UPDATE: Fannie Mae Sells Record $15 Billion Of 2-Year Notes
February 26 2009 - 1:58PM
Dow Jones News
Fannie Mae (FNM) on Thursday sold a record $15 billion in
two-year notes amid strong demand, indicating investors are keen to
buy debt backed by the U.S. government.
This is the second super-sized debt offering this month from
Fannie. Last week, Freddie Mac (FRE) sold its largest-ever debt
issue of $10 billion.
The strong demand for agency debt comes as the Federal Reserve
continues to support this market through its purchase of debt
securities issued by Fannie, Freddie and the Federal Home Loan Bank
system and the tightening of ties between the government and the
mortgage companies.
The $15 billion Fannie deal received orders of more than $20
billion and investors who were unable to purchase the bond then
swooped in to buy them in the open market after the sale, causing
risk premiums on the bonds to narrow further.
The deal, sold at 68 basis points over comparable Treasurys, is
quoted about five basis points tighter at 63/61 basis points, said
Jim Vogel, agency debt strategist at FTN Financial. Investors, who
were largely based in the U.S., were drawn to the relatively high
risk premium, he added.
Fannie's older two-year note that matures in October 2010
carried a risk premium of roughly 28 basis points, while a Fedddie
security maturing January 2011 carried one of 45 basis points.
Fannie was to release further details on who bought the deal
later Thursday.
The note sold Thursday has a yield of 1.801%, down from a yield
of 2.896% that Fannie's $7 billion of two-year notes fetched at a
sale in September. U.S. investors bought 63% of that deal.
Huge investor demand for these issues has driven up the size of
the debt offerings by both Fannie and Freddie this year.
Just this month, Fannie sold a hefty $7 billion of five-year
benchmark notes at 93 basis points over comparable Treasury notes
to yield 2.767%. The Feb. 3 deal also generated strong investor
demand, especially from domestic buyers who purchased 65.6% of the
deal. Asian investors took nearly 20% of the share.
Vogel cautioned, however, that the mammoth size of these deals
could cause expectations the agency will continue selling notes in
large size. If they come with smaller deals, it could be taken to
be a sign of weakness even if it's not the case.
The Federal Reserve has bought $35.7 billion of agency debt
securities from investors to date, and is expected to buy $100
billion worth, or more, if necessary.
In addition, recent announcements from the U.S. Treasury -
including the increase to $200 billion each of the credit lines
offered to Fannie and Freddie if their net worth turns negative -
have rallied investor confidence.
An added incentive for buyers has been the good performance in
the secondary market of agency bonds in the past couple of
weeks.
The tightening of risk premiums, especially when compared with
the widening of some of the corporate bonds issued with the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corp. guarantee, has brought fresh buyers to this
market.
Joint leads on the Fannie deal were J.P. Morgan, Barclays
Capital and UBS Securities.
-By Anusha Shrivastava, Dow Jones Newswires; 201-938-2371;
anusha.shrivastava@dowjones.com
(Prabha Natarajan contributed to this report)