Bets are on for the future of Fannie and Freddie:
Bill Gross, chief investment officer at bond giant Pimco, tell Reuters again that a Treasury bailout of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac isn't imminent, and said last week that, "The election season and the relatively recent passage of the (Treasury) authorization argue for delay as long as possible," though he notes both will have to keep selling notes and debt at "relatively stable spreads." (via FT Alphaville)
Meanwhile, Andrew Ross Sorkin, in his latest column at DealBook, says:
A brief forecast on Freddie Mae and Fannie Mac: Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson Jr. will nationalize them within the next two weeks, but he won't wipe out all the stakeholders, even if they deserve to be. The debt holders and the preferred shareholders will make out like bandits. A "moral hazard" will always exist, but the government may end up saving some of the rich to save the poor.
Sorkin's other predictions: Lehman Bros. is too important to fail.
Lastly, DealBreaker's John Carney points to an FT story over the weekend noting that regional banks and insurers hold the majority of Fannie and Freddie's $36 billion in preferred stock. If those shareholders take it on the chin, it likely means the financial sector will be in for yet another disproportionately large hit.
charles of TX @ Sep 20, 2008 23:24:41 PM
MICHAEL B WILKINS of TX @ Aug 26, 2008 18:21:46 PM
Steve of WI @ Aug 26, 2008 13:22:46 PM