Paper Economy - A US Real Estate Bubble Blog

Monday, December 01, 2008

Ticking Time Bomb?: Fannie Mae Monthly Summary October 2008

Decades from now the summer of 2008 will likely be remembered to mark the turning point where legislative blundering took an otherwise serious financial crisis and molested it into an epic financial collapse.

By fully assuming the liabilities of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the two colossal and corrupt (and conduit of corruptness funneling junk Countrywide Financial loans onto the implied balance sheet of the federal government) government sponsored enterprises, the federal government, led by Treasury Secretary Paulson and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, has thrust taxpayers into an abyss of insolvency with one mighty shove.

Given the sheer size of these government sponsored companies, with loan guarantee obligations recently estimated by Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis President William Poole of totaling $4.47 Trillion (That’s TRILLION with a capital T… for perspective ALL U.S. government debt held by the public totals roughly $4.87 Trillion) this legislative reversal making certain the “implied” government guarantee is reckless to say the least.

The following chart (click for larger) shows what Fannie Mae terms the count of “Seriously Delinquent” loans as a percentage of all loans on their books.

It’s important to understand that Fannie Mae does NOT segregate foreclosures from delinquent loans when reporting these numbers and that should they report the delinquent results as a percentage of the unpaid principle balance, things might likely look a lot worse.

Finally, the following chart (click for larger) shows the relative movements of Fannie Mae’s credit and non-credit enhanced (insured and non-insured) “Seriously Delinquent” loans.

Labels: , , , ,

Copyright © 2009
PaperEconomy Blog - www.papereconomy.com
All Rights Reserved

Disclaimer

5 Comments:

  • got to be close to $50B. no?

    By Blogger static, at 3:02 PM  

  • Hey we own the assets, don't forget that! I know it's small consolation with the real estate market tanking, but a whole lot of the loans on the books of Fannie and Freddie must predate the ridiculous run-up.

    By Anonymous Phil, at 3:25 PM  

  • I'm trying to grasp the problem here. Let's say 2% of loan amounts are deliquent, that's $90B worth of loans. Certainly we could recover half of that through foreclosure, or a total net loss of $45B. A lot of money but hardly bankrupting the US government. In fact, Fannie can probably cover a good part of those losses themselves, no? Am I off an order of magnitude somewhere? Or are you expecting defaults to rise stupendously to 20 or 50%?

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at 8:36 PM  

  • anon, I know it seems like a manageable amount. what you have to remember though is this is just one of the GSE's, the other is in just as much trouble. If everything stopped! right now!
    and we took account, and took the loss, and the assets were transfered/sold to those who could handle them things might come out differently.
    That would be a free market at work.

    Now remember, on wall street there are untold amounts of Leveraged assets
    there are untold amounts of bets on those assets in the CDS market,
    there are untold amounts of unsecured debt, there are bets on that as well, we are just looking at one company here... Fannie Mae.
    asset prices are currently in a freefall, which affects all of the above. There is no easy way out, in fact there is probably no way out other than letting the market (free market) have it's way with the assets.
    And on top/bottom (however you like it) of it all is the absolute speghetti bowl of documentation and settlement hurdles. PLUS
    The consumer is TAPPED out. If Meridith Whitney is right and the card companys draw a line... 2 trillion dollars under the current lines of credit, ...well....God help us.

    static

    By Blogger static, at 8:58 PM  

  • Well it doesn't take a very high non-performance rate in order to make a mortgage portfolio effectively insolvent... I don't believe that their guarantee obligations are any different.

    So with the current "seriously delinquent" trend and the governments conservatorship, I think its very likely that the US taxpayer will be forced to absorb significant losses.

    By Blogger SoldAtTheTop, at 9:26 AM  

Post a Comment

Links to this post:

Create a Link

<< Home


 
Top Real Estate Blogs Top Real Estate Blogs Blogarama - The Blog Directory Check Google Page Rank