Originally created in 1938 by Congress to bolster the housing industry after the Great Depression, Fannie Mae was part of the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) and authorized to purchase only FHA-insured loans. In 1968, it became a private company operating with private capital whose role is to buy mortgages beyond government-linked mortgages and to establish a national secondary market for government-insured mortgages. Fannie Mae’s debt is perceived to be nearly as safe as U.S. Treasury debt, which allows it to pay lower interest rates to its debt holders. Even though Fannie Mae is now a private company that continues to be active in the secondary market for conventional and FHA and VA loans, it still operates under a congressional charter and the Department of Housing and Urban Development and the U.S. Treasury Department continue to have oversight of the agency.
See Fannie Mae in Wall Street Words
Learn more about Fannie Mae