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November 21, 2009

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The Big Mystery: Understanding Freddie, Fannie and Ginnie

Published: 6:07 PM, 05/05/2009 Last updated: 9:53 AM, 05/13/2009
 



Freddie and Fannie's names have been everywhere the past couple of months.  Ginnie?  Not so much.  Did you ever wonder who these "people" were that affect our economy actually are? 

 

 

Fannie, Freddie and Ginnie aren't people, they are institutions.  They are the shortened names for Fannie Mae (FNMA-Federal National Mortgage Association), Freddie Mac (FHLMC -Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation) and Ginnie Mae (GNMA-Government National Mortgage Association).  They are the big three, and they buy the majority of mortgages for all homes across the nation.

 

In the old days, if you wanted to buy a house, you met with a local banker who went to high school with your Daddy, and he assessed whether you were worth the risk to lend you the money.  His decision was probably based on his personal assessment of your wealth and character, as well as his bank's guidelines.

 

These days, when you talk with most mortgage lenders, they verify your life history, perhaps including taking a DNA sample, and you may find yourself qualifying for a mortgage.  But you rarely make your mortgage payment to that original lender after an interim period.  That's because lenders make most of their money by selling your loan.  And more often than not, whatever company to which you make your payment doesn't actually own your loan.  It has only purchased the rights to become the "servicer" of that loan.  It is called your servicer because it is simply servicing your loan for the institution that actually owns it.

 

What happens is your loan gets sold to another company that sells it to one of the aforementioned big three, or sometimes the company you got your loan from originally sells it directly to one of the big three.  Freddie, Fannie and Ginnie buy "pools" or bulked groups, of loans.   Loans quickly become "pooled" into groups of loans of similar size, interest rate and type.  The servicer gets a monthly fee from the institution for servicing your loan and processing your payments.  This fee is small (about 3/8 of a percent), but if your pool gets big enough, it can create a tidy sum of income.  There are companies that service billions of dollars of loans.  You might have heard lately in the news that some of these servicing portfolios didn't perform.  That's created a huge crisis lately in our economy.  Just think how many businesses or jobs are tied to the housing industry.  Not only lenders and realtors......think about the guy who makes realtors signs or kitchen cabinets. How about the landscape installers, the plumbers and electrians?  Don't forget the huge superstores that everyone makes ten trips to when they buy a new home.   It's a wide reaching net. 

 

The entire system of mortgages (originators, brokers, banks) is designed to create these pools because so much income can be generated from servicing. When enough loans are made to create a pool, the company sells the loans to Freddie, Fannie or Ginnie, generating more income.  This action in turn allows the company to make more loans, and so on and so forth.  The whole process begins again.

 

Freddie, Fannie and Ginnie set underwriting guidelines for lenders to follow that will allow for lower risk loans.  The foreclosures of late have caused these guidelines to become less lenient, and in general, more documentation is required to close a loan.  The loans in the pools serviced have been reviewed to make sure they are compliant with the guidelines set forth.

 

So, now you know who Freddie, Fannie and Ginnie are.  Mystery solved.

 

Let My Experience Work For You!

Email your home loan financing questions to Kristin Abouelata, Home Loan Specialist with Mortgage Investors Group, at question@kristinmortgage.com or call direct: (865) 567-0113 Toll Free: 1-800-489-8910.  For more information visit her website at www.kristinmortgage.com Home Loans Plain Talk.

 

 

FHA, Federal Housing Administration, FHA Loan Limit, FHA Loan Limit increase, home loan financing, credit reports, Home Loan Plain Talk, Mortgage Specialist, Kristin Abouelata

 

 

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