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FNM/FRE:财政部长又放话-持股者活该

(2008-07-12 15:55:22) 下一个
FNM/FRE:财政部长又放话-持股者活该

真耶?假耶?还把时间都说明白了,下个星期一早晨?

有把话说的这么坦诚明白的么?有道是兵不厌诈!

Reuters
Paulson cool to shield Fannie/Freddie investors: report
Saturday July 12, 5:15 pm ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson is insisting that if Fannie Mae (NYSE:FNM - News) and Freddie Mac (NYSE:FRE - News) need rescuing, the plan should not benefit shareholders of the giant mortgage finance firms, the Wall Street Journal said on Saturday. (评:注意,这里说法已与昨天星期五不一样了。但明确号召,股民们卖吧)

Citing people familiar with the matter, the newspaper said a possible intervention by the Bush administration to help the government-sponsored mortgage enterprises could happen as early as Monday morning. (评:连时间都说明了,大伙星期一早上卖,要不就晚了)

That is around the time Freddie Mac is due to sell $3 billion worth of short-term debt, a barometer of market appetite for its securities.

A Treasury Department spokesman called the article "thinly sourced speculation" but declined to elaborate.

Paulson indicated on Friday the administration had no plans to nationalize the congressionally chartered but privately owned companies, which finance nearly half of U.S. homes. (评:等着你自打嘴巴!)

Shares of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, trading at a fraction of their value a year ago, fell sharply this week as fears mounted they would not have enough capital to make it through the worst U.S. housing crisis since the Great Depression.

Home foreclosures, falling prices, tighter credit for buyers and the overall state of the U.S. economy have become major issues in the campaign for the presidential and congressional elections in November.

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac said on Friday their finances were sound enough to withstand the housing crisis and government officials scrambled to make statements to restore confidence in them.

The abrupt erosion of the share values of the two companies raised the specter of a government rescue operation similar to the sale in March of failing investment bank Bear Stearns.

One analyst said the crisis of confidence points to risks associated with having two large private firms play such a central role in U.S. housing markets. (评:问什么不点明这两家持有特许经营权?本来就是这么设计的!)

"What they do is more needed than ever," said Richard Bove, an analyst with Labenburg Thalman. "Get rid of them and create new structures that will perform their functions more efficiently, with more accountability and without the distraction of the equity markets."(评:说得轻巧!)

The Wall Street Journal said Paulson does not want to help shareholders of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac because it would create "moral hazard" -- encouraging greater risk-taking because of an expectation of a government safety net. (评:这帮人还有道德?)

Paulson took a similar stance during the Bear Stearns intervention, arguing the government's role in facilitating the firm's sale was needed to prevent broader economic carnage but that its shareholders should be hit financially. (评:这话还说得不明白?股民们,赶紧卖,赶紧放空!)

BONDHOLDERS BENEFIT

But any intervention could benefit bondholders by strengthening perceptions of government backing of the firms.

"Equity holders would suffer greatly while the position of senior debt holders would actually be enhanced by the more explicit government support," JPMorgan analysts Alex Roever and Cie-Jai Brown wrote in a note to clients.

The New York Times and the Wall Street Journal reported this week that the government has discussed plans to deal with the failure of either company, including a federal takeover.

Appetite for Freddie Mac's debt due to be sold on Monday could be a critical indicator of investor confidence next week.

"The deal will do OK because it's pretty clear the debt will be good," said Andrew Harding, head of taxable fixed income at Allegiant Asset Management in Cleveland. "The probability of government intervention is very, very high."

Russia, a holder of about $100 billion of U.S. agency debt, including securities of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, said on Saturday it had no immediate plans to reallocate.

Paulson indicated on Friday a bailout was unlikely. He said the administration's main focus was supporting the agencies "in their current form as they carry out their important mission."

Connecticut Sen. Chris Dodd, who heads the Senate Banking Committee, said on Friday the Fed was considering allowing Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to borrow directly from the central bank.

The anxiety surrounding the health of the financial system was heightened all the more late on Friday when U.S. banking regulators swooped in to take over mortgage lender IndyMac Bancorp Inc (NYSE:IMB - News), marking one of the largest bank failures in U.S. history and the fifth bank to close this year.

Freddie Mac said it had options to manage capital, such as cutting its dividend, and was not on the threshold of conservatorship. Fannie Mae said it had access to "ample sources of liquidity," noting it had issued more than $24 billion in debt this week.

(Reporting by Mark Felsenthal and Al Yoon in New York; Editing by John O'Callaghan)

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