Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac sit behind roughly 70% of mortgages in America, and the Trump administration wants to take them public for the first time since the 2008 crisis. The listing would be one of the biggest in market history, though new obstacles are slowing the path.
The Setup
Fannie and Freddie don't write home loans directly - they buy mortgages from banks, package them up, and sell them to investors. That cycle keeps mortgage money flowing, which keeps rates lower than they'd otherwise be.
Both firms nearly collapsed in 2008, forcing a taxpayer bailout. They've stayed under government conservatorship ever since.
The Trump administration wants to change that. The pitch: hand both companies back to private investors, list them publicly, and let taxpayers finally cash out on the rescue.
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Where The Friction Is
The new wrinkle is personnel. Bill Pulte, the FHFA director leading the spin-off, was just named acting Director of National Intelligence while keeping his housing role. Analysts at TD Cowen and academics at Wharton say the dual job makes an already-complex privatization even harder to push through.
The core tension is simple: Fannie and Freddie make home loans cheaper because investors believe the government stands behind them.
Pull that backing away and mortgage rates could rise. Keep it in place and the firms aren't really private.
That's the puzzle the administration has been trying to solve - and the new uncertainty suggests they haven't cracked it yet.
What To Watch
Trump said Thursday that Pulte's DNI role is "not a permanent position" and praised his work at FHFA, but the White House, FHFA, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac all declined to give CNN an updated IPO timeline this week.
Anything that changes how Fannie and Freddie work flows straight to mortgage rates, which flow straight to home prices. That makes this one of the few policy fights that touches almost every household.
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