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Fannie Mae’s Crypto Leap: The Web3 Tipping Point Wall Street Can’t Ignore

Fannie Mae’s Crypto Leap: The Web3 Tipping Point Wall Street Can’t Ignore

Published:
2025-06-26 10:07:03
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Boom—mortgage giant Fannie Mae just dropped the crypto equivalent of a Molotov cocktail on traditional finance. Here's why it matters.

When a government-sponsored enterprise starts flirting with blockchain, you know the revolution's gone mainstream. This isn't some crypto startup's pipe dream—it's institutional adoption on steroids.

The backstory: Fannie's exploring crypto mortgage payments. Because nothing says 'trustless system' like letting borrowers pay their 30-year fixed in ETH.

Three seismic implications:

1.
Validation tsunami
: When the folks who brought you the 2008 housing crash embrace DeFi, even your goldbug uncle starts asking about seed phrases.

2.
Liquidity earthquake
: Suddenly, billions in real estate collateral could flow on-chain. AMM pools meet McMansions.

3.
Regulatory reckoning
: The SEC's 'regulation by enforcement' strategy? About to meet its match in a GSE with better lobbyists than Coinbase.

Of course, the irony's thicker than a Bitcoin maximalist's tinfoil hat—the same institution that standardized the mortgage bond is now hedging against fiat with digital assets. How's that for poetic justice?

One thing's clear: When the housing market's 800-pound gorilla starts apeing into crypto, the smart money follows. Just don't expect the Fed to like it.

Fanniemae allows crypto

On Wednesday, in a landmark move for both real estate and digital assets, the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) has directed government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs) Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to begin accepting cryptocurrency holdings as qualifying assets for mortgage applications. This unprecedented decision allows borrowers to use crypto stored on U.S.-regulated centralized exchanges as proof of financial stability, without the need to convert the assets into U.S. dollars.

FHFA Director William Pulte, appointed under President Trump’s pro-crypto administration, framed the move as a step toward making the United States “the crypto capital of the world.” It represents a broader ideological shift: digital assets are no longer fringe finance. They are now becoming embedded in traditional economic systems.

Previously, borrowers could only qualify for government-backed mortgages if they sold their crypto and converted it into fiat currency. This policy change allows for the direct inclusion of crypto in risk assessments, creating more inclusive access to credit for digitally native investors.

Will Bitcoin Become the New Bank Statement?

The inclusion of cryptocurrency in mortgage applications may signal a paradigm shift for the cryptocurrency sector. Supporters will see the decision as proof that digital assets like Bitcoin and ethereum have matured to a point where they can function as reliable stores of value. For borrowers who are self-employed, digitally native, or asset-rich but cash-poor, this shift creates new pathways to homeownership – and may well impact the crypto borrowing market which is largely predicated on the concept that crypto isn’t widely recognised by trad-fi as being a tangible asset like cash savings.

Critics, however, will still warn of the inherent volatility in crypto markets. Bitcoin can swing 5% in a day, and many digital assets still have looming external threats like smart contract risks. To offset these risks, lenders will likely apply “haircuts” to the crypto’s market value, treating it similarly to how brokerage-held equities or vested stock options are discounted during risk assessments.

The Infrastructure Is Catching Up

Private platforms in the US like Milo Credit and Figure have been early movers in the crypto-mortgage space, offering products where borrowers can post BTC or ETH as collateral to secure loans. These start-ups are dwarfed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, that are federally backed trillion-dollar mortgage companies.

With Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac stepping in, new fintech entrants are likely to emerge. Expect to see more integrations between crypto exchanges and mortgage originators, along with stablecoin-based escrow services and smart-contract-driven underwriting processes.

What This Means for Homebuyers

According to Redfin, fewer than 1% of buyers used crypto proceeds in down payments between mid-2023 and mid-2024. This is likely to change with now lower barriers for self-employed individuals and digital entrepreneurs whose wealth exists largely in tokenized form. It could have profound implications for housing accessibility, especially in a market where mortgage rates remain elevated and credit standards are tight. In addition, the removal of most restrictions on U.S banks integrating with crypto recently will provide further incentives for crypto-backed lending in housing markets.

While this MOVE boosts crypto legitimacy, risks remain. Borrowers and lenders alike should still consider how crypto price swings impact asset eligibility and mortgage security in the wake of any market crash, the legal status of crypto assets under different state laws,  and custody risks.

|Square

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