WASHINGTON(AP)
Shares of mortgage finance companies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac
continued their plunge Wednesday as investors are increasingly
convinced that the stocks will drop to zero if the government bails
out the troubled companies.
Fannie Mae's chief executive sought to reassure investors
that no bailout is imminent.
"They haven't offered anything and we haven't asked
for anything," Fannie Mae CEO Daniel Mudd said in a public
radio interview Wednesday morning. "I don't anticipate
that they will do that."
The two government-sponsored companies, the largest source of
funding for home mortgages in the U.S., have struggled with soaring
losses from mortgage defaults. Washington-based Fannie Mae and
McLean, Va.-based Freddie Mac, have lost a combined $3.1 billion
between April and June, and investors fear the losses will continue
to grow.
Shares in the mortgage finance giants tumbled Wednesday to the
lowest levels in nearly two decades. Fannie Mae stock fell 90
cents, or 15 percent, to $5.11 in morning trading after earlier
hitting a low of $4.74. Shares of Freddie Mac fell 79 cents, or
18.9 percent, to $3.38 after earlier hitting a low of $2.84.
Fannie's stock is down 87 percent so far this year, while
Freddie has lost 90 percent of its value.
"They don't have insight on how bad losses are going to
get," Friedman, Billings, Ramsey & Co. analyst Paul Miller
said in an interview Tuesday.
The Bush administration on July 13 unveiled a plan to provide
unlimited government loans to the two mortgage giants and to
purchase stock in the two companies if needed for a period covering
the next 18 months. Congress ultimately adopted those proposals as
part of a broader bill that also seeks to help keep 400,000
households from losing their homes to foreclosure.
Critics charged that the open-ended nature of the support for
Fannie and Freddie would expose taxpayers to billions of dollars of
potential losses.
Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson has insisted that the package
needed to be structured in this way to boost financial markets'
confidence as the companies deal with mounting losses from
mortgages that have gone bad.
But investors have grown worried in recent days, following a
Barron's magazine article citing an anonymous Bush
administration source, reported that the government is pressing the
companies to raise more money to guard against losses but
doesn't expect them to succeed.
The Barron's report said the government is likely to buy
preferred stock in the companies, wiping out common shareholders.
Paulson has declined to comment on whether a rescue is
imminent.
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