The Ginnie Mae II MBS 
program was introduced in 1983 in response to the changing demands of the 
secondary mortgage marketplace. 
Ginnie Mae II MBS are 
modified pass-through mortgage-backed securities for which registered holders 
receive an aggregate principal and interest payment from a central paying agent. 
Ginnie Mae II MBS have 
become useful tools for "pipeline" management for our issuers. They also provide 
additional flexibility and liquidity. For example, Ginnie Mae II securities 
permit greater flexibility with respect to loan characteristics: coupon rates on 
the underlying mortgages can vary between 25 and 75 basis points above the 
interest rate on the pool for pools issued on or after July 1, 2003 and between 
50 and 150 basis points for pools issued before July 1, 2003. Multiple-issuer as 
well as single-issuer pools are permitted under the program. 
The Ginnie Mae II MBS 
also allows small issuers who do not meet the dollar requirements of the Ginnie 
Mae I MBS program to participate in the secondary mortgage market. In addition, 
the Ginnie Mae II MBS permits the securitization of adjustable rate mortgages 
(ARMs). 
The Ginnie Mae II MBS 
have a central paying and transfer agent that collects payments from all issuers 
and makes one consolidated payment, on the 20th of each month, to each security 
holder.
An issuer may 
participate in the Ginnie Mae II MBS either by issuing custom, single-issuer 
pools or through participation in the issuance of multiple-issuer pools. A 
custom pool has a single-issuer that originates and administers the entire pool. 
A multiple issuer pool 
typically combines loans with similar characteristics. The resulting pool backs 
a single MBS issue and each participant is responsible for administering the 
mortgage loans that it contributes to the pool. The securitization provisions 
are set forth in detail in the Ginnie Mae MBS Guide.
Ginnie Mae II Key 
Program Provisions 
There are five programs 
within Ginnie Mae II, each representing a different type of mortgage. Under each 
type, both the custom pool and multiple issuer pool approaches are permissible. 
Any one pool must consist of only one of the following mortgage types: 
- Single-family level-payment mortgages (FHA, 
	VA, or RD loans) 
- Single-family graduated payment mortgages (FHA or 
VA) 
- Single-family growing equity mortgages (FHA or 
VA) 
- Manufactured home loans (FHA or VA) 
- Single-family adjustable rate mortgages (FHA or 
VA)