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Fannie Mae seeks $8.5 bn from taxpayers

Mortgage finance giant Fannie Mae on Friday said it would ask for an additional USD 8.5 billion from taxpayers as it continues to suffer losses on loans made prior to 2009.

May 07, 2011 / 02:06 PM IST

Mortgage finance giant Fannie Mae on Friday said it would ask for an additional USD 8.5 billion from taxpayers as it continues to suffer losses on loans made prior to 2009.


The largest US residential mortgage funds provider reported a net loss attributable to common shareholders of USD 8.7 billion, or USD 1.52% share, in the first quarter.


Including the latest request, the firm has taken about USD 100 billion from the US government since it was seized in 2008, though it has also paid about USD 12.4 billion to taxpayers in interest.


Loans made in the past two years have been more profitable than loans made during the housing boom in preceding years.


"As we move forward, we are building a strong new book of business that now accounts for 45% of the company's overall single-family guaranty book of business," said Michael Williams, the firm's president and chief executive officer.


Sibling firm Freddie Mac said on Wednesday it lost just under a billion dollars in the first three months of the year, though the second-largest provider of mortgage funds did not request any new money from the government.


The two firms together have asked for about USD 164 billion, though their net payments have been reduced to about USD 140 billion as a result of the interest payments, including the latest request.


Then-US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson took control of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae at the height of the financial crisis in September 2008 as losses mounted from mortgages gone bad.


The plan to put them into conservatorship was meant to be temporary, although it is likely to be years before a long-term replacement structure takes shape.


The two firms and the Federal Housing Administration back close to nine of 10 new home loans after private mortgage funding dried up in the wake of the financial crisis.