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    Is Freddie Mac Betting Against Homeowners?

    Is Freddie Mac trying to help homeowners-or hurt them?

    A recent investigation into trades made by the taxpayer-owned mortgage giant shows that while Freddie with one hand is helping consumers get mortgages, it is, with its other, making those mortgages harder to refinance. Result: Homeowners trying to refinance their way out of high-interest mortgages say they feel trapped in "financial jail."

    The investigation-a joint effort between National Public Radio and ProPublica, an independent, non-profit investigative news service-looked at multibillion-dollar investments made late in 2010 by Freddie. These investments pay off only if homeowners remain locked in high-interest mortgages.

    Not only do the investments appear to be at odds with Freddie's public mandate, they increase the size of Freddie's investment portfolio at a time when the Freddie, under the terms of a 2008 bailout agreement, is supposed to be reducing it. Both Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae were bailed out by U.S. taxpayers in 2008 and are now owned by the public.

    The NPR-ProPublica report finds, too, that Freddie's new investments have increased the volatility of its portfolio.

    Securities owned by Freddie fall into two categories. In one are those backed mainly by principal. These pay a low return but are considered low-risk. The second category holds securities backed by mortgage interest payments only.  These pay a higher rate but are considered riskier, since, if homeowner defaults, Freddie as the insurer must pay the entire value of the mortgage. Known as inverse floaters, these investments are harder for Freddie to offload onto investors.

    In 2010 and 2011, Freddie increased its holdings of inverse floaters by $3.4 billion, according to prospectuses for those deals. Interest rates on the underlying mortgages run as high as 7 percent.

    In the same way that it's not in Freddie's interest to have borrowers default on those mortgages, it's not in its interest to have them switch to cheaper mortgages, since, when a borrower refinances, he pays off the first loan early, and those juicy interest payments stop.

    Freddie thus has taken steps to make it harder for homeowners to refinance.

    For example, in October 2010 it began refusing to insure new loans for homeowners who have had a short sale in the past two to four years. (In a short sales, a house is sold for less than the value of the underlying mortgage.)

    That rule change has hit people like Jay and Bonnie Silverstein of Pennsylvania hard. Because the Silversteins did a short sale of their old home, Freddie now will not help them refinance their new one, even though the Silversteins say they haven't missed a payment. Says Jay Silverstein, who speaks for millions of consumers in his same situation, "We're in financial jail. We've never been there before."

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    • renter  •  1 mth 14 days ago
      freddie and fannie both need to go. There spending too much time sucking tax payers dry.
    • oceanboy  •  San Diego, California  •  1 mth 14 days ago
      Anyone starting to see the Real Picture? Government/Business tells us one story while covertly working to steal all we possess , defraud us out of our liberties, and enslave us!
    • Edhbladman  •  Tustin, California  •  1 mth 14 days ago
      The solution to this problem is to shut down Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, fire all the executives with NO pensions and start over. These clowns were the driving force in the housing meltdown and they are still allowed to do business to this day.
    • Michael  •  Glasgow, Kentucky  •  1 mth 14 days ago
      What do you expect? It's run by government idiots who don't know the meaning of the words common sense.
    • DonnieDarko  •  San Antonio, Texas  •  1 mth 14 days ago
      Lets ask that Fat POS Barney Frank what he thinks.
    • Lupine Smile  •  1 mth 14 days ago
      The people in the example may have had a short sale, but they are not alone. I have never missed a payment, no short sale, near 800 credit rating, and I cannot refinance because my home value has dropped to less than 60% of my purchase price. I had 30% down which is now gone. The banks will not let me refinance because I would be above their acceptable loan to value. Even though I am making more money now than when I bought the house 5 yrs ago. They are effectively telling me than I cannot afford a lower payment. Nice how the banks made out like bandits and left us regular guys to fry.
    • Whiz  •  1 mth 14 days ago
      My property is underwater with Freddie MAC. We bought it at $305K and the market value is just $175K. I wasn't approved for a loan modification and can't refinance (HARP). Just lost my job. Would I consider strategic default? Please advise......
    • kevin  •  1 mth 14 days ago
      If "the public owns Freddie" then whoever is in charge should be FIRED for not acting in the best interest of "the public"! Don't you think?
    • Mkooch  •  1 mth 14 days ago
      We the people been saying this for a few years now, This article is really not news to anyone who has tried to refinance or do a loan modification in the last few years.
    • Gerald  •  Grand Rapids, Michigan  •  1 mth 14 days ago
      Fannie and Freddie are govt entities and should be shut down.The government needs to stay out of the lending buisness period.This housing bust would of never happened if the govt would have kept there noses out of it and forced banks to loan money to people who would never be able to pay it back.Plus the banks that did loan the money should never have been able to bundle and sell to make a quick buck.You lend the money and you are stuck with the loan until its paid off.
    • hx  •  1 mth 14 days ago
      These agencies were, are, and will be created so politicians can give their buddies high paying, powerful positions to rob and help the politicians indirectly rob taxpayers under the pretext of helping the needy citizens. The poor has always been pawns to politicians regardless of ideology.
    • James S  •  Houston, Texas  •  1 mth 14 days ago
      Just rent. Screw em all.
    • Greg  •  Indianapolis, Indiana  •  1 mth 14 days ago
      " Because the Silversteins did a short sale of their old home, Freddie now will not help them refinance their new one"
      So...they stiffed (short sale) whoever held their previous mortgage and they are surprised when someone doesn't want to help them get a new one?
      Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me.
    • Brendan  •  Los Angeles, California  •  1 mth 14 days ago
      Here's the problem in this country: The greedy have become even more greedy, and worse, in their voracious appetite for more, they've become infinitely more sophisticated and clandestine about how they purport their greed. Common sense ought to tell anyone that mortgage-backed securities are little more than a proposition of extreme risk. Further, common sense also ought to tell anyone that a credit default swap- especially- is simply in conception, erroneous. In fact, the designers of the CDS instrument- I think AIG- should do jail time for their reckless disregard for principles of finance, economics, and insurance; if I was in charge, they would! So, after all the mortgage-backed-securities and credit default swaps, what do we have- as you know, bailout after bailout after bailout. The sad thing is, neither the greed nor the players have changed a beat, only the game. God help the USA!
    • Cal  •  Boca Raton, Florida  •  1 mth 14 days ago
      Nothing is going to change until we change the US Congress. The most corrupt part of our government!!
    • Phillip  •  1 mth 14 days ago
      This article just like many other articles refer's to Freddie Mac as who made the decision to do this, when in fact it was a group of executives at Freddie Mac who made that decision. Just like the big banks, and just like the green companies who have taken our tax dollars and mis-used them. These are the people who should be made to pay for this.
    • Yahoo User  •  Atlanta, Georgia  •  1 mth 14 days ago
      Freddie Mac and Fannie May need to be desolved and their top management put into prison.
    • Michael H  •  Salem, Oregon  •  1 mth 14 days ago
      Works just like the private companies who created their own mortgage backed securities. They bought insurance policies on these products and enjoyed big payouts when they failed. They bet on failure and made big bucks while bankrupting our country.
    • ScreaminFetus  •  1 mth 14 days ago
      Ok if Freddie is owned by the public... doesnt that mean that we the people control the board and thus can fire and hire who we want to run freddie mac?
    • William  •  1 mth 14 days ago
      F the bail outs. they did not work. We the people told the government not to bail out the banksters, and they did it anyway. Vote out congress! Vote in states men and women. Get the liars out of congress.
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