Thursday, May 6, 2010

Freddie Mac asks U.S. for $10 billion as losses pile up

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/05/05/AR2010050505227.html?wprss=rss_business

10 billion more and that's just right now after the FED unloads the rest of the crap it's holding on to Freddie, that 10 billion is going to look like CHUMP CHANGE.
Audit the FED NOW,
Ask yourself does it really make sense for the White House or the Senate to be using every trick in the book to make sure the FED remains unaudited?
No it doesn't, the question is WHY?
What's on the FED's books that they don't want the public to see?

Freddie Mac, the bailed-out mortgage-finance giant, reported Wednesday that it continues to lose money and needs an additional $10.6 billion in assistance from U.S. taxpayers.

The most recent earnings report follows three straight quarters in which the McLean-based company did not need infusions from the Treasury. Still, the firm is struggling to recover from the mortgage-market meltdown; it reported a net loss of $6.7 billion in the first quarter of 2010, compared with a loss of $9.9 billion a year ago.

Freddie Mac is turning to the Treasury again mostly because of a change in accounting. Revised rules that took effect this year require companies such as Freddie to move all mortgages they guarantee -- but don't own -- onto their books. This shift alone caused the company's equity to drop by $11.7 billion, helping to plunge its net worth into the red.

Under the terms of Freddie's September 2008 bailout, taxpayers make up the shortfall in any quarter when the firm's net worth is negative. The accounting change, along with the firm's loss and a $1.3 billion dividend payment to the Treasury, pushed Freddie's net worth to a negative $10.5 billion, down from a positive $4.4 billion last year.