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Fremont General says may file for bankruptcy

Fri May 9, 2008 6:02pm EDT

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By Jonathan Stempel

Stocks  |  Bonds  |  Global Markets

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Fremont General Corp FMNT.PK, which was one of the largest U.S. providers of subprime mortgages before regulators ordered it to stop making the loans, said on Friday it may file for bankruptcy protection.

The Brea, California-based company announced its intentions a day after disclosing plans to sell some mortgage servicing rights to Litton Loan Servicing LP, an affiliate of Goldman Sachs Group Inc (GS.N). Last month, it agreed to sell bank branches and deposits to CapitalSource Inc (CSE.N).

Fremont said these sales covered substantially all assets of its Fremont Investment & Loan thrift unit.

The company said, though, that unless it enters a "viable transaction" for its remaining assets, it expects to file for Chapter 11 protection because it cannot comply with regulatory rules to solicit shareholder approval for the CapitalSource transaction. Fremont said the transaction could thereafter be approved in accordance with U.S. bankruptcy laws.

If the asset sales to CapitalSource and Litton take place, Fremont said it then plans to complete an "orderly liquidation" of Fremont Investment & Loan.

By filing for bankruptcy, Fremont would join a growing list of subprime lenders, including New Century Financial Corp NEWCQ.PK, to seek court protection since the U.S. housing slump began more than a year ago.

Well over 100 mortgage lenders have quit lending or sold their businesses since the downturn began.

Fremont had been one of the nation's 10 largest subprime lenders until the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp in March 2007 ordered it to stop risky lending.

The company had made nearly $32 billion of subprime mortgages in 2006, according to National Mortgage News.

In March, the FDIC declared Fremont undercapitalized and ordered it to raise money or find a buyer by May 26.

Fremont shares fell 8.3 cents to 9.2 cents in afternoon trading on the Pink Sheets. They traded as high as $13.80 last May 31.

(Editing by Gerald E. McCormick and Dave Zimmerman)



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