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To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (23665)7/28/2003 10:24:09 AM
From: Mannie  Respond to of 89467
 
ECB Recommends Central Banks Sell U.S. Agency Debt, Person Says

quote.bloomberg.com.

July 28 (Bloomberg) -- The European Central Bank is eliminating its holdings of debt issued by Freddie Mac
and Fannie Mae, the two biggest U.S. providers of mortgage financing, and recommended that its national central
banks do the same, according to a person who has seen the ECB's recommendation.

The Frankfurt-based central bank, which sets interest rates for the 12 countries sharing the euro, gave its opinion
at the last meeting of the 18-member governing council on July 10, said the person who declined to be named.
ECB spokeswoman Regina Schueller declined to comment. Officials of the 12 central banks declined to
comment.

Freddie Mac is under investigation by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and federal prosecutors
after overstating earnings, leading to the ouster of its top three managers. The difference between yields on
Freddie Mac notes and comparable U.S. government debt has increased this year as investors perceive Freddie
Mac debt to be more risky.

``Some investors will ask themselves: Is this really as safe as I thought it was? And some will say: This is too
risky for me,'' said Louis Hagen, general manager of the Association of German Mortgage Banks in Berlin.

McLean, Virginia-based Freddie Mac said last month it understated profits by as much as $4.5 billion during the
past three years as it made errors in applying generally accepted accounting principles in valuing derivatives
contracts. Derivatives are financial obligations tied to the value of debt and equity securities, commodities and
currencies.

The ECB based its recommendation to the national central banks on credit risk, the person who declined to be
identified said.

Freddie, Fannie Decline to Comment

Freddie Mac spokeswoman Heather Sieber declined to comment.

``We do not comment about specific investors,'' Fannie Mae spokesman Jason Lobo said. ``Our investors are
broadly distributed around the world and those investors include central banks.

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac own or guarantee about 42 percent of the $7 trillion U.S. mortgage market. Fannie
Mae's mortgage portfolio is worth about $816 billion, while Freddie Mac controls about $573 billion of
mortgages.

The two companies, regulated by the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight, are known as
government-sponsored enterprises. While the U.S. government doesn't guarantee any of their obligations, both
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have Aaa ratings from Moody's Investors Service and Standard & Poor's.

No ECB Totals on Agency Debt

Freddie Mac notes maturing in January 2013 traded 43.5 basis points more than 10-year Treasuries, widening
from 26 basis points before the company announced the management changes, according to J.P. Morgan
Securities. Since June 6, the yield spread widened to as much as 44.5 basis points before rebounding back to 33
basis points.

ECB doesn't disclose breakdown of its reserves and spokeswoman Schueller declined to comment on how much
U.S. agency debt either the ECB or the 12 national central banks of the nations sharing the euro hold.

The ECB's foreign currency reserves are managed by the euro region's 12 national central banks on the basis of
ECB guidelines. The ECB can order the other central banks what to do with its own reserves, while the national
central banks have control over their own reserves.

The ECB and the national central banks had combined foreign currency assets of 221.2 billion euros at the end
of last week, of which 205.4 billion were claims on residents outside the euro region.

The region's central banks sold 3.075 billion euros in foreign currency reserves in the week ended July 18 that
were owed to them by residents outside the euro region, the second- biggest sale in more than a year, according to
Bloomberg calculations based on ECB data.

So-called agency debt held in custody for foreign central banks has declined in six of the past seven weeks to
$183.25 billion from a record $189.9 billion, according to the Federal Reserve. Foreign central banks sold $585
million in the week ended July 23, the Fed said.

By comparison, foreign central banks' holdings of U.S. Treasury debt declined by $3.88 billion in the latest week
to $753.74 billion. Those banks sold $3.27 billion Treasuries in the prior week.

Last Updated: July 27, 2003 19:06 EDT