Getting Personal
Fannie and Freddie?
Question: Many of us know about the woes being felt by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and their stock performance tells it well. But is now the time to buy them? I mean, with a history of a 40-60 point value, a low current value, and (seemingly) a government assurance of not failing, it seems pretty attractive to this novice investor. Thanks! Mark, Charlotte, NC
Answer: You're right that the stock of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are still trading. But "low" seems too mild a word. As I'm writing this, Fannie Mae is trading at.880 a share--down 97.7% year-to-date. The comparable market figures for Freddie Mac are .940 and -97.1%, respectively. That's a disaster for shareholders.
Here's what the market service Morningstar said about Fannie Mae last month:
"The magnitude and duration of the housing bust and job losses will largely determine Fannie Mae's fate. If the spiral of downward home prices, negative equity, foreclosures, and lack of financing alternatives continues, Fannie Mae might need substantial additional equity capital in order to operate. Not only are higher minimum capital standards and additional dilution a risk, the firm appears to be losing control over pricing, growth, and underwriting decisions to its conservator. The firm could also be nationalized outright based on future political decisions."
The same holds for Freddie Mac.
I'm not a stock picker. I don't think novice investors should be speculating. I guess if you have some entertainment money that might go toward an evening out, the slots at Las Vegas, or the stock of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, then by all means take a flyer. But its not an investment. It's a speculation.
Search
Looking for guidance on your personal finances? I'm taking your questions and answering one here each day. Just click on the "Ask a question" link to tell me what's on your mind.
Chris Farrell Marketplace Money personal finance guru

Categories
- Banking
- Books
- Budgeting
- Charitable giving
- Credit cards
- Credit counseling
- Credit report, credit score
- Debt
- Dollar exchange rate
- Economy
- Estate planning
- Financial planner
- Housing
- Insurance
- Investing
- Kids and money
- Mutual funds
- Other
- Paying for college
- Retirement
- Retirement savings
- 401k
- Bonds
- IRAs
- Money markets
- Mutual funds
- Savings
- Scams
- Social Security
- Taxes
- Vacation
- Work
- cars
- graduate school
Hot Topic
Latest Posts
Archives
| S | M | T | W | T | F | S |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | ||||||
| 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 |
| 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 |
| 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 |
| 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 |
| 30 | 31 |
sponsor
Latest Comments
- Tax-exempt bonds vs. taxable bonds (1)
- Eric Vanhove wrote: So, if there are calculators on the net, why should we be reading your blog? Geez, give us the form... [read]
- Buying a few shares (2)
- Manuel Mihalas wrote: I would recommend you minimize your trading cost as much as possible. There are many low cost tradin... [read]
- Bob wrote: I just enrolled my 17-year-old in a no-load Roth IRA that requires no minimum contribution. There a... [read]
- CDs (2)
- Mark wrote: According to this, you can withdraw all of your money penalty free after 6 days, and still get the i... [read]
- mei wrote: Can’t state enough how important the sacrifices that go into wealth creation are. Curious if anyone... [read]
- Home equity line of credit (3)
- Bruce wrote: I disagree about using a credit card unless you plan to pay it off quickly. Especially with credit ... [read]
- DJ wrote: Using a cc is not most sensible option. My financial "guru" would never recommend using a cc that yo... [read]
- Variable annuity (1)
- ann hancox wrote: I took Chris's advice and also agree, they are expensive and once fit my life style. I recently cas... [read]
sponsor


