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"The Official Portrait of Miss InDiana"
aka "Miss Victory"

Monday, July 14, 2008

Chinese Government is Top Foreign Holder of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac Bonds

WASHINGTON, Jul 11, 2008
(BUSINESS WIRE)
Story link
As politicians call for taxpayer bailouts and a government takeover of troubled mortgage lenders Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, FreedomWorks would like to point out that a bailout is a transfer of possibly hundreds of billions of U.S. tax dollars to sophisticated investors and governments overseas.

The top five foreign holders of Freddie and Fannie long-term debt are China, Japan, the Cayman Islands, Luxembourg, and Belgium. In total foreign investors hold over $1.3 trillion in these agency bonds, according to the U.S. Treasury's most recent "Report on Foreign Portfolio Holdings of U.S. Securities."

FreedomWorks President Matt Kibbe commented, "The prospectus for every GSE bond clearly states that it is not backed by the United States government. That's why investors holding agency bonds already receive a significant risk premium over Treasuries."

"A bailout at this stage would be the worst possible outcome for American taxpayers and mortgage holders, who have been paying a risk premium to these foreign investors. It would change the rules of the game retroactively and would directly subsidize the risks taken by sophisticated foreign investors."

"A bailout of GSE bondholders would be perhaps the greatest taxpayer rip-off in American history. It is bad economics and you can be sure it is terrible politics."

SOURCE: FreedomWorks FreedomWorks
Adam Brandon, 202-942-7612
abrandon@freedomworks.org

1 comment:

Sean Shepard said...

China is, I believe, also now the largest holder of U.S. Treasuries (they hold about 10% of the debt outstanding).

Everyone should be seriously questioning what we're doing with our government and personal spending. Any kind of government bailout is just transferring the debt from the private sector to the taxpayers and, as the article says, retroactively nullifying the risk for which there was a premium that investors were paid to hold that debt.