Potential ohne ENDE?
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Darüber erzählen er nichts. Ganz klar können die Wahlen und das Verfahren gegen Trump Dinge verändern...
Nur, für mich ist als Aktionär jetzt erstmal Schritt 1 dann 2 und 3 wichtig. Was Layton erzählt ist nicht unwichtig, aber für mich als Aktionär nur über 2021 hinaus wichtig...und Schritt 4 oder 5. Was ich von der Reform als Aktionär habe? Das steht in den Sternen...
Schönes WE allen...
Ist man sich sicher, dass alles in Ordnung geht, kommen auf einmal neue Bedenkenträger.Es sieht so aus, als ob überhaupt keine Linie mehr vorhanden ist. „En banc“ hat meiner Meinung nach keinen erkennbaren Einfluss auf die Politik und deren Handlanger bei F&F. Trump hat jetzt andere Sorgen. Die Macht derjenigen, welche schon immer gegen eine Entlassung von F&F waren, wird spürbar wieder stärker. Solange immer nur in „Floskeln“ geredet wird, fehlen uns die echten Chancen.
Wikipedia:
Layton studierte Wirtschaftswissenschaften am Massachusetts Institute of Technology und an der Harvard University. 29 Jahre lang war er bis 2004 beim Bankunternehmen JPMorgan Chase beschäftigt, dessen Vizevorsitzender er in den letzten Jahren vor seinem Weggang war.[1] Layton leitet seit 2012 die Hypothekenbank Freddie Mac
und generell bei Langeweile in Ermangelung neuer Infos gibts hier öfter was zu lesen:
https://investorshub.advfn.com/Fannie-Mae-FNMA-13035/
Geld bleibt im Haus und Kurs steigt. Vermutlich erstmal nur mit Letter Agreement...mehr wäre geil...
@fully, die erste Kuh fliegt bald...
Aber wer will schon gerne noch länger warten!
Ja, Kühe fliegen bald! :)
Fannie will be permitted to retain earnings until its capital buffer hits $25 billion, while Freddie will be allowed to hold $20 billion, the Treasury Department and the Federal Housing Finance Agency announced Monday. Last year, Fannie reported net income of $16 billion and Freddie made $9.2 billion, signaling it could take more than a year for the companies to reach the administration’s new goal.
Treasury and FHFA, Fannie and Freddie’s regulator, also committed to making more changes to the bailout agreements that were struck after the companies were rescued with taxpayer funds at the height of the 2008 financial crisis.
The agencies said they intend to make additional tweaks to Fannie and Freddie’s capital structures, as well. The moves are all part of an effort -- outlined in a plan released by Treasury earlier this month -- to end the companies’ decade long conservatorships and return them to the private market.
Read More: Trump Fannie-Freddie Plan Urges Ending Decade of U.S. Rule
“These modifications are an important step toward implementing Treasury’s recommended reforms that will define a limited role for the federal government in the housing finance system and protect taxpayers against future bailouts,” Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said in a statement.
The change, which has been telegraphed by FHFA Director Mark Calabria and Mnuchin for weeks, marks one of the biggest changes for Fannie and Freddie since they were made wards of the state. Under the companies’ current bailout agreements, they are restricted from holding more than $3 billion in capital apiece, much less than they would need to survive outside government control. Instead of retaining earnings, they send their profits each quarter to the Treasury -- a process known as the net worth sweep.
But even at the levels outlined in Monday’s statement, Fannie and Freddie would still be far short of the capital cushions that most everyone agrees are required. Calabria and Mnuchin have both said the companies will need to raise private capital, potentially through a share sale. One way to interpret Monday’s announcement is as a suspension of the net worth sweep.
With much still to be sorted out, it’s unclear how soon hedge funds and other investors that own Fannie and Freddie stock might make windfalls on their stakes. And if a Democrat beats President Donald Trump in the 2020 election next November, Calabria and Mnuchin’s plans would likely be scrapped.
‘Significant Challenges’
“There are still some significant challenges to recapitalization," KBW analyst Brian Gardner said in a note earlier this month. “Recapitalization is unlikely to happen until after the 2020 election and then it will obviously be dependent to a large degree on the outcome of the election."
Still, Fannie and Freddie shares have rallied this year on Wall Street optimism that the Trump administration is making progress.
Fannie and Freddie don’t make loans. Instead they keep the mortgage market humming by buying loans from banks and other lenders and packaging them into securities. Bond investors consider the companies’ mortgage securities to be extremely safe because they have guarantees in case homebuyers default on their loans. The process provides liquidity for home purchases and keeps borrowing rates low.
Read More: Fannie and Freddie Died But Were Reborn, Profitably
The government took control of Fannie and Freddie when the housing market tanked in 2008, eventually injecting them with more than $187 billion. Their bailout agreements originally called for Fannie and Freddie to pay 10% dividends each quarter to the Treasury, but in 2012 the government changed the terms to sweep nearly all of the companies’ profits. In 2017, Treasury and FHFA amended that agreement to allow the companies to retain $3 billion in earnings apiece.
Under the agreement announced Monday, the amount of a senior preferred stock of Fannie and Freddie that is owned by Treasury will increase by $22 billion and $17 billion respectively, according to the statement.
The change announced Monday in some way kicks the can down the road until FHFA and Treasury are prepared make more sweeping changes. Calabria has indicated that the process of ending the companies’ conservatorships will take some time. In a Bloomberg Television interview earlier this month, he predicted that the companies probably won’t be ready to seek private capital until early 2021.
“The enterprises are leveraged nearly 1,000-to-1, ensuring they would fail during an economic downturn -- exposing taxpayers once again,” Calabria said in a Monday statement. The revised agreement with Treasury is “an important milestone on the path to reform.”
https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/sm786
September 30, 2019
WASHINGTON – The U.S. Department of the Treasury (Treasury) and the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) today announced that they had agreed to modifications to the Preferred Stock Purchase Agreements (PSPAs) that will permit Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to retain additional earnings in excess of the $3 billion capital reserves currently permitted by their PSPAs. Under the modifications announced today, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will be permitted to maintain capital reserves of $25 billion and $20 billion, respectively. These changes to the PSPAs were recommended in the Treasury Housing Reform Plan (Plan) released on September 5, 2019.
“These modifications are an important step toward implementing Treasury’s recommended reforms that will define a limited role for the Federal Government in the housing finance system and protect taxpayers against future bailouts,” said U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven T. Mnuchin.
To compensate Treasury for the dividends that it would have received absent these modifications, Treasury’s liquidation preferences for its Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac preferred stock will gradually increase by the amount of the additional capital reserves until the liquidation preferences increase by $22 billion for Fannie Mae and $17 billion for Freddie Mac.
Treasury and each of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac also agreed to negotiate an additional amendment to the PSPAs that would further enhance taxpayer protections by adopting covenants that are broadly consistent with the recommendations for administrative reforms contained in the Plan.
The Plan also recommended that Treasury and FHFA develop recapitalization plans for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac after identifying and assessing the full range of strategic options. Subsequent amendments to the PSPAs may be appropriate to facilitate the implementation of any eventual recapitalization plans.
Copy of the Fannie Mae agreement.
https://home.treasury.gov/system/files/136/...pital%20Agreement_0.pdf
Copy of the Freddie Mac Agreement.
https://home.treasury.gov/system/files/136/...pital%20Agreement_0.pdf
Auf geht's!
Der erste wichtige Schritt war es doch, dass die Gewinne in FF bleiben.
Das ist nun passiert.
In 10 min öffnet USA, dann geht da die Rakete ab, oder die Kühe...
Für mich äußerst gute Nachrichten.
Aber das soll keine Aufforderung sein, jeder ist für sich selbst verantwortlich!
aber fnma muss das ja nicht zutreffen;-)
allen viel erfolg diese woche........