Fannie and Freddie go bye-bye: a link recap

Debbie wrote this article on Tuesday, but I’ve been a little slow on the up-keep.  If you want a recap of Fannie/Freddie bail out links because you missed the action here you go. — Morgan

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If you haven’t heard the news yet because you’re tired of hearing all the daily mortgage woes, Fannie and Freddie have joined close to 300 other mortgage companies that have imploded.

While the news wasn’t that big of a shock, media outlets around the world did have their say. Here’s a quick round-up of – some and not all – of what some of the main news outlets had to say and what we can expect in the weeks and most likely, months to come.

Bloomberg News reported: “The U.S. Treasury’s takeover of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac is aimed at keeping the companies going into 2009, while leaving the next president and Congress to decide their long-term structure.

“Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and Federal Housing Finance Agency Director James Lockhart yesterday placed the two firms in a government-operated conservatorship, ousting their chief executives and eliminating their dividends. The Treasury may purchase up to $200 billion of stock in the firms to keep them solvent…” Read more at the site.

Ml-implode.com: “The government has taken over the reins and purse strings of both mortgage giants. The American taxpayer is now on the hook for losses yet to be seen, in what many media outlets are calling “the chickens have come home to roost.”

Others like Fox writer , Ken Sweet, added that, “The U.S. government seized control of the mortgage giants Fannie Mae (FNM: 0.73, -6.31, -89.63%) and Freddie Mac (FRE: 0.88, -4.22, -82.74%) on Sunday, placing the liabilities of more than $5 trillion of mortgages onto the backs of the U.S. taxpayer …” Read the rest on the site.

Even President Bush was in high spirits and was quoted as saying: “Americans should be confident that the actions taken today will strengthen our ability to weather the housing correction and are critical to returning the economy to stronger sustained growth,” in a statement released by the White House,

Perhaps one of the best and most readable and understandable report about Freddie and Fannie came from NPR … “The U.S. government stepped in with an ambitious plan on Sunday to help rescue mortgage finance giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The Bush administration placed the two companies into a conservatorship, replaced their CEOs and boards of directors, and announced a plan to infuse billions of dollars to prop them up as a means for reinvigorating the U.S. housing market…”

 

It goes on to answer typical questions for us folks who aren’t mortgage experts … but then again, if they had been experts, maybe we wouldn’t be in such a mortgage meltdown, right?

Undoubtedly, the saga will continue.

The writer, Debbie L. Sklar is a 20+year journalism veteran residing in Southern California, where she is a writer, columnist and editor for many local, regional and national publications. She will be a regular contributor to Blown Mortgage and may be reached via e-mail at DebbieSklar@cox.net.

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Lehman takes $4 billion quarterly loss

Lehman Brothers the massive Wall Street investment bank reported a quarterly loss of $4 billion on the back of mortgage-related write downs and losses. The company also announced it’s spinning off or selling its commercial real estate and its coveted investment management division.

Lehman has been on death watch. As one of the biggest players in the subprime mortgage arena they have been one of the slowest banks to restructure and sell off debt. Now as their stock price has plummeted the company looks more and more like Bear Stearns. Unfortunately for Lehman there haven’t been the strong intonations from the government to save it.

The body count in this crisis is epic now. We’ve lost our two government-sponsored mortgage giants Fannie and Freddie to what amounts to a bankruptcy restructuring, we’ve lost one major Wall Street bank and are on the verge of another, we’ve lost at least ten banks to FDIC conservatorship and have a huge S&L on the ropes in Washington Mutual. Wow - just saying that feels scary.

From CNN.com

Lehman Brothers suffered one of its worst quarterly losses in the company’s history, reporting a loss of nearly $4 billion Wednesday, and announced a series of drastic steps aimed at reviving the beleaguered firm.

The firm said it would spin-off part of its commercial real estate assets, sell a majority stake of its investment management division and slash its annual dividend.

The company’s stock has plunged nearly 88% so far this year due to concerns about its ability to raise much needed capital.

A keystone of Lehman’s restructuring plan included a drastic reduction in both its commercial and residential real estate holdings. Lehman said it would spin off the majority of the company’s commercial real estate assets into a new separate public company dubbed Real Estate Investments Global.

The company trimmed its residential real estate holdings by nearly a half. Part of that included the planned sale of about $4 billion worth of U.K. residential real estate. Lehman said it was working with asset manager BlackRock (BLK, Fortune 500) on the sale and expected it to be completed in the coming weeks.

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