Home / Daily Dose / Report: Freddie Mac to Sell $1 Billion Worth of Non-Performing Mortgage Loans
Print This Post Print This Post

Report: Freddie Mac to Sell $1 Billion Worth of Non-Performing Mortgage Loans

Freddie Mac Non-Performing LoansFreddie Mac is selling three pools of non-performing residential home loans with an unpaid principal balance of $1 billion, according to a report from Bloomberg.

The loans will reportedly be sold in three pools totaling $660 million, $249 million, and $125 million. According to the report, the homes sold in the smallest pool are all in New York while the homes related to the two larger pools are dispersed nationwide. Offers are due for the loans on March 24, according to Mission Capital Advisors.

"The loans involved in this transaction are deeply delinquent, including a large share that are more than two years delinquent," said Thomas Fitzgerald, a spokesman for Freddie Mac, in an email to DS News. "The sales process is a one round competitive auction."

Freddie Mac's conservator, the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), is requiring Freddie Mac and its fellow GSE, Fannie Mae, to reduce the number of non-performing residential loans in their portfolios. This will be Freddie Mac's third sale of nonperforming loans since last summer; the latest $1 billion offering is Freddie Mac's largest of the three. In August, the Enterprise sold a bundle of NPLs totaling $596 million and one in February that covered $392 in UPB. Sales of NPLs by the two Enterprises generally include loans that are seriously delinquent, which are those that are 90 days or more past due. In many cases, the seriously delinquent loans in the GSE portfolios are more than a year overdue. The 1,975 NPLs sold in the February sale were an average of three years delinquent on mortgage payments, meaning that most of them were likely in some stage of mitigation, according to Freddie Mac.

In early March, the FHFA enacted enhanced requirements for the buyers and servicers of Agency non-performing loans. Among other requirements, bidders must identify servicing partners at the time of qualification and complete a questionnaire to demonstrate a record of successful loan resolution through foreclosure alternatives. Servicers who purchase non-performing Agency loans must apply a "waterfall of resolution tactics" before resorting to foreclosure and report loan resolution results and borrower outcomes to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac for four years after the NPL sale.

About Author: Brian Honea

Brian Honea's writing and editing career spans nearly two decades across many forms of media. He served as sports editor for two suburban newspaper chains in the DFW area and has freelanced for such publications as the Yahoo! Contributor Network, Dallas Home Improvement magazine, and the Dallas Morning News. He has written four non-fiction sports books, the latest of which, The Life of Coach Chuck Curtis, was published by the TCU Press in December 2014. A lifelong Texan, Brian received his master's degree from Amberton University in Garland.
x

Check Also

Federal Reserve Holds Rates Steady Moving Into the New Year

The Federal Reserve’s Federal Open Market Committee again chose that no action is better than changing rates as the economy begins to stabilize.