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Accounting Rule To Ease Sting Of Changing Fannie,Freddie Loans


WASHINGTON (Dow Jones)
Federal Housing Finance Agency Director James B. Lockhart said a looming accounting change will make it less painful for Fannie Mae (FNM) and Freddie Mac (FRE) to modify loans.
The government-controlled mortgage-finance giants are a key part of the administration's strategy to help strapped homeowners. But accounting rules require them to take a 60% write-down on loans they purchase out of pools of mortgage-backed securities to modify them, Lockhart said Thursday in Washington.
That will change on Jan. 1, when a new Financial Accounting Standards Board rule will take effect, forcing Fannie and Freddie to bring the mortgage-backed securities they guarantee onto their balance sheets.
"With a stroke of a pen, the FASB is going to increase their balance sheets from $2 trillion to over $5 trillion," Lockhart said.

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El Genio dijo...

Federal Housing Finance Agency Director James B. Lockhart acknowledged that he is concerned that rising mortgage rates could deal a blow to the Obama administration's plan to help strapped homeowners.

"Certainly it is an issue. We're certainly seeing a slowdown in refinancings, you can see the numbers," Lockhart said in response to a reporter's question Thursday.

A key part of the administration's plan aims to help underwater homeowners refinance to take advantage of low mortgage rates. But rates have shot up to well above 5% since the program was announced. So far, 80,000 homeowners have received refinancings under the program.

"There's a big pipeline so it probably won't hit for a couple months," Lockhart said. "But at some point, if we don't see some moderation of rates, it could have an impact."

Lockhart, the regulator for Fannie Mae (FNM) and Freddie Mac (FRE), confirmed the administration is mulling tweaks to the program so homeowners with mortgages worth more than 105% of their home's value could qualify for refinancings.

He declined to say what the new loan-to-value limit would be, but said that loans with a 125% loan-to-value ratio could be sold into special pools known as Real Estate Mortgage Investment Conduits, or REMICs.

Lockhart said Fannie and Freddie were barred by their charter from engaging in "warehouse" lending, which nonbank mortgage lenders rely on for capital to make fresh loans. Lenders have seen their warehouse lines of credit cut due to the credit crunch.

Lockhart said Fannie and Freddie could help cash-strapped lenders by agreeing upfront to purchase the loans before they are originated.