Industry Group Unveils Proposal To Overhaul US Mortgage Market
September 02 2009 - 12:31AM
Dow Jones News
A key industry group is proposing to replace Fannie Mae (FRE)
and Freddie Mac (FRE) with a handful of small, shareholder-owned
companies, subject to strict supervision and limits on their
profits and activities.
The proposal, set to be released by the Mortgage Bankers
Association Wednesday, comes as officials are grappling with how to
reshape the government's role in ensuring the widespread
availability of mortgage credit in the U.S.
Last fall's federal takeover of Fannie and Freddie amid the
housing market storm illustrated the pitfalls of relying on two
private companies with a public mission and lucrative ties to the
government. Yet shifting away from that longstanding model is a
complex task, requiring tough negotiations among various
stakeholders and a plan for handling billions of bad assets at
Fannie and Freddie.
The Mortgage Bankers have discussed their proposal with
officials from Treasury, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and the
companies' regulator, as well as with members of the White House
economic team. MBA officials also detailed the proposal for Federal
Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and Fed Vice Chairman Donald Kohn
Tuesday. On Wednesday they will meet with other industry
organizations.
Debate about the future of Fannie and Freddie will likely
intensify in the coming months. The Obama administration plans to
unveil a proposal when it releases its 2011 budget in February.
Meanwhile, House Financial Services Chairman Barney Frank, D-Mass.,
is preparing legislation.
The mortgage behemoths were thrown into the conservatorship of
their regulator after mounting mortgage defaults ate through their
cushions of capital. Critics of the companies say they were able to
accumulate excessive risks because investors believed - ultimately
correctly - that the government would bail them out. Since it
seized the companies nearly a year ago, the government has pumped
nearly $100 billion into them to keep them afloat.
The Mortgage Bankers' proposal envisions a handful of
government-chartered companies devoted to purchasing home mortgages
from lenders and repackaging them into securities for investors.
The companies, dubbed mortgage credit-guarantor entities, or MCGEs,
would provide guarantees for investors against default of the
underlying loans in the securities.
A government agency would then provide an explicit government
guarantee of the timely payment of principal and interest on the
mortgage securities as protection against some catastrophic event.
The guarantee would be backed by a new insurance fund amassed
through premium payments by the MCGEs. Surpluses from the fund
could provide a source of funding for affordable housing, the
Mortgage Bankers said.
The system of supports wouldn't bolster the entire $11 trillion
U.S. mortgage market, only those "core" products deemed by the MCGE
regulator as necessary for a vibrant U.S. mortgage market,
according to the proposal.
Mortgage Bankers Vice Chairman Michael Berman argued the model
would greatly decrease the risk of a future taxpayer bailout. The
MCGEs would be fashioned after public utilities, subject to
stringent capital standards and limits on their activities and
their return on equity. They would also be barred from holding more
than limited portfolios of mortgage-backed securities, eliminating
a risky source of profits that helped to cause Fannie's and
Freddie's undoing.
The companies' stock will be a "conservative investment" with
low, steady returns that "will not attract the same kind of
investor" that bought Fannie and Freddie stock, Berman
predicted.
He also noted the government will have the power to charter new
MCGEs in order to ensure none grows too big to fail. At least two
to three should be chartered at the outset, Berman said, with the
number growing to potentially six to ten over time.
Jim Vogel, a mortgage market analyst at FTN Financial, warned
the model could run into trouble during a housing downturn. Without
the implicit or explicit backing of the U.S. government or the
flexibility to engage in other businesses, the MCGEs might have
trouble maintaining their capital base if investors grow jittery
about the housing market. As a result, mortgage credit could dry up
just as the housing market comes under stress, Vogel argued.
National Housing Conference President Conrad Egan, who was
briefed by the Mortgage Bankers on their proposal, argued the model
could decrease the risk of a sharp housing downturn. The strict
supervision of the MCGEs would foster tighter mortgage underwriting
standards, he said.
A spokeswoman for the Treasury Department declined to comment on
the proposal.
-Jessica Holzer, Dow Jones Newswires; 202-862-9228;
jessica.holzer@dowjones.com