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chapter54

10/13/05 9:51 PM

#1377 RE: chapter54 #1350

another

another $1,000,000,000 for "katrina".....

By Annys Shin
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, October 13, 2005

Housing finance company Freddie Mac plans to put $1 billion into mortgages and home-repair loans in areas damaged by Hurricane Katrina, an effort praised by critics of the company as Congress considers legislation to increase regulation of Freddie and its larger rival, Fannie Mae.

In Baton Rouge, La., yesterday, Freddie Mac chairman and chief executive Richard F. Syron and members of the Louisiana congressional delegation announced Freddie Mac's plan to buy $1 billion worth of bonds from state and local housing finance agencies. By accepting a below-market rate of return on the bonds, the purchase will allow cut-rate financing for homeowners.

The bond purchase "further demonstrates what Congress created Freddie Mac to do: to provide stability, liquidity, and affordability for housing markets -- both in good times and in crises like this one," Syron said in a news release.

Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae have "stepped to the plate in a big way on Katrina, while the rest of the banking industry is squabbling over how to shift their losses to taxpayers. That point won't be lost on Congress," said Howard Glaser, a housing industry consultant.

Freddie Mac seems to have tempered criticism from some of its fiercest opponents, including Rep. Richard A. Baker (R-La.), who has argued for years to increase oversight of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae. Baker said yesterday in a news release that Freddie Mac's bond purchase would help provide homeownership opportunities "as we turn our focus from the temporary to the long-term housing needs of storm victims."

Last month, Freddie Mac was praised by another critic, Housing and Urban Development Secretary Alphonso Jackson, after the company pledged to buy up to $300 million in mortgages in hurricane-affected areas.

Syron, in an interview, said the company's good works were not intended to influence the congressional debate. "We're not doing this for any signal reason. . . . There could be no legislation and we'd still be doing this," he said.

The company's actions may help offset criticism of its $677.8 billion investment portfolio, which played a central role in Freddie Mac's recent accounting scandal. Freddie Mac officials said they could not have responded as they did to Katrina without the portfolio.

Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae buy mortgages from banks and other lenders and repackage them into securities to sell to investors. Over the past decade or so, the companies have held more mortgages and mortgage-backed securities on their books for investment purposes, increasing profit but also their vulnerability to interest rate swings. As a result, critics, including Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, say the portfolios pose a risk to the financial system.

On Monday, Greenspan found a new ally: Armando Falcon Jr., the former director of the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight, Freddie Mac's and Fannie Mae's chief regulator. In a column in the Wall Street Journal, Falcon endorsed legislation that would force the companies to gradually shed their investment holdings.

In its response to Katrina, Freddie Mac may have found a way to keep its portfolio business and please everyone, said Kenneth A. Posner, an analyst with Morgan Stanley & Co., which owns stock in and does investment banking and other securities business with Freddie Mac.

Because many analysts did not expect Freddie Mac's portfolio would grow at all this year, investors are likely to be happy if they see Freddie Mac increasing its portfolio "at a pace and in a manner that doesn't exacerbate political concerns . . . and that creates economic value for shareholders," Posner said.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/10/12/AR2005101202023.html

no way we don't
make money here, no way.....

~ ric

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chapter54

10/26/05 4:54 PM

#1628 RE: chapter54 #1350

money

no way we don't make money here, just too many
irons in the fire not to. best to all, good days ahead.....

http://www.frappr.com/pblslongs

~ ric



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chapter54

11/23/05 12:28 AM

#4561 RE: chapter54 #1350

seattle

look who is
based in seattle.....

http://www.wysak.com/

guess who has
interests in wyoming.....

http://www.marketwire.com/mw/release_html_b1?release_id=82957

and is trading
at a 52 week low.....

http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=wysk.pk

we may have
our "seattle answer".....

~ ric
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chapter54

11/29/05 11:21 AM

#4938 RE: chapter54 #1350

again

posted on 12 october, (this post linked to it) that i had "made my final buy" - that i had all the PBLS that i needed. well, upon further review: i believe another 500,000+ are in order. off to make the buy.....

~ ric
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chapter54

11/27/06 6:35 PM

#29359 RE: chapter54 #1350

out

there comes a time when one simply must, "cut bait" - for me that time came today. tired of waiting and ready to make some of my lost money back, i have now sold each and every share i still owned. received an incredibly upbeat email recently from an, "old and trusted" friend about a holding that is "about to pop" - and placed all my eggs into that basket. unless i reclaim a position here at some point down the road, there will be no subsequent posts from me on this thread. nothing but the best to those remaining, with regard.....

~ ric