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Pledge fails to lift cloud over Fannie, Freddie
(Agencies)
Updated: 2008-07-15 09:42

NEW YORK - Buyers showed no hesitation in bidding on Freddie Mac's $3 billion debt sale on Monday, just hours after the US government pledged support for the nation's top mortgage finance agencies, but the steps failed to stem growing alarm on Wall Street.


Mortgage firm Freddie Mac headquarters is pictured in McLean, Virginia July 13, 2008. [Agencies]

Global stock markets had rallied after the Treasury Department and Federal Reserve stepped in on Sunday with offers of richer credit lines, equity purchases and direct access to central bank coffers should Freddie and its sister agency Fannie Mae run into deeper financial trouble.

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However, stocks quickly shed initial gains as investors feared the steps will do little stem the losses spreading through the financial sector in the wake of a deflating housing market and stalling economy.

Friday's failure of mortgage lender IndyMac Bancorp Inc, the third-largest bank collapse in US history, was a pointed and painful reminder of the financial strains. Shares of a host of banks, including National City and Washington Mutual, fell sharply.

"This incident (with Fannie and Freddie) is not the last one," billionaire investor George Soros told Reuters in a telephone interview, adding that the year-long global market turmoil represented "the most serious financial crisis of our lifetime."

Fannie and Freddie together finance about half of US homes and are seen as vital for stabilizing the worst housing slump since the Great Depression some 80 years ago. But as mortgage defaults rise, even among borrowers with seemingly solid credit, concerns have grown that the two agencies may need more money to cover heavier losses.

Their shares ended lower in a volatile trading day despite the vote of investor confidence exhibited in the debt auction.

"Ultimately, we do not view these (government) measures, dramatic as they look, as either a turning point for the US housing market or as a sign that the downturn will be much worse than previously believed," Goldman Sachs economist Jan Hatzius wrote in a note to clients.

"They simply reaffirm our long-held -- and widely shared -- view that the government will do everything it can to avert a meltdown in the conforming mortgage market and will continue to stand behind the government-sponsored enterprises," he said.

Attention now shifts to Tuesday's hearing of the US Senate Banking Committee, where Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Christopher Cox are expected to join Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke, who was previously scheduled to testify. All three will likely be called upon to detail the Fannie and Freddie proposals.

Congressional approval

On Sunday, the Treasury Department agreed to raise Fannie and Freddie's credit lines above the existing $2.25 billion each and buy shares to strengthen their finances if needed. The Federal Reserve offered to let the agencies borrow at the rate it charges banks for direct loans.

Congress must approve some of those measures. Rep. Barney Frank, the Massachusetts Democrat who chairs the House of Representatives Financial Services Committee, said those provisions would be part of a broader housing bill that is expected to be sent to President George W. Bush for approval by the end of next week.

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