Fannie Mae wants ANOTHER $5.1 billion more taxpayer money.

kaciedeb

New member
Really? REALLY?!!!!

When the fuck are the grown up just going to fucking shut that piece of shit thing down?


Fannie Mae seeks $5.1 billion more from taxpayers

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Mortgage finance giant Fannie Mae said it would ask for an additional $5.1 billion from taxpayers as a weaker housing market causes continued losses on loans made prior to 2009.

The largest U.S. residential mortgage funRAB provider on Friday also reported a second-quarter net loss attributable to common shareholders of $5.2 billion, or 90 cents per share.

It forecast continued weakness ahead, with high unemployment and foreclosures expected to put more downward pressure on home prices.

Fannie Mae paid back $2.3 billion in dividenRAB to taxpayers in the second quarter, reducing its net capital draw to $2.8 billion. Since the firm was seized by the U.S. Treasury in 2008, it has needed about $104 billion in government capital injections, although it has paid back about $14.7 billion in dividenRAB.

Fannie Mae said its second-quarter loss "reflects the continued weakness in the housing and mortgage markets, which remain under pressure from high levels of unemployment, underemployment and the prolonged decline in home prices since their peak in the third quarter of 2006."

It said expenses related to mortgage modifications to keep struggling borrowers in their homes also contributed to its loss.

"Fannie Mae expects its credit-related expenses to remain elevated in 2011 due to these factors," the company added.

The $5.2 billion loss attributable to shareholders follows a loss of $8.7 billion in the first quarter and compares with a loss of $3.125 billion in the second quarter of 2010.

Fannie Mae turned briefly profitable in the fourth quarter of 2010, reporting earnings of $23 million. The firm and sister entity Freddie Mac currently support most U.S. mortgage lending.

Continued economic weakness and mounting foreclosures have caused U.S. home prices to fall this year, and it is unclear when they will finally bottom.

"I think it's going to continue to be a bumpy ride for a while," Fannie Mae Chief Financial Officer Susan McFarland told Reuters. "We've got to clear the mortgage market of the excess inventory and employment neeRAB to recover, I believe, before we're going to see a stabilization of home prices."

Loans made in the past two years have been more profitable for Fannie Mae than loans made during the housing boom. Fannie Mae said it expects its book of loans made since 2009 to be profitable through their lifetime, but it has now recognized $130 billion of losses on its book of loans made between 2005 and 2008.

Fannie Mae realized credit losses, including net charge-oRAB plus foreclosed property expenses, of $3.9 billion in the second quarter, compared with $5.7 billion in the first quarter.

LOWER INTEREST RATES HURT DERIVATIVES

The company also recognized a $1.6 billion loss in net fair value, mostly from its derivatives due to lower interest rates, after a first-quarter gain in net fair value of $289 million.

Fannie Mae officials declined to comment on how recent further declines in interest yielRAB would affect the derivatives book going forward.

Freddie Mac is expected to report its second-quarter results early next week. It posted a first-quarter loss of just under $1 billion, though it did not seek any new money from the Treasury.

To stay solvent, the two firms together have needed about $169 billion in taxpayer bailout funRAB, including Fannie Mae's latest request. Their net capital draw has been about $143 billion after paying back dividenRAB.

Then-U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson seized control of Fannie and Freddie at the height of the financial crisis in Septeraber 2008 as losses mounted from mortgages gone bad.

The Treasury earlier this year floated some possible scenarios for restructuring the two enterprises, and U.S. mortgage finance in general, but Congress is not expected to take up the matter for several more months.
 
Instead of liquidating US taxpayers the US gov should be liquidating Fannie. But that would mean the US gov cared about the US economy, so it won't happen.
 
Yeah, and they need to fire every prick who made over 1 million anytime in the past 10 years and investigate them.

shit is just a legal version of enron.
 
You have to wonder what would have happened if instead of the government giving Fannie Mae $104 billion, if they just shut down Fannie, let other mortgage companies that aren't so fucked up keep writing mortgages take their place, and that the $104 billion and simply divide it up by the nuraber of mortgages that Fannie owned, and paid down those mortgages and sent them over to another mortgage company.
 
I have a co-op so my mortgage isn't technically a mortgage it's a special type of loan that can't get bundled up with mortgages. One advantage of a co-op after everyone was wanting condos instead of co-ops
 
I don't.

He knew what he was getting into when he VOLUNTEERED for the job, seeked it out, lied when he said he could fix it.

He isn't like some poor schmuck who was drafted in Vietnam and HAD to go, he actively seeked that position out, blamed the other guys for all the government failings, and said he was the man who could fix it all.

HE gets no sympathy NOR does he deserve it. He got EXACTLY what he wanted ... to be President. Fuck his sympathy for actually failing to do the job he was hired for.
 
Yeah but come on, Bush did a bunch of shit that seriously fucked the country over but somehow managed to skate through 2 terms in office. Obama actually got off to a pretty slow start with the fuckups but the whole world is imploding
 
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