Jump to content

FNMA and FMCC preferreds. In search of the elusive 10 bagger.


twacowfca

Recommended Posts

  • Replies 17.1k
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Top Posters In This Topic

Posted Images

 

So the treasury admits that it was an investment. Still makes the sweep unlawful... They invested in 80% of Fannie through preferreds and it's just a question of whether what happens to the other 20% that belongs to shareholders.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Judge sees ‘dilemma’ in government defense of AIG bailout

 

By Patrick Temple-West

 

4/22/15 5:38 PM EDT

 

A federal judge on Wednesday leaned firmly against parts of the U.S. government’s closing argument in its fight with shareholders of American International Group Inc — led by former CEO Hank Greenberg — who are claiming $40 billion in damages stemming from the company’s bailout in September 2008.

 

After 37 days of trial, attorneys for the shareholders and the Justice Department made their final pleas before Judge Thomas Wheeler in the case, which included star witnesses Ben Bernanke, Timothy Geithner and Henry Paulson.

 

At one point during Wednesday’s hearing, Wheeler sounded skeptical of an argument by Justice Department attorney Kenneth Dintzer that there was no “regulatory taking” violation under the 5th Amendment when the government took an 80 percent stake in AIG.

 

“There’s no question in anybody’s mind that there had been change in ownership … the government was running the show,” Wheeler said.

“The dilemma I’m having, I’m listening to your arguments but nevertheless in that very first week the government is in control,” Wheeler said. “How can it be that there wasn’t some sort of illegal exaction of taking for that to have happened?”

In a different exchange with Dintzer, Wheeler raised concerns with the government’s profit-taking after it acquired its AIG stake.

“The government acquired the stock without paying anything for it and then pocketed the revenue,” Wheeler said. “I mean, c’mon.”

Earlier in the day, the attorney for Greenberg and other AIG shareholders argued the government illegally extracted 80 percent of the company as a condition for a $85 billion loan during the September 2008.

“Somebody had to be a scapegoat” so that 2008 presidential candidates Barack Obama and John McCain could “support the ‘TARP’ bailout,” said David Boies, chairman of the law firm Boies, Schiller & Flexner who is representing the AIG shareholders. “The government made a political statement … to demonize AIG.”

During Boies’s arguments, Wheeler offered a favorable analogy for the shareholders, saying their situation sounded similar to a partial government seizure of a home: “We’re only going to let you live in the master bedroom.”

Maurice “Hank” Greenberg, AIG’s ex-chairman and CEO, was in the courtroom but declined to answer questions after the hearing.

A ruling in the case would come “in the relatively near future,” Wheeler said. But Boies said that decision is at least months away.

To view online:

https://www.politicopro.com/go/?id=46606

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Looks like there's a fight brewin' -- filed on April 23rd, 2015

 

Full docket text for document 148:

**SEALED** MOTION to Remove the "Protected Information" Designation from Defendant's March 20 Privilege Log, filed by All Plaintiffs.Response due by 5/11/2015. (Attachments: # (1) Appendix)(Cooper, Charles)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I was excited to see Judge Wheeler's remarks. Let's see what happens.

 

On a separate issue, I like to read John Carney's posts on Twitter just to provide myself with a Devil's advocate. One thing he keeps saying is that the 12% PIK was not a viable option, because it doesn't provide a cash dividend. I really don't understand this argument, so maybe someone can enlighten me.

 

Basically he's saying that the sweep was necessary, because it doesn't make sense to continuously borrow from Treasury to have to pay dividends to Treasury. Nor does it make sense to create an IOU in the form of payment in kind. Therefore, the best option is to take all the money that pours in.

 

My question to this is, weren't the Senior preferred dividends cumulative? So if the companies can't afford to pay, they would still accrue, right? And if the companies ever do return to profitability, the Senior preferred be first in line to receive all missing payments anyway. Furthermore, it's not like the sweep would help if the companies don't return to profitability, at which point it would be no different than an IOU.

 

And if the companies do earn money, well then cumulative dividends get paid and no need to worry about it being non-cash.

 

Tough to follow Carney's or the government's logic here.

 

Edit: FWIW, Judge Wheeler and Judge Sweeney were both appointed on the same day by George W. Bush. Hopefully that's not all they have in common. :)

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

There's no logic there.

 

Lol, yeah I try very hard to avoid commitment bias. But this main argument of theirs makes no sense at all! The sweep is useless without profits, and with profits the PSPA suffices!

 

The point seemed to be that the combination of paying the coupon and not making any money (therefore requiring continuous additional draws) was eating away at the available support, and the deal effectively provided relief, preserving availability without having to stop paying dividends on their major committed capital instrument. This seems perfectly reasonable. If you're running a financial company you don't want to stop paying dividends on your preferred stock if it's at all avoidable since it's a major sign of weakness and instability.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The point seemed to be that the combination of paying the coupon and not making any money (therefore requiring continuous additional draws) was eating away at the available support, and the deal effectively provided relief, preserving availability without having to stop paying dividends on their major committed capital instrument.

 

They could have preserved availability by enacting the PIK, which was to be used for precisely situations in which they can't afford to pay the dividend. The dividends accumulate, and you pay them off as they make money.

 

Effectively, the sweep does exactly that: you don't pay when you don't have the money, and when you do have money, you pay it off. Except even when you pay it off, you continue paying with everything you earn.

 

So if granting relief was the goal, a 2% penalty with the PIK is much more relieving than an infinite penalty.

 

This seems perfectly reasonable. If you're running a financial company you don't want to stop paying dividends on your preferred stock if it's at all avoidable since it's a major sign of weakness and instability.

 

I'm not sure what you mean here? They wouldn't pay the dividend regardless if there aren't any profits, sweep or no sweep. Only way to pay dividends without making money is by continuing with the draws - which doesn't make any sense either.

 

The only people for whom this is a sign of weakness are for those below the senior preferred. Well, turns out the sweep makes it far weaker for us. And the real sign of weakness for parties other than equity holders is depriving the companies of capital, which wouldn't be the case if there wasn't a sweep.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/04/23/business/supreme-court-hears-appeal-in-raisin-case.html

 

Supreme Court hears appeal in Raisin "Taking" Case

 

 

Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. said the program was “a historical quirk” that allowed the government to do more than regulate production. “You come up with the truck and you get the shovels and you take their raisins, probably in the dark of night,” the chief justice told a lawyer for the federal government, Edwin S. Kneedler.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

'The other element I find funny—curious, not ha-ha--Treasury made its 2012 “sweep” investment decision to gobble up "all earnings (and subsequently draw about 20 lawsuits—owing to its fear of the GSEs could be possibly “borrowing from Treasury to pay borrowings from Treasury” (isn’t that lending terminology?)—but this fear/justification about a penniless Fannie and Freddie occurred just as both companies were about to revenue ripen and burst into significant profitability.''

 

 

From Bill Maloni's GSE Blog

 

http://malonigse.blogspot.com/

Link to comment
Share on other sites

More on Wheeler

 

Judge seems skeptical of government's AIG bailout terms by Paul Davidson, USA TODAY

 

 

http://archive.courier-journal.com/usatoday/article/26184917

 

 

Wheeler, however, said he remained "perplexed" by the government's treatment of AIG. "It doesn't really justify interest (rate) four times as high (as other firms) and an 80% stake," the judge said. "I mean nobody got that."

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Throughout the transcript, the loan to AIG is referred to as a 13(3) loan. Could someone point me in the direction as to determining what the means and what it is? It seems that one of the plaintiffs arguments was that the government is authorized to accept equity on top of an interest rate in exchange for the loan and makes multiple references that this was only done required of AIG.

 

Ultimately, I'm trying to determine how the 79.9% equity stake granted to the government here differs from the 79.9% granted to the government in the case of Fannie/Freddie to know how relevant this ruling will be to us.

 

Thanks,

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now



×
×
  • Create New...