President Obama unveiled an ambitious new plan this week to overhaul how America finances home mortgages.If the president’s plan is enacted, the likely result will be slightly higher interest rates and a more stable financial system.If a hard-right rump in the House prevails (which it probably won’t), the likely result will be shorter-term mortgages at adjustable rates and a less stable financial system.And if nothing happens at all—a very real possibility—then interest rates and financial stability will be unaffected; the budget deficit will be a bit lower; and U.S. government debt, which today stands officially at $17 trillion, will actually be more like $23 trillion (an outcome that isn’t necessarily dire).At issue is the continued existence of the government-created Federal National Mortgage Association, commonly known as Fannie Mae, and Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation, commonly known as Freddie Mac. These so-called “government sponsored enterprises” buy home mortgages, package them into securities, and then sell them to investors. For some obscure reason these enterprises tend to have nicknames straight out of Li’l Abner (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Sallie Mae for student loans, Farmer Mac for agricultural loans).”By securitizing mortgages, Fannie and Freddie make it possible for banks to issue mortgages on what would otherwise be, when you think about it, great terms for the borrower but lousy terms for the lender (30 years? At fixed interest rates? To a borrower who might turn out to be a deadbeat?). Indeed, the 30-year mortgage didn’t exist before President Franklin Roosevelt created Fannie Mae during the Great Depression. When people bought houses, they typically took out two or three mortgages, each at a higher interest rate than its predecessor, and these mortgages had to be paid off or renegotiated within five or six years. That limited severely the home buyers’ market, and when the crash came in 1929 the highly-leveraged housing sector fell especially hard.
Related: Obama outlines plan for ‘responsibility’ in housing
Roosevelt invited the financial community to create a secondary mortgage market within the private sector, but there were no takers. So in 1938 he created Fannie Mae as a government-owned corporation that packaged home mortgages into bonds. Thirty years later Congress made Fannie a private corporation, and two years after that it created Freddie Mac to give Fannie a little competition. In 1977, a young Salomon Brothers trader named Lewis Ranieri created mortgage-backed securities, a more lucrative alternative to bonds in the secondary mortgage market, and pretty soon they were being packaged in enormous volume by Fannie, Freddie, and the banks.In 2008 this market crashed, bringing the entire U.S. financial system down with it. Conservatives try to blame Fannie and Freddie, which had been directed by the federal government to broaden the market for lower-income homeowners. But in fact the culprits were banks and mortgage companies, which had grown steadily more reckless in bundling so-called “subprime” mortgages issued to unwary low-income people who were bad credit risks. Also culpable were the big three credit rating agencies (Standard & Poor’s, Moody’s, and Fitch), which yielded to financial pressure from their clients the issuers to inflate ratings for these subprime mortgage-backed securities.For a long while Fannie and Freddie stayed away from the subprime market, even as the government enterprises were expanding loans to more creditworthy low-income people. But eventually Fannie and Freddie yielded to competitive pressure to market subprime mortgage-backed securities too, and when the crash came they entered into government receivership, where they remain today as the de facto property of the U.S. government.Nobody wants Fannie and Freddie to be revived as private organizations. As “government-created enterprises,” they were always presumed to have the implicit backing of the government, a guarantee that became explicit after the 2008 crash. This translated into what was in effect an unfair (and much-resented) subsidy.Fannie in particular hired executives based less on their banking knowhow than on government connections they could translate into lobbying stroke to preserve their privileged place in the market. Fannie spun that advantage into excessive shareholder returns and made small fortunes for its executives. It was the worst of both worlds. The public presumed, correctly, that Fannie Mae had government backing, but the government had little control over its operations.
Some conservatives propose eliminating Fannie and Freddie and leaving the secondary mortgage market to the private sector. That’s the approach favored by House Financial Services Committee Chairman Jeb Hensarling, a Texas Republican, in a bill that narrowly cleared the committee on July 24.









