ADVERTISEMENT

Fannie-Freddie Fall as Trump Plan Shows Quick Windfall Unlikely

Fannie-Freddie Bulls Might Need Trump Win in 2020 to Mint Riches

(Bloomberg) -- The Trump Administration’s plan to release Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac from their government shackles laid out a vision that could eventually lead to hedge funds minting riches on their investments in the mortgage giants

But the Treasury Department’s proposal left much to be ironed out, signaling there might not be a windfall unless President Donald Trump wins re-election in 2020. That sentiment was palpable on Wall Street Friday with Fannie and Freddie suffering their biggest one-day drops since January.

Treasury officials acknowledged that their recommendations could take years to implement -- a timetable that would extend beyond Trump’s first term. And the report, released Thursday, left it to a politically divided Congress to handle some of the most sweeping changes.

In the months before a presidential election, legislative action typically slows to a crawl. If Trump loses, an administration led by Wall Street scourge Elizabeth Warren or even Joe Biden would be expected to scrap ideas that came from Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin.

“Post-election, the odds get a lot more complicated,” said Jim Parrott, a former housing official during the Obama administration. “If you’re an investor, you’ve got to hope Trump wins and that Mnuchin, or someone like-minded, remains at Treasury. A Democratic administration will never support a plan that enriches a few hedge funds to the tune of billions of dollars.”

The good news for Paulson & Co., Pershing Square Capital Management LP and other hedge funds that own Fannie and Freddie shares is that Treasury made it crystal clear that it wants the companies to build up their capital buffers and exit the government’s grip.

That scenario sounds a lot like something known as recap and release that hedge funds have spent millions of dollars lobbying on in Washington. That’s because it would likely lead to stock sales that enrich existing investors.

Yet Treasury’s outline calls for another, separate plan to hash out the details of how Fannie and Freddie would boost capital. Also, Treasury indicated it wants to let lawmakers take a crack at figuring out a fix before it and the companies’ regulator, the Federal Housing Finance Agency, do anything bold. Taken together, the statements suggest the process will be slow-moving.

“The report raises as many questions as it answers,” said Jaret Seiberg, an analyst at Cowen & Co. LLC. “The next six months will be key as FHFA and Treasury negotiate.”

Fannie fell 13% to $2.60 in New York trading as of 12:49 p.m., the biggest decline since January. Freddie slumped 11% to $2.49.

The two companies don’t make loans. Instead, they purchase mortgages from banks and other lenders and package them into securities. Those securities have guarantees that protect investors from the risk of homeowners defaulting. The process is central to the mortgage market.

Fannie and Freddie got into trouble when the housing market cratered in 2008, with the companies being taken over and eventually receiving $191 billion in taxpayer funds to keep them afloat. They have since become profitable again, paying out more than $300 billion in dividends to the Treasury.

The Trump administration wants the conservatorships to end because it believes the companies’ insufficient capital and market dominance mean taxpayers are at risk as long as the government has such a big footprint in the housing sector.

There is plenty for shareholders to like about the Treasury report.

Fannie and Freddie are currently limited to holding $3 billion in capital apiece to protect the companies from another housing crash.

The plan calls for increasing those buffers, which could be seen as a step toward ending what’s known as the net worth sweep -- a controversial policy implemented during the Obama administration that forces Fannie and Freddie to send nearly all their earnings to the Treasury. Hedge funds, in lawsuits that have been unsuccessful thus far, have sought to end the profit sweep because they want to see at least some of those dividend payments redirected to themselves.

In a bad sign for shareholders, the Treasury report ponders at least one method for bolstering Fannie and Freddie’s capital that hedge funds probably won’t like: putting the companies in receivership. Such a tactic, which is a form of bankruptcy, could wipe out existing shareholders, depending how it’s done.

The report is already dividing politicians on Capitol Hill, not a promising sign for quick legislation.

Senator Elizabeth Warren, the Massachusetts Democrat who’s seeking the party’s presidential nomination, called the plan a “shameful” ploy to make home-buying harder, especially for families of color. Both Senator Sherrod Brown and House Financial Services Committee Chairwoman Maxine Waters, key Democrats that the administration will need to get on board if they want to pass housing-finance legislation, also sharply criticized the plan.

Senate Banking Committee Chairman Mike Crapo, an Idaho Republican, said he prefers that Congress fix Fannie and Freddie, though he added that the Trump administration should start moving forward on “administrative reforms.”

The politics surrounding housing finance will be on display Sept. 10 when Mnuchin, FHFA Director Mark Calabria and Housing and Urban Development Director Ben Carson testify before the banking panel.

Whatever happens, the silver lining for hedge funds is that they’ve already benefited from the Trump administration’s push on Fannie and Freddie. This year alone, the companies’ share prices have more than doubled on expectations that the conservatorships will eventually end.

That has been especially good for Paulson & Co.’s John Paulson, who has a long history with Mnuchin. In 2008, they joined forces to buy troubled mortgage lender OneWest, a deal that proved lucrative for both of them.

To contact the reporters on this story: Elizabeth Dexheimer in Washington at edexheimer@bloomberg.net;Austin Weinstein in New York at aweinstein18@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Jesse Westbrook at jwestbrook1@bloomberg.net, Gregory Mott

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.