Fannie Mae

The Federal National Mortgage Association (FNMA) (OTCBB: FNMA), commonly known as Fannie Mae, was founded in 1938 during the Great Depression as part of the New Deal. It was set up as a government-sponsored enterprise (GSE), but it converted into a PTC in 1968. The corporation's purpose is to expand the secondary mortgage market by securitizing mortgages in the form of mortgage-backed securities (MBS), allowing lenders to reinvest their assets into more lending and in effect increasing the number of lenders in the mortgage market by reducing the reliance on thrifts.

Source: Wikipedia

Campaign Finance

$18,275 Given
Information

Figures are based on itemized contributions reported to the Federal Election Commission and state agencies. Please note that:

  • contributions under $200 are not reported, and so are not included in totals.
  • only contributions from individuals and organizations to candidates are included. Various accounting measures and more exotic contribution types are excluded.
  • contributions are matched based on organization and recipient name reported within each election cycle. Contributions using an incorrect or non-standard version of the name may be missed.
  • corporate name changes and mergers may cause figures to differ from those of the Center for Responsive Politics.
  • organization totals include known subsidiaries of the organization.

For more information, please see our campaign finance methodology page. Lobbyist bundling data is described on our lobbyist bundling methodology page.

covers through 2011
  • Top Recipients

    Employee Color Block
    Individuals
    PAC Color Block
    PAC
    Includes contributions from the organization’s employees, their family members, and its political action committee.
  • Republicans vs. Democrats

    in dollars
  • State vs. Federal

    in dollars
  • Top PAC Recipients

    Employee Color Block
    Individuals
    PAC Color Block
    PAC
    Includes contributions from the organization’s employees, their family members, and its political action committee.
View all campaign finance data for Fannie Mae Sources: OpenSecrets.org FollowTheMoney.org

Regulations

72 Mentions
Information

All data is based on documents downloaded from Regulations.gov. The first table shows mentions: all documents that include the name of the company anywhere in the document or document metadata. The second table shows submissions: all documents where the submitter metadata included the company name. Each table shows the top 10 dockets, ranked by number of occurrences.

Matches are based on a search for the company name. Variations in the company name, such as acronyms, nicknames or alternate names may cause documents to be missed. The mention of a company name in a document may be incidental and does not necessarily indicate that the company has any relevance to the document. Company names that are common English words may erroneously match with text that is not referring to the company.

Not all agencies submit public comments to Regulations.gov. For a list of participating and non-participating agencies see here. Agencies that do submit to Regulations.gov have varying levels of accuracy and completeness.

Regulations and public comments can be downloaded in bulk here.

updated from Regulations.gov on September 27, 2011

The tables show occurrences of "Fannie Mae" in public comments on proposed federal regulations.

  • Mentions in Document Text
    • Mentions
    • Agency
    • Docket
    • Date
    • Toggle 108 OCC Credit Risk Retention by Securitizers 2011
    • Toggle 63 HUD Credit Risk Retention 2011
    • Toggle 7 CFPB Regulation Z; Truth in Lending 2011
    • Toggle 5 OCC Margin and Capital Requirements for Covered Swap Entities 2011
    • Toggle 5 OCC Incentive-Based Compensation Arrangements 2011
    • Toggle 3 CFPB Defining Larger Participants in Certain Consumer Financial Products and Services Markets 2011
    • Toggle 1 FHFA Privacy Act; Systems of Records 2011
    • Toggle 1 FHFB Rules of Practice and Procedure 2011
    • Toggle 1 USSC Sentencing Guidelines for United States Courts 2011
    • Toggle 1 NCUA Incentive-based Compensation Arrangements 2011