The Treasury Department announced the changes Friday in an effort
to deal with concerns that the companies could at some point exhaust the
federal support they were guaranteed when they were taken over by the
government in September 2008 during the financial crisis. The two firms would have to turn over all
profits they earn every quarter. They would also be required to accelerate the
reduction of their mortgage holdings to hit a cap of $250 billion by 2018, four
years earlier than planned. Under the
new arrangement, the firms' portfolios can be no larger than $650 billion each
at the end of this year.
The Obama administration unveiled a plan last year to slowly
dissolve Fannie and Freddie, with the goal of shrinking the government's role
in the mortgage system. The proposal would remake decades of federal policy
aimed at supporting Americans' ability to buy homes and could make home loans
more expensive. However, Congress hasn't yet decided how far the government's
role in mortgages should be reduced.
Industry groups including the American Bankers Association and the
Mortgage Bankers Association were generally supportive of the administration's
action.
"Much more work needs to be done to reform the secondary
market (for mortgage-backed securities) but today's announcement helps move
this process forward and ensure the taxpayers' investment is ultimately
repaid," Frank Keating, president of the banking group, said in a
statement.
Currently, Fannie and Freddie make dividend payments to the
Treasury every quarter. That has forced them to borrow money from the
government and use that money to repay the government in periods when they
didn't turn a large enough profit to cover the dividend payments.
Under the new arrangement, the government will simply take all the
profits that the firms make in any quarter as a dividend payment. The
government will not require a dividend payment in periods when the firms run a
loss.
So far, Fannie and Freddie have paid nearly $46 billion in
dividends.
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