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This Congressional Budget Office (CBO) paper, prepared at the request of Congressmen Christopher Shays and Edward Markey, analyzes the likely economic effects of a proposal to repeal Fannie Mae's and Freddie Mac's exemptions from the Securities and Exchange Commission's registration and disclosure requirements. In keeping with CBO's mandate to provide objective and impartial analysis, this report makes no recommendations. David Torregrosa of CBO's Microeconomic and Financial Studies Division conducted the analysis, with contributions from Deborah Lucas, under the direction of Marvin Phaup and Roger Hitchner. Brian Doherty, Patrick Lawler, Forrest Pafenberg, David Pearl, and Robert S. Seiler Jr. of the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight; Ron Feldman of the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis; Wayne Passmore of the Federal Reserve Board; and Mario Ugoletti of the Department of the Treasury provided helpful reviews. Charles Capone, William Gainer, Doug Hamilton, Arlene Holen, Ken Johnson, Angelo Mascaro, Robert Murphy, and Jennifer Smith--all of CBO--made useful suggestions. In addition, staff members of the Securities and Exchange Commission, Fannie Mae, and Freddie Mac provided assistance, as did Susan Woodward of Sand Hill Econometrics, Anne Canfield of the Consumer Mortgage Coalition, Andrew Davidson of Andrew Davidson & Co., and Mitch Flack of Metropolitan West Asset Management. Edward Cowan and John Skeen edited the paper, and Christian Spoor proofread it. Rae Roy produced drafts of the manuscript, and Kathryn Winstead prepared the paper for publication. Annette Kalicki produced the electronic versions for CBO's Web site. Douglas Holtz-Eakin
SummaryFannie Mae and Freddie Mac are government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs), established and granted special exemptions and status by federal statute. Their primary purpose is to facilitate the flow of funds from the capital markets to finance housing. Congressmen Christopher Shays and Edward Markey have proposed repealing one of Fannie Mae's and Freddie Mac's privileges as GSEs: the exemptions from the Securities and Exchange Commission's (SEC's) registration and disclosure requirements. Enactment of that legislation, the Uniform Securities Disclosure Act (which was introduced but not adopted in the 107th Congress), would subject those GSEs to the legal requirements that apply to other publicly traded companies and to other issuers of private mortgage-backed securities (MBSs). Accordingly, those GSEs would be required to pay registration fees and to disclose information, as specified by the SEC, about their securities. Inasmuch as the new fees would amount to less than $25 per mortgage, most of the effects of repealing the exemptions would result from the new requirements for the GSEs to register their securities and to disclose information. Three types of GSE securities would be subject to the new requirements: common and preferred stock, debt, and MBSs. Following the introduction of the legislation to repeal the exemptions, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have taken steps to comply voluntarily with some of the requirements that would result from enactment. Specifically:
Registering those securities is expected to have little effect on the prices of the GSEs' stock because the enterprises were already disclosing detailed information on their overall financial condition and performance. Because investors in corporate debt rely on much the same information as equity investors, any new disclosures that would accompany the registration of debt would also have little effect on the prices of those securities. However, the new voluntary disclosures for MBSs may affect the market prices of those securities if they enable investors to predict more accurately the speed at which the mortgages will be paid off. In fact, the uncertain rate at which homeowners refinance or sell their homes and prepay their mortgage balances, or prepayment risk, is an important factor affecting the value of individual issues of MBSs. But whether the net effect will be higher or lower security prices is uncertain. To the extent that the new information is useful in identifying MBS issues with above- or below-average prepayment risk, the prices of those securities would vary more widely--some rising, others falling, and many staying the same--reflecting differences in the characteristics of mortgage pools that affect prepayments and the value of the securities. Increased disclosures about individual pools could also change investors' perceptions about the quality of the MBSs they are buying and perhaps reduce the discount resulting from a perceived risk of purchasing securities that (in terms of prepayment risk) are of below-average quality. A reduction in that "lemons" discount would raise the average price of MBSs. Added disclosures by the GSEs could, however, cause some segmentation of the market for MBSs by prepayment risk. Rather than being valued as if prepayment risk were virtually the same for all issues of the same type (for example, securities based on a pool of 30-year fixed-rate mortgages) with the same interest rate and age, prices might reflect whether prepayments were expected to occur at below-average, average, or above-average rates. Finer differentiation of securities by risk of prepayment could lead to smaller volumes in submarkets, which could reduce liquidity and thereby lower prices for MBSs. The potentially offsetting effects of higher prices from a smaller lemons discount and lower prices from reduced market liquidity make the net effect on average prices ambiguous but probably small. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have not elected to register their debt or MBS issues voluntarily. Voluntary disclosure is not equivalent to mandatory requirements to which the GSEs would be subject under the Shays-Markey bill. That legislation would make the GSEs' debt and MBSs subject to enforced disclosure requirements and fees and would reduce the enterprises' future discretion. Any further effects of that legislation on the GSEs' securities would depend on the specifics of the implementing regulations issued by the SEC.
IntroductionFannie Mae and Freddie Mac are government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs), established by federal law in 1968 and 1970, respectively, to overcome then-existing legal and institutional impediments to the flow of funds for housing.(1) They act as financial intermediaries, raising funds in the capital markets and channeling the proceeds to lenders, who in turn provide financing for their customers. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are restricted to financing "conforming" mortgages, which are high-quality loans secured by residential real estate whose original principal amount is no greater than the conforming ceiling--$322,700 for single-family mortgages in 2003.(2) Loans above that limit are called "jumbo" loans and are bundled and sold in the capital markets by private issuers as "private-label" securities. Although the GSEs receive special benefits from the government and are restricted in the mortgages that they can finance, they are owned by private investors, to whom they have a fiduciary responsibility. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac supply funds to mortgage lenders in two ways. First, they borrow money by selling corporate debt securities and use the funds to purchase mortgages and mortgage-backed securities (MBSs). They profit from that activity because the income that they earn on those assets exceeds the interest that they must pay on debt plus their operating costs. Second, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac guarantee investors against credit losses on securities backed by pools of conforming mortgages. Those GSE-guaranteed mortgage-backed securities can be held as investments by the sellers of the loans (in a "swap" transaction) or sold to investors, including Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac themselves.(3) The sale of pools of mortgages, packaged as standardized MBSs, provides lenders with a ready supply of mortgage financing. The GSEs receive fees from guaranteeing timely payment of principal and interest to the investors in the MBSs. (For more details, see Box 1.)
The Benefits of GSE StatusCurrent law treats the GSEs as instrumentalities of the federal government, rather than as fully private entities. As a consequence, they are afforded exemptions from many taxes, fees, and regulations; and for many purposes, their securities are treated as government securities. For Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, GSE status starts with their federal statutory charter, which exempts them from state and local income taxes (but not federal taxes or local property taxes) and enables them to use the Federal Reserve as their fiscal agent. In addition, the U.S. Treasury is authorized to lend $2.25 billion to each enterprise either through purchases of its securities or through direct lending. Like Treasury debt, debt issued by the GSEs is eligible for use by banks as collateral for both public deposits (for example, the Treasury's deposits)(4) and loans from Federal Reserve banks, for unlimited investment by federally chartered and insured banks and thrifts, and for purchase by the Federal Reserve in its open-market operations.(5) Finally, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac--along with the Federal Home Loan Banks and the Farm Credit System (but not the Federal Agricultural Mortgage Corporation, which is known as "Farmer Mac")--are exempt by law from the registration and disclosure requirements that the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) imposes on nearly all other large privately owned issuers of publicly traded securities.(6) Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are also the only issuers of publicly traded stock that are exempt. If Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were federal, rather than government-sponsored, agencies, those provisions would be unremarkable. But the enterprises are privately owned entities that have a possibility of insolvency. Although Fannie Mae is financially strong now, it experienced a series of losses in the early 1980s that could have caused the failure of a purely private firm.(7) The statutory provision for the U.S. Treasury to lend to the GSEs in time of financial distress acknowledges the risk of failure. Indeed, the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight (OFHEO), the safety and soundness regulator of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, was established to control GSEs' risks. The GSEs receive two distinct but related benefits from their sponsored status.(8) First, regulatory and tax exemptions reduce their operating costs. Second, and far more important, their treatment in federal law is interpreted by investors as implying that the credit risk of GSE debt and MBSs is comparable to that of U.S. Treasury debt, which is regarded as the least risky debt in the financial markets.(9) As a consequence, GSEs' debt issues are traded in the market for federal agencies' obligations, where interest rates are somewhat higher than those on Treasury debt but below those on the highest-quality private securities. A Legislative Proposal to Repeal the GSEs' SEC ExemptionsThe Uniform Securities Disclosure Act, or H.R. 4071--introduced on March 20, 2002, by Congressmen Christopher Shays and Edward Markey--would repeal Fannie Mae's and Freddie Mac's exemptions from the SEC's registration and disclosure requirements.(10)Accordingly, the two GSEs would be required to pay registration fees and to disclose information as specified by the SEC about their securities, just as other publicly traded companies and other issuers of private MBSs do. The bill does not include changes to other special provisions of law that favor the GSEs, nor does it refer to the Federal Home Loan Banks or the Farm Credit System, two GSEs that share the exemption on debt issues but that do not issue publicly traded stock or MBSs.(11) On July 12, 2002, prior to legislative action on H.R. 4071, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac reached an agreement with the SEC and OFHEO to register their common stock. Although registration was voluntary, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac cannot terminate it. In addition, voluntary registration triggers mandatory disclosures and the SEC's review and enforcement authority.(12) Fannie Mae registered its common stock when it filed its registration statement and first periodic financial report (its Form 10-K annual report, which contains audited financial statements) with the SEC on March 31, 2003, just as non-GSE firms do. Freddie Mac will register later in the year. Equity investors can obtain those filings through the SEC's electronic reporting system, known as EDGAR. In the interim, Freddie Mac's information is available on its Web site. Voluntary registration under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 rather than the Securities Act of 1933 offers the GSEs certain advantages.(13) For example, they were able to register one class of securities (common stock) without registering their preferred stock, debt, and MBSs.(14) Moreover, registrants under the Exchange Act pay no fees to the SEC. Further, with voluntary registration, not all of the legal requirements of that law may apply to the enterprises.(15) Registration of those securities is expected to have little effect on the prices of GSE stock because the enterprises were already disclosing detailed information on their overall financial condition and performance in the form of monthly, quarterly, and annual reports and detailed information statements. Under voluntary registration, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will have to make all of the disclosures mandated by the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.(16) The companies also will voluntarily disclose transactions in company stock by corporate officers and directors.(17) Voluntary compliance with the disclosure requirements for debt that would be triggered by H.R. 4071 might not be a significant burden to the enterprises because few additional disclosures would be necessary.(18) That is because investors in the enterprises' debt generally rely on the same periodic financial disclosures already made for the enterprises' stock. However, SEC registration for those securities would entail additional administrative costs and some fee expenses.
The Basics of Mortgage-Backed SecuritiesMortgage-backed securities are created when a financial institution originates mortgages and then, rather than holding the loans, pools them and sells shares of the pooled assets to investors. A mortgage-backed security differs from a debt security--an obligation of the issuer--in that it represents an ownership interest in the underlying loans. That ownership interest provides the investors a claim to a pro rata share of the interest and principal payments from a specified group of individual mortgages rather than a fixed stream of payments. Payments on MBSs vary depending on the rate at which borrowers sell their homes and pay off their loans or refinance their mortgages. The value of a mortgage-backed security depends on the credit and prepayment risk of the pool. The potential credit risk on MBSs is reduced through diversification among many borrowers and various forms of credit enhancement, including mortgage and pool insurance, and the GSEs' guarantees of payment. Fannie Mae's and Freddie Mac's guarantees are backed by the capital of the agencies. Because of the perception of an implicit federal guarantee and the fact that investors in the GSEs' MBSs have never suffered losses from default, credit risk is not a major concern for investors in this market. In contrast, credit risk is a concern for investors in private-label MBSs. Prepayment risk, which is the major source of uncertainty in the cash flows from MBSs, however, is a concern for investors in both the GSEs' and private-label MBSs. The market for the GSEs' MBSs is large and liquid. New issues have exploded. In 1990, the enterprises issued $171 billion of MBSs; in 2001, they issued $918 billion--$528 billion by Fannie Mae and $390 billion by Freddie Mac (see Figure 1). Those amounts ran far ahead of the $174 billion of new issues in the private-label market in 2001 and the $175 billion of absorption of issues guaranteed by the federally owned Government National Mortgage Association, or Ginnie Mae.(19) At more than $2 trillion, the GSEs' outstanding MBSs are equal to about two-thirds of the U.S. public debt. Even though the enterprises are major investors in their own MBSs, retaining more than $730 billion in their portfolios, holdings by other investors exceed $1.5 trillion (see Table 1).
Prepayment RiskMortgage borrowers can generally prepay all or part of their debt at any time without penalty. That option for borrowers exposes investors in MBSs to a risk that they do not face when holding noncallable debt securities.(20) That risk arises because, unlike noncallable debt instruments, which promise a series of predetermined payments from the issuer to investors, MBSs pay investors shares of the often uneven and somewhat unpredictable cash flows from the underlying pool of mortgages. The major source of the uncertainty about those cash flows is the speed with which borrowers--the homeowners--will prepay the mortgages in the pool. Borrowers are especially likely to prepay and refinance their homes when interest rates fall because refinancing at lower rates saves them money. When that happens, MBS investors get some of their money back sooner than expected and then face less desirable opportunities for reinvesting because of the lower prevailing interest rates.(21) Consequently, the likelihood of prepayment of the mortgages in a pool of MBSs is an important determinant of expected cash flows and hence the value of the securities. Investors are also at risk when rates rise and borrowers pay off mortgages more slowly than expected--extension risk. Thus, unexpected changes in interest rates in both directions can hurt MBS investors. (See Box 2 for further discussion of factors affecting borrowers' prepayments.)
Although prepayment risk is an important factor affecting the value of the GSEs' and private-label mortgage-backed securities, the former have generally traded as though that risk were virtually the same for all issues of the same type (for example, securities based on 30-year fixed-rate mortgages) with the same interest rate and seasoning, or time since origination. That homogeneity in prices is particularly evident when the MBSs are first sold in what is known as the To Be Announced (TBA) market. That market currently prices new MBSs before the underlying pools are assembled; prices are based on the interest rate to be passed through to investors, which is disclosed in advance by the pooler (see Box 3 for a description of the TBA market). Consequently, the TBA market prices MBSs without specific information about the composition of the loan pools, including factors that affect prepayment risk.
Increasing Demand for Disclosures About MBSsInvestors' demand for information about securities depends on their ability to use it to value those investments. Until recently, there was little demand for detailed information about mortgage pools that might permit investors to differentiate among MBS issues on the basis of prepayment risk. Investors may have believed either that prepayments were equally likely on all MBSs or that any systematic differences in prepayment risk among MBSs could not be identified. Three changes in the MBS market have increased investors' demand for information about GSEs' mortgage pools: increased diversity in the composition of pools, improved information technology, and the growing role of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac as investors in MBSs. That growing role has the potential to disadvantage other investors because of the GSEs' greater access to information. First, the loans eligible for pooling have become less homogeneous with increases in the conforming loan limit and the addition of loans to borrowers with higher credit risks. The enterprises can now purchase mortgages of up to $322,700, reflecting an increase of more than $95,000 in five years (see Figure 2); and Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are now including in the mortgage pools limited numbers of mortgages from borrowers whose credit histories are blemished or who have little or no credit history and loans from borrowers who generally do not meet the standards for the lowest mortgage rates.(22) The GSEs are also increasing the number of loans with low down payments. As a consequence, MBS pools are growing more diverse with respect to factors that can affect prepayment rates, especially loan size and borrowers' credit quality. That development raises the value of more-detailed information about mortgage pools that could be used in predicting prepayment rates.(23)
Second, improved information technology has given analysts the ability to use more information to predict prepayments. In addition, the advent of electronic mortgage application and processing systems gives the originators and the GSEs' an ability to quickly process detailed information about the underlying mortgages.(24) Those technical advances increase the value of information that can be used to estimate prepayment risk. In fact, lower costs of processing information have enabled large originators and poolers to sort their loans and create customized pools that are based on the characteristics of individual loans, including prepayment risk. Such pools are more valuable than those that are undifferentiated and delivered to the generic To Be Announced market.(25) Third, the enterprises are now the largest investors in their own mortgage-backed securities. Some institutional investors believe that they could be at an informational disadvantage compared with the large originators of the mortgages and the GSEs.(26) Fannie Mae's holdings of its own MBSs increased from $103 billion in 1996 to $431 billion in 2001 (see Table 2). Freddie Mac's holdings of its own MBSs shot up from $81 billion to $302 billion over that five-year period. As a result, the GSEs' share of the total outstanding issues doubled during that time span, and each now holds more than 30 percent of the securities that it has guaranteed.(27) |
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac deny that they trade on the basis of their superior information and point to the "information firewalls" that exist between their trading desks and the rest of the company so that employees making investment decisions on MBSs do not have access to loan-level data. In addition, the enterprises' opportunity to gain from their superior information may be limited because most of their purchases occur in the TBA market before the pools have been fully assembled and generally follow a buy-and-hold strategy. Moreover, no evidence of a breach of the firewalls has surfaced.(28)
New Disclosures in the MBS MarketOn February 3, 2003, a joint task force consisting of staff from the Department of the Treasury, the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight, and the Securities and Exchange Commission released a report including recommendations for new disclosures to the GSEs' MBS market.(29) Subsequently, the enterprises agreed to disclose additional information about--but not register--their MBSs. That agreement continued the trend toward increased disclosures to investors in the GSEs' mortgage-backed securities. The GSEs' Disclosures for MBSs Before 2003Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have always been subject to antifraud provisions of federal securities law, including rule 10b-5 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Those provisions require the enterprises to disclose material facts to investors and prohibit fraudulent and deceptive practices. Accordingly, the GSEs have provided data on prepayments for generic classifications of MBSs (for example, pools of 7.0 percent interest, 30-year fixed-rate mortgages).(30) In addition, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have disclosed the weighted-average coupon (WAC)(31); the weighted-average remaining maturity (WARM); the weighted-average loan age (WALA); the weighted-average original loan term (WAOLT); and the identity of the pooler. They have also provided the distributions of mortgages by state and by year of origination and the average original loan size (AOLS). In addition, they report changes in WACs and WARMs and actual prepayments on individual MBSs. Both GSEs also disclose updated distributions of loan size, and Freddie Mac provides monthly loan delinquency rates. Private-Label Issuers' Disclosures for MBSsIssuers of MBSs backed by mortgages not eligible for purchase by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, that is, private-label issuers, who are subject to the SEC's oversight, provided more information to their investors at issuance than the GSEs did before April 1, 2003. For example, private-label issuers generally reported and still report both the weighted average and the distributional ranges for loan-to-value ratios; the credit quality of borrowers as measured by the Fair, Isaac, and Company's (FICO) scores; the eligibility of loans for credit under the Community Reinvestment Act (Public Law 95-128); and the location of properties (sometimes by zip code).(32) Private issuers also disclose the purpose of loans (to refinance an existing loan, to refinance and pull the equity out, or to make a new purchase), the originators of the loans, documentation levels (details about borrowers' income, debt, and wealth) for loans, and delinquency history.(33) Loans that are subprime or Alternative-A loans may also be identified. Such extensive disclosure about borrowers informs the market for private-label MBSs about credit risk. Investors in private-label issues generally must look to borrowers rather than issuers for payments.(34) The GSEs' New Disclosures for MBSsOn April 1, 2003, Fannie Mae voluntarily began releasing both the weighted average and quartile loan-to-value ratios and borrowers' credit scores for the loans making up its MBS pools.(35) The enterprise also began identifying the servicers for the pools, the occupancy status of the properties (borrowers' use of properties as a principal residence, second home, or investment property), property types (single unit dwellings, or two- to- four unit dwellings), and the purpose of the mortgages (to purchase or to refinance properties). Freddie Mac will begin making those same disclosures in June 2003. Such disclosures will largely be made after sales because most securities are initially sold in the To Be Announced market before such information is available.(36) Some market participants had requested additional disclosures, including the points paid by borrowers, the level of loan documentation, and borrowers' debt-to-income ratios. While the interagency task force recognized some difficulties and limitations of that information, it believed that the enterprises should consider making those additional disclosures.(37)
Effects of New Disclosures on the MBS MarketThe new voluntary disclosures by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac could help investors better estimate prepayment risk on the GSEs' mortgage-backed securities. Increased disclosure on individual MBS pools, therefore, could reduce any "lemons" discount that investors might require as compensation for uncertainty about the quality of those securities (mainly the prepayment risk). The added disclosures by the GSEs might also segment the market by quality. If so, each submarket necessarily would have less volume than the entire market, and liquidity might be adversely affected. However, such effects are hard to estimate. The potentially offsetting effects of a smaller lemons discount and reduced market liquidity make it impossible to predict whether the net effect of new disclosures will be to raise or lower the prices of MBSs. Possible Effects on the "Lemons" DiscountThe discount that buyers demand to offset the perceived risk of purchasing MBSs that have higher prepayment risk is referred to as a lemons price discount (or yield premium).(38) If the new voluntary disclosures change investors' perceptions of the appropriate size of that discount, the market price of MBSs will change. If investors discover that the current discount is too high, for example, market prices will rise. Or if investors feel more certain about the extent to which the best securities may be being withheld, the lemons discount could lessen and the average prices of MBSs could rise. Any increase in prices from that source is likely to be quite small, however, because if the discount had been large, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, as well as the large originators, would have had incentives to voluntarily disclose more information and thereby raise the price of their MBSs and the value of their guarantees.(39) Possible Effects on the Liquidity of MBSsMBSs guaranteed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are highly liquid--a valued attribute that raises their price. But increased disclosures have the potential to reduce the liquidity of MBSs.(40) The GSEs' MBSs are highly liquid primarily because they are relatively homogeneous; the large size of the market also helps liquidity. Thus, investors determine value largely on the basis of generic characteristics such as coupon rate and maturity, rather than valuing each MBS issue on its own. Additional information that permits investors to differentiate among MBSs on the basis of expected prepayment rates may fragment the market and thus reduce MBSs' liquidity and price. For that reason, Ginnie Mae did not disclose the geographic location of loans in pools or other loan-level characteristics until a few years ago.(41) Increased disclosures may also cause some investors to withdraw from the market because they will be forced to make use of the new information or risk losing out to better informed market participants. Given that choice and the increased cost of the information--occasioned by hiring more analysts and developing more complex prepayment models--some investors may switch to less complex investment instruments. The interagency task force, however, believed that the additional pool-specific disclosures that it recommended would not have a significant adverse effect on liquidity in the MBS market. The task force reasoned that greater disclosures in the past had had little adverse effect on the market but did increase investors' confidence.(42) Indeed, fear of a loss of liquidity did not stop originators from customizing pools, disclosing additional information, and selling pools outside the generic TBA market at premiums. The Net Effect on the Prices of MBSsOn balance, any adverse effect on the prices of MBSs is likely to be small. That is because if MBS prices fall, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will have a profitable opportunity to expand their purchases of "cheaper" MBSs with the proceeds of issues of debt, whose prices are not expected to be affected by the new disclosures. Alternatively, the GSEs could issue larger and more homogeneous pools of MBSs.(43) For similar reasons, the six new disclosures are unlikely to have much effect on mortgage rates (see Box 4).
Possible Effects of RegistrationRegistration would require the enterprises to pay fees to the SEC, might cause some investors to perceive a weakening of the implied federal guarantee of the GSEs' debt and MBSs, and could lead to some changes in the TBA market. Contrary to some claims, borrowers would still be able to lock in mortgage rates prior to closing. Registration Fees and Administrative CostsThe direct cost of paying SEC registration fees for debt and MBSs could reach $250 million in 2004.(44) In 2002, the Congress reduced the fees from $239 per $1 million in securities sold to $92 per $1 million and directed the SEC to adjust fee rates annually thereafter to reach statutory targets for collections. Under H.R. 4071, the enterprises would pay fees of about 1.25 basis points in 2004.(45) If that fee was fully passed on to borrowers, the closing cost of a $200,000 mortgage would rise by less than $25. Registration could also require the GSEs to have their MBSs rated by one of the credit-rating agencies, which would have a small additional cost. Charging Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac registration fees generally would not increase the total fees collected by the Securities and Exchange Commission. The Investor and Capital Markets Fee Relief Act (P.L. 107-123), enacted in January 2002, limits annual amounts of fees that the Commission should attempt to collect.(46) Because of those limits, collecting fees from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac would lower the fees paid by all other issuers of securities. Repealing the GSEs' exemption would not impose significant administrative costs on the enterprises because registration can be done electronically. Moreover, the enterprises could make use of "shelf registration," which allows an issuer to register in advance for an anticipated large volume and repeated issuances of securities. That is, one shelf registration can cover large volumes of mortgage-backed securities or corporate debt issued in installments. The Implied Federal GuaranteeAlthough many factors affect yields on debt and mortgage-backed securities issued or guaranteed by the GSEs, the enterprises pay lower interest rates than other private issuers do as a result of the perception of the implied federal guarantee based on the special privileges accorded to the enterprises.(47) Some observers have suggested that enactment of H.R. 4071 would reduce the strength of the implied federal guarantee. If so, one effect could be to raise rates on the GSEs' securities. However, other analysts disagree. They note that the legislation leaves intact the GSEs' other privileges. In addition, investors' perceptions may be influenced by the size of the enterprises in the capital and housing markets as well as by provisions of law. If so, investors could conclude that the implicit guarantee would be unaffected by that statutory change. The To Be Announced MarketThe specifics of the SEC's implementing regulations would determine how registration might affect the To Be Announced market, which is currently not subject to regulation. Transactions in that market are notable in that they involve buying and selling pools of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and Ginnie Mae loans before the loans have been made. At present, the Bond Market Association, an industry trade group, establishes the basic terms that those contracts must specify to constitute "good delivery," including the product type (for example, securities based on 30-year fixed-rate mortgages), interest rate, settlement date, and the total amount of the MBSs to be delivered. If the SEC was given authority to specify disclosure requirements for the GSEs' MBSs, that might trigger disclosure requirements for the contracts traded in the TBA market. Such requirements could be difficult for the poolers and the enterprises to meet and could curtail the operation of that market. To avoid disclosure requirements that might harm the efficiency of the TBA market, the SEC might require additional authority applicable to such disclosures. The Ability to Lock In Mortgage RatesBorrowers in both the market for conforming loans bought by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and the market for jumbo loans bought by private-label issuers can lock in mortgage rates up to 90 days prior to closing.(48) Borrowers attach substantial value to being able to fix their mortgage rate before closing, and they pay for that option through either a fixed fee (or points) or a higher interest rate. Lenders are willing to provide those commitments because the rates locked in reflect the current market rates for forward sale agreements in the To Be Announced market, and the fees paid at closing by borrowers compensate lenders who provide the commitments. Because the TBA market probably would function in much the same way with registration of MBSs as it does now, the possibility that borrowers would lose the option to lock in rates seems remote.(49) Even if the TBA market changed significantly, mortgage lenders would have alternative ways of hedging their interest rate risk. But because the alternatives would probably be less efficient than the current system, borrowers might face somewhat higher costs to lock in rates.
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