Freddie Mac reimburses US bailout

A huge jump in earmnings has helped US mortgage giant Freddie Mac pay back more than its bailout during the 2008 global financial crisis.

Freddie Mac says its payments to the US Treasury have exceeded its 2008 US bailout funds as the US mortgage-finance giant notched a huge jump in earnings.

But Freddie signalled on Thursday that its meteoric earnings growth, a more than four-fold increase annually, is "not sustainable" long term, in part because of slowing home price gains.

The rise in home prices has meant a big drop in Freddie Mac's provisions for bad loans. Earnings have also been lifted by favourable accounting effects and by a series of settlements with banks and other financial institutions related to the subprime mortgage crisis.

Net earnings for the quarter ended December 31 were $US8.6 billion ($A9.62 billion), up from $US4.5 billion in the year-ago period. The results included $US5.6 billion in legal settlements.

For the year, Freddie garnered $US48.7 billion in profits, up from $US11.0 billion in 2012.

Freddie said with its latest dividend payments to the US, it had paid $US71.35 billion to the Treasury through the end of 2013, slightly above the $US71.34 billion it received from Treasury since the 2008 bailout.

The company said it would send $US10.4 billion to the Treasury in March, bringing the total paid to $US81.8 billion.

Freddie's earnings came after a similar report from sibling organisation Fannie Mae, which said last week that it will have reimbursed its bailout with a March dividend payment.

Both Fannie and Freddie, which back most of the mortgages financed in the United States, have been operating under the conservatorship of the Federal Housing Finance Agency since September 2008.

The government stepped in to rescue them from bankruptcy during the financial crisis. The bailout was aimed at providing liquidity and stability to the housing market and prevent a wider financial crisis.

Founded by Congress, the two companies will remain under conservatorship until Congress acts to wind them down or remove government support.


2 min read

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Source: AAP


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