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Showing posts with label Freddie Mac. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Freddie Mac. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Fannie, Freddie to Refinance Loans With Loan-To-Value Ratios Of As Much As 125%

By Dawn Kopecki
July 1 (Bloomberg) -- Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will begin refinancing mortgages with loan-to-value ratios of as much as 125 percent as the Obama administration seeks to boost participation in its anti-foreclosure programs.
Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan made the announcement in a statement today. Currently Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, through President Barack Obama’s Home Affordable program, can refinance mortgages they own or guarantee when the loan is worth as much as 105 percent of the home’s market value.

The continuing slide in home prices has pushed millions of Americans beyond that 105 percent loan-to-value ratio, limiting participation in Obama’s initiative. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have refinanced 80,000 loans under that program, which set out to help as many as 5 million people who may owe more than their homes are worth, Federal Housing Finance Agency Director James Lockhart said at a real estate conference on June 18.

The decision to change the allowable ratio is part of an effort to “adapt to an ever-changing housing market,” Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said in the HUD statement. “By expanding refinance eligibility, we can bring relief to more struggling homeowners more quickly.”

Paul Miller
, an analyst with FBR Capital Markets in Arlington, Virginia, said mortgage brokers have told him that many aren’t sending borrowers through the program because it’s cumbersome and the loan applications “still have a lot of bells and whistles, which makes them difficult to do.”

Little Impact
“I don’t think it’s going to have much of an impact because you still don’t have enough qualified borrowers,” Miller said, referring to today’s announcement. “It will help on the margin, but the issues with Obama’s plans is that they all focus on affordability and not principal writedowns and at some point they’re going to have to address” that, he said.
Just 20,000 of the 80,000 refinanced Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac mortgages exceed loan-to-value ratios of 80 percent, which are the loans administration officials specifically targeted in designing the program, Lockhart said.

Peter Cirillo, an independent mortgage broker in Long Island, New York, said Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac’s risk-based pricing makes it “much too difficult” for borrowers to qualify to refinance, even if the companies already back their loans.

“All of these government programs are having little or no effect on the ability to refinance,” Cirillo said in an interview. “Even potential borrowers with great credit and low LTV’s, but reduced income, have no chance of refinancing to a lower rate or payment because of strict” rules on debt-to- income ratios, he said.

Home Values
A drop in values has left about 20.4 million of the U.S.’s 93 million houses, condos and co-ops with mortgages higher than the properties are worth as of March 31, Seattle-based real estate data service Zillow.com said in a report May 6.

Home Affordable has also been “seeing a slowdown” as mortgage rates increase, Lockhart said. The average rate on a typical 30-year fixed loan was 5.42 percent in the week ended June 25, according to Freddie Mac. The rate is up from a record low of 4.78 percent at the end of April.

U.S. mortgage applications fell last week by the most since February, the Mortgage Bankers Association said today. The MBA’s index of applications to buy a home or refinance a loan dropped 19 percent to 444.8 in the week ended June 26 from 548.2 the prior week. The group’s refinancing gauge fell 30 percent to the lowest in seven months, while the index of purchases declined 4.5 percent.

Loan Limits
The Obama program applies to mortgages that meet Washington-based Fannie Mae and McLean, Virginia-based Freddie Mac’s conforming loan limits. That cap is $417,000 for some areas and as high as $729,750 for the 250 most expensive real estate markets.

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac own or guarantee more than half of the single-family mortgages in the U.S. The government- chartered companies were seized by regulators in September amid concern that their capital wasn’t sufficient to weather the worst housing slump since the Great Depression.

The companies each said in separate statements today that borrowers with loan-to-value ratios of between 105 percent and 125 percent must refinance through their existing mortgage company to qualify. Fannie Mae is additionally paying lenders an incentive equal to half a percentage point, to encourage refinancings to shorter terms of 20 or 25 years. Freddie Mac said it is also offering a “special price incentive” as well to borrowers that accept a shorter repayment schedule.

To contact the reporter on this story: Dawn Kopecki in Washington at dkopecki@bloomberg.net.

Last Updated: July 1, 2009 15:19 EDT

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aHVHVQAbwbvY

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Interview with Eliot Spitzer. The man who was railroaded for prosecuting AIG!

On today’s edition of CNN's "Fareed Zakaria GPS," former Governor of New York Eliot Spitzer appeared on the program for his first television interview since resigning. A full transcript of the program is below.

Welcome to all of you in the United States and around the world.  I'm Fareed Zakaria.

This has been another week of outrage over Wall Street.  But mixed in with the outrage, there continues to be a bewilderment about how these problems in the financial industry could have been piling up without warning.

When being briefed by academics from the London School of Economics, Queen Elizabeth II asked a simple question:  Why did nobody notice it?

In fact, some people did notice it.  Warren Buffett, Paul Volcker and others did warn about the danger of derivatives and debt.  Others warned about Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

But through all these warnings, the markets kept rising.  Financial firms minted money.  The naysayers looked like fuddy-duddies, and the risk-takers like geniuses.  No one likes to fight success.

Actually, there was one guy who took on the financial firms at the height of their prestige and power when the country, the media and Washington were gushing with admiration.

That man was Eliot Spitzer.

And he is my guest today, for his first interview since resigning as governor of New York.

You remember him as the governor of New York who resigned after a scandal involving prostitution.  But think back before then.  He was the attorney general of New York who went after Merrill Lynch, prosecuted AIG and several other institutions for practices he argued were corrupt, fraudulent and illegal.  Those prosecutions were deeply controversial, and Spitzer made most of Wall Street his enemy.

I'm going to talk to him about what he thinks about the world he's watching today.

ZAKARIA:  So, now to my guest today, former governor of New York, former attorney general of New York, Eliot Spitzer.

Welcome.

ELIOT SPITZER, FORMER GOVERNOR OF NEW YORK:  Thank you.  A pleasure to be here.

ZAKARIA:  When you saw the news about these AIG bonuses, what did you think?  This was the company that you prosecuted way back when.

SPITZER:  On the one hand, I was not surprised.  Bonuses are part and parcel of Wall Street compensation.  And I think if you looked at any company, you would see bonuses of an equivalent size.

So I think to a certain extent, what we are now doing is looking at what is a typical part of Wall Street compensation, voicing a visceral outrage that is legitimate, but is not particular to AIG.

ZAKARIA:  But when you took on AIG, what troubled you about it? 

What made you look at AIG and say something's wrong here?

SPITZER:  Their fundamental accounting structure was wrong.  And when we prosecuted them, we brought a case alleging that they had manufactured false, fictitious reinsurance contracts.  It's a very technical issue, but there were false reinsurance contracts designed to create the appearance of capital on the books, which was not there.  And this was a structure that had been designed and orchestrated at the very top of the company.

And as we dug into the accounting...

ZAKARIA:  So, they were basically fudging the numbers to make it seem as though they had a stronger balance sheet than they had.

SPITZER:  Precisely.  That's exactly right.

And the underlying effort was to create an illusion of financial strength that was not there.  And as we dug more deeply into the underlying structure and organization and accounting that was ongoing at the company, we knew there was a problem.

And just parenthetically, four people have been convicted of this. 

The former CEO was called an unindicted co-conspirator in the federal courtroom by the federal prosecutor.  So, this was a fundamental effort to alter the actuality and to lie to the public.

    ZAKARIA:  So, do you think that the problems that AIG got into later on stem from some of the same practices that you were trying to get at?

    SPITZER:  They stemmed from an effort from the very top to gin up returns whenever, wherever possible, and to push the boundaries in a way that would garner returns almost regardless of risk.

    And so, to the extent that there is a discussion, did this begin before or after the tenure of Hank Greenberg, it's unambiguous -- unambiguous that the structures and the flaws and the policies began while he was there.  That is why the board that he had controlled with an iron fist asked him to leave.  It was their decision -- not my decision, their decision -- to ask him to step down, something that was then and is now very unusual.

    He has invoked the Fifth Amendment, which, of course, is his right to do.  But he was asked to leave by his own board, because they saw the flaws and the problems that have since multiplied and created this monster that can bring down the financial system.

    Back then I said to people, AIG is at the center of the web.  The financial tentacles of this company stretched to every major investment bank.  The web between AIG and Goldman Sachs is something that should be pursued.

    And as I have written...

    ZAKARIA:  Meaning what?  Meaning that a lot of the money that we the taxpayers gave AIG has ended up being paid to Goldman Sachs...

    SPITZER:  Precisely.  And...

    ZAKARIA:  ... and other companies.

    SPITZER:  The so-called counterparties to these very sophisticated financial transactions.

    When AIG initially received $80 billion -- a decision that was the consequence of a very brief meeting of the president of the New York Fed, the secretary of the Treasury, perhaps Chairman Bernanke and arguably, some reports say, the chairman of Goldman Sachs -- $80 billion, virtually all of it flowed out to counterparties, $12.9 billion to Goldman Sachs.

    Why did that happen?  What questions were asked?  Why did we need to pay 100 cents on the dollar on those transactions, if we had to pay anything?  What would have happened to the financial system, had it not been paid?

    These are the questions that should be pursued.  Look, bonus is a real issue.  It touches us viscerally.  The real money and the real structural issue is the dynamic between AIG and the counterparties.

    ZAKARIA:  Because those payments are in the tens of billions of dollars.  The bonuses are a few hundred million.

    SPITZER:  The bonuses we think are $164 million, give or take -- huge money.  I mean, nobody should diminish that.  These counterparty payments, tens and tens of billions of dollars.

    ZAKARIA:  And it, to your mind, it seems as though this taxpayer money may have been recklessly and unwisely paid off?

    SPITZER:  Well, it may be that a case could be made that it should have been paid.

    But at a moment in our nation's history when everybody is being asked to bear a piece of the burden -- everybody -- people are being told work four days a week, not five.  Sales taxes are going to go up. 

Contracts are being broken and renegotiated for workers across America. 

Our 401(k)s and our savings have been depleted by the recklessness of Wall Street.

    For Goldman and the other counterparties not to be able to say, we can make do with only 50 cents on the dollar, 30 cents on the dollar, after we've already given Goldman a $25 billion cash infusion, they are sitting on vast amounts of cash on the sidelines -- which is their right, but they're going to invest it in due course, based upon their judgment -- for them, on top of all that to get another $12.9 billion in the dark without questions, after a meeting of this sort, is fundamentally wrong.  And that is the nature of the inquiry that should be raised.

    ZAKARIA:  Is there, as far as you know, a congressional inquiry into these monies?

    SPITZER:  I do not know if there is or isn't.  I certainly hope that Barney Frank, who is the chairman of the right committee, will do so. 

He's a brilliant guy, a spectacular legislator and lawyer.  I have absolute confidence that if he pokes at this, he will get to the bottom of it.

    He is somebody -- there are many on Capitol Hill who are beating their chests so loudly, you know it's just a cover-up of their neglect and failure over the last decade.  They sat there and watched and did nothing, as they clearly should have known that we were building a system that was a house of cards.  And they enjoyed it and prospered from it, and there was a symbiotic relationship between them and Wall Street.

    Barney Frank is not one of those.  Barney Frank will ask the right questions, and I hope he does.

    ZAKARIA:  Was the regulation -- was the regulatory regime in place strong enough?  And I'm thinking particularly of the New York Fed, which was headed by Tim Geithner, of the SEC?

    Where do you see the flaw having been over the last few years?

    SPITZER:  Here's my answer to that.  The regulatory system was structurally flawed, but that's not why this happened.

    After the last round of scandals -- Enron, et al. -- we passed Sarbanes-Oxley.  And we said, aha, we've solved the problem.  Now we have another set of scandals.

    There are enough laws, enough regulations on the books for smart, aggressive regulators and prosecutors to make all the cases.  What was missing was judgment.  And you can't legislate judgment.  You can't regulate judgment.

    Either the people who are the regulators will walk into a bank and say "Your leverage is too great.  We are going to take actions to pull it back," or "This type of investment is flawed," or they won't.  You can't pass a law that says, you must use sound judgment.

    Bubbles have been there through history, through over-regulation and under-regulation.  This is a question of judgment and of failure of judgment.

    When I was attorney general, people said, "Oh, you're using this crazy little statute," the Martin Act in New York, "to bring all these cases."  The Martin Act had a simple anti-fraud provision.  That's all we used.

    The federal government has exponentially more regulatory power than we did.  What was lacking was the judgment, the tenacity, the desire to rein in a financial system that was spiraling out of control.

    ZAKARIA:  How do you think President Obama is handling this crisis?

    SPITZER:  Well, I think he is doing stupendously.  I mean, I'm a huge fan of his.  I think we all have to be and should be, if only because he has been thrust into a dynamic that is almost impossible.

    He is trying to put out not 500 small fires, 500 forest fires simultaneously.  And he is addressing them sequentially, trying to keep a political coalition together.  But it's very hard.

    And I think one of the largest, most difficult tasks that he has is to control the outrage that is brewing in the public -- sympathize with it and garner it, but use it to get good policy, not policy based upon anger.

    Populism, if we go to the other extreme -- and we had libertarianism masquerading as capitalism for the past 30 years.  That didn't work. 

And we knew it wouldn't work.

    I'm worried that we will go to the other extreme and end up with rank populism.  That could be just as dangerous.

    And it's very hard to craft the reasoned policies that make the market work without losing the support of the public.  That's what he's trying to do.  It's a very difficult task.

    He is a brilliant communicator and a brilliant leader, and I think we all have to hope that he succeeds.

    ZAKARIA:  Do you worry about this kind of populist anger when you watch the outrage over the bonuses?

    SPITZER:  Yes, yes.  The outrage is legitimate, but it is being fomented by sort of a faux populism by many on Capitol Hill who saw this coming, who knew this was going on.

    And so, I look at them and I say, "Come on, guys.  You're supposed to be more mature.  Express the anger, but then say, how do we solve it?  Don't just throw more oil on the fire."

    And I am worried about that.  And I'm worried that it will be destructive to our capitalist system.  And I've said since the very beginning, that my energy was directed at preserving and protecting capitalism.

    The libertarians didn't understand it.  Populists don't understand it.  But capitalism is what we want to preserve.

    ZAKARIA:  A simple legal question.  If you were in a position where you could do something about it, what would you do about the bonuses? 

Legally, what strategy would you employ?

    SPITZER:  I think I might go back to a very old tort theory of unjust enrichment -- contract theory, tort theory -- and say, you know what, guys?  There's a theory in the law that says -- a couple of theories -- one impossibility saying, AIG just doesn't have the money to pay you.  And absent the federal infusion, it wouldn't have it, so we can't pay.

    And second I would say, unjust enrichment.  You simply don't deserve it.  It's an equitable argument.  Some courts might go for it, some courts might not.

    But as a practical matter, as the president of the United States, I think I would call the CEOs into the Oval Office.  And I would say, "Guys, this is untenable.  We're all going to have to suck it up a little bit and show the American people that we know what it means to be part of a community, and share the sacrifice.  Let's see if we can't solve this without the legal wrangling."

    And I bet he could.  I have no doubt that President Obama could do that.

    ZAKARIA:  And we will be back with Eliot Spitzer right after this.

    (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

    ZAKARIA:  You know there are a number of people watching who are going to say, Eliot Spitzer doesn't have credibility to talk about these issues, because of what happened over the last year with your own behavior.

    (END VIDEO CLIP)

    (COMMERCIAL BREAK)

    ZAKARIA:  And we are back with Eliot Spitzer.

    Eliot, you've spent a lot of time looking at Wall Street, battling with them often.  What do you think is the fundamental thing that got us into this mess?

    SPITZER:  Recklessness, greed and a misunderstanding of what capitalism is all about, and a belief that financial services alone could generate wealth.

    Financial services doesn't really generate wealth.  Financial -- the capital markets are designed to raise money and then apportion it to industries that are creative, whether it's biotech or automotive, or anything else.

    Financial services should be a conduit.  Instead, we became enamored of the products themselves.  And what resulted was this enormous bubble in assets, ginned up and supported by a financial services sector that, because of a series of improper incentives, got us to where we are right now.

    ZAKARIA:  And what should have been done?  Should there just have been a lot more attorneys general like you kind of battling this?

    SPITZER:  We had one who was enough, I thought.  But it was...

    ZAKARIA:  But should there have been a different kind of regulation?  How should this have been prevented?

    SPITZER:  There should have been a very different regulatory framework.  Not in the sense that we needed more words in the books.  We needed more aggressive voices at the SEC, the FTC, the OCC -- this welter of federal agencies -- people who came to Wall Street and said, "Wait a minute.  That leverage is crazy."

    And it was -- it's kind of odd, because everybody derided leverage in public, but in private, participated to the hilt.  And when you look back at these deals you say, this was crazy.  We needed regulators who said it.  We needed wiser voices on Wall Street.

    This was sort of a disease that got into the bloodstream and the DNA of Wall Street leadership.

    Now, there were some who were spectacular who disagreed with it, who said, "Wait a minute, guys.  We can't afford this."

    The more traditional, old-fashioned investment bankers -- you think of Felix Rohatyn, who said, "Wait a minute, guys.  This doesn't work." 

And...

    ZAKARIA:  Right, right.  Or Warren Buffett or Paul Volcker...

    SPITZER:  Or Warren Buffett.  Well, I love Warren Buffett.  We all do.  He also invested in some of these vehicles that had the leverage, but I think he always was a voice of modulation.

    And we needed more of that and, frankly, less of the sort of, you know, hotdog, cowboy mentality that leveraged everything up, sent it out so that people would structure deals without retaining any of the ownership.

    If you want a technical answer, all of the securitization that was done, where you had the rating agencies, you had the originators who would originate loans they knew were bad, securitize them, get AAA ratings, securitize it out into a market -- they didn't maintain any ownership.

    So, a simple rule could be, if you securitize a stream of debt, you've got to retain 10, 15, 20 percent, so you are at risk.  You evaluate deals very differently if you are actually at risk, rather than merely selling it to somebody else.

    ZAKARIA:  And that could have been part of the regulation.

    SPITZER:  Absolutely.  The power of the federal agencies to do this stuff was unlimited.

    And any time I hear the SEC say, we didn't have the power to do this or that, forget it.  They had more people, more power, more money than was necessary.  What they lacked was the creativity and the will.

    ZAKARIA:  In a sense, this is almost a greater failure of Washington than Wall Street.

    SPITZER:  Well, there have been debates -- Washington, Wall Street. 

It's one of those debates where, of course, both were at fault.

    Now, I happen, having been on the government side, to have a slightly more aggressive view of what government should do, perhaps. 

And I believe that Wall Street was at fault for fostering an ideology, and imposing an ideology, or buying its way into an ideology in Washington that said, "Let us alone.  We will self-regulate."

    So, Wall Street created this notion of self-regulation, sold it to Washington with all of its tremendous capacity through fund raising and intellectual capital.  Washington was happy enough to succumb to the temptation.

    Self-regulation was a mirage.  It was an abject failure.  Some of us were saying, it always will be a failure.

    So, Wall Street is to be blamed for creating the notion, Washington is to be blamed for buying into it.  Who's more at fault is sort of a puerile debate, but I think both parties.

    ZAKARIA:  What about the media, CNBC?  You actually know Jim Cramer.  You know all the parties involved.

    SPITZER:  Full disclosure.  Jim is a great and close friend.  And I think he took his licks from Jon Stewart last week.  And Jim said on the show, "Yes, we have to have done better."

    And I think the media -- writ large.  I mean, forget CNBC.  I think the entire media -- print media, TV media, et cetera -- did not ask the hard questions as these deals were being structured, as the bubble was inflating.

    We turned the Wall Street masters of the universe into these icons, who bestrode the universe and made no mistakes, when I think a more inquisitive attitude would have said, "Wait a minute, guys.  This won't last."

    And so, I think, yes.

    We're all at fault, which is why the search for villains is emotionally satisfying, not terribly useful.  The better effort is, OK, what do we learn?  What do we do going forward?

    ZAKARIA:  Now, a lot of people look at your prosecutions, and they say, "Look.  This was very unfair, very selective.  You would threaten these companies, therefore plunging their stock price.  In many cases you didn't get convictions.  If this is the model, it's not going to work.  It's unfair."

    SPITZER:  Well, I think they're wrong, needless to say.  But I think if you look at the cases, the analyst cases where we highlighted -- you referred to the Merrill Lynch case where, at the end, we got Merrill, Goldman, Bank of America -- all the major firms, all of the bulge-bracket firms -- to agree to an entirely new structure of doing analytical work, which was necessary for the integrity of the marketplace.

    Whether it was insurance, mutual funds, analytical work, on and on, each of the major areas we looked at, we sought to craft a solution.

    ZAKARIA:  But your real leverage was that, once you go out in the public, their share price starts dropping and...

    SPITZER:  No question about it.  And I'll give you a real example of that, and you can evaluate it as you wish, with Merrill Lynch.

    They wanted us to settle.  They would have paid some money.  But they said, you must keep all the evidence secret."

    And I said, no, my job as a public prosecutor is to explain to the public what the problems are in Wall Street.  I said, that is the only way we will get a remedy.  And I said, we must present this to the public.  It may be right, it may be wrong.

    And we didn't do this to hurt individuals.  And we took out the names of most of the individuals.  But we said, the public has to understand why the market is flawed.

    And I think it's fair to say we, several years ahead of time, were saying, be careful, beware of what is going on here.  I'm not pretending to see everything.  I'm not pretending to be smarter or better than anybody else, just saying, wait a minute.  We have seen a problem that, if not addressed, will be the downfall of the market.

    ZAKARIA:  But you got very few convictions.

    SPITZER:  No, we -- well, first of all, most of the cases were civil cases.  And there was a reason for that.  I did not believe in taking one individual and making him the subject of all the venom.  I said, this is a civil issue.  Resolve it with the company.

    I tried very hard not to vilify individuals, because it wasn't a mid-level executive who was the problem.  It was the whole structure. 

And that's why the global deal was with all the banks.

    We didn't say to individual X, you're the problem.  That's a mirage.  That is an emotional, as I said, an emotionally satisfying effort, but it would not have solved the problem.

    ZAKARIA:  And we will be back with Eliot Spitzer right after this.

    (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

    SPITZER:  I never held myself out as being anything other than human.  I have flaws, as we all do, arguably.  I failed in a very important way in my personal life, and I have paid a price for that.

    (END VIDEO CLIP)

    (COMMERCIAL BREAK)

    ZAKARIA:  And we are back with Eliot Spitzer.

    You know, there are a number of people watching who are going to say, Eliot Spitzer doesn't have credibility to talk about these issues, because of what happened over the last year with your own behavior.

    What would you say to them?

    SPITZER:  I would say to them that I never held myself out as being anything other than human.  I have flaws, as we all do, arguably.  I failed in a very important way in my personal life, and I have paid a price for that.

    I have spent a year with my family, with my wonderful and amazing and forgiving wife and three daughters, and have rebuilt those relationships, and hope to do that as time goes on.

    I also feel that, to the extent, if I'm asked, and I can contribute to a very important conversation, I will do that as well.  That is our right, arguably our obligation as citizens.  I will do what I can, and with full awareness and heaviness of heart about what I did.

    ZAKARIA:  But it wasn't just a personal failing.  There were also legal issues involved...

    SPITZER:  Well, those were not pursued by those who decided to pursue them.

    But I have made no excuses.  I have not shirked, and I will not do so.  I failed.  I resigned my position, because I said this is the appropriate step for me to take.

    ZAKARIA:  Do you feel like you wish, watching all this, you were back in office doing something about it?

    SPITZER:  Well, obviously, I, first and foremost, hope that we can solve the problems, because the future of our economy -- and without overstating it, our nation -- is at stake here.  If I can contribute, I will do so in whatever way I can.

    Obviously, I care deeply about these issues.  They were central to what I did as attorney general.  And so, I read the papers and say, sure, these are issues that I feel deeply about.  But I am where I am, because of my own conduct.  And as I said, I make no excuses.

    ZAKARIA:  Do you imagine you could ever be back in government?

    SPITZER:  I don't think about it.  I don't worry about it.  I focus on a family, on the issues.  If I write an occasional column and speak occasionally, that is all I'm doing.

    ZAKARIA:  Eliot Spitzer, thank you for coming on.

http://primebuzz.kcstar.com/?q=node%2F17760

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

AIG a gold standard for fiascoes

Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

Friday, March 20, 2009

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner may have the "complete confidence" of President Obama, but he doesn't have mine. Ditto for Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke.

In fact, American International Group's $165 million bonus fiasco is one of the many blunders the U.S. government has made in handling the worst economic crisis of my lifetime, which has me giving serious consideration to the so-called conspiracy theorists.

My friend Norman, who studies conspiracies like a college senior cramming for a must-pass final exam, last year introduced me to the documentary America: Freedom to Fascism, late director Aaron Russo's exposé of the illegal and unconstitutional income tax and the Federal Reserve that is not federal and has no reserves.

It's a fascinating film that certainly got me thinking, if only for a while. Then the economy collapsed. The so-called experts can't fix it. And now my income tax dollars, which I'm not convinced I should be paying, are lining the pockets of the suits who got us in this mess.

Are Mr. Russo, G. Edward Griffin, author of The Creature from Jekyll Island: A Second Look at the Federal Reserve, and U.S. Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, right? They maintain that the Fed is an illegal, private banking cartel created surreptitiously by the richest and most powerful bankers in the world during a secret meeting on Jekyll Island, Ga. The Fed is not a part of the U.S. government, they say, but in cahoots - I mean partnership - with it. The Fed controls our monetary system - with no oversight from our government - and its profits are shared with financial interests around the world.

It sounds pretty far-fetched until you learn that AIG used some of its $170 billion in taxpayer bailouts to send $11.9 billion to France's Societe Generale, $11.8 billion to Deutsche Bank of Germany, and $8.5 billion to Barclays of Britain. Then you hear that Mr. Bernanke will save the day with a $1.2 trillion effort to lower mortgage rates and other consumer debt to spur spending and revive the economy. But he's doing it by spending $300 billion on government bonds and $750'billion on mortgage-backed securities guaranteed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

I'm no math whiz, but how can Fannie and Freddie guarantee anything when the U.S. government - itself broke - just bailed them out? Sounds to me like we're just printing worthless paper on top of worthless paper and spreading around the debt. In other words, fiat money, irredeemable paper currency.

It's just what Franklin Roosevelt promised wasn't happening during the Great Depression in 1933 when he ordered private citizens to turn in their gold to the Federal Reserve in exchange for pieces of paper. "We do not want and will not have another epidemic of bank failures," President Roosevelt said. "This currency is not fiat currency."

Wrong! Seems to me that if we'd stuck with gold and hadn't turned over control of the nation's money to an entity our government doesn't control, we wouldn't be in this mess.

Consider this response from former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan to a question by NewsHour's Jim Lehrer about the kind of relationship the Fed chair should have with a U.S. president. "The Federal Reserve is an independent agency, and that means basically that there is no other agency of government which can overrule actions that we take," Mr. Greenspan said. "So long as that is in place and there is no evidence that the administration or the Congress or anybody else is requesting that we do things other than what we think is the appropriate thing, then what the relationships are don't frankly matter."

In other words, don't question the agency that Mr. Bernanke admitted in 2002 caused the Great Depression. That's nerve!

Maybe it's time we stop bailing out the AIGs of the world, shut down the Fed and start over.

Conspiracy theory or not, that's change I can believe in.

http://www.palmbeachpost.com/search/content/opinion/epaper/2009/03/20/a18a_swancol_0320.html#comments

Saturday, March 21, 2009

Fannie Mae Wants More Bailout Money, plans to pay its executives $1 million Retention bonuses each

By Zachary A. Goldfarb

Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, March 19, 2009; Page D01

Fannie Mae, the federally run mortgage finance giant, plans to pay four top executives $1 million or more in retention bonuses.

The bonus plan prompted the company's federal regulator to defend compensation decisions the government made when it took over Fannie Mae in September. It comes as American International Group faces public outrage over $165 million in bonuses it awarded last week.

Fannie Mae, which suffered $59 billion in losses last year, has requested $15 billion in taxpayer assistance and has said it expects to need plenty more.

Chief Operating Officer Michael Williams is in line for a $1.3 million bonus. Deputy Chief Financial Officer David Hisey is slated for $1.1 million, while executive vice presidents Thomas Lund, responsible for the mortgage business, and Kenneth Bacon, responsible for housing and community development, are each in line for $1 million.

A fifth of this money was paid in 2008. Executives will receive about 60 percent of the remaining funds this year and, depending on performance, as much as 40 percent next year. These executives earned salaries of $385,000 to $676,000 last year.

Fannie Mae chief executive Herbert M. Allison did not take a salary or bonus in 2008. He received $60,000 largely to compensate for his move to Washington to run the company. He was offered a $900,000 base salary. His 2009 salary and bonus haven't been set.

When it took over Fannie Mae, the government instituted a retention program. Under the program, employees deemed crucial to the company's efforts to carry out government housing plans are eligible to receive retention payments, but some may not receive any.

"Many employees have received significant pay reductions, with no bonuses for 2008 performance and all past stock grants are virtually worthless. This retention program is pay for specific efforts underway now to meet national goals," Federal Housing Finance Agency director James B. Lockhart III said in a statement.

"We started to design a retention plan with a compensation consultant even before the [take over] because it was critical to retain their most important asset -- their employees -- who are being asked to play a vital role in the nation's economic recovery," he said. "As the previous senior management teams left, it would have been catastrophic to lose the next layers down and other highly experienced employees."

FHFA signs off on all major compensation decisions. Freddie Mac hasn't disclosed its retention payments, yet. It is expected to do so in coming months, and its payments should resemble those at Fannie Mae.

Insiders say that a few hundred people at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will receive bonuses, and the average bonus should be in the mid-five figures.

It's a big contrast to what Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac employees experienced in the past, when their shares were skyrocketing and stock-based awards were a popular way to compensate employees, from entry-level secretaries to senior staff.

Many of those employees lost small fortunes when the companies' shares collapsed. Stock grants play no role in current compensation practices at the firms.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/03/18/AR2009031803188.html?hpid=topnews