COMPANIES

Freddie Mac

Office address: 8200 Jones Branch Drive, McLean, VA 22102-3110
Website: freddiemac.com
Year established: 1970
Company type: government-sponsored enterprise (GSE)
Employees: 8,100+
Expertise: secondary mortgage market operations, single-family mortgage funding, multifamily housing finance, mortgage-backed securities and capital markets, credit risk transfer and investor risk-sharing
Parent company: N/A
Key people: Mike Hutchins (interim CEO); John Glessner, Matthew Abrusci, Anil Hinduja, and Jim Whitlinger (EVPs); Michele Espada, Dennis Hermonstyne, and Laura Lee (SVPs)
Financing status: N/A

The Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (Freddie Mac) functions as a GSE in the US mortgage market. It buys single-family and multifamily mortgages, then packages them into securities sold to investors. Headquartered in McLean, it held $3.6 trillion assets as of September 30, 2025.

History of Freddie Mac

Freddie Mac entered the US housing scene in 1970 with a very specific task: to support a growing secondary mortgage market. Freddie Mac was formed by Congress through the Emergency Home Finance Act.

Backed by a $100 million contribution from the Federal Home Loan Banks, Freddie Mac bought long-term conforming mortgages from thrifts. Those mortgages were then packaged into mortgage-backed securities so lenders could recycle funds and reduce interest rate risk.

Early strategy and market pressures

Through the 1970s and 1980s, Freddie Mac focused on purchasing conventional conforming mortgages and securitizing them. That approach left most interest rate risk with investors in its securities instead of on its own balance sheet.

As inflation and rates climbed, this securitization model helped Freddie Mac stay more insulated from funding pressures. Its role as a consistent buyer of mortgages supported lenders even in those stressed conditions.

Shift to a shareholder-owned GSE and new obligations

The savings and loan crisis of the 1980s led lawmakers to reshape the firm's structure. In 1989, FIRREA converted Freddie Mac from an entity owned by the Federal Home Loan Banks into a for-profit corporation with private shareholders.

In 1992, Congress strengthened oversight by creating OFHEO to supervise Freddie Mac's safety and soundness. The same law added an explicit obligation for the company to help finance affordable housing for low- and moderate-income families.

Freddie Mac's risk build-up and conservatorship era

From the early 2000s to 2008, the firm increased exposure to higher-risk mortgage assets. It bought Alt-A loans and subprime-backed securities that performed poorly when home prices fell. Rising losses and weaker investor confidence contributed to the federal decision to place it into conservatorship.

Recent focus on access, technology and stability

Freddie Mac has focused on access to credit, new tools and risk sharing. It launched solutions such as:

  • Loan Product Advisor enhancements
  • LPA Choice
  • DPA One for lenders

The company also expanded offerings like Home Possible and CHOICEHome and backed major credit risk transfer efforts.

Freddie Mac's products and services

Freddie Mac offers mortgage funding, capital markets tools and technology that support lenders, investors and housing professionals:

Single-family mortgage funding

  • single-family mortgage purchases: buys conforming home loans from approved lenders
  • Home Possible mortgages: supports low- and moderate-income buyers with low down payments
  • CHOICEHome financing: backs modern factory-built homes with conventional loans

Multifamily and rental financing

  • multifamily mortgage funding: finances rental properties from small buildings to large communities
  • affordable rental housing support: targets loans for properties with lower-cost rents
  • K-Deal securitizations: transfers multifamily credit risk to private investors

Capital markets and credit products

  • mortgage-backed securities: packages loans into MBS for global investors
  • credit risk transfer programs: shifts mortgage credit exposure to bond and note investors

Underwriting and lender technology

  • Loan Product Advisor and LPA Choice: automated tools to assess risk and eligibility
  • AIM and DPA One: support income assessment and down payment assistance matching

Consumer education and tools

  • My Home by Freddie Mac: guides on buying, owning and renting homes
  • CreditSmart curriculum: builds core credit and money-management skills

Freddie Mac is also known for steady liquidity and disciplined delinquency performance across cycles. Its funding, risk transfer and education tools support both professional portfolios and everyday borrowers.

Culture and corporate values

Freddie Mac says that its culture centers on people working together to deliver on its housing mission. Its values are:

  • being mission driven
  • doing the right thing
  • performing with excellence
  • having a welcoming environment

The company also supports an in-office work environment with staff on-site five days weekly. It provides staff with these benefits:

  • homeownership and commuting support: first-time homebuyer help plus pre-tax commuter benefits
  • education and student loans: assistance for courses, certifications and student debt repayment
  • family and caregiving benefits: family-building coverage, New Mothers Program and backup child or elder care
  • legal and protection services: legal help, ID theft protection, survivor support and pet insurance
  • health and wellness coverage: medical, dental, vision, EAP access and on-site wellness center
  • fitness programs: headquarters fitness center and virtual wellness offerings
  • retirement and savings: 401(k) with match, extra contribution and flexible spending accounts
  • insurance options: life, accidental death, personal loss and business travel coverage

Freddie Mac also offers structured time off, including vacation, holidays, sick, and other types of leave. It further supports civic and community engagement through voting leave and matching gifts to selected nonprofits.

About Interim CEO Mike Hutchins and key people

Mike Hutchins is president and interim CEO of Freddie Mac and sits on its Board of Directors and Senior Operating Committee. Hutchins previously co-founded and served as CEO of PrinceRidge after holding other senior roles in financial services. He has more than 30 years of experience in the industry.

Those who work alongside Hutchins to lead Freddie Mac include:

  • Matthew Abrusci is EVP, general counsel and corporate secretary, overseeing all legal and corporate secretarial matters
  • John Glessner is EVP and head of Investments & Capital Markets, directing liquidity, funding, securitization and investment activities
  • Dennis Hermonstyne Jr. serves as SVP and chief compliance officer, running the compliance risk program for laws and regulations
  • Anil Hinduja is EVP and chief risk officer, setting and overseeing enterprise-wide risk management across businesses
  • Laura Lee is SVP and general auditor, leading internal audit to review controls, governance and risk processes
  • Michele Espada is SVP and CHRO, leading enterprise-wide talent, culture and people programs

Together, these executives oversee legal, people, risk, capital markets, compliance and audit. Their leadership helps keep Freddie Mac's housing work stable and mission focused.

The future at Freddie Mac

The company's status as a fully conserved GSE may shift if a large IPO goes ahead. Plans being discussed involve selling only a small stake, yet the implied value could reach about $500 billion. That kind of deal would move Freddie Mac closer to market ownership while federal oversight likely remains.

For lenders and investors who use its securities, any change could affect perceived support, funding costs and mortgage pricing. Because of this, how the potential IPO unfolds will be central to the company's future role in US housing finance.

The latest Freddie Mac news

Displaying 156 results
ALTERNATIVES MAR 26, 2009
Mortgage rates drop to record low

Rates on 30-year mortgages plunged this week to the lowest level on record after the Federal Reserve launched a new effort to assist the staggering U.S. housing market.

ALTERNATIVES MAR 23, 2009
February existing home sales rise unexpectedly

Sales of previously occupied homes jumped in February by the largest amount in nearly six years as first-time buyers took advantage of deep discounts on foreclosures and other distressed properties.

FIXED INCOME MAR 18, 2009
Fed to buy up to $300B long-term Treasury bonds

The Federal Reserve announced Wednesday it will spend up to $300 billion over the next six months to buy long-term government bonds, a new step aimed at lifting the U.S. out of recession by lowering rates on mortgages and other consumer debt.

Regulatory overhaul needed: Bernanke

America's financial regulatory system must be overhauled to strengthen oversight of banks, mutual funds and large financial institutions, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said Tuesday.

Life insurer Aviva lost $995M in 2008

Aviva PLC, Europe’s biggest provider of life insurance products, posted a loss of $995 million for 2008, down from a profit of $2.98 billion in 2007.

Old Mutual's earnings off 30%

Insurer Old Mutual PLC reported Wednesday a 30 percent drop in 2008 profits as its U.S. Life unit made a large loss, hurt by the collapse of financial institutions such as Lehman Brothers and Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae.

OPINION MAR 01, 2009
Nationalization should be last resort

President Obama and Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner are resisting calls for the nationalization of Citigroup Inc. and perhaps other large banks.

Obama plan targets 9M homeowners

President Obama’s mortgage plan aims to keep up to 9 million families from losing their homes to foreclosure.

RIA NEWS FEB 12, 2009
Housing prices plunge 12.4%

Foreclosures and short sales took a toll on home prices in the fourth quarter as the median price of existing single family homes plunged 12.4% from a year earlier.

OPINION FEB 08, 2009
Pay cuts for Washington, too

The critics are right.

OPINION FEB 08, 2009
Will we make the same housing mistakes?

House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank, D-Mass., last week laid out an ambitious 2009 legislative program for his committee.

MUTUAL FUNDS FEB 01, 2009
Schwab waives fees on $30.5B Treasury money fund

Charles Schwab & Co. late last month began waiving fees or reimbursing expenses on its $30.5 billion U.S. Treasury Money Fund, which is used as a sweep account by many clients for their free credit balances — but you had to be something of a detective to discover the move.

ALTERNATIVES JAN 11, 2009
Richard H. Baker

Last year was among the worst ever in the history of hedge funds, with $210 billion in losses during the third quarter alone, 693 funds closed through Sept. 30 and an average 16% decline through November.

ALTERNATIVES DEC 22, 2008
Apt. REITs susceptible to downturn, analysts say

Apartment real estate investment trusts, which have been outperforming many of their real estate peers in 2008, are expected to take a hit in 2009 as rising unemployment will likely cause both demand and rents to decline.

ALTERNATIVES DEC 17, 2008
JP analyst ups estimates on mortgage REITs

JPMorgan Chase & Co. analyst Andrew Wessel has raised earnings estimates and price targets on several mortgage real estate investment trusts in the wake of the Fed’s latest rate cut.