Posted on 01/23/2010 9:39:25 AM PST by DogByte6RER
Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac Should Be Eliminated, Frank Says
By NICK TIMIRAOS And MICHAEL R. CRITTENDEN
A top House Democrat on Friday said his committee was preparing to recommend "abolishing" mortgage-finance giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and rebuilding the U.S. housing-finance system from scratch.
"The remedy here is...as I believe this committee will be recommending, abolishing Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in their current form and coming up with a whole new system of housing finance," said Rep. Barney Frank (D., Mass.), the chairman of the House Financial Services Committee.
His comments initially rippled through bond markets on concerns that the government might pull away from the mortgage market. Many believe that's unlikely and that any revamp would include continued government involvement. The government took over the companies in September 2008 as loan losses mounted.
Some Republicans have argued that the companies should ultimately be reduced in size and privatized, while at other end of the spectrum, some analysts have recommended turning the companies into government agencies. But several industry groups and academics have suggested that the government is likely to continue playing at least some role in the future of the companies.
One such report came from analysts at Standard & Poor's this past week. "It's hard for us to imagine" how enough capital could be attracted to replace Fannie and Freddie with stand-alone private companies that would be able to offer low-cost funding for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages, the analysts wrote.
(Excerpt) Read more at online.wsj.com ...
Why? To cover his tracks? To hide the evidence? What’s he up to? It ain’t cause he’s suddenly a fiscally responsible Capitalist!
And Brown won big in his district
this is where conservatives need to ‘play it back’ to the dumrats. ‘agree’ that we need to abolish FM and FM, and get that to happen first. then conservatives can stop any further efforts to replace either one with a gov’t org.
as far as business goes, gov’t needs to stay out except to catch, prosecute and punish crooks. gov’t should, if anything, sponsor watchdog organizations that can monitor and record and report on unethical or rancid businesses and then let the consumer make their choice. then darwin can take over.
including themselves
“What did Barney say about Freddie’s Fannie?”
-—The only punchline I could come up with
in less than the 10 seconds I reserve for these
riddles is:
“Mae I, Mac?”
Here’s hoping this is not an old joke, and I just discovered
the punchline on my own. I hate to be robbed that way.
“What did Barney say about Freddie’s Fannie?”
-—The only punchline I could come up with
in less than the 10 seconds I reserve for these
riddles is:
“Mae I, Mac?”
Here’s hoping this is not an old joke, and I just discovered
the punchline on my own. I hate to be robbed that way.
Like a snake shedding its skin.
Your right if they get investigated Frank will get hit hard,no pun intended.
ooops...
Yes, Frank is up for re-election EVERY election.
jus rename them Bwawny Fwag...
You can see how much I pay attention to clowns, idiots, and oxygen wasters!!
However, you've given me good news....vote that scum out of office, for pete's sake!!!
“I smell a rat.”
As do I. I agree with the end of Freddie and Fannie but when the arch Socialist suggest it there must be an IDE somewhere along the road!
If mortgage rates are decreed to be cheaper than what the market would otherwise demand, somebody needs to bear the risk. The risk cannot be made to go away by any form of hand-waving by the government.
Freddie and Fannie were lucky for many years until they rolled a "7". They were a way to hide the risk (they were very complex organizations, hard to understand), but the risk was always there. Because they were so large, everybody knew that the taxpayers ultimately would be on the hook.
If Freddie and Fannie are abolished, the risk will be formally placed on you and me as taxpayers. But it has always been there--the taxpayers got lucky until 2007.
This is the real issue--how should our economy absorb the risk of mortgage lending. Coming up with the best answer will not be easy. This is particularly true if the profits made in good times are allowed to be separated from the losses in bad times.
I smell Cloward-Piven
Actually, that is not correct. In the late 70's-early 80-s, Fannie Mae was massively insolvent to the tune of several billions of dollars (it was a smaller institution then). This was due to another risk of mortgage lending (a risk different from credit risk) that was hidden --the interest rate risk of making long term fixed rate mortgages funded by short term borrowings. This blew up at the time when interest rates skyrocketed- Fannie was stuck with lots of money-losing, low yielding fixed rate mortgages. The problem was swept under the rug at the time.
This is why the administration of the great Ronaldus Magnus and a number of conservative economic thinkers, strongly opposed the role of Fannie and Freddie in the 80's. Unfortunately, due to the lobbying power of Fannie and Freddie, they got nowhere in Congress. People thought that having Freddie and Fannie absorb the risk of mortgages was a "free-lunch" way to have "cheap" mortgages. But TAANSTFL, and the taxpayers were on the hook then, as now.
Bwarney Wefused!!!
Dear oh dear what a WICKED WEB we WEAVE when first we practice to deceive!!
My guess......Bwarney is twying to save his job!!!
Funny! And original! My comment wasn't a riddle, it was just me trying to play on words. But your answer makes my stupid attempt at humor actually worth the bandwidth! Thanks!
No, thank YOU!
You just confirmed my private gloating when I came up with that in a “DAMN,I’M GOOD!” moment, and realized all the pieces fell into place-— even the gender-order, was right.
How do I do it?
I practice.
Check my other 6000 replies in the past 3 1/2 years.
And there were probably more than that , going back to March 1998.
But that’s another story.And another screenname.
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