Freddie Mac Total Mtge Portfolio Rose Annualized 21% In March
24 April 2009 - 11:45PM
Dow Jones News
Freddie Mac's (FRE) total mortgage portfolio ballooned at the
annualized rate of 21% in March, as the company's refinance-loan
purchase volume increased to $52 billion.
In a monthly report released Friday, the company said this was
the largest refinance month since 2003. Freddie and Fannie Mae
(FNM) have embarked on a refinancing program for existing
homeowners under the administration's Making Home Affordable
Program.
Freddie expects refinancing volumes to stay up in the near term
as more homeowners avail of this opportunity to lower their
mortgage rates and monthly payments.
Meanwhile, the mortgage company also increased its commitments
to buy mortgage bonds to $15.8 billion in March from $4 billion in
the previous month.
Also, its single-family delinquency rate continued to go up
under the dual impact of its foreclosure program being suspended
and the broader economic slowdown.
Freddie said its delinquency rate rose to 2.29% in March from
2.13% in February.
Freddie noted that these numbers may be slightly skewed due to
the temporary moratorium on its foreclosure program, which means
loans stay delinquent instead of moving on to foreclosure. The
company didn't reveal the extent of the impact.
Even then, these rates continue to rise to record highs for the
mortgage finance giant, and are an indication of the extent of
decline among prime borrowers with conforming loans. The
delinquency rate was at 0.65% at the end of 2007.
Meanwhile, in March, Freddie's total investment portfolio is at
$867.1 billion, nearly 31% annualized growth year to date.
Over the past couple of months, the role of Freddie and its
sibling Fannie Mae (FNM) have diminished in the mortgage market as
both the U.S. Treasury and the Federal Reserve have emerged as
backstop buyers with deep pockets.
The U.S. Treasury, so far, has bought nearly $125 billion of
agency mortgage-backed securities, while the central bank bought
$381.185 billion, and announced that it would buy up to $1.25
trillion worth of these bonds this year.
However, market participants still keep tabs on Fannie and
Freddie's portfolios as an indication of their financial health,
and their ability to continue to play a role as both guarantors and
buyers of mortgage bonds.
Other details in the monthly report show that Freddie's issuance
of guaranteed securities and pass-through certificates increased to
$57.68 billion from $29.8 billion in February, as the refinancing
volume picked up.
The mortgage giant's total mortgage portfolio increased 3% in
February to $2.246 trillion.
The duration gap, a measure of the portfolio's sensitivity to
interest rates, averaged one month in March.
-By Prabha Natarajan, Dow Jones Newswires, 201-938-5071;
prabha.natarajan@dowjones.com