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1 Accounting for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in the Federal Budget 1 (September 2018)

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Accounting for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac

                      in the Federal Budget


Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were originally chartered
as government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs) to ensure a
stable supply of credit for mortgages nationwide. They
dominate the secondary (resale) market for residential
mortgages, in which they buy home loans, pool the loans
into mortgage-backed securities, and sell the securities
to investors with a guarantee against most losses from
defaults on the underlying loans.' The two GSEs have
been in federal conservatorship since the financial crisis
of 2008.

The budgetary treatment of Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mac is complex, as is the treatment of policy options
for the housing finance system that the Congressional
Budget Office analyzes. The budgetary treatment of the
GSEs involves two different accounting approaches:
fair-value estimating of the costs of the GSEs' mortgage
guarantees and cash-based estimating of the GSEs' trans-
actions with the Treasury.

   In CBO's judgment, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac
   are effectively part of the government. Hence, in its
   baseline budget projections for the coming 10 years,
   CBO accounts for the GSEs' operations as though
   they are being conducted by a federal agency. CBO
   measures the cost of the GSEs' mortgage guarantees
   on a fair-value basis by effectively using market prices
   for those guarantees. (The fair value of a liability, such


1. For more information about their operations, see Congressional
   Budget Office, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the Federal Role in
   the Secondary Mortgage Market (December 2010), www.cbo.gov/
   publication/21992.


   as a loan guarantee, is the price that would have to
   be paid to induce a private financial institution to
   assume the liability.)

   Although Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are currently
   controlled by the government, the Administration's
   Office of Management and Budget (OMB) treats
   them as nongovernmental entities for budgetary
   purposes. OMB records in the budget only cash
   transactions between the Treasury and the GSEs. In
   its budget estimates for the current year, CBO too
   presents the projected cost of Fannie Mae and Freddie
   Mac on a cash basis so that its estimates for the cur-
   rent year are consistent with how the Administration
   reports budget totals.

In contrast, CBO accounts for other federal pro-
grams that guarantee mortgages-such as programs
of the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) and
the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA)-using the
approach required by the Federal Credit Reform Act of
1990 (FCRA).

This report addresses several questions:

 How does federal control of the GSEs affect their
   budgetary treatment?

 What types of estimates does CBO prepare for federal
   credit programs?

 Why does CBO use fair-value accounting for the
   GSEs?


Note: Numbers in the text and tables of this report may not add up to totals because of rounding.

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