Nothing to See Here, Folks. Just Keep Moving.

The Federal Housing Authority is running a little short so the Treasury is advancing a small loan – not even $2 billion – to replenish an insurance fund. This is necessary, as Clea Benson of Bloomberg reports: … after losses on defaulted mortgages depleted reserves. But no big deal, nothing to be alarmed about.  Be assured since:  FHA […]

Published September 28, 2013 8:48am EST | Updated January 6, 2024 7:29pm EST



The Federal Housing Authority is running a little short so the Treasury is advancing a small loan – not even $2 billion – to replenish an insurance fund. This is necessary, as Clea Benson of Bloomberg reports:

… after losses on defaulted mortgages depleted reserves.

But no big deal, nothing to be alarmed about.  Be assured since:

 FHA Commissioner Carol Galante said in a letter sent to Congress today [that] â€œThis required mandatory appropriation is an accounting transfer and does not reflect an up-to-date view” of the insurance fund’s “performance, its long-term fiscal health or its current cash position. In the next few months we expect updated data and economic forecasts to reflect what we already know to be true — the health of the Fund has improved significantly.”

Yes.  And we hear that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are doing just fine, too.