10-Q: Q2 2024 Earnings Report
Fannie Mae Announces Scheduled Release of Second Quarter 2024 Financial Results
Fannie Mae Prices $708 Million Connecticut Avenue Securities (CAS) REMIC Deal
Fannie Mae Priced $509.1 Million Multifamily DUS REMIC (FNA 2024-M4) Under Its GeMS Program
Fannie Mae Prices $628 Million Connecticut Avenue Securities (CAS) REMIC Deal
Fannie Mae Announces Sale of Non-Performing Loans
Households May Finally Be Adjusting to Higher Mortgage Rates
Fannie Mae Executes Two Credit Insurance Risk Transfer Transactions on $22.0 Billion of Single-Family Loans
Fannie Mae Receives 2024 ENERGY STAR Partner of the Year Award for Sustained Excellence
Higher Mortgage Rate Forecast Leads to Decline in 2024 Home Sales Expectations
Fannie Mae Provides Day 1 Certainty; New Enhancement Further Streamlines Mortgage Origination Process for Lenders and Homebuyers
Housing Activity Expected to Pick Up in 2024 as Rates Move Lower
Fannie Mae Announces Scheduled Release of Fourth Quarter and Full-Year 2023 Financial Results
Fannie Mae Multifamily Closes 2023 With More Than $52 Billion in Volume
Mortgage Rates Expected to Dip Below 6 Percent in 2024, Boosting Home Sales
Home Price Growth Falls Further in Fourth Quarter
Fannie Mae Announces Sale of Reperforming Loans
Consumer Optimism About Mortgage Rates Jumps Significantly
Us debt has become popular again: Japan increases its holdings by 9.6 billion and the UK buys 29.5 billion! And the Fed gives up?
The latest statistics on Tuesday (Oct. 19) show that the overseas market for US Treasuries changed greatly in August, with both Japanese and British buyers continuing the overweight operation last month. Among them, the size of Japanese US debt increased to 1.3198 trillion from 1.3102 trillion in July, setting a new record, up 9.6 billion US dollars from the previous month. Britain bought 29.5 billion US dollars of US debt and now holds 569 billion US dollars. Unlike these two countries, among the top 20 overseas "financiers" of US debt, eight buyers, including India, Switzerland, Singapore and Saudi Arabia, have all chosen to sell US debt. Among them, India
The international gold price is firm, the US index continues to fall, and the Delta strain is changing a market point of view.
International gold prices strengthened on Monday as the dollar index continued to fall from the previous session's high of 93.734 since early November and investors' concerns that the Delta mutation could slow the pace of the global economic recovery also boosted gold's safe-haven appeal. At 15:56 Beijing time, spot gold rose 0.28% to $1786.06 / oz, the main COMEX gold contract rose 0.23% to $1788.1 / oz, and the dollar index fell 0.21% to 93.264. ING analyst Warren Patters
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