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  2. Secondary mortgage market: What it is and how it works - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/secondary-mortgage-market...

    The secondary mortgage market is a financial marketplace, where investors buy and sell bundled packages consisting of many individual loans — called mortgage-backed securities.

  3. Mortgage-backed security - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mortgage-backed_security

    A mortgage-backed security (MBS) is a type of asset-backed security (an "instrument") which is secured by a mortgage or collection of mortgages. The mortgages are aggregated and sold to a group of individuals (a government agency or investment bank) that securitizes, or packages, the loans together into a security that investors can buy.

  4. What are mortgage-backed securities? - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/mortgage-backed-securities...

    A mortgage-backed security (MBS) is an investment product that consists of thousands of individual mortgages. Investors can purchase MBSs on the secondary market and directly from the issuer. When ...

  5. Secondary mortgage market - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secondary_mortgage_market

    The secondary mortgage market is the market for the sale of securities or bonds collateralized by the value of mortgage loans.A mortgage lender, commercial bank, or specialized firm will group together many loans (from the "primary mortgage market" [1]) and sell grouped loans known as collateralized mortgage obligations (CMOs) or mortgage-backed securities (MBS) to investors such as pension ...

  6. What is the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet? - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/federal-balance-sheet...

    Beginning in June 2020, the Fed officially announced that it would purchase $80 billion worth of Treasury securities and $40 billion mortgage-backed assets a month.

  7. Subprime mortgage crisis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subprime_mortgage_crisis

    In 2008, another source found estimates by some analysts that Fannie's share of the subprime mortgage-backed securities market dropped from a peak of 44% in 2003 to 22% in 2005, before rising to 33% in 2007. [261] Whether GSEs played a small role in the crisis because they were legally barred from engaging in subprime lending is disputed. [267]