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- Report
CBO estimates that the net cost of the TARP will total $32 billion—$1 billion less than it estimated in June 2017 because of a decrease in projected outlays for mortgage programs. Almost all of the TARP’s transactions have been completed.
- Presentation
This slide deck enhances the transparency of CBO’s modeling of the budgetary effects of federal single-family mortgage insurance programs.
- Report
CBO reviews Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac’s program to transfer some of the credit risk of their guarantees to investors and analyzes two approaches for expanding those efforts.
- Presentation
Presentation by Sebastien Gay, Assistant Director of CBO’s Financial Analysis Division, at the 2017 Real Estate Research Symposium at the Kenan-Flagler Business School, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
- Report
CBO analyzes options to reduce FHA’s exposure to risk from its program to guarantee single-family mortgages, including creating a larger role for private lenders and restricting the availability of FHA’s guarantees.
- Presentation
Presentation by Elizabeth Cove Delisle, an analyst in CBO’s Budget Analysis Division, to the Council of Large Public Housing Authorities.
- Report
CBO estimates that the net cost of the TARP will total $33 billion—$3 billion higher than the agency’s March 2016 estimate because of an increase in projected disbursements for mortgage programs.
- Cost Estimate
As ordered reported by the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform on March 28, 2017
- Report
In this report, CBO analyzes a policy that would allow Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to increase their capital by reducing their payments to the government and discusses the effects that it would have on the budget and the mortgage market.
- Report
Most activities financed by the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) have now been completed; only mortgage programs remain active. All told, CBO estimates that the net cost of the TARP over its lifetime will total $30 billion.