![]() Return to the Article |
If there really is a housing bubble, both Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae presumably would take a major hit. Is there any alternative to a government bailout if they start down the tubes? I recently found an interesting article by law professor Richard Carnell has lots of good information on the risks we taxpayers are bearing because of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac's borrowing habit and lousy corporate governance. He also proposes creating a mechanism for dealing with any potential insolvency on their part.This is an issue that's been flying under everybody's radar screen, but is a key issue given the state of the housing market. Carnell's article is a good introduction to this important problem.
Fannie and Freddie should have been fully privatized years ago, so that they were subject to market competition; alternatively, although less ideally, they should have been brought back into the government to be regulated more effectively. Leach was right that leaving them as they were was a disaster waiting to happen. And now it looms larger than ever, with potential disastrous implications, as Tom Petruno explains:
On Friday, rumors swamped financial markets that the federal government would be forced to step in to aid mortgage-finance giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which together own or guarantee $5 trillion in U.S. home loans.In Wall Street's version of a bank run, investors drove shares of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to 17-year lows, signaling a gnawing lack of faith in the companies' ability to survive rising mortgage defaults without government help.