Browse Mortgages and Real Estate Finance

Government-Sponsored Enterprises and Agency Lenders

Housing finance terms for Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Ginnie Mae, Farmer Mac, federal land banks, and GSE labels.

Government-Sponsored Enterprises and Agency Lenders covers mortgage agencies, GSEs, lenders, brokers, originators, guarantee programs, forms, and parties involved in housing-finance channels.

Use these pages when the institution or party role changes loan eligibility, guarantee coverage, origination responsibility, servicing, or investor treatment. It sits inside Government Agencies and GSEs, so readers can move up when the broader property-finance context matters.

Use the table below to choose the narrower mortgage or real-estate finance branch before applying a term to a loan file, closing record, servicing review, investor report, appraisal, or valuation model. Move into the term page when the document, calculation, party role, lien position, or property cash flow matters.

What This Branch Covers

AreaUse it for
Fannie MaeFannie Mae is a mortgage agency concept tied to secondary-market standards, guarantees, or housing finance liquidity.
Farmer MacFarmer Mac is a mortgage agency concept tied to secondary-market standards, guarantees, or housing finance liquidity.
Federal Land BankFederal Land Banks were Farm Credit System institutions created to provide long-term mortgage credit to farmers and rural borrowers.
Freddie MacFreddie Mac is a government-sponsored enterprise that buys mortgages, supports securitization, and provides liquidity to the U.S. housing finance system.
Ginnie MaeGinnie Mae is a mortgage agency concept tied to secondary-market standards, guarantees, or housing finance liquidity.
Government-Sponsored Enterprise (GSE)Government-Sponsored Enterprise (GSE) is a mortgage agency concept tied to secondary-market standards, guarantees, or housing finance liquidity.
GSE Government-Sponsored EnterpriseGSE Government-Sponsored Enterprise is a mortgage agency concept tied to secondary-market standards, guarantees, or housing finance liquidity.

What to Check

  • Agency, GSE, lender, broker, originator, servicer, co-signer, guarantor, or program party.
  • Charter, guarantee, eligibility rule, form, servicing rule, or origination channel.
  • Loan type, documentation, program limit, guarantee fee, insurance, and investor execution.
  • Effect on borrower access, lender risk, agency delivery, disclosure, and secondary-market treatment.
  • Current agency or program source rather than informal market usage.

Common Mistakes

  • Mixing lender, broker, servicer, agency, guarantor, and investor roles.
  • Assuming all agency-related terms mean government guarantee.
  • Ignoring program documents, forms, fees, and eligibility limits.
  • Using old GSE or agency rules without checking current requirements.

Mortgage agency and lender content is educational and does not provide lending, regulatory, legal, tax, or program-eligibility advice.

In this section

Choose a subsection first. Deeper term pages live inside each subsection, which keeps large topic hubs readable.

Fannie Mae

Fannie Mae is a mortgage agency concept tied to secondary-market standards, guarantees, or housing finance liquidity.

Farmer Mac

Farmer Mac is a mortgage agency concept tied to secondary-market standards, guarantees, or housing finance liquidity.

Federal Land Bank

Federal Land Banks were Farm Credit System institutions created to provide long-term mortgage credit to farmers and rural borrowers.

Freddie Mac

Freddie Mac is a government-sponsored enterprise that buys mortgages, supports securitization, and provides liquidity to the U.S. housing finance system.

Ginnie Mae

Ginnie Mae is a mortgage agency concept tied to secondary-market standards, guarantees, or housing finance liquidity.

GSE Government-Sponsored Enterprise

GSE Government-Sponsored Enterprise is a mortgage agency concept tied to secondary-market standards, guarantees, or housing finance liquidity.

Revised on Sunday, June 21, 2026