing mortgage rates up.

Market Instability: Mortgage markets are highly sensitive to perceptions of government support. A partial float without clear legislative backing could leave the GSEs in a murky “half-private, half-public” limbo, sowing uncertainty for lenders and investors alike.

Moral Hazard Concerns: If private investors reap profits while taxpayers still shoulder catastrophic risk, the IPO could be seen as privatizing gains while socializing losses — a formula that triggered resentment in 2008.

Political Volatility: With an election year looming, critics argue the proposal is as much political theater as policy. A new administration could reverse course, leaving investors in limbo.

For now, the administration appears to be testing the waters. FHFA Director Pulte insists there is no firm timeline yet, but market speculation is already moving share prices: Freddie Mac has gained modestly after the news, while Fannie Mae slipped slightly.

Investors, lawmakers, and housing professionals will be watching for clarity on three key questions:

Conservatorship: Will this IPO mark the beginning of the end of government control, or simply a cash-raising gesture?

Guarantees: Will Congress legislate an explicit federal backstop, or will the government’s implicit guarantee continue to float in ambiguity?

Market Impact: Could an IPO lead to cheaper, more competitive mortgage credit — or would it risk a repeat of past instability? Until those questions are answered, the proposal remains, for the most part, more signal than substance. But by putting Fannie and Freddie back on the national agenda, the Trump Administration unquestionably has revived one of the most consequential unresolved debates in U.S. housing finance.


TOPICS: Business/Economy
KEYWORDS: fanniemae; freddiemac
I'm long FMCC and the FNMA series S preferred.
1 posted on 09/05/2025 5:11:14 AM PDT by Miami Rebel
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To: Miami Rebel

Fannie was a Depression years invention.

It was created to encourage lenders to offer 30 year mortgages.

Before Fannie your mortgage would run 3-5 years after which you had to get a new one for the balance that you still owed. If you couldn’t find a lender you lost your house.


2 posted on 09/05/2025 7:34:05 AM PDT by Pelham (President Eisenhower. Operation Wetback 1953-54)
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