Federal National Mortgage Association intends to de-list its stocks
It has been reported that the Federal National Mortgage Association Wednesday notified New York and Chicago stock exchanges of its intention to delist its stock due to low prices.
According to Fannie Mae, it had filed notification with the Securities and Exchange Commission of its intention to delist common and preferred stock, a move prompted by the New York Stock Exchange, which informed Fannie Mae on June 15 that it no longer met minimum standards on prices to maintain a presence on the exchange.
CNNMoney. com has reported that the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp., Freddie Mac, was also ordered off of stock listings.
It was also reported that shares of both mortgage giants fell with the news. Fannie Mae was listed at 56 cents per share in midday trading, down 0.37 percent from the opening price of 91 cents at the opening bell. Freddie Mac shares fell 40 percent to 72 cents.
Both companies were put into government conservatorship in September 2008 after massive losses due to the subprime mortgage meltdown.
With $83.6 billion in bailout funds, the Treasury Department has kept Fannie Mae afloat, while Freddie Mac has received $61.3 billion.
The Congressional Budget Office, in its most recent estimate, said that $400 billion will be needed to keep the companies going. (With inputs from Agencies)