FCP® announces its recognition for a second year in a row by Freddie Mac as a 2025 Multifamily Impact Sponsor. The Impact Sponsor cohort comprises sponsors who have shown significant results in providing affordable housing options, supporting their residents, and/or implementing innovative practices at their properties.
“FCP is proud to again be recognized by Freddie Mac as a 2025 Multifamily Impact Sponsor,” said FCP Senior Vice President Elizabeth Cotter. “FCP is excited to assist Freddie Mac in its goals to execute on their mission to provide liquidity, stability, and affordability to the multifamily market. We congratulate our fellow cohorts of the 2025 program.”
FCP focuses on value-creating initiatives through resident services and utility savings projects and seeks opportunities to build resiliency while supporting the livelihoods of its residents and tenants.
FCP® is a privately held real estate investment company that has invested in or financed more than $14.6 billion in gross asset value since its founding in 1999. FCP invests directly and with operating partners in commercial and residential assets. The firm makes equity and structured investments in income-producing and development properties. Based in Chevy Chase, MD, FCP invests both its commingled, discretionary funds and separate accounts targeted at major real estate markets in the United States.
The Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation, commonly known as Freddie Mac, is an American publicly traded, government-sponsored enterprise, headquartered in Tysons, Virginia. The FHLMC was created in 1970 to expand the secondary market for mortgages in the US. Freddie Mac was chartered by Congress in 1970 to support the U.S. housing finance system and help ensure a reliable and affordable supply of mortgage funds across the country. Rather than lending directly to borrowers, Freddie Mac operates in the U.S. secondary mortgage market, buying loans that meet our standards from approved lenders. Those lenders are then, in turn, able to provide more loans to qualified borrowers and keep capital flowing into the housing market. Freddie Mac then pools the mortgages it buys into securities, which they sell to investors around the world.