Bad credit personal loan, unsecured no credit check credit card

Application for a high risk, bad credit personal loan with no credit check and an unsecured credit card with instant approval decision.

 

Credit Applications

 

Auto Loan: New & used auto loans & refinancing

 

Credit Card: Secured & unsecured credit card offers

 

Credit Report: Order a free credit report copy online

 

Debt Relief: Counseling, consolidation & settlement

 

New Home Loan: Multiple new home loan rate quotes

 

Mortgage Refi: Refinance or get a mortgage equity loan

 

Personal Loan: Good or bad credit personal loan approval

Credit Articles

Financial News

Recent Articles

RSS Feeds Syndication

Site Map

Search Articles



Advanced Search

Search Credit Federal


Click HERE to Subscribe!

Article Options
Popular Articles
  1. Spot Counterfeit Money
  2. Bad Credit Personal Loan FAQs
  3. High Risk Cosigner Loan
  4. High Risk Personal Loan Application
  5. Preapproved Credit Card
No popular articles found.

 

Article Library:

Auto Loan Tips

Credit Card Advice

Credit Report Help

Debt Relief Counseling

Payday Personal Loan Offers

Secured Credit

Unsecured Credit

   

 »  Articles  »  Home Loan  »  Fannie Mae Accounting
Fannie Mae Accounting
By Credit Federal | Published 05/9/2006 | Home Loan |
Fannie Mae

Fannie Mae, the government sponsored company, finances one of every five home loans in the United States, and said it had found accounting errors in addition to those it disclosed on March 13. Fannie Mae said it will miss a regulatory deadline Wednesday for filing its financial report for the first quarter. 

In 2004, Federal regulators accused Fannie Mae of serious accounting problems and earnings manipulation to meet Wall Street targets, and the Securities and Exchange Commission ordered the company to restate earnings back to 2001. This correction is expected to reach an estimated $11 billion, prompting the Justice Department to pursue a criminal investigation. 

The company also has said it expects an upcoming internal report to show that its financial controls remained insufficient as recently as the end of last year.

In a filing with the SEC, Fannie Mae said, "We have substantially completed a comprehensive review of our accounting policies and practices in order to determine whether these policies and practices are consistent with standard accounting principles. Restating our financial statements is requiring a substantial amount of time and resources because the restatement entails significant complexities." 

Fannie Mae also stated that the newly disclosed accounting errors involve certain transactions in its business of buying home mortgages from banks and other lenders and bundling them into securities. The company said it has not yet determined how the errors affected its financial situation. 

In March, Fannie Mae revealed new accounting problems that had been uncovered in several areas, including certain loans, investment securities, houses acquired through foreclosures, interest on delinquent home loans and reverse mortgages. These are in addition to the accounting rule violations which surfaced in September 2004 involving derivatives, the financial instruments Fannie Mae uses to hedge against swings in interest rates and its mortgage commitments.

Email this article to a friend - click here


Webmasters: Free Credit Content for Your Website!

Multiple ways to use our financial content:

*) You can use our RSS Feeds for automatic insertion and updates

*) You can simply link to this article