Speculation swirls around ailing US mortgage giants

WASHINGTON (AFP) - Speculation about the stressed financial health of
US mortgage-finance giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac swirled Wednesday
as their share prices further plummeted.

The two mortgage giants, which prop up a large part of the US mortgage
market, have been at the center of a financial storm in recent weeks,
especially after both companies revealed hefty second-quarter losses.

A Wall Street Journal report Wednesday said Freddie Mac has been forced
to offer "unusually rich terms" to investors in relation to a
three-billion-dollar securities auction.

The Treasury, which was recently empowered by Congress and US President
George W. Bush to extend credit and pump liquidity into Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac if necessary, is keeping a close watch on the companies'
fortunes.

"As you would expect, we have been in communication with the companies
for months to receive updates. We've also been communicating with their
regulator and the Federal Reserve," Treasury spokeswoman Jennifer
Zuccarelli told AFP.


But investors continue to sell the companies' stocks.

Fannie Mae's shares were down a heavy 17.1 percent at 4.98 dollars in
late morning trading, while Freddie Mac was 20.1 percent lower at 3.30
dollars.

Both companies' shares have fallen heavily in the past year since a
credit crunch erupted last August, triggering losses at the two firms.

The Treasury on Monday had played down a report by Barron's weekly
suggesting the government could be poised to extend significant
financial aid to the struggling mortgage-finance giants.

Zuccarelli said Monday that the Treasury had no intention of using its
special authority to extend emergency financial aid to the ailing
companies.

Fannie Mae chief executive Daniel Mudd told the CNBC business channel
Wednesday morning that the company had not asked the government for
financial assistance. He also said such assistance had not been offered
by the government.

The two firms, which are chartered by Congress to boost home ownership
but are shareholder-owned, have endured hefty losses amid a lingering US
housing market slump and as losses on mortgage securities continue
rattling credit markets.

Concern about the two firms has unsettled investors because together
they own or guarantee some 5.2 trillion dollars in loans, or about 40
percent of the total value of home loans in the United States.

Bush sought to restore confidence in the two mortgage finance giants as
well as the wider housing market by recently approving a sweeping
housing rescue plan -- the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008 --
designed to help 400,000 homeowners avert foreclosure.

The bill, which Bush signed into law late last month, empowers the
Treasury to extend credit to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac if Treasury
Secretary Henry Paulson deems such a move necessary.


http://www.enews.ma/speculation-swirls_i98537_1.html 






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