This so-called “FHFA press release” is likely a Photoshopped fake designed to trick retail investors or fleece them. A little critical thinking shows it doesn’t hold up:
1️⃣ Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are separate companies with independent boards. They wouldn’t share a chairman. This “William J. Pulte” is absurd—he’s just an X (Twitter) influencer who gives away money for charity, not a Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac executive, let alone someone authorized to speak for the FHFA. The identity doesn’t add up.
2️⃣ The wording screams fake. Official government or regulatory statements never use casual phrases like “I’m encouraged… the economy will boom.” Real releases are vetted by lawyers, with precise, cautious language—not like a rant on social media.
3️⃣ Mainstream media would be all over this. Jerome Powell, the Fed Chair, is the most powerful central banker globally. His resignation would be a market-shaking event, impacting stocks, bonds, gold, and the dollar. If true, the White House or Fed would announce it first, followed by instant coverage from Reuters, Bloomberg, WSJ, and CNBC. But search “Jerome Powell resign” on Reuters or Bloomberg—nothing. Why? Because it’s not real.
4️⃣ This is a classic scam to manipulate retail investors. Fake press releases are a go-to trick to spook people. Retail investors, too impatient to verify, panic-sell or chase pumps, while the orchestrators cash in.
⚜️Keep building.Stay SAFU ✅