$FNMA #FANNIEGATE
Chief Judge Sweeney entered her opinion yesterday granting the government's motion to dismiss Owl Creek and other Jones Day clients' complaints because, she says, the Court of Federal Claims lacks jurisdiction to entertain the investors' fiduciary duty and implied-in-fact contract claims and they lack standing to pursue any of their claims. At page 20 Chief Judge Sweeney explains neither HERA nor the PSPAs create any duties to shareholders and at page 25 she explains shareholders aren't beneficiaries to any agreements among FHFA and the GSEs. A copy of the opinion is attached to this e-mail message.
The Fisher and Reid Plaintiffs made their final pitch to Chief Judge Sweeney yesterday asking her to certify her May 8 decision for separate review of these two questions by the Federal Circuit:
(x) whether plaintiffs have standing to assert derivative claims notwithstanding HERA's succession clause; and
(y) whether the FHFA-C's actions are attributable to the United States such that the court possesses subject-matter jurisdiction to entertain plaintiffs’ derivative takings and illegal exaction claims;
and a copy of the shareholders' filing is attached to this e-mail message.
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Glen Bradford
Investor · Builder · Writer
MBA from Purdue. Former hedge fund manager. Holds 26 series of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac junior preferred stock. Built Cloud Nimbus for Salesforce consulting. Author of Act As If. Writes about investing, building things, and the longest financial fraud in American history.
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Read moreDisclaimer: This blog post reflects the author's personal opinions at the time of writing and is not financial, investment, or legal advice. Glen Bradford holds positions in securities discussed on this site. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Do your own research and consult qualified professionals before making investment decisions. Some content on this site was generated or edited with AI assistance.