by ishak » Tue Aug 26, 2008 11:45 pm
Fannie, Freddie Can Absorb Losses This Year: Citigroup
Reuters, 26 Aug 2008
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the two biggest U.S. mortgage finance giants, have enough capital to absorb probable losses through the end of the year, according to Citigroup equity research.
Separately, Fannie and Freddie said their investment portfolios grew in July as they continued to provide support for the slumping U.S. housing market, but Freddie Mac indicated its future growth may slow.
Delinquencies on loans guaranteed by the two government-sponsored enterprises, or GSEs, both reached record levels, increasing the pressure on their capital positions.
The two housing finance companies, which own or guarantee nearly half of all outstanding U.S. mortgages, have reported losses for the past four quarters, but both companies currently meet regulatory capital requirements and are rolling over their debt on schedule.
Shares of Fannie and Freddie rose sharply, continuing a rally from the day before.
The companies have come under intense scrutiny over the past few months on investor speculation that mortgage losses would cause shortfalls in capital, and lead to a bailout by the U.S. Treasury.
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac shares have tumbled since May with analysts contending a taxpayer-funded rescue could leave shares worthless.
But Citigroup analyst Bradley Ball, in an Aug. 22 report, asserted that shareholder interests would likely be preserved despite increased chances for "extraordinary" actions by the companies and policymakers.
Estimated third and fourth quarter revenue of $7.5 billion for Fannie Mae and $5.5 billion for Freddie Mac would cover likely losses of $1.5 billion and $1.2 billion, Citigroup said in slides for a conference call Tuesday.
The excess capital over minimums in the second half of the year would thus total $20.3 billion for Fannie Mae and $12.7 billion for Freddie Mac, the slide presentation obtained by Reuters shows.
Freddie Mac, the second-largest U.S. home funding company, said its portfolio of investments surged to a record in July.
The portfolio in July rose to $798.2 billion from $791.8 billion in June, the McLean, Virginia-based company said in its July monthly volume summary.
But, its purchase and sales agreements for future months turned around abruptly from the past five months, falling to negative $324 million in the month from $34.7 billion in June.
Fannie Mae, the largest U.S. home funding company, said its mortgage investment portfolio grew 14.4 percent in July.
The portfolio increased to $758.1 billion, the Washington-based company said in its July monthly summary.
Fannie Mae's contracts to purchase mortgages in the future rose to $43.3 billion from $38.3 billion.
Serious delinquencies on loans guaranteed by Fannie Mae jumped to 1.36 percent in June from 1.30 percent in May, while the delinquency rate for all Freddie Mac loans rose above 1 percent for the first time ever, reaching 1.01 percent of its book of business from 0.93 percentage points in May.
After reporting its fourth straight quarterly loss earlier this month, Freddie Mac said it will be more conservative in managing its capital in coming months, including reducing purchases of loans and mortgage bonds for its portfolio.
The portfolio has surged from $712 billion in March.
Fannie Mae earlier this month reported a much larger-than-expected second-quarter loss and slashed its dividend more than 85 percent to preserve capital as home loan defaults accelerated amid the worst U.S. housing market downturn since Great Depression.
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