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by ambernightcrush
1406 days ago
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Both Fannie and Freddie buy mortgages, but your description is much more stringent than in truth. Fannie buys from big banks, Freddie buys from thrift banks; both buy conforming loans(conforming to their standards) which is a large part of the home buying audience. In addition to that, the non-conforming loans that you listed e.g. FHA and VA. Those government-backed loans are for special populations. These mortgages are assembled into MBS and then sold to investors; the banks that originated the loans get their liquidity back. |
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Yes, I said as much. The OP claimed they guaranteed mortgages, which they do not.
I'm decently aware of the MBS market - I developed MBS pricing algorithms in the late 90s/early 00s for putting houses in tranches after a friend at a mortgage company asked for help with algorithms. Turns out the problem was NP-hard (a lattice based linear programming problem if I recall), but good heuristics from the literature and some special sauce outperformed their current (at that time) pricing.
Around the time the whole market blew up I was considering going to hedge funds, and was working out details of how all the math, science, and computer algos work to prepare for interviewing. After the market crash, I moved on more into scientific and R&D computing. But I still read papers in the area out of curiosity.
But the fact is the market is not "guaranteed" in any sense - which is likely good as 2008 showed.