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Ginnie Mae I, or GNMA I MBS, is composed of mortgages that pay principal and interest on the fifteenth of every month, while the Ginnie Mae II, or GNMA II MBS, does the same on the twentieth of every month.
Ginnie Mae does not insure lenders against borrower credit risk. Ginnie Mae does not set credit, underwriting, or servicing standards at the loan level. Ginnie Mae does not purchase individual loans or MBS*.
GNMA guarantees principal and interest on mortgage-backed securities (MBS) backed by loans insured by the Federal Housing Administration and the Department of Veterans Affairs.
A Ginnie Mae security is a type of mortgage-backed security offered by Ginnie Mae. Mortgage-backed securities offered by Ginnie Mae, Fannie Mae, and Freddie Mac are often classified together in what is known as government supported mortgage-backed securities.
Characteristics FundamentalVFIIXBenchmarkNumber of bonds23474Yield to maturity3.3%3.4%Average coupon2.8%2.9%Average effective maturity7.5 years6.3 years4 more rows

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GNMA bonds are any privately issued mortgage-backed security guaranteed by the Government National Mortgage Association (GNMA) to have timely payment of principal and interest payments. They are the only mortgage-backed securities that enjoy the full faith and credit of the United States government.
Key Takeaways. Pass-through certificates are fixed-income securities. These securities are often put together by the Government National Mortgage Association (Ginnie Mae). A pass-through certificate means that the holder is entitled to any income earned from the securitized finance product.
The Government National Mortgage Association (or Ginnie Mae) is a government corporation within the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). It was established in 1968 when Fannie Mae was privatized. Its mission is to expand funding for mortgages that are insured or guaranteed by other federal agencies.
Pass-Throughs: The most basic mortgage securities are known as pass-throughs. They are a mechanism\u2014in the form of a trust\u2014through which mortgage payments are collected and distributed (or passed through) to investors. The majority of pass-throughs have stated maturities of 30 years, 15 years and five years.
MBS are issued with maturities of up to 30 years, though most mature earlier. Each MBS has an \u201caverage life,\u201d an estimate of the time remaining until the final principal payment.

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