Freddie Mac gates $6.1B from gov't

NEW YORK (AP) - July 1, 2009 The company could also be close to naming a new, permanent CEO, according to a report in The Wall Street Journal.

The Federal Housing Finance Agency, which has been operating Freddie Mac since last fall, requested the funds for Freddie Mac after the mortgage firm's liabilities exceeded its assets by more than $6 billion, according to the filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

After drawing the funds, Freddie Mac has now received $51.7 billion from the Treasury Department and still has access to an additional $149.3 billion to help it finance operations.

In early May, Freddie Mac said it would seek the additional funds to help offset its worsening books as it continues to hemorrhage cash amid the ongoing housing market downturn. It was the third time since Freddie Mac was taken over in September that it has requested funds.

The McLean, Va.-based company posted a loss of $9.9 billion, or $3.14 per share, for the quarter ending March 31. The results were driven by $8.8 billion in credit losses due to soaring delinquency rates and falling home prices, and $7.1 billion in write-downs of the value of its mortgage-backed securities.

Continued struggles at Freddie Mac come while the company's management is in flux. Freddie Mac's board of directors is eyeing Charles Haldeman Jr. as the primary candidate to become its new CEO, according to the Journal report.

John Koskinen has been serving as interim CEO since March, when he took over as head of the company after the resignation of David Moffett, the former government-appointed CEO.

Haldeman's appointment would have to be approved by the Federal Housing Finance Agency, according to the Journal. Spokespeople for Freddie Mac and the Federal Housing Finance Agency did not immediately return calls seeking comment on the potential hiring.

On Tuesday, mutual fund manager Putnam Investments said Haldeman stepped down as chairman of Putnam Investment Management LLC, president of Putnam Funds and trustee of the funds.

Freddie Mac has been among the hardest hit financial firms, along with fellow mortgage guarantor Fannie Mae, amid the housing slump, credit crisis and ongoing recession. Mounting losses led to government takeovers amid concern the collapse of the mortgage companies would throw the housing market into further chaos.

Washington-based Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac play a vital role in the mortgage market by purchasing loans from banks and selling them to investors. Together, the companies own or guarantee almost 31 million home loans worth about $5.5 trillion. That's about half of all U.S home mortgages.

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