So much for GSEs bailing out those masses of underwater borrowers:

July 21 (Bloomberg) — Freddie Mac, the second-largest U.S. mortgage-finance company, may cut purchases of home loans from banks and bonds backed by housing debt to shore up its capital amid record delinquencies.

The government-sponsored company is also considering selling securities and reducing its dividend while it prepares to issue $5.5 billion of stock, McLean, Virginia-based Freddie Mac said in a July 18 filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. JPMorgan Chase & Co. analyst Matthew Jozoff said in a report last week that growth in mortgage holdings of Freddie Mac and the larger Fannie Mae will be “weak.”

“This just means much less credit availability for mortgage borrowers,” said Paul Colonna, who manages more than $100 billion as chief investment officer for fixed income at GE Asset Management in Stamford, Connecticut. “They were teed up to be saviors of the mortgage crisis, but now they’ve got their own capital issues.”

Congress may have lifted their growth restrictions and their capital requirements, but what Congress giveth, market forces could be taking away.