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QUOTE (Rex Kicka** @ Jun 27, 2008 -> 11:27 AM)
Part 87 of I don't understand why the oil shock is fundamentally based.

 

Oil is expensive to store and oil stockpiles remain relatively static historically. If as I read in Slate yesterday, we can really only store about 55 days worth of oil, and the supply of oil hasn't diminished, why is there a fundamental reason for such a large shock in oil?

Because the demand for oil has gone up while the supply hasn't.

 

Think of it this way...if the supply of oil hasn't diminished, but the price of oil has gone up, then if demand had been holding constant, you'd expect demand to drop as the price goes up. In other words, as the price goes up, you'd be able to sell less, but if supply remained constant, then stockpiles would have to go up with the price increase. The fact that supplies haven't increased concomitant with this price increase suggests that the price increase is being driven by the necessity of slowing demand growth.

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QUOTE (kapkomet @ Jul 3, 2008 -> 05:30 AM)
$145

 

$146

 

These bastards are trying to be the "Morgan Stanley self-fullfilling prophecy", aren't they?

 

They never did print $146, at least not yet. The high so far is $145.85, and we are a couple bucks off of that now. 9:30 is gasoline inventories, so all of that could change quickly. We could be at 140 or 150 in a heartbeat.

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QUOTE (southsider2k5 @ Jul 3, 2008 -> 08:04 AM)
They never did print $146, at least not yet. The high so far is $145.85, and we are a couple bucks off of that now. 9:30 is gasoline inventories, so all of that could change quickly. We could be at 140 or 150 in a heartbeat.

I saw the London ICE rate, not the NYMEX one.

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http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/opinion...0,5041638.story

 

For love of speculators*

 

July 2, 2008

 

Presidential candidates Barack Obama and John McCain don't agree on much, but they've decided that speculators are to blame for soaring oil prices.

 

They're not alone. Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah points the finger at speculators. Congress spent much of last week skewering those who play in the commodity markets for rising prices, particularly for causing oil to more than double in price over the last year. Oil closed at nearly $141 a barrel Tuesday.

 

"The American people should not be punished at the pump for the actions of oil speculators," House Speaker Nancy Pelosi recently railed.

 

You sense a trend here?

 

More than a dozen bills on Capitol Hill would restrict what King Abdullah described at a recent oil summit as the "abhorrent act of speculators acting for their own selfish interests." The House voted 402-19 last Thursday to order the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, which regulates futures markets, to crack down on "excessive speculation."

 

So there. If we stopped the speculators in the futures markets, oil prices would plunge and all would be right in the world. Right?

 

At the risk of incurring the wrath of Obama, McCain, Pelosi, King Abdullah and just about anybody who fills up his or her tank today, we're going to venture some reasons why you should love speculators.

 

Well, at least why you should respect what they do.

 

What is speculation?

Southwest Airlines is about the only airline making money in America these days. One reason: Southwest locked in more than 70 percent of the fuel it expects to use this year at a price of $51 a barrel of oil. Southwest made a bet that oil prices would continue to rise and that $51 would look cheap by July 2008. Southwest looks pretty smart right now. But that hedge would have been impossible without somebody willing to speculate on the other side of that trade, to make a bet that prices would fall.

 

That's how futures markets work. Trades are matched or they don't happen. Farmers try to lock in high prices for their crops; food companies try to lock in low prices. Speculators bet prices will rise even more when they take the other side of the farmers' bet and that they will fall further when they take the other side of the food manufacturers' bet.

 

Speculators can try to make money betting prices will fall or by betting prices will rise. If they bet wrong, they lose money. Ever since oil topped $100 a barrel, more speculators have been betting the price will drop than that it will rise, Alan Reynolds, senior fellow with the Cato Institute, pointed out in the New York Post last month. So, if prices continue rising, those speculators will lose money. Commodity markets without speculators cease to be markets.

 

If Congress had cracked down on speculation in futures markets, Southwest would have had a tougher time hedging its fuel prices and you would be paying more to fly out of Midway to Cleveland. So there's a reason to . . . like speculators.

 

Who are these people?

Look in the mirror. If you hold mutual funds in your 401(k) or have a pension, chances are your retirement funds have poured money into commodity funds, particularly energy funds. More than half the estimated $139 billion that has been invested in oil and other energy commodities through March comes from retirement funds, according to Chicago research firm Ennis Knupp and Associates. Pension funds, mutual funds, hedge funds and investment banks turned to oil investments to protect themselves against the falling value of the dollar and rising inflation. More investors have put their money in oil, corn and other commodities because they're getting a lot better return than they would if they had put it elsewhere. The proof: Stocks are flirting with bear market territory, real estate is a shambles, the dollar dropping, bonds skidding.

 

Some speculators are just in it for the money. They're the ones risking their own capital. They're the ones taking the other side of the Southwest bet and the other side of the farmers' bet. Sometimes they win big; sometimes they lose big.

 

What's their impact on oil prices?

They're a factor in the price rise, but probably a modest one.

 

The world is in the midst of what energy expert Daniel Yergin, chairman of Cambridge Energy Research Associates, has called an "oil shock." Demand for petroleum has risen, especially in the advancing economies of China and India. Supplies are tight, with disruptions or production declines in Nigeria, Mexico, Venezuela and other places. It's getting more expensive to access new supplies, said Yergin. That has created a "shortage psychology." When that sets in, any bad news about pipelines blowing up in Nigeria or production dropping in Mexico gets magnified. Any good news about a huge new oil field find off Brazil or a drop in U.S. demand gets minimized.

 

The falling dollar hasn't helped. Oil is priced in dollars. The Federal Reserve Board has cut short-term interest rates eight times since August. Those cuts caused the dollar to fall against other currencies—and money to rush into oil (and other commodities) to make up for a cheaper dollar.

 

•••

 

Speculators are critical to commodity futures markets. They take on risks that others shun. Without the liquidity they bring, prices would gyrate even more wildly.

 

Reining in speculators won't change the fundamentals driving higher commodity prices. It would, however, drive this kind of trading away from the U.S. and could distort commodities markets in ways that would lead to even more pain.

 

That won't keep the candidates, the Saudi king or Congress from railing against the evils of speculation. But it should give you reason to recognize why they are wrong.

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QUOTE (Cknolls @ Jul 3, 2008 -> 10:46 AM)
I believe the speculation that has driven up oil in the last month has been from trapped shorts.

That would seem odd. If they are trapped in shorts, they would probably be liquidating as fast as they could, and that would glut the market (thus lowering prices). Unless, you are saying that they are all sticking it out, waiting for a correction before expiry.

 

ETA: Or, do you mean they are offsetting into long positions as a makeup? And flooding the market with buys that way? As in, a failed wave of shorts?

 

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QUOTE (NorthSideSox72 @ Jul 3, 2008 -> 10:50 AM)
That would seem odd. If they are trapped in shorts, they would probably be liquidating as fast as they could, and that would glut the market (thus lowering prices). Unless, you are saying that they are all sticking it out, waiting for a correction before expiry.

 

ETA: Or, do you mean they are offsetting into long positions as a makeup? And flooding the market with buys that way? As in, a failed wave of shorts?

 

 

Short covering.

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QUOTE (Chisoxfn @ Jul 11, 2008 -> 10:14 AM)
The weak $ may be the #1 reason the price of oil is so high right now (from the US perspective).

Oil was in the 30's only a few years ago. So unless inflation has been about 400% since then, the weak dollar isn't the primary reason. A contributor no doubt - just not the majority of the price increase.

 

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QUOTE (Rex Kicka** @ Jul 11, 2008 -> 11:56 AM)
But more than the price of inflation. Oil is a pretty standard hedge against a weak dollar these days.

 

My uneducated guess: Oil stays 130-150 in the near future. If Bernanke raises interest rates, oil starts to trend back down towards 100-110.

It does go beyond inflation and valuation, yes. As you say, some use it as a hedge. But I think this needs some perspective here - the price of oil is not being driven primarily by the dollar. Its a factor.

 

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QUOTE (NorthSideSox72 @ Jul 11, 2008 -> 12:24 PM)
It does go beyond inflation and valuation, yes. As you say, some use it as a hedge. But I think this needs some perspective here - the price of oil is not being driven primarily by the dollar. Its a factor.

 

It isn't the primary motivator, but I do think the weak dollar may be responsible for 15-20% of the current valuation.

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http://newsbusters.org/blogs/dan-gainor/20...ae-bailout-2005

 

BMI Warned of Billion-Dollar Fannie Mae Bailout in 2005

Photo of Dan Gainor.

By Dan Gainor (Bio | Archive)

July 11, 2008 - 12:32 ET

 

I hate to say I told you so, but what the heck. We did. The Business & Media Institute warned that Fannie Mae was a looming taxpayer-backed disaster - in 2005. Only the network news shows didn't like to tell you about it. An op-ed I wrote appeared in The New York Post under the headline: "The $30B Scandal That TV Forgot." I think $30 billion is small potatoes now. $100 billion is the number being used now.

 

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are Government-Sponsored Entities, which means they are publicly listed yet still backed by taxpayers. They have also been mismanaged and embroiled in accounting fiascos. Fannie was run by prominent Democrats like former Chief Executive Officer Franklin Raines and former Vice Chairman Jamie Gorelick - both instrumental figures in the Clinton administration.

 

A Dec. 23, 2004, Washington Post article explained that Franklin Raines "was a director of the Office of Management and Budget in the Clinton administration, and his name was mentioned as a possible Treasury Secretary had Sen. John F. Kerry (D-Mass.) been elected president."

 

Newsweek's Charles Gasparino labeled this GSE a "Government-Sponsored Enron" and said the lack of TV news coverage of the issue was "politically correct" because journalists supported what the organization did.

 

According to today's New York Times online: "Shares of District-based Fannie Mae dropped 45 percent in the first minutes of trading today, to around $7.50 a share, while shares of McLean-based Freddie Mac collapsed nearly 50 percent, to about $4.20." When BMI first reported the issue, Fannie Mae was trading at $55 a share. It's lost $47.50 or 86 percent of its value in that time.

 

CNBC's Jim Cramer was on "Squawk Box" this morning calling for $100 billion to be given by the government (that's us) to Fannie and Freddie to keep them afloat.

 

Better grab your wallets.

 

http://www.businessandmedia.org/specialrep.../fannie_mae.asp

 

Government-Sponsored Enron

Billion-Dollar Scandal Not Ready for Prime Time

 

By Dan Gainor

Director, Business & Media Institute

 

Charles Simpson

Research Analyst

 

See Executive Summary | PDF Version

 

Itâ€s a familiar story. An enormous company reveals its “accounting problems.” The problems are found to be far worse than anyone realized. The CEO is forced to resign. Other high-ranking executives follow. The stock price begins to drop. Billions of dollars might be lost. The politically savvy CEO even has direct connections to a presidential administration.

 

If the word “Enron” has formed in your mind, youâ€d be close, but wrong. Welcome to Fannie Mae, the nationâ€s second-largest financial company. Only Fannie Mae, officially known as the Federal National Mortgage Association, isnâ€t like any standard Wall Street business. It was founded by Congress to increase the amount of capital available for the secondary mortgage market. Fannie Mae is a Government Sponsored Entity (GSE) and enjoys a congressional charter, limited oversight, and a strongly implied government commitment to cover any losses.

 

This billion-dollar scandal has highlighted questionable practices by the lender and the response from Americaâ€s broadcast media has been almost complete silence.

 

The print media have done strong work on the story. Papers such as the The Wall Street Journal and The Washington Post deserve credit for alerting the public to the enormous problems at the mortgage giant. The New York Times also has done solid reporting on the Fannie Mae situation.

 

Look at how an Oct. 4, 2004, Wall Street Journal editorial referred to the crisis at Fannie Mae:

 

“For years, mortgage giant Fannie Mae has produced smoothly growing earnings. And for years, observers have wondered how Fannie could manage its inherently risky portfolio without a whiff of volatility. Now, thanks to Fannie's regulator, we know the answer. The company was cooking the books. Big time.”

 

Analysts are predicting that Fannie Mae will have to compensate for $11 billion in accounting errors. To put this in perspective, Enron overstated its earnings by $567 million: 5 percent of Fannie Maeâ€s fiasco. Since February 2004, Fannie Maeâ€s stock has plummeted from a high of about $80 a share to roughly $55 per share. Thatâ€s a decline of 31 percent, or a loss of more than $20 billion in value to stockholders. Despite these incredible losses and errors, as well as three separate investigations, the broadcast media have ignored Fannieâ€s decline.

 

In a Dec. 23, 2004, news analysis, New York Times reporter Timothy L. Oâ€Brien listed several problems that faced the company. They included: a Justice Department inquiry that might result in criminal charges; a Securities and Exchange Commission investigation; a complaint by the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight that claimed Fannie Mae was “undercapitalized by almost $3 billion”; and criticism by Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan. According to Oâ€Brien: “Now, amid the wreckage of Mr. [Franklin] Rainesâ€s tenure, the question is how well the company itself can weather the storm.”

 

Things have only gotten far worse since December. The company announced on March 17, 2005 that it would miss the deadline for filing its 2004 financial report. According to the Wall St. Journal, Fannie Mae still hasnâ€t filed its third-quarter report, which was due in November. Now Greenspan is scheduled to testify on Fannie Mae and other GSEs on April 6 in front of the Senate Banking Committee.

 

Since Enron, this type of story has become all too familiar – except this time, the TV networks arenâ€t interested in this key national scandal.

 

A LexisNexis search of ABC, CBS, NBC, and CNN on the term “Enron” from the nine months around when the story first broke – Oct. 1, 2001, to July 1, 2002, produced 3,017 hits. A search of CNN alone produced 1,385 hits. During that nine-month time period, Enron disclosed that it had overstated its earnings by $567 million since 1997. Several key figures at the embattled company testified before Congress under subpoena.

 

A similar LexisNexis search was performed for the term “Fannie Mae” for those same media, from June 1, 2004, to March 1, 2005, again during the time the story was breaking. This search discovered a paltry 37 matches. Through those nine months, Fannie Mae was asked by its regulator to revamp its accounting, key executives resigned, and about $11 billion in accounting errors were revealed. Yes, CBSâ€s “Early Show” called events at Fannie Mae “an accounting scandal” in its Dec. 28, 2004 report. The problem is that was one of only five references at the network. The words “Fannie Mae” didnâ€t show up once for ABC, while CNN registered only 31 hits – less than 3 percent of the coverage it gave Enron over a similar time period.

 

Even Fannie Maeâ€s announcement that it wouldnâ€t be able to deliver its 2004 financials and the subsequent 4 percent drop in its stock werenâ€t enough to push the story on to the TV news. But Enron remains a staple for the networks and an interview with former Enron CEO Ken Lay was on “60 Minutes” on March 13.

 

 

Bigger Numbers, Less Noise

 

Enronâ€s collapse was a calamity for its employees and shareholders. In response, the media offered, in Peter Jenningsâ€s words, “The Enron story for the day” for several months. And rightly so: Enron was a “debacle,” “disaster,” “scandal,” and according to a Feb. 15, 2002, “CBS Evening News” broadcast, it created “nagging worries about corporate accounting and fears there may be other Enrons out there.”

 

The numbers behind Enron were stunning, and a $567 million accounting adjustment was only the beginning of the companyâ€s financial and public collapse. A March 1, 2002, ABCâ€s “World News Tonight” story revealed that, “According to company documents, Enron paid $320 million to some executives, only 10 months before Enron collapsed.”

 

While the figures behind Enron were calculator-busting, the problems at Fannie Mae were greater: roughly $11 billion in earnings restatements. Thatâ€s about 19 times more than Enronâ€s accounting “errors.” Although broadcast news offered wall-to-wall coverage of the endless commas and zeros behind the Enron collapse, Fannie Maeâ€s staggering problems and the resignation of six top executives, including the CEO and chief financial officer, received almost no TV news attention.

 

The compensation packages of Enron executives like Andy Fastow were similar to former Fannie Mae CEO Franklin Rainesâ€s exorbitant bonuses. While Fastow raked in $37 million, a Jan. 22, 2005, article in The New York Times reported that “Mr. Raines made $14 million in salary and bonuses and received $25.6 million in incentive pay, including stock options.” In a Jan. 24, 2005, article, Business Week confirmed that “Fannie had paid its 20 top executives a combined $245 million in bonuses.”

 

Much of that money was in stock options and bonuses that were pegged to Fannie Maeâ€s performance. Now that earnings have been restated, those bonuses have been called into question. Though Fannie Mae and Enron are similar, they are not identical. Fannieâ€s mistakes were larger than Enronâ€s. But it is important to note that no one with Fannie Mae has been indicted.

 

 

Friends in High Places

 

Connections to the halls of power can make any story front-page news. Fannie Mae and Enron had no shortage of those. They employed two of the most generous campaign contributors in the nation. The media tried to link the leadership at Enron to the Bush administration and to several key figures in Congress. On the other hand, the broadcast media had nothing to say about the unambiguous connections between Fannie Mae board members and the Clinton administration.

 

Brian Ross of ABCâ€s “World News Tonight” told viewers during a Feb. 14, 2002, broadcast, “The Enron scandal is leading to new efforts to crack down on tax havens like the Caymans, efforts that previously faced strong opposition. Before becoming White House economic adviser, Larry Lindsey was one of the most outspoken defenders of such havens. At the same time, he also served as a consultant to Enron, earning $50,000.” In the spirit of Valentineâ€s Day, Ross tried to sell the concept of a sweetheart arrangement between the White House and Enron.

 

Tom Brokaw and David Gregory of “NBC Nightly News” also tried to exaggerate the connections between the Bush administration and Enron. On a Jan. 10, 2002, broadcast, Brokaw began: “Enron chief executive Kenneth Lay and his company have been some of the most generous contributors to President Bush during his political career, and Enron executives met six different times with Vice President Cheney or his staff as he was shaping the administrationâ€s energy policy last spring. So the White House today was working hard to put distance between the president and this companyâ€s troubles.”

 

Gregory characterized Enron as a “Texas powerhouse, as you say, in the energy business, whose leader has close ties to this president.” Gregory continued: “The political heat reaches the White House today as the president distanced himself from one of his top supporters and political contributors, saying Ken Lay, the Enron CEO who gave more than $200,000 to the Bush campaign and inaugural committee, didnâ€t have his ear when Enron was crumbling and didnâ€t get any favors from the administration.”

 

The following night, the tandem reprised the connections before concluding that they probably werenâ€t that big of a deal to begin with. Brokaw began: “Now to the White House where a good deal of this day was spent doing damage control over the widening investigation into the collapse of energy giant Enron.”

 

Gregory detailed several contacts between the Treasury and Commerce departments and Enron. While he conceded that “No action resulted from those calls,” he theorized that the White House didnâ€t have the time to hold up their end of the quid pro quo, “because the company fell too far, too fast for the government to have bailed them out.”

 

In contrast, neither NBC nor any other broadcast outlet would have needed to search hard for political ties in the Fannie Mae debacle. Former Chief Executive Officer Franklin Raines and former Vice Chairman Jamie Gorelick were both instrumental figures in the Clinton administration. The print media were candid about Fannieâ€s political connections. In a Dec. 23, 2004, article, Albert Crenshaw of The Washington Post revealed that Franklin Raines “was a director of the Office of Management and Budget in the Clinton administration, and his name was mentioned as a possible Treasury Secretary had Sen. John F. Kerry (D-Mass.) been elected president.”

 

Jamie Gorelick was Deputy Attorney General under Clinton. Fannie Mae board member Jack Quinn was the attorney for pardoned tax evader Marc Rich. Fannie also has one of the largest lobbying budgets in Washington. A Feb. 24, 2005, article in The Washington Post reported that Fannie “paid its lobbying corps about $5 million in the first six months of last year.”

 

According to Jeff Bliss of Bloomberg.com, Fannie Mae spent almost $8.7 million on lobbyists in 2003. In May of 2004, Citizens Against Government Waste criticized Fannie for “heavy handed meddling in the legislative process to protect the companyâ€s congressional protected status and its lavish corporate welfare program.”

 

The connections were there, but broadcast news was uninterested.

 

 

Taking Stock of the Victims

 

The Enron collapse created numerous victims. A Jan. 21, 2002, broadcast of “NBC Nightly News” explained that “Enronâ€s stock dropped from $80 to 70 cents in one year.” During that same NBC broadcast, Jim Avila rightly called the Enron collapse a “big retirement dent for workers who never drew a paycheck from a company whose failure echoes nationwide.”

 

This development prompted ABCâ€s Feb. 5, 2002, “World News Tonight” to take a “closer look tonight at the importance of financial literacy.” The media had infinite access to a witness pool of pensioners , individual investors, and laid-off Enron employees to underscore the depth of the calamity.

 

So far, Fannie Maeâ€s stock hasnâ€t dropped as badly and itâ€s not likely to do so. One of the companyâ€s strengths is its reliance on the perception that Congress would bail it out of any financial trouble. Still, that hasnâ€t prevented Fannie Mae stock from collapsing 31 percent in about one year – a loss of more than $20 billion in overall value to the company. Those losses go directly to the owners of the firmâ€s stock.

 

The media were obsessed with Enronâ€s stock losses. A Feb. 9, 2002, CBS Evening News broadcast put the decline in perspective while warning of future ruin. Russ Mitchell led off with how “Thousands of Enron workers saw their 401(k)s disappear before their very eyes when the company went bankrupt. And Randall Pinkston tells us people still on the Enron payrolls are being warned to consider getting out while they can.” Pinkston spent the report explaining “the rules of the game when a company goes belly up.”

 

TV news reporters spent plenty of time explaining the present and future ramifications of Enronâ€s downfall. However, they did little about the consequences of a possible Fannie Mae collapse. Although it is not guaranteed a capital cushion from the U.S. government, it uses the implied line of credit to secure cheap liquidity and a near government-perfect credit rating. As the October Wall Street Journal piece explained: “Fannie Mae isn't an ordinary company and this isn't a run-of-the-mill accounting scandal. The U.S. government had no financial stake in the failure of Enron or WorldCom. But because of Fannie's implicit subsidy from the federal government, taxpayers are on the hook if its capital cushion is insufficient to absorb big losses. Private profit, public risk.”

 

So, if Fannieâ€s trillion-dollar portfolio were to falter, the shareholders would absorb the loss. On the other hand, if the U.S. were to bail the mortgage giant out, the taxpayers would foot the bill. Fannieâ€s potential fall is a “lose-lose” situation.

 

 

‘Government-Sponsored Enronâ€

 

The lack of coverage from the broadcast media is shocking, especially in light of the work done by print media, such as the Wall Street Journal, Washington Post and New York Times. Why would television avoid broaching the problems at Fannie Mae? Charles Gasparino, a reporter for Newsweek who had labeled this GSE a “Government-Sponsored Enron,” had a theory.

 

On a Dec. 28, 2004, edition of CNNâ€s “Newsnight With Aaron Brown,” Tucker Carlson interviewed Gasparino about the mediaâ€s bypassing the Fannie Mae story. Carlson asked, “Why has it not been reported like Enron?”

 

Gasparino replied: “Well, Fannie Mae is a very politically corrupt – it may be politically corrupt, but itâ€s a politically correct company. I mean, they do all the things that, letâ€s face it, liberal journalists like, like put home mortgages out there for poor people. And so right now, beating up on Fannie Mae is kind of politically incorrect.”

 

The next exchange was telling. Carlson deduced: “So, because itâ€s not part of the tobacco industry or an energy company, it gets a pass from the press?”

 

Gasparino agreed: “Right. Itâ€s not related to George Bush. Franklin Raines, I believe, is a Democrat. So there is a degree here – because Iâ€ve heard journalists talk about this – that hey, this is – thereâ€s politics on the part of the Republicans. Thatâ€s why theyâ€re beating up on Fannie Mae, which may be true. But, at the same time, this is a huge story, and itâ€s going overlooked.”

 

Sadly, this perception of political correctness is out of touch with reality. According to a September 2003 report by a GSE watchdog group, Fannie Mae Policy Focus, Fannie lags far behind the market in facilitating housing for minority and first-time buyers. As a matter of fact, the GSEs buy less than 10 percent of private sector loans to first-time African-American and Hispanic purchasers. Moreover, Fannie and Freddie acquired “more loans made to absentee landlords, vacation homes, and second mortgages than first-time homebuyer loans,” according to the report.

 

It appears that very little of the implicit taxpayer subsidy to the GSEs is fulfilling that politically correct dream. This failure, compounded by an accounting scandal, should be red meat for story-driven TV journalists. As the analysis proves, that hasnâ€t been the case.

 

 

Conclusion

 

Gasparino is right: The scandal at Fannie Mae is a “huge story.” Despite all the similar circumstances between Enron and Fannie Mae, there are two notable differences. First, Fannie Mae is unlikely to go bankrupt because of its government charter. Secondly, it appears the Fannie Mae accounting scandal, though arguably larger than Enronâ€s, is just as unlikely to attract the attention of network news.

 

The results of our analysis lend weight to Gasparinoâ€s view – that Fannie Mae is too politically correct to be criticized. The disparity between the coverage of Enron and Fannie Mae is too significant to conclude otherwise.

 

 

 

Fannie Mae Fact Sheet

 

Fannie Mae (and her little brother Freddie Mac) were chartered by Congress to provide capital for the secondary mortgage market, where residential mortgages are traded like stocks and bonds. Fannie and Freddie were intended to free up capital for banks and other financial services firms to provide mortgages for first-time homebuyers and minorities seeking the American dream of home ownership.

 

Because Fannie Maeâ€s investments are implicitly guaranteed by the U.S. Treasury, it enjoys incredible economic advantages over its private sector competitors. Fannie has used those advantages to pursue an aggressive expansion into markets surrounding the housing finance system. Some of these ventures have resulted in profits, but some of them have produced serious losses. Several analysts and experts wondered how Fannie could manage its portfolio with very little volatility. It turns out that their questions were answered. Fannie couldnâ€t. The Fannie Mae scandal revealed not only the mediaâ€s apprehensive coverage of “politically correct” institutions, but the dangers of “private” companies using government benefits to undertake inherently risky business ventures.

 

 

Fannie Mae Experts

 

* Peter J. Wallison, Resident Fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, Phone: 202-862-5864; co-author of “Privatizing Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the Federal Home Loan Banks: Why and How”

* Tom Schatz, president of Citizens Against Government Waste; Media inquiries: Call Tom Finnigan at 202-467-5300

* Mike House, Executive Director of Fannie Mae Policy Focus; Media inquiries: Call Beneva Schulte (202) 661-6379

 

 

Fannie Mae Facts and Figures

 

* Expected to adjust for about $11 billion dollars in losses because of accounting errors – 19 times more than Enronâ€s accounting fiasco

* Stock value has fallen from 52-week high of 77.80 to about 55 per share.

* Former CEO Franklin Raines was Clintonâ€s director of the Office of Management and Budget and a possible choice for Secretary of the Treasury had Kerry won election

* Despite marketing slogans like “Our Business is the American Dream,” the GSEs together buy less than 10 percent of loans made to first-time African-American and Hispanic homebuyers

* Bought more loans made to absentee landlords, vacation homes and second mortgages than first-time homebuyer loans

* S&P 500; Ticker: FNM; Number of Employees: 5,060 (approx)

 

 

Fannie Mae Policy Focus Report: http://www.BMIolicyfocus.org/publications/...3.03_report.pdf

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QUOTE (Rex Kicka** @ Jul 11, 2008 -> 12:42 PM)
It isn't the primary motivator, but I do think the weak dollar may be responsible for 15-20% of the current valuation.

 

It definitely does. and now they want to add more debt with a massive corporate bailout with money the government doesn't have? This is going to do more damage than good. For some reason, it seems the majority of people in this country really don't care about a massive deficit. The dollar is going to get weaker and weaker the more the country goes into debt. The weaker dollar topped with raising prices due to increased global = expensive gasoline for Americans.

Edited by mr_genius
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QUOTE (mr_genius @ Jul 11, 2008 -> 04:53 PM)
It definitely does. and now they want to add more debt with a massive corporate bailout with money the government doesn't have? This is going to do more damage than good. For some reason, it seems the majority of people in this country really don't care about a massive deficit. The dollar is going to get weaker and weaker the more the country goes into debt. The weaker dollar topped with raising prices due to increased global = expensive gasoline for Americans.

 

It seems that a majority of people in this country don't understand basic personal finances, let alone micro/ macro economics.

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