Fannie, Freddie have won capital relief--sources
|
|
|
| Posted
:
Wed, 19 Mar 2008 02:09:06 GMT |
| By
:
Reuters |
| Category
:
US (Business) |
| News Alerts by
Email ( click
here ) |
|
US Business News |
Home
|
|
|
|
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The regulator for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will on Wednesday announce that the two U.S. mortgage finance companies have won relief from stringent capital rules and so can pump about $200 billion into a shaky mortgage market, sources familiar with the plan said on Tuesday.The Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight will hold a joint press conference with Fannie Mae CEO Daniel Mudd and Freddie Mac CEO Richard Syron at the regulator's Washington offices to announce the deal at 9 a.m. EST.Under the agreed-to plan, the two companies will be permitted to use some of their capital reserves to soak up mortgage assets while pledging to raise equity capital -- probably in the form of preferred stock -- in the near future.A source familiar with the deal said the companies would be granted on the order of $200 billion in new mortgage-buying power, which amounts to a one-third reduction in their excess capital.Shares of the two government-sponsored companies soared on Tuesday on expectations they were near a deal with OFHEO that would allow them to expand their support of the mortgage market.At the close in New York, Fannie Mae's stock rose 27.06 percent to $28.22, marking the biggest one-day percentage gain in at least a quarter-century. Freddie Mac shares climbed 26.19 percent, the best percentage boost since 1988, to $26.02.The deal would roll back OFHEO demands that the nation's two largest sources of mortgage finance hold 30 percent more capital than typically required. That constraint was put in place several years ago after accounting scandals shook both companies.Increased investment by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac is expected to bolster confidence in a secondary mortgage market shaken by a wave of failing home loans. Cratering prices and a sell-off of mortgage-related assets this year have worsened the credit crunch, which may be tipping the U.S. economy into recession.But the companies, which hold charters from the government to support homeownership, are themselves struggling with losses due to falling home prices and record home foreclosures.Both recently boosted forecasts for their credit losses into 2009 after reporting combined net losses of $6.1 billion for the fourth quarter of 2007.The companies' political allies in Washington have called for OFHEO to loosen the reins on the two government-sponsored enterprises. On Tuesday, Sen. Charles Schumer, a New York Democrat, wrote a letter to OFHEO Director Lockhart requesting the companies be given meaningful capital relief.(Reporting by Al Yoon and Patrick Rucker; Editing by Marguerita Choy, Gary Hill) (c) Reuters 2008. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by caching, framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters and the Reuters sphere logo are registered trademarks and trademarks of the Reuters group of companies around the world.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Related News
US stocks gain on surprise home sales recovery New York - US stocks surged Monday after the release of some surprisingly buoyant data on home sales. Existing home sales surged to 6.1 million units in October, the highest annualized rate since February 2007 and up 10.1 per cent from September, acc...
Report: Microsoft and News Corp in search pact talks San Francisco - Microsoft and News Corp are in advanced negotiations that would see the media conglomerate's content removed from Google's search index and appear exclusively via Microsoft's Bing search engine, the Financial Times reported Monday. Ne...
US home sales surge to highest level since 2007 Washington - Existing home sales surged more than 10 per cent in the United States in October to their highest level since February 2007, according to figures released Monday. The monthly data by the National Association of Realtors (NAR) beat expect...
US economists: 'Jobless' recovery to reach bottom at start of 2010 Washington - The US economy will start adding jobs some time in the first quarter of 2010, ending a so-called jobless recovery that has plagued the world's largest economy since the summer months, according to a survey released Monday. But the Nati...
Hershey, Nestle, sweeten war for Cadbury Washington - Hershey and Nestle are expected to jump into the war over Cadbury sweets, media reports said Saturday, just weeks after the British-based stalwart rejected a hostile bid by US Kraft Inc. The growing market for chocolate in the developing...
US stock drop slightly on Dell profits, mixed for week New York - Technology and energy shares pushed US stocks lower Friday, capping a mixed week for investors amid unease about the pace of the world's economic recovery. Tech stocks slid after a disappointing earnings report from computer giant Dell, wh...
GM: Opel restructuring plan by mid-December; cuts up to 25 per cent Washington - US carmaker General Motors will present a new restructuring plan for its European operations by mid-December, Nick Reilly, the new head of GM Europe, wrote on his new blog Friday. While the details were still being hashed out, Reilly war...
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|