'Enterprises Can Weather Stuyvesant Town Woes'

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have $2 billion at stake in the Stuyvesant Town and Peter Cooper Village debacle in Manhattan — but their former regulator believes they won't be big losers. "They have the most senior piece and they are well positioned," said former Federal Housing Finance Agency director James Lockhart, speaking at the American Securitization Forum conference in Washington. The GSEs are investors in commercial mortgage-backed securities that were issued in 2006 when Tishman Speyer Properties and BlackRock Realty acquired the 11,000-unit apartment complex for $5.4 billion. (At the time of purchase, Mr. Lockhart was the FHFA chief and the GSEs were not wards of the government.) On Jan. 25, Tishman and BlackRock defaulted on $4.4 billion in loans, including $3 billion in senior mortgages. The properties are now valued at $2 billion. "Obviously, that was a bubble transaction. It will have to be unscrambled and it is going to be very messy," said Mr. Lockhart, who is now vice-chairman of WL Ross & Co., a New York vulture fund that specializes in distressed mortgage-related investments.

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