by TJ_98370 » Thu Jan 10, 2008 9:52 am
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An article dated 26 Nov 2007:
.....In a letter to the regulator of the Federal Home Loan Bank system, Sen. Charles Schumer said Countrywide, the largest U.S. mortgage lender, may be abusing the program.
At the end of September, Countrywide had borrowed $51.1 billion from the Federal Home Loan Bank system -- a government-sponsored program.
"Countrywide is treating the Federal Home Loan Bank system like its personal ATM," Schumer, a New York Democrat who heads the housing panel of the Senate Banking Committee, said in the letter. "At a time when Countrywide's mortgage portfolio is deteriorating drastically, FHLB's exposure to Countrywide poses an unreasonable risk."......
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While the article is dated (August 2007) I found it helpful in understanding CFC's situation
What is the problem at Countrywide?
"The country's largest mortgage lender by volume has lost access to some sources of the money it needs to make home loans. The main problem so far is in the market for commercial paper, where companies borrow money for periods from one day to about three months. As of June 30, Countrywide relied on commercial paper for about $13 billion in financing, which it used to make loans that it would then turn around and sell to government-sponsored mortgage companies such as Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac or to private investors. In the past year, Countrywide had made an average of about $41 billion in loans every month, most of which it sells directly to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac."
How is Countrywide different from other troubled mortgage banks in the headlines?
"Many lenders that have closed or filed for bankruptcy protection in the past several months have been mortgage banks, which borrow short-term in credit markets, lend to home buyers, then sell the loans to Wall Street banks or keep them as investments. They aren't banks in the usual sense and don't take deposits."
"Countrywide, by contrast, is a savings and loan holding company that includes a thrift unit, Countrywide Bank FSB, and mortgage bank unit, Countrywide Home Loans. That gives it more ways to borrow money than would be available to a mortgage bank alone. The thrift takes deposits, can borrow from the Federal Reserve and Federal Home Loan Bank and has short-term financing agreements with private banks."
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