2 datasets found
  1. Leading diversified financial service companies in the U.S. 2021, by revenue...

    • statista.com
    Updated Feb 13, 2024
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    Statista (2024). Leading diversified financial service companies in the U.S. 2021, by revenue [Dataset]. https://www.statista.com/statistics/185510/leading-us-diversified-financial-service-companies/
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    Dataset updated
    Feb 13, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Statistahttp://statista.com/
    Time period covered
    2021
    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    In 2021, Fannie Mae was the leading diversified financial company in the United States and generated revenues exceeding 100 billion U.S. dollars in that year. In that year, Fannie Mae generated revenues of around 101.54 billion U.S. dollars, followed by Freddie Mac with 65.9 billion U.S. dollars. Both companies are government-sponsored mortgage loan providers.

  2. Global Financial Crisis: Fannie Mae stock price and percentage change...

    • statista.com
    • flwrdeptvarieties.store
    Updated Sep 2, 2024
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    Statista (2024). Global Financial Crisis: Fannie Mae stock price and percentage change 2000-2010 [Dataset]. https://www.statista.com/statistics/1349749/global-financial-crisis-fannie-mae-stock-price/
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    Dataset updated
    Sep 2, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Statistahttp://statista.com/
    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    The Federal National Mortgage Association, commonly known as Fannie Mae, was created by the U.S. congress in 1938, in order to maintain liquidity and stability in the domestic mortgage market. The company is a government-sponsored enterprise (GSE), meaning that while it was a publicly traded company for most of its history, it was still supported by the federal government. While there is no legally binding guarantee of shares in GSEs or their securities, it is generally acknowledged that the U.S. government is highly unlikely to let these enterprises fail. Due to these implicit guarantees, GSEs are able to access financing at a reduced cost of interest. Fannie Mae's main activity is the purchasing of mortgage loans from their originators (banks, mortgage brokers etc.) and packaging them into mortgage-backed securities (MBS) in order to ease the access of U.S. homebuyers to housing credit. The early 2000s U.S. mortgage finance boom During the early 2000s, Fannie Mae was swept up in the U.S. housing boom which eventually led to the financial crisis of 2007-2008. The association's stated goal of increasing access of lower income families to housing finance coalesced with the interests of private mortgage lenders and Wall Street investment banks, who had become heavily reliant on the housing market to drive profits. Private lenders had begun to offer riskier mortgage loans in the early 2000s due to low interest rates in the wake of the "Dot Com" crash and their need to maintain profits through increasing the volume of loans on their books. The securitized products created by these private lenders did not maintain the standards which had traditionally been upheld by GSEs. Due to their market share being eaten into by private firms, however, the GSEs involved in the mortgage markets began to also lower their standards, resulting in a 'race to the bottom'. The fall of Fannie Mae The lowering of lending standards was a key factor in creating the housing bubble, as mortgages were now being offered to borrowers with little or no ability to repay the loans. Combined with fraudulent practices from credit ratings agencies, who rated the junk securities created from these mortgage loans as being of the highest standard, this led directly to the financial panic that erupted on Wall Street beginning in 2007. As the U.S. economy slowed down in 2006, mortgage delinquency rates began to spike. Fannie Mae's losses in the mortgage security market in 2006 and 2007, along with the losses of the related GSE 'Freddie Mac', had caused its share value to plummet, stoking fears that it may collapse. On September 7th 2008, Fannie Mae was taken into government conservatorship along with Freddie Mac, with their stocks being delisted from stock exchanges in 2010. This act was seen as an unprecedented direct intervention into the economy by the U.S. government, and a symbol of how far the U.S. housing market had fallen.

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Close
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Statista (2024). Leading diversified financial service companies in the U.S. 2021, by revenue [Dataset]. https://www.statista.com/statistics/185510/leading-us-diversified-financial-service-companies/
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Leading diversified financial service companies in the U.S. 2021, by revenue

Explore at:
Dataset updated
Feb 13, 2024
Dataset authored and provided by
Statistahttp://statista.com/
Time period covered
2021
Area covered
United States
Description

In 2021, Fannie Mae was the leading diversified financial company in the United States and generated revenues exceeding 100 billion U.S. dollars in that year. In that year, Fannie Mae generated revenues of around 101.54 billion U.S. dollars, followed by Freddie Mac with 65.9 billion U.S. dollars. Both companies are government-sponsored mortgage loan providers.

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