by kennynah » Thu Oct 02, 2008 11:13 am
Testimony of Herbert M. Allison, Jr.
President and Chief Executive Officer
Fannie Mae
Hearing before the House Committee on Financial Services
Washington, D.C.
Thursday, Sept. 25, 2008
especially if you are vested in FNM, or are thinking of vesting interest in their shares...you should be interested to read this long article...
at least, one gets a clear idea of what FNM does, besides providing cheap mortgage loans to american home owners.... one understands the other key function is to insure mortgage backed securities from other loaning institutions as well, thereby creating further liquidity for further loans... this is how capitalistic society stretches that $1 used effectively over and over again, as opposed to printing $1 for need of every $1. the latter will dilute money's face value.
one may conclude that unless some one else does this key social function, FNM and FRE cannot be allowed to fail without throwing their society back to the stone age period.
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(Opening Statement as Submitted to the Committee)
"Oversight Hearing to Examine Recent Treasury and FHFA Actions Regarding the GSEs"
Chairman Frank, Ranking Member Bachus and members of this committee, thank you for
inviting me to testify today.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency placed Fannie Mae into conservatorship on Sept. 6.
As Director Lockhart announced the following day, this step was taken to stabilize
Fannie Mae and ensure its safety, soundness and solvency, and to reduce the growing
systemic risks to the mortgage finance system.
You asked me to address how we are pursuing our mission to support the mortgage
market, provide liquidity, and prevent foreclosures since the conservatorship began.
The government’s actions have given Fannie Mae the responsibility and the flexibility to
expand our service to the market and provide more liquidity. Under this conservatorship
our job is to balance the needs of safety and soundness and taxpayer protection with the
imperative that we provide the most support possible to the mortgage market. We are
acutely aware of our public purpose.
We have been working closely with our conservator, Treasury and the Federal Reserve to
achieve this balance. We are committed to being as transparent as possible with
Congress and the American public about our actions and results.
We are focused on meeting the goals of the conservatorship — conserving our assets,
restoring sound operations and meeting our mission. We communicate daily with FHFA
and have been assuring that their needs for Fannie Mae data and planning are met. With
this foundation and with the Department of the Treasury’s backstop, we are mindful that
we need to operate in a safe and sound manner and we need to move quickly to perform
our role as a core stabilizing factor in the markets.
Let me respond to the specific matters you asked me to address.
The Past Three Weeks
At the outset of the conservatorship, our top priority was to ensure our business continued
uninterrupted, and to make clear to our customers and the market that Fannie Mae is open
for business.
• In spite of extreme market turbulence and disruption, we continued to provide a
steady supply of funding to U.S. single-family and multifamily lenders during this
period. We securitized about $31 billion in single-family mortgages during the
first three weeks of September, an amount roughly equal to our securitization
volume in the first three weeks of August, despite a much more challenging
market during this month.
• Days after the conservatorship became effective, we sold $7 billion in two-year
Benchmark Note debt securities to global investors, allowing us to make
additional mortgage purchases to support the market. This was the largest debt
issuance of this kind in our history, and the rates we received were substantially
better than the rates before the conservatorship. The result demonstrated renewed
market confidence in the GSEs following the government’s action.
• Our multifamily business has continued unabated. Director Lockhart made clear
in his statement of September 12 that our continued leadership in, and support for,
affordable rental properties is a key component of the conservatorship. We are
committed to meeting that directive.
• A key test of our market impact is mortgage rates – the cost of financing a home.
Primary mortgage market rates, especially for 30-year fixed rate conforming
loans, fell in the days after the conservatorship commenced. We are working to
build on this so that the tightening of yields seen in the mortgage-backed
securities market results in savings to consumers.
• We are continuing our contractual relationships, which has assured both investors
and contractors of our stability and ongoing business plans.
• Lastly, we have an excellent non-executive chairman who is working on
reconstituting our board to provide advice and guidance to the firm in line with
the obligations of the conservatorship.
Keeping People in Their Homes
Let me take this opportunity to report briefly on some of the steps Fannie Mae has taken
to help reduce home foreclosures and provide liquidity to the market:
• Because preventing foreclosures is a staff-intensive, high-touch business, we have
increased staffing in our servicing operations center in Dallas, Texas. We are
currently working with our major servicers to ensure as few loans as possible go
to foreclosure referral, and not before all alternatives to foreclosure, such as
repayment plans, forbearance and modifications, are fully explored.
• We are in the process of increasing our use of specialty servicers skilled in
problem loan workouts, and have revamped all of our servicer incentives to
encourage them to change their own processes so no borrower who needs help
falls through bureaucratic cracks.
• We have also provided bridge loans this year to nearly 38,000 homeowners who
fell behind because of a serious illness, job loss or other temporary issue.
• Finally, Fannie Mae has provided $1 trillion of liquidity through its guaranty and
purchases since early last year, or about $3 billion a day. Our share of new singlefamily
mortgage-backed securities issued was 48 percent for the first half of the
year.
Preparing to Do More
However, given the scale of the current crisis, these actions clearly are not enough. The
responsibility entrusted by the government to us when it provided the capital and
liquidity facilities requires that we do far more to stabilize the market, prevent
foreclosures and provide liquidity so that creditworthy borrowers continue to have access
to affordable mortgages.
We are looking at every aspect of our business, with the goal of improving our funding,
pricing, trading, risk management and foreclosure-prevention efforts. New initiatives that
take greater advantage of Fannie Mae’s breadth and size may entail risks and costs in the
short-run, but will have long-run benefits to the country and Fannie Mae by helping
staunch the flow of foreclosures, encourage homeowners to ride out the cycle, and help
put a floor under home prices.
To that end, we are:
• Examining our underwriting and pricing standards to assure that the appropriate
balance is struck between expanding our activities and safeguarding the interests
of taxpayers.
• Increasing purchases of mortgage-backed securities to bolster market liquidity, so
that new mortgages remain available and affordable. Treasury and FHFA are
counting on us to do this, and we will.
• Working closely with our loan servicers to come up with new and better
foreclosure prevention solutions to keep people in their homes. We have begun a
comprehensive effort to reduce the flow of delinquent loans being referred to
foreclosure.
• Evaluating how we can participate in the FHA Hope for Homeowners program to
reduce principal loan balances, once the rules of the program are finalized. A
good number of Fannie Mae borrowers may benefit from this program.
• As Director Lockhart has said, we are in discussions with IndyMac and the FDIC
to evaluate how we can best integrate the FDIC-announced streamlined loan
modification program into our own loss-mitigation efforts related to those loans
IndyMac services.
• Developing new plans to perform on our obligation to serve low-income and
underserved borrowers and renters. Our binding affordable housing goals are
ambitious, and in this market may be unattainable. But we will not shirk
responsibility to do all we can to achieve them.
• Finally, we are working closely with FHFA and Treasury to find ways Fannie
Mae can assist in government efforts, including the mortgage asset liquidity fund
proposed by Secretary Paulson, to deal with mortgage asset quality in a broader
way by modifying mortgages, preventing foreclosures, and keeping more people
in their homes.
Actions by the Treasury and Federal Reserve
Last week’s actions by the Federal Reserve and the Treasury to support our discount
notes and to purchase our mortgage-backed securities should help improve the liquidity
of the mortgage market and ensure access to affordable new mortgages.
Together with FHFA’s directive to increase purchases of mortgage-backed securities,
these actions are primarily designed to keep mortgage rates as low as possible. Treasury’s
proposal for a government liquidity vehicle for illiquid mortgage-related securities should
help in this regard, so that the troubles of the non-agency market can begin to be
addressed and the global flow of capital and credit, upon which the secondary mortgage
market depends, can continue.
While these actions have helped, the credit markets remain unsettled. Treasury has said
that our senior and subordinated debt holders, as well as holders of our MBS, are
protected without regard to when those securities were issued or guaranteed. We are
working with the investment community to better their understanding of the long-term
soundness of our debt securities, and the binding legal obligation to support those
securities provided by the Treasury Department.
Moving Forward
Lastly, with the close supervision of FHFA, we are undertaking a full re-examination of
the company’s risk posture and controls, both in the context of safety and soundness and
in the context of providing maximum liquidity support for affordable mortgage lending
during this extraordinary period.
We are reviewing all of our mortgage guaranty pricing and underwriting standards. Now
that our capital base is secure, we can reevaluate our pricing for credit risk. This means
we will reexamine the pricing of our guaranty fee in light of current conditions and the
needs of the market today. Done correctly, this should have long-term benefits for the
mortgage market and Fannie Mae.
I have initiated a full review of our operations, technology, governance and management
structure to align the company with the new reality of the marketplace and the goals of
the conservatorship. We are going to examine all of our operating costs with an eye on
delivering service more effectively and efficiently. Our resources will be targeted on the
fulfillment of our mission, which is:
• To enhance the liquidity of the secondary markets for conventional mortgages;
• To make mortgages and rental housing as affordable as possible for low-andmoderate-
income families;
• To prevent foreclosures; and,
• To safely and responsibly deliver reasonably priced credit for mortgages that are
sustainable over the long haul.
Our goals are to realign Fannie Mae to deliver on this mission, to develop realistic plans
to achieve sustainability, and to eventually remove the need for government assistance.
Thank you again, Mr. Chairman, for this opportunity. You and this committee have
provided valuable leadership on GSE and housing policy, and I look forward to working
with you through this difficult period for our housing markets and our country. I will be
happy to take any questions from the committee.
Last edited by
kennynah on Thu Oct 02, 2008 12:04 pm, edited 5 times in total.
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