USA 7s D2: Argentina 14-12 USA (FT), NZ 12-5 Samoa (FT), France 5-33 South Africa (FT), Kenya 7-7 England (H2), Fiji 19-10 Canada (FT), Australia 10-7 Japan (FT), Wales 28-7 Uruguay (FT), Scotland  33-5 Brazil (FT).
Suva, Fiji
Temp: 86 °F / 30.0 °C
Wind: 12.9 KMH
INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS NEWS
November 07, 2009 01:22:03 PM

US mortgage finance giant Freddie Mac said Friday it lost 6.3 billion dollars for shareholders in the third quarter but would not seek any additional bailout funds from the government.

The firm, which was seized by the government and placed into conservatorship along with rival Fannie Mae, said it had a net loss of 5.0 billion dollars and paid a dividend to the US Treasury of 1.3 billion dollars in the quarter.

The shareholder-owned, government chartered firm said, however, it would not seek further Treasury aid, unlike its cousin Fannie Mae.

Freddie Mac said it had a positive net worth as of September 30 of 10.4 billion dollars, reflecting "improved values on the company's available-for-sale securities."

"As a result of the positive net worth, no additional funding from the US Department of the Treasury was required," it said.

"During this critical time for homeowners and the market, we continued to support the recovery of the housing market by providing a stable source of mortgage funding and helping people keep their homes," said Freddie Mac chief executive Charles Haldeman.

"In the third quarter, we helped more than 100,000 borrowers avoid foreclosure... We expect this to continue."

Earlier this week, Fannie Mae reported a net loss of 18.9 billion dollars in the third quarter, and said it needed an additional 15 billion dollars in taxpayer funds.

Fannie and Freddie have already received hundreds of billions of dollars as part of a government takeover aimed at avoiding their collapse in the wake of the subprime mortgage crisis.

The two firms, which underpin trillions of dollars in home loans, were at the epicenter of the financial crisis as the US housing bubble collapsed.

Fannie Mae was originally a government agency created during the Great Depression to help provide liquidity for housing. It was privatized in 1968 and Freddie Mac was chartered by Congress in 1970 to provide competition.

But many officials and analysts argue there was a contradiction in the mission of the two, which tried to maximize results for shareholders at the same time seeking to lower the cost of mortgage credit.

* Get local and international rugby news , gossip & live updates/results on your phone. Txt VRUG to 333 now.

* Get local and international football news, gossip & live updates/results on your phone. Txt VSOC to 333 now.

   

Post a Comment
Bookmark and Share
Posted Comments
No comments, but you can post the first comment!
LOCAL
RBF governor calls for supportThe need for joint effort by all stakeholders is vital to support Fiji banks in their challenge to boost lending to agriculture and renewable energy sectors.
SPORTS
Fiji tops pool, faces Wales in quartersFiji topped Pool B of Las Vegas 7s after defeating Canada 19-5 in its final group match today at the Sam Boyd Stadium.
BUSINESS
ATH to buy FINTELAmalgamated Telecom Holdings Limited (ATH) is awaiting necessary government approvals before it proceeds to own the Fiji International Telecommunications Limited (FINTEL).
ENTERTAINMENT
Bachchan 'hale and hearty' after surgeryVeteran Bollywood superstar Amitabh Bachchan was "hale and hearty" after undergoing a three-hour operation on Saturday for an abdominal ailment, a hospital official said.
OFFBEAT
Implanted breasts save woman in crashA model with the world's largest implants was saved from a car crash after her breasts acted as an airbag.
FIJIAN
Veidigidigi ena na 2014 e dei tikogaE vakaraitaka na Paraiminisita ni noda vanua o Commodore Voreqe Bainimarama ni na dei tikoga na navunavuci ni matanitu oqo ena na kena vakayacori na veidigidigi ena yabaki 2014.