Agency Securities
Agency securities are bonds issued by U.S. government agencies or government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs). They offer slightly higher yields than Treasuries while still maintaining high credit quality.
Two Categories of Agency Issuers
1. Government Agencies (Full U.S. Government Backing)
| Agency | Full Name | Backing |
|---|---|---|
| Ginnie Mae (GNMA) | Government National Mortgage Association | Full faith and credit of U.S. government |
Ginnie Mae is the only mortgage-related agency with explicit government backing.
2. Government-Sponsored Enterprises (GSEs)
| GSE | Full Name | Backing |
|---|---|---|
| Fannie Mae (FNMA) | Federal National Mortgage Association | Implicit (not explicit) |
| Freddie Mac (FHLMC) | Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation | Implicit (not explicit) |
| Federal Home Loan Banks (FHLB) | Federal Home Loan Banks | Implicit |
| Federal Farm Credit System | Farm Credit System | Implicit |
GSEs have implied but not explicit government backing. They were placed in conservatorship in 2008 during the financial crisis.
Key Agency Comparison
| Feature | Ginnie Mae | Fannie Mae / Freddie Mac |
|---|---|---|
| Government Backing | Full faith and credit | Implied only |
| Credit Risk | Lowest (same as Treasury) | Slightly higher |
| Yield | Lowest agency yield | Slightly higher |
| Types of Mortgages | FHA, VA, USDA loans | Conforming conventional |
| Status | Government agency | GSE in conservatorship |
Mortgage-Backed Securities (MBS)
Agency securities are primarily mortgage-backed securities—bonds backed by pools of mortgages.
Pass-Through Securities
Pass-through MBS are the most common type:
| Feature | Description |
|---|---|
| Structure | Pool of mortgages packaged together |
| Cash Flows | Principal, interest, and prepayments "pass through" to investors |
| Payments | Monthly (unlike semi-annual for most bonds) |
| Prepayment Risk | Primary risk—homeowners can prepay mortgages |
How Pass-Throughs Work
- Thousands of mortgages pooled together
- Investors buy shares of the pool
- Each month, mortgage payments flow through to investors
- Payments include: scheduled interest + scheduled principal + prepayments
Prepayment Risk: The Key Risk for MBS
Prepayment risk is the risk that mortgages will be paid off early, returning principal sooner than expected.
When Prepayment Increases
| Scenario | Effect | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Interest rates fall | Prepayments increase | Homeowners refinance to lower rates |
| Housing market strong | Prepayments increase | More home sales |
| Economic strength | Prepayments increase | More moves, upgrades |
Why Prepayment Risk Hurts Investors
When rates fall:
- Homeowners refinance, paying off mortgages early
- Investors receive principal back sooner than expected
- Must reinvest at lower rates
- Lose the higher-coupon investment just when it's most valuable
This is similar to call risk on callable bonds.
Extension Risk
The opposite problem: when rates rise:
- Homeowners don't refinance
- Prepayments slow dramatically
- Average life of MBS extends
- Investors stuck with below-market yields longer
Collateralized Mortgage Obligations (CMOs)
CMOs restructure MBS cash flows into different classes (tranches) to manage prepayment risk.
| Tranche Type | Characteristics |
|---|---|
| Short-term tranches | Receive principal first; lower prepayment risk |
| Intermediate tranches | Receive principal after short-term paid off |
| Long-term tranches (Z-tranche) | Receive principal last; highest prepayment uncertainty |
| PAC tranches | Planned Amortization Class; most predictable cash flows |
| Companion tranches | Absorb prepayment variability; most uncertain |
CMOs don't eliminate prepayment risk—they redistribute it among tranches.
Agency Securities Characteristics
| Feature | Agency Securities |
|---|---|
| Credit Risk | Very low (Ginnie Mae lowest) |
| Yield | Higher than Treasury, lower than corporate |
| Prepayment Risk | Primary risk |
| State Tax | Generally taxable (unlike Treasuries) |
| Monthly Payments | MBS pay monthly, not semi-annually |
| Liquidity | Very good—second largest bond market |
In Practice: How Investment Advisers Apply This
Portfolio applications:
- Use agency MBS for yield enhancement over Treasuries
- Ginnie Mae for most conservative clients (government backing)
- Consider prepayment risk in rising/falling rate environments
- CMO tranches for specific cash flow matching needs
Client considerations:
- Monthly payments may be attractive for income-focused retirees
- Prepayment risk means uncertain duration
- Extension risk is a concern when rates rise
On the Exam
The Series 65 exam tests your understanding of:
- Ginnie Mae: Only agency with full government backing
- Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac: GSEs with implied (not explicit) backing
- Prepayment risk: Main risk for MBS; increases when rates fall
- Extension risk: Opposite—prepayments slow when rates rise
- Pass-through vs. CMO: CMOs redistribute prepayment risk among tranches
Expect 2-3 questions on agency securities. Common formats include identifying which agency has government backing and understanding prepayment risk.
Key Takeaways
- Ginnie Mae is the ONLY agency backed by full faith and credit of U.S. government
- Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are GSEs with implied but not explicit backing
- Prepayment risk is the primary risk for MBS investors
- Prepayments increase when interest rates fall (refinancing)
- Extension risk occurs when rates rise and prepayments slow
- Pass-through MBS pass mortgage payments directly to investors
- CMOs restructure cash flows into tranches with different prepayment characteristics
- Agency MBS are generally state-taxable (unlike Treasuries)
Which agency's securities are backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. government?
Prepayment risk is HIGHEST when:
Collateralized Mortgage Obligations (CMOs) are designed to:
4.4 Corporate Bonds
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