Freddie posts 4th straight quarterly loss and slashes dividend
By Al Yoon
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Freddie Mac (FRE.N), one of the major players in the U.S. mortgage market, on Wednesday posted its fourth straight quarterly loss as it braced for a prolonged housing market slump by setting aside twice as much money for bad loans and cutting its dividend by at least 80 percent.
The worse-than-expected results came just three weeks after the Treasury orchestrated a Congressional rescue plan to prop up the U.S. No. 2 provider of residential mortgage funding and its rival Fannie Mae (FNM.N).
Freddie Mac's chief financial officer Buddy Piszel reiterated that the company has adequate capital, and said it can wait for "choppy" market conditions to improve before raising capital, which could exceed $5.5 billion.
For the second quarter, McLean, Virginia-based Freddie posted a loss of $821 million, or $1.63 per share, compared with a profit of $729 million, or 96 cents per share, in the same quarter a year earlier.
That included the first loss from its holdings of subprime and other risky loans, which formed a significant part of its $2.8 billion in realized and anticipated losses stemming from the steepest U.S. housing downturn since the Great Depression.
The company more than doubled its provisions for loan losses to $2.5 billion since the first quarter, marking the fourth increase in as many quarters. All credit-related expenses surged to $2.8 billion from $1.4 billion in the previous period and $463 million a year earlier.
"Credit-related expenses were far higher than what guidance had been," said Rajiv Setia, a strategist at Barclays Capital in New York. Barclays was expecting about $2 billion, he said, adding "that was on the high side" of analyst estimates.
FOURTH STRAIGHT LOSS Continued...


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