Money | subprime crisis Freddie, Fannie Rules Eased to Boost Housing Market Regulators reduce capital surplus required of firms By Sam Gale Rosen Posted Mar 19, 2008 2:53 PM CDT Copied Signs rest in front of a foreclosed home in Shaker Heights, Ohio, in this Oct. 30, 2007 file photo. (AP Photo/Tony Dejak, file) Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will be able to buy more mortgages after the amount of capital they're required to hold as a cushion was cut from 30% to 20% today, the Wall Street Journal reports. The move by the Bush administration should pump up to $200 billion of liquidity into the mortgage-backed securities market. "We believe they can play an even more positive role in providing the stability and liquidity the markets need right now," the director of the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight tells the Journal. Still, he says the firms will keep "prudent cushions" above this requirement. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were chartered by Congress and are chief providers of funding for home loans. Read These Next No one can fly in or out of El Paso for the next week or so. At least 10 dead in mass shooting in small Canadian town. The world says its final goodbye to Dawson Leery. Nancy Guthrie's camera footage raises an ancillary question: how? Report an error