Bailout or Bustout? Fannie and Freddie - Top Stocks Blog - MSN Money
 
Search Top Stocks:

Bailout or Bustout? Fannie and Freddie

Posted Sep 05 2008, 05:41 PM by Andrew Horowitz
Rating:

5:45 on a Friday night. Somehow I knew something was in the air. The end of day upward move for a market that should have traded lower made no sense. It appears that now, according to the WSJ, there is talk about a backstop for Fannie and Freddie. It is a general consensus that any plan will have a very negative impact on the common shares and after hours shares are sinking. Freddie is now down 23% for the day and Fannie is down 20%. Wait, Freddie is down 25%, no 27%, uh......this is not pretty and I am not kidding.

Somehow, there is talk of a rally that will be in place as the market opens on Monday. Perhaps that is good news as I suppose that the guessing game is coming to an end and investors will be able to rest with the knowledge that we finally have a big fat failure, once and for all.

Of course, the good news is a matter of perspective; I can't imagine it is good if you have anything to do with either of these companies. (both leveling off down 24% now...oh...spoke too soon, Fannie dropping again, down 31%)

A government plan will certainly take some heat off of the financials for the moment and if the Fed/Treasury actually plan on taking over these mortgage monsters, the problem will then rest squarely on yours and my shoulders. We will pay for the lasting luxury of ensuring the survival of both companies through higher taxes and reduced benefits. Nice!

(By the way, both are only off by 19%...)

From the WSJ:

Precise details of Treasury's plan couldn't be learned. The plan is expected to involve a creative use of Treasury's new authority to make a capital injection into the beleaguered giants.

The plan includes changes to senior management at both companies, according to a person familiar with the plans.

An announcement could come as early as this weekend.

On Friday, a series of high-level meetings were planned between Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, the chief executives of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and the companies' new regulator, the Federal Housing Finance Agency.

Treasury has been working with bankers at Morgan Stanley to use its newfound authority, granted by Congress in July, to devise a way to prop up the mortgage giants, which have been pummeled by investors in recent weeks.

The two giants are vital cogs in the U.S. housing market and their financial woes have threatened to worsen the bursting of the housing bubble.

"We are making progress on our work," said Treasury spokeswoman Jennifer Zuccarelli. She declined to comment further on Treasury's plans.

 

Related Reading:


Disclosure: Horowitz & Company managed account clients do not hold positions in securities mentioned as of the publish date.

Andrew Horowitz is a money manager and the founder of Horowitz & Company. He is also the author of the bestselling book, The Disciplined Investor . Check out his latest investment idea or listen in as he hosts, The Disciplined Investor Podcast.

Comments

 

This bail out will cost taxpayers billions. I guess its OK for govt interventions after the mortgage guys made all their money ripping off the public. Half the mortgage brokers and companies should be prosecuted for fraud !

You know...with all of this money that the CEO's got for running the company, they ought to be the first casualities to lose out. They don't need their precious millions to live. I'm just surviving and I feel for those who are in this mess. It's all due to greed plain and simple; I wish I had just a little of that money to pay off my credit cards, loans and such. I don't need millions to live, but obviously, the CEO's of both these companies thought so and did'nt care less what happened.

I think the banks made the bad loans. The investors are greedy. I live in a trailer let them join me. I have to pay all the taxes to suport the rich. I am a MAD AMERICAN Ill never vote republican till I die. Let them fall in the cesspool they built

It's greed.  At all levels.

From CEO's running cooked books to make profit appear out of no where for the benifit of shareholders. (easily done when they know who exactly is wearing a golden parachute.)

To speculators and day traders destabilzing an already swaying house of cards market from the comfort of the family rec room for a few bucks.....

To every person who bought into systems (legal?) that allow an individual or group of individuals to purchace two, three, four or more houses based on non existant projected profit from a possible future sale.....after renovations.

To "Big Oil".  Scum.  Artificial bottlenecks in the system, abysmal refinement facilities located on the hurricane prone Gulf coast, drop of the hat inflation of prices based on whym and the inability to adjust downward at a comparable pace.

To Government and its inept fiscal policies.  (print more....spend more...print more....)  

It all needs a proper fix.

Democracy is dead.  Politicians and the government only continue to sell the idea to Americans that it isn't.  Sadly the government is going to step in and and take over for all their rich buddies and rich foreign investors, a.k.a. China, and let them all keep their money.  I will be sending a letter to the Internal Revenue Service and the Federal Government this year stating that I will not pay my taxes.  No taxation without representation. Obviously the government is no longer interested in the citizens of this country, unless you can write a check that will help them get re-elected and continue to live their life of privledge.  

The only people the federal government bails out are crooks. We pay for the greedy good ole boys every working day of our lives.

It doesn't matter what party is in office the solution to our problems are tax the citizens. Asking people who are in trouble to put down larger down payments to keep their family off the streets doen't seem like a solution nor does raisning the interst rate at the consumer level. The greedy set us all up for failure and now they want us again to bail them out. Why not put a plan in place that keeps people in their home. Some money is better than nothing at all Mr.Banker. Then try something new, work with the customer. What do we do with the family that needs five bedrooms and now their credit is shot? Oh well, the citizens can pay.

MAD AMERICAN you do not pay taxes to support the rich.  They pay most of the taxes (top 5% wage earners pay 54% of the federal taxes) to provide government services for you.

This just goes to show that the government really does not care for the people, and second the share holders in both companies are stupid. The top five execs in both companies should have been fired long ago for their stupidity, greed and ignorance. How much more debt can this country handle?

The American politians in the White House helped make these problems. The government seen what happened with Enron, did nothin, seen what happened with Northwest Airlines, did nothin and now Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and the only people that walk away with money is the CEO, WHY am I not surprised. This is business as usual in America lately. This is what happens when you let the lobbiest write the rules.

Send a Comment

Comments must be directly related to the blog entry. Comments with offensive language will be deleted. Your e-mail address won't be displayed.

(please, no HTML tags. Web addresses will be hyperlinked):