Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac Further Support for Renters

The Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) has announced greater rental housing support from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac (the GSEs) by raising the multifamily loan purchase cap for each GSE to $73 billion, representing $146 billion in total 2025 multifamily market support and a more than 4% increase from 2024.

The FHFA establishes the caps every year, and they are later included in Appendix A of the GSEs’ Conservatorship Scorecard, a set of annual priorities that they are expected to meet. Just like in 2024, when the cap for each GSE was $70 billion, multifamily loans that finance workforce housing will be excluded from the 2025 limits.

“The 2025 multifamily loan caps reflect the Enterprises’ strong commitment to provide liquidity to make renting a home more affordable,” said FHFA Director Sandra L. Thompson. “Additionally, the ongoing workforce housing exemption will continue to enhance the Enterprises’ ability to support properties that preserve affordable rents, including properties preserved or created through corporate-sponsored affordable housing initiatives.”

Since 2015, the FHFA has set caps on the GSEs’ conventional (market-rate) multifamily businesses to ensure that they continue to support liquidity in the multifamily market, particularly for affordable housing and underserved segments, without crowding out private capital. In order to encourage GSE financing in affordable housing and underserved markets, the FHFA initially excluded several categories of business from the caps. However, in September 2019, the FHFA revised the cap structure to apply to all multifamily business and removed previous exclusions.

For 2024, FHFA set a $70 billion volume cap for each GSE with a 50% mission-driven minimum percentage. Through Q3 of 2024, the GSEs have financed more than $4.5 billion in workforce loans, more than doubling their combined total in 2023.

Over the past year, since workforce housing was first exempted from the caps, both Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have seen encouraging growth in this critical market segment. In addition, FHFA is continuing to require that at least 50% of the GSEs’ multifamily businesses be mission-driven.

The FHFA will continue to monitor the multifamily mortgage market and maintains the ability to raise the caps further if necessary to support liquidity in the market. However, to prevent market disruption, if FHFA determines that the actual size of the 2025 market is smaller than was initially projected, FHFA will not lower the caps.

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Eric C. Peck

MortgagePoint Managing Digital Editor Eric C. Peck has 25-plus years’ experience covering the mortgage industry. He graduated from the New York Institute of Technology, where he received his B.A. in Communication Arts/Media. After graduating, he began his professional career in New York City with Videography Magazine before landing in the mortgage finance space. Peck has edited three published books, and has served as Copy Editor for Entrepreneur.com.
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