honoluluadvertiser.com

Sponsored by:

Comment, blog & share photos

Log in | Become a member
The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Freddie Mac posts $2 billion loss, expects bigger hit in '09

By Noelle Knox
USA Today

Stunning Wall Street with a $2 billion quarterly loss, Freddie Mac yesterday warned that the worst is yet to come: It said its mortgage losses will deepen through 2009, and it's considering slashing its dividend in half and issuing a "large" amount of preferred stock to raise cash.

Wall Street reacted by pounding the company's shares, which lost nearly 29 percent of their market value. The stock closed at $26.74, off $10.76.

Freddie, the nation's second-largest buyer and guarantor of mortgages, blamed eroding credit quality and falling home prices, which have caused homeowners to fall behind on their loans.

Concern that the housing market is still deteriorating was echoed by one of the nation's largest home builders, D.R. Horton. The company reported a $50 million loss in the July-through-September quarter and said that despite home price cuts, nearly half of its prospective buyers had canceled their contracts.

In many parts of the country, builders are axing construction plans. In October, construction of single-family homes slumped to the lowest point in 16 years, the Commerce Department said yesterday.

The pain is spread unevenly. Home sales in parts of the Dakotas and Carolinas, for instance, remain healthy. At the same time, many cities in California, Florida, Arizona and Nevada have seen double-digit drops in sales and prices and a spike in foreclosures.

California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger announced an agreement yesterday to help several thousand of the 500,000 borrowers in the state whose adjustable-rate loans will reset to higher rates. The plan will effectively freeze the rates at their current levels for two to five years, he said, to allow property prices to recover.

Among Freddie Mac's darkest projections is that up to 5 percent of the loans it holds or guarantees could go into default. It says losses could hit nearly $17 billion, and it expects the worst hit to come in 2009.

Two weeks ago, Fannie Mae, a larger rival, reported a $1.4 billion quarterly loss, and it's also raised money by selling preferred stock.

Freddie and Fannie were created by Congress to foster homeownership by buying and packaging mortgages. Together, the two own or guarantee 40 percent of the U.S. mortgage market.