Freddie Mac loses $6.3B in 3Q
By ALAN ZIBEL
WASHINGTON (AP) - Freddie Mac's losses narrowed to $6.3 billion
in the third quarter, but the government-controlled mortgage
finance company didn't need a federal cash infusion.
The McLean, Va.-based company has received about $51 billion
since it was seized by federal regulators in September 2008, but
said it didn't need any more money for the second-straight quarter.
``We continued to see some positive housing market developments,
including higher volumes of home sales and modest increases in
house prices in certain areas of the country,'' the company's new
chief executive, Charles Haldeman, said in a statement Friday.
NYSE:FNM Updated: 16:01 ET 1.00 -0.01 |
NYSE:FRE Updated: 16:01 ET 1.13 -0.03 |
However, he cautioned, high unemployment and rising foreclosures
will continue to ``impede a full recovery,'' and the company may
need more money from the Treasury Department to stay afloat. The
government reported Friday that the unemployment rate hit 10.2
percent, the highest since early 1983.
Freddie Mac's quarterly loss works out to $1.94 per share and
includes $1.3 billion in dividends paid to the Treasury Department.
It compares with a loss of $25.3 billion, or $19.44 per share, in
the year-ago period.
The results were driven by $7.6 billion in credit losses as the
company continued to build its reserves for bad mortgages. About
3.3 percent of Freddie Mac's borrowers are at least three payments
behind on their mortgages, more than double the rate last year.
The problems at Freddie Mac and its sibling Fannie Mae have
proven far worse than most experts had foreseen. On Thursday,
Fannie Mae asked the government for another $15 billion, bringing
the tab for rescuing both companies to about $111 billion.
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac play a vital role in the mortgage
market by purchasing loans from banks and selling them to
investors. Together, Fannie and Freddie own or guarantee almost 31
million home loans worth about $5.5 trillion. That's about half of
all mortgages.
The two companies lowered their standards for borrowers during
the real estate boom and are reeling from the consequences.
High-risk loans, now defaulting at a record pace, have come back to
haunt the companies. Worse still, the recession is causing formerly
reliable homeowners with good credit to default.
11/06/09 19:35
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