Saturday, May 11, 2019 12:40:28 PM
In a Receivership the warrants do have value to the tune of 80% of settlement value of the sales of all assets of FnF.
Not really. The warrants give 79.9% of this money after all debtholders, senior preferred equity holders, and junior preferred equity holders have been made whole. Common shares stand at the end of the line.
It wouldn't take excessive losses to force Receivership, so market value of assets would be substantial and 80% would go to holders of the Warrants, thus assuring taxpayers would not have their interests wiped out, at the expense of equity shareholders by dilution.
If FnF go into receivership right now, they only have $6B in capital (excess of assets over liabilities). The seniors' liquidation preference of $193B would absorb all of that, leaving nothing at all for common shareholders, including Treasury with its warrants.
Yank's statement was correct. In the case of both bankruptcy and receivership, the warrants are worthless. The seniors' massive liquidation preference makes sure of that.
Recent FNMA News
- Fannie Mae Releases February 2026 Monthly Summary • PR Newswire (US) • 03/26/2026 08:05:00 PM
- Fannie Mae Announces Results of Tender Offer for Any and All of Certain CAS Notes • PR Newswire (US) • 03/02/2026 02:00:00 PM
- Fannie Mae Releases January 2026 Monthly Summary • PR Newswire (US) • 02/26/2026 09:05:00 PM
- Fannie Mae Announces Tender Offer for Any and All of Certain CAS Notes • PR Newswire (US) • 02/23/2026 02:00:00 PM
