Business Management

Obama’s mortgage-market reform plan calls for winding down Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac

The Obama administration’s long-awaited proposal for reforming the U.S. mortgage market calls for shuttering both Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac over a period of five years or more. The two agencies, along with the Federal Housing Administration, currently provide more than 90 percent of housing finance.
Feb. 11, 2011

The Obama administration’s long-awaited proposal for reforming the U.S. mortgage market calls for shuttering both Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac over a period of five years or more. The two agencies, along with the Federal Housing Administration, currently provide more than 90 percent of housing finance, according to a Washington Post report on Obama’s plan.

In a white paper released this morning, the Obama administration broadly outlines three options for replacing Fannie and Freddie:

  • Establish a government agency that would insure mortgages all the time
  • Create a government entity that would only step in during times of market crisis
  • Have zero government backing for home loans beyond FHA.

Regardless of the proposed plan, Obama warned that any mortgage-market reform would most likely lead to higher mortgage rates, higher fees and down payments for home loans, and the potential for reduced availability of the 30-year fixed rate mortgage.

Other discussion points of the proposal:

  • Scale back FHA by limiting the size of loans it can provide and increasing fees and down payment amount
  • Make government-backed mortgages more costly so that the private mortgage market can compete
  • Focus on providing rental housing for low- and moderate-income communities

Read the Washington Post report.

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