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FEDERAL HOME LOAN MORTGAGE CORP - Quarter Report: 2021 June (Form 10-Q)


UNITED STATES SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
 FORM 10-Q
QUARTERLY REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934.
For the quarterly period ended June 30, 2021
or
TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934.
For the transition period from                                       to
Commission File Number: 001-34139
fmcc-20210630_g1.jpg
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

Federally chartered 
52-0904874
8200 Jones Branch Drive
22102-3110
(703)
903-2000
corporation 
McLean,
Virginia
(State or other jurisdiction of incorporation or organization) 
(I.R.S. Employer
Identification No.)
(Address of principal executive offices)(Zip Code)
(Registrant’s telephone number,
including area code)
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act: 
Title of each classTrading Symbol(s)Name of each exchange on which registered
NoneN/AN/A
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant: (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days.     Yes     No
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has submitted electronically every Interactive Data File required to be submitted pursuant to Rule 405 of Regulation S-T (§232.405 of this chapter) during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to submit such files).     Yes    No
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, a smaller reporting company, or an emerging growth company. See the definitions of "large accelerated filer," "accelerated filer," "smaller reporting company," and "emerging growth company" in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act.
 
Large accelerated filer
 Accelerated filer
 Non-accelerated filer Smaller reporting company
Emerging growth company
If an emerging growth company, indicate by check mark if the registrant has elected not to use the extended transition period for complying with any new or revised financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) of the Exchange Act.
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act).    Yes      No 
As of July 13, 2021, there were 650,059,553 shares of the registrant’s common stock outstanding.


Table of Contents
Table of Contents
Page
MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
n    Introduction
n    Market Conditions and Economic Indicators
n    Consolidated Results of Operations
n    Consolidated Balance Sheets Analysis
n    Our Portfolios
n    Our Business Segments
n    Risk Management
l Credit Risk
l Market Risk
n    Liquidity and Capital Resources
n    Critical Accounting Policies and Estimates
n    Regulation and Supervision
n    Forward-Looking Statements
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
OTHER INFORMATION
CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES
EXHIBIT INDEX
SIGNATURES
FORM 10-Q INDEX

Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
i

Table of Contents
MD&A TABLE INDEX
TableDescriptionPage
1
Summary of Condensed Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss)

2Components of Net Interest Income
3Analysis of Net Interest Yield
4Components of Guarantee Income
5Components of Investment Gains (Losses), Net
6Components of Mortgage Loans Gains (Losses)
7Components of Investment Securities Gains (Losses)
8Components of Debt Gains (Losses)
9Components of Derivative Gains (Losses)
10Components of Benefit (Provision) for Credit Losses
11Summarized Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheets
12Mortgage Portfolio
13Guarantee Portfolio
14Mortgage-Related Investments Portfolio
15Single-Family Segment Financial Results
16Multifamily Segment Financial Results
17Single-Family New Business Activity
18Single-Family Mortgage Portfolio CRT Issuance
19Single-Family Mortgage Portfolio Credit Enhancement Coverage Outstanding
20
Serious Delinquency Rates for Credit-Enhanced and Non-Credit-Enhanced Loans in Our Single-Family Mortgage Portfolio
21Credit Enhancement Coverage by Year of Origination
22Single-Family Mortgage Portfolio Without Credit Enhancement
23Details of Single-Family Credit Enhancement Costs, Investment Gains (Losses), and Recoveries
24Single-Family Credit Enhancement Receivables
25Credit Quality Characteristics of Our Single-Family Mortgage Portfolio
26Single-Family Mortgage Portfolio Attribute Combinations
27Alt-A Loans in Our Single-Family Mortgage Portfolio
28Concentration of Credit Risk of Our Single-Family Mortgage Portfolio
29Credit Quality Characteristics of Our Single-Family Loans in Forbearance
30Single-Family Loans in Forbearance Plans by Payment Status
31Accrued Interest Receivable Related to Single-Family Loans in Forbearance
32Single-Family Loans that Received Forbearance
33Single-Family Allowance for Credit Losses Activity
34Single-Family Mortgage Portfolio Credit Performance Metrics
35Single-Family TDR and Non-Accrual Loans
36Foregone Interest Income on Single-Family TDRs and Non-Accrual Loans
37Single-Family TDR Loan Activity
38
Single-Family Sales and Securitization of Seasoned Loans
39Single-Family REO Activity
40Multifamily Loans that Received Forbearance
41Multifamily Allowance for Credit Losses Activity
42Multifamily Mortgage Portfolio CRT Issuance
43Credit-Enhanced and Non-Credit-Enhanced Loans Underlying Our Multifamily Mortgage Portfolio
44Level of Subordination Outstanding
45Credit Quality of Our Multifamily Mortgage Portfolio Without Credit Enhancement
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
ii

Table of Contents
TableDescriptionPage
46Single-Family Mortgage Portfolio Non-Depository Servicers
47Single-Family Mortgage Insurers
48Single-Family ACIS Counterparties
49PVS-YC and PVS-L Results Assuming Shifts of the LIBOR Yield Curve
50Duration Gap and PVS Results
51PVS-L Results Before Derivatives and After Derivatives
52Earnings Sensitivity to Changes in Interest Rates
53Liquidity Sources
54Other Investments Portfolio
55Funding Sources
56Debt of Freddie Mac Activity
57Activity for Debt Securities of Consolidated Trusts Held by Third Parties
58Net Worth Activity
59Forecasted House Price Growth Rates
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
iii

Management's Discussion and AnalysisIntroduction
Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations
This Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q includes forward-looking statements that are based on current expectations, including the effects the COVID-19 pandemic and the actions taken in response may have on our liquidity, business activities, financial condition, and results of operations, and that are subject to significant risks and uncertainties. These forward-looking statements are made as of the date of this Form 10-Q. We undertake no obligation to update any forward-looking statement to reflect events or circumstances after the date of this Form 10-Q. Actual results might differ significantly from those described in or implied by such statements due to various factors and uncertainties, including those described in the MD&A - Forward-Looking Statements section of this Form 10-Q and the Introduction and Risk Factors sections of our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2020, or 2020 Annual Report.
Throughout this Form 10-Q, we use certain acronyms and terms that are defined in the Glossary of our 2020 Annual Report.
You should read the following MD&A in conjunction with our 2020 Annual Report and our condensed consolidated financial statements and accompanying notes for the three and six months ended June 30, 2021 included in Financial Statements.
INTRODUCTION
Freddie Mac is a GSE chartered by Congress in 1970. Our public mission is to provide liquidity, stability, and affordability to the U.S. housing market. We do this primarily by purchasing residential mortgage loans originated by lenders. In most instances, we package these loans into guaranteed mortgage-related securities, which are sold in the global capital markets, and transfer interest-rate and liquidity risks to third-party investors. In addition, we transfer mortgage credit risk exposure to third-party investors through our credit risk transfer programs, which include securities- and insurance-based offerings. We also invest in mortgage loans and mortgage-related securities. We do not originate loans or lend money directly to mortgage borrowers.
We support the U.S. housing market and the overall economy by enabling America's families to access mortgage loan funding with better terms and by providing consistent liquidity to the single-family and multifamily mortgage markets. We have helped many distressed borrowers keep their homes or avoid foreclosure and have helped many distressed renters avoid eviction. We are working with FHFA, our customers, and the industry to build a better housing finance system for the nation.
COVID-19 Pandemic Response Efforts
Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, we have remained focused on serving our mission and the crucial role we play in the U.S. housing finance system while supporting the health and safety of our communities, customers, and staff. We continue to actively monitor the effects of the pandemic and to make decisions based on guidance from national, state, and local governments and public health authorities, including the U.S. CDC. More than 95% of our staff continued to work remotely as of June 30, 2021. We have started planning for our staff to return to the office. The decision as to timing will be informed by local infection rates, CDC guidance, and other factors.
We have taken actions to help homeowners with Freddie Mac-owned mortgages who are directly or indirectly affected by the COVID-19 pandemic stay in their homes during this challenging time. We have also provided support to the multifamily mortgage market. For additional information on our support of the mortgage markets during the pandemic, see MD&A - Our Business Segments - Single-Family, MD&A - Our Business Segments - Multifamily, MD&A - Risk Management - Credit Risk - Single-Family Mortgage Credit Risk, and MD&A - Risk Management - Credit Risk - Multifamily Mortgage Credit Risk.

Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
1

Management's Discussion and AnalysisIntroduction
Business Results
Consolidated Financial Results
Net Revenues, Net Income, and Comprehensive Income
(In billions)
fmcc-20210630_g2.jpg
n    Net income was $3.7 billion for 2Q 2021, an increase of 107% year-over-year. Comprehensive income was $3.6 billion for 2Q 2021, an increase of 86% year-over-year. The increases in both net income and comprehensive income were driven by higher net revenues and a credit reserve release, primarily in our Single-family segment.
n    Net revenues increased 41% year-over-year to $5.9 billion, primarily driven by higher net interest income due to continued growth in our single-family mortgage portfolio, higher average guarantee fee rates on our single-family mortgage portfolio, and higher deferred fee income recognition.
Net Worth
(In billions)
fmcc-20210630_g3.jpg
n    Net worth was $22.4 billion as of June 30, 2021, up from $16.4 billion as of December 31, 2020. The increases in net worth reflected above through March 31, 2021 have been added to the aggregate liquidation preference of the senior preferred stock, and the increase in net worth during 2Q 2021 will be added to the aggregate liquidation preference of the senior preferred stock on September 30, 2021. For more information, see MD&A - Introduction - Business Results - Conservatorship and Government Support for Our Business.

Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
2

Management's Discussion and AnalysisIntroduction
Market Liquidity
                     Market Liquidity
(In thousands)
fmcc-20210630_g4.jpg
We support the U.S. housing market by executing our Charter Mission to provide liquidity and help maintain credit availability for new and refinanced single-family mortgages as well as for rental housing. We provided $306 billion in liquidity to the mortgage market in 2Q 2021, which enabled the financing of nearly 1.2 million home purchases, refinancings, and rental units.

Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
3

Management's Discussion and AnalysisIntroduction
Portfolio Balances

Mortgage Portfolio
(UPB in billions)fmcc-20210630_g5.jpg

Investments Portfolio
(UPB in billions)
fmcc-20210630_g6.jpg

    
n    Our mortgage portfolio increased 23% year-over-year to $2,962 billion, driven by a 24% increase in our single-family mortgage portfolio and a 12% increase in our multifamily mortgage portfolio.
l    The growth in our single-family mortgage portfolio was primarily driven by higher new business activity. Additionally, continued house price appreciation contributed to new business acquisitions having a higher average loan size compared to older vintages that continued to run off.
l    The growth in our multifamily mortgage portfolio was primarily driven by ongoing loan purchase and securitization activity attributable to continued high demand for multifamily financing.
n    Our investments portfolio decreased 19% year-over-year to $284 billion, primarily due to a decrease in our mortgage- related investments portfolio. This was partially offset by an increase in our other investments portfolio.
l    The decrease in our mortgage-related investments portfolio was driven by asset sales to comply with the August 2020 FHFA instructions with respect to agency MBS and CMO portfolios. For more information on limits on our mortgage-related investments portfolio, see MD&A - Our Portfolios - Investments Portfolio - Mortgage-Related Investments Portfolio.
l    The increase in our other investments portfolio was driven by our compliance with the minimum liquidity requirements established by FHFA that have been in effect since December 2020.

Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
4

Management's Discussion and AnalysisIntroduction
Credit Risk Transfer
Single-Family Mortgage Portfolio with Credit Enhancement
(UPB in billions)
fmcc-20210630_g7.jpg
Multifamily Mortgage Portfolio with Credit Enhancement
(UPB in billions)
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In addition to transferring interest-rate and liquidity risk to third-party investors through our securitization activities, we engage in various credit enhancement arrangements to reduce our credit risk exposure. We transfer a portion of the credit risk, primarily on recently acquired loans, through our CRT programs. We also reduce our credit risk exposure through other credit enhancement arrangements, primarily through primary mortgage insurance. See MD&A - Risk Management Credit Risk for additional information on our credit enhancements and CRT programs.
Conservatorship and Government Support for Our Business
Since September 2008, we have been operating in conservatorship, with FHFA as our Conservator. The conservatorship and related matters significantly affect our management, business activities, financial condition, and results of operations. Our future is uncertain, and the conservatorship has no specified termination date. We do not know what changes may occur to our business model during or following conservatorship, including whether we will continue to exist.
In connection with our entry into conservatorship, we entered into the Purchase Agreement with Treasury, under which we issued Treasury both senior preferred stock and a warrant to purchase common stock. The senior preferred stock and warrant were issued as an initial commitment fee in consideration for Treasury's commitment to provide funding to us under the Purchase Agreement. Our Purchase Agreement with Treasury is critical to keeping us solvent and avoiding the appointment of a receiver by FHFA under statutory mandatory receivership provisions. We believe that the support provided by Treasury pursuant to the Purchase Agreement currently enables us to have adequate liquidity to conduct normal business activities.
Our Purchase Agreement with Treasury significantly affects our business activities, including by limiting: our secondary market activities; the amount and type of single-family and multifamily loans we can acquire; the amount of indebtedness we can incur; the size of our mortgage-related investments portfolio; and our ability to pay dividends, transfer certain assets, raise capital, pay down the liquidation preference of the senior preferred stock, and exit conservatorship.
Treasury, as the holder of the senior preferred stock, is entitled to receive cumulative quarterly cash dividends, when, as, and if declared by the Board of Directors. The dividends we have paid to Treasury on the senior preferred stock have been declared by, and paid at the direction of, the Conservator, acting as successor to the rights, titles, powers, and privileges of the Board.
Under the August 2012 amendment to the Purchase Agreement, our cash dividend requirement each quarter is the amount, if any, by which our Net Worth Amount at the end of the immediately preceding fiscal quarter, less the applicable Capital Reserve Amount, exceeds zero. Pursuant to the January 2021 Letter Agreement, the applicable Capital Reserve Amount is the amount of adjusted total capital necessary to meet the capital requirements and buffers set forth in the ERCF. This Capital Reserve Amount will remain in effect until the last day of the second fiscal quarter during which we have reached and maintained such
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
5

Management's Discussion and AnalysisIntroduction
level of capital (the Capital Reserve End Date). As a result of increases in the applicable Capital Reserve Amount since December 2017, we have been able to retain earnings and build capital, but the increases in our Net Worth Amount have been, or will be, added to the aggregate liquidation preference of the senior preferred stock. If for any reason we were not to pay our dividend requirement on the senior preferred stock in full in any future period until the Capital Reserve End Date, the unpaid amount would be added to the liquidation preference and the applicable Capital Reserve Amount would thereafter be zero. This would not affect our ability to draw funds from Treasury at the request of FHFA, our Conservator, under the Purchase Agreement. After the Capital Reserve End Date, we will be subject to a new periodic cash dividend requirement, as well as a periodic commitment fee to be agreed upon with Treasury in consultation with the Chairman of the Federal Reserve.
The graphs below show our net worth, the liquidation preference of the senior preferred stock, the remaining amount of Treasury's funding commitment to us, the cumulative senior preferred stock dividends we have paid to Treasury, and the cumulative funds we have drawn from Treasury pursuant to its funding commitment.
Net Worth, Liquidation Preference, and
Treasury Funding Commitment
(In billions)
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Draws and Dividend Payments

(In billions)
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Pursuant to the Purchase Agreement and terms of the senior preferred stock:
n    Our Net Worth Amount was $22.4 billion as of June 30, 2021, up from $18.8 billion as of March 31, 2021. As our Net Worth Amount as of March 31, 2021 was below the amount necessary to meet the capital requirements and buffers set forth in the ERCF, we did not have a dividend requirement to Treasury on the senior preferred stock for 2Q 2021, and we will not have a dividend requirement on the senior preferred stock until we reach such capital levels.
n    The liquidation preference of the senior preferred stock increased from $89.1 billion on March 31, 2021 to $91.4 billion on June 30, 2021 based on the $2.4 billion increase in our Net Worth Amount during 1Q 2021, and will increase to $95.0 billion on September 30, 2021 based on the $3.6 billion increase in our Net Worth Amount during 2Q 2021.
At June 30, 2021, our assets exceeded our liabilities under GAAP; therefore, no draw is being requested from Treasury under the Purchase Agreement. As of June 30, 2021, our aggregate funding received from Treasury under the Purchase Agreement was $71.6 billion. The remaining Treasury commitment under the Purchase Agreement was $140.2 billion at June 30, 2021, and will be reduced by any future draws.
For more information on the conservatorship and government support for our business, including our dividend requirements on and increases in the liquidation preference of the senior preferred stock, see Note 2.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
6

Management's Discussion and AnalysisMarket Conditions and Economic Indicators

MARKET CONDITIONS AND ECONOMIC INDICATORS
The following graphs and related discussions present certain market and macroeconomic indicators that can significantly affect our business and financial results.
Interest Rates(1)
Quarterly Ending Ratesfmcc-20210630_g11.jpg
(1) 30-year PMMS interest rates are as of the last week in each quarter. SOFR interest rates are 30-day average rates.
n    The 30-year Primary Mortgage Market Survey (PMMS) interest rate is indicative of what a consumer could expect to be offered on a first-lien prime conventional conforming home purchase mortgage with an LTV of 80%. Increases (decreases) in the PMMS rate typically result in decreases (increases) in refinancing activity and total originations.
n    Changes in the 10-year LIBOR interest rate and other benchmark rates can significantly affect the fair value of our financial instruments. We have elected hedge accounting for certain assets and liabilities in an effort to reduce GAAP earnings variability attributable to changes in benchmark interest rates.
n    Changes in the 3-month LIBOR rate affect the interest expense on our short-term funding.
n    SOFR is a benchmark rate for secured overnight dollar-denominated financing identified by certain banking regulators and market participants as a potential replacement for LIBOR. SOFR affects the interest earned on our short-term investments.
n    The yield curve flattened as long-term rates declined during 2Q 2021, reversing some of the increases that occurred in 1Q 2021, while short-term rates remained near zero.
Unemployment Rate and Monthly Net New Jobs
fmcc-20210630_g12.jpgSource: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

n    Changes in the national unemployment rate can affect several market factors, including the demand for both single-family and multifamily housing and loan delinquency rates.
n    In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, many state and local governments enacted measures designed to curb the spread of COVID-19 that severely curtailed economic activity and significantly increased unemployment levels. While the labor market has improved, it has yet to return to pre-pandemic levels, with non-farm payroll jobs still down nearly 7 million from February 2020. The improved availability of a COVID-19 vaccine and its widespread distribution are contributing to the easing of government restrictions and driving economic growth, which continues to help reduce unemployment levels.

Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
7

Management's Discussion and AnalysisMarket Conditions and Economic Indicators
Single-Family Housing and Mortgage Market Conditions
U.S. Single-Family Home Sales and House Prices
fmcc-20210630_g13.jpgSources: National Association of Realtors, U.S. Census Bureau, and Freddie Mac House Price Index.

U.S. Single-Family Mortgage Originations
(UPB in billions)
fmcc-20210630_g14.jpg
Source: Inside Mortgage Finance. 2Q 2021 U.S. single-family mortgage originations data is not yet available.
n    Low interest rates and increased time at home as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic (such as for health and safety reasons, remote work, or virtual learning) drove significant increases in home sales in 2020. Mortgage rates remained low in the first half of 2021, but we expect them to increase in the second half of 2021. A shortage of homes for sale has contributed to high house price growth, which in turn has slowed the pace of home sales. These factors could lead to lower home purchase volumes.
n    Single-family house prices increased 6.9% during 2Q 2021, compared to an increase of 2.2% during 2Q 2020. We expect house price growth to remain robust in 2021.














n    U.S. single-family loan origination volumes increased to $1,305 billion in 1Q 2021 from $690 billion in 1Q 2020 as a result of low average mortgage interest rates, higher home sales, and increasing house prices.


Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
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Management's Discussion and AnalysisMarket Conditions and Economic Indicators
Multifamily Housing and Mortgage Market Conditions
Apartment Vacancy Rates and Change in Effective Rents
fmcc-20210630_g15.jpgSource: Reis.
Apartment Completions and Net Absorption
(Units in thousands)
fmcc-20210630_g16.jpg
Source: Reis. 2Q 2021 net absorption data is not yet available.

n    Vacancy rates remained flat during 2Q 2021 and slightly below the long-term average (between 2000 and 2Q 2021) of 5.4% due to COVID-19 relief programs and eviction moratoriums, along with improving economic conditions leading to increased demand. Vacancy rates for the remainder of the year are expected to be flat or slightly down as demand is expected to keep pace with supply. However, vacancy rates may be impacted in the future as the COVID-19 relief programs and eviction moratoriums are set to expire in the second half of 2021.
n    Effective rent growth (i.e., the average rent paid by the renter over the term of the lease, adjusted for concessions by the landlord and costs borne by the renter) was positive at a national level and in substantially all of the geographic markets in 2Q 2021. However, the actual effective rents paid in 2Q 2021 were modestly lower on a year-over-year basis. The positive rent growth observed at the national level during 2Q 2021 is expected to continue through the remainder of 2021.
n    Multifamily property prices grew 4.2% in 2Q 2021, as investors continued to believe there was a need for additional rental housing in the U.S. and the overall investment environment remained attractive given low interest rates and a less optimistic outlook for most other commercial property types (e.g., office, retail, hotel).

n    Improving markets typically result in strong demand, with net absorptions expected to match or exceed completions for full-year 2021. Increases in absorption rates are expected if employment rates continue to increase, which typically drives household income and formation.


Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
9

Management's Discussion and AnalysisMarket Conditions and Economic Indicators
Mortgage Debt Outstanding
Single-Family Mortgage Debt Outstanding
(UPB in billions)
fmcc-20210630_g17.jpgSource: Federal Reserve Financial Accounts of the United States of America. 2Q 2021 U.S. single-family mortgage debt outstanding data is not yet available.
Multifamily Mortgage Debt Outstanding
(UPB in billions)
fmcc-20210630_g18.jpgSource: Federal Reserve Financial Accounts of the United States of America. 2Q 2021 U.S. multifamily mortgage debt outstanding data is not yet available.
n    U.S. single-family mortgage debt outstanding is expected to increase year-over-year, primarily driven by house price appreciation. An increase in U.S. single-family mortgage debt outstanding typically results in the growth of our single-family mortgage portfolio.
















n    While the multifamily mortgage market grew, our share of multifamily mortgage debt outstanding remained flat in 1Q 2021 due to increased competition and a reduced loan purchase cap.

Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
10

Management's Discussion and AnalysisMarket Conditions and Economic Indicators
Delinquency Rates
Single-Family Serious Delinquency Rates
fmcc-20210630_g19.jpg
Source: National Delinquency Survey from the Mortgage Bankers Association. 2Q 2021 total mortgage market rate is not yet available.

Multifamily Delinquency Rates
fmcc-20210630_g20.jpgSource: Freddie Mac, FDIC Quarterly Banking Profile, Intex Solutions, Inc., and Wells Fargo Securities (Multifamily CMBS market, excluding REOs), American Council of Life Insurers (ACLI). The 2Q 2021 delinquency rates for FDIC insured institutions and ACLI investment bulletin are not yet available.
n    Our single-family serious delinquency rate is based on the number of loans in our single-family mortgage portfolio that are three monthly payments or more past due or in the process of foreclosure. We report single-family loans in forbearance as delinquent during the forbearance period to the extent that payments are past due based on the loans' original contractual terms, irrespective of the forbearance plan.
n    Our single-family serious delinquency rate declined quarter-over-quarter and year-over-year, due primarily to an increase in the number of borrowers exiting forbearance and completing loan workout solutions that return their mortgages to current status. 54% of the seriously delinquent loans at June 30, 2021 were covered by credit enhancements that may partially reduce our credit risk exposure to these loans.
n    While our single-family serious delinquency rate has declined since 3Q 2020, we expect the rate to remain elevated as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic and the forbearance programs we are offering in response.




n    Our multifamily delinquency rate is based on the UPB of loans in our multifamily mortgage portfolio that are two monthly payments or more past due or in the process of foreclosure. We report multifamily loans in forbearance as current as long as the borrowers are in compliance with their forbearance agreement, including the agreed-upon repayment plan.
n    Our multifamily delinquency rate increased year-over-year, due to the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, but decreased quarter-over-quarter and remains low compared to many other market participants. See MD&A - Risk Management - Credit Risk - Multifamily Mortgage Credit Risk for additional information on our delinquency and forbearance rates.
n    Multifamily delinquency rates could increase further in the near term due to the continuing effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. However, our credit enhancement coverage will partially reduce our credit risk exposure from these loans. See MD&A - Risk Management - Credit Risk - Multifamily Mortgage Credit Risk for additional information.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
11

Management's Discussion and AnalysisConsolidated Results of Operations

CONSOLIDATED RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
The discussion of our consolidated results of operations should be read in conjunction with our condensed consolidated financial statements and accompanying notes.
The table below compares our summarized consolidated results of operations.
Table 1 - Summary of Condensed Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss)
ChangeChange
(Dollars in millions)2Q 20212Q 2020$%YTD 2021YTD 2020$%
Net interest income
$4,767 $2,876 $1,891 66 %$8,406 $5,661 $2,745 48 %
Guarantee income356 469 (113)(24)604 846 (242)(29)
Investment gains (losses), net
636 670 (34)(5)1,844 (165)2,009 1,218 
Other income (loss)
107 134 (27)(20)285 229 56 24 
Net revenues5,866 4,149 1,717 41 11,139 6,571 4,568 70 
Benefit (provision) for credit losses740 (705)1,445 205 936 (1,938)2,874 148 
Credit enhancement expense(369)(233)(136)(58)(704)(464)(240)(52)
Benefit for (decrease in) credit enhancement recoveries(193)221 (414)(187)(450)688 (1,138)(165)
REO operations expense(7)(14)50 (15)(99)84 85 
Credit-related income (expense)171 (731)902 123 (233)(1,813)1,580 87 
Administrative expense(651)(601)(50)(8)(1,290)(1,188)(102)(9)
Temporary Payroll Tax Cut Continuation Act of 2011 expense(570)(442)(128)(29)(1,104)(874)(230)(26)
Other expense(179)(140)(39)(28)(394)(243)(151)(62)
Operating expense(1,400)(1,183)(217)(18)(2,788)(2,305)(483)(21)
Income (loss) before income tax (expense) benefit4,637 2,235 2,402 107 8,118 2,453 5,665 231 
Income tax (expense) benefit(958)(458)(500)(109)(1,672)(503)(1,169)(232)
Net income (loss)3,679 1,777 1,902 107 6,446 1,950 4,496 231 
Total other comprehensive income (loss), net of taxes and reclassification adjustments(68)161 (229)(142)(457)610 (1,067)(175)
Comprehensive income (loss)$3,611 $1,938 $1,673 86 %$5,989 $2,560 $3,429 134 %
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
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Management's Discussion and AnalysisConsolidated Results of Operations

Net Revenues
Net Interest Income
The table below presents the components of net interest income.
Table 2 - Components of Net Interest Income
ChangeChange
(Dollars in millions)2Q 20212Q 2020$%YTD 2021YTD 2020$%
Guarantee net interest income:
Contractual net interest income$2,108 $1,111 $997 90 %$3,933 $2,295 $1,638 71 %
Net interest income related to the Temporary Payroll Tax Cut Continuation Act of 2011585 454 131 29 1,140 883 257 29 
Deferred fee income1,699 748 951 127 2,718 1,300 1,418 109 
Total guarantee net interest income4,392 2,313 2,079 90 7,791 4,478 3,313 74 
Investments net interest income:
Contractual net interest income and amortization969 1,225 (256)(21)2,065 2,435 (370)(15)
Interest expense related to CRT debt(142)(187)45 24 (289)(427)138 32 
Total investments net interest income827 1,038 (211)(20)1,776 2,008 (232)(12)
Income (expense) from hedge accounting(452)(475)23 (1,161)(825)(336)(41)
Net interest income$4,767 $2,876 $1,891 66 %$8,406 $5,661 $2,745 48 %
Key Drivers:
n    Guarantee net interest income
l    2Q 2021 vs. 2Q 2020 and YTD 2021 vs. YTD 2020 - Increased primarily due to the continued growth in the single-family mortgage portfolio, higher average guarantee fee rates on the single-family mortgage portfolio, and higher deferred fee income recognition.
n    Investments net interest income
l    2Q 2021 vs. 2Q 2020 and YTD 2021 vs. YTD 2020 - Decreased primarily due to a change in our investment mix as the lower-yielding other investments portfolio represented a larger percentage of our total investments portfolio, partially offset by lower funding costs. Interest expense related to CRT debt decreased primarily due to a decline in volume as we no longer issue STACR debt notes on a regular basis.
n    Income (expense) from hedge accounting
l    YTD 2021 vs. YTD 2020 - Expense increased primarily due to amortization of hedge accounting-related basis adjustments driven by faster prepayments.


Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
13

Management's Discussion and AnalysisConsolidated Results of Operations

Net Interest Yield Analysis
The table below presents an analysis of interest-earning assets and interest-bearing liabilities.
Table 3 - Analysis of Net Interest Yield
2Q 20212Q 2020
(Dollars in millions)
Average
Balance
Interest
Income
(Expense)
Average
Rate
Average
Balance
Interest
Income
(Expense)
Average
Rate
Interest-earning assets:
Cash and cash equivalents$120,325 $1 — %$18,656 $3 0.06 %
Securities purchased under agreements to resell29,276 0.05 95,243 30 0.13 
Advances to lenders3,770 10 1.06 2,507 1.47 
Secured lending1,618 1.83 2,067 11 2.26 
   Mortgage-related securities, net27,313 580 8.50 43,068 553 5.14 
Non-mortgage-related securities30,755 37 0.49 31,632 84 1.05 
Loans held by consolidated trusts(1)
2,486,743 13,983 2.25 1,992,498 14,260 2.86 
Loans held by Freddie Mac(1)
82,135 607 2.96 88,112 766 3.48 
Total interest-earning assets2,781,935 15,230 2.19 2,273,783 15,716 2.76 
Interest-bearing liabilities:
Debt securities of consolidated trusts held by third parties2,479,641 (10,033)(1.62)1,951,651 (11,975)(2.45)
Debt of Freddie Mac:
Short-term debt11,698 — 0.01 101,989 (130)(0.51)
Long-term debt244,207 (430)(0.70)195,573 (735)(1.50)
Total debt of Freddie Mac255,905 (430)(0.67)297,562 (865)(1.16)
Total interest-bearing liabilities2,735,546 (10,463)(1.53)2,249,213 (12,840)(2.28)
Impact of net non-interest-bearing funding46,389 — 0.03 24,570 — 0.02 
Total funding of interest-earning assets2,781,935 (10,463)(1.50)2,273,783 (12,840)(2.26)
Net interest income/yield$4,767 0.69 %$2,876 0.50 %
(1)Loan fees, primarily consisting of amortization of upfront fees, included in interest income were $806 million and $1.2 billion for loans held by consolidated trusts and $29 million and $20 million for loans held by Freddie Mac during 2Q 2021 and 2Q 2020, respectively.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
14

Management's Discussion and AnalysisConsolidated Results of Operations

 YTD 2021YTD 2020
(Dollars in millions)
Average
Balance
Interest
Income
(Expense)
Average
Rate
Average
Balance
Interest
Income
(Expense)
Average
Rate
Interest-earning assets:
Cash and cash equivalents$92,734 $4 0.01 %$15,444 $24 0.31 %
Securities purchased under agreements to resell54,778 21 0.07 83,767 291 0.69 
Advances to lenders3,864 20 1.06 2,030 18 1.81 
Secured lending1,631 15 1.81 2,097 28 2.63 
Mortgage-related securities, net28,201 1,154 8.18 44,034 1,082 4.92 
Non-mortgage-related securities29,173 73 0.51 30,124 207 1.37 
Loans held by consolidated trusts(1)
2,418,033 26,509 2.19 1,978,555 30,117 3.04 
Loans held by Freddie Mac(1)
93,069 1,336 2.87 83,259 1,541 3.70 
Total interest-earning assets2,721,483 29,132 2.14 2,239,31033,3082.97 
Interest-bearing liabilities:
Debt securities of consolidated trusts held by third parties2,410,850 (19,789)(1.64)1,926,559 (25,422)(2.64)
Debt of Freddie Mac:
Short-term debt12,595 (2)(0.02)110,605 (560)(1.00)
Long-term debt252,795 (935)(0.74)183,022 (1,665)(1.81)
Total debt of Freddie Mac265,390 (937)(0.71)293,627 (2,225)(1.51)
Total interest-bearing liabilities2,676,240 (20,726)(1.55)2,220,186 (27,647)(2.49)
Impact of net non-interest-bearing funding45,243 — 0.03 19,124 — 0.02 
Total funding of interest-earning assets2,721,483 (20,726)(1.52)2,239,310 (27,647)(2.47)
Net interest income/yield$8,406 0.62 %$5,661 0.50 %
(1)Loan fees, primarily consisting of amortization of upfront fees, included in interest income were $1.8 billion and $2.0 billion for loans held by consolidated trusts and $52 million and $41 million for loans held by Freddie Mac during YTD 2021 and YTD 2020, respectively.
Guarantee Income
The table below presents the components of guarantee income.
Table 4 - Components of Guarantee Income
ChangeChange
(Dollars in millions) 2Q 20212Q 2020$%YTD 2021YTD 2020$%
Contractual guarantee fees$304 $245 $59 24 %$589 $485 $104 21 %
Guarantee obligation amortization288 254 34 13 560 474 86 18 
Guarantee asset fair value changes(236)(30)(206)(687)(545)(113)(432)(382)
Guarantee income$356 $469 ($113)(24)%$604 $846 ($242)(29)%
Key Drivers:
n    YTD 2021 vs. YTD 2020 - Decreased as continued growth in our multifamily guarantee portfolio was more than offset by the impacts of interest-rate changes on the fair values of our guarantee assets. During YTD 2021, we recorded higher fair value losses due to increases in medium- and long-term interest rates compared to lower fair value losses during YTD 2020 due to significant decreases in interest rates.


Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
15

Management's Discussion and AnalysisConsolidated Results of Operations

Investment Gains (Losses), Net
The table below presents the components of investment gains (losses), net.
Table 5 - Components of Investment Gains (Losses), Net
ChangeChange
(Dollars in millions)2Q 20212Q 2020$%YTD 2021YTD 2020$%
Mortgage loans gains (losses)$1,511 $1,046 $465 44 %$1,717 $2,218 ($501)(23)%
Investment securities gains (losses)(330)65 (395)(608)(837)1,120 (1,957)(175)
Debt gains (losses)18 60 (42)(70)156 760 (604)(79)
Derivative gains (losses)(563)(501)(62)(12)808 (4,263)5,071 119 
Investment gains (losses), net$636 $670 ($34)(5)%$1,844 ($165)$2,009 1,218 %
Mortgage Loans Gains (Losses)
The table below presents the components of mortgage loans gains (losses). We economically hedge our interest rate exposure on loan commitments and mortgage loans using interest-rate risk management derivatives. The offsetting effects of these derivatives are recognized in derivative gains (losses).
Table 6 - Components of Mortgage Loans Gains (Losses)
ChangeChange
(Dollars in millions)2Q 20212Q 2020$%YTD 2021YTD 2020$%
Single-family:
    Gains (losses) on mortgage loans$510$103$407395 %$554$81$473 584 %
Multifamily:
Gains (losses) on certain loan purchase commitments342 650 (308)(47)537 1,182 ($645)(55)
   Gains (losses) on mortgage loans659 293 366 125 626 955 (329)(34)
Total Multifamily1,001 943 58 6 1,163 2,137 (974)(46)
Mortgage loans gains (losses)$1,511 $1,046 $465 44 %$1,717 $2,218 ($501)(23)%
Key Drivers:
n    2Q 2021 vs. 2Q 2020 - Single-family mortgage loans gains increased primarily due to a higher volume of sales of single-family held-for-sale loans. For multifamily, mortgage loans gains increased primarily due to higher floating-rate loan securitization volume, partially offset by less K Certificate spread tightening and a smaller volume of fixed-rate held-for-sale loan commitments.
n    YTD 2021 vs. YTD 2020 - Single-family mortgage loans gains increased primarily due to a higher volume of sales of single-family held-for-sale loans. For multifamily, mortgage loans gains decreased as tighter K Certificate spreads and higher floating-rate loan securitization volume were more than offset by the impacts of interest-rate changes on the fair values of our loans and fixed-rate loan commitments. During YTD 2021, we recorded fair value losses due to increases in long-term interest rates compared to significant fair value gains during YTD 2020 due to large interest rate decreases as a result of the market volatility caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
16

Management's Discussion and AnalysisConsolidated Results of Operations

Investment Securities Gains (Losses)
The table below presents the components of investment securities gains (losses). We economically hedge our interest rate exposure on investment securities using interest rate-risk management derivatives. The offsetting effects of these derivatives are recognized in derivative gains (losses).
Table 7 - Components of Investment Securities Gains (Losses)
ChangeChange
(Dollars in millions)2Q 20212Q 2020$%YTD 2021YTD 2020$%
Realized gains (losses) on sales of available-for-sale securities$99 $7 $92 1,314 %$467 $17 $450 2,647 %
Realized and unrealized gains (losses) on trading securities(410)84 (494)(588)(1,264)1,153 (2,417)(210)
Other(19)(26)27 (40)(50)10 20 
Investment securities gains (losses)($330)$65 ($395)(608)%($837)$1,120 ($1,957)(175)%
Key Drivers:
n    2Q 2021 vs. 2Q 2020 - Decreased primarily due to higher losses on trading securities as a result of a larger decrease in long-term interest rates and a change in investment mix in 2Q 2021 compared to 2Q 2020.
n    YTD 2021 vs. YTD 2020 - Decreased primarily due to losses on trading securities driven by the increase in long-term interest rates in YTD 2021 compared to gains in YTD 2020 due to a decrease in long-term interest rates. The losses on trading securities were partially offset by gains on sales of agency mortgage-related securities.
Debt Gains (Losses)
The table below presents the components of debt gains (losses).
Table 8 - Components of Debt Gains (Losses)
ChangeChange
(Dollars in millions)2Q 20212Q 2020$%YTD 2021YTD 2020$%
Fair value changes:
Debt securities of consolidated trusts
$13 ($1)$14 1,400 %$12 $3 $9 300 %
Debt of Freddie Mac22 (69)91 132 30 479 (449)(94)
Total fair value changes35 (70)105 150 42 482 (440)(91)
Gains (losses) on extinguishment of debt:
Debt securities of consolidated trusts
(8)35 (43)(123)133 39 94 241 
Debt of Freddie Mac(9)95 (104)(109)(19)239 (258)(108)
Total gains (losses) on extinguishment of debt(17)130 (147)(113)114 278 (164)(59)
Debt gains (losses)$18 $60 ($42)(70)%$156 $760 ($604)(79)%
Key Drivers:
n    YTD 2021 vs. YTD 2020 - Decreased primarily due to lower fair value gains on STACR debt notes for which we elected the fair value option. Fair value gains in YTD 2020 were driven by spread widening caused by the significant market volatility related to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
17

Management's Discussion and AnalysisConsolidated Results of Operations

Derivative Gains (Losses)
The table below presents the components of derivative gains (losses). Certain of our interest rate-related derivative gains (losses) have offsetting effects recognized in mortgage loans gains (losses), investment securities gains (losses), debt gains (losses), or other comprehensive income (loss).
Table 9 - Components of Derivative Gains (Losses)
ChangeChange
(Dollars in millions)2Q 20212Q 2020$%YTD 2021YTD 2020$%
Fair value gains (losses):
Interest-rate risk management derivatives$631 $175 $456 261 %$1,023 ($2,794)$3,817 137 %
Mortgage commitment derivatives(860)(396)(464)(117)616 (1,122)1,738 155 
CRT-related derivatives
15 43 (28)(65)(27)121 (148)(122)
Other
11 83 37 (29)(78)
Total fair value gains (losses)(203)(172)(31)(18)1,620 (3,758)5,378 143 
Accrual of periodic cash settlements(360)(329)(31)(9)(812)(505)(307)(61)
Derivative gains (losses)($563)($501)($62)(12)%$808 ($4,263)$5,071 119 %
Key Drivers:
n    YTD 2021 vs. YTD 2020 - Derivative gains in YTD 2021 primarily driven by the increase in long-term interest rates, compared to derivative losses in YTD 2020 due to the decrease in long-term interest rates.
Credit-Related Income (Expense)
Benefit (Provision) for Credit Losses
The table below presents the components of benefit (provision) for credit losses.
Table 10 - Components of Benefit (Provision) for Credit Losses
ChangeChange
(Dollars in millions)2Q 20212Q 2020$%YTD 2021YTD 2020$%
Benefit (provision) for credit losses:
  Single-family$686 ($624)$1,310 210 %$832 ($1,790)$2,622 146 %
  Multifamily54 (81)135 167 104 (148)252 170 
Benefit (provision) for credit losses$740 ($705)$1,445 205 %$936 ($1,938)$2,874 148 %
Key Drivers:
Single-family
n    2Q 2021 vs. 2Q 2020 and YTD 2021 vs. YTD 2020 - A benefit for credit losses in the 2021 periods compared to a provision for credit losses in the 2020 periods primarily driven by the following factors:
l    A reserve release due to:
Reduced expected credit losses related to COVID-19 - Our estimate of expected credit losses related to the COVID-19 pandemic decreased during the 2021 periods as economic conditions improved. Our provision for credit losses increased during the 2020 periods due to the increase in expected credit losses related to the economic effects of the pandemic.
Appreciation in realized house prices - The realized house price growth rates were higher in the 2021 periods than in the 2020 periods and, as a result, further reduced our estimate of expected credit losses as the higher house prices decreased both the probability and severity of expected credit losses.
l    This was partially offset by an increase in expected losses on new single-family loans due to growth in our single-family mortgage portfolio. We recognize expected credit losses at the time of loan acquisition.
Multifamily
n    2Q 2021 vs. 2Q 2020 and YTD 2021 vs. YTD 2020 - A benefit for credit losses in the 2021 periods compared to a provision for credit losses in the 2020 periods driven by improved actual and forecasted economic factors.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
18

Management's Discussion and AnalysisConsolidated Results of Operations

Credit Enhancement Expense
Key Drivers:
n    2Q 2021 vs. 2Q 2020 and YTD 2021 vs. YTD 2020 - Increased $136 million and $240 million, respectively, primarily due to higher outstanding cumulative volumes of CRT transactions.
Benefit for (Decrease in) Credit Enhancement Recoveries
Key Drivers:
n    2Q 2021 vs. 2Q 2020 and YTD 2021 vs. YTD 2020 - Decreased $414 million and $1.1 billion, respectively, as a result of the corresponding decrease in expected credit losses.
Other Comprehensive Income (Loss)
Key Drivers:
n    2Q 2021 vs. 2Q 2020 and YTD 2021 vs. YTD 2020 - Decreased $229 million and $1.1 billion, respectively, primarily due to recognition of realized gains due to sales of available-for-sale securities. The 2020 periods included fair value gains as long-term interest rates declined as a result of the market volatility caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. We economically hedge our interest rate exposure on investment securities using interest-rate risk management derivatives. The offsetting effects of these derivatives are recognized in derivative gains (losses).
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
19

Management's Discussion and AnalysisConsolidated Balance Sheets Analysis

CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS ANALYSIS
The table below compares our summarized condensed consolidated balance sheets.
Table 11 - Summarized Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheets
Change
(Dollars in millions)June 30, 2021December 31, 2020$%
Assets:
Cash and cash equivalents$11,171 $23,889 ($12,718)(53)%
Securities purchased under agreements to resell113,697 105,003 8,694 
Subtotal124,868 128,892 (4,024)(3)
Investment securities, at fair value59,558 59,825 (267)— 
Mortgage loans, net2,608,223 2,383,888 224,335 
Accrued interest receivable, net7,637 7,754 (117)(2)
Derivative assets, net756 1,205 (449)(37)
Deferred tax assets, net6,494 6,557 (63)(1)
Other assets34,606 39,294 (4,688)(12)
Total assets$2,842,142 $2,627,415 $214,727 8 %
Liabilities and Equity:
Liabilities:
Accrued interest payable$6,122 $6,210 ($88)(1)%
Debt2,802,755 2,592,546 210,209 
Derivative liabilities, net507 954 (447)(47)
Other liabilities10,356 11,292 (936)(8)
Total liabilities2,819,740 2,611,002 208,738 8 
Total equity22,402 16,413 5,989 36 
Total liabilities and equity$2,842,142 $2,627,415 $214,727 8 %
Key Drivers:
As of June 30, 2021 compared to December 31, 2020:
n    Cash and cash equivalents and securities purchased under agreements to resell decreased on a combined basis primarily due to a decrease in trust cash driven by lower loan prepayments, partially offset by an increase in the size of our other investments portfolio to comply with the minimum liquidity requirements established by FHFA that have been in effect since December 2020.
n    Other assets decreased primarily due to lower servicer receivables driven by the decrease in loan prepayments.
n    Total equity increased primarily due to our net income for 2Q 2021 combined with our continued ability to retain earnings as a result of the increases in the applicable Capital Reserve Amount and the resulting changes in our dividend requirement pursuant to the Letter Agreements.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
20

Management's Discussion and AnalysisOur Portfolios
OUR PORTFOLIOS
In connection with the change in our reportable segments implemented in 1Q 2021, we updated the definitions of our portfolio balances and aligned the definitions across our two reportable segments. Prior periods have been revised to conform to the current period presentation.
Mortgage Portfolio
Our mortgage portfolio includes assets held by both business segments and consists of:
n Securitized mortgage loans - Loans held by securitization trusts that issue securities that we guarantee.
n Unsecuritized mortgage loans
l Securitization pipeline loans - Single-family and multifamily loans that we have purchased for cash and aggregate prior to securitization.
l Loss mitigation loans - Delinquent and modified single-family loans that we have purchased from securitization trusts to facilitate loss mitigation. Certain of these loans have re-performed, either on their own or through modification or other loss mitigation activity.
l Other loans - Unsecuritized mortgage loans that do not fit in either of the prior two categories, primarily multifamily loans we acquire as part of a buy-and-hold investment strategy.
n Other - Primarily consists of other mortgage-related guarantees.
The table below presents the UPB of our mortgage portfolio by segment.
Table 12 - Mortgage Portfolio
June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
(In millions)Single-FamilyMultifamilyTotalSingle-FamilyMultifamilyTotal
Securitized mortgage loans:
Held by consolidated trusts$2,469,623$15,197$2,484,820$2,204,936$12,305$2,217,241
Held by nonconsolidated trusts35,181355,718390,89934,932331,860366,792
Total securitized mortgage loans2,504,804 370,915 2,875,719 2,239,868 344,165 2,584,033 
Unsecuritized mortgage loans:
Securitization pipeline loans25,745 12,878 38,623 51,040 29,183 80,223 
Loss mitigation loans22,892 — 22,892 26,303 — 26,303 
Other loans— 4,608 4,608 — 4,224 4,224 
Total unsecuritized mortgage loans48,637 17,486 66,123 77,343 33,407 110,750 
Other10,148 10,026 20,174 9,215 10,775 19,990 
Total mortgage portfolio$2,563,589 $398,427 $2,962,016 $2,326,426 $388,347 $2,714,773 
Guarantee Portfolio
Our guarantee portfolio primarily consists of mortgage-related securities guaranteed by Freddie Mac in exchange for guarantee fee income. This amount differs from the securitized mortgage loans amount included in the mortgage portfolio because of two primary factors: (1) it includes only the UPB of securities guaranteed by Freddie Mac and excludes the UPB of any unguaranteed subordinated securities issued by securitization trusts and (2) it reflects timing differences between the receipt of mortgage payments and the pass-through of those payments to security holders. The other category primarily consists of other mortgage-related guarantees.
The table below presents the guarantee portfolio by segment.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
21

Management's Discussion and AnalysisOur Portfolios
Table 13 - Guarantee Portfolio
June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
(In millions)Single-FamilyMultifamilyTotalSingle-FamilyMultifamilyTotal
Guaranteed mortgage-related securities:
Issued by consolidated trusts$2,518,884 $15,191 $2,534,075 $2,273,736 $12,305 $2,286,041 
Issued by nonconsolidated trusts29,409 311,443 340,852 29,300 289,056 318,356 
Total guaranteed mortgage-related securities2,548,293 326,634 2,874,927 2,303,036 301,361 2,604,397 
Other 10,148 10,026 20,174 9,215 10,775 19,990 
Total guarantee portfolio$2,558,441 $336,660 $2,895,101 $2,312,251 $312,136 $2,624,387 
Our guarantee portfolio excludes guarantees of Fannie Mae securities and other similar transactions in which we do not directly guarantee mortgage credit risk in exchange for guarantee fees. See Note 5 for additional information on our guarantee activities.
Investments Portfolio
Our investments portfolio consists of our mortgage-related investments portfolio and other investments portfolio.
Mortgage-Related Investments Portfolio
We primarily use our mortgage-related investments portfolio to provide liquidity to the mortgage market and support our loss mitigation activities. Our mortgage-related investments portfolio includes assets held by both business segments and consists of:
n Unsecuritized mortgage loans - Single-family and multifamily unsecuritized loans as discussed above.
n Agency mortgage-related securities - Primarily includes Freddie Mac mortgage-related securities, both single-family and multifamily, although we may also invest in Fannie Mae and Ginnie Mae mortgage-related securities.
n Non-agency mortgage-related securities - We continue to own certain non-agency mortgage-related securities that we acquired in prior years. We generally no longer purchase non-agency mortgage-related securities, although we may acquire such securities in connection with our senior subordinate securitization structures backed by seasoned loans.
The table below presents the UPB of our mortgage-related investments portfolio. The balance of our mortgage-related investments portfolio for purposes of the $225 billion FHFA cap and $250 billion Purchase Agreement cap was $124.1 billion as of June 30, 2021, including $10.8 billion representing 10% of the notional amount of the interest-only securities we held as of June 30, 2021.
With respect to the composition of our mortgage-related investments portfolio, in August 2020, FHFA instructed us to: (1) reduce the amount of agency MBS to no more than $50 billion by June 30, 2021 and no more than $20 billion by June 30, 2022, with all dollar caps to be based on UPB; and (2) reduce the UPB of our existing portfolio of collateralized mortgage obligations (CMOs), which are also sometimes referred to as REMICs, to zero by June 30, 2021. We will have a holding period limit to sell any new CMO tranches created but not sold at issuance. CMOs do not include tranches initially retained from reperforming loans senior subordinate securitization structures.
Table 14 - Mortgage-Related Investments Portfolio
June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
(In millions)Single-FamilyMultifamilyTotalSingle-FamilyMultifamilyTotal
Unsecuritized mortgage loans:
Securitization pipeline loans$25,745 $12,878 $38,623 $51,040 $29,183 $80,223 
Loss mitigation loans22,892 — 22,892 26,303 — 26,303 
Other loans— 4,608 4,608 — 4,224 4,224 
Total unsecuritized mortgage loans48,637 17,486 66,123 77,343 33,407 110,750 
Mortgage-related securities:
Agency mortgage-related securities42,320 3,466 45,786 65,954 4,066 70,020 
Non-agency mortgage-related securities1,225 101 1,326 1,300 114 1,414 
Total mortgage-related securities43,545 3,567 47,112 67,254 4,180 71,434 
Mortgage-related investments portfolio$92,182 $21,053 $113,235 $144,597 $37,587 $182,184 
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
22

Management's Discussion and AnalysisOur Portfolios
Other Investments Portfolio
Our other investments portfolio, which includes the liquidity and contingency operating portfolio, is primarily used for short-term liquidity management, collateral management, and asset and liability management. The assets in the other investments portfolio are primarily allocated to the Single-family segment.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
23

Management's Discussion and AnalysisOur Business Segments

OUR BUSINESS SEGMENTS
As shown in the table below, we have two reportable segments, which are based on the way our chief operating decision maker manages our business.
During 1Q 2021, our chief operating decision maker began making decisions about allocating resources and assessing segment performance based on two reportable segments, Single-family and Multifamily. In prior periods, we managed our business based on three reportable segments, Single-family Guarantee, Multifamily, and Capital Markets. As our mortgage-related investments portfolio has declined over time, our capital markets activities have become increasingly focused on supporting our single-family and multifamily businesses. As a result, we determined that, effective in 1Q 2021, our Capital Markets segment should no longer be considered a separate reportable segment, and our chief operating decision maker no longer reviews separate financial results or discrete financial information for our capital markets activities. Substantially all of the revenues and expenses that were previously directly attributable to our Capital Markets segment are now included in our Single-family segment, while certain administrative expenses and other centrally-incurred costs previously allocated to the Capital Markets segment are now allocated between the Single-family and Multifamily segments using various methodologies depending on the nature of the expense.
In connection with this change, we also changed the measure of segment profit and loss for each segment to be based on net income and comprehensive income calculated using the same accounting policies we use to prepare our general purpose financial statements in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles. The financial results of each reportable segment include directly attributable revenue and expenses. We allocate interest expense and other debt funding and hedging-related costs to each reportable segment using a funds transfer pricing process. We fully allocate to each reportable segment the administrative expenses and other centrally-incurred costs that are not directly attributable to a particular segment using various methodologies depending on the nature of the expense. As a result, the sum of each income statement line item for the two reportable segments is equal to that same income statement line item for the consolidated entity. We have discontinued the reclassifications of certain activities between various line items that were included in our previous measure of segment profit and loss. Prior period information has been revised to conform to the current period presentation. See Note 15 for additional information on the change in our segment reporting presentation.
SegmentDescription
Single-family
Reflects results from our purchase, sale, securitization, and guarantee of single-family loans and securities, our investments in those loans and securities, the management of single-family mortgage credit risk and market risk, and any results of our treasury function that are not allocated to each segment.
Multifamily
Reflects results from our purchase, sale, securitization, and guarantee of multifamily loans and securities, our investments in those loans and securities, and the management of multifamily mortgage credit risk and market risk.
Segment Net Income (Loss) and Comprehensive Income (Loss)
The graphs below show our net income (loss) and comprehensive income (loss) by segment.
Segment Net Income (Loss)
(In millions)fmcc-20210630_g21.jpg
Segment Comprehensive Income (Loss)
(In millions)fmcc-20210630_g22.jpg
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
24

Management's Discussion and Analysis
Our Business Segments | Single-Family
Single-Family
Business Results
The graphs, tables, and related discussion below present the business results of our Single-family segment.
New Business Activity
UPB of Single-Family Loan Purchases and Guarantees by Loan Purpose and Average Guarantee Fee Rate(1) Charged on New Acquisitions
(UPB in billions, guarantee fee rate in bps) fmcc-20210630_g23.jpg
(1)Guarantee fee excludes the legislated 10 basis point increase and includes deferred fees recognized over the estimated life of the related loans.
Number of Families Helped to Own a Home and Average Loan UPB of New Acquisitions

(Loan count in thousands)
fmcc-20210630_g24.jpg

n    2Q 2021 vs. 2Q 2020 and YTD 2021 vs. YTD 2020
l    Our loan purchase and guarantee activity increased due to higher refinance and home purchase volumes driven by the low mortgage interest rate environment. We expect mortgage interest rates to increase in the second half of 2021 and, as a result, refinance volume to decrease.
l    The average guarantee fee rate charged on new acquisitions increased primarily due to the adverse market refinance fee we began to charge in December 2020. In July 2021, FHFA instructed us to eliminate this fee for loan deliveries effective August 1, 2021.
l    We continue to monitor our compliance with the Purchase Agreement covenants added pursuant to the January 2021 Letter Agreement that place additional restrictions on our secondary market activities, including our single-family loan acquisitions and cash window activities, and we have changed, and may further change, our loan acquisition and cash window programs to maintain compliance. In 1Q 2021, FHFA instructed us to apply the $1.5 billion limit on the volume of loans purchased through the cash window program per lender during any period comprising four calendar quarters to certain lenders beginning on July 1, 2021. In June 2021, FHFA revised this guidance on early implementation of the new cash window restrictions, reverting to the requirement in the Purchase Agreement to implement this $1.5 billion limit beginning on January 1, 2022.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
25

Management's Discussion and Analysis
Our Business Segments | Single-Family
Single-Family Mortgage Portfolio
Single-Family Mortgage Portfolio and Average Guarantee Fee Rate(1) Charged on Mortgage Portfolio
(UPB in billions, guarantee fee rate in bps) fmcc-20210630_g25.jpg
(1)Guarantee fee rate calculation excludes the legislated 10 basis point increase. As of June 30, 2021, excludes $49 billion in UPB of loans for which the average guarantee fee charged information is not available.
Single-Family Loans
(Loan count in millions)fmcc-20210630_g26.jpg
n    The single-family mortgage portfolio grew $503 billion, or 24%, year-over-year driven by higher new business activity. Additionally, continued house price appreciation contributed to new business acquisitions having a higher average loan size compared to older vintages that continued to run off.
n    2Q 2021 vs. 2Q 2020 and YTD 2021 vs. YTD 2020 - The average guarantee fee rate charged on the single-family mortgage portfolio increased as older vintages with lower charged guarantee fee rates were replaced by acquisitions of new loans with higher charged guarantee fee rates, including the adverse market refinance fee we began to charge in December 2020. In July 2021, FHFA instructed us to eliminate this fee for loan deliveries effective August 1, 2021.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
26

Management's Discussion and Analysis
Our Business Segments | Single-Family
CRT Activities
We transfer credit risk on a portion of our single-family mortgage portfolio to the private market, reducing the risk of future losses to us when borrowers default. The graphs below show the issuance amounts associated with CRT transactions for loans in our single-family mortgage portfolio. We evaluate and update our CRT strategy as needed depending on our overall business strategy, regulatory requirements, and market conditions.
UPB Covered by New CRT Issuance New CRT Issuance Maximum Coverage
(In billions) (In billions)
fmcc-20210630_g27.jpg
fmcc-20210630_g28.jpg
n    2Q 2021 vs. 2Q 2020 and YTD 2021 vs. YTD 2020
l    The percentage of our single-family acquisitions targeted for CRT transactions (primarily 30-year fixed rate loans with LTV ratios between 60% and 97%) decreased to 61% during the 2021 periods from 63% and 66% during 2Q 2020 and YTD 2020, respectively, primarily driven by an increase in the proportion of recently acquired loans with lower LTV ratios.
l    The UPB of mortgage loans covered by CRT transactions issued during the 2021 periods increased significantly due to the recovery of the CRT markets from the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, the increase in loan acquisition activity in recent quarters, and the shortened timeline between loan acquisition and ACIS issuance.
l    Our CRT issuance maximum coverage increased but was proportionally lower than the increase in UPB of mortgage loans covered by CRT transactions issued during the 2021 periods due to the improved credit quality of the covered loans, which reduced the amount of credit coverage we required on those loans.
See MD&A – Risk Management - Single-Family Mortgage Credit Risk - Transferring Credit Risk to Third-Party Investors for additional information on our CRT activities and other credit enhancements.









Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
27

Management's Discussion and Analysis
Our Business Segments | Single-Family
Loss Mitigation Activities
The following graph provides details about our completed single-family loan workout activities. The forbearance data below is limited to loans in forbearance that are past due based on the loans' original contractual terms and excludes both loans for which we do not control servicing and loans included in certain legacy transactions, as the forbearance data for such loans is either not reported to us by the servicers or is otherwise not readily available to us.

Completed Loan Workout Activity

(UPB in billions, number of loan workouts in thousands)

fmcc-20210630_g29.jpg
n    Completed loan workout activity includes forbearance plans where borrowers fully reinstated the loan to current status during or at the end of the forbearance period, payment deferrals, modifications, successfully completed repayment plans, short sales, and deeds in lieu of foreclosure. Completed loan workout activity excludes active loss mitigation activity that was ongoing and had not been completed as of the end of the quarter, such as forbearance plans that had been initiated but not completed and trial period modifications. There were approximately 177,000 loans in active forbearance plans and 11,000 loans in other active loss mitigation activity as of June 30, 2021.
n    Pursuant to FHFA guidance and the CARES Act, we offer mortgage relief options for borrowers affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. Among other things, we are offering forbearance of up to 18 months to single-family borrowers experiencing a financial hardship, either directly or indirectly, related to the COVID-19 pandemic. We are also offering a payment deferral option that allows a borrower to defer up to 18 months of payments for eligible homeowners who have the financial capacity to resume making their monthly payments, but who are unable to afford the additional monthly contributions required by a repayment plan. The length of available forbearance or payment deferral may be extended or the terms of forbearance or payment deferral revised by further FHFA guidance or federal government regulation.
n    YTD 2021 vs. YTD 2020 - Our loan workout activity increased significantly, primarily driven by the increase in completed forbearance plans and payment deferrals related to the COVID-19 pandemic.
See MD&A - Risk Management for additional information on our loan workout activities.

Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
28

Management's Discussion and Analysis
Our Business Segments | Single-Family
Net Interest Yield and Average Investments Portfolio Balances
Net Interest Yield & Average Investments Portfolio Balances
(Weighted average balance in billions)
fmcc-20210630_g30.jpg
n    2Q 2021 vs. 2Q 2020 and YTD 2021 vs. YTD 2020
l    Net interest yield on our investments portfolio decreased primarily due to changes in investment mix as the lower-yielding other investments portfolio represented a larger percentage of the total investments portfolio. Net interest yield on our investments portfolio is calculated as net interest income related to our investments portfolio divided by the weighted average investments portfolio balance during the period.
l    The weighted average investments portfolio balance decreased in 2Q 2021 compared to 2Q 2020 due to a decline in the mortgage-related investments portfolio driven by asset sales to comply with the August 2020 FHFA instructions with respect to agency MBS and CMO portfolios. The weighted average investments portfolio balance increased in YTD 2021 compared to YTD 2020 as the increase in the other investments portfolio to comply with the minimum liquidity requirements established by FHFA that have been in effect since December 2020 more than offset the decline in the mortgage-related investments portfolio.



Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
29

Management's Discussion and Analysis
Our Business Segments | Single-Family
Financial Results
The table below presents the components of net income and comprehensive income for our Single-family segment.
Table 15 - Single-Family Segment Financial Results
ChangeChange
(Dollars in millions)2Q 20212Q 2020$%YTD 2021YTD 2020$%
 Guarantee net interest income$4,334 $2,283 $2,051 90 %$7,680 $4,423 $3,257 74 %
 Investments net interest income578 782 (204)(26)1,249 1,477 (228)(15)
 Income (expense) from hedge accounting(452)(475)23 (1,161)(825)(336)(41)
   Net interest income4,460 2,590 1,870 72 7,768 5,075 2,693 53 
Guarantee income10 55 (45)(82)99 42 57 136 
Investment gains (losses), net137 (61)198 325 437 (37)474 1,281 
Other income (loss)108 83 25 30 260 141 119 84 
Net revenues4,715 2,667 2,048 77 8,564 5,221 3,343 64 
Benefit (provision) for credit losses686 (624)1,310 210 832 (1,790)2,622 146 
Credit enhancement expense(361)(228)(133)(58)(686)(455)(231)(51)
Benefit for (decrease in) credit enhancement recoveries(190)219 (409)(187)(435)658 (1,093)(166)
REO operations expense(7)(14)50 (15)(99)84 85 
Credit-related income (expense)128 (647)775 120 (304)(1,686)1,382 82 
Administrative expense (503)(477)(26)(5)(991)(944)(47)(5)
Temporary Payroll Tax Cut Continuation Act of 2011 expense(570)(442)(128)(29)(1,104)(874)(230)(26)
Other expense (172)(131)(41)(31)(381)(229)(152)(66)
Operating expense (1,245)(1,050)(195)(19)(2,476)(2,047)(429)(21)
Income (loss) before income tax (expense) benefit 3,598 970 2,628 271 5,784 1,488 4,296 289 
Income tax (expense) benefit(743)(198)(545)(275)(1,191)(305)(886)(290)
Net income (loss)2,855 772 2,083 270 4,593 1,183 3,410 288 
Total other comprehensive income (loss), net of taxes and reclassification adjustments(74)103 (177)(172)(402)488 (890)(182)
Comprehensive income (loss)$2,781 $875 $1,906 218 %$4,191 $1,671 $2,520 151 %
Key Business Drivers:
n 2Q 2021 vs. 2Q 2020 and YTD 2021 vs. YTD 2020
l    Higher net interest income in the 2021 periods compared to the 2020 periods primarily due to the continued growth in the single-family mortgage portfolio, higher average guarantee fee rates on the single-family mortgage portfolio, and higher deferred fee income recognition.
l    Credit-related income in 2Q 2021 compared to credit-related expense in 2Q 2020 and lower credit-related expense in YTD 2021 compared to YTD 2020, primarily driven by a benefit for credit losses as a result of a credit reserve release due to realized house price appreciation and improving economic conditions. This was partially offset by a decrease in credit enhancement recoveries. Credit-related expense in the 2020 periods was primarily driven by the negative economic effects of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
30

Management's Discussion and Analysis
Our Business Segments | Multifamily

Multifamily
Business Results
The graphs, tables, and related discussion below present the business results of our Multifamily segment.
New Business Activity and Guarantee Activities
New Business Activity(1)
(In billions)
fmcc-20210630_g31.jpg (1) Includes LIHTC new business activity
Guarantee Activities
(In billions)

fmcc-20210630_g32.jpg
n    In November 2020, FHFA announced that the 2021 loan purchase cap for the multifamily business will be $70 billion, and at least 50% of the multifamily new business activity must be mission-driven, affordable housing, generally defined as affordable to renters at 80% of AMI or below, with at least 20% being affordable to renters at 60% of AMI or below.
l    As of June 30, 2021, the total multifamily new business activity counting toward this cap was $27.0 billion. Approximately 67% of this activity, based on UPB, was mission-driven, affordable housing, with approximately 33% being affordable to renters at 60% of AMI or below.
n    New business activity decreased YTD 2021 compared to YTD 2020 due to increased competition and a reduced loan purchase cap. We expect full year 2021 new business activity to reach the $70 billion purchase cap as broader economic activity is expected to drive demand for mortgage financing.
n    Outstanding commitments, including index lock commitments and commitments to purchase or guarantee multifamily assets, were $18.7 billion and $18.0 billion as of June 30, 2021 and June 30, 2020, respectively, indicating a strong pipeline for the remainder of the year.
n    Guarantee activity UPB increased in YTD 2021 compared to YTD 2020 primarily due to the securitization of the significant loan purchase activity from 4Q 2020, along with the purchase of a higher volume of floating-rate loans during YTD 2021, which typically have shorter aggregation periods.

Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
31

Management's Discussion and Analysis
Our Business Segments | Multifamily

Multifamily Mortgage Portfolio and Guarantee Portfolio

Mortgage Portfolio
(In billions)
fmcc-20210630_g33.jpg
Guarantee Portfolio
(In billions)
fmcc-20210630_g34.jpg
n    Our multifamily mortgage and guarantee portfolios increased as of June 30, 2021 compared to December 31, 2020 primarily due to ongoing loan purchase and securitization activities. We expect continued growth in these portfolios during the remainder of 2021 as purchase and securitization activities should outpace loan payoffs.
n    In addition to our multifamily mortgage portfolio, we own equity interests in LIHTC fund partnerships with carrying values totaling $1.6 billion and $1.4 billion as of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
32

Management's Discussion and Analysis
Our Business Segments | Multifamily

CRT Activities
UPB Covered by New CRT Issuance New CRT Issuance Maximum Coverage
(In billions) (In billions)
fmcc-20210630_g35.jpg
fmcc-20210630_g36.jpg
n    As of June 30, 2021, we had cumulatively transferred a substantial amount of the expected and stressed credit risk on the multifamily guarantee portfolio primarily through subordination in our securitizations. In addition, nearly all of our securitization activities shifted substantially all of the interest rate and liquidity risk associated with the underlying collateral away from Freddie Mac to third-party investors.
n    The UPB of mortgage loans covered by CRT transactions issued during the 2021 periods and the related maximum coverage increased as we securitized the significant loan purchase activity from the previous two quarters.
We evaluate our risk transfer strategy and make changes depending on market conditions, our business strategy, and regulatory requirements. See MD&A - Risk Management - Multifamily Mortgage Credit Risk - Transferring Credit Risk to Third-Party Investors for more information on risk transfer transactions and credit enhancements on our multifamily mortgage portfolio.

Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
33

Management's Discussion and Analysis
Our Business Segments | Multifamily

Net Interest Yield and Average Investments Portfolio Balances
Net Interest Yield & Average Investments Portfolio Balances
(Weighted average balance in billions)
fmcc-20210630_g37.jpg
n    2Q 2021 vs. 2Q 2020 and YTD 2021 vs. YTD 2020
l    Net interest yield increased primarily due to a change in the composition of our investments portfolio as our interest-only securities, which are generally higher yielding investments, represented a larger percentage of our investments portfolio.
l    The weighted average investments portfolio balance decreased as the average unsecuritized mortgage loans balance decreased due to an increase in securitization activity.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
34

Management's Discussion and Analysis
Our Business Segments | Multifamily

Mortgage Loans Gains (Losses), Net and Initial Pricing Margin on Commitments
Multifamily Segment Mortgage Loans Gains (Losses), Net
(In millions)fmcc-20210630_g38.jpgSource of spread data in basis points: Independent dealers
Initial Pricing Margin on Commitments
(In millions)
fmcc-20210630_g39.jpg(Notional in millions) 2Q20 3Q20 4Q20 1Q20 2Q21
New loan commitments for $10,821 $10,804 $13,127 $4,850 $5,778
which we have elected
the fair value option

n    We primarily recognize revenue from our mortgage loans as mortgage loans gains (losses), net, which is a component of investment gains (losses), net. The amount of mortgage loans gains (losses), net, shown above is net of gains and losses on derivative instruments we use to economically hedge the interest-rate risk of the loan commitments and mortgage loans.
n    Mortgage loans gains (losses), net, consists of three components: (1) the initial pricing margin on new loan commitments for which we have elected the fair value option, (2) spread-related fair value changes during the commitment and loan holding periods for loan commitments and mortgage loans we measure at fair value, which are primarily driven by changes in benchmark spreads after the commitment date, and (3) other items, including realized gains on sales of mortgage loans for which we do not elect the fair value option.
n    Mortgage loans gains, net, decreased during 2Q 2021 compared to 2Q 2020 due to less K Certificate spread tightening, lower net impacts from index lock activity, and a smaller volume of fixed-rate loan commitments, partially offset by higher floating-rate loan securitization volume.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
35

Management's Discussion and Analysis
Our Business Segments | Multifamily

Financial Results
The table below presents the components of net income and comprehensive income for our Multifamily segment.
Table 16 - Multifamily Segment Financial Results
 ChangeChange
(Dollars in millions)2Q 20212Q 2020$%YTD 2021YTD 2020$%
Guarantee net interest income$59 $36 $23 64 %$112 $62 $50 81 %
Investments net interest income248 250 (2)(1)526 524 — 
Net interest income307 286 21 638 586 52 
Guarantee income346 414 (68)(16)505 804 (299)(37)
Mortgage loans gains (losses), net671 807 (136)(17)1,661 171 1,490 871 
Other investment gains (losses), net(172)(76)(96)(126)(254)(299)45 15 
Investment gains (losses), net499 731 (232)(32)1,407 (128)1,535 1,199 
Other income (loss)(1)51 (52)(102)25 88 (63)(72)
Net revenues1,151 1,482 (331)(22)2,575 1,350 1,225 91 
Credit-related income (expense)43 (84)127 151 71 (127)198 156 
Operating expense(155)(133)(22)(17)(312)(258)(54)(21)
Income (loss) before income tax (expense) benefit1,039 1,265 (226)(18)2,334 965 1,369 142 
Income tax (expense) benefit(215)(260)45 17 (481)(198)(283)(143)
Net income (loss)824 1,005 (181)(18)1,853 767 1,086 142 
Total other comprehensive income (loss), net of taxes and reclassification adjustments58 (52)(90)(55)122 (177)(145)
Comprehensive income (loss)$830 $1,063 ($233)(22)%$1,798 $889 $909 102 %
Key Business Drivers:
n    2Q 2021 vs. 2Q 2020
l    Lower net investment gains primarily due to less K Certificate spread tightening, lower net impacts from index lock activity, and a smaller volume of fixed-rate held-for-sale loan commitments, partially offset by higher floating-rate loan securitization volume.
l    Benefit for credit losses compared to a provision for credit losses driven by improved actual and forecasted economic factors.
n    YTD 2021 vs. YTD 2020
l    Lower guarantee income as continued growth in our multifamily guarantee portfolio was more than offset by the impacts of interest-rate changes on the fair values of our guarantee assets. During YTD 2021, we recorded higher fair value losses due to increases in medium- and long-term interest rates compared to lower fair value losses during YTD 2020 due to significant decreases in interest rates.
l    Net investment gains compared to net investment losses primarily due to higher floating-rate loan securitization volume, coupled with fair value gains due to K Certificate spread tightening. YTD 2020 included significant spread-related losses as a result of the market volatility caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.



Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
36

Management's Discussion and AnalysisRisk Management


RISK MANAGEMENT
Risk is an inherent part of our business activities. We are exposed to the following key types of risk: credit risk, operational risk, market risk, liquidity risk, strategic risk, and reputation risk.
Credit Risk
Overview
Credit risk is the risk associated with the inability or failure of a borrower, issuer, or counterparty to meet its financial and/or contractual obligations. We are exposed to both mortgage credit risk and counterparty credit risk.
Mortgage credit risk is the risk associated with the inability or failure of a borrower to meet its financial and/or contractual obligations. We are exposed to two types of mortgage credit risk:
n    Single-family mortgage credit risk, through our ownership or guarantee of loans in the single-family mortgage portfolio and
n    Multifamily mortgage credit risk, through our ownership or guarantee of loans in the multifamily mortgage portfolio.
In the section below, we provide a discussion of the current risk environment for our mortgage credit risk.
Single-Family Mortgage Credit Risk
Maintaining Prudent Underwriting Standards and Quality Control Practices and Managing Seller/Servicer Performance
Temporary Underwriting Changes Due to COVID-19 Pandemic
We have announced temporary changes in our underwriting standards due to the COVID-19 pandemic, which may negatively affect the expected performance of purchased loans that were underwritten under these temporary changes. As discussed below, these temporary changes have either expired or, in certain cases, been made permanent.
In March and May 2020, we introduced a number of temporary measures to help provide sellers with the clarity and flexibility to continue to lend in a prudent and responsible manner during the COVID-19 pandemic. The flexibility we allowed in demonstrating a borrower's current employment status has expired and is not applicable to loan applications dated on or after May 1, 2021. The option to verify the borrower’s employment via email was included permanently in our Guide on April 7, 2021.
In March and April 2020, we announced loan processing flexibilities to expedite loan closings and help keep homebuyers, sellers, and appraisers safe during the COVID-19 pandemic. These flexibilities have expired and are not applicable to loan applications dated on or after June 1, 2021. They included:
n    Allowing desktop appraisals or exterior-only inspection appraisals for certain purchase transactions;
n    Allowing exterior-only appraisals for certain no cash-out refinances;
n    Allowing desktop appraisals on new construction properties (purchase transactions);
n    Allowing flexibility on demonstrating that construction has been completed; and
n    Allowing flexibility for borrowers to provide documentation (rather than requiring an inspection) to allow renovation disbursements (draws).
The following temporary flexibilities have expired and are not applicable to loan applications dated on or after May 1, 2021:
n    Offering flexibility in condominium project reviews and
n    Expanding the use of powers of attorney and remote online notarizations. Permanent updates to our requirements for the use of powers of attorney were included in our Guide and are effective for applications dated on or after June 30, 2021.
On July 16, 2021, FHFA announced that we and Fannie Mae will be eliminating the 50-basis point adverse market refinance fee for loan deliveries effective August 1, 2021.
Appraisal Waivers
In March 2020, we introduced expanded eligibility of Automated Collateral Evaluation (ACE) waivers to include no cash-out refinances with LTVs up to 90% and cash-out refinances for primary residences with LTVs up to 70% and second homes with LTVs up to 60%. As a result of this expansion, combined with a historically high refinance market (ACE waivers are granted more often for refinanced loans), ACE waiver usage increased from approximately 36% and 29% of loan purchases during 2Q
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
37

Management's Discussion and AnalysisRisk Management


2020 and YTD 2020, respectively, to approximately 39% and 43% of loan purchases during 2Q 2021 and YTD 2021, respectively.
Loan Purchase Credit Characteristics
We monitor and evaluate market conditions that could affect the credit quality of our single-family loan purchases. The graphs below show the credit profile of the single-family loans we purchased or guaranteed.
Weighted Average Original LTV Ratio fmcc-20210630_g40.jpg
Weighted Average Original Credit Score(1)
fmcc-20210630_g41.jpg
(1)Weighted average original credit score is based on three credit bureaus (Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion).

The table below contains additional information about the single-family loans we purchased or guaranteed.
Table 17 - Single-Family New Business Activity
2Q 20212Q 2020YTD 2021YTD 2020
(Dollars in billions)Amount% of TotalAmount% of TotalAmount% of TotalAmount% of Total
30-year or more amortizing fixed-rate$224 78 %$182 78 %$517 80 %$296 80 %
20-year amortizing fixed-rate17 11 35 17 
15-year amortizing fixed-rate46 16 37 16 97 15 54 14 
Adjustable-rate— — 
Total$288 100 %$232 100 %$650 100 %$370 100 %
Percentage of purchases
DTI ratio > 45%11 %10 %10 %12 %
Original LTV ratio > 90%11 11 13 
Original credit score < 680
Transaction type:
Cash window46 62 55 57 
Guarantor swap53 37 45 42 
Other— 
Property type:
Detached single-family houses and townhouses92 93 93 93 
Condominium or co-op
Occupancy type:
Primary residence94 94 94 93 
Second home
Investment property
Loan purpose:
Purchase34 26 29 31 
Cash-out refinance23 18 21 19 
   Other refinance43 56 50 50 
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
38

Management's Discussion and AnalysisRisk Management


Transferring Credit Risk to Third-Party Investors
To reduce our credit risk exposure, we engage in various credit enhancement arrangements, which include CRT transactions and other credit enhancements.
Single-Family Mortgage Portfolio CRT Issuance
The table below provides the UPB of the mortgage loans covered by CRT transactions issued during the periods presented as well as the maximum coverage provided by those transactions.
Table 18 - Single-Family Mortgage Portfolio CRT Issuance
2Q 20212Q 2020
(In millions)
UPB(1)
Maximum Coverage(2)
UPB(1)
Maximum Coverage(2)
STACR $101,136 $1,500 $17,682 $578 
Insurance/reinsurance 69,203 1,567 35,439 376 
Subordination3,037 214 — — 
Lender risk-sharing 195 195 246 188 
Less: UPB with more than one type of CRT — — (52,748)(578)
Total CRT Issuance$173,571 $3,476 $619 $564 
YTD 2021YTD 2020
(In millions)
UPB(1)
Maximum Coverage(2)
UPB(1)
Maximum Coverage(2)
STACR $277,843 $5,044 $150,253 $4,285 
Insurance/reinsurance 297,510 4,281 133,197 1,230 
Subordination3,037 214 1,865 177 
Lender risk-sharing 366 366 6,453 579 
Less: UPB with more than one type of CRT (159,835)— (150,253)(578)
Total CRT Issuance$418,921 $9,905 $141,515 $5,693 
(1)    Represents the UPB of the assets included in the associated reference pool or securitization trust, as applicable. Prior periods have been revised to conform to the current period presentation.
(2)    For STACR transactions, represents the balance held by third parties at issuance. For insurance/reinsurance transactions, represents the aggregate limit of insurance purchased from third parties at issuance. For subordination, represents the UPB of the securities that are held by third parties at issuance and are subordinate to the securities we guarantee.
Single-Family Mortgage Portfolio Credit Enhancement Coverage Outstanding
The table below provides information on the UPB and maximum coverage associated with credit enhanced loans in our single-family mortgage portfolio as of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively.
Table 19 - Single-Family Mortgage Portfolio Credit Enhancement Coverage Outstanding
June 30, 2021
(Dollars in millions)
UPB(1)
% of Portfolio
Maximum Coverage(2)
Primary mortgage insurance(3)
$501,768 20 %$122,942 
STACR 897,667 35 31,495 
Insurance/reinsurance 922,969 36 14,331 
Subordination 40,957 6,199 
Lender risk-sharing 4,975 — 4,477 
Other237 — 234 
Less: UPB with multiple credit enhancements and other reconciling items(4)
(1,113,809)(44)— 
Single-family mortgage portfolio - credit-enhanced1,254,764 49 179,678 
Single-family mortgage portfolio - non-credit-enhanced1,308,825 51 — 
Total
$2,563,589 100 %$179,678 
Referenced footnotes are included after the prior period table.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
39

Management's Discussion and AnalysisRisk Management


December 31, 2020
(Dollars in millions)
UPB(1)
% of Portfolio
Maximum Coverage(2)
Primary mortgage insurance(3)
$472,881 20 %$116,973 
STACR 853,733 37 29,665 
Insurance/reinsurance 876,815 38 11,586 
Subordination 44,170 6,182 
Lender risk sharing 5,731 — 4,831 
Other374 — 371 
Less: UPB with multiple credit enhancements and other reconciling items(4)
(1,101,461)(47)— 
Single-family mortgage portfolio - credit-enhanced1,152,243 50 169,608 
Single-family mortgage portfolio - non-credit-enhanced1,174,183 50 N/A
Total
$2,326,426 100 %$169,608 
(1)    Represents the current UPB of the assets included in the associated reference pool or securitization trust, as applicable. Prior periods have been revised to conform to the current period presentation.
(2)    For STACR transactions, represents the outstanding balance held by third parties. For insurance/reinsurance transactions, represents the remaining aggregate limit of insurance purchased from third parties. For subordination, represents the outstanding UPB of the securities that are held by third parties and are subordinate to the securities we guarantee.
(3)    Amounts exclude certain loans for which we do not control servicing, as the coverage information for these loans is not readily available to us.
(4)    Other reconciling items primarily include timing differences in reporting cycles between the UPB of certain CRT transactions and the UPB of the underlying loans.
Credit Enhancement Coverage Characteristics
The table below provides the serious delinquency rates for the credit-enhanced and non-credit-enhanced loans in our single-family mortgage portfolio. The credit-enhanced categories are not mutually exclusive as a single loan may be covered by both primary mortgage insurance and other credit enhancements.
Table 20 - Serious Delinquency Rates for Credit-Enhanced and Non-Credit-Enhanced Loans in Our Single-Family Mortgage Portfolio
June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
(% of portfolio based on loan UPB)(1)
% of PortfolioSDQ Rate% of PortfolioSDQ Rate
Credit-enhanced
   Primary mortgage insurance20 %2.74 %21 %3.77 %
   CRT and other44 2.14 41 3.22 
Non-credit-enhanced51 1.52 50 2.13 
TotalN/A1.86 N/A2.64 
(1)Excludes loans underlying certain securitization products for which loan-level data is not available.
The table below provides information on the amount of credit enhancement coverage by year of origination associated with loans in our single-family mortgage portfolio.
Table 21 - Credit Enhancement Coverage by Year of Origination
June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
(Dollars in millions)UPB% of UPB with Credit EnhancementUPB% of UPB with Credit Enhancement
Year of Loan Origination
  2021$530,861 20 %N/AN/A
  2020976,491 56 $971,092 36 %
  2019202,114 72 276,302 73 
  201885,483 79 118,668 80 
  2017110,927 73 147,856 75 
  2016 and prior 657,713 47 812,508 49 
Total$2,563,589 49 $2,326,426 50 
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
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Management's Discussion and AnalysisRisk Management


The following table provides information on the characteristics of the loans in our single-family mortgage portfolio without credit enhancement.
Table 22 - Single-Family Mortgage Portfolio Without Credit Enhancement(1)
June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
(Dollars in millions)UPB% of PortfolioUPB% of Portfolio
Low current LTV ratio(1)(2)
$917,902 36 %$784,150 34 %
Short-term(1)(3)
64,032 81,681 
Pre-CRT program inception(1)(4)
6,288 — 11,327 — 
CRT pipeline(1)(5)
303,006 12 276,611 12 
Other(1)(6)
17,597 20,414 
Single-family mortgage portfolio - non-credit-enhanced$1,308,825 51 %$1,174,183 50 %
(1)Loans with multiple characteristics are assigned to categories in this table based on the following order: low current LTV ratio, short-term, pre-CRT program inception, and CRT pipeline.
(2)Represents loans with a current LTV ratio less than or equal to 60%.
(3)Represents loans with an original maturity of 20 years or less.
(4)Represents relief refinance loans and loans that were acquired before the inception of our CRT programs in 2013.
(5)Represents recently acquired loans that are targeted to be included in the on-the-run CRT transactions and have not yet been included in a reference pool.
(6)Primarily includes government guaranteed loans, ARM loans, loans with a current LTV ratio greater than 97%, and loans that fail the delinquency requirements for CRT transactions.
Credit Enhancement Expenses and Recoveries
The recognition of expenses and expected recoveries associated with credit enhancements in our condensed consolidated financial statements depends on the type of credit enhancement. See Note 8 for additional information on our credit enhancements. The table below contains details on the costs, investment gains (losses), and recoveries associated with our single-family credit enhancements.
Table 23 - Details of Single-Family Credit Enhancement Costs, Investment Gains (Losses), and Recoveries
(In millions) 2Q 20212Q 2020YTD 2021YTD 2020
Credit enhancement costs:
Credit enhancement expense($361)($228)($686)($455)
Interest expense related to CRT debt(136)(182)(275)(414)
   Less: estimated reinvestment income from proceeds of CRT debt issuance14 13 25 59 
Single-family credit enhancement costs($483)($397)($936)($810)
Credit enhancement investment gains (losses):
  CRT derivatives gains (losses)$6 $8 12 $100 
  CRT debt gains (losses)(1)(66)36 483 
Single-family credit enhancement investment gains (losses)(1)
$5 ($58)$48 $583 
Single-family benefit for (decrease in) credit enhancement recoveries(1)
($190)$219 ($435)$658 
(1)Recoveries collected under freestanding credit enhancements and write-offs of CRT debt were $2 million and $5 million during 2Q 2021 and YTD 2021, respectively, compared to $5 million and $8 million during 2Q 2020 and YTD 2020, respectively.
The table below presents the details of the credit enhancement recovery receivables we have recognized within other assets on our condensed consolidated balance sheet.
Table 24 - Single-Family Credit Enhancement Receivables
(In millions) June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
Freestanding credit enhancement expected recovery receivables, net of allowance$209 $653 
Primary mortgage insurance receivables(1), net of allowance
71 74 
Total credit enhancement receivables$280 $727 
(1)Excludes $433 million and $444 million of deferred payment obligations associated with unpaid claim amounts as of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively. We have reserved for substantially all of these unpaid amounts as collectability is uncertain.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
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Management's Discussion and AnalysisRisk Management


Monitoring Loan Performance and Characteristics
We review loan performance, including delinquency statistics and related loan characteristics, in conjunction with housing market and economic conditions, including the economic effects associated with the COVID-19 pandemic, to assess credit risk when estimating our allowance for credit losses and to determine if our pricing and eligibility standards reflect the risk associated with the loans we purchase and guarantee.
Loan Characteristics
The table below contains details of the characteristics of the loans in our single-family mortgage portfolio.
Table 25 - Credit Quality Characteristics of Our Single-Family Mortgage Portfolio
June 30, 2021
(Dollars in billions)UPB
Original Credit
Score
(1)
Current Credit
Score
(1)(2)
Original
LTV Ratio
Current
LTV
Ratio
Current
LTV Ratio
>100%
Alt-A %
Single-family mortgage portfolio year of origination:
  2021$531 75675570 %68 %— %— %
  2020977 76076371 62 — — 
  2019202 74675377 60 — — 
  201885 73773777 56 — — 
  2017111 74174775 51 — — 
  2016 and prior 658 73875275 39 — 
Total$2,564 75175673 56  1 
December 31, 2020
(Dollars in billions)UPB
Original Credit
Score
(1)
Current Credit
Score
(1)(2)
Original
LTV Ratio
Current
LTV
Ratio
Current
LTV Ratio
>100%
Alt-A %
Single-family mortgage portfolio year of origination:
  2020$971 76075871 %68 %— %— %
  2019276 74775477 67 — — 
  2018119 73973977 62 — — 
  2017148 74274775 56 — — 
  2016187 74875873 49 — — 
  2015 and prior 625 73775075 41 — 
Total$2,326 749 754 74 58  1 
(1)Original credit score is based on three credit bureaus (Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion). Current credit score is based on Experian only.
(2)Credit scores for certain recently acquired loans may not have been updated by the credit bureau since the loan acquisition and therefore the original credit scores also represented the current credit scores.
Higher Risk Loan Attributes and Attribute Combinations
Certain combinations of loan attributes can indicate a higher degree of credit risk, such as loans with both higher LTV ratios and lower credit scores. The following table presents the combination of credit score and CLTV ratio attributes of loans in our single-family mortgage portfolio.
Table 26 - Single-Family Mortgage Portfolio Attribute Combinations
June 30, 2021
CLTV ≤ 60CLTV > 60 to 80CLTV > 80 to 90CLTV > 90 to 100
CLTV > 100
All Loans
(Original credit score)% of PortfolioSDQ Rate% of Portfolio
SDQ Rate(1)
% of Portfolio
SDQ Rate(1)
% of Portfolio
SDQ Rate(1)
% of Portfolio
SDQ Rate(1)
% of PortfolioSDQ Rate
% Modified(2)
< 6200.8 %8.19 %0.2 %13.81 %— %NM— %NM— %NM1.0 %9.45 %9.4 %
620 to 6794.2 4.87 2.3 5.54 0.3 4.88%0.1 5.63%— NM6.9 5.06 6.2 
≥ 68049.0 1.38 34.9 1.44 6.4 1.051.7 0.51— NM92.0 1.37 0.5 
Not available0.1 6.31 — NM— NM— NM— NM0.1 6.70 14.3 
Total54.1 %1.9037.4 %1.876.7 %1.421.8 %1.05 %NM100.0 %1.861.2
Referenced footnotes are included after the prior period table.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
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Management's Discussion and AnalysisRisk Management


December 31, 2020
CLTV ≤ 60CLTV > 60 to 80CLTV > 80 to 90CLTV > 90 to 100
CLTV > 100
All Loans
(Original credit score)% of PortfolioSDQ Rate% of Portfolio
SDQ Rate(1)
% of Portfolio
SDQ Rate(1)
% of Portfolio
SDQ Rate(1)
% of Portfolio
SDQ Rate(1)
% of PortfolioSDQ Rate
% Modified(2)
< 6200.9 %9.27 %0.3 %14.96%0.1 %18.74%— %NM— %NM1.3 %11.00 %10.2 %
620 to 6794.2 5.93 2.5 7.930.5 8.170.1 7.92%— NM7.3 6.64 7.1 
≥ 68045.4 1.83 34.5 2.318.9 2.372.4 0.960.1 12.56%91.3 2.00 0.6 
Not available0.1 7.96 — NM— NM— NM— NM0.1 8.79 16.9 
Total50.6 %2.4637.3 %2.949.5 %2.902.5 %1.690.1 %18.11100.0 %2.641.4
(1)     NM - not meaningful due to the percentage of the portfolio rounding to zero.
(2)     Primarily includes loans modified through the Freddie Mac Flex Modification program.
Alt-A and Subprime Loans
While we have referred to certain loans as subprime or Alt-A for purposes of the discussion below and elsewhere in this Form 10-Q, there is no universally accepted definition of subprime or Alt-A, and the classification of such loans may differ from company to company. We do not rely on these loan classifications to evaluate the credit risk exposure relating to such loans in our single-family mortgage portfolio.
Participants in the mortgage market have characterized single-family loans based upon their overall credit quality at the time of origination, including as prime or subprime. While we have not historically characterized the loans in our single-family mortgage portfolio as either prime or subprime, we monitor the amount of loans we have guaranteed with characteristics that indicate a higher degree of credit risk. In addition, we estimate that approximately $0.6 billion and $0.7 billion of security collateral underlying our other securitization products at June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively, were identified as subprime based on information provided to us when we entered into these transactions.
Mortgage market participants have classified single-family loans as Alt-A if these loans have credit characteristics that range between their prime and subprime categories, if they are underwritten with lower or alternative income or asset documentation requirements compared to a full documentation loan, or both. Although we have discontinued new purchases of loans with lower documentation standards, we continue to purchase certain amounts of such loans in cases where the loan was either purchased pursuant to a previously issued guarantee, part of our relief refinance initiative or part of another refinance loan initiative and the pre-existing loan was originated under less than full documentation standards. In the event we purchase a refinance loan and the original loan had been previously identified as Alt-A, such refinance loan may no longer be categorized or reported as an Alt-A loan in this Form 10-Q and our other financial reports because the new refinance loan replacing the original loan would not be identified by the seller or servicer as an Alt-A loan. As a result, our reported Alt-A balances may be lower than would otherwise be the case had such refinancing not occurred. From the time the relief refinance initiative began in 2009 to June 30, 2021, we have purchased approximately $36.4 billion of relief refinance loans that were previously categorized as Alt-A loans in our portfolio.
The table below contains information on Alt-A loans in our single-family mortgage portfolio.
Table 27 - Alt-A Loans in Our Single-Family Mortgage Portfolio
June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
(Dollars in billions)UPBCLTV
% Modified(1)
SDQ RateUPBCLTV
% Modified(1)
SDQ Rate
Alt-A$16.8 51 %14.0 %9.07 %$18.4 55 %14.7 %10.66 %
(1)     Primarily includes loans modified through the Freddie Mac Flex Modification program.
The UPB of Alt-A loans in our single-family mortgage portfolio is continuing to decline due to borrowers refinancing into other mortgage products, foreclosure sales, and other liquidation events.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
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Management's Discussion and AnalysisRisk Management


Geographic Concentrations
We purchase mortgage loans from across the U.S. However, local economic conditions can affect the borrower's ability to repay and the value of the underlying collateral, leading to concentrations of credit risk in certain geographic areas. In addition, certain states and municipalities may pass laws that limit our ability to foreclose or evict and make it more difficult and costly to manage our risk.
The table below summarizes the concentration by geographic area of our single-family mortgage portfolio as of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020. While our portfolio is diversified geographically, the economic effects of the COVID-19 pandemic may be disproportionately concentrated in certain geographic regions or areas. See Note 16 for more information about credit risk associated with loans that we hold or guarantee.
Table 28 - Concentration of Credit Risk of Our Single-Family Mortgage Portfolio
June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
YTD 2021(1)
YTD 2020(1)
(Dollars in billions)
Portfolio UPB(2)
% of
Portfolio
SDQ Rate
Portfolio UPB(2)
% of
Portfolio
SDQ RateCredit Losses Amount
% of Credit Losses(3)
Credit Losses Amount% of Credit Losses
Region:(4)
West
$800 31 %1.65 %$720 31 %2.41 %$— NM$— %
Northeast
608 24 2.30 549 24 3.16 — NM0.1 38 
North Central
385 15 1.52 357 15 2.06 — NM0.1 27 
Southeast
412 16 2.02 375 16 2.95 — NM0.1 20 
Southwest
358 14 1.82 325 14 2.59 — NM— 
Total
$2,563 100 %1.86 $2,326 100 %2.64 $— NM$0.3 100 %
State:
California $472 19 %1.80 $424 18 %2.64 $— NM$— %
Texas 158 2.13 145 3.11 — NM— 
Florida 149 2.42 135 3.70 — NM— 11 
New York 111 3.43 103 4.56 — NM— 10 
Illinois 102 2.34 96 2.96 — NM0.1 14 
All other1,571 61 1.66 1,423 62 2.34 — NM0.2 58 
Total$2,563 100 %1.86 $2,326 100 %2.64 $— NM$0.3 100 %
(1)Excludes credit losses related to charge-offs of accrued interest receivables.
(2)Excludes $476 million and $505 million in UPB of loans underlying certain securitization products for which data was not available as of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively.
(3)NM - not meaningful due to the credit losses amount rounding to zero.
(4)Region designation: West (AK, AZ, CA, GU, HI, ID, MT, NV, OR, UT, WA); Northeast (CT, DE, DC, MA, ME, MD, NH, NJ, NY, PA, RI, VT, VA, WV); North Central (IL, IN, IA, MI, MN, ND, OH, SD, WI); Southeast (AL, FL, GA, KY, MS, NC, PR, SC, TN, VI); Southwest (AR, CO, KS, LA, MO, NE, NM, OK, TX, WY).
Loans in COVID-19 Related Forbearance Plans
The table below contains details on the characteristics of our single-family loans in forbearance that are past due based on the loan's original contractual terms.
Table 29 - Credit Quality Characteristics of Our Single-Family Loans in Forbearance(1)
June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
(Dollars in billions)UPB% of Total UPB % of Total
Current LTV ratio(2):
≤ 60$22.0 57 %$29.4 49 %
> 60 to 8014.2 37 23.7 39 
> 80 to 1002.1 6.9 11 
> 1000.1 — 0.3 
Total$38.4 100 %$60.3 100 %
(1)Excludes certain loans for which we do not control servicing and loans underlying certain legacy transactions, as the forbearance information for these loans is either not reported to us by the servicers or is otherwise not readily available to us. These loans represented approximately 1.9% and 2.0% of the single-family mortgage portfolio as of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively.
(2)The weighted average current LTV ratio for our single-family loans in forbearance that were past due based on the loan's original contractual terms was 56% and 59% as of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
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The table below presents payment status information of our single-family loans in forbearance based on the loans' original contractual terms.
Table 30 - Single-Family Loans in Forbearance Plans by Payment Status(1)
June 30, 2021
(Dollars in millions)CurrentOne Month Past DueTwo
Months
Past Due
Three 
Months to Six Months Past Due(2)
Greater Than Six Months Past Due(2)
Total
UPB$6,466$2,224$2,061$6,902$27,212$44,865
Number of loans (in thousands)32111033123209
As a percentage of our single-family mortgage portfolio(3)
0.26%0.09%0.08%0.26%0.98%1.67%
December 31, 2020
(Dollars in millions)CurrentOne Month Past DueTwo
Months
Past Due
Three 
Months to Six Months Past Due(2)
Greater Than Six Months Past Due(2)
Total
UPB$8,907$5,443$4,372$15,366$35,144$69,232
Number of loans (in thousands)44282275155324
As a percentage of our single-family mortgage portfolio(3)
0.37%0.23%0.18%0.63%1.29%2.70%
(1)Excludes certain loans for which we do not control servicing and loans underlying certain legacy transactions, as the forbearance information for these loans is either not reported to us by the servicers or is otherwise not readily available to us. These loans represented approximately 1.9% and 2.0% of the single-family mortgage portfolio as of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively.
(2)The UPB of loans in forbearance that were three months or more past due and accruing was $19.5 billion and $42.2 billion as of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively.
(3)Based on loan count.
We generally place single-family loans on non-accrual status when the loan becomes three monthly payments past due. For loans in active forbearance plans that were current prior to receiving forbearance, we continue to accrue interest income while the loan is in forbearance and is three or more monthly payments past due when we believe the available evidence indicates that collectability of principal and interest is reasonably assured based on management judgment, taking into consideration additional factors, the most important of which is the current LTV ratio. We ceased accruing interest income on certain loans that were more than nine months past due and in forbearance based on this analysis starting in 1Q 2021. When we accrue interest on loans that are three or more monthly payments past due, we measure an allowance for expected credit losses on unpaid accrued interest receivable balances such that the balance sheet reflects the net amount of interest we expect to collect.
The table below provides the amount of accrued interest receivable, net of the allowance for credit losses, related to our single-family loans in forbearance.
Table 31 - Accrued Interest Receivable Related to Single-Family Loans in Forbearance(1)
(In millions) June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
Accrued interest receivable:
Less than three months past due$29 $74 
Three months to six months past due93 235 
Greater than six months past due(2)
806 911 
Accrued interest receivable, gross928 1,220 
Allowance for credit losses(167)(138)
Accrued interest receivable, net$761 $1,082 
(1)Excludes certain loans for which we do not control servicing and loans underlying certain legacy transactions, as the forbearance information for these loans is either not reported to us by the servicers or is otherwise not readily available to us. These loans represented approximately 1.9% and 2.0% of the single-family mortgage portfolio as of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively.
(2)97% and 90% of the accrued interest receivable greater than six months past due is related to loans with current LTV ratios that are less than or equal to 80% as of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively.
Prior to expiration of a borrower's forbearance plan, servicers are required to contact the borrower to determine how the payments missed during the forbearance period will be repaid. We require servicers to follow a defined loss mitigation hierarchy to determine which options to offer to borrowers. This hierarchy is based on certain factors, such as the borrowers’ delinquency status, reasons for delinquency, loan types, and types of hardships. Borrowers are not required to repay all past due amounts in a single lump sum. Upon expiration of the forbearance plan, borrowers may reinstate the loan or enter into either a
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
45

Management's Discussion and AnalysisRisk Management


repayment plan, a payment deferral, or a trial period plan related to a loan modification. If the borrower is not eligible for any of the home retention options, we may seek to pursue a foreclosure alternative or foreclosure. As a result of loans exiting COVID-19 related forbearance plans through payment deferrals or loan modifications during 2Q 2021 and YTD 2021, we deferred $359 million and $609 million, respectively, of delinquent interest into non-interest-bearing principal balances that are due at the earlier of the payoff date, maturity date, or sale of the property.
The table below presents a summary of single-family loans that received forbearance and were past due based on the loans' original contractual terms at some point during the forbearance period.
Table 32 - Single-Family Loans that Received Forbearance(1)
(Loan count in thousands) June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
Active forbearance at end of period177280
Forbearance plan exits(2) (from January 1, 2020 to end of period)
   Reinstatement(3)
237189
Pay-off5639
   Payment deferral273166
   Other(4)
5943
Total forbearance plan exits(5)
625437
Total single-family loans that received forbearance(6) (from January 1, 2020 to end of period)
802717
(1)Excludes certain loans for which we do not control servicing and loans underlying certain legacy transactions, as the forbearance information for these loans is either not reported to us by the servicers or is otherwise not readily available to us. These loans represented approximately 1.9% and 2.0% of the single-family mortgage portfolio as of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively.
(2)Represents the exit path the borrower took upon exit from the forbearance plan, which could be at the end of or during the forbearance period.
(3)Includes forbearance plans where the borrower brought the mortgage current during forbearance.
(4)Primarily includes forbearance plans where the borrowers remained delinquent and the exit paths were not determined at the end of the forbearance periods. Also includes other exit paths such as repayment plans, modifications, and foreclosure alternatives.
(5)86% and 83% of loans that received and subsequently exited forbearance were current or paid off as of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively.
(6)Based on number of forbearance plans. A loan may have received more than one forbearance plan during the period.
Allowance for Credit Losses
The table below summarizes our single-family allowance for credit losses activity.
Table 33 - Single-Family Allowance for Credit Losses Activity
 (Dollars in millions) 2Q 20212Q 2020YTD 2021YTD 2020
Beginning balance$6,130 $6,347 $6,353 $5,233 
Provision (benefit) for credit losses(686)624 (832)1,790 
Charge-offs(203)(121)(441)(285)
Recoveries collected61 36 107 124 
Other211 30 326 54 
Ending balance $5,513 $6,916 $5,513 $6,916 
Components of ending balance of allowance for credit losses:
Mortgage loans held-for-investment$4,601 $6,482 
Advances of pre-foreclosure costs691 323 
Accrued interest receivable on mortgage loans168 57 
Off-balance-sheet credit exposures53 54 
Total$5,513 $6,916 
As a percentage of our single-family mortgage portfolio
0.22 %0.34 %
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
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Management's Discussion and AnalysisRisk Management


Credit Losses and Recoveries
The table below contains certain credit performance metrics for our single-family mortgage portfolio. Credit losses increased year-over-year as charge-offs of accrued interest receivable increased. Other credit losses declined as a result of the foreclosure moratorium that will remain in effect through July 31, 2021. After July 31, 2021, servicers will implement new foreclosure regulations issued by the CFPB on June 28, 2021. It is likely that we will incur additional costs in future periods, such as higher property preservation and maintenance expenses, due to the foreclosure moratorium and the foreclosure regulations newly issued by the CFPB as borrowers may remain delinquent for an extended period of time.
Table 34 - Single-Family Mortgage Portfolio Credit Performance Metrics
(Dollars in millions) 2Q 20212Q 2020YTD 2021YTD 2020
Charge-offs
$203 $121 $441 $285 
Recoveries collected(1)
(61)(36)(107)(124)
Charge-offs, net142 85 334 161 
REO operations expense14 15 99 
Total credit losses$149 $99 $349 $260 
Total credit losses (in bps)
2.3 1.9 2.8 3.2 
(1)Includes cash, REO, or other assets such as receivables from primary mortgage insurance.
TDRs and Non-Accrual Loan Activity
Single-family loans that have been modified or placed on non-accrual status generally have a higher associated allowance for credit losses.
The table below presents information about the UPB of single-family TDR loans and non-accrual loans on our condensed consolidated balance sheets.
Table 35 - Single-Family TDR and Non-Accrual Loans
June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
(Dollars in millions) Mortgage Loans Held-for-InvestmentMortgage Loans Held-for-SaleTotalMortgage Loans Held-for-investmentMortgage Loans Held-for-SaleTotal
UPB:
  TDRs on accrual status$25,810 $3,007 $28,817 $28,547 $4,293 $32,840 
  Non-accrual loans21,044 4,459 25,503 13,679 5,020 18,699 
Total TDRs and non-accrual loans$46,854 $7,466 $54,320 $42,226 $9,313 $51,539 
Non-accrual loans as a percentage of total loans outstanding(1)
0.99 %0.80 %
Allowance for credit losses as a percentage of non-accrual loans(2)
21.6233.98 
(1)Represents the total UPB of single-family non-accrual loans as a percentage of the total UPB of the single-family mortgage portfolio as of period end.
(2)Represents the total allowance for credit losses as a percentage of the total UPB of single-family non-accrual loans as of period end.
The table below presents information about the foregone interest income of single-family TDR loans and non-accrual loans.
Table 36 - Foregone Interest Income on Single-Family TDRs and Non-Accrual Loans
2Q 2021(1)
2Q 2020(1)
(In millions)Mortgage Loans Held-for-InvestmentMortgage Loans Held-for-SaleTotalMortgage Loans Held-for-InvestmentMortgage Loans Held-for-SaleTotal
Interest on TDRs and non-accrual loans:
  At original contractual rates$570 $111 $681 $365 $230 $595 
  Recognized(302)(44)(346)(179)(128)(307)
Foregone interest income on TDRs and non-accrual loans(2)
$268 $67 $335 $186 $102 $288 
Referenced footnotes are included after the prior period table.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
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Management's Discussion and AnalysisRisk Management


YTD 2021(1)
YTD 2020(1)
(In millions)Mortgage Loans Held-for-InvestmentMortgage Loans Held-for-SaleTotalMortgage Loans Held-for-InvestmentMortgage Loans Held-for-SaleTotal
Interest on TDRs and non-accrual loans:
At original contractual rates$1,168 $215 $1,383 $863 $446 $1,309 
Recognized(652)(84)(736)(559)(258)(817)
Foregone interest income on TDRs and non-accrual loans(2)
$516 $131 $647 $304 $188 $492 
(1)Represents interest income at the original contractual rates, interest income recognized, and foregone interest income based on TDRs and non-accrual loans at the end of each period.
(2)Represents the amount of interest income that we did not recognize but would have recognized during the period for the loans outstanding at the end of each period had the loans performed according to their original contractual terms.
The table below summarizes the UPB of single-family held-for-investment TDR loan activity.
Table 37 - Single-Family TDR Loan Activity
June 30, 2021June 30, 2020
(Dollars in millions) Loan CountAmountLoan CountAmount
Beginning balance, as of January 1229,277 $32,676 249,182 $35,623 
New additions(1)
8,815 1,449 13,546 2,230 
Repayments and reclassifications to held-for-sale(22,782)(3,799)(28,055)(4,657)
Foreclosure sales and foreclosure alternatives(1,181)(218)(1,120)(170)
Ending balance, as of June 30214,129 $30,108 233,553 $33,026 
(1)Includes certain bankruptcy events and forbearance plans, repayment plans, payment deferrals, and modification activities that do not qualify for the temporary relief related to TDR provided by the CARES Act, based on servicer reporting at the time of the TDR event.
Delinquency Rates
We report single-family delinquency rates based on the number of loans in our single-family mortgage portfolio that are past due as reported to us by our servicers as a percentage of the total number of loans in our single-family mortgage portfolio.
The chart below shows the delinquency rates of mortgage loans in our single-family mortgage portfolio.
Single-Family Delinquency Ratesfmcc-20210630_g42.jpg
The percentages of loans that were one month past due and two months past due increased in early 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic but have trended back toward pre-pandemic levels as the impact of the pandemic on early-stage delinquencies has started to stabilize. The percentage of loans one month past due can be volatile due to seasonality and other factors that may not be indicative of default. As a result, the percentage of loans two months past due tends to be a better early performance indicator than the percentage of loans one month past due.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
48

Management's Discussion and AnalysisRisk Management


Our single-family serious delinquency rate decreased to 1.86% as of June 30, 2021, compared to 2.48% as of June 30, 2020, driven by an increase in the number of borrowers exiting forbearance and completing loan workout solutions that return their mortgages to current status. In addition, 54% of the seriously delinquent loans at June 30, 2021 were covered by credit enhancements that may partially reduce our credit risk exposure to these loans. See Note 4 for additional information on the payment status of our single-family mortgage loans.
Engaging in Loss Mitigation Activities
We offer a variety of borrower assistance programs, including loan workout activities for struggling borrowers. Our loan workouts include both home retention options and foreclosure alternatives. We also engage in transfers of servicing for, and sales of, certain seriously delinquent and reperforming loans.
Loan Workout Activities
Pursuant to FHFA guidance and the CARES Act, we have offered mortgage payment relief options to borrowers affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. Among other things, we are offering forbearance of up to 18 months to single-family borrowers experiencing a financial hardship and a payment deferral option that allows a borrower to defer up to 18 months of payments for eligible homeowners who have the financial capacity to resume making their monthly payments, but who are unable to afford the additional monthly contributions required by a repayment plan. The types of loss mitigation options available to borrowers impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic may be revised by further FHFA guidance or federal government regulation.
The volume of our foreclosure alternatives remained insignificant in recent periods. The volume of foreclosures in YTD 2021 declined year-over-year, primarily due to the foreclosure moratorium that will remain in effect through July 31, 2021. After July 31, 2021, servicers will implement new foreclosure regulations issued by the CFPB on June 28, 2021.
The following graphs provide details about our single-family loan workout activities and foreclosure sales. In prior periods, payment deferrals were included in the loan modification category, as such amounts were not significant. Prior periods have been revised to conform to the current period presentation.
Home Retention Actions(1)
(In thousands)fmcc-20210630_g43.jpg
(1)Forbearance plans in this graph only include those where borrowers fully reinstated the loan to current status during or at the end of the forbearance period.
Foreclosure Alternatives and Foreclosure Sales
(In thousands)fmcc-20210630_g44.jpg






Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
49

Management's Discussion and AnalysisRisk Management


Sales and Securitization of Certain Seasoned Loans
We pursue sales of certain seriously delinquent loans when we believe the sale of these loans provides better economic returns than continuing to hold them. The FHFA requirements guiding these transactions include bidder qualifications, loan modifications, and performance reporting. In addition, in February 2021, in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, FHFA required that future transactions include requirements that the loans (i) be serviced in a manner that is consistent with any requirements that would apply under Section 4022 of the CARES Act as if the loans were still owned or securitized by Freddie Mac and (ii) adhere to any existing and future foreclosure or eviction moratoria related to the COVID-19 pandemic that have been imposed by FHFA or by federal legislation applicable to single-family loans that are owned or securitized by Freddie Mac.
Certain seriously delinquent loans may reperform, either on their own or through modification. In addition to sales of seriously delinquent loans, we securitize certain reperforming loans, which typically involves securitization of the loans using our senior subordinate securitization structures or Level 1 Securitization Products, depending on market conditions, business strategy, credit risk considerations, and operational efficiency. As with sales of seriously delinquent loans, FHFA required that future securitizations of such reperforming loans include requirements regarding compliance with Section 4022 of the CARES Act (which is applicable for loans purchased or securitized by Freddie Mac) and that the servicers adhere to any existing and future foreclosure or eviction moratoria related to the COVID-19 pandemic that have been imposed by FHFA or by federal legislation applicable to single-family loans that are owned or securitized by Freddie Mac. Of the $7.9 billion in UPB of single-family loans classified as held-for-sale at June 30, 2021, $4.3 billion related to loans that were seriously delinquent.
The table below presents the UPB of our single-family sales and securitization of seasoned loans.
Table 38 - Single-Family Sales and Securitization of Seasoned Loans
(In millions) 2Q 20212Q 2020YTD 2021YTD 2020
Seriously delinquent loans$— $— $— $296 
Reperforming loans3,424 — 3,424 1,865 
Total$3,424 $— $3,424 $2,161 
Managing Foreclosure and REO Activities
Pursuant to FHFA guidance and the CARES Act, we are required to suspend foreclosures, other than for vacant or abandoned properties, and evictions due to the COVID-19 pandemic until July 31, 2021. As a result of this suspension, our REO ending inventory declined year-over-year. After July 31, 2021, servicers will implement new foreclosure regulations issued by the CFPB on June 28, 2021.
The table below shows our single-family REO activity.
Table 39 - Single-Family REO Activity
2Q 20212Q 2020YTD 2021YTD 2020
(Dollars in millions)Number of PropertiesAmountNumber of PropertiesAmountNumber of PropertiesAmountNumber of PropertiesAmount
Beginning balance — REO1,604 $175 4,168 $474 1,766 $199 4,989 $565 
Additions375 31 190 15 729 61 1,631 151 
Dispositions(502)(47)(1,546)(159)(1,018)(101)(3,808)(386)
Ending balance — REO1,477 159 2,812 330 1,477 159 2,812 330 
Beginning balance, valuation allowance(1)(17)(1)(10)
Change in valuation allowance— — 
Ending balance, valuation allowance(1)(8)(1)(8)
Ending balance — REO, net$158 $322 $158 $322 
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
50

Management's Discussion and AnalysisRisk Management


Multifamily Mortgage Credit Risk
Maintaining Prudent Underwriting Standards
We use a prior approval underwriting approach for multifamily loans in which we maintain credit discipline by completing our own underwriting and credit review for each new loan prior to purchase. Our underwriting standards focus on the LTV ratio and DSCR, which estimates a borrower's ability to repay the loan using the secured property's cash flows, after expenses. Our standards define maximum LTV ratios and minimum DSCRs that vary based on the characteristics and features of the loan. Changes in market conditions can affect the credit quality of our multifamily loan purchases and/or guarantees. Notwithstanding the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on the multifamily market and broader economic environment, the credit quality of our multifamily loan purchases and guarantees remained consistent with prior periods.
The graphs below show the credit profile of the multifamily loans we purchased or guaranteed.
Weighted Average Original LTV Ratio fmcc-20210630_g45.jpg
Weighted Average Original DSCR
fmcc-20210630_g46.jpg
Managing Our Portfolio, Including Loss Mitigation Activities
Loans in COVID-19 Related Forbearance Plans
Pursuant to FHFA guidance and the CARES Act, beginning in March 2020, we offered multifamily borrowers mortgage forbearance with the condition that they suspend all evictions during the forbearance period for renters unable to pay rent. Initially under our forbearance program, through December 31, 2020, multifamily borrowers with a fully performing loan as of February 1, 2020 were able to defer their loan payments for up to 90 days by showing hardship as a consequence of the COVID-19 pandemic and by gaining lender approval. After the forbearance period, the borrower was required to repay the forborne loan amounts in no more than 12 equal monthly installments.
In June 2020, in coordination with FHFA, we announced several supplemental forbearance relief options that servicers may use to assist borrowers who have a forbearance plan in place and continue to be materially affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. These supplemental relief options extend most of the original tenant protections and provide increased flexibility to tenants, including allowing the repayment of past due rent over time and not in a lump sum. In December 2020, we extended the deadline for borrowers whose loans have not been more than 30 days past due to request a new COVID-19 forbearance agreement or supplemental relief to March 31, 2021, and have since further extended this deadline to September 30, 2021.
We report multifamily delinquency rates based on the UPB of loans in our multifamily mortgage portfolio that are two monthly payments or more past due based on the loan's current contractual terms or are in the process of foreclosure, as reported by our servicers. Loans in forbearance are not considered delinquent as long as the borrower is in compliance with the forbearance agreement, including the agreed upon repayment plan.
The following table summarizes the current credit quality of loans under our COVID-19 forbearance program, which includes both the forbearance period and the repayment period.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
51

Management's Discussion and AnalysisRisk Management


Table 40 - Multifamily Loans that Received Forbearance(1)
2Q 2021
(UPB in millions)UPBLoan Count
Total multifamily loans in a forbearance program, beginning of period$7,416 1,100 
New loans entering forbearance program17533 
Active forbearance paydowns(17)— 
Total loans exiting forbearance program(2)
(2,475)(386)
Total multifamily loans in a forbearance program$5,099 747
(1)    Excludes loans granted forbearance outside of our COVID-19 forbearance program. These loans represented 0.1% of the multifamily mortgage portfolio as of June 30, 2021.
(2)    Approximately 86% of loans exited our COVID-19 forbearance program through full repayment of the forborne amounts or loan payoff.
Of the loans in forbearance, 81.5%, based on UPB, are in securitizations with first loss credit protection provided by subordination. The weighted average subordination level of securitizations with subordination that have loans in forbearance was 14.4% as of June 30, 2021. 12.1% of loans in forbearance are scheduled to mature prior to 2023. Since the inception of our COVID-19 forbearance program, approximately 39.3% of loans (by UPB) that received relief have exited through full repayment of the forborne amounts. A majority of the remaining loans in our COVID-19 forbearance program will reach the end of their repayment period in the second half of 2021.
Allowance for Credit Losses
The following table summarizes the allowance for credit losses recorded on our multifamily mortgage loans held-for-investment and our off-balance sheet credit exposures.
Table 41 - Multifamily Allowance for Credit Losses Activity
 (In millions) 2Q 20212Q 2020YTD 2021YTD 2020
Beginning balance$150 $136 $200 $69 
Provision (benefit) for credit losses(54)81 (104)148 
Ending balance $96 $217 $96 $217 
Components of ending balance of allowance for credit losses:
Mortgage loans held-for-investment$47 $124 
Off-balance sheet credit exposures49 93 
Total$96 $217 
Our multifamily credit losses remain low due to the property performance of the loans underlying our multifamily mortgage portfolio. See Note 7 for additional information regarding our multifamily credit losses and allowance for credit losses.
Transferring Credit Risk to Third-Party Investors
To reduce our credit risk exposure, we engage in a variety of CRT activities however, securitizations remain our principal risk transfer mechanism. Through securitizations, we have transferred a substantial amount of the expected and stressed credit risk on the multifamily guarantee portfolio, thereby reducing our overall credit risk exposure.
Multifamily Mortgage Portfolio CRT Issuance Activity
The table below provides the UPB of the mortgage loans covered by CRT transactions issued during the periods presented as well as the maximum coverage provided by those transactions.
Table 42 - Multifamily Mortgage Portfolio CRT Issuance
2Q 20212Q 2020YTD 2021YTD 2020
(In millions)
UPB(1)
Maximum Coverage(2)
UPB(1)
Maximum Coverage(2)
UPB(1)
Maximum Coverage(2)
UPB(1)
Maximum Coverage(2)
Subordination$16,929 $1,351 $10,738 $877 $38,043 $2,969 $21,284 $2,189 
SCR— — — — 4,852 277 — — 
Total CRT Activities$16,929 $1,351 $10,738 $877 $42,895 $3,246 $21,284 $2,189 
(1)    Represents the UPB of the assets included in the associated reference pool or securitization trust, as applicable.
(2) For subordination, represents the UPB of the securities that are held by third parties at issuance and are subordinate to the securities we guarantee. For SCR transactions, represents the UPB of securities held by third parties at issuance.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
52

Management's Discussion and AnalysisRisk Management


Multifamily Mortgage Portfolio Credit Enhancement Coverage Outstanding
While we obtain various forms of credit protection in connection with the acquisition, guarantee, or securitization of a loan or group of loans, our principal credit enhancement type is subordination, which is created through our securitization transactions. As of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, our maximum coverage provided by subordination in nonconsolidated VIEs was $44.3 billion and $42.8 billion, respectively. See Note 8 for additional information on our credit enhancements.
The table below presents the UPB, delinquency rates, and forbearance rates for both credit-enhanced and non-credit-enhanced loans underlying our multifamily mortgage portfolio.
Table 43 - Credit-Enhanced and Non-Credit-Enhanced Loans Underlying Our Multifamily Mortgage Portfolio
June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
(Dollars in millions)UPBDelinquency Rate
Forbearance Rate(1)(2)
UPBDelinquency Rate
Forbearance Rate(1)(2)
Credit-enhanced:
Subordination$353,191 0.15 %1.18 %$328,897 0.18 %1.99 %
Other19,885 0.25 1.78 17,352 0.17 2.73 
Total credit-enhanced373,076 0.15 1.21 346,249 0.18 2.03 
Non-credit-enhanced25,351 0.04 2.33 42,098 0.02 1.83 
Total$398,427 0.15 1.28 $388,347 0.16 2.01 
(1)    Excludes loans granted forbearance outside of our COVID-19 forbearance program. These loans represented 0.1% and less than 0.1% of the multifamily mortgage portfolio as of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively.    
(2)    Forbearance rate includes loans in a forbearance program including loans in their repayment period.
The following table provides information on the level of subordination outstanding for our securitizations with subordination.
Table 44 - Level of Subordination Outstanding
June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
(Dollars in millions)UPBDelinquency RateForbearance RateUPBDelinquency RateForbearance Rate
Less than 10%$86,920 — %0.04 %$53,220 0.04 %0.15 %
10% or greater266,271 0.20 1.55 275,677 0.20 2.35 
Total$353,191 0.15 1.18 $328,897 0.18 1.99 
Weighted average subordination level13 %13 %
The table below contains details on the loans underlying our multifamily mortgage portfolio that are not credit-enhanced.
Table 45 - Credit Quality of Our Multifamily Mortgage Portfolio Without Credit Enhancement
June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
(Dollars in millions)UPBDelinquency RateForbearance RateUPBDelinquency RateForbearance Rate
Unsecuritized loans:
Held-for-sale$7,661 0.12 %1.91 %$21,794 0.04 %0.85 %
Held-for-investment6,256 — 0.10 8,655 — 1.40 
Securitization products6,519 — 6.68 6,711 — 6.84 
Other mortgage-related guarantees4,915 — 0.07 4,938 — 0.07 
Total$25,351 0.04 2.33 $42,098 0.02 1.83 
Counterparty Credit Risk
We are exposed to counterparty credit risk, which is a type of institutional credit risk, as a result of our contracts with sellers and servicers, credit enhancement providers (mortgage insurers, investors, etc.), financial intermediaries, clearinghouses, and other counterparties, as well as through our guarantees of Fannie Mae securities underlying commingled resecuritization transactions.
Sellers and Servicers
Single-Family
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
53

Management's Discussion and AnalysisRisk Management


We perform ongoing monitoring and review of our exposure to individual sellers or servicers in accordance with our institutional credit risk management framework, including requiring our counterparties to provide regular financial reporting to us. We have significant exposure to non-depository and smaller depository financial institutions in our single-family business. These institutions may not have the same financial strength or operational capacity, or be subject to the same level of regulatory oversight, as large depository institutions.
Our top five non-depository sellers provided approximately 29% and 24% of our single-family purchase volume during YTD 2021 and YTD 2020, respectively. The table below summarizes the concentration of non-depository servicers of our single-family mortgage portfolio.
Table 46 - Single-Family Mortgage Portfolio Non-Depository Servicers
June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
% of Portfolio(1)
% of Seriously Delinquent Single-Family Loans
% of Portfolio(1)
% of Seriously Delinquent Single-Family Loans
Top five non-depository servicers19 %16 %18 %17 %
Other non-depository servicers34 34 30 28 
Total53 %50 %48 %45 %
(1)     Excludes loans where we do not exercise control over the associated servicing.
Multifamily
The majority of our multifamily loans are securitized using trusts that are administered by master servicers who bear responsibility to advance funds in the event of payment shortfalls, including principal and interest payments related to loans in forbearance. For the majority of our K Certificate securitizations, we utilize one of three large financial depository institutions as master servicer. For SB Certificate securitizations and a smaller number of K Certificate securitizations, we serve as master servicer. In instances where payment shortfalls occur, the master servicer is required to make advances as long as such advances have not been deemed non-recoverable. For loans purchased and held in our mortgage-related investment portfolio, the primary servicers are not required to advance funds in the event of payment shortfalls and therefore do not present significant counterparty credit risk.
Credit Enhancement Providers
We perform periodic analysis of the financial capacity of individual insurers under various adverse economic conditions and have continued our close monitoring and active communication with them to assess potential risk impacts.
The table below summarizes our exposure to single-family mortgage insurers as of June 30, 2021. In the event a mortgage insurer fails to perform, the coverage amounts represent our maximum exposure to credit losses resulting from such a failure.
Table 47 - Single-Family Mortgage Insurers
  June 30, 2021
(In millions)
Credit Rating(1)
Credit Rating
Outlook
(1)
UPB
Coverage(2)
Arch Mortgage Insurance CompanyANegative$98,121 $24,367 
Mortgage Guaranty Insurance Corporation (MGIC)BBB+Stable94,375 23,094 
Radian Guaranty Inc. (Radian)BBB+Stable92,041 21,913 
Essent Guaranty, Inc.BBB+Negative77,888 19,043 
Genworth Mortgage Insurance CorporationBB+Watch Positive77,195 19,077 
National Mortgage Insurance (NMI)BBBStable58,119 14,474 
PMI Mortgage Insurance Co. (PMI)Not RatedN/A1,581 396 
Republic Mortgage Insurance Company (RMIC)Not RatedN/A1,169 289 
Triad Guaranty Insurance Corporation (Triad)Not RatedN/A736 184 
OthersN/AN/A543 105 
Total$501,768 $122,942 
(1)Ratings and outlooks are for the corporate entity to which we have the greatest exposure. Latest rating available as of June 30, 2021. Represents the lower of S&P and Moody's credit ratings and outlooks stated in terms of the S&P equivalent.
(2)Coverage amounts exclude coverage related to IMAGIN and certain loans for which we do not control servicing, and may include coverage provided by consolidated affiliates and subsidiaries of the counterparty.
The table below displays the concentration of our single-family credit risk exposure to our ACIS counterparties.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
54

Management's Discussion and AnalysisRisk Management


Table 48 - Single-Family ACIS Counterparties
June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
(Dollars in billions)
Maximum Coverage(1)
% of Total
Maximum Coverage(1)
% of Total
Top five ACIS counterparties$6.2 45 %$5.3 48 %
All other ACIS counterparties7.5 55 5.8 52 
Total$13.7 100 %$11.1 100 %
(1)Represents maximum coverage exclusive of the collateral posted to secure the counterparties' obligations.
As of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, our ACIS counterparties posted collateral of $3.4 billion and $2.4 billion, respectively.

Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
55

Management's Discussion and Analysis
Risk Management
Market Risk
Overview
Our business has embedded exposure to market risk, which is the economic risk associated with adverse changes in interest rates, volatility, and spreads. Market risk can adversely affect future cash flows, or economic value, as well as earnings and net worth.
A significant source of interest-rate risk is from our investments in mortgage-related assets (securities and loans) and the debt we issue to fund our assets. Another source of interest-rate risk comes from our single-family guarantee portfolio, which includes upfront fees (including buy-downs), buy-ups, and float. Our primary goal in managing interest-rate risk is to reduce the amount of change in the value of our future cash flows due to future changes in interest rates. We use models to analyze possible future interest-rate scenarios, along with the cash flows of our assets and liabilities over those scenarios. Our models include the possibility of future negative interest rate scenarios and such risk is included in our hedging framework.
Interest-Rate Risk
Our primary interest-rate risk measures are duration gap and Portfolio Value Sensitivity (PVS). Duration gap measures the difference in price sensitivity to interest rate changes between our financial assets and liabilities and is expressed in months relative to the value of assets. PVS is an estimate of the change in the present value of the cash flows of our financial assets and liabilities from an instantaneous shock to interest rates, assuming spreads are held constant and no rebalancing actions are undertaken. PVS is measured in two ways, one measuring the estimated sensitivity of our portfolio value to a 50 basis point parallel movement in the LIBOR yield curve (PVS-L) and the other to a non-parallel movement resulting from a 25 basis point change in the slope of the LIBOR yield curve (PVS-YC). While we believe that duration gap and PVS are useful risk management tools, they should be understood as estimates rather than as precise measurements.
The following tables provide our duration gap, estimated point-in-time and minimum and maximum PVS-L and PVS-YC results, and an average of the daily values and standard deviation. The table below also provides PVS-L estimates assuming an immediate 100 basis point shift in the LIBOR yield curve. The interest-rate sensitivity of a mortgage portfolio varies across a wide range of interest rates.
Table 49 - PVS-YC and PVS-L Results Assuming Shifts of the LIBOR Yield Curve
June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
PVS-YCPVS-LPVS-YCPVS-L
(In millions)25 bps50 bps100 bps25 bps50 bps100 bps
Assuming shifts of the LIBOR yield curve, (gains) losses on:(1)
Assets:
Investments($145)$2,804 $5,943 ($286)$3,700 $7,670 
Guarantees(2)
88 (734)(899)165 (1,691)(3,250)
Total Assets(57)2,070 5,044 (121)2,009 4,420 
Liabilities(16)(2,873)(6,166)(54)(3,237)(7,503)
Derivatives77 791 1,041 185 1,180 2,839 
Total4 (12)(81)$10 ($48)($244)
PVS4   $10 $— $— 
(1)The categorization of the PVS impact between assets, liabilities, and derivatives on this table is based upon the economic characteristics of those assets and liabilities, not their accounting classification. For example, purchase and sale commitments of mortgage-related securities and debt securities of consolidated trusts held by the mortgage-related investments portfolio are both categorized as assets on this table.
(2)Represents the interest-rate risk from our single-family portfolio, which includes buy-ups, float, and upfront fees (including buy-downs).
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
56

Management's Discussion and Analysis
Risk Management
Table 50 - Duration Gap and PVS Results
2Q 20212Q 2020
(Duration gap in months, dollars in millions)
Duration
Gap
PVS-YC
25 bps
PVS-L
50 bps
Duration
Gap
PVS-YC
25 bps
PVS-L
50 bps
Average0.3 $7 $17 0.4 $12 $60 
Minimum(0.8)— — (0.6)— — 
Maximum1.0 24 93 0.9 30 200 
Standard deviation0.3 23 0.3 49 
YTD 2021YTD 2020
(Duration gap in months, dollars in millions)
Duration
Gap
PVS-YC
25 bps
PVS-L
50 bps
Duration
Gap
PVS-YC
25 bps
PVS-L
50 bps
Average0.3 $7 $39 0.4 $11 $61 
Minimum(0.8)— — (0.6)— — 
Maximum1.0 24 200 1.5 30 236 
Standard deviation0.3 49 0.4 62 
Derivatives enable us to reduce our economic interest-rate risk exposure as we continue to align our derivative portfolio with the changing duration of our economically hedged assets and liabilities. The table below shows that the PVS-L risk levels, assuming a 50 basis point shift in the LIBOR yield curve for the periods presented, would have been higher if we had not used derivatives.
Table 51 - PVS-L Results Before Derivatives and After Derivatives
PVS-L (50 bps)
(In millions)
Before
Derivatives
After
Derivatives
Effect of
Derivatives
June 30, 2021$1,287 $— ($1,287)
December 31, 2020 (1)
601 — (601)
(1)Before derivatives, our adverse PVS-L rate movement is -50 bps, whereas after derivatives our adverse PVS-L rate movement is +50 bps.
As we continue our efforts to replace LIBOR with SOFR, we expect to transition the company-wide discounting from LIBOR to SOFR in measuring the company’s interest-rate risk in the future. We do not expect the change to have a significant impact on measurement of our interest-rate risk.
Earnings Sensitivity to Market Risk
The accounting treatment for our financial assets and liabilities (e.g., some are measured at amortized cost, while others are measured at fair value) creates variability in our earnings when interest rates and spreads change. We have elected fair value hedge accounting for certain assets and liabilities in an effort to reduce this earnings variability due to interest rates and better align our financial results with the economics of our business. See MD&A - Consolidated Results of Operations and MD&A - Our Business Segments for additional information on the effect of changes in interest rates and market spreads on our financial results.
Interest Rate-Related Earnings Sensitivity
While we manage our interest-rate risk exposure on an economic basis to a low level as measured by our models, changes in interest rates may still result in significant earnings variability from period to period. Based upon the composition of our financial assets and liabilities, including derivatives, at June 30, 2021, we would generally recognize fair value losses when interest rates increase if we did not apply fair value hedge accounting.
By electing fair value hedge accounting for certain single-family mortgage loans and certain debt instruments, we are able to reduce the potential variability in our earnings attributable to changes in interest rates. See Note 10 for additional information on hedge accounting.
Earnings Sensitivity to Changes in Interest Rates
We evaluate a range of interest rate scenarios to determine the sensitivity of our earnings due to changes in interest rates and to determine our fair value hedge accounting strategies. The interest rate scenarios evaluated include parallel shifts in the yield curve in which interest rates increase or decrease by 100 basis points, non-parallel shifts in the yield curve in which long-term interest rates increase or decrease by 100 basis points, and non-parallel shifts in the yield curve in which short-term and
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
57

Management's Discussion and Analysis
Risk Management
medium-term interest rates increase or decrease by 100 basis points. This evaluation identifies the net effect on comprehensive income from changes in fair value attributable to changes in interest rates for financial instruments measured at fair value, including the effects of fair value hedge accounting, for each of the identified scenarios. This evaluation does not include the net effect on comprehensive income from interest-rate sensitive items that are not measured at fair value (e.g., amortization of mortgage loan premiums and discounts, changes in fair value of held-for-sale mortgage loans for which we have not elected the fair value option), or from changes in our future contractual net interest income due to repricing of our interest-bearing assets and liabilities. The before-tax results of this evaluation are shown in the table below.
Table 52 - Earnings Sensitivity to Changes in Interest Rates
(In millions)June 30, 2021June 30, 2020
Interest Rate Scenarios(1)
Parallel yield curve shifts:
  +100 basis points$19 ($10)
  -100 basis points(19)10 
Non-parallel yield curve shifts - long-term interest rates:
  +100 basis points(179)272 
  -100 basis points179 (272)
Non-parallel yield curve shifts - short-term and medium-term interest rates:
 +100 basis points197 (281)
    -100 basis points(197)281 
(1)The earnings sensitivity presented is calculated using the change in interest rates and net effective duration exposure.
The actual effect of changes in interest rates on our comprehensive income in any given period may vary based on a number of factors, including, but not limited to, the composition of our assets and liabilities, the actual changes in interest rates that are realized at different terms along the yield curve, and the effectiveness of our hedge accounting strategies. Even if implemented properly, our hedge accounting programs may not be effective in reducing earnings volatility, and our hedges may fail in any given future period, which could expose us to significant earnings variability in that period.
Spread-Related Earnings Sensitivity
We have limited ability to manage our spread risk exposure, and therefore, the volatility of market spreads may contribute to significant GAAP earnings variability. For financial assets measured at fair value, we generally recognize fair value losses when market spreads widen. Conversely, for financial liabilities measured at fair value, we generally recognize fair value gains when market spreads widen. See MD&A - Our Business Segments for additional information on the impact of market spreads on our results of operations.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
58

Management's Discussion and AnalysisLiquidity and Capital Resources

LIQUIDITY AND CAPITAL RESOURCES
Our business activities require that we maintain adequate liquidity to meet our financial obligations as they come due and meet the needs of customers in a timely and cost-efficient manner. We are also required to comply with the minimum liquidity requirements established by FHFA, and we must maintain adequate capital resources to avoid being placed into receivership by FHFA.
Liquidity
Primary Sources of Liquidity
The following table lists the sources of our liquidity, the balances as of the dates shown, and a brief description of their importance to Freddie Mac.
Table 53 - Liquidity Sources
(In millions)
Balance(1) at June 30, 2021
Balance(1) at December 31, 2020
Description
Other Investments Portfolio - Liquidity and Contingency Operating Portfolio$118,080 $95,894 The liquidity and contingency operating portfolio, included within our other investments portfolio, is primarily used for short-term liquidity management.
Liquid Portion of the Mortgage-Related Investments Portfolio43,573 67,562 
The liquid portion of our mortgage-related investments portfolio can be pledged or sold for liquidity purposes. The amount of cash we may be able to successfully raise may be substantially less than the balance.
(1)Represents carrying value for the liquidity and contingency operating portfolio, included within our other investments portfolio, and UPB for the liquid portion of the mortgage-related investments portfolio.
Other Investments Portfolio
Our other investments portfolio is important to our cash flow, collateral management, asset and liability management, and ability to provide liquidity and stability to the mortgage market. The table below summarizes the balances in our other investments portfolio, which includes the liquidity and contingency operating portfolio.
Table 54 - Other Investments Portfolio
June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
(In millions)Liquidity and Contingency Operating PortfolioCustodial AccountOther
Total Other Investments Portfolio (1)
Liquidity and Contingency Operating PortfolioCustodial AccountOther
Total Other Investments Portfolio (1)
Cash and cash equivalents$7,217 $3,954 $— $11,171 $6,509 $17,380 $— $23,889 
Securities purchased under
agreements to resell
81,334 36,266 717 118,317 65,753 38,487 763 105,003 
Non-mortgage related securities29,529 — 3,754 33,283 23,632 — 3,321 26,953 
Advances to lenders— — 5,045 5,045 — — 4,162 4,162 
LIHTC equity investment— — 1,572 1,572 — — 1,410 1,410 
Secured lending— — 1,593 1,593 — — 1,680 1,680 
Total$118,080 $40,220 $12,681 $170,981 $95,894 $55,867 $11,336 $163,097 
(1)Represents carrying value.
Our non-mortgage-related investments in the liquidity and contingency operating portfolio consist of U.S. Treasury securities and other investments that we could sell to provide us with an additional source of liquidity to fund our business operations. We also maintain non-interest-bearing deposits at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and interest-bearing deposits at commercial banks. Our interest-bearing deposits at commercial banks totaled $3.1 billion as of both June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020.
The liquidity and contingency operating portfolio also included cash collateral posted to us primarily by derivatives counterparties of $1.8 billion and $2.8 billion as of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively. We have invested this collateral in securities purchased under agreements to resell and non-mortgage-related securities as part of our liquidity and contingency operating portfolio, although the collateral may be subject to return to our counterparties based on the terms of our master netting and collateral agreements.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
59

Management's Discussion and AnalysisLiquidity and Capital Resources

Mortgage Loans and Mortgage-Related Securities
We invest principally in mortgage loans and mortgage-related securities, certain categories of which are largely unencumbered and liquid. Our primary source of liquidity among these mortgage assets is our holdings of single-class and multiclass agency securities, excluding certain structured agency securities collateralized by non-agency mortgage-related securities. Our ability to pledge certain of these assets as collateral or sell them enhances our liquidity profile, although the amount of cash we may be able to raise successfully in the event of a liquidity crisis or significant market disruption may be substantially less than the amount of mortgage-related assets we hold.
We hold other mortgage assets, but given their characteristics, they may not be available for immediate sale or for use as collateral for repurchase agreements. These assets consist of certain structured agency securities collateralized by non-agency mortgage-related securities, non-agency CMBS, non-agency RMBS, and unsecuritized seriously delinquent and modified single-family loans.
Primary Sources of Funding
The following table lists the sources and balances of our funding as of the dates shown and a brief description of their importance to Freddie Mac.
Table 55 - Funding Sources
(In millions)
Balance(1) at
 June 30, 2021
Balance(1) at December 31, 2020
Description
Debt of Freddie Mac$227,102 $284,370 Debt of Freddie Mac is used to fund our business activities.
Debt Securities of
Consolidated Trusts
2,575,653 2,308,176 
Debt securities of consolidated trusts are used primarily to fund our single-family activities. This type of debt is principally repaid by the cash flows of the associated mortgage loans. As a result, our repayment obligation is limited to amounts paid pursuant to our guarantee of principal and interest and purchasing modified or seriously delinquent loans from the trusts.
(1)Represents the carrying value of debt balances after consideration of offsetting arrangements.
Debt of Freddie Mac
We issue debt of Freddie Mac to fund our business activities. Competition for funding can vary depending on economic, financial market, and regulatory environments. We issue debt of Freddie Mac based on a variety of factors, including an assessment of market conditions and our liquidity requirements.
The table below summarizes the par value and the average rate of debt of Freddie Mac we issued or paid off, including regularly scheduled principal payments, payments resulting from calls, and payments for repurchases. We call, exchange, or repurchase our outstanding debt from time to time for a variety of reasons, including managing our funding composition and supporting the liquidity of our debt securities.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
60

Management's Discussion and AnalysisLiquidity and Capital Resources

Table 56 - Debt of Freddie Mac Activity
2Q 2021YTD 2021
(Dollars in millions)Short-term
Average Rate(1)
Long-term
Average Rate(1)
Short-term
Average Rate(1)
Long-term
Average Rate(1)
Discount notes and Reference Bills®
Beginning balance$— — %$— — %$11 0.69 %$— — %
Issuances— — — — — — — — 
Repurchases— — — — — — — — 
Maturities— — — — (11)0.69 — — 
Ending Balance        
Securities sold under
agreements to repurchase
Beginning balance7,930 (0.05)— — — — — — 
Additions153,190 (0.06)— — 287,018 (0.05)— — 
Repayments(156,500)(0.06)— — (282,398)(0.06)— — 
Ending Balance4,620 (0.03)  4,620 (0.03)  
Callable debt
Beginning balance10,910 0.03 101,514 0.71 685 0.10 123,338 0.71 
Issuances— — — — 22,050 0.04 1,090 0.60 
Repurchases— — — — — — — — 
Calls(10,910)0.03 (11,795)0.55 (22,735)0.04 (34,184)0.65 
Maturities— — (668)1.70 — — (1,193)1.79 
Ending Balance  89,051 0.72   89,051 0.72 
Non-callable debt
Beginning balance— — 137,973 1.17 4,259 1.51 145,560 1.21 
Issuances— — — — — — — — 
Repurchases— — (11)0.38 (1,835)1.53 (2,832)1.93 
Maturities— — (8,197)0.63 (2,424)1.49 (12,963)1.18 
Ending Balance  129,765 1.21   129,765 1.21 
STACR and SCR Debt(2)
Beginning balance— — 12,061 4.13 — — 12,488 4.09 
Issuances— — — — — — — — 
Repurchases— — — — — — — — 
Maturities— — (401)4.38 — — (828)4.32 
Ending Balance  11,660 4.10  — 11,660 4.10 
   Total debt of Freddie Mac4,620 (0.03)%230,476 1.17 %4,620 (0.03 %)230,476 1.17 %
Offsetting arrangements(4,620)(4,620)
Total debt of Freddie Mac, net$— $230,476 $— $230,476 
(1)Average rate is weighted based on par value.
(2)STACR debt notes and SCR debt notes are subject to prepayment risk as their payments are based upon the performance of a reference pool of mortgage assets that may be prepaid by the related mortgage borrower at any time generally without penalty and are therefore included as a separate category in the table.
As of June 30, 2021, our aggregate indebtedness, calculated as the par value of debt of Freddie Mac, was $230.6 billion, which was below the current $300.0 billion debt cap limit imposed by the Purchase Agreement.
The decrease in total outstanding debt of Freddie Mac from December 31, 2020 to June 30, 2021 was driven by the decline in the mortgage-related investments portfolio, coupled with lower expected cash window volume due to lower expected refinance activities and pursuant to the January 2021 Letter Agreement.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
61

Management's Discussion and AnalysisLiquidity and Capital Resources

Maturity and Redemption Dates
The following graphs present debt of Freddie Mac by contractual maturity date and earliest redemption date. The earliest redemption date refers to the earliest call date for callable debt and the contractual maturity date for all other debt of Freddie Mac.
Contractual Maturity Date as of June 30, 2021 (1)
(Par value in billions)
fmcc-20210630_g47.jpg
Earliest Redemption Date as of June 30, 2021 (1)
(Par value in billions)
fmcc-20210630_g48.jpg


(1)STACR debt notes and SCR debt notes are subject to prepayment risk as their payments are based upon the performance of a reference pool of mortgage assets that may be prepaid by the related mortgage borrower at any time generally without penalty and are therefore included as a separate category in the graphs.
Debt Securities of Consolidated Trusts
The largest component of debt on our condensed consolidated balance sheets is debt securities of consolidated trusts. We issue this type of debt by securitizing mortgage loans primarily to fund the majority of our single-family guarantee activities. When we consolidate securitization trusts, we recognize the following on our condensed consolidated balance sheets:
n    The assets held by the securitization trusts, the majority of which are mortgage loans. We recognized $2,543.5 billion and $2,273.3 billion of mortgage loans, which represented 89.5% and 86.5% of our total assets, as of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively.
n    The debt securities issued by the securitization trusts, the majority of which are Level 1 Securitization Products and are pass-through securities, where the cash flows of the mortgage loans held by the securitization trust are passed through to the holders of the securities. We recognized $2,575.7 billion and $2,308.2 billion of debt securities of consolidated trusts, which represented 91.9% and 89.0% of our total debt, as of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively.
Debt securities of consolidated trusts represent our liability to third parties that hold beneficial interests in our consolidated securitization trusts. Debt securities of consolidated trusts are principally repaid from the cash flows of the mortgage loans held by the securitization trusts that issued the debt securities. In circumstances when the cash flows of the mortgage loans are not sufficient to repay the debt, we make up the shortfall because we have guaranteed the payment of principal and interest on the debt. In certain circumstances, we have the right and/or obligation to purchase the loan from the trust prior to its contractual maturity.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
62

Management's Discussion and AnalysisLiquidity and Capital Resources

The table below shows the issuance and extinguishment activity for the debt securities of our consolidated trusts.
Table 57 - Activity for Debt Securities of Consolidated Trusts Held by Third Parties
(In millions) 2Q 2021YTD 2021
Beginning balance$2,376,691 $2,240,602 
Issuances:
New issuances to third parties225,555 455,755 
Additional issuances of securities168,463 348,386 
Total issuances394,018 804,141 
Extinguishments:
Purchases of debt securities from third parties(2,506)(5,071)
Debt securities received in settlement of secured lending(58,472)(109,164)
Repayments of debt securities(203,397)(424,174)
Total extinguishments(264,375)(538,409)
Ending balance2,506,334 2,506,334 
Unamortized premiums and discounts
69,319 69,319 
Debt securities of consolidated trusts held by third parties
$2,575,653 $2,575,653 
Off-Balance Sheet Arrangements
We enter into certain business arrangements that are not recorded on our condensed consolidated balance sheets or that may be recorded in amounts that differ from the full contractual or notional amount of the transaction that affect our short- and long-term liquidity needs. Certain of these arrangements present credit risk exposure. See MD&A - Risk Management - Credit Risk for additional information on our credit risk exposure on off-balance sheet arrangements.
We have certain off-balance sheet arrangements related to our securitization and other mortgage-related guarantee activities. Our off-balance sheet arrangements related to securitization activities primarily consist of guaranteed K Certificates and SB Certificates. Our guarantee of these securitization activities and other mortgage-related guarantees may result in liquidity needs to cover potential cash flow shortfalls from borrower defaults. As of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, the outstanding UPB of the guaranteed securities was $359.5 billion and $337.0 billion, respectively. In addition to our securitization and other mortgage-related guarantees, we have certain other guarantees that are accounted for as derivative instruments and are recognized on our condensed consolidated balance sheets at fair value. See Note 10 for additional information on these guarantees, which are not included in the totals above.
We have the ability to commingle TBA-eligible Fannie Mae collateral in certain of our resecuritization products. When we resecuritize Fannie Mae securities in our commingled resecuritization products, our guarantee covers timely payments of principal and interest on such securities. Accordingly, commingling Fannie Mae collateral in our resecuritization transactions increases our off-balance sheet liquidity exposure as we do not have control over the Fannie Mae collateral. As of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, the total amount of our off-balance sheet exposure related to Fannie Mae securities backing Freddie Mac resecuritization products was approximately $99.0 billion and $85.8 billion, respectively.
Cash Flows
Cash and cash equivalents (including restricted cash and cash equivalents) increased by $3.6 billion from $7.6 billion as of June 30, 2020 to $11.2 billion as of June 30, 2021, primarily due to an increase in the size of our other investments portfolio to comply with the minimum liquidity requirements established by FHFA that have been in effect since December 2020.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
63

Management's Discussion and AnalysisLiquidity and Capital Resources

Capital Resources
Primary Sources of Capital
Our entry into conservatorship resulted in significant changes to the assessment of our capital adequacy and our management of capital. Under the Purchase Agreement, Treasury made a commitment to provide us with funding, under certain conditions, to eliminate deficits in our net worth. Pursuant to the January 2021 Letter Agreement, we will not be required to pay a dividend on the senior preferred stock to Treasury until our Net Worth Amount exceeds the amount of adjusted total capital necessary to meet capital requirements and buffers set forth in the ERCF. Based on our Net Worth Amount of $22.4 billion as of June 30, 2021, no dividend is payable to Treasury for the quarter ended June 30, 2021. See Note 2 for details of the support we receive from Treasury.
In May 2017, FHFA, as Conservator, issued guidance to us to evaluate and manage our financial risk and to make business decisions, while in conservatorship, utilizing a risk-based CCF, a capital system with detailed formulae provided by FHFA. In November 2020, FHFA released a final rule that establishes the ERCF as a new enterprise regulatory capital framework for Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae. The ERCF, which went into effect in February 2021, has a transition period for compliance. In general, the compliance date for the regulatory capital requirements will be the later of the date of termination of our conservatorship and any later compliance date provided in a consent order or other transition order. Pursuant to the final rule, we will be required to report our regulatory capital under the ERCF beginning on January 1, 2022.
We invest our Net Worth Amount primarily in short-term investments. The table below presents activity related to our net worth during 2Q 2021 and YTD 2021.
Table 58 - Net Worth Activity
(In millions)2Q 2021YTD 2021
Beginning balance$18,791 $16,413 
Comprehensive income (loss)3,611 5,989 
Capital draw from Treasury— — 
Senior preferred stock dividends declared— — 
Total equity / net worth$22,402 $22,402 
Aggregate draws under Purchase Agreement$71,648 $71,648 
Aggregate cash dividends paid to Treasury119,680 119,680 
Liquidation preference of the senior preferred stock91,439 91,439 
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
64

Management's Discussion and AnalysisCritical Accounting Policies and Estimates
CRITICAL ACCOUNTING POLICIES AND ESTIMATES
The preparation of financial statements in accordance with GAAP requires us to make a number of judgments, estimates, and assumptions that affect the reported amounts within our condensed consolidated financial statements. Certain of our accounting policies, as well as estimates we make, are critical, as they are both important to the presentation of our financial condition and results of operations and require management to make difficult, complex, or subjective judgments and estimates, often regarding matters that are inherently uncertain. Actual results could differ from our estimates, and the use of different judgments and assumptions related to these policies and estimates could have a material impact on our condensed consolidated financial statements.
Our critical accounting policies and estimates relate to the single-family allowance for credit losses and fair value measurements. For additional information about our critical accounting policies and estimates and other significant accounting policies, as well as recently issued accounting guidance, see Note 1.
Single-Family Allowance for Credit Losses
The single-family allowance for credit losses represents our estimate of expected credit losses over the contractual term of the mortgage loans. The single-family allowance for credit losses pertains to all held-for-investment single-family mortgage loans on our condensed consolidated balance sheets.
Determining the appropriateness of the single-family allowance for credit losses is a complex process that is subject to numerous estimates and assumptions requiring significant management judgment about matters that involve a high degree of subjectivity. This process involves the use of models that require us to make judgments about matters that are difficult to predict.
Changes in forecasted house price growth rates can have a significant effect on our allowance for credit losses. Our estimate of expected credit losses leverages an internally based model that uses a Monte Carlo simulation which generates many possible house price scenarios for up to 40 years for each metropolitan statistical area (MSA). These scenarios are used to estimate loan-level expected future cash flows and credit losses based on each loan’s individual characteristics. The COVID-19 pandemic initially resulted in a decline in our near-term forecasted house price growth rates compared to pre-pandemic estimates, but our forecast has since improved. The table below summarizes our nationwide forecasted house price growth rates for both full-year 2021 and 2022 that were used in determining our allowance for credit losses as of June 30, 2021 and as of December 31, 2020. These growth rates are used as inputs to our models to develop the detailed forecasted life-of-loan house price growth rates for each MSA.
Table 59 - Forecasted House Price Growth Rates
20212022
June 30, 202112.1 %5.3 %
December 31, 20205.4 %3.0 %




Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
65

Management's Discussion and AnalysisRegulation and Supervision

REGULATION AND SUPERVISION
In addition to our oversight by FHFA as our Conservator, we are subject to regulation and oversight by FHFA under our Charter and the GSE Act and to certain regulation by other government agencies. Furthermore, regulatory activities by other government agencies can affect us indirectly, even if we are not directly subject to such agencies' regulation or oversight. For example, regulations that modify requirements applicable to the purchase or servicing of mortgages can affect us.
Federal Housing Finance Agency
Supreme Court Decision on HERA and Change in FHFA Director
On June 23, 2021, the U.S. Supreme Court decided in Collins v. Yellen that the “for cause” removal provision for the director of FHFA in the Housing and Economic Recovery Act was unconstitutional. As a result, the President has the power to remove the FHFA Director at will. In this decision, the U.S. Supreme Court also noted that “the Recovery Act authorizes the agency to act in what it determines is ‘in the best interests of the regulated entity or the Agency,’" further providing that “when the FHFA acts as a conservator, it may aim to rehabilitate the regulated entity in a way that, while not in the best interests of the regulated entity, is beneficial to the Agency and, by extension, the public it serves.” For more information on this case, see the Legal Proceedings section in this Form 10-Q and our 2020 Annual Report.
On June 23, 2021, President Biden appointed Sandra Thompson as Acting Director of FHFA to replace Mark Calabria. Changes in FHFA leadership could result in significant changes to our business activities or strategic direction. For more information on our conservatorship and related risks, see the MD&A – Conservatorship and Related Matters and Risk Factors sections in our 2020 Annual Report.
Affordable Housing Fund Allocations
The GSE Act requires us to set aside in each fiscal year an amount equal to 4.2 basis points of each dollar of total new business purchases, and pay this amount to certain housing funds. During 2Q 2021 and YTD 2021, we completed $300.2 billion and $674.7 billion, respectively, of new business purchases subject to this requirement and accrued $126 million and $283 million, respectively, of related expense. We are prohibited from passing through these costs to the originators of the loans that we purchase.
Legislative and Regulatory Developments
FHFA Final Rule on Resolution Planning
In May 2021, FHFA published a final rule that requires Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae to develop credible resolution plans, also known as living wills. The purpose of the rule is to require each Enterprise to develop a resolution plan to facilitate its rapid and orderly resolution under FHFA’s receivership authority in a manner that: (1) minimizes disruption in the national housing finance markets by providing for the continued operation of the core business lines of the Enterprise in receivership by a newly constituted limited life regulated entity (“LLRE”); (2) preserves the value of the Enterprise’s franchise and assets; (3) facilitates the division of assets and liabilities between the LLRE and the receivership estate; (4) ensures that investors in mortgage-backed securities guaranteed by the Enterprises and in Enterprise unsecured debt bear losses in accordance with the priority of payments established in the GSE Act; and (5) fosters market discipline by making clear that no extraordinary government support will be available to indemnify investors against losses or fund the resolution of an Enterprise. The rule addresses procedural requirements related to the frequency and timing for submission of initial and subsequent resolution plans to FHFA. The rule provides a set of required and prohibited assumptions when developing the resolution plans, including assuming that receivership may occur under the severely adverse economic conditions provided by FHFA in conjunction with any stress testing required or another scenario provided by FHFA, not assuming the provision or continuation of extraordinary government support (including support under the Purchase Agreement), and reflecting statutory provisions that obligations and securities of the Enterprises are not guaranteed by the United States and do not constitute a debt or obligation of the United States. This rule became effective on July 6, 2021, and our first resolution plan must be submitted to FHFA in April 2023.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
66

Management's Discussion and AnalysisRegulation and Supervision

Borrower Protection as Foreclosure and REO Eviction Moratoriums End
On June 28, 2021, the CFPB amended Regulation X to help protect mortgage borrowers as federal foreclosure moratoriums are phased out and borrowers exit forbearance. These rules establish temporary safeguards to help ensure that borrowers suffering hardship related to COVID-19 have time before foreclosure to explore their options, including loan modification and selling their homes. The rules cover loans on principal residences, generally exclude small servicers, and will take effect on August 31, 2021. The new foreclosure and eviction moratoriums will expire on December 31, 2021 and rules relating to borrower contact will expire on October 1, 2022.
On June 29, 2021, FHFA announced that Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae servicers will not be permitted to make a first notice or filing for foreclosure that would be prohibited by these CFPB rules before the CFPB rules take effect. The Enterprises' moratoriums on single-family foreclosures and REO evictions will expire on July 31, 2021. Requiring Enterprise servicers to follow the CFPB's new protections a month before the CFPB rule takes effect will help protect borrowers from foreclosure and provides certainty for servicers about Enterprise expectations.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
67

Management's Discussion and AnalysisForward-Looking Statements

FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS
We regularly communicate information concerning our business activities to investors, the news media, securities analysts, and others as part of our normal operations. Some of these communications, including this Form 10-Q, contain "forward-looking statements." Examples of forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to, statements pertaining to the conservatorship, our current expectations and objectives for the Single-family and Multifamily segments of our business, our efforts to assist the housing market, our liquidity and capital management, economic and market conditions and trends, the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic and actions taken in response thereto on our business, financial condition, and liquidity, our market share, the effect of legislative and regulatory developments and new accounting guidance, the credit quality of loans we own or guarantee, the costs and benefits of our CRT transactions, and our results of operations and financial condition. Forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks and uncertainties, some of which are beyond our control. Forward-looking statements are often accompanied by, and identified with, terms such as "could," "may," "will," "believe," "expect," "anticipate," "forecast," and similar phrases. These statements are not historical facts, but rather represent our expectations based on current information, plans, judgments, assumptions, estimates, and projections. Actual results may differ significantly from those described in or implied by such forward-looking statements due to various factors and uncertainties, including those described in the Risk Factors section in our 2020 Annual Report, and including, without limitation, the following:
n Uncertainty regarding the duration and severity of the COVID-19 pandemic and the effects of the pandemic and actions taken in response thereto on the U.S. economy and housing market, which could, in turn, adversely affect our business in numerous ways, including, for example, by increasing our credit losses, impairing the value of our mortgage-related securities, decreasing our liquidity and capital levels, and increasing our credit risk and operational risk;
n The actions the U.S. government (including FHFA, Treasury, and Congress) may take, require us to take, or restrict us from taking, including actions to support the housing markets (such as programs implemented in response to the COVID-19 pandemic or to implement the recommendations in FHFA's Conservatorship Scorecards and other objectives for us);
n The effect of the restrictions on our business due to the conservatorship and the Purchase Agreement;
n Changes in our Charter or in applicable legislative or regulatory requirements (including any legislation affecting the future status of our company);
n Changes to our capital requirements and potential effects of such changes on our business strategies;
n Changes in the fiscal and monetary policies of the Federal Reserve (including purchasing agency MBS and agency CMBS in amounts needed to support the market during the COVID-19 pandemic);
n Changes in tax laws;
n Changes in accounting policies, practices, or guidance;
n Changes in economic and market conditions generally, and as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, including changes in employment rates, interest rates, spreads, and house prices;
n Changes in the U.S. residential mortgage market, including changes in the supply and type of loan products (e.g., refinance vs. purchase and fixed-rate vs. ARM);
n The success of our efforts to mitigate our losses on our single-family mortgage portfolio;
n The success of our strategy to transfer mortgage credit risk through STACR, ACIS, K Certificate, SB Certificate, and other CRT transactions;
n Our ability to maintain adequate liquidity to fund our operations;
n Our ability to maintain the security and resiliency of our operational systems and infrastructure, including against cyberattacks;
n Our ability to effectively execute our business strategies, implement new initiatives, and improve efficiency;
n The adequacy of our risk management framework, including the adequacy of our capital framework for measuring risk;
n Our ability to manage mortgage credit risk, including the effect of changes in underwriting and servicing practices;
n Our ability to limit or manage our economic exposure and GAAP earnings exposure to interest-rate volatility and spread volatility, including the availability of derivative financial instruments needed for interest-rate risk management purposes and our ability to apply hedge accounting;
n Our operational ability to issue new securities, make timely and correct payments on securities, and provide initial and ongoing disclosures;
n Our reliance on CSS and the CSP for the operation of the majority of our single-family securitization activities, our limited influence over CSS Board decisions, and any additional changes FHFA may require in our relationship with, or support of, CSS;
n    Changes in the methodologies, models, assumptions, and estimates we use to prepare our financial statements, make business decisions, and manage risks;
n Changes in investor demand for our debt or mortgage-related securities;
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
68

Management's Discussion and AnalysisForward-Looking Statements

n Our ability to maintain market acceptance of the UMBS, including our ability to maintain alignment of the prepayment speeds of our and Fannie Mae's respective UMBS;
n Changes in the practices of loan originators, servicers, investors, and other participants in the secondary mortgage market;
n The discontinuance of, transition from, or replacement of LIBOR and the adverse consequences it could have on our business and operations;
n The occurrence of a major natural disaster or other catastrophic event in areas in which our offices or significant portions of our total mortgage portfolio are located; and
n    Other factors and assumptions described in this Form 10-Q and our 2020 Annual Report, including in the MD&A section.
Forward-looking statements are made only as of the date of this Form 10-Q, and we undertake no obligation to update any forward-looking statements we make to reflect events or circumstances occurring after the date of this Form 10-Q.

Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
69

Financial Statements

Financial Statements
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
70

Financial StatementsCondensed Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income
FREDDIE MAC
Condensed Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income (Loss) (Unaudited)
(In millions, except share-related amounts)
2Q 20212Q 2020YTD 2021YTD 2020
Net interest income
Interest income$15,230 $15,716 $29,132 $33,308 
Interest expense(10,463)(12,840)(20,726)(27,647)
Net interest income4,767 2,876 8,406 5,661 
Non-interest income (loss)
Guarantee income356 469 604 846 
Investment gains (losses), net636 670 1,844 (165)
Other income (loss)107 134 285 229 
Non-interest income (loss)1,099 1,273 2,733 910 
Net revenues5,866 4,149 11,139 6,571 
Benefit (provision) for credit losses740 (705)936 (1,938)
Non-interest expense
Salaries and employee benefits(346)(327)(690)(668)
Professional services(97)(88)(184)(164)
Other administrative expense(208)(186)(416)(356)
Total administrative expense(651)(601)(1,290)(1,188)
Credit enhancement expense (369)(233)(704)(464)
Benefit for (decrease in) credit enhancement recoveries(193)221 (450)688 
REO operations expense(7)(14)(15)(99)
Temporary Payroll Tax Cut Continuation Act of 2011 expense(570)(442)(1,104)(874)
Other expense(179)(140)(394)(243)
Non-interest expense(1,969)(1,209)(3,957)(2,180)
Income (loss) before income tax (expense) benefit4,637 2,235 8,118 2,453 
Income tax (expense) benefit(958)(458)(1,672)(503)
Net income (loss)3,679 1,777 6,446 1,950 
Other comprehensive income (loss), net of taxes and reclassification adjustments
Changes in unrealized gains (losses) related to available-for-sale securities(73)154 (468)592 
Changes in unrealized gains (losses) related to cash flow hedge relationships11 18 24 
Changes in defined benefit plans(3)(4)(7)(6)
Total other comprehensive income (loss), net of taxes and reclassification adjustments(68)161 (457)610 
Comprehensive income (loss)$3,611 $1,938 $5,989 $2,560 
Net income (loss)$3,679 $1,777 $6,446 $1,950 
Future increase in senior preferred stock liquidation preference(3,611)(1,938)(5,989)(2,320)
Net income (loss) attributable to common stockholders$68 ($161)$457 ($370)
Net income (loss) per common share — basic and diluted$0.02 ($0.05)$0.14 $0.11 
Weighted average common shares outstanding (in millions) — basic and diluted3,234 3,234 3,234 3,234 
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these condensed consolidated financial statements.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
71

Financial StatementsCondensed Consolidated Balance Sheets
FREDDIE MAC
Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheets (Unaudited)
June 30,December 31,
(In millions, except share-related amounts)
20212020
Assets
Cash and cash equivalents (Notes 3, 16) (includes $3,954 and $17,379 of restricted cash and cash equivalents)
$11,171 $23,889 
Securities purchased under agreements to resell (Notes 3, 11, 16)113,697 105,003 
Investment securities, at fair value (Note 3, 6)59,558 59,825 
Mortgage loans held-for-sale (Notes 3, 4) (includes $6,811 and $14,199 at fair value)
17,508 33,652 
Mortgage loans held-for-investment (Notes 3, 4) (net of allowance for credit losses of $4,648 and $5,732)
2,590,715 2,350,236 
Accrued interest receivable (Notes 3, 4, 6, 11) (net of allowance of $168 and $140)
7,637 7,754 
Derivative assets, net (Notes 10, 11)756 1,205 
Deferred tax assets, net6,494 6,557 
Other assets (Notes 3) (includes $6,080 and $5,775, at fair value)
34,606 39,294 
Total assets$2,842,142 $2,627,415 
Liabilities and equity
Liabilities
Accrued interest payable (Note 3)$6,122 $6,210 
Debt (Notes 3, 9) (includes $2,073 and $2,592 at fair value)
2,802,755 2,592,546 
Derivative liabilities, net (Notes 10, 11)507 954 
Other liabilities (Notes 3) 10,356 11,292 
Total liabilities2,819,740 2,611,002 
Commitments and contingencies (Notes 5, 10, 18)
Equity (Note 12)
Senior preferred stock (liquidation preference of $91,439 and $86,539)
72,648 72,648 
Preferred stock, at redemption value14,109 14,109 
Common stock, $0.00 par value, 4,000,000,000 shares authorized, 725,863,886 shares issued and 650,059,553 shares and 650,059,292 shares outstanding
— — 
Additional paid-in capital— — 
Retained earnings (accumulated deficit)(60,656)(67,102)
AOCI, net of taxes, related to:
Available-for-sale securities342 810 
Cash flow hedge relationships(188)(206)
Defined benefit plans32 39 
Total AOCI, net of taxes186 643 
Treasury stock, at cost, 75,804,333 shares and 75,804,594 shares
(3,885)(3,885)
Total equity
22,402 16,413 
Total liabilities and equity$2,842,142 $2,627,415 
The table below presents the carrying value and classification of the assets and liabilities of consolidated VIEs on our condensed consolidated balance sheets.
June 30,December 31,
(In millions)20212020
Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheet Line Item (Note 3)
Assets:
Mortgage loans held-for-investment$2,543,467 $2,273,347 
All other assets67,620 83,982 
Total assets of consolidated VIEs$2,611,087 $2,357,329 
Liabilities:
Debt$2,575,653 $2,308,176 
All other liabilities5,631 5,610 
Total liabilities of consolidated VIEs$2,581,284 $2,313,786 
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these condensed consolidated financial statements.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
72

Financial StatementsCondensed Consolidated Statements of Equity

FREDDIE MAC
Condensed Consolidated Statements of Equity (Unaudited)
 Shares Outstanding
Senior
Preferred
Stock
Preferred
Stock, at
Redemption
Value
Common
Stock, at
Par Value
Additional
Paid-In
Capital
Retained
Earnings
(Accumulated
Deficit)
AOCI,
Net of
Tax
Treasury
Stock, at
Cost
Total
Equity
(In millions)
Senior
Preferred
Stock
Preferred
Stock
Common
Stock
Balance at March 31, 2021464 650 $72,648 $14,109 $— $— ($64,335)$254 ($3,885)$18,791 
Comprehensive income (loss):
Net income (loss)— — — — — — — 3,679 — — 3,679 
Other comprehensive income (loss), net of taxes— — — — — — — — (68)— (68)
Comprehensive income (loss)— — — — — — — 3,679 (68)— 3,611 
Ending balance at June 30, 20211 464 650 $72,648 $14,109 $— $— ($60,656)$186 ($3,885)$22,402 
Balance at March 31, 2020464 650 $72,648 $14,109 $— $— ($74,255)$887 ($3,885)$9,504 
Comprehensive income (loss):
Net income (loss)— — — — — — — 1,777 — — 1,777 
Other comprehensive income (loss), net of taxes— — — — — — — — 161 — 161 
Comprehensive income (loss)— — — — — — — 1,777 161 — 1,938 
Ending balance at June 30, 20201 464 650 $72,648 $14,109 $— $— ($72,478)$1,048 ($3,885)$11,442 
 Shares Outstanding
Senior
Preferred
Stock
Preferred
Stock, at
Redemption
Value
Common
Stock, at
Par Value
Additional
Paid-In
Capital
Retained
Earnings
(Accumulated
Deficit)
AOCI,
Net of
Tax
Treasury
Stock, at
Cost
Total
Equity
(In millions)
Senior
Preferred
Stock
Preferred
Stock
Common
Stock
Balance at December 31, 2020464 650 $72,648 $14,109 $— $— ($67,102)$643 ($3,885)$16,413 
Comprehensive income (loss):
Net income (loss)— — — — — — — 6,446 — — 6,446 
Other comprehensive income (loss), net of taxes— — — — — — — — (457)— (457)
Comprehensive income (loss)— — — — — — — 6,446 (457)— 5,989 
Ending balance at June 30, 20211 464 650 $72,648 $14,109 $— $— ($60,656)$186 ($3,885)$22,402 
Balance at December 31, 2019464 650 $72,648 $14,109 $— $— ($74,188)$438 ($3,885)$9,122 
Comprehensive income (loss):
Net income (loss)— — — — — — — 1,950 — — 1,950 
Other comprehensive income (loss), net of taxes— — — — — — — — 610 — 610 
Comprehensive income (loss)— — — — — — — 1,950 610 — 2,560 
Cumulative effect from adoption of CECL— — — — — — — (240)— — (240)
Ending balance at June 30, 20201 464 650 $72,648 $14,109 $— $— ($72,478)$1,048 ($3,885)$11,442 
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these condensed consolidated financial statements.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
73

Financial StatementsCondensed Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows


FREDDIE MAC
Condensed Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows (Unaudited)
(In millions) YTD 2021YTD 2020
Net cash provided by (used in) operating activities$16,070 $428 
Cash flows from investing activities
Purchases of trading securities(62,814)(78,316)
Proceeds from sales of trading securities67,944 58,808 
Proceeds from maturities and repayments of trading securities3,126 11,172 
Purchases of available-for-sale securities(7,288)(5,668)
Proceeds from sales of available-for-sale securities20,941 24,810 
Proceeds from maturities and repayments of available-for-sale securities753 1,737 
Purchases of mortgage loans acquired as held-for-investment(367,336)(221,933)
Proceeds from sales of mortgage loans acquired as held-for-investment5,199 2,706 
Proceeds from repayments of mortgage loans acquired as held-for-investment414,680 294,343 
Advances under secured lending arrangements(112,980)(47,276)
Repayments of secured lending arrangements92 964 
Net proceeds from dispositions of real estate owned and other recoveries144 446 
Net (increase) decrease in securities purchased under agreements to resell(13,314)(43,234)
Derivative premiums and terminations, swap collateral, and exchange settlement payments, net1,113 (9,273)
Other, net(303)(292)
Net cash provided by (used in) investing activities(50,043)(11,006)
Cash flows from financing activities
Proceeds from issuance of debt securities of consolidated trusts held by third parties501,890 267,231 
Repayments and redemptions of debt securities of consolidated trusts held by third parties(429,404)(268,704)
Proceeds from issuance of debt of Freddie Mac23,153 295,145 
Repayments of debt of Freddie Mac(79,001)(279,459)
Net increase (decrease) in securities sold under agreements to repurchase4,620 (1,179)
Other, net(3)(40)
Net cash provided by (used in) financing activities21,255 12,994 
Net increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents (includes restricted cash and cash equivalents)(12,718)2,416 
Cash and cash equivalents (includes restricted cash and cash equivalents) at beginning of year 23,889 5,189 
Cash and cash equivalents (includes restricted cash and cash equivalents) at end of period$11,171 $7,605 
Supplemental cash flow information
Cash paid for:
Debt interest$34,301 $35,486 
Income taxes2,590 340 
Non-cash investing and financing activities (Note 4 and 6)
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these condensed consolidated financial statements.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
74

Financial Statements
Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 1

Notes to Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements
NOTE 1
Summary of Significant Accounting Policies
Freddie Mac is a GSE chartered by Congress in 1970. Our public mission is to provide liquidity, stability, and affordability to the U.S. housing market. We are regulated by FHFA, the SEC, HUD, and Treasury, and are currently operating under the conservatorship of FHFA. For more information on the roles of FHFA and Treasury, see Note 2 in this Form 10-Q and in our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2020, or 2020 Annual Report. Throughout our unaudited condensed consolidated financial statements and related notes, we use certain acronyms and terms which are defined in the Glossary of our 2020 Annual Report.
The accompanying unaudited condensed consolidated financial statements should be read in conjunction with the audited consolidated financial statements and related notes in our 2020 Annual Report.
Basis of Presentation
The accompanying unaudited condensed consolidated financial statements have been prepared in accordance with GAAP and include our accounts as well as the accounts of other entities in which we have a controlling financial interest. All intercompany balances and transactions have been eliminated.
We are operating under the basis that we will realize assets and satisfy liabilities in the normal course of business as a going concern and in accordance with the authority provided by FHFA to our Board of Directors to oversee management's conduct of our business operations. In the opinion of management, our unaudited condensed consolidated financial statements contain all adjustments, which include only normal recurring adjustments, necessary for a fair statement of our results.
During 1Q 2021, our chief operating decision maker began making decisions about allocating resources and assessing segment performance based on two reportable segments, Single-family and Multifamily. See Note 15 for additional information on the change in our segment reporting presentation.
Use of Estimates
The preparation of financial statements requires us to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements and the reported amounts of revenues, expenses, gains, and losses during the reporting period. Management has made significant estimates in preparing the financial statements for establishing the allowance for credit losses and valuing financial instruments and other assets and liabilities. Actual results could be different from these estimates.











Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
75

Financial Statements
Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 1

Other Significant Accounting Policies
Recently Adopted Accounting Guidance
StandardDescriptionDate of
 Adoption
Effect on Consolidated Financial Statements
ASU 2020-06, Debt-Debt with Conversion and Other Options (Subtopic 470-20) and Derivatives and Hedging-Contracts in Entity’s Own Equity (Subtopic 815-40): Accounting for Convertible Instruments and Contracts in an Entity’s Own Equity

The amendments in this Update simplify an issuer's
accounting for certain financial instruments with
characteristics of liabilities and equity, primarily by
eliminating many of the current separation models
used to account for convertible debt and convertible
preferred stock.
January 1, 2021The adoption of the amendments did not have a material effect on our consolidated financial statements.
ASU 2020-08, Codification Improvements to Subtopic 310-20, Receivables-Nonrefundable Fees and Other Costs
The amendments in this Update clarify the guidance
for the reevaluation of whether a callable debt
security’s amortized cost basis exceeds the amount
repayable by the issuer at the next call date.
January 1, 2021The adoption of the amendments did not have a material effect on our consolidated financial statements.

Recently Issued Accounting Guidance, Not Yet Adopted Within Our Consolidated Financial Statements
StandardDescriptionDate of
Planned Adoption
Effect on Consolidated Financial Statements
ASU 2021-04, Earnings Per Share (Topic 260), Debt-Modifications and Extinguishments (Subtopic 470-50), Compensation-Stock Compensation (Topic 718), and Derivatives and Hedging-Contracts in Entity’s Own Equity (Subtopic 815-40): Issuer’s Accounting for Certain Modifications or Exchanges of Freestanding Equity-Classified Written Call Options
The amendments in this Update require issuers to account for modifications or exchanges of freestanding equity-classified written call options based on the reason for the modification or exchange, to issue equity, to issue or modify debt, or for other reasons.January 1, 2022We do not expect the adoption of the amendments to have a material effect on our consolidated financial statements.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
76

Financial Statements
Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 2

NOTE 2
Conservatorship and Related Matters
Business Objectives
We operate under the conservatorship that commenced on September 6, 2008, conducting our business under the direction of FHFA, as our Conservator. The conservatorship and related matters significantly affect our management, business activities, financial condition, and results of operations. Upon its appointment, FHFA, as Conservator, immediately succeeded to all rights, titles, powers, and privileges of Freddie Mac, and of any stockholder, officer, or director thereof, with respect to the company and its assets. The Conservator also succeeded to the title to all books, records, and assets of Freddie Mac held by any other legal custodian or third party. The Conservator provided for the Board of Directors to perform certain functions and to oversee management, and the Board of Directors delegated to management authority to conduct business operations so that the company can continue to operate in the ordinary course. The directors serve on behalf of, and perform such functions as provided by, the Conservator.
We are subject to certain constraints on our business activities under the Purchase Agreement. However, the support provided by Treasury pursuant to the Purchase Agreement currently enables us to maintain our access to the debt markets and to have adequate liquidity to conduct our normal business activities, although the costs of our debt funding could vary. Our ability to access funds from Treasury under the Purchase Agreement is critical to keeping us solvent.
Purchase Agreement
Treasury, as the holder of the senior preferred stock, is entitled to receive quarterly cash dividends, when, as, and if declared by our Board of Directors. The dividends we have paid to Treasury on the senior preferred stock have been declared by, and paid at the direction of, the Conservator, acting as successor to the rights, titles, powers, and privileges of the Board of Directors.
Under the August 2012 amendment to the Purchase Agreement, for each quarter from January 1, 2013 and thereafter, the dividend payment will be the amount, if any, by which our Net Worth Amount at the end of the immediately preceding fiscal quarter, less the applicable Capital Reserve Amount, exceeds zero. Pursuant to the January 2021 Letter Agreement, the applicable Capital Reserve Amount from October 1, 2020 is the amount of adjusted total capital necessary to meet capital requirements and buffers set forth in the ERCF. This increased Capital Reserve Amount will remain in effect until the last day of the second fiscal quarter during which we have reached and maintained such level of capital (the Capital Reserve End Date). As a result, the company was not required to pay a dividend to Treasury on the senior preferred stock in June 2021, and we will not be required to pay a dividend on the senior preferred stock to Treasury until we have built sufficient capital to meet the capital requirements and buffers set forth in the ERCF. If for any reason we were not to pay our dividend requirements on the senior preferred stock in full in any future period until the Capital Reserve End Date, the unpaid amount would be added to the liquidation preference and the applicable Capital Reserve Amount would thereafter be zero.
As the company builds capital during this period, the quarterly increases in our Net Worth Amount have been, and will continue to be, added to the liquidation preference of the senior preferred stock. As a result, the liquidation preference of the senior preferred stock increased from $89.1 billion as of March 31, 2021 to $91.4 billion on June 30, 2021 based on the $2.4 billion increase in our Net Worth Amount during 1Q 2021, and will increase to $95.0 billion on September 30, 2021 based on the $3.6 billion increase in our Net Worth Amount during 2Q 2021.
The Purchase Agreement, as amended by the January 2021 Letter Agreement, includes significant restrictions on our ability to manage our business, including limits on our secondary market activities; the amount and type of single-family and multifamily loans we can acquire; the amount of indebtedness we can incur; the size of our mortgage-related investments portfolio; and our ability to pay dividends, transfer certain assets, raise capital, pay down the liquidation preference of the senior preferred stock, and exit conservatorship. We have accounted for the January 2021 Letter Agreement as a modification of the senior preferred stock recognized on our condensed consolidated balance sheet.
The Purchase Agreement has an indefinite term and can terminate only in limited circumstances, which do not include the end of the conservatorship. The Purchase Agreement therefore could continue after the conservatorship ends. However, Treasury's consent is required for a termination of conservatorship other than in connection with receivership or under the limited circumstances specified in the Purchase Agreement as amended by the January 2021 Letter Agreement involving maintenance of certain capital and resolution of currently pending material litigation related to our conservatorship and the Purchase Agreement. Treasury has the right to exercise the warrant, in whole or in part, at any time on or before September 7, 2028.

Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
77

Financial Statements
Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 2

Impact of Conservatorship and Related Developments on the Mortgage-Related Investments Portfolio
In February 2019, FHFA directed us to maintain our mortgage-related investments portfolio at or below $225 billion at all times. The amount of mortgage assets that we may own in this portfolio is also currently capped under the Purchase Agreement at $250 billion. The Purchase Agreement cap will be lowered from $250 billion to $225 billion at the end of 2022. In addition to UPB, the calculation of mortgage assets subject to the FHFA and Purchase Agreement caps includes 10% of the notional value of interest-only securities. The balance of the mortgage-related investments portfolio for the purposes of the FHFA and Purchase Agreement limits was $124.1 billion as of June 30, 2021, including $10.8 billion representing 10% of the notional amount of the interest-only securities we held as of June 30, 2021. Our ability to acquire and sell mortgage assets continues to be significantly constrained by limitations imposed by the Purchase Agreement and FHFA.
With respect to the composition of our mortgage-related investments portfolio, in August 2020, FHFA instructed us to: (1) reduce the amount of agency MBS to no more than $50 billion by June 30, 2021 and no more than $20 billion by June 30, 2022, with all dollar caps to be based on UPB; and (2) reduce the UPB of our existing portfolio of CMOs, which are also sometimes referred to as REMICs, to zero as of June 30, 2021. We will have a holding period limit to sell any new CMO tranches created but not sold at issuance. CMOs do not include tranches initially retained from reperforming loans senior subordinate securitization structures.
Government Support for Our Business
We receive substantial support from Treasury and are dependent upon its continued support to continue operating our business. Our ability to access funds from Treasury under the Purchase Agreement is critical to:
n    Keeping us solvent;
n    Allowing us to focus on our primary business objectives under conservatorship; and
n    Avoiding the appointment of a receiver by FHFA under statutory mandatory receivership provisions.
At March 31, 2021, our assets exceeded our liabilities under GAAP; therefore, FHFA did not request a draw on our behalf and, as a result, we did not receive any funding from Treasury under the Purchase Agreement during 2Q 2021. The amount of available funding remaining under the Purchase Agreement is $140.2 billion and will be reduced by any future draws.
See Note 9 and Note 12 for more information on the conservatorship and the Purchase Agreement.
Related Parties As a Result of Conservatorship
We are deemed related parties with Fannie Mae as both we and Fannie Mae have the same relationships with FHFA and Treasury. CSS was formed in 2013 as a limited liability company equally owned by Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae and is also deemed a related party.
During YTD 2021, we contributed $45 million of capital to CSS, and we have contributed $702 million since we began making contributions in the fourth quarter of 2014. The carrying value of our investment in CSS was $17 million and $16 million as of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively, and was included in other assets on our condensed consolidated balance sheets.

Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
78

Financial Statements
Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 3

NOTE 3
Securitization Activities and Consolidation
Our primary business activities in our Single-family and Multifamily segments involve the securitization of loans or other mortgage-related assets using trusts that are VIEs. These trusts issue beneficial interests in the loans or other mortgage-related assets that they own. We guarantee the principal and interest payments on some or all of the issued beneficial interests in substantially all of our securitization transactions. We consolidate VIEs when we have a controlling financial interest in the VIE and are therefore considered the primary beneficiary of the VIE. See Note 5 for additional information on our guarantee activities.
We do not believe the maximum exposure to loss from our involvement with VIEs for which we are not the primary beneficiary discussed below is representative of the actual loss we are likely to incur, based on our historical loss experience and after consideration of proceeds from related collateral liquidation, including possible recoveries under credit enhancements. See Note 8 for additional information on credit enhancements. Certain of our interest-rate risk-related guarantees to VIEs for which we are not the primary beneficiary may create exposure to loss that is unlimited. We account for these interest-rate risk-related guarantees at fair value as discussed further in Note 5 and generally reduce our exposure to these guarantees with unlimited interest rate exposure through separate derivative contracts with third parties. See Note 10 for additional information on derivatives.
Securitization Activities
Single-family
Resecuritization Products
With the exception of commingled securities, our investments in and guarantees of securities issued by resecuritization trusts for which we are not the primary beneficiary typically do not create any incremental exposure to loss because we already guarantee and consolidate the underlying collateral. The fair value of these investments in our resecuritization trusts for which we are not the primary beneficiary was $23.6 billion and $28.5 billion as of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively. While our guarantee of Fannie Mae securities underlying commingled resecuritization products creates incremental exposure to loss, we view the likelihood of being required to perform on our guarantee as remote due to Fannie Mae’s status as a GSE and the funding commitment available to it through its senior preferred stock purchase agreement with Treasury. The UPB of Fannie Mae securities underlying commingled Freddie Mac resecuritization trusts for which we are not the primary beneficiary totaled $94.9 billion and $85.3 billion as of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively. See Note 5 for additional information on our guarantee of Fannie Mae securities.
Senior Subordinate Securitization Structures
We do not consolidate our single-family senior subordinate securitization structures backed by seasoned loans because we do not have the ability to direct the loss mitigation activities of the underlying loans, which is the most significant activity affecting the economic performance of the VIE. The maximum exposure to loss for our single-family senior subordinate securitization structures for which we are not the primary beneficiary totaled $28.3 billion and $28.1 billion at June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively, and represents the UPB of the beneficial interests that we have guaranteed. The total assets of these nonconsolidated VIEs totaled $34.1 billion and $33.7 billion at June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively.
Other Securitization Products
We do not consolidate the trusts used to issue our single-family other securitization products when we are not the primary beneficiary. The maximum exposure to loss for these single-family securitizations for which we are not the primary beneficiary totaled $1.4 billion and $1.7 billion at June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively. The total assets of these nonconsolidated VIEs totaled $1.5 billion and $1.8 billion at June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively.
Multifamily
K Certificates
We do not consolidate our K Certificate securitization trusts that have subordination because we do not have the ability to direct the loss mitigation activities of the underlying loans, which is the most significant activity affecting the economic performance of the VIE. The maximum exposure to loss for our K Certificate securitizations for which we are not the primary beneficiary totaled $274.8 billion and $253.0 billion at June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively, and primarily represents the UPB of the beneficial interests that we have guaranteed. The total assets of these nonconsolidated VIEs totaled $314.3 billion and $291.3 billion at June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively.
SB Certificates
Similar to K Certificate transactions, we are not the primary beneficiary of and, therefore, do not consolidate SB Certificate
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
79

Financial Statements
Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 3

trusts, as we do not have the ability to direct loss mitigation activities of the underlying loans, which is the most significant activity affecting the economic performance of the VIE. The maximum exposure to loss for our SB Certificate securitizations for which we are not the primary beneficiary totaled $22.1 billion and $21.5 billion at June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively, and primarily represents the UPB of the beneficial interests that we have guaranteed. The total assets of these nonconsolidated VIEs totaled $24.6 billion and $23.9 billion at June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively.
Other Securitization Products
We do not consolidate the trusts used to issue our other securitization products when we are not the primary beneficiary. The maximum exposure to loss for our other securitization products for which we are not the primary beneficiary totaled $14.8 billion and $14.9 billion at June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively, and primarily represents the UPB of the beneficial interests that we have guaranteed. The total assets of these nonconsolidated VIEs totaled $16.9 billion at both June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020.
CRT Activities
STACR Trust Notes
We are not the primary beneficiary of and, therefore, do not consolidate the STACR Trusts used in the STACR Trust Note transactions. The maximum exposure to loss for our STACR Trust transactions for which we are not the primary beneficiary represents our recorded expected recovery receivable and totaled $174 million and $420 million at June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively. The total assets of these nonconsolidated VIEs totaled $19.9 billion and $17.3 billion at June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively. See Note 8 for additional information on the amount of available coverage.
Consolidated VIEs
The table below presents the carrying value and classification of the assets and liabilities of consolidated VIEs on our condensed consolidated balance sheets.
Table 3.1 - Consolidated VIEs
(In millions)June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheet Line Item
Assets:
Cash and cash equivalents (includes $3,859 and $17,289 of restricted cash and cash equivalents)
$3,860 $17,290 
Securities purchased under agreements to resell36,266 38,487 
Investment securities, at fair value4,159 591 
Mortgage loans held-for-investment, net2,543,467 2,273,347 
Accrued interest receivable, net7,141 7,134 
Other assets16,194 20,480 
Total assets of consolidated VIEs$2,611,087 $2,357,329 
Liabilities:
Accrued interest payable$5,631 $5,610 
Debt2,575,653 2,308,176 
Total liabilities of consolidated VIEs$2,581,284 $2,313,786 
Nonconsolidated VIEs
The following table presents the carrying amounts and classification of the assets and liabilities recorded on our condensed consolidated balance sheets related to VIEs for which we are not the primary beneficiary and with which we were involved in the design and creation and have a significant continuing involvement. Our involvement with such VIEs primarily consists of investments in debt securities issued by resecuritization trusts and guarantees of senior securities issued by certain Multifamily securitization trusts.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
80

Financial Statements
Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 3

Table 3.2 - Nonconsolidated VIEs
(In millions)
June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
Assets and Liabilities Recorded on our Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheets(1)
Assets:
Investment securities, at fair value$23,598 $28,459 
Accrued interest receivable, net236 239 
Derivative assets, net24 61 
Other assets
5,615 5,553 
 Liabilities:
Debt67 — 
Derivative liabilities, net
46 47 
Other liabilities
4,857 4,515 
(1)Includes our variable interests in REMICs and Strips, commingled Supers, K Certificates, SB Certificates, certain senior subordinate securitization structures, and other securitization products that we do not consolidate.
We also obtain interests in various other entities created by third parties through the normal course of business that may be VIEs, such as through our investments in certain non-Freddie Mac mortgage-related securities, purchases of multifamily loans, guarantees of multifamily housing revenue bonds, as a derivative counterparty or through other activities. To the extent that we were not involved in the design or creation of these VIEs, they are excluded from the table above. Our interests in these VIEs are generally passive in nature and are not expected to result in us obtaining a controlling financial interest in these VIEs in the future. As a result, we do not consolidate these VIEs and we account for our interests in these VIEs in the same manner that we account for our interests in other third-party transactions. See Note 6 for additional information regarding our investments in non-Freddie Mac mortgage-related securities. See Note 4 for more information regarding multifamily loans.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
81

Financial Statements
Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 4


NOTE 4
Mortgage Loans
The table below provides details of the loans on our condensed consolidated balance sheets.
Table 4.1 - Mortgage Loans
June 30, 2021 December 31, 2020
(In millions)Single-familyMultifamily TotalSingle-familyMultifamily Total
Held-for-sale UPB$7,920 $10,475 $18,395 $10,702 $23,789 $34,491 
Cost basis and fair value adjustments, net(1,272)385 (887)(1,637)798 (839)
Total held-for-sale loans, net6,648 10,860 17,508 9,065 24,587 33,652 
Held-for-investment UPB2,510,339 22,209 2,532,548 2,271,576 21,923 2,293,499 
Cost basis adjustments62,756 59 62,815 62,415 54 62,469 
Allowance for credit losses(4,601)(47)(4,648)(5,628)(104)(5,732)
Total held-for-investment loans, net
2,568,494 22,221 2,590,715 2,328,363 21,873 2,350,236 
Total mortgage loans, net$2,575,142 $33,081 $2,608,223 $2,337,428 $46,460 $2,383,888 
The table below provides details of the UPB of loans we purchased and sold during the periods presented.
Table 4.2 - Loans Purchased and Sold
(In billions)2Q 20212Q 2020YTD 2021YTD 2020
Single-family:
Purchases:
  Held-for-investment loans
$287.1 $230.7 $647.7 $368.4 
Sale of held-for-sale loans(1)
3.0 — 3.0 2.2 
Multifamily:
Purchases:
  Held-for-investment loans
1.3 3.1 2.9 4.3 
  Held-for-sale loans
11.5 16.4 23.8 24.6 
Sale of held-for-sale loans(2)
17.7 11.0 38.8 21.7 
(1)Our sales of single-family loans reflect the sale of seasoned single-family mortgage loans.
(2)Our sales of multifamily loans occur primarily through the issuance of multifamily K Certificates and SB Certificates. See Note 3 for more information on our K Certificates and SB Certificates.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
82

Financial Statements
Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 4


Reclassifications
We reclassify loans between held-for-investment and held-for-sale depending on our intent and ability to hold the loan for the foreseeable future. The table below presents the allowance for credit losses or valuation allowance that was reversed or established due to loan reclassifications between held-for-investment and held-for-sale during the period presented.
Table 4.3 - Loan Reclassifications
2Q 20212Q 2020
(In millions)UPBAllowance for Credit Losses Reversed or (Established)Valuation Allowance (Established) or ReversedUPBAllowance for Credit Losses Reversed or (Established)Valuation Allowance (Established) or Reversed
Single-family reclassifications from:
Held-for-investment to held-for-sale(1)
$469 $28 $— $759 $34 $— 
Held-for-sale to held-for-investment(2)
67 — 244 20 
Multifamily reclassifications from:
Held-for-investment to held-for-sale1,202 — 615 — — 
   Held-for-sale to held-for-investment12 — — 89 — — 
YTD 2021YTD 2020
(In millions)UPBAllowance for Credit Losses Reversed or (Established)Valuation Allowance (Established) or ReversedUPBAllowance for Credit Losses Reversed or (Established)Valuation Allowance (Established) or Reversed
Single-family reclassifications from:
Held-for-investment to held-for-sale(1)
$970 $35 $— $3,396 $248 $— 
Held-for-sale to held-for-investment(2)
102 — 245 20 
Multifamily reclassifications from:
Held-for-investment to held-for-sale1,730 — 647 — — 
   Held-for-sale to held-for-investment21 — — 571 (1)— 
(1)Prior to reclassification from held-for-investment to held-for-sale, we charged-off $15 million and $42 million against the allowance for credit losses during 2Q 2021 and YTD 2021, respectively, compared to $94 million and $173 million during 2Q 2020 and YTD 2020, respectively.
(2)Allowance for credit losses reversed upon reclassifications from held-for-sale to held-for-investment for loans that were previously charged off and the present values of expected future cash flows were in excess of the amortized cost basis upon reclassification.
Interest Income
The table below provides the amortized cost basis of non-accrual loans as of the beginning and the end of the periods presented, including the interest income recognized for the period that is related to the loans on non-accrual status as of the period end.
Table 4.4 - Amortized Cost Basis of Held-for-Investment Loans on Non-Accrual
Non-Accrual Amortized Cost Basis
Interest Income Recognized(1)
(In millions)March 31, 2021June 30, 20212Q 2021YTD 2021
Single-family:
20- and 30-year or more, amortizing fixed-rate$21,137 $19,431 $35 $70 
15-year amortizing fixed-rate1,031 914 
Adjustable-rate296 268 — 
Alt-A, interest-only, and option ARM700 611 
Total single-family
23,164 21,224 37 76 
Total multifamily
    
Total single-family and multifamily$23,164 $21,224 $37 $76 
Referenced footnotes are included after the prior period table.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
83

Financial Statements
Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 4


Non-Accrual Amortized Cost Basis
Interest Income Recognized(1)
(In millions)March 31, 2020June 30, 20202Q 2020YTD 2020
Single-family:
20- and 30-year or more, amortizing fixed-rate$5,494 $10,226 ($35)$30 
15-year amortizing fixed-rate241 528 (2)
Adjustable-rate83 150 — — 
Alt-A, interest-only, and option ARM389 540 (1)
Total single-family
6,207 11,444 (38)33 
Total multifamily
13    
Total single-family and multifamily$6,220 $11,444 ($38)$33 
(1)Represents the amount of payments received during the period, including those received while the loans were on accrual status, for the held-for-investment loans on non-accrual status as of period end.
The table below provides the amount of accrued interest receivable, net, presented on our condensed consolidated balance sheets and the amount of accrued interest receivable related to loans on non-accrual status at the end of the periods that is charged off.
Table 4.5 - Accrued Interest Receivable, Net and Related Charge-Offs
Accrued Interest Receivable, Net Accrued Interest Receivable Related Charge-Offs
(In millions)June 30, 2021December 31, 20202Q 20212Q 2020YTD 2021YTD 2020
Single-family loans$7,222 $7,292 ($119)($92)($285)($121)
Multifamily loans104 139 — — — — 
Credit Quality
Single-Family
The current LTV ratio is one key factor we consider when estimating our allowance for credit losses for single-family loans. As current LTV ratios increase, the borrower's equity in the home decreases, which may negatively affect the borrower's ability to refinance (outside of the Enhanced Relief Refinance program) or to sell the property for an amount at or above the balance of the outstanding loan.
A second-lien loan also reduces the borrower's equity in the home and has a similar negative effect on the borrower's ability to refinance or sell the property for an amount at or above the combined balances of the first and second loans. However, borrowers are free to obtain second-lien financing after origination, and we are not entitled to receive notification when a borrower does so. For further information about concentrations of risk associated with our single-family and multifamily loans, see Note 16.
The table below presents the amortized cost basis of single-family held-for-investment loans by current LTV ratio. Our current LTV ratios are estimates based on available data through the end of each period presented. For reporting purposes:
n    Loans within the Alt-A category continue to be presented in that category following modification, even though the borrower may have provided full documentation of assets and income to complete the modification and
n    Loans within the option ARM category continue to be presented in that category following modification, even though the modified loan no longer provides for optional payment provisions.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
84

Financial Statements
Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 4


Table 4.6 - Amortized Cost Basis of Single-Family Held-for-Investment Loans by Current LTV Ratio and Vintage
June 30, 2021
Year of Origination Total
(In millions)20212020201920182017Prior
Current LTV Ratio:
  20- and 30-year or more, amortizing fixed-rate
≤ 60$115,459 $306,280 $65,299 $38,381 $65,585 $467,656 $1,058,660 
> 60 to 80235,850 446,701 107,331 36,116 27,259 36,693 889,950 
> 80 to 90
63,487 98,729 7,580 1,426 489 1,565 173,276 
> 90 to 100 39,697 3,968 167 53 41 561 44,487 
> 100(1)
67 14 33 554 677 
  Total 20- and 30-year or more, amortizing fixed-rate
454,560 855,685 180,379 75,990 93,407 507,029 2,167,050 
  15-year amortizing fixed-rate
≤ 6043,775 102,912 18,842 8,654 16,342 94,098 284,623 
> 60 to 8033,861 46,353 4,268 539 204 100 85,325 
> 80 to 90
3,311 1,540 33 4,901 
> 90 to 100595 41 — 642 
> 100(1)
— — 18 
  Total 15-year amortizing fixed-rate
81,551 150,846 23,143 9,199 16,554 94,216 375,509 
  Adjustable-rate
≤ 60545 1,539 803 636 2,056 12,158 17,737 
> 60 to 80746 947 472 214 404 313 3,096 
> 80 to 90
130 55 15 216 
> 90 to 10055 — — — 57 
> 100(1)
— — — — — 
  Total adjustable-rate 1,476 2,541 1,291 855 2,467 12,477 21,107 
  Alt-A, Interest-only, and option ARM
≤ 60— — — — — 8,149 8,149 
> 60 to 80— — — — — 1,083 1,083 
> 80 to 90
— — — — — 120 120 
> 90 to 100— — — — — 45 45 
> 100(1)
— — — — — 32 32 
  Total Alt-A, interest-only, and option ARM     9,429 9,429 
Total single-family loans $537,587 $1,009,072 $204,813 $86,044 $112,428 $623,151 $2,573,095 
Total for all loan product types by current LTV ratio:
≤ 60
$159,779 $410,731 $84,944 $47,671 $83,983 $582,061 $1,369,169 
> 60 to 80270,457 494,001 112,071 36,869 27,867 38,189 979,454 
> 80 to 90
66,928 100,324 7,628 1,435 500 1,698 178,513 
> 90 to 10040,347 4,009 168 54 43 610 45,231 
> 100(1)
76 15 35 593 728 
Total single-family loans $537,587 $1,009,072 $204,813 $86,044 $112,428 $623,151 $2,573,095 
Referenced footnotes are included after the prior period table.

Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
85

Financial Statements
Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 4


December 31, 2020
Year of Origination Total
(In millions)20202019201820172016Prior
Current LTV Ratio:
  20- and 30-year or more, amortizing fixed-rate
≤ 60$203,333 $52,820 $33,139 $64,834 $115,978 $431,406 $901,510 
> 60 to 80437,107 141,094 64,236 59,110 40,614 44,636 786,797 
> 80 to 100
206,457 53,926 8,822 2,117 654 3,983 275,959 
> 100(1)
202 25 64 61 948 1,307 
  Total 20- and 30-year or more, amortizing fixed-rate
847,099 247,847 106,222 126,125 157,307 480,973 1,965,573 
  15-year amortizing fixed-rate
≤ 6078,269 17,753 9,914 19,650 29,916 83,842 239,344 
> 60 to 8067,904 12,169 2,195 961 215 135 83,579 
> 80 to 100
8,553 400 17 12 17 9,008 
> 100(1)
21 — 39 
  Total 15-year amortizing fixed-rate
154,747 30,322 12,129 20,628 30,143 84,001 331,970 
  Adjustable-rate
≤ 601,427 850 731 2,429 2,042 12,993 20,472 
> 60 to 801,403 877 537 1,061 329 528 4,735 
> 80 to 100
232 125 34 29 430 
> 100(1)
— — — — — 
  Total adjustable-rate 3,062 1,852 1,302 3,519 2,373 13,530 25,638 
  Alt-A, Interest-only, and option ARM
≤ 60— — — — — 8,620 8,620 
> 60 to 80— — — — — 1,818 1,818 
> 80 to 100
— — — — — 314 314 
> 100(1)
— — — — — 58 58 
  Total Alt-A, interest-only, and option ARM     10,810 10,810 
Total single-family loans $1,004,908 $280,021 $119,653 $150,272 $189,823 $589,314 $2,333,991 
Total for all loan product types by Current LTV ratio:
≤ 60$283,029 $71,423 $43,784 $86,913 $147,936 $536,861 $1,169,946 
> 60 to 80506,414 154,140 66,968 61,132 41,158 47,117 876,929 
> 80 to 100
215,242 54,451 8,873 2,158 665 4,322 285,711 
> 100(1)
223 28 69 64 1,014 1,405 
Total single-family loans $1,004,908 $280,021 $119,653 $150,272 $189,823 $589,314 $2,333,991 
(1)The serious delinquency rate for the single-family held-for-investment mortgage loans with current LTV ratios in excess of 100% was 10.22% and 11.17% as of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
86

Financial Statements
Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 4


Multifamily
The table below presents the amortized cost basis of our multifamily held-for-investment loans, by credit quality indicator, based on available data through the end of each period presented. These indicators involve significant management judgment and are defined as follows:
n    "Pass" is current and adequately protected by the current financial strength and debt service capacity of the borrower;
n    "Special mention" has administrative issues that may affect future repayment prospects but does not have current credit     weaknesses. In addition, this category generally includes loans in forbearance;
n    "Substandard" has a weakness that jeopardizes the timely full repayment; and
n    "Doubtful" has a weakness that makes collection or liquidation in full highly questionable and improbable based on existing conditions.
Table 4.7 - Amortized Cost Basis of Multifamily Held-for-Investment Loans by Credit Quality Indicator by Vintage
June 30, 2021
Year of OriginationTotal
(In millions) 20212020201920182017PriorRevolving Loans
Category:
Pass
$1,293 $7,698 $5,560 $1,135 $654 $3,039 $2,168 $21,547 
Special mention
— — 476 — — 106 — 582 
Substandard
— — 23 13 102 — 139 
Doubtful
— — — — — — — — 
Total $1,293 $7,698 $6,059 $1,136 $667 $3,247 $2,168 $22,268 
December 31, 2020


Year of OriginationTotal
(In millions) 20202019201820172016PriorRevolving Loans
Category:
Pass
$7,486 $6,491 $1,075 $722 $590 $2,715 $2,024 $21,103 
Special mention
— 524 115 — 108 — 755 
Substandard
— — 41 — 72 — 119 
Doubtful
— — — — — — — — 
Total $7,486 $7,015 $1,196 $763 $598 $2,895 $2,024 $21,977 
Past Due Status
The table below presents the amortized cost basis of our single-family and multifamily loans, held-for-investment, by payment status.
Table 4.8 - Amortized Cost Basis of Held-for-Investment Loans by Payment Status
June 30, 2021
(In millions)Current
One
Month
Past Due
Two
Months
Past Due
Three Months or
More Past Due,
or in Foreclosure(1)
TotalThree Months or More Past Due, and Accruing
Non-accrual With No Allowance(2)
Single-family:
20- and 30-year or more, amortizing fixed-rate$2,114,708 $11,746 $3,429 $37,167 $2,167,050 $18,089 $845 
15-year amortizing fixed-rate371,888 1,103 235 2,283 375,509 1,363 10 
Adjustable-rate20,323 143 42 599 21,107 334 
Alt-A, interest-only, and option ARM8,266 222 78 863 9,429 254 128 
Total single-family
2,515,185 13,214 3,784 40,912 2,573,095 20,040 990 
Total multifamily(3)
22,268    22,268   
Total single-family and multifamily$2,537,453 $13,214 $3,784 $40,912 $2,595,363 $20,040 $990 
Referenced footnotes are included after the prior period table.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
87

Financial Statements
Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 4


December 31, 2020
(In millions)CurrentOne
Month
Past Due
Two
Months
Past Due
Three Months or
More Past Due,
or in Foreclosure
(1)
TotalThree Months or More Past Due, and Accruing
Non-accrual with No Allowance(2)
Single-family:
20- and 30-year or more, amortizing fixed-rate$1,891,981 $15,798 $5,941 $51,853 $1,965,573 $40,162 $648 
15-year amortizing fixed-rate326,651 1,439 429 3,451 331,970 2,723 11 
Adjustable-rate24,483 192 79 884 25,638 690 
Alt-A, interest-only, and option ARM9,227 292 130 1,161 10,810 538 115 
Total single-family
2,252,342 17,721 6,579 57,349 2,333,991 44,113 779 
Total multifamily(3)
21,977    21,977   
Total single-family and multifamily$2,274,319 $17,721 $6,579 $57,349 $2,355,968 $44,113 $779 
(1)Includes $0.8 billion and $1.0 billion of single-family loans that were in the process of foreclosure as of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively.
(2)Loans with no allowance for loan losses primarily represent those loans that were previously charged-off and therefore the collateral value is sufficiently in excess of the amortized cost to result in recovery of the entire amortized cost basis if the property were foreclosed upon or otherwise subject to disposition. We exclude the amounts of allowance for credit losses on accrued interest receivable and advances of pre-foreclosure costs when determining whether a loan has an allowance for credit losses.
(3)As of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, includes $0.6 billion and $0.7 billion of multifamily loans in forbearance that are reported as current.
Troubled Debt Restructurings
The table below provides details of our single-family loan modifications that were classified as TDRs during the periods presented.
Table 4.9 - Single-Family TDR Modification Metrics
2Q 20212Q 2020YTD 2021YTD 2020
Percentage of single-family loan modifications that were classified as TDRs with:
  Interest rate reductions and related term extensions13 %15 %14 %15 %
  Principal forbearance and related interest rate reductions and term extensions37 18 35 19 
Average coupon interest rate reduction0.4 %0.3 %0.4 %0.3 %
Average months of term extension145187149187
Substantially all of our completed single-family loan modifications classified as a TDR during 2Q 2021, 2Q 2020, YTD 2021, and YTD 2020 resulted in a modified loan with a fixed interest rate.
The table below presents the volume of single-family and multifamily loans that were newly classified as TDRs. Loans classified as a TDR in one period may be subject to further action (such as a modification or remodification) in a subsequent period. In such cases, the subsequent action would not be reflected in the table below since the loan would already have been classified as a TDR.
Table 4.10 - TDR Activity
2Q 20212Q 2020YTD 2021YTD 2020
(Dollars in millions)Number  of LoansPost-TDR
Amortized Cost Basis
Number  of LoansPost-TDR
Amortized Cost Basis
Number  of LoansPost-TDR
Amortized Cost Basis
Number  of LoansPost-TDR
Amortized Cost Basis
Single-family:(1)(2)
20- and 30-year or more, amortizing fixed-rate3,729$656 5,309$943 7,511 $1,327 11,741 $2,070 
15-year amortizing fixed-rate42547 59061 897 94 1,319 133 
Adjustable-rate5210 8815 100 19 185 32 
Alt-A, interest-only, and option ARM15620 13519 307 39 301 43 
Total single-family4,362733 6,1221,038 8,815 1,479 13,546 2,278 
Multifamily       
(1)The pre-TDR amortized cost basis for single-family loans initially classified as TDR during 2Q 2021 and YTD 2021 was $0.8 billion and $1.5 billion, respectively, compared to $1.0 billion and $2.3 billion during 2Q 2020 and YTD 2020, respectively.
(2)Includes certain bankruptcy events and forbearance plans, repayment plans, payment deferrals, and modification activities that do not qualify for the temporary relief related to TDR provided by the CARES Act based on servicer reporting at the time of the TDR event.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
88

Financial Statements
Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 4


The table below presents the volume of our TDR modifications that experienced payment defaults (i.e., loans that became two months delinquent or completed a loss event) during the applicable periods and had completed a modification during the year preceding the payment default.
Table 4.11 - Payment Defaults of Completed TDR Modifications
2Q 20212Q 2020YTD 2021YTD 2020
(Dollars in millions)Number of Loans
Post-TDR
Amortized Cost Basis
Number of Loans
Post-TDR
Amortized Cost Basis
Number of Loans
Post-TDR
Amortized Cost Basis
Number of Loans
Post-TDR
Amortized Cost Basis
Single-family:
20- and 30-year or more, amortizing fixed-rate682 $124 4,116 $791 1,813 $322 6,620 $1,218 
15-year amortizing fixed-rate24 197 26 86 316 40 
Adjustable-rate59 10 21 88 14 
Alt-A, interest-only, and option ARM89 13 349 72 216 34 513 104 
Total single-family801 140 4,721 899 2,136 369 7,537 1,376 
Multifamily        
In addition to modifications, loans may be classified as TDRs as a result of other loss mitigation activities (i.e., repayment plans, forbearance plans, or loans in modification trial periods). During YTD 2021 and YTD 2020, 1,689 and 1,936, respectively, of such loans (with a post-TDR amortized cost basis of $0.3 billion during both periods) experienced a payment default within a year after the loss mitigation activity occurred.
Non-Cash Investing and Financing Activities
During YTD 2021 and YTD 2020, we acquired $295.5 billion and $162.4 billion, respectively, of loans held-for-investment in exchange for the issuance of debt securities of consolidated trusts in guarantor swap transactions. We received approximately $112.1 billion and $45.1 billion of loans held-for-investment from sellers during YTD 2021 and YTD 2020, respectively, to satisfy advances to lenders that were recorded in other assets on our condensed consolidated balance sheets.

Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
89

Financial Statements
Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 5

NOTE 5
Guarantees and Other Off-Balance Sheet Credit Exposures
We generate revenue through our guarantee activities by agreeing to absorb the credit risk associated with certain financial instruments that are owned or held by third parties. In exchange for providing this guarantee, we generally receive an ongoing guarantee fee that is commensurate with the risks assumed and that will, over the long-term, provide us with cash flows that are expected to exceed the credit-related and administrative expenses of the underlying financial instruments. The profitability of our guarantee activities may vary and will be dependent on our guarantee fee and the actual credit performance of the underlying financial instruments that we have guaranteed.
The table below shows our maximum exposure, recognized liability, and maximum remaining term of our guarantees to nonconsolidated VIEs and other third parties. This table does not include certain of our unrecognized guarantees, such as guarantees to consolidated VIEs or to resecuritization trusts that do not expose us to incremental credit risk. The maximum exposure disclosed in the table is not representative of the actual loss we are likely to incur, based on our historical loss experience and after consideration of proceeds from related collateral liquidation, including possible recoveries under credit enhancements. See Note 8 for additional information on our credit enhancements.
Table 5.1 - Financial Guarantees

June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
(Dollars in millions, terms in years)
Maximum
Exposure
(1)
Recognized
Liability
(2)
Maximum
Remaining
Term
Maximum
Exposure
(1)
Recognized
Liability
(2)
Maximum
Remaining
Term
Single-family:
Securitization activity guarantees
$29,696 $410 39$29,739 $401 39
Other mortgage-related guarantees
10,148 241 309,215 193 30
Total single-family$39,844 $651 $38,954 $594 
Multifamily:
Securitization activity guarantees$309,718 $4,382 39$287,334 $4,031 39
Other mortgage-related guarantees9,973 389 3310,721 425 33
Total multifamily$319,691 $4,771 $298,055 $4,456 
Other guarantees
$63,926 $1,387 30$47,703 $794 30
Fannie Mae securities backing Freddie Mac resecuritization products99,039 — 4085,841 — 41
(1)The maximum exposure represents the contractual amounts that could be lost if counterparties or borrowers defaulted, without consideration of proceeds from related collateral liquidation and possible recoveries under credit enhancements. For other guarantees, this amount primarily represents the notional amount or UPB of our interest-rate and market value guarantees and guarantees of third-party derivatives. For certain of our other guarantees, our exposure may be unlimited; however, we generally reduce our exposure through separate contracts with third parties.
(2)For securitization activity guarantees and other mortgage-related guarantees, this amount represents the guarantee obligation on our condensed consolidated balance sheets and excludes our allowance for credit losses on off-balance sheet credit exposures. For other guarantees, this amount represents the fair value of the contract.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
90

Financial Statements
Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 5

The table below shows the payment status of the mortgage loans underlying our guarantees that are not measured at fair value.
Table 5.2 – UPB of Loans Underlying Our Guarantees by Payment Status
June 30, 2021
(In millions)Current
One
Month
Past Due
Two
Months
Past Due
Three Months or
More Past Due,
or in Foreclosure
Total(1)
Single-family$40,023 $1,784 $594 $3,058 $45,459 
Multifamily(2)
362,877 55 25 548 363,505 
Total$402,900 $1,839 $619 $3,606 $408,964 
December 31, 2020
(In millions)Current
One
Month
Past Due
Two
Months
Past Due
Three Months or
More Past Due,
or in Foreclosure
Total(1)
Single-family$37,187 $2,204 $945 $3,922 $44,258 
Multifamily339,614 87 62 557 340,320 
Total$376,801 $2,291 $1,007 $4,479 $384,578 
(1)Loan-level payment status is not available for certain guarantees totaling $0.5 billion and $0.7 billion as of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively, and therefore is not included in the table above.
(2)As of June 30, 2021, includes $4.4 billion of multifamily loans in forbearance that are reported as current.
Other Off-Balance Sheet Credit Exposures
In addition to our guarantees, we enter into other agreements that expose us to off-balance sheet credit risk, primarily related to our multifamily business, including certain purchase commitments that are not accounted for as derivative instruments, liquidity guarantees, unfunded lending arrangements and other similar commitments. These agreements may require us to transfer cash before or upon settlement of our contractual obligation. We recognize an allowance for credit losses for those agreements not measured at fair value or otherwise recognized in the financial statements. The total notional value of off-balance sheet credit exposures was $15.0 billion and $15.4 billion at June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively. See Note 7 for additional discussion of our allowance for credit losses on our off-balance sheet credit exposures.
We also have certain multifamily purchase commitments totaling $4.5 billion and $5.5 billion at June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively, that are excluded from the amounts above as they are not included in our allowance for credit losses. We have elected the fair value option for certain of these commitments.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
91

Financial Statements
                         Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 6
NOTE 6
Investment Securities
The table below summarizes the fair values of our investments in debt securities by classification.
Table 6.1 - Investment Securities
(In millions) June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
Trading securities$54,991 $44,458 
Available-for-sale securities4,567 15,367 
Total fair value of investment securities$59,558 $59,825 
As of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, we did not classify any securities as held-to-maturity, although we may elect to do so in the future.
Trading Securities
The table below presents the estimated fair values of our trading securities by major security type. Our non-mortgage-related securities primarily consist of investments in U.S. Treasury securities.
Table 6.2 - Trading Securities
(In millions) June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
Mortgage-related securities:
Agency$21,708 $17,504 
Non-agency— 
Total mortgage-related securities21,708 17,505 
Non-mortgage-related securities33,283 26,953 
Total fair value of trading securities$54,991 $44,458 
For trading securities held at June 30, 2021, we recorded net unrealized gains (losses) of ($398) million and ($797) million during 2Q 2021 and YTD 2021, respectively. For trading securities held at June 30, 2020, we recorded net unrealized gains (losses) of $120 million and $638 million during 2Q 2020 and YTD 2020, respectively.
Available-for-Sale Securities
At June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, all available-for-sale securities were mortgage-related securities. We had no allowance for credit losses on our available-for-sale securities as of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020.
The table below provides details of the securities classified as available-for-sale on our condensed consolidated balance sheets.
Table 6.3 - Available-for-Sale Securities
June 30, 2021
Amortized
Cost
Basis
Gross Unrealized Gains in Other Comprehensive IncomeGross Unrealized
Losses in Other Comprehensive Income
Fair ValueAccrued Interest Receivable
(In millions)
Available-for-sale securities:
Agency$3,380 $189 ($1)$3,568 $8 
Non-agency and other757 242 — 999 
Total available-for-sale securities$4,137 $431 ($1)$4,567 $12 
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
92

Financial Statements
                         Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 6

December 31, 2020
Amortized
Cost
Basis
Gross Unrealized
Gains in Other Comprehensive Income
Gross Unrealized
Losses in Other Comprehensive Income
Fair ValueAccrued Interest Receivable
(In millions)
Available-for-sale securities:
Agency$13,514 $794 ($4)$14,304 $36 
Non-agency and other830 233 — 1,063 
Total available-for-sale securities$14,344 $1,027 ($4)$15,367 $40 
The fair value of our available-for-sale securities held at June 30, 2021 scheduled to contractually mature after ten years was $1.7 billion, with an additional $1.8 billion scheduled to contractually mature after five years through ten years.
Available-for-Sale Securities in a Gross Unrealized Loss Position
The table below presents available-for-sale securities in a gross unrealized loss position and whether such securities have been in an unrealized loss position for less than 12 months, or 12 months or greater.
Table 6.4 - Available-for-Sale Securities in a Gross Unrealized Loss Position
June 30, 2021
 Less than 12 Months12 Months or Greater
(In millions)
Fair
Value
Gross Unrealized Losses
Fair
Value
Gross Unrealized Losses
Available-for-sale securities:
Agency$20 $— $105 ($1)
Non-agency and other— — — — 
Total available-for-sale securities in a gross unrealized loss position$20 $— $105 ($1)
December 31, 2020
Less than 12 Months12 Months or Greater
(In millions)Fair
Value
Gross Unrealized LossesFair
Value
Gross Unrealized Losses
Available-for-sale securities:
Agency$223 ($2)$144 ($2)
Non-agency and other17 — — — 
Total available-for-sale securities in a gross unrealized loss position$240 ($2)$144 ($2)
At June 30, 2021, the gross unrealized losses relate to 31 securities.
Realized Gains and Losses on Sales of Available-for-Sale Securities
The table below summarizes the gross realized gains and gross realized losses from the sale of available-for-sale securities.
Table 6.5 - Gross Realized Gains and Gross Realized Losses from Sales of Available-for-Sale Securities
(In millions) 2Q 20212Q 2020YTD 2021YTD 2020
Gross realized gains$121 $44 $520 $77 
Gross realized losses(22)(37)(53)(60)
Net realized gains (losses)$99 $7 $467 $17 
Non-Cash Investing and Financing Activities
During YTD 2021 and YTD 2020, we recognized $23.9 billion and $12.7 billion, respectively, of investment securities in exchange for the issuance of debt securities of consolidated trusts through partial sales of commingled single-class securities that were previously consolidated.

Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
93

Financial Statements
                         Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 7
NOTE 7
Allowance for Credit Losses
The table below summarizes changes in our allowance for credit losses.
Table 7.1 - Details of the Allowance for Credit Losses
2Q 20212Q 2020YTD 2021YTD 2020
 (In millions) Single-familyMultifamilyTotalSingle-familyMultifamilyTotalSingle-familyMultifamilyTotalSingle-familyMultifamilyTotal
Beginning balance$6,130 $150 $6,280 $6,347 $136 $6,483 $6,353 $200 $6,553 $5,233 $69 $5,302 
Provision (benefit) for credit losses(686)(54)(740)624 81 705 (832)(104)(936)1,790 148 1,938 
Charge-offs(203)— (203)(121)— (121)(441)— (441)(285)— (285)
Recoveries collected61 — 61 36 — 36 107 — 107 124 — 124 
Other211 — 211 30 — 30 326 — 326 54 — 54 
Ending balance$5,513 $96 $5,609 $6,916 $217 $7,133 $5,513 $96 $5,609 $6,916 $217 $7,133 
Components of ending balance of allowance for credit losses:
Mortgage loans held-for-investment$4,601 $47 $4,648 $6,482 $124 $6,606 
Advances of pre-foreclosure costs691 — 691 323 — 323 
Accrued interest receivable on mortgage loans168 — 168 57 — 57 
Off-balance sheet credit exposures53 49 102 54 93 147 
   Total$5,513 $96 $5,609 $6,916 $217 $7,133 
2Q 2021 vs. 2Q 2020 and YTD 2021 vs. YTD 2020
A benefit for credit losses in the 2021 periods primarily driven by the following factors:
n    A reserve release due to:
l    Reduced expected credit losses related to COVID-19 - Our estimate of expected credit losses related to the COVID-19 pandemic decreased during the 2021 periods as economic conditions improved. Our provision for credit losses increased during the 2020 periods due to the increase in expected credit losses related to the economic effects of the pandemic.
l    Appreciation in realized house prices - The realized house price growth rates were higher in the 2021 periods than in the 2020 periods and, as a result, further reduced our estimate of expected credit losses as the higher house prices decreased both the probability and severity of expected credit losses.
n    This was partially offset by an increase in expected losses on new single-family loans due to growth in our single-family mortgage portfolio. We recognize expected credit losses at the time of loan acquisition.
In addition, charge-offs increased due to an increase in the number of loans we placed on non-accrual status in the 2021 periods.

Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
94

Financial Statements
                         Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 8

NOTE 8
Credit Enhancements
We obtain various forms of credit enhancements that reduce our exposure to credit losses. These credit enhancements may be associated with mortgage loans or guarantees recognized on our condensed consolidated balance sheets or embedded in debt recognized on our condensed consolidated balance sheets.
The table below presents details of our credit enhancement receivables. These amounts are recognized in other assets on our condensed consolidated balance sheets.
Table 8.1 - Credit Enhancement Receivables
(In millions)June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
Freestanding credit enhancement expected recovery receivables, net of allowance$217 $677 
Primary mortgage insurance receivables(1), net of allowance
71 74 
Total credit enhancement receivables$288 $751 
(1)Excludes $433 million and $444 million of deferred payment obligations associated with unpaid claim amounts as of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively. We have reserved for substantially all these unpaid amounts as collectability is uncertain.
For information about counterparty credit risk associated with mortgage insurers and other credit enhancement providers, see Note 16.
Single-Family Credit Enhancements
The table below presents the UPB and maximum coverage related to our single-family credit enhancements.
Table 8.2 - Single-Family Credit Enhancements
June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
(In millions) Credit Enhancement Accounting Treatment
UPB(1)
Maximum Coverage(2)
UPB(1)
Maximum Coverage(2)
Primary mortgage insurance(3)
Attached$501,768 $122,942 $472,881 $116,973 
STACR:
  Trust notesFreestanding623,920 19,942 488,251 17,288 
  Debt notesDebt273,747 11,553 365,482 12,377 
Insurance/reinsurance(4)
Freestanding922,969 14,331 876,815 11,586 
Subordination:
  Nonconsolidated VIEs
Guarantee34,871 5,853 34,671 5,718 
  Consolidated VIEsDebt6,086 346 9,499 464 
Lender risk-sharing Freestanding4,975 4,477 5,731 4,831 
OtherPrimarily attached237 234 374 371 
Total single-family credit enhancements$179,678 $169,608 
(1)Represents the current UPB of the assets included in the associated reference pool or securitization trust, as applicable. Underlying loans may be covered by more than one form of credit enhancement. The UPB of certain CRT transactions may be different from the UPB of the underlying loans due to timing differences in reporting cycles between the transactions and the loans. Prior periods have been revised to conform to the current period presentation.
(2)For STACR transactions, represents the outstanding balance held by third parties. For insurance/reinsurance transactions, represents the remaining aggregate limit of insurance purchased from third parties. For subordination, represents the outstanding UPB of the securities that are held by third parties and are subordinate to the securities we guarantee.
(3)Amounts exclude certain loans for which we do not control servicing, as the coverage information for these loans is not readily available to us.
(4)As of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, substantially all of our counterparties posted sufficient collateral on our ACIS transactions to meet the minimum collateral requirements of the ACIS program, which are based on a combination of factors, including counterparty credit risk of the reinsurer and the structure and risk profile of the transaction.

Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
95

Financial Statements
                         Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 8

Multifamily Credit Enhancements
The table below presents the UPB and maximum coverage related to our multifamily credit enhancements.
Table 8.3 - Multifamily Credit Enhancements
June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
(In millions)Credit Enhancement Accounting Treatment
UPB(1)
Maximum Coverage(2)
UPB(1)
Maximum Coverage(2)
Subordination:
Nonconsolidated VIEs Guarantee$353,191 $44,306 $328,897 $42,799 
Lender risk-sharingFreestanding2,892 599 3,317 598 
Insurance/reinsurance(3)
Freestanding5,344 189 5,383 190 
SCR:
Trust notesFreestanding4,788 272 — — 
Debt notesDebt2,139 107 2,217 111 
OtherPrimarily debt1,202 404 2,211 453 
Total multifamily credit enhancements$45,877 $44,151 
(1)Represents the current UPB of the assets included in the associated reference pool or securitization trust, as applicable. Underlying loans may be covered by more than one form of credit enhancement. Prior periods have been revised to conform to the current period presentation.
(2)For subordination, represents the outstanding UPB of the securities that are held by third parties and are subordinate to the securities we guarantee. For insurance/reinsurance transactions, represents the remaining aggregate limit of insurance purchased from third parties. For SCR transactions, represents the outstanding balance held by third parties. Prior periods have been revised to conform to the current period presentation.
(3)As of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, the counterparties to our insurance/reinsurance transactions have complied with the minimum collateral requirements. Minimum collateral requirements are assessed on each deal based on a combination of factors, including counterparty credit risk of the reinsurer and the structure and risk profile of the transaction.
We have other multifamily credit enhancements in the form of collateral posting requirements, indemnification, pool insurance, bond insurance, recourse, and other similar arrangements. These credit enhancements, along with the proceeds received from the sale of the underlying mortgage collateral, are designed to recover all or a portion of our losses on our mortgage loans or the amounts paid under our financial guarantee contracts. Our historical losses and related recoveries pursuant to these agreements have not been significant and therefore these other types of multifamily credit enhancements are excluded from the table above.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
96

Financial Statements
                         Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 9

NOTE 9
Debt
The table below summarizes the balances of total debt per our condensed consolidated balance sheets.
Table 9.1 - Total Debt
(In millions)
June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
Debt securities of consolidated trusts held by third parties
$2,575,653 $2,308,176 
Debt of Freddie Mac:
Short-term debt
— 4,955 
Long-term debt
227,102 279,415 
Total Debt of Freddie Mac227,102 284,370 
Total debt
$2,802,755 $2,592,546 
As of June 30, 2021, our aggregate indebtedness was $230.6 billion, which was below the current $300.0 billion debt cap limit imposed by the Purchase Agreement. Our aggregate indebtedness calculation primarily includes the par value of short- and long-term debt.
Debt Securities of Consolidated Trusts Held by Third Parties
The table below summarizes the debt securities of consolidated trusts held by third parties based on underlying loan product type.
Table 9.2 - Debt Securities of Consolidated Trusts Held by Third Parties
June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
(Dollars in millions)
Contractual
Maturity
UPB
Carrying Amount(1)
Weighted
Average
Coupon(2)
Contractual
Maturity
UPB
Carrying Amount(1)
Weighted
Average
Coupon(2)
Single-family:
30-year or more, fixed-rate2021 - 2060$1,990,165 $2,046,438 2.77 %2021 - 2060$1,799,065 $1,855,438 3.07 %
20-year fixed-rate2021 - 2041119,298 122,569 2.53 2021 - 204197,520 100,498 2.84 
15-year fixed-rate2021 - 2036357,016 365,964 2.25 2021 - 2036303,142 310,612 2.46 
Adjustable-rate2021 - 205120,531 20,996 2.48 2021 - 205123,964 24,484 2.76 
Interest-only2026 - 20513,144 3,277 2.57 2026 - 20413,671 3,736 3.15 
FHA/VA2021 - 2051828 845 3.79 2021 - 2050752 769 4.04 
Total single-family2,490,982 2,560,089 2,228,114 2,295,537 
Multifamily2021-205115,352 15,564 2.26 2021-205012,488 12,639 2.43 
Total debt of consolidated trusts held by third parties$2,506,334 $2,575,653 $2,240,602 $2,308,176 
(1)Includes $252 million and $205 million at June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively, of debt securities of consolidated trusts that represents the fair value of debt for which the fair value option was elected.
(2)The effective interest rate for debt securities of consolidated trusts held by third parties was 1.73% and 1.76% as of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
97

Financial Statements
                         Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 9

Debt of Freddie Mac
The table below summarizes the balances and effective interest rates for debt of Freddie Mac.
Table 9.3 - Total Debt of Freddie Mac
June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
(Dollars in millions)Par Value
Carrying Amount(1)
Weighted
Average
Effective Rate(2)
Par Value
Carrying Amount(1)
Weighted
Average
Effective Rate(2)
Short-term debt:
Discount notes and Reference Bills$— $— — %$11 $11 0.69 %
Medium-term notes— — — 4,944 4,944 1.31 
Securities sold under agreements to repurchase(3)
4,620 4,620 (0.03)— — — 
Total short-term debt4,620 4,620 (0.03)4,955 4,955 1.31 
Long-term debt:
Original maturities on or before December 31,
202126,621 26,620 0.72 43,422 43,417 0.95 
202255,228 55,247 0.72 61,071 61,092 0.68 
202348,199 48,139 0.44 61,998 61,920 0.45 
202416,389 16,367 0.49 21,679 21,651 0.61 
202535,777 35,414 0.83 44,342 43,944 0.84 
Thereafter36,602 34,867 2.62 36,386 34,583 2.64 
STACR and SCR debt(4)
11,660 11,496 4.19 12,488 12,342 4.18 
Hedging-related basis adjustmentsN/A(1,048)N/A466 
Total long-term debt230,476 227,102 1.13 281,386 279,415 1.09 
Total debt of Freddie Mac(5)
$235,096 $231,722 $286,341 $284,370 
(1)Represents par value, net of associated discounts or premiums and issuance cost. Includes $1.8 billion and $2.4 billion at June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively, of long-term debt that represents the fair value of debt for which the fair value option was elected.
(2)Based on carrying amount.
(3)We offset payables related to securities sold under agreements to repurchase against receivables related to securities purchased under agreements to resell on our condensed consolidated balance sheets, when such amounts meet the conditions for offsetting in the accounting guidance.
(4)Contractual maturities of these debt securities are not presented because they are subject to prepayment risk, as their payments are based upon the performance of a pool of mortgage assets that may be prepaid by the related mortgage borrower at any time, generally without penalty.
(5)Carrying amount for debt of Freddie Mac includes callable debt of $89.0 billion and $124.0 billion at June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
98

Financial Statements
                      Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 10

NOTE 10
Derivatives
Use of Derivatives
We use derivatives primarily to hedge interest-rate sensitivity mismatches between our financial assets and liabilities. We analyze the interest-rate sensitivity of financial assets and liabilities across a variety of interest-rate scenarios based on market prices, models, and economics. When we use derivatives to mitigate our exposures, we consider a number of factors, including cost, exposure to counterparty risk, and our overall risk management strategy.
We classify derivatives into three categories:
n    Exchange-traded derivatives;
n    Cleared derivatives; and
n    OTC derivatives.
Exchange-traded derivatives include standardized interest-rate futures contracts and options on futures contracts. Cleared derivatives refer to those interest-rate swaps that the CFTC has determined are subject to the central clearing requirement of the Dodd-Frank Act. OTC derivatives refer to those derivatives that are neither exchange-traded derivatives nor cleared derivatives.
Types of Derivatives
We principally use the following types of derivatives:
n    LIBOR- and SOFR-based interest-rate swaps;
n    LIBOR-, Treasury-, and SOFR-based purchased options (including swaptions); and
n    LIBOR-, Treasury-, and SOFR-based exchange-traded futures.
We also purchase swaptions on credit indices in order to obtain protection against adverse movements in multifamily spreads which may affect the profitability of our K Certificate or SB Certificate transactions.
In addition to swaps, futures, and purchased options, our derivative positions include written options and swaptions, and commitments.
Hedge Accounting
We apply fair value hedge accounting to certain single-family mortgage loans and certain issuances of debt where we hedge the changes in fair value of these items attributable to the designated benchmark interest rate (i.e., LIBOR), using LIBOR-based interest-rate swaps.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
99

Financial Statements
                      Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 10

Derivative Assets and Liabilities at Fair Value
The table below presents the notional value and fair value of derivatives reported on our condensed consolidated balance sheets.
Table 10.1 - Derivative Assets and Liabilities at Fair Value
June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
 
Notional or
Contractual
Amount
Derivatives at Fair Value
Notional or
Contractual
Amount
Derivatives at Fair Value
(In millions) AssetsLiabilitiesAssetsLiabilities
Not designated as hedges
Interest-rate risk management derivatives:
Swaps$647,387 $2,082 ($5,132)$559,596 $2,639 ($7,091)
Written options31,654 — (1,331)18,259 — (735)
Purchased options(1)
236,105 4,395 — 169,995 5,265 — 
Futures174,513 — — 181,702 — — 
Total interest-rate management derivatives1,089,659 6,477 (6,463)929,552 7,904 (7,826)
Mortgage commitment derivatives:
Forward contracts to purchase mortgage loans11,857 23 (3)37,122 183 — 
Forward contracts to purchase mortgage-related securities32,396 79 (6)45,185 203 — 
Forward contracts to sell mortgage-related securities77,182 11 (201)136,802 (759)
Total mortgage commitment derivatives121,435 113 (210)219,109 388 (759)
CRT-related derivatives30,553 24 (38)28,949 61 (47)
Other7,685 (24)4,029 (16)
Total derivatives not designated as hedges1,249,332 6,615 (6,735)1,181,639 8,355 (8,648)
Designated as fair value hedges
Interest-rate risk management derivatives:
Swaps153,002 109 (1,336)180,686 224 (500)
Total derivatives designated as fair value hedges153,002 109 (1,336)180,686 224 (500)
Derivative interest receivable (payable)(2)
485 (463)455 (523)
Netting adjustments(3)
(6,453)8,027 (7,829)8,717 
Total derivative portfolio, net
$1,402,334 $756 ($507)$1,362,325 $1,205 ($954)
(1)Includes swaptions on credit indices with a notional or contractual amount of $11.5 billion and $16.8 billion at June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively, and a fair value of $3.0 million and $9.0 million at June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively.
(2)Includes other derivative receivables and payables.
(3)Represents counterparty netting and cash collateral netting.
See Note 11 for information related to our derivative counterparties and collateral held and posted.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
100

Financial Statements
                      Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 10

Gains and Losses on Derivatives
The table below presents the gains and losses on derivatives, including the accrual of periodic cash settlements, while not designated in qualifying hedge relationships and reported on our condensed consolidated statements of comprehensive income (loss) as investment gains (losses), net.
Table 10.2 - Gains and Losses on Derivatives
(In millions) 2Q 20212Q 2020YTD 2021YTD 2020
Not designated as hedges
Interest-rate risk management derivatives:
Swaps$1,039 $1,000 $1,654 ($3,863)
Written options305 55 (156)(265)
Purchased options(586)(760)(634)3,782 
Futures(127)(120)159 (2,448)
Total interest-rate risk management derivatives fair value gains (losses)631 175 1,023 (2,794)
Mortgage commitment derivatives(860)(396)616 (1,122)
CRT-related derivatives15 43 (27)121 
Other11 37 
Total derivatives not designated as hedges fair value gains (losses)(203)(172)1,620 (3,758)
     Accrual of periodic cash settlements(1)
(360)(329)(812)(505)
Total($563)($501)$808 ($4,263)
(1)Includes interest on variation margin on cleared interest-rate swaps.
Fair Value Hedges
The table below presents the effects of fair value hedge accounting by condensed consolidated statements of comprehensive income (loss) line item, including the gains and losses on derivatives and hedged items designated in qualifying hedge relationships and other components due to the application of hedge accounting.
Table 10.3 - Gains and Losses on Fair Value Hedges
2Q 20212Q 2020
(In millions) Interest Income Interest Expense Interest Income Interest Expense
Total amounts of income and expense line items presented in our condensed consolidated statements of comprehensive income in which the effects of fair value hedges are recorded:$15,230 ($10,463)$15,716 ($12,840)
Interest contracts on mortgage loans held-for-investment:
Gain (loss) on fair value hedging relationships:
Hedged items1,086 — 670 — 
Derivatives designated as hedging instruments(1,097)— (474)— 
Interest accruals on hedging instruments(139)— (122)— 
Discontinued hedge-related basis adjustments amortization(511)— (695)— 
Interest contracts on debt:
Gain (loss) on fair value hedging relationships:
Hedged items— (600)— 37 
Derivatives designated as hedging instruments— 568 — (81)
Interest accruals on hedging instruments— 248 — 187 
Discontinued hedge-related basis adjustments amortization— — 17 
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
101

Financial Statements
                      Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 10

YTD 2021YTD 2020
(In millions)Interest Income Interest Expense Interest IncomeInterest Expense
Total amounts of income and expense line items presented in our condensed consolidated statements of comprehensive income in which the effects of fair value hedges are recorded:$29,132 ($20,726)$33,308 ($27,647)
Interest contracts on mortgage loans held-for-investment:
Gain (loss) on fair value hedging relationships:
Hedged items(437)— 5,563 — 
Derivatives designated as hedging instruments437 — (5,554)— 
Interest accruals on hedging instruments(253)— (185)— 
Discontinued hedge-related basis adjustments amortization(1,292)— (948)— 
Interest contracts on debt:
Gain (loss) on fair value hedging relationships:
Hedged items— 1,514 — (468)
Derivatives designated as hedging instruments— (1,620)— 473 
Interest accruals on hedging instruments— 503 — 287 
Discontinued hedge-related basis adjustments amortization— — 37 
Cumulative Basis Adjustments Due to Fair Value Hedging
The table below presents the cumulative basis adjustments and the carrying amounts of the hedged item by its respective balance sheet line item.
Table 10.4 - Cumulative Basis Adjustments Due to Fair Value Hedging
June 30, 2021
Carrying Amount Assets / (Liabilities)Cumulative Amount of Fair Value Hedging Basis Adjustments Included in the Carrying AmountClosed Portfolio Under the Last-of-Layer Method
(In millions)TotalUnder the Last-of-Layer MethodDiscontinued - Hedge RelatedTotal Amount by Amortized Cost BasisDesignated Amount by UPB
Mortgage loans held-for-investment$693,011 $3,388 ($224)$3,612 $72,555 $3,019 
Debt(146,969)1,048 — (30)— — 
December 31, 2020
Carrying Amount Assets / (Liabilities)Cumulative Amount of Fair Value Hedging Basis Adjustments Included in the Carrying AmountClosed Portfolio Under the Last-of-Layer Method
(In millions)TotalUnder the Last-of-Layer MethodDiscontinued - Hedge RelatedTotal Amount by Amortized Cost BasisDesignated Amount by UPB
Mortgage loans held-for-investment$478,077 $5,117 ($318)$5,435 $220,301 $9,112 
Debt(176,512)(466)— (38)— — 

Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
102

Financial Statements
                       Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 11

NOTE 11
Collateralized Agreements and Offsetting Arrangements
Offsetting of Financial Assets and Liabilities
We offset fair value amounts recognized for the right to reclaim cash collateral or the obligation to return cash collateral against fair value amounts recognized for derivative instruments executed with the same counterparty under a master netting and collateral agreement. We also offset payables related to securities sold under agreements to repurchase against receivables related to securities purchased under agreements to resell when such amounts meet the conditions for balance sheet offsetting.
The table below presents offsetting and collateral information related to derivatives, securities purchased under agreements to resell, and securities sold under agreements to repurchase which are subject to enforceable master netting agreements or similar arrangements.
Table 11.1 - Offsetting and Collateral Information of Financial Assets and Liabilities
June 30, 2021
Gross
Amount
Recognized
Amount 
Offset in the
Consolidated
Balance Sheets
Net Amount
Presented in the Consolidated
Balance Sheets
Gross Amount
Not Offset in the  Consolidated
Balance Sheets(2)
Net
Amount
(In millions)Counterparty Netting
Cash Collateral Netting(1)
Assets:
Derivatives:
OTC derivatives$6,955 ($5,088)($1,405)$462 ($419)$43 
Cleared and exchange-traded derivatives116 (5)45 156 — 156 
Mortgage commitment derivatives113 — — 113 — 113 
Other25 — — 25 — 25 
Total derivatives7,209 (5,093)(1,360)756 (419)337 
Securities purchased under agreements to resell118,317 (4,620)— 113,697 (113,697)— 
Total$125,526 ($9,713)($1,360)$114,453 ($114,116)$337 
Liabilities:
Derivatives:
OTC derivatives($8,197)$5,088 $2,902 ($207)$— ($207)
Cleared and exchange-traded derivatives(65)32 (28)28 — 
Mortgage commitment derivatives(210)— — (210)— (210)
Other(62)— — (62)— (62)
Total derivatives(8,534)5,093 2,934 (507)28 (479)
Securities sold under agreements to repurchase(4,620)4,620 — — — — 
Total($13,154)$9,713 $2,934 ($507)$28 ($479)
Referenced footnotes are included after the next table.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
103

Financial Statements
                       Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 11

 December 31, 2020
Gross
Amount
Recognized
Amount 
Offset in the
Consolidated
Balance Sheets
Net Amount
Presented in the Consolidated
Balance Sheets
Gross Amount
Not Offset in the  Consolidated
Balance Sheets(2)
Net
Amount
(In millions)Counterparty Netting
Cash Collateral Netting(1)
Assets:
Derivatives:
OTC derivatives$8,566 ($5,932)($1,957)$677 ($648)$29 
Cleared and exchange-traded derivatives17 — 60 77 — 77 
Mortgage commitment derivatives388 — — 388 — 388 
Other63 — — 63 — 63 
Total derivatives9,034 (5,932)(1,897)1,205 (648)557 
Securities purchased under agreements to resell105,003 — — 105,003 (105,003)— 
Total$114,037 ($5,932)($1,897)$106,208 ($105,651)$557 
Liabilities:
Derivatives:
OTC derivatives($8,812)$5,932 $2,759 ($121)$— ($121)
Cleared and exchange-traded derivatives(37)— 26 (11)— (11)
Mortgage commitment derivatives(759)— — (759)— (759)
Other(63)— — (63)— (63)
Total derivatives(9,671)5,932 2,785 (954) (954)
Securities sold under agreements to repurchase— — — — — — 
Total($9,671)$5,932 $2,785 ($954)$— ($954)
(1)Excess cash collateral held is presented as a derivative liability, while excess cash collateral posted is presented as a derivative asset.
(2)Does not include the fair value amount of non-cash collateral posted or held that exceeds the associated net asset or liability, netted by counterparty, presented on the condensed consolidated balance sheets.
Collateral Pledged
Collateral Pledged to Freddie Mac
We have cash pledged to us as collateral primarily related to OTC derivative transactions. We had $1.8 billion and $2.8 billion pledged to us as collateral that was invested as part of our liquidity and contingency operating portfolio as of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively.
We primarily execute securities purchased under agreements to resell transactions with central clearing organizations where we have the right to repledge the collateral that has been pledged to us, either with the central clearing organization or with other counterparties. At June 30, 2021, and December 31, 2020, we had $59.6 billion and $85.8 billion, respectively, of securities pledged to us in these transactions. In addition, at June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, we had $0.7 billion and $0.8 billion, respectively, of securities pledged to us for transactions involving securities purchased under agreements to resell not executed with central clearing organizations that we had the right to repledge.
Collateral Pledged by Freddie Mac
For cash collateral related to commitments and securities purchased under agreements to resell transactions primarily with central clearing organizations, we posted less than $0.1 billion cash collateral as of June 30, 2021 and $1.3 billion as of December 31, 2020.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
104

Financial Statements
                       Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 11

The table below summarizes the fair value of the securities pledged as collateral by us for derivatives and collateralized borrowing transactions, including securities that the secured party may repledge.
Table 11.2 - Collateral in the Form of Securities Pledged
June 30, 2021
(In millions)DerivativesSecurities Sold Under Agreements to Repurchase
Other(3)
Total
Cash equivalents(1)
$— $569 $— $569 
Debt securities of consolidated trusts(2)
— — 335 335 
Trading securities1,888 4,054 1,536 7,478 
Total securities pledged$1,888 $4,623 $1,871 $8,382 
December 31, 2020
(In millions)DerivativesSecurities Sold Under Agreements to Repurchase
Other(3)
Total
Debt securities of consolidated trusts(2)
$121 $— $345 $466 
Trading securities1,920 — 1,163 3,083 
Total securities pledged$2,041 $— $1,508 $3,549 
(1)Represents U.S. Treasury securities accounted for as cash equivalents.
(2)Represents debt securities of consolidated trusts held by us in our mortgage-related investments portfolio which are recorded as a reduction to debt securities of consolidated trusts held by third parties on our condensed consolidated balance sheets.
(3)Includes other collateralized borrowings and collateral related to transactions with certain clearinghouses.
The table below summarizes the underlying collateral pledged and the remaining contractual maturity of our gross obligations under securities sold under agreements to repurchase.
Table 11.3 - Underlying Collateral Pledged
June 30, 2021
(In millions)Overnight and Continuous30 Days or LessAfter 30 Days Through 90 DaysGreater Than 90 DaysTotal
U.S. Treasury securities and other$2,875 $1,748 $— $— $4,623 
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
105

Financial Statements
                      Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 12

NOTE 12
Stockholders' Equity and Earnings Per Share
Accumulated Other Comprehensive Income
The table below presents changes in AOCI after the effects of our federal statutory tax rate of 21% for the periods presented, related to available-for-sale securities, cash flow hedges, and our defined benefit plans.
Table 12.1 - Changes in AOCI by Component, Net of Taxes
2Q 2021
(In millions)AOCI Related
to Available-
for-Sale
Securities
AOCI Related
to Cash Flow
Hedge
Relationships
AOCI Related
to Defined
Benefit Plans
Total
Beginning balance$415 ($196)$35 $254 
Other comprehensive income before reclassifications— — 
Amounts reclassified from accumulated other comprehensive income(79)(3)(74)
Changes in AOCI by component(73)8 (3)(68)
Ending balance$342 ($188)$32 $186 
YTD 2021
(In millions)AOCI Related
to Available-
for-Sale
Securities
AOCI Related
to Cash Flow
Hedge
Relationships
AOCI Related
to Defined
Benefit Plans
Total
Beginning balance$810 ($206)$39 $643 
Other comprehensive income before reclassifications(99)— (1)(100)
Amounts reclassified from accumulated other comprehensive income(369)18 (6)(357)
Changes in AOCI by component(468)18 (7)(457)
Ending balance$342 ($188)$32 $186 
 2Q 2020
(In millions)AOCI Related
to Available-
for-Sale
Securities
AOCI Related
to Cash Flow
Hedge
Relationships
AOCI Related
to Defined
Benefit Plans
Total
Beginning balance$1,056 ($231)$62 $887 
Other comprehensive income before reclassifications160 — — 160 
Amounts reclassified from accumulated other comprehensive income(6)11 (4)
Changes in AOCI by component154 11 (4)161 
Ending balance$1,210 ($220)$58 $1,048 
 YTD 2020
(In millions)AOCI Related
to Available-
for-Sale
Securities
AOCI Related
to Cash Flow
Hedge
Relationships
AOCI Related
to Defined
Benefit Plans
Total
Beginning balance$618 ($244)$64 $438 
Other comprehensive income before reclassifications606 — 608 
Amounts reclassified from accumulated other comprehensive income(14)24 (8)
Changes in AOCI by component592 24 (6)610 
Ending balance$1,210 ($220)$58 $1,048 
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
106

Financial Statements
                      Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 12

Reclassifications from AOCI to Net Income
The table below presents reclassifications from AOCI to net income, including the affected line items in our condensed consolidated statements of comprehensive income (loss).
Table 12.2 - Reclassifications from AOCI to Net Income
(In millions) 2Q 20212Q 2020YTD 2021YTD 2020
AOCI related to available-for-sale securities
Affected line items on the condensed consolidated statements of comprehensive income (loss):
Investment gains (losses), net$99 $7 $467 $17 
Income tax (expense) benefit(20)(1)(98)(3)
Net of tax79 6 369 14 
AOCI related to cash flow hedge relationships
Affected line items on the condensed consolidated statements of comprehensive income (loss):
Interest expense(10)(14)(21)(30)
Income tax (expense) benefit
Net of tax(8)(11)(18)(24)
AOCI related to defined benefit plans
Affected line items on the condensed consolidated statements of comprehensive income (loss):
Salaries and employee benefits10 
Income tax (expense) benefit(1)(1)(2)(2)
Net of tax3 4 6 8 
Total reclassifications in the period, net of tax$74 ($1)$357 ($2)
Senior Preferred Stock
As a result of changes to the terms of the senior preferred stock pursuant to the January 2021 Letter Agreement, the company will not be required to pay a dividend to Treasury until we have built sufficient capital to meet the capital requirements and buffers set forth in the ERCF. Accordingly, the company was not required to pay a dividend to Treasury on the senior preferred stock in June 2021. As the company builds capital during this period, the quarterly increases in our Net Worth Amount have been, and will continue to be, added to the aggregate liquidation preference of the senior preferred stock. As a result, the liquidation preference of the senior preferred stock increased from $89.1 billion as of March 31, 2021 to $91.4 billion on June 30, 2021 based on the $2.4 billion increase in the Net Worth Amount during 1Q 2021. The liquidation preference will increase to $95.0 billion on September 30, 2021 based on the $3.6 billion increase in our Net Worth Amount during 2Q 2021. See Note 2 for additional information.
As of June 30, 2021, our assets exceeded our liabilities under GAAP; therefore, no draw is being requested from Treasury under the Purchase Agreement.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
107

Financial Statements
                      Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 12


The table below provides a summary of our senior preferred stock outstanding at June 30, 2021.
Table 12.3 - Senior Preferred Stock
(In millions, except initial liquidation preference price per share)
Shares
Authorized
Shares
Outstanding
Total
Par Value
Initial
Liquidation
Preference
Price per Share
Total
Liquidation
Preference
Non-draw Adjustment Dates:
September 8, 20081.00 1.00 $1.00 $1,000 $1,000 
December 31, 2017— — — N/A3,000 
September 30, 2019— — — N/A1,826 
December 31, 2019— — — N/A1,848 
March 31, 2020— — — N/A2,448 
June 30, 2020— — — N/A382 
September 30, 2020— — — N/A1,938 
December 31, 2020— — — N/A2,449 
March 31, 2021— — — N/A2,522 
June 30, 2021— — — N/A2,378 
Total non-draw adjustments1.00 1.00 1.00 19,791 
Draw Dates:
November 24, 2008— — — N/A13,800 
March 31, 2009— — — N/A30,800 
June 30, 2009— — — N/A6,100 
June 30, 2010— — — N/A10,600 
September 30, 2010— — — N/A1,800 
December 30, 2010— — — N/A100 
March 31, 2011— — — N/A500 
September 30, 2011— — — N/A1,479 
December 30, 2011— — — N/A5,992 
March 30, 2012— — — N/A146 
June 29, 2012— — — N/A19 
March 30, 2018— — — N/A312 
Total draw adjustments   71,648 
Total senior preferred stock1.00 1.00 $1.00 $91,439 

Stock Issuances and Repurchases
We did not repurchase or issue any of our common shares or non-cumulative preferred stock during YTD 2021, except for issuances of treasury stock related to stock based compensation granted prior to conservatorship.
Dividends and Dividend Restrictions
No common dividends were declared during YTD 2021. As a result of the increase in the applicable Capital Reserve Amount pursuant to the January 2021 Letter Agreement, we did not declare or pay a dividend on the senior preferred stock during YTD 2021. We also did not declare or pay dividends on any other series of Freddie Mac preferred stock outstanding during YTD 2021.
Our payment of dividends on Freddie Mac common stock or any series of Freddie Mac preferred stock (other than senior preferred stock) is subject to certain restrictions as described in Note 13 in our 2020 Annual Report.

Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
108

Financial Statements
                      Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 13
NOTE 13
Net Interest Income
The table below presents the components of net interest income per our condensed consolidated statements of comprehensive income (loss).
Table 13.1 - Components of Net Interest Income
(In millions)2Q 20212Q 2020YTD 2021YTD 2020
Interest income
Mortgage loans$14,590 $15,026 $27,845 $31,658 
Investment securities617 637 1,227 1,289 
Other23 53 60 361 
Total interest income15,230 15,716 29,132 33,308 
Interest expense
Debt securities of consolidated trusts held by third parties(10,032)(11,975)(19,788)(25,422)
Debt of Freddie Mac:
Short-term debt— (130)(2)(560)
Long-term debt(431)(735)(936)(1,665)
Total interest expense(10,463)(12,840)(20,726)(27,647)
Net interest income4,767 2,876 8,406 5,661 
Benefit (provision) for credit losses740 (705)936 (1,938)
Net interest income after benefit (provision) for credit losses$5,507 $2,171 $9,342 $3,723 
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
109

Financial Statements
                      Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 14
NOTE 14
Investment Gains (Losses), Net
The table below presents the components of investment gains (losses), net on our condensed consolidated statements of comprehensive income (loss).
Table 14.1 - Components of Investment Gains (Losses), Net
(In millions)2Q 20212Q 2020YTD 2021YTD 2020
Investment gains (losses), net:
Mortgage loans gains (losses)$1,511 $1,046 $1,717 $2,218 
Investment securities gains (losses)(330)65 (837)1,120 
Debt gains (losses)18 60 156 760 
Derivative gains (losses)(563)(501)808 (4,263)
Investment gains (losses), net$636 $670 $1,844 ($165)
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
110

Financial Statements
                      Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 15

NOTE 15
Segment Reporting
During 1Q 2021, our chief operating decision maker began making decisions about allocating resources and assessing segment performance based on two reportable segments, Single-family and Multifamily. In prior periods, we managed our business based on three reportable segments, Single-family Guarantee, Multifamily, and Capital Markets. As our mortgage-related investments portfolio has declined over time, our capital markets activities have become increasingly focused on supporting our single-family and multifamily businesses. As a result, we determined that, effective in 1Q 2021, our Capital Markets segment should no longer be considered a separate reportable segment, and our chief operating decision maker no longer reviews separate financial results or discrete financial information for our capital markets activities. Substantially all of the revenues and expenses that were previously directly attributable to our Capital Markets segment are now included in our Single-family segment, while certain administrative expenses and other centrally-incurred costs previously allocated to the Capital Markets segment are now allocated between the Single-family and Multifamily segments using various methodologies depending on the nature of the expense.
In connection with this change, we also changed the measure of segment profit and loss for each segment to be based on net income and comprehensive income calculated using the same accounting policies we use to prepare our general purpose financial statements in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles. The financial results of each reportable segment include directly attributable revenue and expenses. We allocate interest expense and other debt funding and hedging-related costs to each reportable segment using a funds transfer pricing process. We fully allocate to each reportable segment the administrative expenses and other centrally-incurred costs that are not directly attributable to a particular segment using various methodologies depending on the nature of the expense. As a result, the sum of each income statement line item for the two reportable segments is equal to that same income statement line item for the consolidated entity. We have discontinued the reclassifications of certain activities between various line items that were included in our previous measure of segment profit and loss. Prior period information has been revised to conform to the current period presentation.
Segment
Description
Single-family
Reflects results from our purchase, sale, securitization, and guarantee of single-family loans and securities, our investments in those loans and securities, the management of single-family mortgage credit risk and market risk, and any results of our treasury function that are not allocated to each segment.

Multifamily
Reflects results from our purchase, sale, securitization, and guarantee of multifamily loans and securities, our investments in those loans and securities, and the management of multifamily mortgage credit risk and market risk.


Segment Allocations and Results
The results of each reportable segment include directly attributable revenues and expenses. We allocate interest expense and other debt funding and hedging-related costs to each reportable segment using a funds transfer pricing process. We fully allocate to each reportable segment administrative expenses and other centrally-incurred costs that are not directly attributable to a particular segment using various methodologies depending on the nature of the expense.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
111

Financial Statements
                      Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 15

The table below presents the financial results for our Single-family and Multifamily segments.
Table 15.1 - Segment Financial Results
 2Q 2021
 Single-familyMultifamilyTotal
(In millions)
Net interest income $4,460 $307 $4,767 
Non-interest income (loss)
Guarantee income10 346 356 
Investment gains (losses), net137 499 636 
Other income (loss)108 (1)107 
Non-interest income (loss)255 844 1,099 
Net revenues4,715 1,151 5,866 
Benefit (provision) for credit losses686 54 740 
Non-interest expense
Administrative expense(503)(148)(651)
Credit enhancement expense (361)(8)(369)
Benefit for (decrease in) credit enhancement recoveries(190)(3)(193)
REO operations expense(7)— (7)
Temporary Payroll Tax Cut Continuation Act of 2011 expense(570)— (570)
Other expense(172)(7)(179)
Non-interest expense(1,803)(166)(1,969)
Income (loss) before income tax (expense) benefit3,598 1,039 4,637 
Income tax (expense) benefit(743)(215)(958)
Net income (loss)2,855 824 3,679 
Other comprehensive income (loss), net of taxes and reclassification adjustments
Changes in unrealized gains (losses) related to available-for-sale securities(79)(73)
Changes in unrealized gains (losses) related to cash flow hedge relationships— 
Changes in defined benefit plans(3)— (3)
Total other comprehensive income (loss), net of taxes and reclassification adjustments(74)6 (68)
Comprehensive income (loss)$2,781 $830 $3,611 
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
112

Financial Statements
                      Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 15

YTD 2021
Single-familyMultifamilyTotal
(In millions)
Net interest income$7,768 $638 $8,406 
Non-interest income (loss)
Guarantee income99 505 604 
Investment gains (losses), net437 1,407 1,844 
Other income (loss)260 25 285 
Non-interest income (loss)796 1,937 2,733 
Net revenues8,564 2,575 11,139 
Benefit (provision) for credit losses832 104 936 
Non-interest expense
Administrative expense(991)(299)(1,290)
Credit enhancement expense(686)(18)(704)
Benefit for (decrease in) credit enhancement recoveries(435)(15)(450)
REO operations expense(15)— (15)
Temporary Payroll Tax Cut Continuation Act of 2011 expense(1,104)— (1,104)
Other expense(381)(13)(394)
Non-interest expense(3,612)(345)(3,957)
Income (loss) before income tax (expense) benefit5,784 2,334 8,118 
Income tax (expense) benefit(1,191)(481)(1,672)
Net income (loss)4,593 1,853 6,446 
Other comprehensive income (loss), net of taxes and reclassification adjustments
Changes in unrealized gains (losses) related to available-for-sale securities(414)(54)(468)
Changes in unrealized gains (losses) related to cash flow hedge relationships18 — 18 
Changes in defined benefit plans(6)(1)(7)
Total other comprehensive income (loss), net of taxes and reclassification adjustments(402)(55)(457)
Comprehensive income (loss)$4,191 $1,798 $5,989 

Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
113

Financial Statements
                      Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 15

 2Q 2020
 Single-familyMultifamilyTotal
(In millions)
Net interest income $2,590 $286 $2,876 
Non-interest income (loss)
Guarantee income55 414 469 
Investment gains (losses), net(61)731 670 
Other income (loss)83 51 134 
Non-interest income (loss)77 1,196 1,273 
Net revenues2,667 1,482 4,149 
Benefit (provision) for credit losses(624)(81)(705)
Non-interest expense
Administrative expense(477)(124)(601)
Credit enhancement expense(228)(5)(233)
Benefit for (decrease in) credit enhancement recoveries219 221 
REO operations expense(14)— (14)
Temporary Payroll Tax Cut Continuation Act of 2011 expense(442)— (442)
Other expense(131)(9)(140)
Non-interest expense(1,073)(136)(1,209)
Income (loss) before income tax (expense) benefit970 1,265 2,235 
Income tax (expense) benefit(198)(260)(458)
Net income (loss)772 1,005 1,777 
Other comprehensive income (loss), net of taxes and reclassification adjustments
Changes in unrealized gains (losses) related to available-for-sale securities95 59 154 
Changes in unrealized gains (losses) related to cash flow hedge relationships11 — 11 
Changes in defined benefit plans(3)(1)(4)
Total other comprehensive income (loss), net of taxes and reclassification adjustments103 58 161 
Comprehensive income (loss)$875 $1,063 $1,938 
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
114

Financial Statements
                      Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 15

 YTD 2020
 Single-familyMultifamilyTotal
(In millions)
Net interest income$5,075 $586 $5,661 
Non-interest income (loss)
Guarantee income42 804 846 
Investment gains (losses), net(37)(128)(165)
Other income (loss)141 88 229 
Non-interest income (loss)146 764 910 
Net revenues5,221 1,350 6,571 
Benefit (provision) for credit losses(1,790)(148)(1,938)
Non-interest expense
Administrative expense(944)(244)(1,188)
Credit enhancement expense(455)(9)(464)
Benefit for (decrease in) credit enhancement recoveries658 30 688 
REO operations expense(99)— (99)
Temporary Payroll Tax Cut Continuation Act of 2011 expense(874)— (874)
Other expense(229)(14)(243)
Non-interest expense(1,943)(237)(2,180)
Income (loss) before income tax (expense) benefit1,488 965 2,453 
Income tax (expense) benefit(305)(198)(503)
Net income (loss)1,183 767 1,950 
Other comprehensive income (loss), net of taxes and reclassification adjustments
Changes in unrealized gains (losses) related to available-for-sale securities469 123 592 
Changes in unrealized gains (losses) related to cash flow hedge relationships24 — 24 
Changes in defined benefit plans(5)(1)(6)
Total other comprehensive income (loss), net of taxes and reclassification adjustments488 122 610 
Comprehensive income (loss)$1,671 $889 $2,560 
We measure total assets for our reportable segments based on the mortgage portfolio for each segment. We operate our business in the U.S. and its territories, and accordingly, we generate no revenue from and have no long-lived assets, other than financial instruments, in geographic locations other than the U.S. and its territories.
The table below presents total assets for our Single-family and Multifamily segments.
Table 15.2 - Segment Assets
(In millions)June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
Single-family$2,563,589 $2,326,426 
Multifamily398,427 388,347 
Total segment assets2,962,016 2,714,773 
Reconciling items(1)
(119,874)(87,358)
Total assets per condensed consolidated balance sheets$2,842,142 $2,627,415 
(1)Reconciling items include assets in our mortgage portfolio that are not recognized on our condensed consolidated balance sheets and assets recognized on our condensed consolidated balance sheets that are not allocated to the reportable segments.



Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
115

Financial Statements
                      Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 16

NOTE 16
Concentration of Credit and Other Risks
Single-Family Mortgage Portfolio
The table below summarizes the concentration by loan portfolio and geographic area of the approximately $2.6 trillion and $2.3 trillion UPB of our single-family mortgage portfolio as of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively. See Note 4, Note 6, and Note 7 for more information about credit risk associated with loans and mortgage-related securities that we hold or guarantee.
Table 16.1 - Concentration of Credit Risk of Our Single-Family Mortgage Portfolio
June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
YTD 2021(1)
YTD 2020(1)
(Dollars in billions)
Portfolio UPB(2)
% of
Portfolio
SDQ Rate
Portfolio UPB(2)
% of
Portfolio
SDQ RateCredit Losses Amount
% of Credit Losses(3)
Credit Losses Amount% of Credit Losses
Region:(4)
West
$800 31 %1.65 %$720 31 %2.41 %$— NM$— %
Northeast
608 24 2.30 549 24 3.16 — NM0.1 38 
North Central
385 15 1.52 357 15 2.06 — NM0.1 27 
Southeast
412 16 2.02 375 16 2.95 — NM0.1 20 
Southwest
358 14 1.82 325 14 2.59 — NM— 
Total
$2,563 100 %1.86 $2,326 100 %2.64 $— NM$0.3 100 %
State:
California $472 19 %1.80 $424 18 %2.64 $— NM$— %
Texas 158 2.13 145 3.11 — NM— 
Florida 149 2.42 135 3.70 — NM— 11 
New York 111 3.43 103 4.56 — NM— 10 
Illinois 102 2.34 96 2.96 — NM0.1 14 
All other1,571 61 1.66 1,423 62 2.34 — NM0.2 58 
Total$2,563 100 %1.86 $2,326 100 %2.64 $— NM$0.3 100 %
(1)Excludes credit losses related to charge-offs of accrued interest receivables.
(2)Excludes $476 million and $505 million in UPB of loans underlying certain securitization products for which data was not available as of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively.
(3)NM - not meaningful due to the credit losses amount rounding to zero.
(4)Region designation: West (AK, AZ, CA, GU, HI, ID, MT, NV, OR, UT, WA); Northeast (CT, DE, DC, MA, ME, MD, NH, NJ, NY, PA, RI, VT, VA, WV); North Central (IL, IN, IA, MI, MN, ND, OH, SD, WI); Southeast (AL, FL, GA, KY, MS, NC, PR, SC, TN, VI); Southwest (AR, CO, KS, LA, MO, NE, NM, OK, TX, WY).
Credit Performance of Certain Higher Risk Single-Family Loan Categories
Participants in the mortgage market have characterized single-family loans based upon their overall credit quality at the time of origination, including as prime or subprime. Mortgage market participants have classified single-family loans as Alt-A if these loans have credit characteristics that range between their prime and subprime categories, if they are underwritten with lower or alternative income or asset documentation requirements compared to a full documentation loan, or both. Although we discontinued new purchases of loans with lower documentation standards beginning March 1, 2009, we continued to purchase certain amounts of these loans in cases where the loan was either:
n    Purchased pursuant to a previously issued other mortgage-related guarantee;
n    Part of our relief refinance initiative; or
n    In another refinance loan initiative and the pre-existing loan (including Alt-A loans) was originated under less than full documentation standards.
In the event we purchase a refinance loan and the original loan had been previously identified as Alt-A, such refinance loan may no longer be categorized or reported as Alt-A in the table below because the new refinance loan replacing the original loan would not be identified by the seller/servicer as an Alt-A loan. As a result, our reported Alt-A balances may be lower than would otherwise be the case had such refinancing not occurred.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
116

Financial Statements
                      Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 16

Although we do not categorize single-family loans we purchase or guarantee as prime or subprime, we recognize that there are a number of loan types with certain characteristics that indicate a higher degree of credit risk.
For example, a borrower's credit score is a useful measure for assessing the credit quality of the borrower. Statistically, borrowers with higher credit scores are more likely to repay or have the ability to refinance than those with lower scores.
Presented below is a summary of the serious delinquency rates of certain higher-risk categories (based on characteristics of the loan at origination) of loans in our single-family mortgage portfolio. The table presents each higher-risk category in isolation. A single loan may fall within more than one category (for example, a loan with an original LTV ratio greater than 90% may also have a credit score at origination less than 620). Loans with a combination of these attributes will have an even higher risk of delinquency than those with an individual attribute.
Table 16.2 - Certain Higher Risk Categories in Our Single-Family Mortgage Portfolio
% of Portfolio(1)
SDQ Rate(1)
(% of portfolio based on UPB)June 30, 2021December 31, 2020June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
Alt-A
%%9.07 %10.66 %
Original LTV ratio greater than 90%(2)
13 15 3.31 4.25 
Lower credit scores at origination (less than 620)
9.45 11.00 
(1)Excludes $476 million and $505 million in UPB of loans underlying certain securitization products for which data was not available as of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively.
(2)Includes HARP loans, which we purchased as part of our participation in the MHA Program.
Sellers and Servicers
We acquire a significant portion of our single-family and multifamily loan purchase and guarantee volume from several large sellers. Single-family top 10 sellers provided 49% and 46% of our purchase and guarantee volume during YTD 2021 and YTD 2020, respectively. None of our single-family sellers provided 10% or more of our purchase and guarantee volume during these periods. The table below summarizes the concentration of multifamily sellers who provided 10% or more of our purchase and guarantee volume.
Table 16.3 - Multifamily Seller Concentration
Multifamily Sellers YTD 2021YTD 2020
Berkadia Commercial Mortgage LLC15 %15 %
CBRE Capital Markets, Inc.15 14 
Other top 10 sellers 50 48 
Top 10 multifamily sellers80 %77 %
We purchase single-family loans from both depository and non-depository sellers. Non-depository institutions may not have the same financial strength or operational capacity, or be subject to the same level of regulatory oversight, as large depository institutions. Our top five non-depository sellers provided approximately 29% and 24% of our single-family purchase volume during YTD 2021 and YTD 2020, respectively.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
117

Financial Statements
                      Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 16

Significant portions of our single-family and multifamily loans are serviced by several large servicers. The table below summarizes the concentration of single-family and multifamily servicers who serviced 10% or more of our single-family mortgage portfolio and multifamily mortgage portfolio as of June 30, 2021 or December 31, 2020.
Table 16.4 - Servicer Concentration
Single-family Servicers
June 30, 2021(1)
December 31, 2020(1)
Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.%11 %
Other top 10 servicers38 38 
Top 10 single-family servicers47 %49 %
Multifamily Servicers(2)
June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
CBRE Capital Markets, Inc.16 %17 %
Berkadia Commercial Mortgage LLC13 13 
JLL Real Estate Capital LLC11 11 
Other top 10 servicers41 39 
Top 10 multifamily servicers81 %80 %
(1)Percentage of servicing volume is based on the total single-family mortgage portfolio, which includes loans where we do not exercise servicing control. However, loans where we do not control servicing are not included for purposes of determining the concentration of servicers who serviced more than 10% of our single-family mortgage portfolio.
(2)Represents multifamily primary servicers.
Single-family loans utilize both depository and non-depository servicers. Some of these non-depository servicers have grown in recent years and now service a large share of our loans. As of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, approximately 19% and 18%, respectively, of our single-family mortgage portfolio, excluding loans for which we do not exercise control over the associated servicing, was serviced by our five largest non-depository servicers, on a combined basis. We routinely monitor the performance of our largest non-depository servicers.
Multifamily loans utilize both primary and master servicers. Primary servicers service unsecuritized mortgage loans and are also typically engaged by master servicers to service on their behalf the mortgage loans underlying securitizations. For a majority of our K Certificate securitizations, we utilize one of three large financial depository institutions as master servicer. For SB Certificate securitizations and a smaller number of K Certificate securitizations, we serve as master servicer. Multifamily primary servicers included in the table above present potential operational risk and impact to the borrowers if the servicing needs to be transferred to another servicer. We also rely on master servicers of our multifamily securitization transactions to advance funds in the event of payment shortfalls, including principal and interest payments related to loans in forbearance. In instances where payment shortfalls occur, the master servicer is required to make advances as long as such advances have not been deemed unrecoverable. For multifamily loans purchased and held in our mortgage-related investments portfolio, the primary servicers are not required to advance funds in the event of payment shortfalls and therefore do not present significant counterparty credit risk.
Credit Enhancement Providers
We have counterparty credit risk relating to the potential insolvency of, or non-performance by, mortgage insurers that insure single-family loans we purchase or guarantee. We also have similar exposure to insurers and reinsurers through our ACIS and other insurance transactions where we purchase insurance policies as part of our CRT activities. See Note 8 for additional information on our credit enhancements.
We evaluate the recovery and collectability from mortgage insurers as part of the estimate of our allowance for credit losses. See Note 7 for additional information. As of June 30, 2021, mortgage insurers provided coverage with maximum credit loss of $123.0 billion, for $501.8 billion of UPB, in connection with our single-family mortgage portfolio. These amounts are based on gross coverage without regard to netting of coverage that may exist to the extent an affected loan is covered under other types of insurance. Changes in our expectations related to recovery and collectability from our credit enhancement providers may affect our estimates of expected credit losses, perhaps significantly.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
118

Financial Statements
                      Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 16

The table below summarizes the concentration of mortgage insurer counterparties who provided 10% or more of our overall mortgage insurance coverage. On October 23, 2016, Genworth Financial, Inc. ("Genworth") announced that it had entered into an agreement to be acquired by China Oceanwide Holdings Group Co., Ltd. ("Oceanwide"). Because Genworth Mortgage Insurance Corporation, a subsidiary of Genworth, is an approved mortgage insurer, Freddie Mac evaluated the planned acquisition and approved Oceanwide's control of Genworth Mortgage Insurance Corporation. On April 6, 2021, Genworth announced that it had terminated its merger agreement with Oceanwide.
Table 16.5 - Mortgage Insurer Concentration
Mortgage Insurance Coverage(2)
Mortgage Insurer
Credit Rating(1)
June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
Arch Mortgage Insurance CompanyA20 %20 %
Mortgage Guaranty Insurance Corporation BBB+19 18 
Radian Guaranty Inc.BBB+18 19 
Essent Guaranty, Inc.BBB+15 16 
Genworth Mortgage Insurance CorporationBB+15 15 
National Mortgage Insurance CorporationBBB12 10 
Total99 %98 %
(1)    Ratings are for the corporate entity to which we have the greatest exposure. Latest rating available as of June 30, 2021. Represents the lower of S&P and Moody’s credit ratings stated in terms of the S&P equivalent.
(2)    Coverage amounts exclude coverage related to IMAGIN and certain loans for which we do not control servicing, and may include coverage provided by affiliates and subsidiaries of the counterparty.
PMI Mortgage Insurance Co. and Triad Guaranty Insurance Corp. are both under the control of their state regulators and are in run-off. A substantial portion of their claims is recorded by us as deferred payment obligations. As of both June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, we had cumulative unpaid deferred payment obligations of $0.4 billion from these insurers. We have reserved substantially all of these unpaid amounts as collectability is uncertain. It is not clear how the regulators of these companies will administer their respective deferred payment plans in the future, nor when or if those obligations will be paid.
As part of our insurance/reinsurance CRT transactions, we regularly obtain insurance coverage from insurers and reinsurers. These transactions incorporate several features designed to increase the likelihood that we will recover on the claims we file with the insurers and reinsurers, including the following:
n    In each transaction, we require the individual insurers and reinsurers to post collateral to cover portions of their exposure, which helps to promote certainty and timeliness of claim payment and
n    While private mortgage insurance companies are required to be monoline (i.e., to participate solely in the mortgage insurance business, although the holding company may be a diversified insurer), many of our insurers and reinsurers in these transactions participate in multiple types of insurance business, which helps diversify their risk exposure.
Other Investments Counterparties
We are exposed to the non-performance of counterparties relating to other investments (including non-mortgage-related securities and cash equivalents) transactions, including those entered into on behalf of our securitization trusts. Our policies require that the counterparty be evaluated using our internal counterparty rating model prior to our entering into such transactions. We monitor the financial strength of our counterparties to these transactions and may use collateral maintenance requirements to manage our exposure to individual counterparties. The permitted term and dollar limits for each of these transactions are also based on the counterparty's financial strength.
Our other investments (including non-mortgage-related securities and cash equivalents) counterparties are primarily major financial institutions, including other GSEs, Treasury, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, GSD/FICC, highly-rated supranational institutions, depository and non-depository institutions, brokers and dealers, and government money market funds. As of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, including amounts related to our consolidated VIEs, the balance in our other investments portfolio was $171.0 billion and $163.1 billion, respectively. The balances consist primarily of cash, securities purchased under agreements to resell invested with counterparties, U.S. Treasury securities, cash deposited with the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, and secured lending activities. As of June 30, 2021, all of our securities purchased under agreements to resell were fully collateralized. As of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, $0.7 billion and $0.8 billion, respectively, of our securities purchased under agreements to resell were used to provide financing to investors in Freddie Mac securities to increase liquidity and expand the investor base for those securities. These transactions differ from the securities purchased under agreements to resell that we use for liquidity purposes as the counterparties we face may not be major financial institutions and we are exposed to the counterparty risk of these institutions.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
119

Financial Statements
                      Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 17

NOTE 17
Fair Value Disclosures
The accounting guidance for fair value measurements and disclosures defines fair value, establishes a framework for measuring fair value, and sets forth disclosure requirements regarding fair value measurements. This guidance applies whenever other accounting guidance requires or permits assets or liabilities to be measured at fair value. Fair value represents the price that would be received to sell an asset or paid to transfer a liability in an orderly transaction between market participants at the measurement date. Fair value measurement assumes that the transaction to sell the asset or transfer the liability takes place either in the principal market for the asset or liability, or, in the absence of a principal market, in the most advantageous market for the asset or liability.
We use fair value measurements for the initial recording of certain assets and liabilities and periodic remeasurement of certain assets and liabilities on a recurring or non-recurring basis.
Fair Value Measurements
The accounting guidance for fair value measurements and disclosures establishes a three-level fair value hierarchy that prioritizes the inputs into the valuation techniques used to measure fair value. The levels of the fair value hierarchy are defined as follows in priority order:
n    Level 1 - inputs to the valuation techniques are based on quoted prices in active markets for identical assets or liabilities.
n    Level 2 - inputs to the valuation techniques are based on observable inputs other than quoted prices in active markets for identical assets or liabilities.
n    Level 3 - one or more inputs to the valuation technique are unobservable and significant to the fair value measurement.
We use quoted market prices and valuation techniques that seek to maximize the use of observable inputs, where available, and minimize the use of unobservable inputs. Our inputs are based on the assumptions a market participant would use in valuing the asset or liability. Assets and liabilities are classified in their entirety within the fair value hierarchy based on the lowest level input that is significant to the fair value measurement.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
120

Financial Statements
                      Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 17

Assets and Liabilities Measured at Fair Value on a Recurring Basis
The table below presents our assets and liabilities measured on our condensed consolidated balance sheets at fair value on a recurring basis subsequent to initial recognition, including instruments where we have elected the fair value option.
Table 17.1 - Assets and Liabilities Measured at Fair Value on a Recurring Basis
June 30, 2021
(In millions)
Level 1Level 2Level 3
Netting Adjustment(1)
Total
Assets:
Investment securities:
Available-for-sale, at fair value:
Mortgage-related securities:
Agency
$— $3,092 $476 $— $3,568 
Non-agency and other— 998 — 999 
Total available-for-sale securities, at fair value
 3,093 1,474  4,567 
Trading, at fair value:
Mortgage-related securities:
Agency
— 18,185 3,523 — 21,708 
Non-mortgage-related securities
32,269 1,014 — — 33,283 
Total trading securities, at fair value
32,269 19,199 3,523  54,991 
Total investments in securities32,269 22,292 4,997  59,558 
Mortgage loans:
Held-for-sale, at fair value— 6,811 — — 6,811 
 Derivative assets, net17 6,682 25 — 6,724 
 Netting adjustments(1)
— — — (5,968)(5,968)
Total derivative assets, net
17 6,682 25 (5,968)756 
Other assets:
 Guarantee assets, at fair value— — 5,869 — 5,869 
 Non-derivative held-for-sale purchase commitments, at fair value— 141 — — 141 
 All other, at fair value— — 70 — 70 
Total other assets
 141 5,939  6,080 
Total assets carried at fair value on a recurring basis
$32,286 $35,926 $10,961 ($5,968)$73,205 
Liabilities:
Debt securities of consolidated trusts held by third parties, at fair value$— $1 $251 $— $252 
Debt of Freddie Mac, at fair value— 1,704 117 — 1,821 
 Derivative liabilities, net— 8,048 23 — 8,071 
 Netting adjustments(1)
— — — (7,564)(7,564)
Total derivative liabilities, net 8,048 23 (7,564)507 
Total liabilities carried at fair value on a recurring basis
$— $9,753 $391 ($7,564)$2,580 
Referenced footnote is included after the prior period table.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
121

Financial Statements
                      Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 17

 December 31, 2020
(In millions)Level 1Level 2Level 3
Netting Adjustment(1)
Total
Assets:
Investment securities:
Available-for-sale, at fair value:
Mortgage-related securities:
Agency$— $13,778 $526 $— $14,304 
Non-agency and other— 1,062 — 1,063 
Total available-for-sale securities, at fair value 13,779 1,588  15,367 
Trading, at fair value:
Mortgage-related securities:
Agency— 14,246 3,258 — 17,504 
Non-agency— — — 
Total mortgage-related securities 14,246 3,259  17,505 
Non-mortgage-related securities26,255 698 — — 26,953 
Total trading securities, at fair value26,255 14,944 3,259  44,458 
Total investments in securities26,255 28,723 4,847  59,825 
Mortgage loans:
Held-for-sale, at fair value— 14,199 — — 14,199 
         Derivative assets, net — 8,516 63 — 8,579 
     Netting adjustments(1)
— — — (7,374)(7,374)
Total derivative assets, net 8,516 63 (7,374)1,205 
Other assets:
Guarantee assets, at fair value— — 5,509 — 5,509 
Non-derivative held-for-sale purchase commitments, at fair value— 158 — — 158 
All other, at fair value— — 108 — 108 
Total other assets 158 5,617  5,775 
Total assets carried at fair value on a recurring basis$26,255 $51,596 $10,527 ($7,374)$81,004 
Liabilities:
Debt securities of consolidated trusts held by third parties, at fair value$— $2 $203 $— $205 
   Debt of Freddie Mac, at fair value— 2,267 120 — 2,387 
    Derivative liabilities, net— 9,132 16 — 9,148 
Netting adjustments(1)
— — — (8,194)(8,194)
Total derivative liabilities, net 9,132 16 (8,194)954 
Other liabilities:
    Non-derivative held-for-sale purchase commitments, at fair value— — — 
    All other, at fair value— — — 
  Total other liabilities 1 3  4 
  Total liabilities carried at fair value on a recurring basis$— $11,402 $342 ($8,194)$3,550 
(1)     Represents counterparty netting, cash collateral netting, and net derivative interest receivable or payable.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
122

Financial Statements
                      Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 17

Level 3 Fair Value Measurements
The table below presents a reconciliation of all assets and liabilities measured on our condensed consolidated balance sheets at fair value on a recurring basis using significant unobservable inputs (Level 3), including transfers into and out of Level 3. The table also presents gains and losses due to changes in fair value, including both realized and unrealized gains and losses, recognized on our condensed consolidated statements of comprehensive income (loss) for Level 3 assets and liabilities.
Table 17.2 - Fair Value Measurements of Assets and Liabilities Using Significant Unobservable Inputs
2Q 2021
 
Balance,
April 1,
2021
Total Realized/Unrealized Gains (Losses)
Purchases
Issues
Sales
Settlements,
Net
Transfers
into
Level 3
(1)
Transfers
out of
Level 3
(1)
Balance,
June 30,
2021
Change in Unrealized Gains (Losses) Included in Net Income Related to Assets and Liabilities Still Held as of June 30, 2021(2)
Change in Unrealized Gains (Losses), Net of Tax, Included in OCI Related to Assets and Liabilities Still Held as of June 30, 2021
(In millions)
Included in
Earnings
Included in Other
Comprehensive
Income
Assets
Investment securities:
Available-for-sale, at fair value:
Mortgage-related securities:
Agency
$801 $— $1 $— $— ($296)($30)$— $— $476 $— $— 
Non-agency and other
1,035 — — — (50)— — 998 
Total available-for-sale mortgage-related securities
1,836 5 9   (296)(80)  1,474 6 7 
Trading, at fair value:
Mortgage-related securities:
Agency
3,061 (170)— 737 — — (23)— (82)3,523 (177)— 
Non-agency
(1)— — — — — — — — — — 
Total trading mortgage-related securities
3,062 (171) 737   (23) (82)3,523 (177) 
Derivative assets30 (5)— — — — — — — 25 (5)— 
Other assets:
Guarantee assets5,688 — — 416 — (240)— — 5,869 48 — 
All other, at fair value115 (39)— (9)(6)— — 70 (39)— 
Total other assets
5,803 (34) 5 420 (9)(246)  5,939 9  
 Balance,
April 1,
2021
Total Realized/Unrealized (Gains) Losses
Purchases
Issues
Sales
Settlements,
Net
Transfers
into
Level 3
(1)
Transfers
out of
Level 3
(1)
Balance,
June 30,
2021
Change in Unrealized (Gains) Losses Included in Net Income Related to Assets and Liabilities Still Held as of June 30, 2021(2)
Change in Unrealized (Gains) Losses, Net of Tax, Included in OCI Related to Assets and Liabilities Still Held as of June 30, 2021
 
Included in
Earnings
Included in Other
Comprehensive
Income
Liabilities
Debt securities of consolidated trusts held by third parties, at fair value$260 ($13)$— $— $35 $— ($31)$— $— $251 ($12)$— 
Debt of Freddie Mac, at fair value
120 (3)— — — — — — — 117 (2)— 
Derivative liabilities34 (8)— — — — (3)— — 23 (11)— 
All other, at fair value— (1)— — — — — — — (1)— 
Referenced footnotes are included after the prior period table.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
123

Financial Statements
                      Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 17

 YTD 2021
 Balance,
January 1,
2021
Total Realized/Unrealized Gains (Losses)PurchasesIssuesSalesSettlements,
Net
Transfers
into
Level 3
(1)
Transfers
out of
Level 3
(1)
Balance,
June 30,
2021
Change in Unrealized Gains (Losses) Included in Net Income Related to Assets and Liabilities Still Held as of June 30, 2021(2)
Change in Unrealized Gains (Losses), Net of Tax, Included in OCI Related to Assets and Liabilities Still Held as of June 30, 2021
(In millions)Included in
Earnings
Included in Other
Comprehensive
Income
 
Assets
Investment securities:
Available-for-sale, at fair value:
Mortgage-related securities:
Agency$526 $— ($5)$— $— $— ($45)$— $— $476 $— ($4)
Non-agency and other1,062 12 — — — (85)— — 998 12 
Total available-for-sale mortgage-related securities1,588 12 4    (130)  1,474 12 3 
Trading, at fair value:
Mortgage-related securities:
Agency3,258 (355)— 1,112 — (269)(43)— (180)3,523 (364)— 
Non-agency(1)— — — — — — — — — — 
Total trading mortgage-related securities3,259 (356) 1,112  (269)(43) (180)3,523 (364) 
Derivative assets63 (38)— — — — — — — 25 (38)— 
Other assets:
Guarantee asset5,509 (83)— — 905 — (462)— — 5,869 (79)— 
All other, at fair value108 (29)— 10 (9)(11)— — 70 (29)— 
Total other assets5,617 (112) 1 915 (9)(473)  5,939 (108) 
 Balance,
January 1,
2021
Total Realized/Unrealized (Gains) LossesPurchasesIssuesSalesSettlements,
Net
Transfers
into
Level 3
(1)
Transfers
out of
Level 3
(1)
Balance,
June 30,
2021
Change in Unrealized (Gains) Losses Included in Net Income Related to Assets and Liabilities Still Held as of June 30, 2021(2)
Change in Unrealized (Gains) Losses, Net of Tax, Included in OCI Related to Assets and Liabilities Still Held as of June 30, 2021
 Included in
Earnings
Included in Other
Comprehensive
Income
 
Liabilities
Debt securities of consolidated trusts held by third parties, at fair value$203 ($10)$— $— $88 $— ($30)$— $— $251 ($8)$— 
Other debt, at fair value120 — — — — (4)— — 117 — — 
Derivative liabilities16 11 — — — (6)— — 23 — 
All other, at fair value(5)— — — — — — — (5)— 
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
124

Financial Statements
                      Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 17

 2Q 2020
 Balance,
April 1,
2020
Total Realized/Unrealized Gains (Losses)PurchasesIssuesSalesSettlements,
Net
Transfers
into
Level 3
(1)
Transfers
out of
Level 3
(1)
Balance,
June 30,
2020
Change in Unrealized Gains (Losses) Included in Net Income Related to Assets and Liabilities Still Held as of June 30, 2020(2)
Change in Unrealized Gains (Losses), Net of Tax, Included in OCI Related to Assets and Liabilities Still Held as of June 30, 2020
(In millions)Included in
Earnings
Included in Other
Comprehensive
Income
 
Assets
Investment securities:
Available-for-sale, at fair value:
Mortgage-related securities:
Agency$650 $— $8 $197 $— ($10)($31)$— $— $814 $— $6 
Non-agency and other1,101 41 — — — (40)— — 1,106 32 
Total available-for-sale mortgage-related securities1,751 4 49 197  (10)(71)  1,920 4 38 
Trading, at fair value:
Mortgage-related securities:
Agency2,544 (53)— 742 — (170)(11)— — 3,052 (49)— 
Non-agency— — — — — — — — — — 
Total trading mortgage-related securities2,545 (53) 742  (170)(11)  3,053 (49) 
Derivative assets63 (1)— — — — — — — 62 51 — 
Other assets:
Guarantee assets4,565 163 — — 289 — (193)— — 4,824 163 — 
All other, at fair value106 (3)— (6)— 11 — — 114 (3)— 
Total other assets4,671 160  (6)295  (182)  4,938 160  
 Balance,
April 1,
2020
Total Realized/Unrealized (Gains) LossesPurchasesIssuesSalesSettlements,
Net
Transfers
into
Level 3
(1)
Transfers
out of
Level 3
(1)
Balance,
June 30,
2020
Change in Unrealized (Gains) Losses Included in Net Income Related to Assets and Liabilities Still Held as of June 30, 2020(2)
Change in Unrealized (Gains) Losses, Net of Tax, Included in OCI Related to Assets and Liabilities Still Held as of June 30, 2020
 Included in
Earnings
Included in Other
Comprehensive
Income
 
Liabilities
Debt securities of consolidated trusts held by third parties, at fair value$199 $3 $— $— $— $— $— $— $— $202 $3 $— 
Debt of Freddie Mac, at fair value
151 — — — (7)— (23)123 — 
Derivative liabilities24 (5)— — — — (2)— — 17 (28)— 
All other, at fair value— — — — — — — — — — 
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
125

Financial Statements
                      Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 17

 YTD 2020
 Balance,
January 1,
2020
Total Realized/Unrealized Gains (Losses)PurchasesIssuesSalesSettlements,
Net
Transfers
into
Level 3
(1)
Transfers
out of
Level 3
(1)
Balance,
June 30,
2020
Change in Unrealized Gains (Losses) Included in Net Income Related to Assets and Liabilities Still Held as of June 30, 2020(2)
Change in Unrealized Gains (Losses), Net of Tax, Included in OCI Related to Assets and Liabilities Still Held as of June 30, 2020
(In millions)Included in
Earnings
Included in Other
Comprehensive
Income
 
Assets
Investment securities:
Available-for-sale, at fair value:
Mortgage-related securities:
Agency$1,960 $12 $46 $197 $— ($218)($88)$— ($1,095)$814 $— $4 
Non-agency and other1,267 (86)— — — (82)— — 1,106 (68)
Total available-for-sale mortgage-related securities3,227 19 (40)197  (218)(170) (1,095)1,920 7 (64)
Trading, at fair value:
Mortgage-related securities:
Agency2,709 (37)— 923 — (104)(42)— (397)3,052 (44)— 
Non-agency— — — — — — — — — — 
Total trading mortgage-related securities2,710 (37) 923  (104)(42) (397)3,053 (44) 
Derivative assets16 45 — — — — — — 62 45 — 
Other assets:
Guarantee asset4,426 262 — — 512 — (376)— — 4,824 262 — 
All other, at fair value120 (11)— (6)12 (8)— — 114 (11)— 
Total other assets4,546 251  (6)524 (8)(369)  4,938 251  
 Balance,
January 1,
2020
Total Realized/Unrealized (Gains) LossesPurchasesIssuesSalesSettlements,
Net
Transfers
into
Level 3
(1)
Transfers
out of
Level 3
(1)
Balance,
June 30,
2020
Change in Unrealized (Gains) Losses Included in Net Income Related to Assets and Liabilities Still Held as of June 30, 2020(2)
Change in Unrealized (Gains) Losses, Net of Tax, Included in OCI Related to Assets and Liabilities Still Held as of June 30, 2020
 Included in
Earnings
Included in Other
Comprehensive
Income
 
Liabilities
Debt securities of consolidated trusts held by third parties, at fair value$203 ($1)$— $— $— $— $— $— $— $202 ($1)$— 
Other debt, at fair value129 — — — — (8)— — 123 — — 
Derivative liabilities37 (14)— — — (8)— — 17 (22)— 
All other, at fair value— — — — — — — — — — 
(1)Transfers out of Level 3 during 2Q 2021, YTD 2021, 2Q 2020, and YTD 2020 consisted primarily of certain mortgage-related securities due to an increased volume and level of activity in the market and availability of price quotes from dealers and third-party pricing services. Certain Freddie Mac securities are classified as Level 3 at issuance and generally are classified as Level 2 when they begin trading.
(2)Represents the amount of total gains or losses for the period, included in earnings, attributable to the change in unrealized gains and losses related to assets and liabilities classified as Level 3 that were still held at June 30, 2021 and June 30, 2020, respectively. This amount includes any allowance for credit losses recorded on available-for-sale securities and amortization of basis adjustments.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
126

Financial Statements
                      Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 17

The table below provides valuation techniques, the range, and the weighted average of significant unobservable inputs for Level 3 assets and liabilities measured on our condensed consolidated balance sheets at fair value on a recurring basis.
Table 17.3 - Quantitative Information about Recurring Level 3 Fair Value Measurements
June 30, 2021
 
Level 3
Fair
Value
Predominant
Valuation
Technique(s)
Unobservable Inputs
(Dollars in millions, except for certain unobservable inputs as shown)

TypeRange
Weighted
Average(2)
Assets
Available-for-sale, at fair value
Mortgage-related securities
Agency
$379 Discounted cash flowsOAS
89 - 89 bps
89 bps
97 Other
Non-agency and other
855 Median of external sourcesExternal pricing sources
$66.4 - $79.5
$72.4 
143 Other
Trading, at fair value
Mortgage-related securities
Agency
2,879 Single external sourceExternal pricing sources
$0.0 - $7,971.4
$596.0 
644 Other
Guarantee assets, at fair value5,455  Discounted cash flows OAS
17 - 186 bps
45 bps
414 Other
Insignificant Level 3 assets(1)
95 
Total level 3 assets$10,961 
Liabilities
Debt securities of consolidated trusts held by third parties, at fair value$172 Single external sourceExternal pricing sources
$99.9 - $106.9
$102.1 
79 Other
Insignificant Level 3 liabilities(1)
140 
Total level 3 liabilities$391 
Referenced footnotes are included after the next table.

Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
127

Financial Statements
                      Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 17


 December 31, 2020
 
Level 3
Fair
Value
Predominant
Valuation
Technique(s)
Unobservable Inputs
(Dollars in millions, except for certain unobservable inputs as shown)
Type
Range
Weighted
Average(2)
Assets
Available-for-sale, at fair value
Mortgage-related securities
Agency
$410 
Discounted cash flows
OAS
90 - 90 bps
90 bps
116 Other
Non-agency and other
875 Median of external sourcesExternal pricing sources
$67.1 - $79.1
$72.8 

187 
Other
Trading, at fair value
Mortgage-related securities
Agency
2,204 
Single external source
External pricing sources
$0.0 - $8,894.6
$947.8 

472 
Discounted cash flows
OAS
(951) - 2,910 bps
834 bps
583 Other
    Guarantee assets, at fair value5,195 
 Discounted cash flows
OAS
15 - 186 bps
38 bps
314 
Other
    Insignificant Level 3 assets(1)
171 
Total level 3 assets
$10,527 
Liabilities
Debt securities of consolidated trusts held by third parties, at fair value
$203 
Single external source
External pricing sources
$97.3 - $107.0
$101.7 
Insignificant Level 3 liabilities(1)
139 
Total level 3 liabilities$342 
(1)     Represents the aggregate amount of Level 3 assets or liabilities measured at fair value on a recurring basis that are individually and in the aggregate insignificant.
(2) Unobservable inputs were weighted primarily by the relative fair value of the financial instruments.



Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
128

Financial Statements
                      Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 17

Assets Measured at Fair Value on a Non-Recurring Basis
We may be required, from time to time, to measure certain assets at fair value on a non-recurring basis. These adjustments usually result from the application of lower-of-cost-or-fair-value accounting or measurement of impairment based on the fair value of the underlying collateral. Certain of the fair values in the tables below were not obtained as of the period end, but were obtained during the period.
The table below presents assets measured on our condensed consolidated balance sheets at fair value on a non-recurring basis.
Table 17.4 - Assets Measured at Fair Value on a Non-Recurring Basis
June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
(In millions)Level 1Level 2Level 3TotalLevel 1Level 2Level 3Total
Assets measured at fair value on a non-recurring basis:
Mortgage loans(1)
$— $32 $1,443 $1,475 $— $6 $2,241 $2,247 
(1)Includes loans that are classified as held-for-investment and have been measured for impairment based on the fair value of the underlying collateral and held-for-sale loans where the fair value is below cost.
The table below provides valuation techniques, the range, and the weighted average of significant unobservable inputs for Level 3 assets measured on our condensed consolidated balance sheets at fair value on a non-recurring basis.
Table 17.5 - Quantitative Information About Non-Recurring Level 3 Fair Value Measurements
June 30, 2021
 
Level 3
Fair
Value
Predominant
Valuation
Technique(s)
Unobservable Inputs
(Dollars in millions, except for unobservable inputs as shown)
TypeRange
Weighted
Average(1)
Non-recurring fair value measurements
Mortgage loans$1,443 
Internal modelHistorical sales proceeds
$3,150 - $622,325
$209,088
Internal modelHousing sales index
72 - 637 bps
127 bps
Median of external sourcesExternal pricing sources
$60.0 - $106.3
$95.2
 December 31, 2020
 
Level 3
Fair
Value
Predominant
Valuation
Technique(s)
Unobservable Inputs
(Dollars in millions, except for unobservable inputs as shown)
TypeRange
Weighted
Average(1)
Non-recurring fair value measurements
Mortgage loans$2,241 
Internal modelHistorical sales proceeds
$3,001 - $696,004
$202,539
Internal modelHousing sales index
66 - 345 bps
119 bps
Median of external sourcesExternal pricing sources
$59.5 - $104.0
$92.1
(1) Unobservable inputs were weighted primarily by the relative fair value of the financial instruments.

Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
129

Financial Statements
                      Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 17

Fair Value of Financial Instruments
The table below presents the carrying value and estimated fair value of our financial instruments. For certain types of financial instruments, such as cash and cash equivalents, securities purchased under agreements to resell, secured lending and other, and certain debt, the carrying value on our GAAP balance sheets approximates fair value, as these assets and liabilities are short-term in nature and have limited fair value volatility.
Table 17.6 - Fair Value of Financial Instruments
June 30, 2021
GAAP Measurement Category(1)
GAAP Carrying  AmountFair Value
(In millions)Level 1Level 2Level 3
Netting 
Adjustments(2)
Total
Financial Assets
Cash and cash equivalentsAmortized cost$11,171 $11,171 $— $— $— $11,171 
Securities purchased under agreements to resellAmortized cost113,697 — 118,317 — (4,620)113,697 
Investment securities:
Available-for-sale, at fair valueFV - OCI4,567 — 3,093 1,474 — 4,567 
Trading, at fair valueFV - NI54,991 32,269 19,199 3,523 — 54,991 
Total investment securities59,558 32,269 22,292 4,997  59,558 
Mortgage loans:
Loans held by consolidated trusts2,543,467 — 2,351,354 234,749 — 2,586,103 
Loans held by Freddie Mac64,756 — 36,783 30,364 — 67,147 
Total mortgage loans
Various(3)
2,608,223  2,388,137 265,113  2,653,250 
Derivative assets, netFV - NI756 17 6,682 25 (5,968)756 
Guarantee assetsFV - NI5,869 — — 5,873 — 5,873 
Non-derivative purchase commitments, at fair valueFV - NI141 — 226 — — 226 
Advances to lendersAmortized cost5,045 — — 5,045 — 5,045 
Secured lendingAmortized cost1,593 — 1,391 56 — 1,447 
Total financial assets$2,806,053 $43,457 $2,537,045 $281,109 ($10,588)$2,851,023 
Financial Liabilities
Debt:
Debt securities of consolidated trusts held by third parties$2,575,653 $— $2,607,642 $796 $— $2,608,438 
Debt of Freddie Mac227,102 — 233,566 3,965 (4,620)232,911 
Total debt
Various(4)
2,802,755  2,841,208 4,761 (4,620)2,841,349 
Derivative liabilities, netFV - NI507 — 8,048 23 (7,564)507 
Guarantee obligationsAmortized cost5,422 — — 6,232 — 6,232 
Non-derivative purchase commitments, at fair valueFV - NI12 — — 53 — 53 
Total financial liabilities$2,808,696 $— $2,849,256 $11,069 ($12,184)$2,848,141 
(1)FV - NI denotes fair value through net income. FV - OCI denotes fair value through other comprehensive income.
(2)Represents counterparty netting, cash collateral netting, and net derivative interest receivable or payable.
(3)As of June 30, 2021, the GAAP carrying amounts measured at amortized cost, lower-of-cost-or-fair-value, and FV - NI were $2.6 trillion, $10.7 billion, and $6.8 billion, respectively.
(4)As of June 30, 2021, the GAAP carrying amounts measured at amortized cost and FV - NI were $2.8 trillion and $2.1 billion, respectively.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
130

Financial Statements
                      Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 17

December 31, 2020
 
GAAP Measurement Category(1)
GAAP Carrying  AmountFair Value
(In millions)Level 1Level 2Level 3
Netting Adjustments(2)
Total
Financial Assets
Cash and cash equivalentsAmortized cost$23,889 $23,889 $— $— $— $23,889 
Securities purchased under agreements to resellAmortized cost105,003 — 105,003 — — 105,003 
Investment securities:
Available-for-sale, at fair valueFV - OCI15,367 — 13,779 1,588 — 15,367 
Trading, at fair valueFV - NI44,458 26,255 14,944 3,259 — 44,458 
Total investment securities59,825 26,255 28,723 4,847  59,825 
Mortgage loans:
Loans held by consolidated trusts2,273,347 — 2,080,687 262,309 — 2,342,996 
Loans held by Freddie Mac110,541 — 76,917 36,578 — 113,495 
Total mortgage loans
Various(3)
2,383,888  2,157,604 298,887  2,456,491 
Derivative assets, netFV - NI1,205 — 8,516 63 (7,374)1,205 
Guarantee assetsFV - NI5,509 — — 5,515 — 5,515 
Non-derivative purchase commitments, at fair valueFV - NI158 — 246 — — 246 
Advances to lendersAmortized cost4,162 — — 4,162 — 4,162 
Secured lendingAmortized cost1,680 — 1,427 89 — 1,516 
Total financial assets$2,585,319 $50,144 $2,301,519 $313,563 ($7,374)$2,657,852 
Financial Liabilities
Debt:
Debt securities of consolidated trusts held by third parties$2,308,176 $— $2,382,157 $852 $— $2,383,009 
Debt of Freddie Mac284,370 — 286,634 4,088 — 290,722 
Total debt
Various(4)
2,592,546  2,668,791 4,940  2,673,731 
Derivative liabilities, netFV - NI954 — 9,132 16 (8,194)954 
Guarantee obligationsAmortized cost5,050 — — 5,378 — 5,378 
Non-derivative purchase commitments, at fair valueFV - NI20 — 143 — 144 
Total financial liabilities$2,598,570 $— $2,677,924 $10,477 ($8,194)$2,680,207 
(1)FV - NI denotes fair value through net income. FV - OCI denotes fair value through other comprehensive income.
(2)Represents counterparty netting, cash collateral netting, and net derivative interest receivable or payable.
(3)As of December 31, 2020, the GAAP carrying amounts measured at amortized cost, lower-of-cost-or-fair-value, and FV - NI were $2.4 trillion, $19.5 billion, and $14.2 billion, respectively.
(4)As of December 31, 2020, the GAAP carrying amounts measured at amortized cost and FV - NI were $2.6 trillion and $2.6 billion, respectively.
Fair Value Option
We elected the fair value option for certain multifamily held-for-sale loans, multifamily held-for-sale loan purchase commitments, and long-term debt.
The table below presents the fair value and UPB related to certain loans and long-term debt for which we have elected the fair value option. This table does not include interest-only securities related to debt securities of consolidated trusts and debt of Freddie Mac held by third parties with a fair value of $233 million and $173 million and multifamily held-for-sale loan purchase commitments with a net fair value of $141 million and $157 million, as of June 30, 2021 and December 31, 2020, respectively.
Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
131

Financial Statements
                      Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 17

Table 17.7 - Difference between Fair Value and UPB for Certain Financial Instruments with Fair Value Option Elected
June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
(In millions)
Multifamily
Held-For-Sale
 Loans
Debt of Freddie Mac -
Long Term
Debt Securities of Consolidated Trusts Held by Third Parties
Multifamily
Held-For-Sale
 Loans
Debt of Freddie Mac -
Long Term
Debt Securities of Consolidated Trusts Held by Third Parties
Fair value$6,811 $1,668 $172 $14,199 $2,216 $203 
UPB6,424 1,637 169 13,400 2,189 200 
Difference$387 $31 $3 $799 $27 $3 
Changes in Fair Value Under the Fair Value Option Election
The table below presents the changes in fair value included in non-interest income (loss) in our condensed consolidated statements of comprehensive income (loss), related to items for which we have elected the fair value option.
Table 17.8 - Changes in Fair Value Under the Fair Value Option Election
2Q 20212Q 2020YTD 2021YTD 2020
(In millions)Gains (Losses) Gains (Losses)
Multifamily held-for-sale loans
$221 $313 ($230)$951 
Multifamily held-for-sale loan purchase commitments 342 650 537 1,182 
Debt of Freddie Mac - long term22 (70)30 478 
Debt securities of consolidated trusts held by third parties13 — 
Changes in fair value attributable to instrument-specific credit risk were not material for 2Q 2021, YTD 2021, 2Q 2020, and YTD 2020 for assets or liabilities for which we elected the fair value option.

Freddie Mac 2Q 2021 Form 10-Q
132

Financial Statements
                      Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 18

NOTE 18
Legal Contingencies
We are involved as a party in a variety of legal and regulatory proceedings arising from time to time in the ordinary course of business including, among other things, contractual disputes, personal injury claims, employment-related litigation, and other legal proceedings incidental to our business. We are frequently involved, directly or indirectly, in litigation involving mortgage foreclosures. From time to time, we are also involved in proceedings arising from our termination of a seller's or servicer's eligibility to sell loans to, and/or service loans for, us. In these cases, the former seller or servicer sometimes seeks damages against us for wrongful termination under a variety of legal theories. In addition, we are sometimes sued in connection with the origination or servicing of loans. These suits typically involve claims alleging wrongful actions of sellers and servicers. Our contracts with our sellers and servicers generally provide for indemnification of Freddie Mac against liability arising from sellers' and servicers' wrongful actions with respect to loans sold to or serviced for Freddie Mac.
Litigation and claims resolution are subject to many uncertainties and are not susceptible to accurate prediction. In accordance with the accounting guidance for contingencies, we reserve for litigation claims and assessments asserted or threatened against us when a loss is probable (as defined in such guidance) and the amount of the loss can be reasonably estimated.
Putative Securities Class Action Lawsuit: Ohio Public Employees Retirement System vs. Freddie Mac, Syron, Et Al.
This putative securities class action lawsuit was filed against Freddie Mac and certain former officers on January 18, 2008 in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Ohio purportedly on behalf of a class of purchasers of Freddie Mac stock from August 1, 2006 through November 20, 2007. FHFA later intervened as Conservator, and the plaintiff amended its complaint on several occasions. The plaintiff alleged, among other things, that the defendants violated federal securities laws by making false and misleading statements concerning our business, risk management, and the procedures we put into place to protect the company from problems in the mortgage industry. The plaintiff seeks unspecified damages and interest, and reasonable costs and expenses, including attorney and expert fees.
In October 2013, defendants filed motions to dismiss the complaint. In October 2014, the District Court granted defendants' motions and dismissed the case in its entirety against all defendants, with prejudice. In November 2014, plaintiff filed a notice of appeal in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. On July 20, 2016, the Sixth Circuit reversed the District Court's dismissal and remanded the case to the District Court for further proceedings. On August 14, 2018, the District Court denied the plaintiff's motion for class certification. On January 23, 2019, the Sixth Circuit denied plaintiff's petition for leave to appeal that decision. On September 17, 2020, the District Court granted a request from the plaintiff for summary judgment and entered final judgment in favor of Freddie Mac and the other defendants. On October 9, 2020, the plaintiff filed a notice of appeal with the Sixth Circuit. On January 27, 2021, Freddie Mac filed a motion to dismiss the appeal.
At present, it is not possible for us to predict the probable outcome of this lawsuit or any potential effect on our business, financial condition, liquidity, or results of operations. In addition, we are unable to reasonably estimate the possible loss or range of possible loss in the event of an adverse judgment in the foregoing matter due to the following factors, among others: the inherent uncertainty of the appellate process, and the inherent uncertainty of pre-trial litigation in the event the case is ultimately remanded to the District Court in whole or in part. In particular, while the District Court denied plaintiff's motion for class certification, this decision and the entry of final judgment in defendants' favor have been appealed. Absent a final resolution of whether a class will be certified, the identification of a class if one is certified, and the identification of the alleged statement or statements that survive dispositive motions, we cannot reasonably estimate any possible loss or range of possible loss.
LIBOR Lawsuit
On March 14, 2013, Freddie Mac filed a lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia against the British Bankers Association and the 16 U.S. Dollar LIBOR panel banks and a number of their affiliates. The case was subsequently transferred to the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York. The complaint alleges, among other things, that the defendants fraudulently and collusively depressed LIBOR, a benchmark interest rate indexed to trillions of dollars of financial products, and asserts claims for antitrust violations, breach of contract, tortious interference with contract, and fraud. Freddie Mac filed an amended complaint in July 2013, and a second amended complaint in October 2014. In August 2015, the District Court dismissed the portion of our claim related to antitrust violations and fraud and we filed a motion for reconsideration. On March 31, 2016, the District Court granted a portion of our motion, finding personal jurisdiction over certain defendants, and denied the portion of our motion with respect to statutes of limitation for our fraud claims. Subsequently, in a related case, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit reversed the District Court's dismissal of certain plaintiffs' antitrust claims and
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remanded the case to the District Court for consideration of whether, among other things, the plaintiffs are "efficient enforcers" of the antitrust laws.
On December 20, 2016, after briefing and argument on the defendants' renewed motions to dismiss on personal jurisdiction and efficient enforcer grounds, the District Court denied defendants' motions in part and granted them in part. The District Court held that Freddie Mac is an efficient enforcer of the antitrust laws, but dismissed on personal jurisdiction grounds Freddie Mac's antitrust claims against all defendants except HSBC USA, N.A. Then, in an order issued February 2, 2017, the District Court effectively dismissed Freddie Mac's remaining antitrust claim against HSBC USA, N.A. At present, Freddie Mac's breach of contract actions against Bank of America, N.A., Barclays Bank, Citibank, N.A., Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, Royal Bank of Scotland, and UBS AG are its only claims remaining in the District Court.
On February 23, 2018, the Second Circuit reversed the District Court's dismissal of certain plaintiffs' state law fraud and unjust enrichment claims on statutes of limitations grounds. While Freddie Mac was not a party to the appeal, this decision could have the effect of reinstating Freddie Mac's fraud claims against the above-named defendants. The Second Circuit also reversed certain aspects of the District Court's personal jurisdiction rulings and remanded with instructions to allow the named appellant to amend its complaint. The District Court subsequently granted in part Freddie Mac's motion for leave to amend its complaint, and Freddie Mac amended its complaint on April 16, 2019.
Litigation Concerning the Purchase Agreement
Since July 2013, a number of lawsuits have been filed against us concerning the August 2012 amendment to the Purchase Agreement, which created the net worth sweep dividend provisions of the senior preferred stock. The plaintiffs in the lawsuits allege that they are holders of common stock and/or junior preferred stock issued by Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae. (For purposes of this discussion, junior preferred stock refers to the various series of preferred stock of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae other than the senior preferred stock issued to Treasury.) It is possible that similar lawsuits will be filed in the future. The lawsuits against us are described below.
Litigation in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia
In re Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac Senior Preferred Stock Purchase Agreement Class Action Litigations. This case is the result of the consolidation of three putative class action lawsuits: Cacciapelle and Bareiss vs. Federal National Mortgage Association, Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation and FHFA, filed on July 29, 2013; American European Insurance Company vs. Federal National Mortgage Association, Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation and FHFA, filed on July 30, 2013; and Marneu Holdings, Co. vs. FHFA, Treasury, Federal National Mortgage Association and Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation, filed on September 18, 2013. (The Marneu case was also filed as a shareholder derivative lawsuit.) A consolidated amended complaint was filed in December 2013. In the consolidated amended complaint, plaintiffs alleged, among other items, that the August 2012 amendment to the Purchase Agreement breached Freddie Mac's and Fannie Mae's respective contracts with the holders of junior preferred stock and common stock and the covenant of good faith and fair dealing inherent in such contracts. Plaintiffs sought unspecified damages, equitable and injunctive relief, and costs and expenses, including attorney and expert fees.
The Cacciapelle and American European Insurance Company lawsuits were filed purportedly on behalf of a class of purchasers of junior preferred stock issued by Freddie Mac or Fannie Mae who held stock prior to, and as of, August 17, 2012. The Marneu lawsuit was filed purportedly on behalf of a class of purchasers of junior preferred stock and purchasers of common stock issued by Freddie Mac or Fannie Mae over a not-yet-defined period of time.
Arrowood Indemnity Company vs. Federal National Mortgage Association, Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation, FHFA, and Treasury. This case was filed on September 20, 2013. The allegations and demands made by plaintiffs in this case were generally similar to those made by the plaintiffs in the In re Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac Senior Preferred Stock Purchase Agreement Class Action Litigations case described above. Plaintiffs in the Arrowood lawsuit also requested that, if injunctive relief were not granted, the Arrowood plaintiffs be awarded damages against the defendants in an amount to be determined including, but not limited to, the aggregate par value of their junior preferred stock, the total of which they stated to be approximately $42 million.
American European Insurance Company, Cacciapelle, and Miller vs. Treasury and FHFA. This case was filed as a shareholder derivative lawsuit, purportedly on behalf of Freddie Mac as a nominal defendant, on July 30, 2014. The complaint alleged that, through the August 2012 amendment to the Purchase Agreement, Treasury and FHFA breached their respective fiduciary duties to Freddie Mac, causing Freddie Mac to suffer damages. The plaintiffs asked that Freddie Mac be awarded compensatory damages and disgorgement, as well as attorneys' fees, costs, and other expenses.
FHFA, joined by Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, moved to dismiss the In re Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac Senior Preferred Stock Purchase Agreement Class Action Litigations case and the other related cases in January 2014. Treasury filed a motion to dismiss the same day. In September 2014, the District Court granted the motions and dismissed the plaintiffs' claims. All plaintiffs appealed that decision, and on February 21, 2017, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit affirmed in part and remanded in part the decision granting the motions to dismiss. The DC Circuit affirmed dismissal of all
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claims except certain claims seeking monetary damages for breach of contract and breach of implied duty of good faith and fair dealing. In March 2017, certain institutional and class plaintiffs filed petitions for panel rehearing with respect to certain claims. On July 17, 2017, the DC Circuit granted the petitions for rehearing and issued a modified decision, which permitted the institutional plaintiffs to pursue the breach of contract and breach of implied duty of good faith and fair dealing claims that had been remanded. The DC Circuit also removed language related to the standard to be applied to the implied duty claims, leaving that issue for the District Court to determine on remand. On October 16, 2017, certain institutional and class plaintiffs filed petitions for a writ of certiorari in the U.S. Supreme Court challenging whether HERA's prohibition on injunctive relief against FHFA bars judicial review of the net worth sweep dividend provisions of the August 2012 amendment to the Purchase Agreement, as well as whether HERA bars shareholders from pursuing derivative litigation where they allege the conservator faces a conflict of interest. The Supreme Court denied the petitions on February 20, 2018. On November 1, 2017, certain institutional and class plaintiffs and plaintiffs in another case in which Freddie Mac was not originally a defendant, Fairholme Funds, Inc. v. FHFA, Treasury, and Federal National Mortgage Association, filed proposed amended complaints in the District Court. Each of the proposed amended complaints names Freddie Mac as a defendant for breach of contract and breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing claims as well as for new claims alleging breach of fiduciary duty and breach of Virginia corporate law. On January 10, 2018, FHFA, Freddie Mac, and Fannie Mae moved to dismiss the amended complaints. On September 28, 2018, the District Court dismissed all of the claims except those alleging breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing. Discovery is ongoing.
Litigation in the U.S. Court of Federal Claims
Reid and Fisher vs. the United States of America and Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation. This case was filed as a derivative lawsuit, purportedly on behalf of Freddie Mac as a nominal defendant, on February 26, 2014. The complaint alleges, among other items, that the net worth sweep dividend provisions of the senior preferred stock constitute an unlawful taking of private property for public use without just compensation. The plaintiffs ask that Freddie Mac be awarded just compensation for the U.S. government's alleged taking of its property, attorneys' fees, costs, and other expenses. On March 8, 2018, the plaintiffs filed an amended complaint under seal, with a redacted copy filed on November 14, 2018. The United States filed a motion to dismiss on August 1, 2018 and an amended motion to dismiss on October 1, 2018. The Court denied the United States' motion to dismiss on May 8, 2020 and granted plaintiffs' motion to certify the decisions for interlocutory appeal on June 11, 2020. The Federal Circuit denied the petition for interlocutory appeal on August 21, 2020. These proceedings are stayed pending a ruling on the Fairholme Funds appeals.
Fairholme Funds, Inc., et al. vs. the United States of America, Federal National Mortgage Association, and Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation. This case was originally filed on July 9, 2013 against the United States of America. On March 8, 2018, plaintiffs filed an amended complaint under seal. A redacted public version was filed on May 11, 2018 and adds Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae as nominal defendants. The amended complaint alleges, among other items, that the net worth sweep dividend provisions of the senior preferred stock constitute an unlawful taking or exaction of private property for public use without just compensation, and that by enacting the net worth sweep, the government breached the fiduciary duty it owed to Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, and implied-in-fact contracts between the United States on the one hand and Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae on the other. The plaintiffs ask that plaintiffs, Freddie Mac, and Fannie Mae be awarded (1) just compensation for the government's alleged taking or exaction of their property, (2) damages for the government's breach of fiduciary duties, and (3) damages for the government's breach of the alleged implied-in-fact contracts. In addition, plaintiffs seek pre- and post-judgment interest, attorneys' fees, costs, and other expenses. The United States filed a motion to dismiss on August 1, 2018 and an amended motion to dismiss on October 1, 2018. On December 6, 2019, the Court dismissed the claims plaintiffs labeled as direct claims and denied defendant's motion to dismiss with respect to the claims plaintiffs labeled as derivative. Accordingly, derivative takings, exaction, breach of fiduciary duty, and breach of implied-in-fact contract claims remain. By order dated March 9, 2020, the Court granted unopposed motions by plaintiffs and defendant to certify the December 6 opinion for interlocutory review, modified its December 6 opinion to include the language necessary for an interlocutory appeal to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, and stayed further proceedings in the case pending the completion of the interlocutory appeal process. The Federal Circuit granted the petition for interlocutory appeal on June 18, 2020.
Perry Capital LLC vs. the United States of America, Federal National Mortgage Association, and Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation. This case was filed as a derivative lawsuit, purportedly on behalf of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae as nominal defendants, on August 15, 2018. The complaint alleges, among other items, that the net worth sweep dividend provisions of the senior preferred stock constitute an unlawful taking of private property for public use without just compensation or an illegal exaction in violation of the Fifth Amendment, and that by enacting the net worth sweep, the government breached the fiduciary duty it owed to Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, and implied-in-fact contracts between the United States on the one hand and Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae on the other. The plaintiff asks that it, Freddie Mac, and Fannie Mae be awarded just compensation for the government's alleged taking of their property or damages for the illegal exaction; damages for the government's breach of fiduciary duties; and damages for the government's breach of the alleged implied-in-fact contracts. These proceedings are stayed pending a ruling on the Fairholme Funds appeals.
At present, it is not possible for us to predict the probable outcome of the lawsuits discussed above in the U.S. District Courts and the U.S. Court of Federal Claims (including the outcome of any appeal) or any potential effect on our business, financial condition, liquidity, or results of operations. In addition, we are unable to reasonably estimate the possible loss or range of
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possible loss in the event of an adverse judgment in the foregoing matters due to a number of factors, including the inherent uncertainty of pre-trial litigation. In addition, with respect to the In re Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac Senior Preferred Stock Purchase Agreement Class Action Litigations case, the plaintiffs have not demanded a stated amount of damages they believe are due, and the Court has not certified a class.

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                      Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements | Note 19

NOTE 19
Regulatory Capital
In October 2008, FHFA announced that it was suspending capital classification of us during conservatorship in light of the Purchase Agreement. FHFA continues to monitor our capital levels, but the existing statutory and FHFA regulatory capital requirements are not binding during conservatorship.
We continue to provide quarterly submissions to FHFA on minimum capital as required by FHFA. The table below summarizes our net worth and estimated core capital and minimum capital levels reported to FHFA.
Table 19.1 - Net Worth and Minimum Capital
(In millions) June 30, 2021December 31, 2020
GAAP net worth (deficit)$22,402 $16,413 
Core capital (deficit)(1)(2)
(50,432)(56,878)
Less: Minimum capital(1)
23,549 22,694 
Minimum capital surplus (deficit)(1)
($73,981)($79,572)
(1)Core capital and minimum capital figures are estimates and represent amounts submitted to FHFA. FHFA is the authoritative source for our regulatory capital.
(2)Core capital excludes certain components of GAAP total equity (i.e., AOCI and senior preferred stock) as these items do not meet the statutory definition of core capital.
In May 2017, FHFA, as Conservator, issued guidance to us to evaluate and manage our financial risk and to make economic business decisions, while in conservatorship, utilizing a risk-based CCF, a capital system with detailed formulae provided by FHFA. In November 2020, FHFA released a final rule that establishes the ERCF as a new enterprise regulatory capital framework for Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae. The ERCF, which went into effect in February 2021, has a transition period for compliance. In general, the compliance date for the regulatory capital requirements will be the later of the date of termination of our conservatorship and any later compliance date provided in a consent order or other transition order. Pursuant to the final rule, we will be required to report our regulatory capital under the ERCF beginning on January 1, 2022.

END OF CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND ACCOMPANYING NOTES
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Other Information
Other Information
LEGAL PROCEEDINGS
We are involved as a party to a variety of legal proceedings. For more information, see Note 18 in this Form 10-Q and Note 20 in our 2020 Annual Report.
In addition, a number of lawsuits have been filed against the U.S. government related to the conservatorship and the Purchase Agreement. Some of these cases also have challenged the constitutionality of the structure of FHFA. For information on these lawsuits, see the Legal Proceedings section in our 2020 Annual Report. One such case, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas, was appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit and subsequently to the U.S. Supreme Court. On June 23, 2021, the Supreme Court held that the shareholders’ statutory claim is barred and found the “for cause” removal provision for the director of FHFA in the Housing and Economic Recovery Act unconstitutional. The Supreme Court held that the August 2012 amendment to the Purchase Agreement should not be voided as a result of the constitutional violation and remanded the case to the lower courts to determine what other remedy, if any, the shareholders are entitled to receive on their constitutional claim. Freddie Mac is not a party to any of these lawsuits.
RISK FACTORS
This Form 10-Q should be read together with the Risk Factors section in our 2020 Annual Report, which describe various risks and uncertainties to which we are or may become subject. These risks and uncertainties could, directly or indirectly, adversely affect our business, financial condition, results of operations, cash flows, strategies, and/or prospects.
UNREGISTERED SALES OF EQUITY SECURITIES AND USE OF PROCEEDS
Recent Sales of Unregistered Securities
The securities we issue are "exempted securities" under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended. As a result, we do not file registration statements with the SEC with respect to offerings of our securities.
Following our entry into conservatorship, we suspended the operation of, and ceased making grants under, equity compensation plans. Previously, we had provided equity compensation under those plans to employees and members of the Board of Directors. Under the Purchase Agreement, we cannot issue any new options, rights to purchase, participations, or other equity interests without Treasury's prior approval. However, grants outstanding as of the date of the Purchase Agreement remain in effect in accordance with their terms.
Information About Certain Securities Issuances by Freddie Mac
We make available, free of charge through our website at www.freddiemac.com, our annual reports on Form 10-K, quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, current reports on Form 8-K, and all other SEC reports and amendments to those reports as soon as reasonably practicable after we electronically file the material with the SEC. The SEC also maintains an internet site (www.sec.gov) that contains reports, proxy and information statements, and other information regarding companies that file electronically with the SEC.
We provide disclosure about our debt securities on our website at www.freddiemac.com/debt. From this address, investors can access the offering circular and related supplements for debt securities offerings under Freddie Mac's global debt facility, including pricing supplements for individual issuances of debt securities. Similar information about our STACR transactions and SCR debt notes is available at crt.freddiemac.com and mf.freddiemac.com/investors, respectively.
We provide disclosure about our mortgage-related securities, some of which are off-balance sheet obligations (e.g., K Certificates and SB Certificates), on our website at www.freddiemac.com/mbs and mf.freddiemac.com/investors. From these addresses, investors can access information and documents, including offering circulars and offering circular supplements, for mortgage-related securities offerings.
We provide additional information, including product descriptions, investor presentations, securities issuance calendars, transactions volumes and details, redemption notices, Freddie Mac research, and material developments or other events that may be important to investors, in each case as applicable, on the websites for our business activities, which can be found at sf.freddiemac.com, mf.freddiemac.com, and www.freddiemac.com/capital-markets.
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Other Information
EXHIBITS
The exhibits are listed in the Exhibit Index of this Form 10-Q.
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Controls and Procedures

Controls and Procedures
EVALUATION OF DISCLOSURE CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES
Disclosure controls and procedures include, without limitation, controls and procedures designed to ensure that the information we are required to disclose in reports that we file or submit under the Exchange Act is recorded, processed, summarized, and reported within the time periods specified by the SEC's rules and forms and that such information is accumulated and communicated to management of the company, including the company's Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer, as appropriate, to allow timely decisions regarding required disclosure. In designing our disclosure controls and procedures, we recognize that any controls and procedures, no matter how well designed and operated, can provide only reasonable assurance of achieving the desired control objectives, and we must apply judgment in implementing possible controls and procedures.
Management, including the company's Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer, conducted an evaluation of the effectiveness of our disclosure controls and procedures as of June 30, 2021. As a result of management's evaluation, our Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer concluded that our disclosure controls and procedures were not effective as of June 30, 2021, at a reasonable level of assurance, because we have not been able to update our disclosure controls and procedures to provide reasonable assurance that information known by FHFA on an ongoing basis is communicated from FHFA to Freddie Mac's management in a manner that allows for timely decisions regarding our required disclosure under the federal securities laws. We consider this situation to be a material weakness in our internal control over financial reporting.
CHANGES IN INTERNAL CONTROL OVER FINANCIAL REPORTING DURING 2Q 2021
We evaluated the changes in our internal control over financial reporting that occurred during 2Q 2021 and concluded that there were no changes that materially affected, or are reasonably likely to materially affect, our internal control over financial reporting.
MITIGATING ACTIONS RELATED TO THE MATERIAL WEAKNESS IN INTERNAL CONTROL OVER FINANCIAL REPORTING
As described above under Evaluation of Disclosure Controls and Procedures, we have one material weakness in internal control over financial reporting as of June 30, 2021 that we have not remediated.
Given the structural nature of this material weakness, we believe it is likely that we will not remediate it while we are under conservatorship. However, both we and FHFA have continued to engage in activities and employ procedures and practices intended to permit accumulation and communication to management of information needed to meet our disclosure obligations under the federal securities laws. These include the following:
n    FHFA has established the Division of Resolutions, which is intended to facilitate operation of the company with the oversight of the Conservator.
n    We provide drafts of our SEC filings to FHFA personnel for their review and comment prior to filing. We also provide drafts of certain external press releases and statements to FHFA personnel for their review and comment prior to release.
n    FHFA personnel, including senior officials, review our SEC filings prior to filing, including this Form 10-Q, and engage in discussions with us regarding issues associated with the information contained in those filings. Prior to filing this Form 10-Q, FHFA provided us with a written acknowledgment that it had reviewed the Form 10-Q, was not aware of any material misstatements or omissions in the Form 10-Q, and had no objection to our filing the Form 10-Q.
n    The Director or Acting Director of FHFA is in frequent communication with our Chief Executive Officer (or if that office is vacant, with our President), typically meeting (in person or by phone) on at least a bi-weekly basis.
n    FHFA representatives attend meetings frequently with various groups within the company to enhance the flow of information and to provide oversight on a variety of matters, including accounting, credit and capital markets management, external communications, and legal matters.
n    Senior officials within FHFA's accounting group meet frequently with our senior financial executives regarding our accounting policies, practices, and procedures.
In view of our mitigating actions related to this material weakness, we believe that our condensed consolidated financial statements for 2Q 2021 have been prepared in conformity with GAAP.
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Exhibit Index

Exhibit Index
ExhibitDescription*
10.1
10.2
10.3
31.1
31.2
32.1
32.2
101.INSXBRL Instance Document - the instance document does not appear in the Interactive Data File because its XBRL tags are embedded within the Inline XBRL document
101.SCHXBRL Taxonomy Extension Schema
101. CALXBRL Taxonomy Extension Calculation
101.DEFXBRL Taxonomy Extension Definition
101.LABXBRL Taxonomy Label
101. PREXBRL Taxonomy Extension Presentation
104Cover Page Interactive Data File - the cover page interactive data file does not appear in the Interactive Data File because its XBRL tags are embedded within the Inline XBRL document
*
The SEC file numbers for the Registrant’s Registration Statement on Form 10, Annual Reports on Form 10-K, Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q, and Current Reports on Form 8-K are 000-53330 and 001-34139.
This exhibit is a management contract or compensatory plan, contract, or arrangement.

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Signatures

Signatures
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned thereunto duly authorized.
 
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation
By: /s/ Michael J. DeVito
 Michael J. DeVito
Chief Executive Officer
 (Principal Executive Officer)
Date: July 29, 2021
 
By: /s/ Christian M. Lown
 Christian M. Lown
 Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
 (Principal Financial Officer)
Date: July 29, 2021
 


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Form 10-Q Index


Form 10-Q Index
Item NumberPage(s)
PART IFINANCIAL INFORMATION
Item 1.Financial Statements
Item 2.Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations
1 - 69
Item 3.Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk
56 - 58
Item 4.Controls and Procedures
PART IIOTHER INFORMATION
Item 1.Legal Proceedings
Item 1A.Risk Factors
Item 2.Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities and Use of Proceeds
Item 6.Exhibits
Exhibit Index
Signatures

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