| Federally
Backed Mortgage Notes
Conservative investors desiring
income can do better than many other alternatives by investing in federally
guaranteed
and federally backed mortgage notes. The notes issued by Ginnie Mae,
Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae often provide yields 1% to 1.5% better than
Treasury notes. And for investors willing to make the required tradeoff,
the extra income can be welcome.
Mortgage notes have an implied
AAA rating. Therefore,
the credit markets do not consider them to have more credit risk than
treasury securities. But while treasury securities have a fixed maturity
date, mortgage notes do not. And you get a higher yield for accepting
that variability.
When you invest in mortgage
notes, you are lending your money to a group of people to buy homes
(with the federal agency
or federally sponsored corporation guaranteeing your money). If the
borrowers move and pay off their mortgage or refinance, you get paid
back. This could happen at any time. You could get payments or principal
at any time. For many seniors, this is not a big negative because
the return of their principal is of utmost importance, which is assured
if you hold the notes to maturity (various maturity options are readily
available).
If extra income is desired
without sacrifice of credit quality, check off for information on
mortgage notes. (Note
that with mortgage securities, the yield and average life consider
prepayment assumptions that may or may not be met. Changes in payments
may significantly affect yield and average life. Both treasury securities
and mortgage notes have a fixed percentage yield and treasury securities
have a fixed maturity).
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