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Agency security

 
Wikipedia: Agency security
Securities

Securities
Bond
Equities
Investment Fund
Derivatives
Structured finance
Agency securities

Markets
Bond market
Stock market
Futures market
Foreign exchange market
Commodity market
Spot market
Over-the-counter Market (OTC)

Bonds
Bonds by coupon
Fixed rate bond
Floating rate note
Zero-coupon bond
Inflation-indexed bond
Commercial paper
Perpetual bond

Bonds by issuer
Corporate bond
Government bond
Municipal bond
Pfandbrief
Sovereign bonds

Equities (Stocks)
Stock
Share
IPO
Short Selling

Investment Funds
Mutual fund
Index Fund
Exchange-traded fund (ETF)
Closed-end fund
Segregated fund
Hedge fund

Structured finance
Securitization
Asset-backed security
Mortgage-backed security
Commercial mortgage-backed security
Residential mortgage-backed security

Tranching
Collateralized debt obligation
Collateralized fund obligation
Collateralized mortgage obligation

Credit-linked note
Unsecured bond
Agency Securities

Derivatives
Options
Warrants
Futures
Forwards
Swaps
Credit Derivatives
Hybrid Securities

[Template:Securities&action=edit edit this box]

Agency securities are specific securities that are issued by either Ginnie Mae, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac or the Federal Home Loan Banks. These securities are backed by mortgage loans, and due to their creation from these particular corporations that are sponsored by the U.S. government, they enjoy credit protection based on an explicit guarantee from the U.S. Government in the case of Ginnie Mae securities, or an implicit guarantee from the U.S. Government in the case of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

Due to the expectation of federal backing, these securities historically hold the highest credit rating possible.

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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Agency security" Read more