From Deseret News archives:

Takeover looms for mortgage giants

Published: Sunday, Sept. 7, 2008 12:20 a.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
The details of those plans continued to be worked out on Saturday, when the Federal Reserve chairman, Ben S. Bernanke, met with Paulson, Lockhart and key company executives in Washington.

While Freddie Mac's accounting woes make it easier for regulators to force the company into conservatorship, there was more resistance from Fannie Mae, according to people familiar with the discussions. Once the government took action against Freddie Mac, however, confidence in Fannie Mae would certainly waver. Given Fannie Mae's declining financial condition, the company has few options but to concede to the government's demands.

Both companies have the option of challenging the conservatorship and asking for a judicial review.

Accusations of questionable accounting are not new for either company. Earlier this decade, both companies paid large fines and ousted their top executives after accounting scandals.

Freddie Mac's current chief executive and chairman, Richard F. Syron, joined the company in 2003 after the former managers revealed they had manipulated earnings by almost $5 billion.

Story continues below
The following year Fannie Mae's chief executive, Daniel H. Mudd, was promoted to the top spot after that company was accused of accounting errors totaling $6.3 billion. People familiar with Treasury's plan say that both men, as well as other executives, will be forced to leave the companies.

The accounting issues that brought so much urgency to the bailout appear to center on Freddie Mac's capital cushion, the assets that regulators require them to keep on hand to cover losses.

The methods used to bolster that cushion have caused serious concerns among the companies' regulators, outside auditors and some investors. For example, while Freddie Mac's portfolio contains many securities backed by subprime loans, made to the riskiest borrowers, and alt-A loans, one step up on the risk ladder, the company has not written down the value of many of those loans to reflect current market prices.

Executives have said that they intended to hold the loans to maturity, meaning they would be worth more, and they needed not write down their value. But other financial institutions have written down similar securities, to comply with "mark-to-market" accounting rules. Freddie Mac holds roughly twice as many of those securities as Fannie Mae.

Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae have also inflated their financial positions by relying on deferred-tax assets — credits accumulated over the years that can be used to offset future profits. Fannie maintains that its worth is increased by $36 billion through such credits, and Freddie argues that it has a $28 billion benefit.

Recent comments

Is that the show just couldn't continue like the fat cats wanted it...

The Main Problem | Sept. 8, 2008 at 12:41 a.m.

Brother Chuck Schroeder is why conservative logic seems convoluted....

Thanks, Ignorant People | Sept. 7, 2008 at 1:29 p.m.

We are all Americans and need towear the same hat,
McCain said that....

Stop this stupitity | Sept. 7, 2008 at 12:20 p.m.

previousnext

Latest comments

I've been in that cave and I've been in the Birth Canal section of the cave....

Tiger Woods was unconscious

Hello Tiger Woods, I am relieved to know that you are doing well and on to a...

I am laughing so hard right now from looking at the picture of the BYU Fan...

Affluence abounds in Utah

if you figure an annual health care cost of $14,244 per family (towers perrin...

Letters: Free our captive children

Dude, seriously, how do you do it? I can't get the DN to publish MOST of my...

Utes to get tested by Illinois

I have know Marshall Henderson (G) since he was in elementary school. He and...

Rivalry Week is highly profane

There are rowdy BYU and Utah fans. Try to be decent... it is just a game.

You guys don't understand. Not only should our thoughts and prayers be with...

I guess leaving the body in there is probably the best thing to do, and a...

It ain't over till it's over. Mayhap the young man will return to the ball...

Advertisements