What the Fannie-Freddie takeover means for mortgage rates
Perspective: From The Mortgage Reports Blog
By Dan Green, Monday, September 8, 2008.On Sunday, the government announced that it will take over Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and assume their respective operations. Mortgage-backed debt is now government debt.
But for all the front-page stories today, there's surprisingly little coverage about how the news impacts homeowners in need of a mortgage.
Mortgage rates are down sharply today, and possibly forever.
See, when Fannie Mae was first created in 1938, it was a federal government entity -- a child of the parent government. Fannie Mae operated that way for 30 years.
Then, in 1968, Fannie Mae went on its own.
Only saying that Fannie Mae was "on its own" wasn't really true. Despite the spin-off, the federal government continued to give its mortgage child preferential tax and oversight treatment, plus an unspoken promise to guarantee its debts.
Think of it like when the child of well-known, wealthy parents starts his own business. There's going to be risks, but there's also going to be that thought in the back of everyone's mind that there's no way the parent is going to let the child fail.
This is how Wall Street looked at Fannie Mae.
For years, Wall Street endured Fannie Mae's accounting issues, leadership scandals and weak balance sheets, knowing that the mortgage group's parent was just a cab ride away. Wall Street harbored a deep-seated belief that should things get really bad for Fannie Mae, the government would step and take over.
And, that's exactly what happened.
As of today, mortgage debt is government debt and by the transitive property of risk premiums, mortgage debt is now risk-free. Therefore, conforming mortgage rates are down.
Originally published on The Mortgage Reports Blog. Dan Green is a loan officer at Mobium Mortgage. He lends in all 50 states.
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Submitted by Wenceslao Fernandez Jr, BS, Realtor, CDPE on September 8, 2008 - 3:03pm.
Indeed, rates are down, investors are happy (domestically and abroad), and the bottom may in fact be here now that these giants no longer carry the perceived risk they did until Sunday.
With Fannie and Freddie under Treasury supervision, they should be cleaned out and morphed into what they were intended to be over time.
The bail-out will cost tax-payers but, will also help re-invigorate market confidence and help carry the burden away from FHA loans, proving once again, more alternatives.
Buyers...this is it. The moment you were waiting for. If you try to fine-tune your timing of the bottom much longer, you will find yourself reading about it in the paper, which would mean that you missed it.
Sellers, don't drop your guard. You are still competing with many distressed sellers and builders. A market recovery to that magic number you still think you'd like to get for your property, may still be a long time away.
www.MiamiRealEstateKing.com
Certified Distressed Property Expert
Miami-Dade County, Florida.
Submitted by Joe Dahleen on September 8, 2008 - 3:49pm.
I agree - this is huge sign for buyers. With 30 year fixed at 5.50% today and property values way down - it is a very smart time to buy.
Have the seller pay your closing costs and get your rate down to 4.75% with just a few points.
The buyer ready program never looked this good.
http://www.goliveloans.com/buyer-ready-mortgage-program.php