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Mortgage Glossary
Adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM):
A mortgage with an interest rate and payment that change
periodically over the life of the loan based on changes
in a specified index.
Callable debt:
A debt security whose issuer has the right to redeem the
security at a specified price on or after a specified
date, but prior to its stated final maturity.
Charge-off:
The portion of principal and interest due on a loan that
is written off when deemed to be uncollectible.
Common stock:
A security that represents ownership in a company but
gives no legal claim to a definite dividend or to a
return of capital.
Conventional mortgage:
A mortgage loan that is not insured or guaranteed by the
federal government.
Credit enhancement:
A method to reduce credit risk by requiring collateral,
letters of credit, mortgage insurance, corporate
guarantees, or other agreements to provide an entity
with some assurance that it will be recompensed to some
degree in the event of a financial loss.
Credit loss ratio:
The ratio of credit-related losses to the dollar amount
of MBS outstanding and total mortgages owned by the
corporation.
Credit-related expenses:
The sum of foreclosed property expenses plus the
provision for losses.
Credit-related losses:
The sum of foreclosed property expenses plus
charge-offs.
Credit scoring:
A process that uses recorded information about
individuals and their loan requests to assess - in a
quantifiable, objective, and consistent manner - their
future performance regarding debt repayment.
Debt security:
A security in which the issuing company generally agrees
to repay the principal (typically, the original amount
borrowed) and make interest payments according to an
agreed schedule.
Default:
The failure of a borrower to comply with the terms of a
note or the provisions of a mortgage.
Delinquency:
A mortgage loan on which a payment has not been made by
the due date.
Derivative:
A financial instrument which derives its value from an
underlying security or notional amount.
Duration:
The weighted-average life of the present value of all
future cash flows, both principal and interest, of a
security. It is used as a measure of the sensitivity of
the value of a security to changes in interest rates.
Earnings per share (EPS):
The net earnings of a corporation divided by the average
number of shares of its common stock outstanding during
a period. A common method of expressing a corporation's
profitability.
Fixed-rate mortgage:
A mortgage loan in which the interest rate does not
change during the entire term of the loan.
Forbearance:
The lender's postponement of legal action when a
borrower is delinquent. It is usually granted when a
borrower makes satisfactory arrangements to bring the
overdue mortgage payments up to date.
Foreclosure:
The legal process by which property that is mortgaged as
security for a loan may be sold to pay a defaulting
borrower's loan.
Global Debt Facility:
A debt issuance facility through which U.S. dollar and
foreign currency debt securities may be offered to
investors worldwide with the feature of clearing and
settlement through a variety of clearing systems.
Guaranty fee:
Compensation paid by a lender to Fannie Mae for the
guarantee of timely payments of principal and interest
to MBS security holders.
Interest rate swap:
A transaction between two parties in which each agrees
to exchange payments tied to different interest rates or
indices for a specified period of time, generally based
on a notional principal amount.
Intermediate-term mortgage:
A mortgage loan with a contractual maturity at time of
purchase equal to or less than 20 years.
Lender option commitments:
An agreement giving a lender the option to deliver loans
or securities by a certain date at agreed-upon terms.
Loan servicing:
The tasks a lender performs to protect a mortgage
investment, including collecting monthly payments from
borrowers and dealing with delinquencies.
Loan-to-value (LTV) ratio:
The relationship between the dollar amount of a
borrower's mortgage loan and the value of the property.
Loss mitigation:
Activities designed to reduce either the likelihood of
the corporation suffering financial losses on a loan or
the final dollar value of those losses in the event of a
borrower default.
Mandatory delivery commitment:
An agreement that a lender will deliver loans or
securities by a certain date at agreed-upon terms.
Medium-term notes:
Unsecured general obligations of Fannie Mae with
maturities of one day or more and with principal and
interest payable in U.S. dollars.
Modification:
Any change to the original terms of a mortgage.
Mortgage:
A legal document that pledges property to a lender as
security for the repayment of the loan. The term also is
used to refer to the loan itself.
Mortgage-Backed Security (MBS):
A Fannie Mae security that represents an undivided
interest in a group of mortgages. Principal and interest
payments from the individual mortgage loans are grouped
and paid out to the MBS holders.
Multifamily housing:
A building with more than four residential rental units.
Nonperforming asset:
An asset such as a mortgage that is not currently
accruing interest or on which interest is not being
paid.
Notional principal amount:
The hypothetical amount on which interest rate swap
payments are based. The notional principal amount in an
interest rate swap generally is not paid or received by
either party.
Preferred stock:
Stock that takes priority over common stock with regard
to dividends and liquidation rights. Preferred
stockholders typically have no voting rights.
Preforeclosure sale:
A procedure in which the borrower is allowed to sell his
or her property for an amount less than what is owed on
it to avoid a foreclosure. This sale fully satisfies the
borrower's debt.
Real Estate Mortgage Investment Conduit (REMIC):
A security that represents a beneficial interest in a
trust having multiple classes of securities. The
securities of each class entitle investors to cash flows
structured differently from the payments on the
underlying mortgages.
Repayment plan:
An agreement between a lender and a borrower who is
delinquent on his or her mortgage payments, in which the
borrower agrees to make additional payments to pay down
past due amounts while still making regularly scheduled
payments.
Return on average common equity:
Net income available to common stockholders, as a
percentage of average common stockholders' equity.
Reverse mortgage:
A financial tool which provides seniors with funds from
the equity in their homes. Generally, no payments are
made on a reverse mortgage until the borrower moves or
the property is sold. The final repayment obligation is
designed to not exceed the proceeds from the sale of the
home.
Risk-based capital:
The amount of capital necessary to absorb losses
throughout a hypothetical ten-year period marked by
severely adverse circumstances.
Secondary mortgage market:
The market in which residential mortgages or mortgage
securities are bought and sold.
Security:
A financial instrument showing ownership of equity (such
as common stock), indebtedness (such as a debt
security), a group of mortgages (such as MBS), or
potential ownership (such as an option).
Serious delinquency:
A single-family mortgage that is 90 days or more past
due, or a multifamily mortgage that is two months or
more past due.
Stockholders' equity:
The sum of proceeds from the issuance of stock and
retained earnings less amounts paid to repurchase common
shares.
Stripped MBS (SMBS):
Securities created by "stripping" or separating the
principal and interest payments from the underlying pool
of mortgages into two classes of securities, with each
receiving a different proportion of the principal and
interest payments.
Transfer agent:
A bank or trust company charged with keeping a record of
a company's stockholders and canceling and issuing
certificates as shares are bought and sold.
Underwriting:
The process of evaluating a loan application to
determine the risk involved for the lender. It involves
an analysis of the borrower's ability and willingness to
repay the debt and the value of the property.

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