Freddie Mac has announced that
it will be requesting an additional $1.8 billion cash infusion from the
Treasury Department based on the results of its Second Quarter 2010 financial
statement released on Tuesday. The
government sponsored enterprise (GSE) reported a net loss attributable to
common stockholders of $6.0 billion, or $1.85 per diluted common share compared
to a net loss attributable to common stockholders of $8.0 billion, or $2.45 per
diluted common share, for the first quarter of 2010. The total reflected a $1.3 billion stock
dividend payable to the U.S Treasury under the terms of its Senor Preferred
Stock Purchase Agreement. The net loss attributable
to Freddie Mac of $4.7 billion for the quarter compared to $6.7 billion in
Quarter One.
The company said that the
net loss during the quarter was negatively impacted by an out-of-period
accounting adjustment with the cumulative effect of $1.2 billion net of
taxes. This was the result of
identifying a backlog related to the processing of "certain foreclosure
alternatives reported to the company by its servicers, principally loan
modifications and short sales."
This resulted in erroneous loan data within loan reporting systems and
significantly affected its financial accounting and reporting systems.
Freddie Mac had interest
income of $27.9 billion compared to $28.6 in the first quarter and net interest
income of $4.1 billion, virtually unchanged from the previous quarter. $5.0 billion of the net interest income was
set aside as a provision for credit loss. Non-interest income of ($3.6) billion was a
substantial improvement over the ($4.9) billion in the period ended March 31
and included a derivative losses of $3.8 billion compared to $4.7 billion in
the prior period.
Non-interest expenses were
$479 million compared to $667 million the previous quarter and $1.21 billion
for the second quarter of 2009. The
current quarter tally included 387 million in administration expenses and $40
million in expenses related to owned real estate.
During the quarter the
company charged off $3.92 billion in debt or 0.80 percent of the total mortgage
portfolio. This was a substantial
increase over the $2.77 billion or 0.56 percent charged off in Quarter
One. There are currently $118.7 billion
in non-performing assets in the portfolio compared to 116.1 billion last
quarter. Non-performing assets represented
5.9 percent of the portfolio in the second quarter and 5.8 percent in the
first. The single family delinquency
rate however dropped from 4.13 percent to 3.96 percent.
The company's announcement that
it was requesting a $1.8 billion draw from the Treasury comes days after Fannie
Mae announced it would make a similar request for $1.5 billion. This draw will
bring the company's total indebtedness to the government to $64.1 billion.
The unpaid principal
balance of the company's mortgage-related investments portfolio was $739.5
billion at June 30, 2010, down from $753.3 billion at March 31, 2010, due to
ongoing liquidations of the company's existing holdings outpacing purchases
during the period as a result of a lack of favorable investment opportunities.
The majority of the company's purchases consisted of purchases of delinquent
loans from PC trusts.
The balance of the
company's single-family credit guarantee portfolio was $1.87 trillion at June
30, 2010, down from $1.88 trillion at March 31, 2010, primarily due to
liquidations exceeding new business activity in the second quarter.
During the quarter just
ended, Freddie Mac acquired 34,667 units of owned real estate and disposed of
26,316 units. The current inventory
stands at 62,190 units compared to 53,839 units at the end of the first quarter.
"Freddie Mac continues
to support the still-fragile housing market by providing America's families
with access to affordable home financing and foreclosure alternatives,"
said Freddie Mac Chief Executive Officer Charles E. Haldeman, Jr. "We
helped more than 150,000 struggling borrowers avoid foreclosure and provided
funding that enabled more than 865,000 American families to buy or rent a home
in the first half of 2010 - during which the GSEs again supplied the majority
of all the liquidity to the U.S. mortgage market.
"At the same time, we
are promoting sustainable homeownership by helping families buy homes that they
can afford and keep for the long term," said Haldeman. "We recognize
that high unemployment and other factors still pose very real challenges for
the housing market, and with that in mind, we continue to focus on the quality
of the new business we are adding to our book to be responsible stewards of
taxpayer funds as we support the nation's housing market."
As Fannie Mae did earlier in its second quarter report, Freddie Mac
expressed confidence in the improving quality of its portfolio of loans
originated since improved underwriting guidelines were put in place in
2009. These loans have experienced
significantly better delinquency trends this early in their lifecycle than
loans originated in the 2005-2008 period.