MUST READ: FNMA/FMCC Shareholders Politely Ask For
Post# of 1629
11 Jun 2013 at 12:16 PM
By Matt Levine
There’s an alternative theory of the 2007-2008 financial crisis in which it was just a minor hiccup that would have worked out fine for all concerned if the meddling U.S. government hadn’t been so trigger-happy in bailing out basically sound but momentarily embarrassed financial institutions .1 I mean, you probably won’t actually run into anyone who believes this theory, because it is a pretty loony theory. And yet! It keeps coming up in court, which I guess means the courts are full of loonies, QED.
Obviously Hank Greenberg is the most vocal and delightful proponent of this theory, since he’s been suing the government for ever and ever for taking over AIG when AIG actually would have been just fine with a little eleven-digit low-interest loan from the government. But Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac shareholders have come on strong of late, with weird lobbying for re-privatization of their shares and, now, a lawsuit filed yesterday seeking $41 billion in damages over their bailout.
The theory here should be familiar if you’ve been following along with AIG; it goes something like this:
Fannie and Freddie were basically fine, a little banged up maybe but definitely going to survive perfectly well on their own;
but the government, for reasons of its own, came to their boards and said “we need to take you over, get 79.99% of your equity , screw your shareholders, and run your business for our purposes”;
the government did not have statutory authority to do these things, nor did it have shareholders’ best interests at heart;
but, what, were the boards going to do, say no?;
so the boards approved a takeover and that was unfair to shareholders, and an unconstitutional taking of private property, so the shareholders should get their money back.
Blah I guess whatever. There are important differences between the AIG and Frannie cases. For one thing, this suit sort of acknowledges that Fannie and Freddie had run into some unpleasantness through their massive purchases of risky mortgages , but then blames the government – in the form of Congress and Frannie’s regulators – for forcing them to do so to prop up the housing market.2 Others would disagree,3 and the evidence suggests “allowing” more than “forcing.” “Fannie and Freddie lobbied their regulators to let them take more risk, then did” is less sympathetic than “the regulators forced Fannie and Freddie to take more risk.”4
For another, while Greenberg’s AIG lawsuit makes the pretty amazing argument that AIG would have been fine if it had only received that eleven-digit loan , and that the unfair part of the bailout was not its existence but the government’s insistence on also taking equity, the Frannie lawsuits argue instead that Fannie and Freddie would have been fine without any government support at all:
At the time the conservatorships were imposed, not only were the Companies adequately capitalized, … but each company’s capital was substantially in excess of its capital requirements. Moreover, each company’s ability to raise capital from the public equity and private capital markets was more than sufficient to allow it to absorb any potential future losses, particularly in the Companies had been allowed to offer terms to potential investors as favorable as those demanded by the Government in exchange for the extremely costly capital it provided upon taking control of the Companies.
“We didn’t need a bailout” is I guess a better argument, legally, than “we needed a bailout but yours was a little too expensive,” but also probably less plausible? Some people, for instance, thought at the time, and think now, that Fannie and Freddie were insolvent when they were taken over, and that even if they weren’t they were well on their way there.5 And “we would have been fine raising billions of dollars in private capital in September 2008? is the sort of argument that it is best to make, um, a long time away from September 2008. Preferably a long time before, rather than after, but you go to war with the imaginary capital markets you have, or something.
But the ultimate point of these lawsuits are the same: the boards of Fannie and Freddie, like that of AIG, were coerced into agreeing to a shareholder-fleecing government takeover, and that government takeover may have been good for the world but was nonetheless bad for private company shareholders.6 Which, for AIG, is, like, an argument, anyway.
But for Fannie and Freddie it seems a little weird. These were “government sponsored enterprises” with a public purposes, and an implicit government guarantee. The implicit deal was, I suppose, that Frannie’s private shareholders got the benefit of that implicit guarantee in the form of cheaper financing costs and more profits during good times, and in exchange they ran the risk of being treated as something slightly less sacrosanct than private property owners in bad times.
I mean, implicitly. Who knows what anyone thought the actual deal was; that tradeoff wasn’t spelled out anywhere, and the plaintiffs here point to lots of Congressional, regulatory and other statements seemingly designed to reassure Frannie equity holders that their investment was safe and their companies were private companies rather than instrumentalities of the government. Maybe someone believed those statements.
It’s not immediately obvious what the relationship is between this lawsuit and the people who now own Fannie and Freddie preferred and common shares and are lobbying to have the companies re-privatized. Lots of those shares have changed hands, suggesting that the plaintiffs who lost money on Frannie shares in 2008 are mostly different from the current shareholders standing to make money on a re-privatization. Casual Googling suggests those shares are generally up today after the lawsuit was filed.
But if you were in Congress or Treasury and pondering whether or not to re-privatize Fannie and Freddie, wouldn’t this suit be a reminder of what a bad idea that would be? Fannie and Freddie were designed to carry out a public purpose while also making money for private shareholders. When those goals conflicted, the public purpose won and the private shareholders were thrown into the abyss. If you’re the government: that’s perfect. Except now those shareholders are suing, as shareholders tend to do. If you’re the government: why would you set yourself up for more of that?