UPDATED ON:
Sunday, September 07, 2008
18:54 Mecca time, 15:54 GMT
 
News Americas
US takes over mortgage giants
Paulson, left, moved to support the ailing lenders after Bush passed a housing act [AFP]

The US government has placed mortgage lenders Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac under its supervision in an attempt to help them recover from massive losses, the country's treasury secretary has announced.

The move on Sunday means that the mortgage giants, which are federally chartered but shareholder owned, are effectively under bankruptcy reorganisation.

Henry Paulson, the Treasury secretary, unveiled a four-part strategy that will allow the US regulator to seize control of companies holding trillions of dollars of home loans.

The companies together account for more than half of all US home mortgages.

The supervision plan "is the best means of protecting our markets and the taxpayers from the systemic risk posed by the current financial condition" of Fannie and Freddie, Paulson said in a statement.

"Because the [lenders] are in conservatorship, they will no longer be managed with a strategy to maximise common shareholder returns, a strategy which historically encouraged risk-taking.

"Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are so large and so interwoven in our financial system that a failure of either of them would cause great turmoil in our financial markets here at home and around the globe," he said.

Liquidity strategy

The Treasury and Federal Housing Finance Agency will now be able to purchase a new class of preferred stock in the companies to "ensure that each company maintains a positive net worth," Paulson said.

The strategy means that cash will be injected into the mortgage lenders as needed.

The move will be "more efficient than a one-time equity injection, because it will be used only as needed and on terms that Treasury has set," Paulson said.

The chief executives of Fannie and Freddie have been sacked, officials said on Sunday.

Herb Allison, a former vice chairman of Merrill Lynch, will take over at the helm of Fannie Mae, while David Moffett, a former vice chairman of US Bancorp, will now lead Freddie Mac.

The US government has long attempted to support the ailing mortgage lenders since the US housing market hit trouble last year.

Shares in Fannie and Freddie have lost about 90 per cent of their value amid continued fears of losses due to customers defaulting on their mortgage payments.

About $14bn has been wiped off the two companies after millions of homeowners defaulted or went into arrears on mortgages.

The federal government’s move to take control of Fannie and Freddie comes two months after George Bush, the US president, approved an act aimed at preventing 400,000 homeowners from foreclosure.

The bill empowered the Treasury to extend credit to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac if Paulson considered such a move necessary.

But some analysts said a government bail out of Fannie and Freddie could alarm investors concerned at the scale of government intervention.

 Source: Agencies
 
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