Getting a home loan from a mortgage lender means you’re interacting in what’s known as the primary mortgage market. Many lenders turn around and sell some or all of their loans and the right to service them to investors in what’s known as the secondary mortgage market.
This is a marketplace where investors purchase mortgages, group them together and package them into mortgage-backed securities. These securities are then sold to other investors.
Selling mortgages on the secondary market gives lenders much-needed cash, which they can turn around and use to fund more home loans.
Investor Guidelines
The secondary market is one reason why underwriting requirements can vary among lenders. Investors, loan purchasers, and others in the secondary market can have their own guidelines and requirements for loans they will purchase or back.
To safely sell their loans, lenders may require borrowers to meet not just VA requirements but those set by investors, and these requirements can include things like:
- Minimum credit score
- Allowable debt-to-income ratio and more
These additional guidelines are known as lender overlays.
The government-sponsored enterprises Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, are the country’s two biggest investors in the secondary market. These are quasi-governmental entities, and they purchase only conventional loans.
Lenders that want to sell loans to Fannie and Freddie have to meet their respective requirements, including minimum credit score, maximum debt-to-income ratio and more.
For government-backed mortgages like VA loans, things look a little different. For VA loans, many lenders interact with the governmental agency known as Ginnie Mae.
Ginnie Mae & VA Loans
Unlike Fannie and Freddie, Ginnie Mae doesn’t purchase mortgages from lenders. Instead, it essentially insures groups of loans that are made and sold by lenders.
Ginnie Mae is a part of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, which means the federal government fully guarantees those groups of loans known as mortgage-backed securities.
Having the “full faith and credit” of the federal government gives investors greater confidence in Ginnie Mae securities. That ultimately helps explain why VA loans and FHA loans typically have lower average interest rates than conventional mortgages, which don’t carry that government backing.
Ginnie Mae carefully vets lenders and servicers before allowing them to participate in the program. The agency regularly reviews participating lenders, looking at key things like their financial security and their performance making and servicing loans. Veterans United is proud to be an approved issuer of Ginnie Mae mortgage-backed securities.
Unlike Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, Ginnie Mae doesn’t have guidelines or requirements that affect a borrower’s ability to qualify for a VA loan. Prospective borrowers will need to meet VA and lender guidelines.
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