Good news on the AP wire from DC (emphasis added):

WASHINGTON, May 19 (Reuters) - Leaders of the U.S. Senate Banking Committee said on Monday they had reached a deal on legislation to create a multibillion dollar mortgage rescue fund and a new regulator for housing finance companies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

The plan would enable the Federal Housing Administration to guarantee billions of dollars in refinanced mortgages for homeowners whose properties have fallen in value since they took out their loan.

“The bill addresses the root of our current economic problems — the foreclosure crisis — by creating a voluntary initiative at no estimated cost to taxpayers which will help Americans keep their homes,” Democratic Sen. Christopher Dodd, the committee’s chairman, said in a statement…

This is a victory for the taxpayers. As far as the housing component is concerned, we’re not funding this… with taxpayers’ money,” Alabama Sen. Richard Shelby, the panel’s top Republican, said on CNBC.

A quick google news search brings up another source with even more info on the planned bill.

Top Senate Banking Committee members reached an agreement Monday on legislation that would provide new oversight to mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and use the two’s assets to allow the Federal Housing Administration to insure up to $300 billion in new mortgages for struggling borrowers…

After a week of negotiating, Banking Chairman Christopher Dodd struck a deal with ranking member Richard Shelby in advance of today’s markup on the measure. The key to the agreement was tinkering with a proposal designed to provide more liquidity in the mortgage market by allowing the FHA to guarantee new 30-year, fixed-rate mortgages for at-risk subprime borrowers, providing their lenders voluntarily write down their current notes to below market value. A similar provision in a House-passed housing bill was estimated to cost $1.7 billion.

Shelby had insisted the proposal be paid for, forcing Dodd to use an offset in the bill that originally would take a portion of Fannie’s and Freddie’s new business and siphon that into an affordable-housing trust fund…

Dodd said the cost of his FHA refinancing provision should be about $500 million, which is roughly the amount that would have gone into the affordable housing fund during its first year in operation.

I’ll let bile tackle the legitimacy of GSE’s like Fannie and Freddie, but in reading these two articles, I couldn’t help but feel that our government officials have either failed math, or are simply lying. How in the world can $500 million possibly guarantee $300 billion, minus voluntary lender write downs, in subprime debt? Assuming lenders write down 1/3 of the value, 500/200000=0.25%! Even the $1.7 billion, tax-payer funded House version amounts to a tiny percentage.

So the numbers look dodgy, but according to Senators Shelby and Dodd, the taxpayer is off the hook, right? The FHA is a self-funding government agency (for now) and Fannie/Freddie are quasi-private enterprises chartered by the Federal Gov’t. But what happens if (or possibly when) the latter fall underwater themselves? When the backstops of gov’t sponsored low interest rates are over-leveraged, the market certainly isn’t confident about their worth:

Fannie Mae

Freddie Mac

Remember those quotes from Senators Shelby and Dodd in the coming months. Are they just rearranging the deck chairs until the numbers catch up? How far is the federal government and indirectly, the taxpayer, willing to bailout billions of dollars of worthless loans? Why didn’t I buy a $500,000 two story when I had the chance?