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Housing, a forgotten issue in US elections, still vexes economy

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“We have now passed the four-year anniversary of the government takeover … and the Obama administration has failed to come up with anything more than noncommittal options to reform these institutions,” says Romney’s campaign report on housing, itself offering no concrete measures on how it’d revamp Fannie and Freddie.

Fannie and Freddie’s outsized role in mortgage finance today is crowding out the private sector, said a Romney aide who’s involved in formulating the campaign’s housing policy.

“That impacts the whole market. … If you are pricing out the private capital, how on earth could they” compete, asked the aide, who demanded anonymity in order to discuss the campaign’s thinking. “As long as you are artificially under-pricing everyone, nobody else can get in.”

Fannie and Freddie were created in 1938 and 1970, respectively. They purchase mortgages underwritten by banks, operating a secondary market so the banks don’t have to retain loans and can pass them off in order to keep lending. The purchased mortgages are pooled together, a process called securitization, and investors buy mortgage bonds. A homeowner’s monthly mortgage payment becomes the revenue stream that flows to investors.

From the late 1990s on, Wall Street banks moved aggressively to securitize mortgages and compete with Fannie and Freddie. Fueling this was a push by the Clinton and Bush administrations to drive up America’s homeownership rate, which reached record levels in 2004 and 2005 at above 69 percent.

But this explosion of mortgage lending had a dirty secret. Underwriting standards fell sharply, and inflated home prices rose by percentages unseen in American history. It all started unraveling in 2007, and the government stepped in to help rescue a big Wall Street bank, Bear Stearns, in March 2008. President George W. Bush declined to do the same for investment bank Lehman Brothers in September 2008, and a financial crisis ensued.

Since then, private-sector securitization has all but vanished, as investors no longer trust these financial instruments. It’s left Fannie and Freddie the only game in town, now backstopping about 90 percent of new mortgage lending.

It’s why the question of what to do about Fannie and Freddie looms so large in this election.

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