Showing posts with label Treasury Dept. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Treasury Dept. Show all posts

Saturday, March 28, 2009

Plan B is for the Fed to borrow directly from the public

TO BE NOTED: From Econbrowser:

"
Money creation and the Fed

A lot of people have seen this picture of the recent behavior of the monetary base and wondered what it means.


Figure 1. Adjusted monetary base. Source: FRED.
mon_base_mar_09.jpg

To understand the explosion in the monetary base since September, let's begin with a little background. The Federal Reserve has the ability to purchase assets or make loans with funds (money) that are created by the Fed itself. To buy a billion dollars worth of assets, the Fed doesn't show up with new cash in a wheelbarrow. Instead the Fed pays for any assets it purchases or loans it extends by crediting the funds that the recipient bank has in an account with the Fed, known as reserve deposits. A bank can later withdraw those deposits in the form of green currency, if it chooses, and that's the point at which an armored truck from the Fed would be involved with physical delivery of cash.

The monetary base is essentially the sum of (1) the currency that's been withdrawn from private banks and is being held by the public, (2) the currency that's sitting in the vaults of private banks that could potentially be withdrawn by the banks' customers if they wanted, and (3) banks' reserve deposits, which you could think of as electronic credits for currency that the banks could ask for from the Fed any time the banks choose. Historically, newly created reserve deposits have usually shown up pretty quickly as currency withdrawn by banks and then by the public. Choosing a pace at which to allow that supply of currency to grow so as to accommodate the increased currency demands from a growing economy without cultivating excessive inflation is one of the main responsibilities of the Fed.

Figure 2 below plots the assorted "factors absorbing reserve funds" from the Fed's H41 release during the halcyon period from 2003 to the middle of 2007. At that time, currency held by the public was by far the biggest component in the liabilities side of the Fed's balance sheet, with the currency supply increasing 20% over these 5 years and with temporary seasonal bumps to accommodate the annual Christmas surge in currency demand. Reserve deposits (the sum of the "reserves" and "service" components in Figure 2) were quite minor relative to total quantity of currency in circulation.


Figure 2. Factors absorbing reserve funds, in billions of dollars, seasonally unadjusted, from Jan 7, 2003 to June 27, 2007. Wednesday values, from Federal Reserve H41 release. Treasury: sum of U.S. Treasury general and supplementary funding accounts; reserves: reserve balances with Federal Reserve Banks; misc: sum of Treasury cash holdings, foreign official accounts, and other deposits; other: other liabilities and capital; service: sum of required clearing balance and adjustments to compensate for float; reverse RP: reverse repurchase agreements; Currency: currency in circulation.

With this increase in newly created money, the Fed was over this period acquiring assets primarily in the form of short-term Treasury securities, which holdings grew 25% over this 5-year period. The Fed at that time used short-term repurchase agreements as a device for adjusting the supply of reserves on a temporary basis. Note that for each date the height of the components in Figure 3 below (essentially the asset side of the Fed's balance sheet) is exactly equal, by definition, to the height of the liabilities portrayed in the previous Figure 2.


Figure 3. Factors supplying reserve funds, in billions of dollars, seasonally unadjusted, from Jan 7, 2003 to June 27, 2007. Wednesday values, from Federal Reserve H41 release. Agency: federal agency debt securities held outright; swaps: central bank liquidity swaps; Maiden 1: net portfolio holdings of Maiden Lane LLC; MMIFL: net portfolio holdings of LLCs funded through the Money Market Investor Funding Facility; MBS: mortgage-backed securities held outright; CPLF: net portfolio holdings of LLCs funded through the Commercial Paper Funding Facility; TALF: loans extended through Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility; AIG: sum of credit extended to American International Group, Inc. plus net portfolio holdings of Maiden Lane II and III; ABCP: loans extended to Asset-Backed Commercial Paper Money Market Mutual Fund Liquidity Facility; PDCF: loans extended to primary dealer and other broker-dealer credit; discount: sum of primary credit, secondary credit, and seasonal credit; TAC: term auction credit; RP: repurchase agreements; misc: sum of float, gold stock, special drawing rights certificate account, and Treasury currency outstanding; other FR: Other Federal Reserve assets; treasuries: U.S. Treasury securities held outright.

Beginning in September 2007, the Fed began a process of systematically changing the nature of its asset holdings. Over the course of the next year, the Fed sold off over $300 billion in Treasury securities (about 40% of its holdings of Treasury securities), and replaced them with $150 billion in direct bank lending in the form of term auction credit, $60 billion in loans to foreign central banks in the form of liquidity swaps, and $100 billion in repurchase agreements, used now not for temporary adjustments but instead as a device to create a market for MBS by accepting alternative assets as collateral.


Figure 4. Factors supplying reserve funds, in billions of dollars, seasonally unadjusted, from Jan 3, 2007 to August 27, 2008. Wednesday values, from Federal Reserve H41 release. Agency: federal agency debt securities held outright; swaps: central bank liquidity swaps; Maiden 1: net portfolio holdings of Maiden Lane LLC; MMIFL: net portfolio holdings of LLCs funded through the Money Market Investor Funding Facility; MBS: mortgage-backed securities held outright; CPLF: net portfolio holdings of LLCs funded through the Commercial Paper Funding Facility; TALF: loans extended through Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility; AIG: sum of credit extended to American International Group, Inc. plus net portfolio holdings of Maiden Lane II and III; ABCP: loans extended to Asset-Backed Commercial Paper Money Market Mutual Fund Liquidity Facility; PDCF: loans extended to primary dealer and other broker-dealer credit; discount: sum of primary credit, secondary credit, and seasonal credit; TAC: term auction credit; RP: repurchase agreements; misc: sum of float, gold stock, special drawing rights certificate account, and Treasury currency outstanding; other FR: Other Federal Reserve assets; treasuries: U.S. Treasury securities held outright.

Because the Fed funded those measures through August 2008 by selling off its holdings of Treasuries, there was little effect on either currency in circulation or the monetary base through that time.


Figure 5. Factors absorbing reserve funds, in billions of dollars, seasonally unadjusted, from Jan 3, 2007 to August 27, 2008. Wednesday values, from Federal Reserve H41 release. Treasury: sum of U.S. Treasury general and supplementary funding accounts; reserves: reserve balances with Federal Reserve Banks; misc: sum of Treasury cash holdings, foreign official accounts, and other deposits; other: other liabilities and capital; service: sum of required clearing balance and adjustments to compensate for float; reverse RP: reverse repurchase agreements; Currency: currency in circulation.

Beginning in September of 2008, the Fed embarked on a huge expansion in its lending efforts and holdings of alternative assets. The biggest items among assets currently held are $469 billion in term auction credit, $328 billion in currency swaps, $241 billion leant through the CPLF, and $236 billion in mortgage-backed securities now held outright.


Figure 6. Factors supplying reserve funds, in billions of dollars, seasonally unadjusted, from Jan 3, 2007 to March 25, 2009. Wednesday values, from Federal Reserve H41 release. Agency: federal agency debt securities held outright; swaps: central bank liquidity swaps; Maiden 1: net portfolio holdings of Maiden Lane LLC; MMIFL: net portfolio holdings of LLCs funded through the Money Market Investor Funding Facility; MBS: mortgage-backed securities held outright; CPLF: net portfolio holdings of LLCs funded through the Commercial Paper Funding Facility; TALF: loans extended through Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility; AIG: sum of credit extended to American International Group, Inc. plus net portfolio holdings of Maiden Lane II and III; ABCP: loans extended to Asset-Backed Commercial Paper Money Market Mutual Fund Liquidity Facility; PDCF: loans extended to primary dealer and other broker-dealer credit; discount: sum of primary credit, secondary credit, and seasonal credit; TAC: term auction credit; RP: repurchase agreements; misc: sum of float, gold stock, special drawing rights certificate account, and Treasury currency outstanding; other FR: Other Federal Reserve assets; treasuries: U.S. Treasury securities held outright.

Where did the Fed get the resources to do all this? In part, it asked the Treasury to borrow on its behalf, represented by the pale yellow region in Figure 7 below, and a sum that last week amounted to a quarter trillion dollars. Note that magnitude is not part of the monetary base drawn in Figure 1. Some of the Fed expansion has shown up as additional currency held by the public, which made a modest contribution to the explosion of the monetary base seen in Figure 1. But by far the biggest factor was a 100-fold increase in excess reserves, the green region in Figure 7. These excess reserves mean that for the most part, banks are just sitting on the newly created reserve deposits, holding these funds idle at the end of each day rather than trying to invest them anywhere.


Figure 7. Factors absorbing reserve funds, in billions of dollars, seasonally unadjusted, from Jan 3, 2007 to March 25, 2009. Wednesday values, from Federal Reserve H41 release. Treasury: sum of U.S. Treasury general and supplementary funding accounts; reserves: reserve balances with Federal Reserve Banks; misc: sum of Treasury cash holdings, foreign official accounts, and other deposits; other: other liabilities and capital; service: sum of required clearing balance and adjustments to compensate for float; reverse RP: reverse repurchase agreements; Currency: currency in circulation.

That idleness, as I read the situation, was something the Fed initially actually wanted, and deliberately cultivated by choosing to pay an interest rate on excess reserves that is equal to what banks could expect to obtain by lending them overnight. As long as banks do just sit on these excess reserves, the Fed has found close to a trillion dollars it can use for the various targeted programs.

But what would happen if those electronic credits start to be redeemed for actual cash? Then we would have a concern, and the Fed would need to call the reserves back in by selling assets or failing to renew loans. But that presents a potential problem, as noted by Charles Plosser, President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia:

It is true that a number of the Fed's new programs will unwind naturally and fairly quickly as they are terminated because they involve primarily short-term assets. Yet we must anticipate that special interests and political pressures may make it harder to terminate these programs in a timely manner, thus making it difficult to shrink our balance sheet when the time comes. Moreover, some of these programs involve longer-term assets-- like the agency MBS. Such assets may prove difficult to sell for an extended period of time if markets are viewed as "fragile" or specific interest groups are strongly opposed, which could prove very damaging to our longer-term objective of price stability.

Last Monday's joint statement by the Treasury and the Fed indicated that the plan is for the worst of the Fed's assets (reported as "Maiden Lane" and part of the "AIG" sums in Figure 4) to be taken over by the Treasury, and Plosser for one wants the Treasury to take all the non-Treasury assets off the Fed's balance sheet. But as the Fed has declared its intention to raise its MBS holdings to $1.25 trillion it seems the current plan calls for more, not less of non-Treasury assets. And the following clause in the joint Fed-Treasury statement suggests that perhaps the Fed intends this, like most of the previous balance sheet changes, to not be allowed to impact total currency in circulation:

the Treasury and the Federal Reserve are seeking legislative action to provide additional tools the Federal Reserve can use to sterilize the effects of its lending or securities purchases on the supply of bank reserves.

John Jansen (hat tip: Tim Duy) construes that clause to mean that the Fed is going to request the ability to borrow directly as well as for exemption of any borrowing done by the Treasury on behalf of the Fed from the congressional debt ceiling. Also via Tim, FRB San Francisco President Janet Yellen offers this elaboration:

As the economy recovers, the Fed will eventually have to reduce the quantity of excess reserves. To some extent, this will occur naturally as markets heal and some programs consequently shrink. It can also be accomplished, in part, through outright asset sales. And finally, several exit strategies may be available that would allow the Fed to tighten monetary policy even as it maintains a large balance sheet to support credit markets. Indeed, the joint Treasury-Fed statement indicated that legislation will be sought to provide such tools. One possibility is that Congress could give the Fed the authority to issue interest-bearing debt in addition to currency and bank reserves. Issuing such debt would reduce the volume of reserves in the financial system and push up the funds rate without shrinking the total size of our balance sheet.

In other words, if the Fed decides that, as a result of inflationary pressures, it needs to undo some of the expansion in its liabilities at a time when it is not prepared to unwind its asset positions, Plan B is for the Fed to borrow directly from the public.

Which brings me back to the original question. Does the explosive growth of the monetary base in Figure 1 imply uncontrollable inflationary pressures? My answer: not yet, but stay tuned."

Saturday, February 28, 2009

All of these officials have to survive a Senate confirmation hearing in a brutal political environment

From the Economics Of Contempt:

"Understaffing at Treasury

Paul Volcker is obviously right that it's shameful that the Treasury Department is so badly understaffed right now (the "Treasury Officials" page is hilarious):
"There is an area that I think is, I don't know, shameful is the word," Paul Volcker said this morning at a Joint Economic Committee hearing. "The Secretary of the Treasury is sitting there without a deputy, without any undersecretaries, without any, as far as I know, assistant secretaries responsible in substantive areas at a time of very severe crisis. He shouldn't be sitting there alone."
Felix Salmon agrees (the same Salmon who called the lack of detail in Geithner's banking rescue "inexplicable" a couple weeks ago). Salmon considers this a huge blunder by the Obama administration, as well as an indication that the Obama administration is being managed inefficiently.

This isn't the Obama administration's fault. The reason Geithner is sitting there alone is that the top 33 positions in the Treasury Department are Senate-confirmable, and not only does that slow down the hiring process by introducing political factors into the search, but the Senate confirmation process also takes a long time. The following Treasury positions are Senate-confirmable:

Deputy Secretary of the Treasury
Undersecretary for Domestic Finance
Assistant Secretary for Financial Institutions
Assistant Secretary for Financial Markets
Assistant Secretary for Economic Policy
Undersecretary for International Affairs
Assistant Secretary for International Financial Markets and Investment Policy
Assistant Secretary for International Economics and Development
General Counsel
Assistant Secretary for Legislative Affairs

All of these officials have to survive a Senate confirmation hearing in a brutal political environment, especially for anyone who has ever worked on Wall Street (at any point during his/her life). Even if the Obama administration announced nominees for all of these positions tomorrow, it would still take weeks to get them all confirmed—and that's assuming they all do get confirmed, which isn't a foregone conclusion in the current environment.

People seem to be surprised that the Treasury is understaffed. Do people think entire federal executive departments are magically staffed in the first week or something? The Treasury won't be fully staffed until June at the earliest, and it's one of the smallest executive departments. Washington is slow. Always has been, always will be. "

Me:

Blogger Don said...

Can't people be hired to do work before they are confirmed? Departments often go out and hire independent contractors. Or is that they can't leave their current positions until they are confirmed? It does seem possible for Geithner to have been able to hire help, although he would not have a full staff.

Don the libertarian Democrat

February 28, 2009 4:58 PM

Thursday, January 15, 2009

"As the crisis has worsened, the institutions have come to rely almost entirely on government help. "

Can you say "predictable"? This is why we should have adopted the Swedish Plan. We're basically buying the banks, and allowing them to continue showing us how incompetent they are. From the Washington Post:

"Bank Losses Complicate U.S. Rescue

Pressure Grows on Obama to Allocate More Money for Distressed Financial Firms

By David Cho, Binyamin Appelbaum and Lori Montgomery
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, January 15, 2009; A01

A new wave of bank losses is overwhelming the federal government's emergency response, as financial firms struggle with the souring U.S. economy, the rapid deterioration of global markets and the unexpectedly high costs of shotgun mergers arranged by federal officials last year.

The problems are intensifying the pressure on the incoming Obama administration to allocate more of the $700 billion rescue program to financial firms even as Democratic leaders have urged more help for distressed homeowners, small businesses and municipalities. Senior Federal Reserve officials said this week that the bulk of the money should go to banks.( GOOD JOB )

Some Fed officials suggested that even more than $700 billion may be required, and financial analysts at Goldman Sachs and elsewhere say banks will have to raise hundreds of billions of dollars from public or private sources( IT WILL MAINLY BE PUBLIC ).

This year is expected to be worse for banks than last year, senior government officials and analysts say. The money from the first half of the rescue program helped banks replace most of the money they lost during the first nine months of 2008. But the firms are beginning to report fourth-quarter losses that are larger than analysts expected, and the economic environment continues to worsen quickly.( THE CALLING RUN COULD GET WORSE. GREAT. )

The markets got a taste yesterday of just how badly the year ended. European giant Deutsche Bank revealed an unexpected estimated loss of about $6.3 billion for the fourth quarter. HSBC, which has not yet raised capital during the financial crisis, may need $30 billion from investors, according to Morgan Stanley analysts.

Global stock markets reacted by plummeting, with financial shares falling the hardest. The Dow Jones industrial average dropped nearly 3 percent.

Meanwhile, Bank of America was on the verge of receiving billions more in federal aid to help it absorb( WE SHOULD HAVE DONE THIS ) troubled investment bank Merrill Lynch, whose losses had outpaced expectations, according to people familiar with the matter. That money would come on top of the $25 billion the government has already invested in Bank of America, including $10 billion specifically in connection with the Merrill Lynch deal.

Senior economic advisers to President-elect Barack Obama have said that restoring health to financial markets and the slumping economy requires the second half of the $700 billion rescue program as well as a massive stimulus package with a price tag approaching $850 billion.

On Tuesday, Federal Reserve chairman Ben S. Bernanke, suggested that more help for banks could be needed. "History demonstrates conclusively that a modern economy cannot grow if its financial system is not operating effectively," he said, adding that both the stimulus and the rescue package were essential to restoring health to financial firms.( HE'S CORRECT )

Yet it remained unclear yesterday whether Congress would approve the release of the last $350 billion in the program known as the Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP. Obama's transition team asked lawmakers to do so Monday, saying it was urgently needed. But Democrats are growing increasingly concerned about their ability to quickly deliver the money to Obama.

In the Senate, Republican support for release of the funds has evaporated in the face of public anger over the Bush administration's management of the program. With more than a handful of Democrats also opposed, Senate leaders scrambled yesterday to rally support.

The Senate is set to vote today on a resolution to block the release of the money.

Late yesterday, Lawrence H. Summers, Obama's top economic adviser, and Rahm Emanuel, Obama's incoming chief of staff, met with Senate Republicans to try to persuade them to come aboard. But even many Republicans who voted to create the bailout program in October now say they are unlikely to back the release of the money.

If Congress votes to block the cash, Obama has the power to veto the resolution, all but ensuring the money would be in place early in his administration. Some Republicans said they see no point in casting an unpopular vote simply to spare Obama the discomfort of issuing a veto against the Democratic Congress as one of his first acts as president.

"The Republican base hates this. So a lot of people are saying why anger the base in the name of good policy( TRY DOING WHAT'S BEST FOR THE COUNTRY CINCINNATUS ) when it's going to happen anyway?" said Sen. Robert F. Bennett (R-Utah), a senior member of the Senate Banking Committee, which was at the center of negotiations during the TARP's creation.

Republicans -- and many Democrats -- also say they are dissatisfied with Obama's pledges to dramatically reshape the rescue package to more directly assist distressed homeowners, small business and other consumers in search of credit, as well as to bolster oversight.

Republicans, in particular, want assurances that the money would be reserved to help ease the credit crisis in the financial system. They do not want the funds to go to other sectors, such as the faltering auto industry, which last month won a small share of the money from the Bush administration. That decision, said Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.) turned the program into a "$350 billion slush fund."( IF THE MONEY IS JUST SPENT ON THE FINANCIAL SECTOR, IT WILL BE SEEN AS FAVORITISM AND CRONYISM, WHICH YOU SHOULD UNDERSTAND, SINCE YOU'RE AN EXPERT IN IT. )

After an hour-long meeting with Summers and Emanuel, many Republicans, even those who supported the TARP last fall, said they remained skeptical.

"They probably haven't said quite enough yet for most Republicans," said Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.).

Lawmakers were initially swayed to vote for the bailout program in October because of evidence that some banks were in extreme trouble. At that time, the government pushed healthier banks to acquire faltering rivals.

Now the buyers, which included Bank of America, J.P. Morgan Chase and other major banks, are struggling to make the mergers work. The prices they paid seemed like bargains at the time, but losses have been greater than the banks expected.( GEE. THEY'RE SUCH EXPERT FORECASTERS. )

J.P. Morgan Chase will be the first of several major U.S. institutions to report earnings in coming days. Last year, it acquired two troubled firms, Bear Stearns and Washington Mutual. Analysts expect J.P. Morgan to report a narrow profit after a very tough year-end quarter.

Citigroup, which has received $45 billion in government aid, is expected to report a loss of more than $3 billion on Friday. The company also plans to announce that it will sell several major units to raise capital.

Bank of America, which reports earnings next week, has had enough capital to support its own operations but not enough to absorb Merrill Lynch's losses, according to two people familiar with the situation. Losses at Merrill Lynch have outpaced expectations since the merger was announced in September.

The banks closed the deal Jan. 1 after the Treasury Department committed( GUARANTEED ) in principle to making an additional investment, the sources said.

Bank of America and the Treasury declined to comment.

In total, banks raised about $456 billion in 2008, of which 41 percent came from the U.S. government, according to investment bank Keefe, Bruyette & Woods. But most of the money from private sources was raised in the first half of the year. As the crisis has worsened, the institutions have come to rely almost entirely( YOU THINK? ) on government help.

Staff writer Paul Kane contributed to this report."

If we had simply nationalized these banks, we would have saved ourselves money and aggravation. A hybrid plan pits the banks against the government, even as the money is handed over to the banks, who will continue to lobby for favors. Here's another obvious mess that people can't seem to see. Does anybody who favors the free market really believe that these banks believe in it, or would even be competent to do business in it? Please.

Monday, January 5, 2009

It turns out our entire financial sector was operating under that same premise—and to a far greater degree than Fannie and Freddie.

So, let's look at Fannie/Freddie in Vanity Fair in an excellent post:

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The Economy

Fannie Mae’s headquarters, in Washington, D.C. From left: former Fannie C.E.O. Jim Johnson, Congressman Barney Frank, former OFHEO director Armando Falcon, former Fannie C.E.O. Daniel Mudd, President Bush, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, former Fannie C.E.O. Franklin Raines, and Alan Greenspan. Photograph by Cameron Davidson.

Fannie Mae’s Last Stand

Many believe the government-backed mortgage giants known as Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were major culprits in the economic meltdown. But, for decades, Fannie Mae had been under siege from powerful enemies, who resented its privileged status, its hard-driving C.E.O.’s, and its huge profits. Surveying Fannie’s deeply dysfunctional relationships with Congress, the White House, and Wall Street, the author tells of the long, vicious war—involving most of Washington’s top players—that helped propel one of the world’s most successful companies off a cliff.

by Bethany McLean February 2009

The chairman of the universe.”

“Washington, D.C.’s Medici.”

“The face of the Washington national establishment.”

“One of the most powerful men in the United States.”

All those phrases were used to describe a man you may never have heard of: Jim Johnson, the C.E.O. of mortgage giant Fannie Mae in the 1990s. Fannie was then one of the largest, most profitable companies in the world, with a stock-market value of more than $70 billion and more earnings per employee than any other company in America. (By comparison, G.M. at its peak, in 2000, was worth only $56 billion.) On one level, Johnson, now 65 years old, was just another businessman with a lot of money and multi-million-dollar houses in desirable locations from D.C. to Sun Valley, Idaho, to Palm Desert, California. Chairman of D.C.’s premier arts venue, the Kennedy Center, and one of its top think tanks, the Brookings Institution, Johnson was out “wearing white-tie and black-tie every night,” says Bill Maloni, Fannie’s former chief lobbyist. “Everyone wanted a little bit of Jim.”

Joseph E. Stiglitz

Nobel laureate Joseph E. Stiglitz explains the financial mess.

Capitalist Fools, January 2009

Reversal of Fortune, November 2008

The $3 Trillion War, April 2008 (with Linda J. Bilmes)

The Economic Consequences of Mr. Bush, December 2007

But Johnson was also a political force, because the company he ran had a public mission—literally. It had been chartered by Congress to help homeownership( A GOOD IDEA ). Johnson liked to paraphrase the old motto about General Motors: “What’s good for American housing is good for Fannie Mae,” he’d say. Accordingly, he built Fannie into what former congressman Jim Leach, a Republican from Iowa and longtime Fannie gadfly, calls “the greatest, most sophisticated lobbying operation ( COLLUSION ) in the modern history of finance.”

He may be right. John McCain was embarrassed last summer by revelations that his campaign manager, Rick Davis, had served as the president of the Homeownership Alliance, an advocacy group for Fannie and Freddie Mac, Fannie’s smaller brother. The “revolving door,” as people call it, between the Hill and Fannie and Freddie spun so quickly that it’s actually more surprising when someone isn’t on the list than when they are. Rahm Emanuel served on Freddie’s board! Right-wing godfather Grover Norquist lobbied for Fannie! Newt Gingrich was a consultant for Freddie, and Ralph Reed was a consultant for Fannie!

The Princeton-educated son of a Minnesota state legislator, Johnson has silver hair and round tortoiseshell glasses, which give him a warm appearance that is belied by the hard planes of his face. Indeed, he was “very warm, very nice,” in the words of one former Fannie executive, but also “very hard-ass.” In 1996, Richard Baker, a Republican representative from Louisiana, complained that the preface to a Treasury Department report on Fannie had been watered down to make it friendlier to the company( COLLUSION ). Rumors flew that this had been accomplished after Johnson, or someone else high up in the company, had simply made a call to Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin or President Bill Clinton, both of whom were Johnson’s personal friends. (Johnson and Clinton had met at a 1969 gathering on Martha’s Vineyard.) Johnson has denied calling either man, and has said that he and Rubin had a policy while Rubin was Treasury secretary that they would not discuss business. But, under Johnson, Fannie Mae had a reputation for never losing a fight. “The old political reality was that we always won, we took no prisoners, and we faced little organized political opposition” is how Daniel Mudd, son of journalist Roger Mudd and Fannie’s last real C.E.O., later described Fannie’s golden years.

On December 15, 1998, Jim Johnson’s retirement dinner was held at the National Museum for Women in the Arts. That seems to have been the second choice—according to The Washington Post, the gala was supposed to have been in the U.S. State Department’s Benjamin Franklin Room, which could be used by outsiders only if a government official requested it. The Post began making calls after it got hold of an invitation, at which point State Department lawyers pulled the plug. But the dinner was grand in any event. Rubin spoke, as did comedian Bill Cosby and Fannie board member Bill Daley, the brother of Chicago’s current mayor.

The press reported Johnson’s compensation in his final year as around $7 million, but an internal Fannie Mae analysis (which assumed a high stock price) said that the real number was closer to $21 million. Plus, he got perks that could add up to half a million a year: a consulting agreement, two support-staff employees paid for by Fannie Mae, a car, and partial payment for a driver.

There were rumors that Johnson was angling to become Treasury secretary. Instead, in 1999, he became one of the first outside directors of the investment bank Goldman Sachs, where Rubin had been C.E.O., and where current Treasury secretary Henry Paulson presided at the time. Johnson became the head of the compensation committee, making him the closest thing Hank Paulson had to a boss.

Flash forward to just 10 years later. On Friday, September 5, 2008, Treasury Secretary Paulson sat in a conference room at an obscure government agency known as the Federal Housing Finance Agency (F.H.F.A.), which had been charged with regulating Fannie and Freddie. Next to Paulson sat Jim Lockhart, the director of F.H.F.A. On Lockhart’s other side was Ben Bernanke, chairman of the Federal Reserve. Across the table sat Dan Mudd, who had become Fannie’s C.E.O. in late 2004. By the summer of 2008, Fannie and Freddie owned or guaranteed $5.2 trillion of American mortgages, roughly half the $12 trillion total. Just six weeks before the September 5 meeting, Lockhart had said publicly that Fannie Mae’s capital was “well in excess” of what it needed to survive the mortgage storm that was engulfing the nation. But at the meeting he announced that the company’s capital was, in fact, insufficient( THIS LYING HAS TO STOP ). The government officials told Mudd that his company had to give its consent to something called conservatorship, which meant that the government would take it over, pretty much wiping out shareholders—not because Fannie needed capital at that moment, but because they believed Fannie would need it in the future( BECAUSE OF FORECLOSURES ). Mudd was out. The message to Fannie executives, says one person who was in the room, was crystal clear: “If you oppose us, we will fight publicly and fight hard, and do not think that your share price will do well with all of the forces of the government arrayed against you.”

There was also a threat that F.H.F.A. would make life very unpleasant for both the board and management if they didn’t agree to the government’s terms, says another Fannie executive. “That’s really not true—there were no threats,” claims Lockhart, although he adds, “We were very firm.” Steve Ashley, former chairman of Fannie’s board, asked what the government wanted Fannie to do that it wasn’t already doing. The Fannie team didn’t feel that any good answers were given.

A lot of people assume they already know the story of Fannie’s fall from grace. In a narrative that has been repeated incessantly in op-eds and on cable TV, there were good guys and bad guys. The good guys were the Republicans, who had tried to rein in Fannie and Freddie (which was also put into conservatorship that same day), and the bad guys were the Democrats, who wanted to put people into houses they couldn’t afford with subprime mortgages, and Fannie itself, which took advantage of its supposed mission to enrich its executives at the expense of taxpayers. Some even argue that Fannie and Freddie—“the toxic twins,” former Connecticut Republican representative Chris Shays called them—are to blame for the entire economic meltdown( NO ). They were “the match that started this forest fire( TRUE, BUT THAT'S BECAUSE OF HOW THE GOVERNMENT HANDLED THIS. ),” according to John McCain. On October 21, a group of House Republicans wrote to Attorney General Michael Mukasey, requesting that the Justice Department appoint a special counsel to investigate Fannie and Freddie executives. (The F.B.I. is investigating both Fannie and Freddie( FRAUD, NEGLIGENCE, FIDUCIARY MISMANAGEMENT, AND OBVIOUS COLLUSION. ).) Jim Johnson, by last June the vetter of vice-presidential candidates for Barack Obama, had to resign the post due to allegations that he had gotten more than $7 million of loans—some at favorable rates—from scandal-ridden Countrywide Financial, a major Fannie Mae customer whose former C.E.O., Angelo Mozilo, was a friend of Johnson’s. (Johnson said at the time that he received no special favors.)

But there’s a very different—albeit equally radical—version of reality. In this version, which is told by former Fannie executives and shareholders, Fannie was shot, not because it had to be, but because it could be( A VERY GOOD POINT ). “The weekend massacre”( WHICH BEGAN THE FLIGHT TO SAFETY ) is how one former Freddie lobbyist describes the events of the September 5 weekend. “My view is [the Bush] administration said we’ve got four months to remove this thorn in our side,” says Tim Howard, who was Fannie’s chief financial officer from 1990 to 2004. “There will never be another time. We’ve got to do it now( A TERRIBLE MISTAKE ).”

It is worth noting that thus far the government has put not a dime into Fannie and only $13.8 billion into Freddie—which is a drop in the bucket compared to the taxpayer dollars that have gone to some other firms, such as the $45 billion Hank Paulson has handed Citigroup. In this alternative narrative, it was Paulson’s rash action of taking over Fannie and Freddie that helped cause the financial meltdown( TRUE ). As famous money manager Bill Miller, the chief investment officer of Legg Mason Capital Management, wrote in a recent letter to his investors: “When the government pre-emptively seized [Fannie and Freddie] not because they needed capital and could not get it, but because the government believed they would run out in the future, then shareholders of every other institution that needed or was perceived to need capital did the only rational thing they could do—sell, in case the government decided to pre-emptively wipe them out as well( TRUE ).”

In truth, Fannie was a company with extraordinarily powerful enemies. They spanned the decades, the two parties, and the ideological spectrum, from Reagan budget director David Stockman to Clinton Treasury secretary Larry Summers to President George W. Bush, and from Ralph Nader to former Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan. These enemies, who detested the privileges Fannie got from its congressional charter, had long wanted to drastically curtail the company—or kill it outright. Johnson called the battle a “philosophical dispute with deep roots and many, many branches,” and it was, but it was also a personal dispute based on rivalries and jealousies. “The War of the Roses” is how a former Fannie executive describes it.

As in most wars, there is fault on both sides. Although in 2000 the Department of Housing and Urban Development (hud), under Andrew Cuomo, increased the requirements that Fannie and Freddie buy loans made to lower-income people, a dramatic increase came in 2004—under the Bush administration. Some people believe it did so merely in order to pressure the companies into agreeing to new regulation. But Fannie itself isn’t a hapless victim, either. In the end, it was Fannie executives( TRUE. NO INCENTIVES EXCUSE THIS NEGLIGENCE. ) who made a business decision to stake their future on risky mortgages that had nothing to do with helping people own homes. The company used its political power to stymie effective regulation, and its extreme aggressiveness and arrogance gave its enemies license to do things they never would have done to a normal company. And, oh, did they ever.

The Vampire Issue

Gary Gensler, the Treasury undersecretary for domestic finance in the final years of the Clinton administration, likes to tell a story about the deal Alexander Hamilton cut with Thomas Jefferson and James Madison back in 1790. Jefferson and Madison agreed that the nation would assume the debt of the states; Hamilton agreed that the capital of the country would not be in New York, but rather on the Potomac. “This was a very wise move,” says Gensler, “because for about two centuries it separated the nation’s financial capital from its political capital.” Then he chuckles a little. “It worked until Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac came along.”

The Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae) was founded in 1938, a creature of F.D.R.’s New Deal. The Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp. (Freddie Mac) came along in 1970, when the thrift industry decided that Fannie needed a competitor. Referred to as Government Sponsored Enterprises, or G.S.E.’s, they were created to help homeownership, but that has never been because they lend money directly to homeowners. Instead, Fannie and Freddie bought mortgages from the local institutions—banks, thrifts, and mortgage originators—that had made them, which relieved those mortgage-makers of both the credit risk (the risk that the homeowner wouldn’t pay) and the interest-rate risk (the risk that the bank would earn less on the mortgage than it paid on its debt)( IN OTHER WORDS, AS GUARANTORS. ). This enabled the mortgage-makers to go out and make more loans.

In addition to having a congressional mandate to aid homeownership, Fannie and Freddie also had shareholders who wanted to see profits, just like Citigroup or General Electric or any publicly traded company. That’s because in 1968 President Lyndon Johnson, who needed money to pay for the Vietnam War, decided to remove Fannie from the government’s balance sheet by having it sell shares to the public( A HYBRID. A BAD IDEA. ). Freddie followed suit in 1989.

And yet, Fannie and Freddie weren’t just like Citigroup or General Electric, or any normal company, because they kept an array of special perks that came with their congressional charters. Among those perks: an exemption from state and local income taxes, presidential appointees on their boards of directors, and a line of credit( IMPLICIT GUARANTEE ) with the U.S. Treasury. This last was by far the most important, because the line of credit—eventually $2.25 billion for each company—implied to many investors that the full faith and credit of the U.S. government stood behind Fannie and Freddie. Officially, everyone denied that that was the case, but this “double game”( THE HYBRID GAME )—as Rick Carnell, the Treasury undersecretary for domestic finance in the 1990s, called it—enabled the companies to raise money at a cost that was just a smidgen higher than that of the government itself, thereby providing them with an enormous competitive advantage over ordinary financial institutions.

As the mortgage market evolved, and finance grew more sophisticated, Fannie and Freddie came to make their money in two ways. One was supposedly conservative: they were paid a small fee by the mortgage-makers to guarantee that the homeowner wouldn’t default. And for most of their history, they wouldn’t buy just any loans, but rather loans that conformed to certain size limits (thereby excluding so-called jumbo loans, more than $417,000) and fairly strict credit standards. Then they repackaged these loans into what are known as mortgage-backed securities, and sold them to other investors. The new investors were willing to take the interest-rate risk, but didn’t have to worry about evaluating each and every homeowner’s ability to pay—a task of enormous proportions—because Fannie and Freddie guaranteed( THE GOVERNMENT GUARANTEED ) that. Today, this is the $3.7 trillion in mortgages Fannie and Freddie guarantee.

The other way Fannie and Freddie made money was when they began to repurchase their own mortgage-backed securities, and to buy similar securities that were created by Wall Street without the G.S.E. guarantee, and hold them in a portfolio. Then Fannie and Freddie pocketed the difference—what Greenspan called “the big fat gap”—between what the mortgages yielded and the companies’ own cost of borrowing funds. This was an immensely profitable business: Wall Street analysts estimated that it provided up to three-fourths of Fannie’s and Freddie’s earnings, and today the portfolio business comprises most of the $1.5 trillion in mortgages that Fannie and Freddie own.

This second way of making money became the source of great controversy. Critics, most notably Alan Greenspan, argued that the portfolio wasn’t worth any risk at all because it did nothing to put people in homes and existed only to make money for the companies’ executives and shareholders. He and other critics didn’t want just to modify Fannie’s and Freddie’s business. They wanted to drastically curtail it—or, better yet, wipe out the two G.S.E.’s altogether. And so it was only human nature that Fannie and Freddie fought back—hard. Or, as former Fannie chief lobbyist Bill Maloni, whose Friday-night poker games for Washington power players were the stuff of legend, wrote on a blog, “One fact of the GSE world is that you will be slaughtered either for being a sheep or a wolf, and I’d much rather meet my fate as a predator than as a lamb chop provider.”

Maloni and his bosses felt that they couldn’t lose any battle, no matter how small. “You punch my brother in the face, I’ll burn down your house” was one Fannie Mae saying. Another was “It’s better to throw one brick too many than one brick too few.”

But Fannie, no matter how aggressive it was, could never stop the criticism. Within Fannie, people called the desire to shrink them or kill them the “vampire issue”—because Fannie could never make it go away.

Jim Johnson had come to Fannie in 1990. His predecessor, David Maxwell, had been on the tennis team at Yale and was “the kind of man who sends only handwritten notes,” recalls Maloni. But Maxwell was also a tough cookie who knew how to get what he wanted. When he left, in 1991—with a $19.5 million retirement package—a humorous going-away video showed corporate cars leaving Fannie’s offices with body bags in the trunks.

Maxwell had met Johnson at a small Washington dinner party in 1985. Johnson was a partner at Shearson Lehman, where he’d landed after he and Richard Holbrooke (who would go on to become ambassador to the U.N. under President Clinton) sold a consulting firm they’d founded to the investment bank. Johnson’s world encompassed both business and politics. He had worked on the campaigns of Eugene McCarthy and George McGovern, and then served in the Carter administration as Walter Mondale’s executive assistant (and later the chair of his presidential campaign), during which time he married Mondale’s press secretary, Maxine Isaacs, now a lecturer at the Harvard Kennedy School. When Maxwell retired, he chose Johnson as his successor over protests from President George H. W. Bush’s people, who claimed Johnson was a partisan Democrat.

It was Johnson who “took the seeds that David Maxwell sowed and [grew] them far beyond what David Maxwell dreamed,” as Countrywide chief Angelo Mozilo later told a reporter. Like Maxwell, Johnson cut a charming, suave figure in society, but under his Minnesota-nice exterior was the heart of a born fighter. “In daily life, he’d say things like ‘We’re going to cut them off at the knees,’ ” says a former Fannie executive.

A key test for Johnson came early in his tenure, when Congress began work on how best to regulate Fannie and Freddie. The resulting legislation, which allowed the G.S.E.’s to hold lower amounts of capital than other financial institutions, was what one analyst later called Johnson’s “finest moment.” Fannie lobbied relentlessly, using a letter from former Fed chairman Paul Volcker, who said that if Fannie reached its proposed capital standards it would be able to maintain its solvency.

Fannie’s allies in Congress also made sure that the new regulator—which was known as the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight (ofheo) until its name was changed to the F.H.F.A. in the summer of 2008—was placed inside hud, which had no experience regulating a financial-services company, and that ofheo, unlike any other regulator, would be subject to the appropriations process, meaning its funding was at the mercy of politicians—politicians who often took their cues from Fannie.( COLLUSION )

Not surprisingly, ofheo was a notoriously weak regulator( PR ). For almost three years, from February 1997 to September 1999, the agency didn’t even have a director. “The goal of [Fannie’s] senior management was straightforward: to force ofheo to rely on [Fannie itself] for information and expertise to such a degree that Fannie Mae would essentially be regulated only by itself,” wrote ofheo in a report years later.

Johnson also addressed Fannie’s other big problem, which was that homeowners and politicians never really understood what it did. “There’s nothing in the homeowner’s life called Fannie Mae,” he’d say. So he had to show homeowners that the company was indispensable. The cornerstones of his strategy were the Fannie Mae Foundation and the Partnership Offices. In 1994, Fannie began opening offices in congressional districts around the country. They issued thousands of press releases, which usually featured a local politician prominently assisting Fannie in some good housing-related deed.

In 1995, Johnson seeded the Fannie Mae Foundation with $350 million in Fannie stock. In the ensuing years, the foundation gave away millions of dollars to organizations ranging from the Cold Climate Housing Research Center, in Fairbanks, Alaska, to the Congressional Hispanic Caucus Institute. All of this, along with the alliances Johnson built with others in housing, including homebuilders and real-estate agents, helps explain all the outcry today about Fannie’s and Freddie’s lobbying dollars—$170 million over the past decade, or just a little less than what the American Medical Association spent, according to the Associated Press. But that misses the point. It’s like counting only one arm on a giant octopus. “They ran a battle plan that would make Patton proud. It was 24-7 and never anything left to chance,” says former congressman and Fannie antagonist Richard Baker today.

Despite what right-wing critics now charge, however, Fannie and Freddie weren’t big risktakers, even after the 1992 legislation in which Congress also mandated that they had to buy a certain number of mortgages made to people with lower incomes. Critics now charge that this was when Fannie began to engage in risky lending practices. But, in reality, Fannie was extremely careful about the credit risks it took. Johnson was a master at announcing plans that sounded very grand—such as the trillion-dollar initiative, in which Fannie would buy a trillion dollars’ worth of mortgages to help housing—but didn’t really cost much. “About 98 percent were done at market rates [i.e., mortgages they would have bought anyway],” says a former employee. “We were giving away a little at the edge of the big machine.” Or, as Maloni puts it, Johnson could say to a member of Congress, “ ‘Have you seen our initiative for the handicapped?’ It might have only been for a few dozen loans, but our intent mattered.” Johnson would tell people that “the [congressional] housing goals had no teeth.” Indeed, during those years, Fannie and Freddie faced harsh criticism that they did less—not more—to support affordable housing than private lenders did.

This wasn’t because Fannie people were cynical about affordable housing. Quite the contrary: many referred to themselves as “housers,” which is slang for those who believe that better housing is the cure to all of society’s ills. But the company’s leaders knew that they couldn’t afford to make many unsafe loans, because any sign of financial weakness would be grist for their critics.

If the 1990s were a golden time for Fannie’s political power, they were for its financial power as well. Fannie’s market valuation grew from $10.5 billion at the beginning of the decade to more than $70 billion by the end. On Wall Street, Fannie and Freddie were big business—all those mortgage-backed securities and all that debt to fund their growth were sold through Wall Street firms—and “people dealt with them as if they were sovereign credits( IMPLICIT GUARANTEE ),” says one former banker. There was even talk, in those days of no federal deficit, that Fannie and Freddie debt would become the substitute for U.S. Treasuries.

The G.S.E.’s also became the place for ex-politicians to work. The Washington Monthly once declared that after he left the White House, Bill Clinton should go to Fannie because “scoring an executive post at Fannie Mae is recognized around establishment Washington as the equivalent of winning the lottery.” After all, where else could you make Wall Street–type money with no financial skills? And where else could you make so much money as a lobbyist?

In retrospect, this was a balancing act that was almost destined to fail. As Fannie and Freddie got bigger and more powerful, they struck even more fear into the hearts of those who resented their size and power. “We became dominant so quickly that we scared people,” says former Fannie chief financial officer Tim Howard today. And as a former top lobbyist for Fannie says, “A company like Fannie Mae, which has defined itself in Washington through its public mission, but which also has very well-paid executives, will have a hard time staying in the sweet spot.”

Profits of Doom

Every winter, Fannie Mae held a conference for Wall Street analysts and major investors. One year, right before Johnson retired, the theme song was a customized version of the song “The Best Is Yet to Come( A JINX ),” popularized by Frank Sinatra. Fannie Mae executives dressed up in top hats and tails to perform it. Frank Raines, who took over from Johnson as C.E.O., told investors that “the future’s so bright that I’m willing to set as a goal that our earnings per share will double over the next five years.” A report by the research firm Sanford Bernstein noted that the combined assets of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac exceeded, in dollar terms, the G.D.P. of any nation except the U.S., Japan, and Germany.

When Franklin Delano Raines was named Johnson’s successor, he became the first African-American C.E.O. of a Fortune 500 company. Born in 1949 in Seattle to blue-collar parents—his mother cleaned offices at Boeing and his father was a custodian at the Seattle Parks Department—Raines went to Harvard, where he joined both the Young Democrats and the Young Republicans, and was named a Rhodes scholar. He interned in the Nixon White House and then served in the Carter administration, before leaving government to become a partner at the investment bank Lazard Frères. After 11 years at Lazard, Raines was spending four days a week on the road. He left, without his next move planned, in order to spend more time with his three young children. In 1991, when Johnson offered him the vice-chairmanship of Fannie Mae, Raines said yes—Fannie’s offices were just a mile and a half from Raines’s seven-bedroom Colonial home in Virginia.

In 1996, President Clinton lured Raines away from Fannie by appointing him the director of the Office of Management and Budget. Raines asked Clinton how long the job would last, and Clinton replied, “Until you balance the budget.” Within two years Raines produced the first balanced budget the U.S. had seen in 30 years. Later, he would be amazed to find himself painted as a partisan Democrat, because, during his time at O.M.B., Democrats had been angered by what they saw as his support for Republican fiscal policies. In 1995, Raines was appointed to the board of Boeing, where his mother had scrubbed floors. In 1998 he returned to Fannie Mae. At the time, there was talk that one day he would become the first black president of the United States.

There is no one who says that Franklin Raines isn’t incredibly smart. But praise for Raines’s intelligence is often accompanied by criticism of his interpersonal skills. “He’s very introverted,” says one former executive. “He cannot lower himself to make nice to people he considers intellectually inferior.” “Frank hurt himself,” says another. “He lacks a certain understanding of how to best position the other person so that you get what you want.”

Inside Fannie, there was also skepticism about the promise Raines made to Wall Street to double Fannie’s earnings from $3.23 per share in 1998 to $6.46 per share in 2003. “All the V.P.’s in the company looked at each other and said, ‘How is that going to happen?”’ says a former executive. The promise, combined with the lure of financial rewards, created an unhealthy pressure throughout the company. In 2000 the head of Fannie’s office of auditing gave a speech to the company’s internal auditors. “By now, every one of you must have 6.46 branded in your brains,” he said. “You must be able to say it in your sleep, you must be able to recite it forwards and backwards, you must have a raging fire in your belly that burns away all doubts, you must live, breathe, and dream 6.46 After all, thanks to Frank, we all have a lot of money riding on it.”

Almost immediately in Raines’s tenure, the criticism of the G.S.E.’s took on a new ferocity. One of the first salvos was fired by the Clinton Treasury Department under Larry Summers, who had replaced Rubin in the summer of 1999. Treasury workers knew that taking on Fannie was akin to political suicide, but “everyone jumped off together,” in the words of one former appointee, because they were all so convinced that Fannie and Freddie would eventually fall on top of taxpayers with a crushing thud. One of Summers’s goals was to weaken the perceived ties between the G.S.E.’s and the U.S. government, which was enabling the G.S.E.’s to take on too much risk( THIS IS MY MAIN CAUSE OF THE CRISIS ). Most notably, on March 22, 2000, in congressional testimony, Gary Gensler said that the U.S. Treasury should consider cutting the lines of credit that Fannie and Freddie had with the government.

The response from Fannie Mae was immediate and furious. Tim Howard called Gensler’s comments “inept” and “irresponsible.” Fannie even tried to get the White House to distance itself from the Treasury, according to one person.

What has never been disclosed before is that, even before Gensler’s comments, and through the summer of 2000, Treasury held a series of meetings—some in a room just down the hall from Summers’s office—with Fannie’s top executives, in which Fannie tried to get Treasury to sign off publicly on a set of initiatives Fannie had devised in the hopes of appeasing its critics. Both sides describe Fannie’s strategy in the same way: keep your friends close and your enemies closer. But the negotiations came to nothing. One explanation is that the chemistry between Summers and Raines was “horrible,” in the words of one former executive. “The two of them were so alike,” says this person. “They were both arrogant, stubborn sons of bitches, and they both viewed themselves as the smartest guy in the room.”

Another explanation is that Summers realized that if Treasury supported Fannie in any public way it would only strengthen its apparent ties to the U.S. government, so he backed off. “Treasury was too smart,” Howard says now. “Larry wouldn’t bite.”

But perhaps the best explanation is that there just wasn’t a deal to be cut. Treasury officials simply didn’t believe Fannie’s arguments. As for Fannie, “you have to have some level of trust that they’re not trying to do you in, and there wasn’t that level of trust,” says another former Fannie executive.

As the critics became more vehement, Fannie’s responses became ever tougher. Its customers, including major banks, who were terrified of its rapid growth and Raines’s grand plans, set up a group called FM Watch, which began its own anti-G.S.E. lobbying effort. Fannie responded by comparing FM Watch to Slobodan Milošević, the Serb dictator who was charged with crimes against humanity for his role in the Balkan wars. “I think Frank was scared that he couldn’t be as tough as Jim, and so he overcompensated,” says a former executive.

Operation “Noriega”

When George W. Bush ran for president, part of the Republican Party platform was that “homeownership is central to the American Dream.” Those words were manna for Fannie and Freddie. And Bush appointed people to their boards, including Yale classmate Victor Ashe and campaign donor Manuel Justiz. (“It is a great honor to be appointed by the President to serve on the board of a company with such an important housing mission,” wrote the Bush appointees in a letter to ofheo in late 2001.) In 2002, Karl Rove invited Raines to Bush’s economic summit in Waco. Raines still keeps a “Doonesbury” cartoon on his wall that features an admiring Bush saying, “Franklin can tell you … ”

Perhaps most notably, after a 2002 event in Atlanta in which Bush announced his efforts to help 5.5 million black and Hispanic families buy homes before the end of the decade, both Raines and Freddie C.E.O. Leland Brendsel flew back with him on Air Force One.

Then the Bush administration’s attitude changed dramatically. Both sides point to the same catalyst: Enron. “It was as if someone flipped a switch,” Raines says today. A former Bush-administration official says that the last thing the president wanted was to be at the center of another corporate scandal, and if you were looking for likely candidates, how could you miss Fannie and Freddie, with their longtime critics and thin capitalization? Raines, for his part, thought that the administration wanted to deflect the criticism it got for its ties to Enron by pointing at what it could claim was a Democratic scandal in the making. In 2003, Bush’s chief of staff Andrew Card was put in charge of a policy-review group. Soon thereafter, Bush pulled his presidential appointees from the G.S.E.’s boards.

And then there was Fed chairman Alan Greenspan. He was friendly with Raines, had regular lunches with him, and came to the grand Christmas parties at Raines’s home—but he never got past his deep suspicion of the G.S.E.’s. To wit: the portfolio business was a ticking time bomb, and who needed Fannie and Freddie anyway? Big banks, which were supposedly subject to the discipline of the market, were better holders of mortgage risks than the G.S.E.’s.

Although it didn’t happen immediately, Greenspan’s thinking on the G.S.E.’s soon came to dominate the Bush administration’s thinking on them. “[Greenspan and the Bush administration] weren’t interested in having a strong regulator,” says Howard today. “They were interested in constraining Fannie and Freddie. Obviously, Fannie and Freddie weren’t going to agree to that.” So someone had to win, and someone had to lose.

The fight became both nasty and personal in early 2004, when Raines sent what one person calls a “fuck you” letter to Andrew Card. This came about after the homebuilders complained to Raines that Card had told them Raines had agreed to regulatory compromises the homebuilders didn’t want. After that the White House took on Fannie and Freddie in an organized, orchestrated way that was akin to how Fannie itself had long operated. Some of those on the inside jokingly referred to their assault as “Noriega”—as in Manuel Noriega, the former Panamanian dictator and drug kingpin whom the U.S. military blasted with loud, incessant rock music during its attempt to get him to leave a Vatican compound and surrender.

Congressman Barney Frank, a Massachusetts Democrat and longtime supporter of the G.S.E.’s, told a Wall Street analyst that “the [Bush] administration is engaged in a strategy of political attacks on the G.S.E.’s, designed to pressure them into accepting the administration’s regulatory-reform bill by depressing their stock prices.”

But the best weapon the G.S.E.’s opponents could have had was handed to them by Freddie Mac itself. On June 9, 2003, Freddie’s entire top management team was ousted after the company confessed to needing to re-state its earnings for the past three years. They had understated—not overstated, but understated—earnings in order to produce the smoothly growing earnings that investors most valued.

Just days before Freddie announced its accounting error, ofheo had signed off on Freddie’s management and internal controls. This very public mistake was a huge black eye—a “humiliating experience,” in the words of Steve Blumenthal, then ofheo’s deputy director—for an agency that was already smarting from years of perceived and real condescension.

Not that anyone would have guessed that ofheo’s director at the time, Armando Falcon, was a guy to take on the G.S.E. machine. A Texas Democrat who was appointed by Clinton to head ofheo in 1999, Falcon had been raised near San Antonio by a father who was an aircraft mechanic. On the surface, he seemed like a shy, gentle soul—but he was far more politically savvy and ambitious than anyone would have expected. And he had Steve Blumenthal, a longtime Republican Hill staffer who viewed himself as a warrior, by his side. Even ofheo’s supporters say that Falcon and Blumenthal were emotionally invested in getting Fannie. And even though Falcon is a Democrat, he and the White House both wanted the same thing. In early 2004, over Fannie’s protests that “there should be no question about our accounting” in the wake of Freddie’s problems, ofheo launched a review of Fannie’s finances.

Fannie fought back in classic Fannie fashion. They tried to get Falcon and Blumenthal fired. Via a staffer who was a longtime friend and poker buddy of Maloni’s, Fannie got Republican senator Kit Bond of Missouri to launch a counter-investigation into ofheo. The resulting 2004 report from the hud inspector general (I.G.) came to some startling conclusions that couldn’t be dismissed as politics as usual, however. It claimed that Falcon and Blumenthal’s campaign against the G.S.E.’s was both ugly and relentless. It accused ofheo of taking what one source within ofheo called a “publicity-driven approach to oversight” with a “very strong intent to embarrass Fannie Mae.” A witness recalled that Blumenthal was “almost gleeful” when Fannie’s stock went down. (Blumenthal denied being gleeful, but did say, “You can’t hurt them enough to matter.”) Even more troubling was that both ofheo’s chief accountant, Wanda DeLeo, and its chief examiner, Scott Calhoun, complained that Falcon and Blumenthal were overstating Fannie’s problems or prematurely reporting some of ofheo’s findings, partly for political purposes. Another witness, who wanted to remain anonymous, had this way of explaining ofheo’s strategy: “Everybody runs for cover if somebody’s accusing a company of some impropriety in terms of their accounting. All of a sudden, they don’t have any friends anymore.”

An online exchange that took place in December 2007 shows how bitter emotions were, and still are, between Fannie publicist Bill Maloni and Blumenthal.

Maloni: “A HUD IG in a GOP Administration—with no Dems involved in the process—revealed the game you and your friends were playing.… Why would a regulator turn to guerilla tactics and try and financially injure one of its regulated institutions?”

Blumenthal, who didn’t directly answer the question, responded: “It has been my privelege [sic] to fight people like you all my life. Corrupt, fundamentally dishonest, cowards The HUD IG didn’t intimidate me, and a Chevy Chase wanna-be thug doesn’t either.” (Maloni now lives in Chevy Chase.)

Falcon and Blumenthal accused Fannie’s management of seeking to “misapply and ignore accounting principles” in order to meet Wall Street’s earning expectations. Although much of this was due to the implementation of a complicated new accounting rule for derivatives—one that caused hundreds of other companies to re-state their results as well—Falcon also accused Fannie of improperly deferring $200 million of expenses in 1998 to the following year in order to meet earnings targets and pay management’s bonuses. Both the Department of Justice and the S.E.C. opened investigations into possible accounting fraud at Fannie Mae.

At a congressional hearing on October 6, 2004, Raines and Falcon faced off. Falcon defended his work; Raines defended himself and his company. At the end of the hearing, longtime G.S.E. antagonist Richard Baker, the Republican from Louisiana, threw a curveball. More than a year earlier, he had requested information from ofheo on the compensation of Fannie’s top executives. He hadn’t released it, because Fannie had hired Ken Starr—the former special prosecutor who investigated Bill Clinton—to represent it, and had gone so far as to threaten “criminal proceedings” against anyone who supposedly violated privacy laws to disclose the information. Now Baker had found his moment. He put up a chart showing that 20 of Fannie’s top executives—including three lobbyists—had earned more than $1 million in 2002, and 9 had made more than $3 million. Today, Baker says that when he brought the chart out “the whole room blew up. It was the most animated room I’d ever seen in a hearing.”

If Fannie had any hope of prevailing, that was demolished on December 15, 2004, when the S.E.C. sided with ofheo and said that Fannie would have to re-state years of earnings, wiping out as much as $9 billion in profits. Under pressure from the board, which was itself under pressure from ofheo, Raines retired and Howard resigned.

One and a half years later, on May 23, 2006, ofheo issued its final report on Fannie Mae. The agency claimed that Fannie’s executives “deliberately and systematically” created earnings “illusions” to hit Fannie’s earnings-per-share targets from 1998 through 2004. Fannie agreed to pay the government $400 million. Christopher Cox, chairman of the S.E.C., promised to “vigorously pursue” the people responsible for this “extensive financial fraud.”( DID HE ? )

At the end of that year, ofheo sued Frank Raines, along with Tim Howard and controller Leanne Spencer, demanding the payment of $100 million in civil fines and returned bonuses that could exceed $115 million. ofheo said that Raines, in particular, had gotten $90 million in total compensation from 1998 to 2003, of which more than $52 million was directly tied to achieving earnings-per-share targets.

But astonishingly, given the extreme rhetoric from ofheo—Falcon even called Fannie a “government-sponsored Enron”—no criminal charges were filed against Fannie Mae or any of its executives. And despite Cox’s promises, the S.E.C. never filed civil charges against any Fannie Mae executive, either( THIS IS PART OF THE PATTERN THAT LED TO OUR CURRENT EPIDEMIC OF FRAUD. ). This past spring, ofheo trumpeted the news that the former Fannie executives had paid $31.4 million to settle the charges against them, with Raines agreeing to forgo cash, stock, and other benefits of $24.7 million. But the headline number was an illusion( PR ). In Raines’s case, the bulk of his settlement consisted of stock options that were so out of the money they would never be worth anything, along with $5.3 million that ofheo called “other benefits,” but which Raines says was a “totally made up number.” Nor did Raines agree to keep his mouth shut. In fact, he wanted to respond to the settlement by saying that “the process against me began with lies and ended with lies,” but was persuaded by his lawyers to say instead that “the process invoked against me by ofheo was fundamentally unfair.”

Raines “had to settle because something was wrong,” says current F.H.F.A. director Jim Lockhart. He adds, “It was not one of my happier days. Over 20 percent of the agency’s budget was legal expenses. We were just being eaten up, and [Raines] knew it.”

To this day, Raines insists that he was sabotaged by his enemies. He tells friends that he told Clinton, “They spent more time and money investigating me than you!” In 2007, in a civil suit that is still proceeding against Fannie and its former executives, Raines subpoenaed the White House for what his lawyers called “evidence that officials in the most powerful office in the country were part of a plan to influence the political debate about Fannie Mae.” (Of course, Raines can afford to be aggressive, because as part of his “retirement,” Fannie Mae is paying his legal bills.)( YIKES )

“Frank Raines continues to try to re-write history to protect his reputation, but the history is clear,” counters White House deputy press secretary Tony Fratto.

But, in fact, the history isn’t perfectly clear( OF COURSE NOT ). There is no question that Fannie Mae’s accounting problems were real, and that under Raines the company had an unhealthy focus on earnings growth, but, still, one has to wonder about the solidity of the charge that Raines led an Enron-like enterprise. While some believe the lack of prosecution merely reflects the Justice Department’s unwillingness to take on a deeply complicated accounting case, others argue that it didn’t have a case, because there is a line between aggressive accounting and intentional fraud( THIS IS ALWAYS THE EXCUSE ). And, in fact, an internal Fannie Mae investigation led by former senator Warren Rudman found no evidence that Raines knew the company’s accounting policies departed significantly from generally accepted principles. For Fannie Mae, the distinction didn’t much matter, because its reputation was tarnished beyond repair.

Despite that, no new legislation for regulation of the G.S.E.’s made it through Congress. While it is true that votes often broke along partisan lines, with the Democrats siding with Fannie and Freddie, it’s also true that Republicans often broke ranks. In one instance, Senator Bob Bennett, a Republican from Utah, sabotaged a bill by adding an amendment that favored the G.S.E.’s. (Bennett’s son worked for Fannie’s partnership office in Utah.) Congressman Mike Oxley, an Ohio Republican and a recipient of much campaign cash from the G.S.E.’s, also introduced bills that the administration thought were too weak. “I think the administration, for whatever reason, wants to do a lot more than is possible,” said Oxley. Says former congressman Richard Baker today, “There were Democrats and Republicans who had reservations.… It was not a partisan thing.”

Maybe the truth is that, as one person puts it, “everyone was still scared of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.” Or maybe the truth is that everyone—not just Democrats, and not just Republicans—was terrified that hurting Fannie and Freddie would, as the G.S.E.’s always said, hurt the housing market. “Everybody had a fear of the unknown,” says consultant Bert Ely, another longtime G.S.E. critic.

The End of the Holy War

When Raines was dethroned, the board called Dan Mudd, then the company’s chief operating officer, at seven a.m., just as Mudd was getting dressed for work, and asked him to step in. Mudd couldn’t be more different from Raines and Johnson. He’s “not a rock star,” as one former Fannie employee puts it, he’s not a Democrat, and he’s all businessman. (He ran G.E. Capital Japan before joining Fannie, in 2000.) A self-deprecating ex-Marine, he was not close to Raines, and he had thought about leaving the company because he didn’t like what he called the “arrogant, defiant, my-way Fannie Mae.” But he stayed because, as he later said, “I’m not a quitter.”

Mudd immediately embarked on a strategy of conciliation with ofheo. He visited members of its staff and Congressman Baker, and he even gave ofheo examiners their own badges so they didn’t need a Fannie Mae escort when they were at the company’s offices. “I thought for a very long time that it was our fault, because we were heavy-handed, because we had a propaganda machine,” he says now. “I thought the only way to solve it was to make it Fannie’s problem. It’s like having an argument with your spouse. There’s no use in being right. You have to find the way forward.”

There are some who think Mudd had no choice, and some who are far more critical. Says Maloni, “Dan’s attitude is great if you don’t live in a jungle where all the other animals are trying to eat you.” Even Mudd himself says today, “I thought there were things we could do to be a normal company. I did some, and it turned out they didn’t make a difference.” It was perhaps telling that during his years as C.E.O., he says, no one in the White House would ever take his calls.

By mid-2006 there was a new actor in this long-running drama: Hank Paulson, the former Goldman Sachs C.E.O. who had just become Treasury secretary. Unlike the advisers who surrounded Bush, Paulson did not believe that the G.S.E.’s were the bogeymen of the financial system. After all, they had been major clients of his for years, and the ties between Goldman and Fannie ran deep. Nor did Paulson want any part of what he called “the closest thing I’ve witnessed to a Holy War.”

Paulson quickly began to move away from what one observer calls the “extreme rigidity” of the administration’s position. Then, on the Tuesday night before the 2006 Thanksgiving weekend, he “threw down the gauntlet to change course on where the administration was going,” says someone familiar with the events. He “aggressively argued that the White House should soften its position” and cut a deal for new regulation—which Paulson strongly believed was necessary—with Barney Frank, who had just been named the chairman of the House Financial Services Committee. Bush, who had granted Paulson an unprecedented degree of independence in exchange for his taking the job, soon gave him the authority to change existing policy, according to one inside source.

“I was aghast,” says a longtime G.S.E. foe, expressing a common attitude. “Here we were fighting trench warfare with Fannie and Freddie, and Paulson says, ‘Let’s cut a deal and say we won.’ Some of us really did believe they were a house of cards.”

That fall, Barney Frank told The Washington Post that Paulson had told him he wasn’t going to use the Treasury’s authority to limit Fannie’s and Freddie’s ability to raise money by issuing new bonds. The Bush administration had won that right in 2004, and other Treasury officials had been saying the government would use it. With Paulson’s backing down from Treasury’s position, the White House had lost one of its major clubs against the G.S.E.’s.

At the same time, a critical change was occurring in Fannie’s and Freddie’s businesses. By the mid-2000s, the mortgage market was radically different than it had been in Fannie’s and Freddie’s golden years. What we now all know as the subprime business had taken off, and a whole new breed of opportunistic lenders, such as IndyMac and Washington Mutual, were selling their mortgages to Wall Street, which churned out its own mortgage-backed securities. These were often referred to as private-label securities, or P.L.S.’s, because they bypassed Fannie and Freddie and didn’t have the G.S.E. imprimatur. As a result, Fannie and Freddie, which had always been selective as to which mortgages met their criteria for purchase, saw their market share plunge. Shareholders and customers were begging them to dive into this new, highly profitable world.

Although both companies resisted due to their worries about the riskiness of the new products, eventually senior executives disregarded internal warnings( NEGLIGENCE ), because the lure of big profits was too great. “We’re rushing to get back into the game,” Mudd told analysts in the fall of 2006. “We will be there.” Both companies did two major things. For their portfolios, they bought Wall Street’s P.L.S.’s. They also began to guarantee so-called Alt-A mortgages—loans made to people who had better credit scores than a subprime customer’s, but who might lack a standard job and pay stub. (These mortgages came to be known as “liar loans( FRAUD ),” because either the customers or the brokers, or both, were often just making up the information on the applications.) By the spring of 2008, the companies owned a combined $780 billion of the riskiest mortgages, according to the Congressional Budget Office, even though they had bought P.L.S.’s that were rated Triple A by the rating agencies and they thought their Alt-A product was conservative. But they bought in bulk.

The Green Team

For a brief time, in the summer and fall of 2007, it did look as if the G.S.E.’s would be the saviors of the mortgage market. That is, if you didn’t look too closely and instead just listened to what congressional Democrats were pushing hard, and what the powers that were, including Paulson, Bernanke, Lockhart, and, yes, even President Bush, started saying. As the banks that everyone had said could handle mortgage risk better than the G.S.E.’s deserted the market, stumbling under the weight of billions of dollars in losses on subprime mortgages, there wasn’t anyone else to turn to. Even so, “is there anything dumber than the suggestion that the institutions to rescue the U.S. mortgage market are institutions that are leveraged 60 to 1 and only own U.S. mortgages?” asks one G.S.E. opponent.

Not surprisingly, Fannie and Freddie—egged on by Democrats—seized the opportunity to prove how critical they were to the market. By the first quarter of 2008, they were buying 80 percent of all U.S. mortgages, roughly double their market share from two years earlier.

To some observers, the most remarkable moment came on March 19, 2008, when ofheo held a press conference to announce a deal that Bob Steel—a former Goldman Sachs partner who had joined the Treasury Department shortly after Paulson—had brokered with Fannie and Freddie. The deal was that the G.S.E.’s, which had already sold a combined $14 billion in preferred stock in late 2007, would raise as much as another $10 billion in capital. In return, new ofheo director Jim Lockhart agreed to lower the amount of capital( THIS HAS BEEN THE GOAL OF ALL THIS MESS ) the G.S.E.’s were required to hold, enabling them to acquire another $200 billion in mortgages. Several people who were involved with the discussions say that the theme was that they were all in this together. They say Steel would use the line “We want to come out of this with everyone on the green team.” (Possibly Mudd used the phrase first.) Says Lockhart today, “We could not afford them not being able to provide funding to the housing market.”

ofheo (with Treasury’s support) cut this deal despite the fact that the G.S.E.’s losses from mortgages’ going bad were already escalating. By the spring of 2008, the two had reported combined losses of $9.5 billion over the previous year. And they had just $81 billion in capital, which was 1.5 percent of the $5.2 trillion in mortgages they owned or guaranteed. In other words, if they had to make good on their promises, they had very little money with which to do so. (Skeptics on the Street believed that ofheo’s calculation of Fannie’s and Freddie’s capital was deeply flawed and made the G.S.E.’s look healthier than they were.)

Fannie’s $300 billion Alt-A portfolio accounted for roughly 50 percent of its credit losses. At Freddie, the numbers were similar. Although both companies justified their purchases of risky loans based on their need to meet hud’s affordable-housing goals, former Fannie employees say that, while the P.L.S. purchases did aid in meeting the goals (which, given the abusiveness of these loans, is an abomination), the Alt-A loans did not. In other words, Fannie dove into Alt-A not because of its mission but because of its bottom line( NEITHER IS AN EXCUSE. PERIOD. )—and because its executives feared that Fannie would become irrelevant if it continued to say no to this brave new world.( THIS IS ALWAYS GOING TO BE THE CASE. )

By the summer of 2008, the market was going from bad to worse, and Fannie’s and Freddie’s stocks were plunging. International banks, which held big chunks of both companies’ debt, were panicking, and asking if the U.S. government stood behind the debt( THIS IS THE BIG ISSUE ). On July 13, Paulson announced a plan under which Treasury would backstop all of the G.S.E.’s debt and buy equity if needed. “If you’ve got a bazooka, and people know you’ve got it, you may not have to take it out,” Paulson told lawmakers.

Said President Bush about Fannie and Freddie, “We must ensure that they can continue providing access to mortgage credit during this time of financial stress.”

Said Lockhart, “At a very difficult time in the market, the enterprises have the flexibility and sound operations needed to support their mission.” That was when he also said that their capital levels were “well in excess” of federal requirements.

How did we land in a recession? Visit our archive, “Charting the Road to Ruin.” Illustration by Edward Sorel.

Paulson’s plan was signed into law as part of legislation that—finally!—created a new G.S.E. regulator: the F.H.F.A. This legislation was based on a deal Paulson had cut with Barney Frank. (Despite the criticism of Paulson and Steel, they did succeed where their predecessors had failed, and helped create a far tougher regulator—although by then it was too late.) Slipped in was a provision that exempted Fannie’s and Freddie’s boards from shareholder lawsuits—which was an enormous threat—if they agreed to conservatorship in time of crisis. Fannie didn’t fight this provision, because Mudd thought that conservatorship would require a negotiation. “It’s like the president has the right to fire a nuclear weapon, but it’s unlikely he’ll do so,” as Mudd put it. And maybe there was also a little hubris at work. “I used to say that if two accounting scandals [and] a Republican Congress and White House couldn’t kill us, how could you kill us ever?” says a former executive.

Others knew better. “Fannie Mae figured they could give the government an enormous loaded gun and they’d never fire it,” says Tim Howard.

Paulson’s bazooka to help Fannie and Freddie failed. It failed for a mixture of reasons. Investors were unsure what their eventual losses would be. Both companies announced terrible 2008 second-quarter results, with Fannie losing $2.3 billion and Freddie losing $821 million. But investors were also unsure what the new legislation meant. No one wanted to risk putting money into the G.S.E.’s, only to have the government radically raise capital requirements( NOT MAKE ENOUGH MONEY )—or step in and wipe the shareholders out( YES ). And so, as if the second-quarter results hadn’t caused enough alarm on their own, the legislation had the perverse effect of ensuring the companies would be unable to raise new capital, even as everyone began to say that they had to do so.

Maybe Fannie’s executives should have anticipated what happened next, but they didn’t. After taking the red-eye back from a short family trip over Labor Day weekend—a trip he’d had to reschedule four times—Mudd got a letter from Lockhart that abruptly changed the tone. It “condemned everything we’d ever done,” says one person familiar with the letter’s contents. (Lockhart agrees it was a “severe letter” but says he had given “verbal warnings” about what his agency saw as a “significant deterioration” in their financial position.) On Friday morning, Mudd was summoned to the meeting at F.H.F.A. at three p.m. that day. When the Fannie contingent arrived, there had been no preparation for the meeting, so they were wandering around the lobby when Bernanke came in the front door. The Fannie people also spotted a Wall Street Journal reporter, who had been given advance notice of the meeting, lurking outside the door. It was “almost comical if it weren’t tragic,” Mudd has since joked.

In a conference room off his office, Lockhart told Fannie, he says today, that “pending losses … were going to make it such that [Fannie and Freddie] could not function and fulfill their mission” of supporting the housing market. Then government officials told Fannie that the company had to give its consent to conservatorship.

As for the terms, they were fairly straightforward, with one exception. The government would acquire $1 billion of preferred shares, giving it 80 percent of the company and pretty much wiping out the existing shareholders( NECESSARY IF GOVERNMENT INTERVENES ). Although the government would provide no upfront cash, it would put in money up( NOT A COMPLETE GUARANTEE ) to a combined $200 billion for Fannie and Freddie if needed. Both Mudd and Syron were out, and in short order they were told to forfeit their “golden parachutes.” The exception was an odd detail: Fannie and Freddie would be allowed to grow their portfolios through 2009 in order to help the mortgage market, but then would have to shrink them to $250 billion each. To Fannie people, that provision seemed like a clear indication that their adversaries had had a hand in the battle that ended the war.

Although Freddie agreed to conservatorship at a separate meeting that same day, the Fannie contingent headed to Sullivan & Cromwell’s law offices and called all of their board members to fly to Washington on Saturday for a deliberation. The board came to the conclusion that they had no choice. They could not “single-handedly declare war on the federal government!” Mudd said. Added board chairman Steve Ashley, according to people who were present: “We’ve closed the book on 70 years of housing policy in this country.”

There are a lot of conflicting views on why Paulson abruptly stopped supporting the G.S.E.’s. The best explanation is probably that he was convinced they needed large amounts of capital, and there was no way, given what a Treasury official calls the polarizing quality of the G.S.E.’s in Washington, that he could simply cut them a check without punishing their shareholders and executives( THIS IS TRUE ).

When a CNBC host asked Paulson what he thought the losses would be, he said, “We didn’t sit there and figure this out with a calculator.” In truth, there’s no way to know, because the ultimate number will depend on what happens with the housing market( TRUE ), and on what activities Fannie and Freddie undertake at the direction of their new owner: you! Estimates, which depend on whether you talk to a G.S.E. friend or foe, range from as low as $30 billion for Fannie to well over the $100 billion the government has allocated to each G.S.E.( TRUE )

But a few things are clear. One is that the argument that Fannie and Freddie caused our entire economic calamity is absurd( I AGREE ). Yes, the volume of bad mortgages that Fannie and Freddie bought may have blown the bubble bigger than it otherwise would have been. But to put the blame entirely on Fannie and Freddie is to exempt all the other players, including the mortgage originators who sold subprime mortgages( THE REAL PROBLEM ) and Wall Street, which packaged up the bad mortgages and sold them to investors around the globe.

Another thing that’s clear is that the critics were both right and very wrong about Fannie and Freddie. Yes, their executives and shareholders made fortunes in the glory years, and, yes, taxpayers are now bearing the brunt of whatever losses there are. Just as critics always warned, it’s “the privatization of profits and the socialization of risks.” But what the critics missed is that that wasn’t unique to Fannie and Freddie. It turns out our entire financial sector was operating under that same premise( AMEN. MY EXACT POINT. )—and to a far greater degree than Fannie and Freddie.( THIS IS THE MAIN CAUSE OF THE CRISIS )

The last thing is that what happened on September 7 didn’t solve anything. In fact, quite the opposite. “It is a hodgepodge of nothing( THE PROBLEM ),” says one Wall Streeter. One key idea was, as the Treasury put it, that Fannie and Freddie would “work to increase the availability of mortgage finance.” In other words, the government takeover would reduce the cost of Fannie’s and Freddie’s funds, thereby enabling them to raise money at cheap rates and pump that money into the mortgage market. In a great irony, almost everyone, even some longtime critics, now agree that’s necessary. As Larry Summers recently said, “They have to be used to keep the flow of capital going to the housing market.”( TRUE )

But the terms of the conservatorship are confusing, because the government backing lasts only through 2009, and government officials refuse to confirm( THIS BEGAN THE FLIGHT TO SAFETY. LOOK AT THE CHART OF THE FLIGHT FROM AGENCIES INTO TREASURIES. ) that the U.S. actually guarantees Fannie’s and Freddie’s debt. Instead, they say there is an “effective guarantee”—which means nothing( EXACTLY. THIS WAS THE BIGGEST MISTAKE EXCEPT FOR LEHMAN ) in a market as untrusting as this one. And so, Fannie’s and Freddie’s cost of funds has shot higher, making it economically unfeasible for them to buy up a slew of mortgages. (Lockhart continues to defend the conservatorship. “If we hadn’t done it, there would probably have been a run on the bank( NOT IF IT HAD BEEN GUARANTEED ),” he says, adding, “My view is that conservatorship is working at this point. We prevented a downward spiral( IT CAUSED ONE, BY NOT GUARANTEEING THEM EXPLICICTLY ).”)

In other words, in the greatest irony of all, the G.S.E.’s critics have finally gotten what they wanted—Fannie’s and Freddie’s perceived ties to the government have been weakened—just when no one wants that anymore. “There is culpability somewhere,” says a former Fannie executive. “Whether it is a conspiracy or incompetence, I don’t know.” And in some ways, that sums up the entire story—on both sides.

Bethany McLean is a Vanity Fair contributing editor."

The decision to seize Fannie/Freddie without explicit guarantees and which wiped out shareholders as well began the Flight To Safety. Check the VIX and chart of the switch from Agencies to Treasuries. By letting Lehman fall, they assured a Calling Run, which, as I've argued, can only be stopped by government guarantees in this age. Lockhart doesn't seem to understand what a Calling Run is, or why it occurs. The only way to stop a Calling Run once foreclosures began mounting was for government to explicitly back Agencies and make it clear that the Treasury and Fed would both be a LOLR. That's the Presupposition and Context that investors were working under. There was no plan B.

The evidence for this position are the real world actions of investors and markets, not theories.

Also, and this might not be fair, but this cast of characters is looking like an oligarchy.