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Mortgage
Backed Securities
Once Freddie
Mac, Ginnie Mae, and Fannie purchase the pools,
they break them down into smaller ownership
parcels. These are called "mortgage backed
securities." Each security represents a
small ownership interest, not in your specific
loan, but in the pool of which your loan is only
one part. The risk is therefore
diversified and it is a very safe investment.
The mortgage backed securities are sold on Wall
Street to institutions or individuals looking
for a safe investment, but one that earns a
higher interest rate than treasury bonds.
You may even own some as part of your retirement
fund or investment portfolio.
Perhaps you have heard
of Ginnie Mae bonds? Those are securities
backed by the mortgages on FHA and VA loans.
By
selling the bonds, Ginnie Mae, Freddie Mac, and
Fannie Mae obtain new funds to buy new pools so
lenders can get more money to lend to new
borrowers.
And
that is how the cycle works
So
when you make your payment, the servicer gets to
keep their tiny part, and the majority is passed
on to the investor. Then the investor
passes on the majority of it to the individual
or institutional investor in the mortgage backed
securities.
From time to time your loan may be transferred
from the company where you have been making your
payment to another company. They aren't selling
your loan again, just the right to service your
loan.
There are
exceptions!
Loans above $300,750 do not conform to Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac guidelines, which is why
they are called "non-conforming" loans, or
"jumbo" loans. These loans are packaged into
different pools and sold to different investors,
not Freddie Mac or Fannie Mae. Then they are
securitized and for the most part, sold as
mortgage backed securities as well.
This buying and selling of mortgages and
mortgage backed securities is called "mortgage
banking," and it is the backbone of the mortgage
business. |