Rep. Maloney Hosts Policy Roundtable with Brooklyn Real Estate, Mortgage Industries, Housing Experts

Nov 12, 2013
Press Release

Brooklyn, NY – Congresswoman Carolyn Maloney (NY-12), Ranking Member of the House Financial Services Subcommittee on Capital Markets and Government Sponsored Enterprises, hosted a roundtable today at the Polish Slavic Federal Credit Union in Greenpoint to discuss proposed reforms to federal housing and mortgage finance laws with members of Brooklyn’s real estate and mortgage industries, as well as housing experts.

“Housing is a cornerstone of our economy and a major industry here in Brooklyn. And right now, Washington, DC is debating major reforms to our country’s housing finance policies, including the future of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which could have a significant impact on our local community’s real estate market. Congress can’t make these changes in a vacuum. That’s why I convened today’s roundtable to hear directly from housing experts in our community about how these reforms could affect Brooklyn,” said Congresswoman Carolyn Maloney.

“As the Ranking Member of the subcommittee that oversees Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, I strongly support reforms to better protect taxpayers. However, I believe that some government role remains necessary to ensure that affordable mortgage financing remains available for single-family homes and multi-family developments and that’s what I heard in Brooklyn today,” said Congresswoman Maloney.

Today’s housing roundtable in Brooklyn was the first of two that Congresswoman Maloney convened – the other was held in Queens. The events gave stakeholders in the local mortgage and real estate industries, as well as housing experts, a chance to offer suggestions on how to reform Fannie and Freddie. 

Community members in Brooklyn expressed concerns that any legislative fix to Fannie and Freddie must continue a system that provides affordable and accessible housing, and preserves the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage.

“Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have played a constructive role in the development of housing in the U.S., so we should concentrate our efforts on strengthening these agencies so we don’t have a repeat of the financial crisis of the recent past,” said George Klein, Chairman of Park Tower Group, and a panelist at today’s roundtable.

Congresswoman Maloney outlined several proposals being considered by Congress during today’s roundtable.

She discussed HR 2767, the PATH Act, which narrowly passed the House Financial Services Committee on a partisan vote and over Rep. Maloney’s strong objections. The PATH act would end Fannie Mae and Freddie, government sponsored enterprises (GSEs) that buy mortgages from banks and credit unions to free up credit for homebuyers, and eliminate any government role in the secondary mortgage market. This would effectively kill the 30-year mortgage as we know it and dramatically reduce financing for affordable housing and multifamily developments.

Congresswoman Maloney also discussed what is happening in the Senate, including a bill by Senators Bob Corker (R-TN) and Mark Warner (D-VA) that would replace Fannie and Freddie with a new public-private partnership that limits risks to taxpayers but allows for the government to continue playing a limited role in the secondary mortgage market.

Additional Background:

During the financial crisis and great recession, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac needed to be bailed out by taxpayers and taken over by the federal government because too many of the mortgages they secured had failed. Some $187 billion of taxpayer money was spent to make sure these companies didn’t fail, because failure would have been catastrophic for the housing market and the economy.

That government backing worked and stabilized Fannie and Freddie. Today the two mortgage giants are producing billions of dollars in profits, and they have already sent some $146 billion back to the Treasury, with many projecting that they will have paid more in dividends than they originally borrowed as early as this coming spring. However, they are still operating under government supervision and will remain in conservatorship indefinitely if Congress doesn’t address housing finance reform. In addition, through government guarantees from Fannie, Freddie, and the FHA combined, the government is now backing as much as 90 percent of all new mortgages. That is up from 36 percent before the housing crisis erupted.

As a result, several housing finance reform proposals are being considered in Congress. One bill, the PATH Act, narrowly passed the House Financial Services Committee on a strictly partisan basis. Congresswoman Maloney opposes this bill because it would dissolve Fannie and Freddie, effectively taking the government out of the mortgage market. The PATH Act would replace Fannie and Freddie with a private National Mortgage Market Utility, and many believe it would increase mortgage rates and make the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage unattainable for most families.

In the Senate, the bi-partisan Corker-Warner bill would, like the PATH Act, wind down Fannie and Freddie, but it would create an explicit, limited government guarantee. It would create the Federal Mortgage Insurance Corporation, which would provide a full-faith-and-credit guarantee on eligible mortgage-backed securities, which would be paid for by guarantees fees assessed on the industry. The bill also makes explicit the need to ensure that credit unions and community banks have equal access to the secondary mortgage market.

The Senate Banking Committee Chairman, Tim Johnson of South Dakota, and the Committee’s Ranking Republican, Mike Crapo from Idaho, are conducting a series of bipartisan, in-depth hearings to explore the many issues surrounding housing finance reform. They have jointly announced their intent to introduce their own bipartisan bill at some as yet still uncertain date.

Photo Caption: Rep. Maloney hosts a roundtable discussion on the future of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage, at the Polish Slavic Federal Credit Union in Greenpoint, Brooklyn. This was the first of two roundtables she held today. The second took place in Long Island City, Queens.