FARMER MAC MORTGAGE SECURITIES CORP
424B2, 2000-09-27
ASSET-BACKED SECURITIES
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<PAGE>


         Prospectus supplement to prospectus dated March 29, 2000

                     Federal Agricultural Mortgage Corporation

                                    FARMER MAC

                                     Issuer

                    Farmer Mac Mortgage Securities Corporation

                                    Depositor

          $10,633,750 Guaranteed Agricultural Mortgage-Backed Securities

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Consider  carefully the risk factors  beginning on page S-7 in this prospectus
  supplement and on page 11 in the prospectus.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

  This prospectus  supplement does not contain complete  information  about this
  offering.  There is additional information in the prospectus.  You should read
  both this  prospectus  supplement and the prospectus in full.  This prospectus
  supplement may be used to offer and sell  certificates  only if accompanied by
  the prospectus.

     We will create a trust fund to hold two pools of  agricultural  real estate
mortgage loans and issue certificates backed by those loans. The trust fund will
issue -
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                            Class QM1016      Class QS1016
                            ------------      ------------
<S>                     <C>                 <C>
 Approximate original
 principal amount(1)        $ 985,000          $ 9,648,050

 CUSIP number               31317 GAR 8        31317 HAR 6

 Approximate initial
 pass-through rate(2)        7.250%              7.647%

 Payment frequency          Monthly            Semi-Annual

 First distribution      October 25, 2000    January 25, 2001
 date

 Final distribution      October 25, 2015    January 25, 2026
 date

(1)  May be up to 5% more or less.
(2)  Will vary with the weighted average of the interest rates for  the mortgage
     loans in each pool as described in this prospectus supplement.
</TABLE>

     The  Federal  Agricultural  Mortgage  Corporation,  which is also  known as
Farmer Mac,  guarantees  the timely  payment of interest on and principal of the
certificates. The obligations of Farmer Mac under this guarantee are obligations
solely of Farmer Mac and are not  obligations of, and are not guaranteed by, the
Farm Credit  Administration,  the United States or any agency or instrumentality
of the United  States,  other than  Farmer  Mac,  and are not backed by the full
faith and credit of the United States.

      We will not list the certificates on any national  securities  exchange or
on any automated quotation system of any registered securities association, such
as NASDAQ.

      Neither the  Securities and Exchange  Commission nor any state  securities
commission has approved or  disapproved  of these  securities or passed upon the
accuracy  or  adequacy  of  this  prospectus   supplement  or  the  accompanying
prospectus. Any representation to the contrary is a criminal offense.

      The  Depositor  is offering  the  certificates  directly.  Proceeds to the
Depositor  from  the  sale of the  certificates  will  be 100% of the  aggregate
original  principal  amount of the  certificates,  plus accrued  interest on the
certificates  from September 1, 2000,  before deducting  expenses payable by the
Depositor estimated at $5,000.

                               September 27, 2000


<PAGE>


                                TABLE OF CONTENTS

                                                                           Page

SUMMARY OF TERMS.............................................................S-3

RISK FACTORS.................................................................S-7

  Some Mortgage Loans Are Not Subject to Yield Maintenance Charges...........S-7
  Yield Maintenance Charges May Not Maintain the Anticipated Yield
   to Maturity...............................................................S-7
  Yield Maintenance Charges May Be Waived....................................S-7
  Farmer Mac Will Not Guarantee the Collection of Yield Maintenance Charges..S-7
  Unique Risks Are Associated with Pool QM1016...............................S-8
  Character  of  Mortgage  Loans  in  Some  Pools  May  Result
   in  an  Increased Likelihood of Prepayments...............................S-8

DESCRIPTION OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS............................................S-9

DESCRIPTION OF THE CERTIFICATES.............................................S-10

FARMER MAC..................................................................S-13

FARMER MAC GUARANTEE........................................................S-13

OUTSTANDING GUARANTEES......................................................S-14

YIELD, PREPAYMENT AND MATURITY CONSIDERATIONS...............................S-14

DESCRIPTION OF THE AGREEMENTS...............................................S-17

THE DEPOSITOR...............................................................S-18

FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES.............................................S-18

ERISA CONSIDERATIONS........................................................S-19

LEGAL INVESTMENT............................................................S-19

METHOD OF DISTRIBUTION......................................................S-20

LEGAL MATTERS...............................................................S-20

FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS..................................................S-20

INDEX OF PRINCIPAL TERMS....................................................S-21

ANNEX I:  DESCRIPTION OF THE QUALIFIED LOAN POOLS............................A-1



      We provide  information to you about the  certificates  we are offering in
two separate documents that progressively provide more detail:

           o  the  accompanying  prospectus, which provides general information,
              some  of  which  may  not  apply  to  your certificates, and

           o  this prospectus supplement, which describes the  specific terms of
              your certificates.

      If the  description of your  certificates  varies between this  prospectus
supplement and the accompanying  prospectus,  you should rely on the information
in this prospectus supplement.


<PAGE>


                                SUMMARY OF TERMS

      This summary highlights  selected  information from this document and does
not  contain  all of the  information  that you need to  consider in making your
investment  decision.  To  understand  all of the terms of the  offering  of the
certificates,   read  carefully  this  entire  document  and  the   accompanying
prospectus.

                               OFFERED SECURITIES

      Farmer Mac Mortgage  Securities  Corporation (the  "Depositor"),  a wholly
owned  subsidiary  of Farmer  Mac,  is forming a trust fund to issue  Guaranteed
Agricultural  Mortgage-Backed Securities (the "Certificates") in two classes, as
listed  on the  cover  page  of this  prospectus  supplement.  The  Certificates
represent  beneficial  ownership  interests  in the trust  fund.  The trust fund
assets consist of:

                o       two pools of agricultural real estate mortgage loans;

                o       proceeds and collections on these loans; and

                o       a guarantee of timely payment of principal and interest
                        on the Certificates by Farmer Mac.

      Each class of Certificates will separately represent the right to receive
distributions derived primarily from amounts collected on mortgage loans in a
specific pool.  Each class of Certificates has the same designation as the
designation the Depositor has given to the related pool of mortgage loans.
Therefore,

                o       if  you  hold  Class  QM1016  Certificates, you  will be
                        entitled  to  receive amounts collected  on the mortgage
                        loans in the pool designated as QM1016; and

                o       if  you  hold Class  QS1016  Certificates,  you  will be
                        entitled to  receive  amounts collected  on the mortgage
                        loans in the pool designated as QS1016.

      Each class of Certificates will be issued in an original  principal amount
approximately  equal to the original  principal amount of its corresponding pool
of  mortgage  loans,  subject  to a  permitted  variance  of plus or minus 5% as
described in  "Description  of the  Certificates  - General" in this  prospectus
supplement.

                        DISTRIBUTIONS ON THE CERTIFICATES

o  Distributions  on the  Class  QM1016  Certificates  will be made on a monthly
   basis. A  distribution  will occur for the Class QM1016  Certificates  on the
   25th day of each month.

o  Distributions on the Class QS1016  Certificates will be made on a semi-annual
   basis. A  distribution  will occur for the Class QS1016  Certificates  on the
   25th day of each January and July.


<PAGE>


In each case, if a distribution  date falls on a day that is not a business day,
the distribution  will be made on the next business day. The first  distribution
date  for  each  class of  Certificates  is  listed  on the  cover  page of this
prospectus supplement.

      Distributions  on the  Certificates  will be made only to those persons in
whose names the Certificates are registered on the close of business on the last
business  day of the month  prior to the month in which  the  distribution  date
occurs.

Distributions of Interest

      The  Certificates  of each class will accrue  interest during each related
Interest  Accrual Period at the  pass-through  rate described in "Description of
the  Certificates -  Distributions  - Interest" in this  prospectus  supplement.
Accrued interest will be due on each distribution date.

      Each  "Interest  Accrual  Period"  begins on the first day of the month in
which the previous distribution date for that particular class occurred and ends
on and  includes  the last day of the  month  preceding  the  month in which the
current  distribution date for that particular class occurs.  However, the first
Interest Accrual Period for each class will begin on June 1, 2000 and end on and
include  the last day of the  month  preceding  the  month  in which  the  first
distribution date for that particular class occurs.

Distributions of Principal

      On each distribution  date, the trustee will distribute  principal on each
class of Certificates  in an aggregate  amount equal to the sum of the following
for the corresponding pool:

    o  the  principal  portion  of all scheduled payments (including any balloon
       payments) on the mortgage loans in the pool due during  the preceding Due
       Period,

                                   -- plus --

    o  the scheduled  principal  balance of each  mortgage  loan included in the
       pool that was repurchased or became a defaulted  mortgage loan (if Farmer
       Mac, as the  master servicer  of  the mortgage loans, has determined that
       all amounts  to  be  received on the mortgage  loan have been  recovered)
       during the preceding Due Period,

                                   -- plus --

    o  all full or partial principal prepayments received during  the  preceding
       Due Period.

      Each  "Due  Period"  begins  on the  second  day of the month in which the
previous  distribution  date  occurred and ends on the first day of the month in
which the related  distribution date occurs.  However, the first Due Period will
begin on  September  2,  2000 and end on the first day of the month in which the
related distribution date occurs.


<PAGE>


Yield Maintenance Charges

      Some pools may contain  mortgage  loans that require the borrower to pay a
charge if the borrower prepays the mortgage loan, in whole or in part,  within a
specified  time.  This  charge  is known as a "Yield  Maintenance  Charge."  The
trustee will distribute a portion of the amount of any Yield Maintenance  Charge
actually  collected  from the  borrower to the  holders of the related  class of
Certificates on each distribution date in the manner and to the extent described
in "Description of the Certificates - Distributions - Yield Maintenance Charges"
in this prospectus  supplement.  You should review "Annex I:  Description of the
Qualified Loan Pools" in this prospectus supplement to determine which pools, if
any, contain mortgage loans that have Yield Maintenance  Charges,  on what terms
and  how  we  calculate  the  portion  of  Yield  Maintenance  Charges  we  will
pass-through to you.

                                  THE GUARANTEE

      Farmer Mac  guarantees  the timely payment of interest on and principal of
the  Certificates  (including  any  principal  payments  with respect to balloon
payments on the related mortgage loans).

      Farmer  Mac's  obligations  are not backed by the full faith and credit of
the United States.

      Farmer  Mac  will  not  guarantee  to  holders  of the  related  class  of
Certificates  the  collection  of  any  Yield  Maintenance   Charge  payable  in
connection with a principal prepayment on a mortgage loan.

      See "Farmer Mac Guarantee" in this prospectus  supplement and "Description
of the Trust Funds - The Assets in Each Trust Fund - Farmer Mac's  Guarantee" in
the prospectus for additional information concerning Farmer Mac's guarantee.

                               THE MASTER SERVICER

      Farmer Mac will act as master servicer of the mortgage loans. The mortgage
loans will be directly serviced by one or more mortgage  servicing  institutions
we call central servicers,  each of which will act on behalf of Farmer Mac under
a servicing contract (which may be supplemented from time to time).

                              OPTIONAL TERMINATION

      Under  the  conditions  described  in  "Description  of the  Agreements  -
Optional  Termination"  in this  prospectus  supplement,  Farmer  Mac, as master
servicer, has the right to terminate the trust fund and retire the Certificates.


<PAGE>


                                   THE TRUSTEE

      The  trustee  for  the  Certificates  will  be U.S.  Bank  Trust  National
Association,  a national  banking  association  organized and existing under the
federal laws of the United States.

                         FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES

      The trust fund will be treated as a grantor  trust for federal  income tax
purposes and not as an association taxable as a corporation. No election will be
made to treat the trust fund as a real estate mortgage investment  conduit.  See
"Federal  Income Tax  Consequences"  in this  prospectus  supplement  and in the
accompanying prospectus for additional information concerning the application of
federal income tax laws.

                              ERISA CONSIDERATIONS

      Subject to important considerations described under "ERISA Considerations"
in this prospectus  supplement and in the  accompanying  prospectus,  if you are
investing  assets of employee benefit plans or individual  retirement  accounts,
you can purchase the Certificates.

                                LEGAL INVESTMENT

      The Certificates will constitute  securities  guaranteed by Farmer Mac for
purposes of Farmer Mac's charter.  Subject to important considerations described
under "Legal  Investment" in this prospectus  supplement and in the accompanying
prospectus,  the Certificates  will, by statute,  be legal  investments for some
types of institutional investors.

      If your investment authority is subject to legal restrictions,  you should
consult  your own legal  advisors to  determine  whether and the extent to which
Certificates constitute legal investments for you.

                    OFFICES OF FARMER MAC AND THE DEPOSITOR

      The principal executive offices of Farmer Mac and the Depositor are
located at 919 18th Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20006.  The telephone number
there is 202/872-7700.


<PAGE>


                                  RISK FACTORS

      You should carefully consider the following risks, together with the risks
set  forth  in  "Risk  Factors"  in  the  prospectus,  before  investing  in the
Certificates.  If any of the following  risks actually  occur,  your  investment
could be materially and adversely affected.

      Some Mortgage  Loans Are Not Subject to Yield  Maintenance  Charges.  Some
mortgage  loans  in the  trust  fund may  require  the  borrower  to pay a Yield
Maintenance  Charge if the borrower  prepays the mortgage  loan,  in whole or in
part, within a specified time. However, the trust fund may also include mortgage
loans  that do not  require a Yield  Maintenance  Charge at any time.  Borrowers
under  mortgage loans that are not subject to Yield  Maintenance  Charges may be
more likely to prepay those mortgage  loans than borrowers  under mortgage loans
that are subject to Yield Maintenance Charges. Prepayments on mortgage loans may
adversely effect the yield to maturity on your Certificates.

      Yield  Maintenance  Charges  May Not  Maintain  the  Anticipated  Yield to
Maturity.  A borrower  under a mortgage loan that  requires a Yield  Maintenance
Charge may decide to make a voluntary  prepayment  on the mortgage  loan despite
the fact that he or she will be required to pay this  charge.  The trustee  will
distribute a portion,  calculated as described in "Annex I:  Description  of the
Qualified Loan Pools" in this prospectus supplement,  of the amount of any Yield
Maintenance  Charge  actually  collected from the borrower to the holders of the
related class of Certificates on the next distribution date in the manner and to
the extent described in this prospectus supplement. However, a Yield Maintenance
Charge may not be  sufficient  to maintain  the yield to maturity on the related
mortgage loan (and the  corresponding  class of  Certificates)  at the level you
would have realized without the prepayment.

      Yield Maintenance  Charges May Be Waived.  Under each servicing  contract,
the  central  servicer  may not waive the  collection  of any Yield  Maintenance
Charge  without the prior  written  consent of Farmer  Mac, as master  servicer.
Generally,  it is  Farmer  Mac's  policy  not to  consent  to the  waiver of the
collection  of a Yield  Maintenance  Charge  unless  the amount of the charge is
unduly large relative to the unpaid  principal  balance of the related  mortgage
loan and the  borrower  requests a waiver and  provides  valid  reasons  for the
request.  In those cases, and other circumstances that raise similar concerns of
fairness,  Farmer  Mac's  policy is to require  central  servicers to attempt to
collect  a portion  of the  Yield  Maintenance  Charge  in  connection  with any
prepayment  of principal.  However,  there may be situations in which Farmer Mac
may  consider it  appropriate  to waive any  collection  of a Yield  Maintenance
Charge.  For  example,   Farmer  Mac  generally  consents  to  waive  all  Yield
Maintenance  Charges  with  respect  to  principal  prepayments  resulting  from
condemnation of, or casualties on, properties securing mortgage loans.

      If Farmer Mac consents to waive all or any portion of a Yield  Maintenance
Charge,  those  amounts  waived will not be available  for  distribution  to the
holders of the related class of  Certificates on any  Distribution  Date and, if
you hold Certificates of that class, your yield will be reduced.


<PAGE>


      Farmer Mac Will Not Guarantee the Collection of Yield Maintenance Charges.
Holders of  Certificates  backed by pools  containing  mortgage  loans that have
Yield  Maintenance  Charge  provisions  will  receive a portion,  calculated  as
described  in  "Annex  I:  Description  of the  Qualified  Loan  Pools"  in this
prospectus  supplement,  of the amount of any Yield Maintenance Charges actually
collected from borrowers on the appropriate  distribution date in the manner and
to the extent described in this prospectus supplement.  However, Farmer Mac will
not  guarantee  the  collection  of any  Yield  Maintenance  Charge  payable  in
connection with a principal prepayment on a mortgage loan and cannot assure that
any of these amounts will actually be available for distribution.

       Unique Risks Are  Associated  with Pool QM1016.  As of the Cut-off  Date,
Pool QM1016 was  comprised of a single  mortgage  loan,  which may be prepaid in
whole or in part at any time without  penalty.  Any financial  difficulty of the
borrower,  natural  disaster  or adverse  market  conditions  for the  commodity
produced may result in the  liquidation  or prepayment  of this  mortgage  loan,
resulting in a prepayment in full of Pool QM1016.  See "Annex I:  Description of
the Qualified Loan Pools" and "Yield, Prepayment and Maturity Considerations" in
this prospectus supplement.

      Character  of  Mortgage  Loans in Some  Pools May  Result in an  Increased
Likelihood  of  Prepayments.  Each of the mortgage  loans in the trust fund will
have a fixed rate term of ten years  followed by an  adjustable  rate term of 20
years.  The  prepayment  behavior  of these  loans may differ from that of other
mortgage  loans.  As an adjustable rate mortgage loan with an initial fixed rate
term approaches its initial adjustment date, the borrower may become more likely
to refinance the loan to avoid periodic  changes to the periodic  payment amount
or an increase in the interest rate after the initial fixed rate period, even if
fixed rate loans are  available  only at rates that are  slightly  lower or even
higher than the interest rate before adjustment.


<PAGE>


                        DESCRIPTION OF THE MORTGAGE LOANS

      The Trust Fund will consist  primarily of two pools of  agricultural  real
estate  mortgage  loans  (collectively,  the  "Qualified  Loans")  that  will be
assigned to the Trust Fund by the Depositor.  For a detailed  description of the
characteristics  of the Qualified Loans in each pool, see "Annex I:  Description
of the  Qualified  Loan  Pools" at the end of this  prospectus  supplement.  The
aggregate  outstanding  principal balance of the Qualified Loans in each pool is
subject to the permitted  variance described in "Description of the Certificates
- General" in this  prospectus  supplement.  Each Qualified Loan is secured by a
first  lien on  Agricultural  Real  Estate  (the  "Mortgaged  Properties").  The
principal  amount of any Qualified Loan cannot exceed $3.6 million,  as adjusted
for inflation; except that the principal amount of any Qualified Loan secured by
Agricultural  Real Estate  comprised of not more than 1,000 acres may not exceed
$6 million. "Agricultural Real Estate" is a parcel or parcels of land, which may
be  improved  by  buildings  and  machinery,  fixtures  and  equipment  or other
structures  permanently affixed to the parcel or parcels,  that (1) are used for
the production of one or more agricultural  commodities and (2) include at least
five acres or produce minimum annual receipts of $5,000.

      All of the Qualified  Loans meet Farmer Mac's  Underwriting  and Appraisal
Standards (the "Underwriting Standards") with respect to newly originated loans.
The  Underwriting  Standards are described in  "Description of the Trust Funds -
Qualified Loans - General" in the prospectus.

      The  description  of  the  Qualified  Loans  and  the  related   Mortgaged
Properties  is based upon each pool as  constituted  at the close of business on
September 1, 2000 (the "Cut-off Date"), as adjusted for any scheduled  principal
payments due on or before that date. Prior to the issuance of the  Certificates,
Qualified  Loans  may  be  removed  from  a  pool  as  a  result  of  incomplete
documentation  or  otherwise,  if  the  Depositor  deems  removal  necessary  or
appropriate,  or as a result of  prepayments  in full. A limited number of other
Qualified  Loans  may be  added  to  any  pool  prior  to  the  issuance  of the
Certificates  unless  including those Qualified Loans would materially alter the
characteristics of the pool as described herein. The Depositor believes that the
information set forth in "Annex I: Description of the Qualified Loan Pools" will
be representative of the  characteristics of each pool as it will be constituted
at the time the Certificates are issued, although the range of Mortgage Interest
Rates and maturities  and other  characteristics  of the Qualified  Loans in the
pool may vary.  Pursuant  to the Sale  Agreement,  the  related  Seller has made
limited  representations  and warranties with respect to the Qualified Loans and
their   origination  in  accordance  with  the   Underwriting   Standards.   See
"Description of the Agreements - Representations and Warranties; Repurchases" in
the prospectus.

      The information in "Annex I: Description of the Qualified Loan Pools" with
respect to the Qualified Loans will be revised to reflect any adjustments in the
composition  of the Trust  Fund and will be  included  in a Form 8-K to be filed
with the Securities and Exchange Commission by October 13, 2000. The information
will be available to Holders promptly  thereafter  through the facilities of the
Commission as described under "Where You Can Find Additional Information" in the
prospectus.


<PAGE>


                         DESCRIPTION OF THE CERTIFICATES

General

      The Certificates will be issued pursuant to a Trust Agreement, dated as of
June 1, 1996, as  supplemented  by an Issue  Supplement  dated as of the Cut-off
Date (together, the "Trust Agreement"), each among Farmer Mac, the Depositor and
the  Trustee.  Reference  is made to the  prospectus  for  important  additional
information  regarding the terms and  conditions of the Trust  Agreement and the
Certificates.  See  "Description of the  Certificates"  and  "Description of the
Agreements" in the prospectus.  The Certificates are issued as a separate series
under the Trust Agreement with a series  designation  corresponding  to the date
this  offering is  completed.  Each class of  Certificates  will be issued in an
initial Class Certificate Balance  approximately equal to the original principal
amount of the related pool  subject to a permitted  variance of plus or minus 5%
with respect to each pool.

      The Certificates will evidence  beneficial  ownership interests in a trust
fund (the "Trust Fund")  consisting  primarily of (i) the Qualified Loans;  (ii)
the Farmer Mac Guarantee;  and (iii)  proceeds and  collections on the Qualified
Loans,  deposited in, or held as investments in, the Collection Accounts and the
Certificate Account, each as defined and described in the prospectus.  Each pool
of Qualified  Loans is evidenced by a single class of  Certificates  bearing the
same  alpha-numerical  designation  as the  underlying  pool.  Distributions  of
interest and principal on each class of  Certificates  will be  calculated  with
reference to the Qualified Loans in the related pool.

      Farmer Mac has  established  a six-digit  alpha-numerical  pool  numbering
system to identify specific  characteristics of the Qualified Loans in each pool
and to facilitate Holders' access to the factor and other loan information to be
published  periodically  by Farmer Mac with  respect  thereto.  The first  three
digits are "loan identifiers." The first digit denotes the maximum original term
to maturity of the  Qualified  Loans in the pool;  the second digit  denotes the
scheduled payment frequency with respect to the Qualified Loans in the pool; the
third digit denotes the first month in a calendar  year in which a  Distribution
Date for the pool occurs.  The last three digits  sequentially  designate  pools
with the same three loan  identifiers.  The table below summarizes  Farmer Mac's
pool numbering system:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>


 1st Digit                                       2nd Digit          3rd Digit
<S>  <C>                                        <C>               <C>
 A=15 year fixed  (with  yield  maintenance)     A = Annual        1 = January
 B=7  year fixed                                 S = Semi-annual   2 = April
 C=5  year conditional  balloon  re-set          Q = Quarterly     3 = July
 D=1  year adjustable                            M = Monthly       4 = October
 E=3  year adjustable
 F=5  year adjustable
 G=10 year fixed
 H=30 year fixed (part-time  farm)
 I=15 year fixed (partial  open prepay)
 J=5  year fixed/1 year adjustable (part-time farm)
 K=7  year fixed/1 year adjustable (part-time farm)
 L=10 year fixed/1 year adjustable (part-time farm)
 M=15 year fixed (part-time  farm)
 Q=10 year fixed/1 year adjustable (25 year maturity)
 R=3  year fixed/1 year adjustable (part-time farm)
 V=1  month LIBOR adjustable
</TABLE>


<PAGE>


Book-Entry Certificates

      The  Certificates  will be  issued  in  book-entry  form,  and  beneficial
interests therein will be held by investors through the book-entry system of the
Federal Reserve Banks (the "Fed book-entry system"), in minimum denominations in
Certificate Balances of $1,000 and integral multiples of $1 in excess thereof.

      The  Certificates  will be  maintained on the Fed  book-entry  system in a
manner that permits separate  trading and ownership.  Each class of Certificates
has been  assigned a CUSIP  number and will be  tradable  separately  under that
CUSIP number. The CUSIP number for each class is specified on the cover hereof.

      In  accordance  with the  procedures  established  for the Fed  book-entry
system, the Federal Reserve Banks will maintain book-entry accounts with respect
to the  Certificates  and make  distributions  on the  Certificates on behalf of
Farmer  Mac,  as  master  servicer,  on the  applicable  Distribution  Dates  by
crediting Holders' accounts at the Federal Reserve Banks.

      Those entities  whose names appear on the book-entry  records of a Federal
Reserve  Bank as the  entities for whose  accounts  the  Certificates  have been
deposited  are herein  referred to as "Holders of  Book-Entry  Certificates."  A
Holder of Book-Entry  Certificates is not necessarily the beneficial  owner of a
Certificate.  Beneficial owners will ordinarily hold Certificates through one or
more financial  intermediaries,  such as banks,  brokerage  firms and securities
clearing  organizations.  See "Description of the Certificates - The Fed System"
in the  prospectus.  The terms  "Holder" and "Holders" used herein refer to both
Holders of  Book-Entry  Certificates  and holders of  Certificates  that are not
Book-Entry  Certificates,  unless  specific  reference  is made  only to  either
Holders of  Book-Entry  Certificates  or holders  of  Certificates  that are not
Book-Entry Certificates.

      Issuance of the  Certificates  in book-entry form may reduce the liquidity
of the  Certificates  in the  secondary  market  because some  investors  may be
unwilling  to  purchase  Certificates  for which  they  cannot  obtain  physical
certificates.  See "Risk Factors - Your investment in the certificates will have
limited liquidity" in the prospectus.

Distributions

      General.  Distributions of principal and interest on the Certificates will
be made on an annual,  semi-annual,  quarterly or monthly basis as specified for
each class on the cover page hereof.  The monthly  Distribution Dates will occur
on the  25th  day of  each  month  and  the  annual,  semi-annual  or  quarterly
Distribution  Dates will occur on the 25th day of each January,  April, July and
October,  as applicable,  commencing on the date for each class set forth on the
cover page hereof (each, a "Distribution  Date").  If any of those days is not a
Business Day (a "Business Day" is a day other than Saturday,  Sunday or a day on
which the Federal  Reserve Bank of New York authorizes  banking  institutions in
the Second Federal Reserve District to be closed, or banking institutions in New
York are  authorized  or obligated by law to be closed or Farmer Mac is closed),
distributions  will be made on the next  succeeding  Business  Day to persons in
whose names the Certificates  are registered on the applicable  Record Date. The
"Record Date" for any class and related  Distribution  Date will be the close of
business on the last Business Day of the month  preceding the month in which the
Distribution Date occurs.


<PAGE>


      The final Distribution Date for each class of Certificates has been set to
coincide with the latest maturing underlying Qualified Loan in the related pool.

      Interest.  Interest on the  Certificates of each class will be distributed
on each  Distribution  Date for that class in an  aggregate  amount equal to the
Accrued  Certificate  Interest for that  Distribution  Date and class.  "Accrued
Certificate Interest" for each Distribution Date and class will equal the amount
of interest accrued during the related Interest Accrual Period at the applicable
Pass-Through  Rate on the Class  Certificate  Balance  of the class  immediately
prior to the Distribution Date.  Interest on the Certificates will be calculated
on the basis of a 360-day year  consisting  of twelve 30-day  months.  As of any
date  of  determination,  the  "Class  Certificate  Balance"  of  any  class  of
Certificates will equal the sum of the Certificate  Balances of all Certificates
of the same class and the  "Certificate  Balance" of any  Certificate  as of any
date of determination will equal the original  Certificate  Balance thereof less
all  amounts   distributed   thereon  in  respect  of   principal  on  preceding
Distribution Dates.

      The  Interest  Accrual  Periods  for each class will depend on the payment
frequency  of that class.  As to any class and related  Distribution  Date,  the
"Interest  Accrual Period" will be the period from the first day of the month of
the preceding  Distribution Date (or, in the case of the first Distribution Date
for each class, from the Cut-off Date) through and including the last day of the
month preceding the month of the current Distribution Date.

      Interest will accrue on the  Certificates of each class at a variable rate
per annum (the  "Pass-Through  Rate") equal to the  weighted  average of the Net
Mortgage Rates of the Qualified Loans included in the related pool. For purposes
hereof,  the "Net Mortgage Rate" for each Qualified Loan will equal the interest
rate  thereon  (the  "Mortgage  Interest  Rate")  less a rate  representing  the
combined  fees  of the  applicable  central  servicer,  Farmer  Mac,  as  master
servicer,  and Farmer Mac, as guarantor,  (that amount, the  "Administrative Fee
Rate"). The weighted average  Administrative Fee Rate as of the Cut-off Date for
each pool is set forth in "Annex I:  Description  of the  Qualified  Loan Pools"
hereto.  The Pass-Through Rate for each pool and Distribution Date is calculated
by (1) multiplying  the outstanding  balance of each Qualified Loan in that pool
by its Net Mortgage Rate to derive the Qualified Loan's weighted interest amount
("Weighted  Interest  Amount");  (2) dividing the sum of all the pool's Weighted
Interest  Amounts  by the Class  Certificate  Balance  of the  related  class of
Certificates,  before  giving  effect to the  distribution  of  principal on the
related Distribution Date; and (3) truncating the interest rate to three decimal
places.

      Principal.  Principal in respect of each class will be distributed on each
applicable  Distribution  Date in an  aggregate  amount  equal to the  Principal
Distribution  Amount for the  related  pool on the  Distribution  Date.  On each
Distribution Date, the "Principal  Distribution Amount" for each pool as of each
applicable  Distribution Date will equal the sum of (i) the principal portion of
all scheduled  payments  (including any balloon payments) on the Qualified Loans
in that pool due during the preceding Due Period,  (ii) the scheduled  principal
balance of each  Qualified  Loan included in that pool that was  repurchased  or
became a Liquidated  Qualified  Loan during the preceding Due Period,  and (iii)
all full or partial  principal  prepayments  received  during the  preceding Due
Period.  The "Due Period" for each pool and  Distribution  Date will commence on
the second day of the month of the preceding  Distribution Date (or, in the case
of the first  Distribution Date for each class, on the day following the Cut-off
Date) and will end on the first  day of the  month of the  current  Distribution
Date. A "Liquidated Qualified Loan" is generally any defaulted Qualified Loan as
to which it has been  determined  that all amounts to be received  thereon  have
been recovered.

      Certificate  Pool  Factors.  As soon as  practicable  following  the fifth
Business  Day of each  month  of a  Distribution  Date,  Farmer  Mac  will  make
available to financial  publications and electronic services for each applicable
pool of  Qualified  Loans,  among  other  things,  the factor  (carried to eight
decimal places) that, when multiplied by the original  Certificate  Balance of a
Certificate  evidencing  an  interest  in that pool,  will  equal the  remaining
principal  balance of the Certificate after giving effect to the distribution of
principal to be made on the Distribution Date in that month.

      Yield Maintenance  Charges.  Under federal law, Yield Maintenance  Charges
are not subject to state laws governing usury or loan prepayment provisions.  In
the event a borrower  is  required  to pay a Yield  Maintenance  Charge,  to the
extent the payment is collected by the applicable central servicer,  Farmer Mac,
as master  servicer,  will distribute  that amount,  adjusted to the related Net
Mortgage  Rate  as  described   below,  to  Holders  of  the  related  class  of
Certificates.  Each Yield  Maintenance  Charge  has been  designed  to  mitigate
reinvestment  losses to the  noteholder  on the prepaid  amount of any Qualified
Loan.   Generally,   a  Yield  Maintenance   Charge  represents  the  excess  of
reinvestment  earnings at the related Mortgage Interest Rate (net of the related
servicing  fee rates) on the prepaid  amount  (i.e.,  the amount that would have
been received by the related  noteholder in the absence of the prepayment)  over
earnings  calculated at a prevailing  interest rate (a specified Treasury yield)
on the prepaid  amount,  all  calculations  being done on a present value basis.
Amounts,  if any,  passed  through to  Holders  in respect of Yield  Maintenance
Charges will be  calculated on the basis of the related Net Mortgage Rate rather
than the Mortgage  Interest  Rate.  The  distribution  of any Yield  Maintenance
Charge to  Holders  will not  reduce  the  Certificate  Balance  of the  related
Certificates.  Farmer Mac will not  guarantee to Holders of the related class of
Certificates  the  collection  of  any  Yield  Maintenance   Charge  payable  in
connection  with a  principal  payment on a  Qualified  Loan.  See  "Farmer  Mac
Guarantee" herein.

Advances

      Under the terms of the various Servicing Contracts, some central servicers
will be required to advance their own funds with respect to delinquent Qualified
Loans and other central  servicers  will not be required to so advance.  Because
Farmer Mac  guarantees  timely  distribution  of interest  and  principal on the
Certificates  (including  any balloon  payments),  the presence or absence of an
advancing  obligation will not affect distributions of interest and principal to
Holders.

                                   FARMER MAC

      The  Federal  Agricultural  Mortgage  Corporation,  which is also known as
Farmer  Mac,  is a  federally  chartered  instrumentality  of the United  States
established  by Title  VIII of the Farm  Credit  Act of 1971,  as  amended  (the
"Farmer Mac Charter").  See "Federal  Agricultural  Mortgage Corporation" in the
prospectus.

                              FARMER MAC GUARANTEE


<PAGE>


      Pursuant to the Trust  Agreement,  Farmer Mac will  guarantee (the "Farmer
Mac Guarantee") the timely  distribution of interest accrued on the Certificates
and the distribution of the full Principal  Distribution  Amount  (including any
balloon  payments)  for the related  pool and  Distribution  Date.  In addition,
Farmer Mac is obligated to  distribute on a timely basis the  outstanding  Class
Certificate  Balance  of each  class of  Certificates  in full no later than the
related Final  Distribution Date (as set forth on the cover hereof),  whether or
not sufficient  funds are available in the Certificate  Account.  The Farmer Mac
Guarantee  will not cover the  distribution  to Holders of the related  class of
Certificates of any uncollected Yield Maintenance  Charge. See "Risk Factors" in
this prospectus supplement.

      Farmer Mac's  obligations  under the Farmer Mac Guarantee are  obligations
solely of Farmer  Mac and are not  backed  by the full  faith and  credit of the
United States.  Furthermore,  Farmer Mac anticipates that its future  contingent
liabilities  in  respect  of  guarantees  of  outstanding  securities  backed by
agricultural  mortgage loans will greatly  exceed its  resources,  including its
limited  ability to borrow from the United  States  Treasury.  See  "Outstanding
Guarantees"  in this  prospectus  supplement  and "Risk  Factors - Farmer  Mac's
guarantee of the timely payment of interest on and principal of  certificates is
limited" and "Description of the Trust Funds - The Assets in Each Trust Fund" in
the prospectus.

                             OUTSTANDING GUARANTEES

      As  of  the  Cut-off  Date,  Farmer  Mac  had  outstanding  guarantees  on
approximately $2.8 billion aggregate  principal amount of securities  (including
approximately  $489 million of securities  evidencing assets that are guaranteed
by the Secretary of the United States Department of Agriculture).  Farmer Mac is
authorized  to borrow up to $1.5  billion from the  Secretary  of the  Treasury,
subject to certain  conditions,  to enable  Farmer Mac to fulfill its  guarantee
obligations.  See "Federal Agricultural Mortgage Corporation" in the prospectus.
As of the  Cut-off  Date,  Farmer  Mac had not  borrowed  any  amounts  from the
Secretary of the Treasury to fund guarantee payments.

                 YIELD, PREPAYMENT AND MATURITY CONSIDERATIONS

      The rate of payment of  principal  on each class of  Certificates  and the
yield to maturity  thereof will  correspond  directly to the rate of payments of
principal on the Qualified  Loans in the related  pool.  The rate of payments of
principal  of the  Qualified  Loans  will  in turn be  affected  by the  rate of
principal  prepayments  thereon  by  borrowers,  by  liquidations  of  defaulted
Qualified  Loans,  by  repurchases  as a result of defective  documentation  and
breaches of representations and warranties or for other reasons. There is little
or no historical data available to provide  assistance in estimating the rate of
prepayments and defaults on loans secured by Agricultural  Real Estate generally
or the Qualified Loans particularly.


<PAGE>


      In the  case of  Qualified  Loans,  social,  economic,  political,  trade,
geographic,  climatic,  demographic,  legal  and  other  factors  may  influence
prepayments  and  defaults,  including  the  age of  the  Qualified  Loans,  the
geographic  distribution of the related Mortgaged Properties,  the payment terms
of the Qualified Loans, the characteristics of the borrowers,  weather, economic
conditions  generally  and  in  the  geographic  area  in  which  the  Mortgaged
Properties  are  located,   enforceability  of  due-on-sale  clauses,  servicing
decisions,  the availability of mortgage funds, the extent of the borrowers' net
equity in the Mortgaged  Properties,  mortgage market interest rates in relation
to the effective  interest rates on the Qualified Loans and other  unforeseeable
variables,  both  domestic and  international,  affecting  particular  commodity
groups and the farming industry in general.  Generally,  if prevailing  interest
rates fall  significantly  below the interest rates on the Qualified  Loans, the
Qualified  Loans  are  likely  to be  subject  to  higher  prepayments  than  if
prevailing  rates remain at or above the interest rates on the Qualified  Loans.
Conversely,  if prevailing  interest  rates rise above the interest rates on the
Qualified Loans, the rate of prepayment would be expected to decrease. There can
be no certainty as to the rate of prepayments on the Qualified  Loans during any
period  or over  the  lives of the  Certificates.  The  rate of  default  on the
Qualified  Loans  will also  affect  the rate of  payment  of  principal  on the
Qualified  Loans.  Prepayments,  liquidations  and  repurchases of the Qualified
Loans  will  result  in  distributions  to  Holders  of  the  related  class  of
Certificates of amounts that would  otherwise be distributed  over the remaining
terms of the Qualified Loans.

      Some of the Qualified Loans may impose Yield Maintenance  Charges that, if
enforced by the central  servicer,  could be a deterrent to  prepayments.  Under
each Servicing  Contract,  the central  servicer may not waive the collection of
any Yield Maintenance Charge without the prior written consent of Farmer Mac, as
master  servicer.  It is Farmer  Mac's  policy  generally  not to consent to the
waiver of the collection of a Yield Maintenance  Charge unless the amount of the
charge is unduly large relative to the unpaid  principal  balance of the related
Qualified Loan and the borrower requests a waiver and provides valid reasons for
the  request.  In those  cases,  and  other  circumstances  that  raise  similar
equitable  concerns,  Farmer  Mac's  policy is to require  central  servicers to
attempt to collect a portion of the Yield Maintenance  Charge in connection with
any  prepayment of principal;  however,  there may be situations in which Farmer
Mac may consider it appropriate  to waive any collection of a Yield  Maintenance
Charge. Generally, a principal prepayment resulting from the condemnation of, or
casualty on, the related  Mortgaged  Property will not be accompanied by a Yield
Maintenance  Charge.  With respect to each Qualified Loan, any Yield Maintenance
Charge payable in connection with a prepayment  thereon,  whether in whole or in
part,  will be  calculated,  on a present value basis,  with reference to United
States Treasury securities in a manner designed to mitigate reinvestment losses,
if any, that would  otherwise be incurred by the  noteholder in connection  with
the prepayment.  Because the calculation of any Yield Maintenance  Charge occurs
in connection with the principal prepayment,  which may not be on an Installment
Payment Date, if interest rates have changed between the date of the calculation
and the Installment Payment Date, the Yield Maintenance Charge may be greater or
less than the amount that would have been due had the calculation been performed
as of the Installment Payment Date.

      Because  Farmer  Mac  does  not  guarantee  the  collection  of any  Yield
Maintenance  Charge,  the expected yield to investors in the Certificates may be
sensitive in varying degrees to the extent those amounts are not collected.

      The required payment of a Yield  Maintenance  Charge, if any, may not be a
sufficient  disincentive  to prevent  the  voluntary  prepayment  of the related
Qualified Loan and, even if collected,  may be  insufficient to offset fully the
adverse   effects  on  the   anticipated   yield  thereon  arising  out  of  the
corresponding principal payment.


<PAGE>


      In addition,  all of the Qualified  Loans include  "due-on-sale"  clauses;
however,  it is  generally  the policy of the central  servicers  not to enforce
those clauses unless the transferee of the related  Mortgaged  Property does not
meet the Underwriting Standards of Farmer Mac and the Servicing Contracts do not
require  any  enforcement.  In  addition,  at the request of the  borrower,  the
applicable  central  servicer  may  allow the  partial  release  of a  Mortgaged
Property  provided  the  collateral   property  is  reappraised  and  a  partial
prepayment  is made such that the  resulting  loan-to-value  ratio is no greater
than 70% and the cash  flows  from the  remaining  property  are  sufficient  to
service the remaining debt. A partial release may result in a prepayment in part
(together with any required Yield Maintenance Charge, calculated as described in
"Annex  I:   Description  of  the  Qualified  Loan  Pools"  in  this  prospectus
supplement) on the related Qualified Loan and a corresponding  reamortization of
the unpaid principal  balance of the Qualified Loan to the maturity date (or the
original amortization date if the Qualified Loan provides for a balloon payment)
for the loan.  Any  Qualified  Loan as to which a partial  release  occurs  will
remain in the Trust Fund.

      The yield to maturity to investors in the  Certificates of a class will be
sensitive to the rate and timing of principal payments  (including  prepayments)
of the Qualified  Loans in the related pool,  which  generally can be prepaid at
any time, subject to the restrictions and prepayment  penalties described above.
In addition,  the yield to maturity on a Certificate  may vary  depending on the
extent to which the Certificate is purchased at a discount or premium. Investors
should consider,  in the case of any Certificates  purchased at a discount,  the
risk that a slower than  anticipated  rate of principal  payments on the related
Qualified  Loans  could  result  in an  actual  yield  that is  lower  than  the
anticipated  yield and, in the case of any Certificates  purchased at a premium,
the risk  that a faster  than  anticipated  rate of  principal  payments  on the
related  Qualified  Loans could result in an actual yield that is lower than the
anticipated  yield,   particularly  if  any  Yield  Maintenance  Charge  is  not
distributed to Holders.

      The timing of changes in the rate of  prepayments  on the Qualified  Loans
may  significantly  affect an investor's  actual yield to maturity,  even if the
average rate of principal payments is consistent with an investor's expectation.
In general,  the earlier a  prepayment  of  principal  of the related  Qualified
Loans, the greater the effect on an investor's yield to maturity.  The effect on
an investor's yield of principal  payments occurring at a rate higher (or lower)
than  the  rate  anticipated  by the  investor  during  the  period  immediately
following  the  issuance of the  Certificates  may not be offset by a subsequent
like decrease (or increase) in the rate of principal payments.  An investor must
make an independent  decision as to the  appropriate  prepayment  scenario to be
used in deciding whether to purchase the Certificates.

      Investors  should consider the risk that rapid rates of prepayments on the
Qualified  Loans,  and  therefore of principal  payments on the related class of
Certificates, may coincide with periods of low prevailing interest rates. During
those periods,  the effective  interest rates on securities in which an investor
may choose to reinvest amounts received as principal  payments on the investor's
Certificate may be lower than the applicable Pass-Through Rate. Conversely, slow
rates of prepayments on the Qualified Loans, and therefore of principal payments
on the  related  class  of  Certificates,  may  coincide  with  periods  of high
prevailing  interest  rates.  During  those  periods,  the  amount of  principal
payments  available to an investor for reinvestment at high prevailing  interest
rates may be relatively low.

      The  Pass-Through  Rate for each  class of  Certificates  will  equal  the
weighted average of the Net Mortgage Rates of the Qualified Loans in the related
pool.  Prepayments of Qualified Loans with relatively  higher Mortgage  Interest
Rates,  particularly  if  the  Qualified  Loans  have  larger  unpaid  principal
balances,   will  reduce  the  Pass-Through   Rate  for  the  related  class  of
Certificates  from that which would have existed in the absence of  prepayments.
In addition,  the Qualified  Loans in a pool will not prepay at the same rate or
at the same time. Qualified Loans with relatively higher Mortgage Interest Rates
may prepay at faster rates than Qualified Loans with  relatively  lower Mortgage
Interest  Rates in  response  to a given  change in market  interest  rates.  If
differential  prepayments  were to  occur,  the  yield on the  related  class of
Certificates would be adversely affected.

      The effective  yield to the Holders will be lower than the yield otherwise
produced by the  applicable  purchase  price and  Pass-Through  Rate because the
distributions of principal,  if any, and interest will not be payable to Holders
until at least the 25th day of the month  following the period in which interest
accrues (without any additional  distribution of interest or earnings thereon in
respect of the delay).


<PAGE>


                          DESCRIPTION OF THE AGREEMENTS

      The Certificates  will be issued pursuant to the Trust  Agreement.  Farmer
Mac will act as master servicer of the Qualified Loans. The Qualified Loans will
be directly serviced by one or more central servicers acting on behalf of Farmer
Mac,  each pursuant to a Master  Central  Servicing  Contract (as  supplemented)
between the central  servicer  and Farmer Mac (the  "Servicing  Contract").  See
"Description  of the  Agreements"  in the  prospectus.  For a  statement  of the
numbers  of  Qualified  Loans  (and  related  principal  balances)  in each pool
serviced by each central servicer,  see the narrative  description for each pool
set forth in "Annex I:  Description of the Qualified  Loan Pools"  hereto.  Each
central servicer may subcontract the performance of some of its servicing duties
to a subservicer who may be the seller (the "Seller")  and/or  originator of the
respective  Qualified  Loans. In addition,  each of the Sellers of the Qualified
Loans  has  transferred  and  assigned  its  respective  Qualified  Loans to the
Depositor  pursuant to a separate  Selling and  Servicing  Agreement or a Master
Loan Sale Agreement (a "Sale  Agreement").  The Sale Agreement  includes limited
representations  and  warranties of the related  Seller  respecting  the related
Qualified Loans which  representations and warranties and the remedies for their
breach  will be assigned by Farmer Mac to the Trustee for the benefit of Holders
pursuant  to  the  Trust  Agreement.   See  "Description  of  the  Agreements  -
Representations and Warranties; Repurchases" in the prospectus.

Trustee

      The trustee (the  "Trustee")  for the  Certificates  pursuant to the Trust
Agreement  will be U.S.  Bank Trust  National  Association,  a national  banking
association  organized and existing  under the federal laws of the United States
with an office at 180 East Fifth Street, St. Paul, Minnesota 55101.

Servicing and Other Compensation And Payment of Expenses

      Each  central  servicer  will  be paid a  servicing  fee  calculated  on a
loan-by-loan basis.  Additional servicing compensation in the form of assumption
fees or similar  fees  (other  than late  payment  charges in some cases) may be
retained  by the  central  servicers.  The  Depositor,  Farmer  Mac,  as  master
servicer,  and the central  servicers are obligated to pay all expenses incurred
in connection with their respective  responsibilities  under the Trust Agreement
and the Servicing Contracts (subject to reimbursement for liquidation expenses),
including the fees of the Trustee, and also including,  without limitation,  the
various other items of expense enumerated in the prospectus. See "Description of
the Certificates" in the prospectus.

Optional Termination


<PAGE>


      As master  servicer,  Farmer  Mac may effect an early  termination  of the
Trust Fund on a  Distribution  Date for any class when the  aggregate  principal
balance of  Qualified  Loans in all of the pools in the Trust Fund is reduced to
less than one percent  thereof as of the Cut-off  Date as of the Cut-off Date by
repurchasing  all the Qualified  Loans and REO Property at a price equal to 100%
of the unpaid principal balance of the Qualified Loans,  including any Qualified
Loans  as to which  the  related  property  is held as part of the  Trust,  plus
accrued and unpaid interest  thereon at the applicable  Mortgage  Interest Rate,
determined  as provided in the Trust  Agreement.  The  proceeds  thereof will be
distributed to Holders of the then  outstanding  classes of  Certificates on the
Distribution  Date whether or not that  Distribution Date is a Distribution Date
for all classes of Certificates. See "Description of Certificates - Termination"
in the prospectus.

Repurchases of Qualified Loans

      Under the Trust Agreement,  Farmer Mac, as master servicer,  will have the
right (without  obligation and in its  discretion) to repurchase  from the Trust
Fund,  upon payment of the purchase price provided in the Trust  Agreement,  any
Qualified  Loan at any time after the loan becomes and remains  delinquent as to
any scheduled  payment for a period of ninety days.  Farmer Mac will also have a
similar right to purchase from the Trust Fund any property acquired by the Trust
Fund upon  foreclosure  or comparable  conversion  of any  Qualified  Loan ("REO
Property").  See also  "Description  of the  Agreements  -  Representations  and
Warranties; Repurchases" in the prospectus.

                                  THE DEPOSITOR

      Farmer Mac Mortgage  Securities  Corporation,  the Depositor,  is a wholly
owned  subsidiary of Farmer Mac and was incorporated in the State of Delaware in
December 1991. The principal  executive  offices of the Depositor are located at
919 18th Street, N.W., Washington,  D.C. 20006 and the telephone number there is
202/872-7700.

                         FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES

      The following general  discussion of material  anticipated  federal income
tax  consequences of an investment in the  Certificates is to be considered only
in connection with the discussion in the prospectus  under the caption  "Federal
Income Tax Consequences."

      No election will be made to treat the Trust Fund as a real estate mortgage
investment conduit, or REMIC, for federal income tax purposes. In the opinion of
Andrews & Kurth L.L.P.,  counsel for the  Depositor,  (i) the Trust Fund will be
treated  as a grantor  trust  for  federal  income  tax  purposes  and not as an
association taxable as a corporation;  (ii) a Certificate owned by a real estate
investment trust  representing an interest in Qualified Loans will be considered
to represent "real estate assets" within the meaning of Section  856(c)(4)(A) of
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the "Code"),  and interest income
on the Qualified  Loans will be considered  "interest on obligations  secured by
mortgages on real property" within the meaning of Code Section 856(c)(3)(B),  to
the extent that the Qualified  Loans  represented by that  Certificate  are of a
type  described in that Code section;  and (iii) a Certificate  owned by a REMIC
will  represent  "obligation[s]  . . . which  [are]  principally  secured  by an
interest in real property" within the meaning of Code Section  860G(a)(3) to the
extent that the Qualified  Loans  represented by that  Certificate are of a type
described in that Code  section.  If the value of the real  property  securing a
Qualified  Loan is lower than the amount of the Qualified  Loan,  that Qualified
Loan may not qualify in its entirety  under the  foregoing  Code  sections.  The
Holders  will be treated as owners of their pro rata  interests in the assets of
the Trust  Fund with  respect to the  related  pool.  The Trust Fund  intends to
account for all servicing fees as reasonable  servicing  fees.  However,  if any
servicing  fees,  determined on a Qualified Loan by Qualified  Loan basis,  were
determined  to exceed  reasonable  servicing  fees,  the  Certificates  would be
treated as representing an interest in one or more "stripped bonds."


<PAGE>


      Potential  investors  should consult their tax advisors  before  acquiring
Certificates.

                              ERISA CONSIDERATIONS

      The  acquisition  of  Certificates  by a  plan  subject  to  the  Employee
Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as amended ("ERISA"),  or any individual
retirement account ("IRA") or any other plan subject to Code Section 4975 could,
in some instances, result in a prohibited transaction or other violations of the
fiduciary  responsibility  provisions of ERISA and Code Section 4975. Exemptions
from the prohibited transaction rules could, however, be applicable.

      As discussed under the caption "ERISA  Considerations"  in the prospectus,
Final Regulations (as defined in the prospectus)  provide a plan asset exception
for a Plan's (as defined in the prospectus)  purchase and holding of "guaranteed
governmental  mortgage pool  certificates."  The Final Regulations  provide that
where a Plan acquires a guaranteed  governmental mortgage pool certificate,  the
Plan's assets include the  certificate and all of its rights with respect to the
certificate  under  applicable  law, but do not,  solely by reason of the Plan's
holding  of  the  certificate,  include  any  of the  mortgages  underlying  the
certificate.  The term "guaranteed  governmental  mortgage pool  certificate" is
defined as a  certificate  backed by, or  evidencing  an interest in,  specified
mortgages or participation interests therein, and with respect to which interest
and principal  payable  pursuant to the certificate are guaranteed by the United
States or an agency or  instrumentality  thereof.  The  Department  of Labor has
advised Farmer Mac that the Certificates satisfy the conditions set forth in the
Final  Regulations  and thus qualify as "guaranteed  governmental  mortgage pool
certificates." Accordingly, none of Farmer Mac, the trustee, the master servicer
or any central servicer will be subject to ERISA standards of conduct in dealing
with Qualified Loans or other trust fund assets.

      Prospective  Plan  investors  should  consult  with their  legal  advisors
concerning the impact of ERISA and the Code, and the potential  consequences  in
their specific circumstances, prior to making an investment in the Certificates.
Moreover,  each Plan  fiduciary  should  determine  whether  under  the  general
fiduciary standards of investment prudence and diversification, an investment in
the  Certificates is appropriate  for the Plan,  taking into account the overall
investment  policy  of the Plan and the  composition  of the  Plan's  investment
portfolio. See "ERISA Considerations" in the prospectus.

                                LEGAL INVESTMENT

      The Certificates will constitute  securities  guaranteed by Farmer Mac for
purposes of the Farmer Mac  Charter  and, as such,  will,  by statute,  be legal
investments for some types of  institutional  investors to the extent that those
investors are authorized  under any applicable law to purchase,  hold, or invest
in  obligations  issued by or  guaranteed  as to  principal  and interest by the
United States or any agency or instrumentality  of the United States.  Investors
whose investment authority is subject to legal restrictions should consult their
own legal advisors to determine whether and the extent to which specific classes
of the Certificates constitute legal investments for them.


<PAGE>



                             METHOD OF DISTRIBUTION

      The Certificates are being offered and sold directly by Farmer Mac.

      There is currently no secondary market for the Certificates of any class.

                           FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS

      Some statements in this prospectus  supplement  represent our expectations
or projections for the certificates  offered by this prospectus  supplement only
as of the date of this prospectus  supplement.  You can generally identify those
statements,  which are called  "forward-looking  statements,"  by the use of the
words "may," "will," "expect," "intend,"  "estimate,"  "anticipate" or "believe"
or similar language.

      We believe the expectations  expressed in all  forward-looking  statements
are reasonable and accurate based on information we currently have. However, our
expectations  may not prove to be correct.  Important  factors  that could cause
actual  results  to differ  from our  expectations  are  disclosed  under  "Risk
Factors" and in other parts of this  prospectus  supplement.  You should  always
consider  those  factors  in  evaluating   any   subsequent   written  and  oral
forward-looking statements by us, or persons acting on our behalf, in connection
with this offering.

      We will not  report  to the  public  any  changes  to any  forward-looking
statements to reflect events, developments or circumstances that occur after the
date of this prospectus supplement.


<PAGE>



                            INDEX OF PRINCIPAL TERMS

      Unless the context indicates otherwise, the following terms shall have the
meanings set forth on the pages indicated below.

Accrued Certificate Interest................................................S-12
Administrative Fee Rate.....................................................S-12
Agricultural Real Estate.....................................................S-9
Business Day................................................................S-11
Certificate Balance.........................................................S-12
Certificates.................................................................S-3
Class Certificate Balance...................................................S-12
Code........................................................................S-18
Cut-off Date.................................................................S-9
Depositor....................................................................S-3
Distribution Date...........................................................S-11
Due Period.............................................................S-4, S-12
ERISA.......................................................................S-19
Farmer Mac Charter..........................................................S-13
Farmer Mac Guarantee........................................................S-13
Fed book-entry system.......................................................S-11
Holder(s)...................................................................S-11
Holder(s) of Book-Entry Certificates........................................S-11
Interest Accrual Period................................................S-4, S-12
IRA.........................................................................S-19
Liquidated Qualified Loan...................................................S-12
Mortgage Interest Rate......................................................S-12
Mortgaged Properties.........................................................S-9
Net Mortgage Rate...........................................................S-12
Pass-Through Rate...........................................................S-12
Principal Distribution Amount...............................................S-12
Qualified Loans..............................................................S-9
Record Date.................................................................S-11
REO Property................................................................S-18
Sale Agreement..............................................................S-17
Seller(s)...................................................................S-17
Servicing Contract..........................................................S-17
Trust Agreement.............................................................S-10
Trust Fund..................................................................S-10
Trustee.....................................................................S-17
Underwriting Standards.......................................................S-9
Weighted Interest Amount....................................................S-12
Yield Maintenance Charge.....................................................S-5


<PAGE>



              ANNEX I:  DESCRIPTION OF THE QUALIFIED LOAN POOLS

      The  description  of  the  Qualified  Loans  and  the  related   Mortgaged
Properties  set forth below is based upon each pool as  constituted at the close
of  business on the  Cut-off  Date,  as  adjusted  for the  scheduled  principal
payments  due  before  that date.  Prior to the  issuance  of the  Certificates,
Qualified  Loans  may be  removed  from  each  pool as a  result  of  incomplete
documentation  or  otherwise,  if  the  Depositor  deems  removal  necessary  or
appropriate,  or as a result of  prepayments  in full. A limited number of other
Qualified  Loans  may be  added  to  each  pool  prior  to the  issuance  of the
Certificates  unless  including those Qualified Loans would materially alter the
characteristics of the pool as described herein. The Depositor believes that the
information set forth herein will be  representative of the  characteristics  of
the related  pool as it will be  constituted  at the time the  Certificates  are
issued,  although the range of Mortgage  Interest Rates and maturities and other
characteristics of the Qualified Loans in the pool may vary.

      The composition of each pool is subject to adjustment,  with the amount of
the variance restricted to no more than 5% of the aggregate principal balance of
the Qualified Loans in the pool, as stated herein.  The information set forth as
to the Qualified  Loans will be revised to reflect any  adjustments and included
on a Form 8-K to be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission by October
13, 2000. The information will be available to Holders of Certificates  promptly
thereafter  through the facilities of the  Commission as described  under "Where
You Can Find Additional Information" in the prospectus.

      Percentages  and  principal  balances of Qualified  Loans in the following
tables have been rounded. Accordingly, the total of the percentages in any given
column may not add to 100% and the total of the principal  balances in any given
column may not add to the amount shown as the total for the column.


<PAGE>


                           DESCRIPTION OF POOL QM1016

      The  Qualified  Loan in Pool  QM1016  has a  principal  balance  as of the
Cut-off Date of $985,700.  The Qualified  Loan in Pool QM1016 was  originated on
September  11,  2000.  The  Qualified  Loan in Pool QM1016 will have a scheduled
maturity  of October 1, 2015.  The  Qualified  Loan in Pool  QM1016 will have an
Administrative Fee Rate as of the Cut-off Date of approximately 1.650%.

      The Qualified  Loan in Pool QM1016 does not require the payment of a Yield
Maintenance Charge in connection with any principal  prepayment,  in whole or in
part.

      The Loan included in Pool QM1016 is an adjustable  rate mortgage loan that
has an initial  interest rate that will remain fixed for ten years from the date
of origination  and then will adjust  annually to an interest rate determined by
adding  the margin  indicated  in the  following  schedule  to the then  current
average yield on U.S.  Treasury  securities,  adjusted to a constant maturity of
one year, or one-year CMT.

      The  Qualified  Loan in Pool QM1016  provides  for the monthly  payment of
principal  and interest on a level basis to amortize  fully each such  Qualified
Loan over its stated term.

      Zions First National Bank will be the central servicer with respect to the
Qualified Loan in Pool QM1016.

The  following  schedule  provides  specific  information  with  respect to each
Qualified Loan in, and certain summary data with respect to, Pool QM1016.


<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>


                             Qualified Loan Schedule

                                  Pool: QM1016

                            Cut-off Date: 09/01/2000

                                Loan Information:

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                              <C>

 State                            NM
 Next Payment Date                10/01/2000
 Next Payment Type (1)            IO
 Cut-off Date Principal           $985,700.00
 Balance
 Mortgage Rate                    8.900%
 Net Mortgage Rate                7.250%
 Maturity Date                    10/01/2015
 Amortization Type (2)            F
 Next Reset Date                  10/01/2010
 Gross Margin                     3.650%
 Loan-to-Value Ratio              55%
 Balloon-to-Value Ratio (3)       0%
 Total Debt Coverage Ratio (4)    1.39
 Administrative Fee Rate          1.650%
 Commodity Group                  Dairy
 Remaining Amortization Term (5)  181


(1)   PI = Principal and Interest.  The principal portion of the payment will be
      the principal  amount as if a full payment were collected plus the accrued
      interest  from the Cut-off  Date.  IO = The next  payment will be interest
      only.

(2)   Amortization Type - B = Balloon Loan,  F = Fully Amortizing.
(3)   The Balloon-to-Value Ratio is the percentage of the Balloon Payment of
      each  Qualified  Balloon  Loan in the Pool to the  appraised  value of the
      related Mortgage Property.

(4)   Total  Debt  Coverage  Ratio  is the  ratio  determined  by  dividing  the
      borrower's total annual net income (net of living expenses and taxes) from
      all  sources by the  borrower's  total  annual  debt  service  obligations
      (including  capital  lease  payments).  Those  loans  that were  processed
      through Fast Track will have no Total Debt Coverage Ratio calculated.

(5)   The Remaining Amortization Term represents the number of amortization
      periods covered in months.  For example, 300 months on an annual pay loan
      represents 25 amortization periods
</TABLE>


<PAGE>



                           DESCRIPTION OF POOL QS1016

      The  Qualified  Loans in Pool  QS1016 will have had  individual  principal
balances  as of the  Cut-off  Date of not less than  $104,750  and not more than
$985,000.  None of the Qualified  Loans in Pool QS1016 will have been originated
prior to June 22, 2000.  None of the Qualified  Loans in Pool QS1016 will have a
scheduled  maturity prior to January 1, 2016 nor later than January 1, 2026. The
Qualified Loans in Pool QS1016 will have a weighted average  Administrative  Fee
Rate as of the Cut-off Date of approximately 1.382%.

      None of the Qualified  Loans in Pool QS1016 require the payment of a Yield
Maintenance Charge in connection with any principal  prepayment,  in whole or in
part.

      Each Qualified Loan included in Pool QS1016 is an adjustable rate mortgage
loan that has an initial interest rate that will remain fixed for ten years from
the date of  origination  and then will  adjust  annually  to an  interest  rate
determined by adding the margin indicated in the following  schedule to the then
current  average  yield on U.S.  Treasury  securities,  adjusted  to a  constant
maturity of one year, or one-year CMT.

      All of the  Qualified  Loans in Pool QS1016  provide  for the  semi-annual
payment of principal  and interest on a level basis to amortize  fully each such
Qualified Loan over its stated term.

      Fourteen of the Qualified Loans having an aggregate  principal  balance of
$4,018,250  in Pool QS1016 were  processed  through  Fast Track.  Under the Fast
Track process, a loan is determined to be a Qualified Loan if it is secured by a
first lien on Agricultural Real Estate,  the loan is for not more than $750,000,
the LTV is not greater  than 55% and the  borrower has a Fair Isaac credit score
of at least 660.

      Zions First National Bank will be the central servicer with respect to all
of the Qualified Loans in Pool QS1016.

      The following schedule provides specific  information with respect to each
Qualified Loan in, and certain summary data with respect to, Pool QS1016.


<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                              Qualified Loan Schedule
                                                   Pool:    QS1016
                                                Cut-off   09/01/2000
Loan Information:
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                   Next   Cut-off Date               Net                          Next             Loan-to-  Balloon-  Total Debt
        Next Pmt   Pmt     Principal     Mortgage  Mortgage   Maturity   Amort    Reset     Gross   Value    to-Value   Coverage
 State   Date    Type (1)   Balance       Rate      Rate        Date   Type (2)   Date      Margin  Ratio    Ratio (3)  Ratio (4)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>  <C>          <C>    <C>            <C>       <C>       <C>          <C>  <C>          <C>       <C>      <C>         <C>
 CA   01/01/2001   IO     $480,000.00    9.050%    7.610%    01/01/2026   F    01/01/2011   3.550%    50%       0%
 CA   01/01/2001   IO     $460,000.00    9.040%    7.735%    01/01/2026   F    01/01/2011   3.415%    66%       0%         1.48
 CA   01/01/2001   IO     $350,000.00    9.150%    7.735%    01/01/2026   F    01/01/2011   3.525%    47%       0%
 CA   01/01/2001   IO     $225,000.00    9.170%    7.610%    01/01/2026   F    01/01/2011   3.670%    45%       0%
 CA   01/01/2001   IO     $215,000.00    9.250%    7.735%    01/01/2026   F    01/01/2011   3.675%    31%       0%         1.35
 CA   01/01/2001   IO     $160,000.00    9.000%    7.485%    01/01/2016   F    01/01/2011   3.625%    33%       0%         4.20
 CA   01/01/2001   IO     $140,000.00    9.290%    7.735%    01/01/2026   F    01/01/2011   3.715%    64%       0%         2.83
 CA   01/01/2001   IO     $125,000.00    9.290%    7.735%    01/01/2026   F    01/01/2011   3.665%    69%       0%         2.80
 CA   01/01/2001   IO     $122,500.00    9.000%    7.360%    01/01/2016   F    01/01/2011   3.750%    70%       0%         3.31
 IA   01/01/2001   IO     $985,000.00    8.660%    7.610%    01/01/2026   F    01/01/2011   3.160%    63%       0%         1.33
 IA   01/01/2001   IO     $171,000.00    9.050%    7.735%    01/01/2026   F    01/01/2011   3.425%    28%       0%
 ID   01/01/2001   IO     $500,000.00    9.000%    7.735%    01/01/2026   F    01/01/2011   3.375%    41%       0%
 ID   01/01/2001   IO     $138,000.00    8.640%    7.485%    01/01/2016   F    01/01/2011   3.265%    60%       0%         1.57
 IL   01/01/2001   IO     $280,000.00    9.140%    7.735%    01/01/2026   F    01/01/2011   3.515%    69%       0%         1.49
 IL   01/01/2001   IO     $120,000.00    8.940%    7.735%    01/01/2026   F    01/01/2011   3.315%    23%       0%
 IN   01/01/2001   IO     $195,000.00    8.870%    7.610%    01/01/2026   F    01/01/2011   3.370%    63%       0%         1.35
 IN   01/01/2001   IO     $150,000.00    8.870%    7.610%    01/01/2026   F    01/01/2011   3.370%    35%       0%
 KY   01/01/2001   IO     $104,750.00    9.140%    7.485%    01/01/2026   F    01/01/2011   3.765%    41%       0%
 MN   01/01/2001   IO     $450,000.00    8.950%    7.485%    01/01/2026   F    01/01/2011   3.575%    66%       0%         1.46
 MN   01/01/2001   IO     $250,000.00    9.120%    7.610%    01/01/2026   F    01/01/2011   3.620%    46%       0%
 MN   01/01/2001   IO     $182,000.00    9.120%    7.610%    01/01/2026   F    01/01/2011   3.620%    70%       0%         1.67
 MT   01/01/2001   IO     $452,500.00    9.450%    7.735%    01/01/2026   F    01/01/2011   3.900%    50%       0%
 NE   01/01/2001   IO     $330,000.00    9.510%    7.610%    01/01/2016   B    01/01/2011   4.010%    39%      69%
 NM   01/01/2001   IO     $657,300.00    8.980%    7.610%    01/01/2026   F    01/01/2011   3.480%    56%       0%         1.46
 SD   01/01/2001   IO     $475,000.00    9.250%    7.610%    01/01/2026   F    01/01/2011   3.750%    65%       0%         2.24
 SD   01/01/2001   IO     $300,000.00    9.250%    7.585%    01/01/2026   F    01/01/2011   3.775%    48%       0%
 TX   01/01/2001   IO     $325,000.00    9.100%    7.735%    01/01/2026   F    01/01/2011   3.475%    56%       0%         1.30
 UT   01/01/2001   IO     $400,000.00    8.870%    7.610%    01/01/2026   F    01/01/2011   3.370%    40%       0%
 UT   01/01/2001   IO     $185,000.00    9.100%    7.735%    01/01/2026   F    01/01/2011   3.475%    34%       0%
 WA   01/01/2001   IO     $720,000.00    8.750%    7.735%    01/01/2026   F    01/01/2011   3.125%    58%       0%         1.97
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Total                    $9,648,050.00                                 Loan       30
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>

<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>


Summary Information:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                    Cut-off Date               Net                         Remain    Next            Loan-to- Total Debt
                     Principal    Mortgage  Mortgage  Admin    Maturity    Amort    Reset     Gross    Value    Coverage
                      Balance       Rate      Rate   Fee Rate  Date (5)   Term (6) Date (5)   Margin   Ratio   Ratio (4)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                  <C>          <C>       <C>     <C>      <C>          <C>    <C>         <C>        <C>     <C>

 Weighted Average     $321,601     9.030%    7.647%  1.382%   07/01/2025   291    01/01/2011  3.498%     53%     1.75
 Minimum              $104,750     8.640%    7.360%  1.015%   01/01/2016   184    01/01/2011  3.125%     23%     1.30
 Maximum              $985,000     9.510%    7.735%  1.900%   01/01/2026   300    01/01/2011  4.010%     70%     4.20
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

(1)   PI = Principal and Interest.  The principal portion of the payment will be
      the principal  amount as if a full payment were collected plus the accrued
      interest  from the Cut-off  Date.  IO = The next  payment will be interest
      only.

(2)   Amortization Type - B = Balloon Loan,  F = Fully Amortizing.

(3)   The Balloon-to-Value Ratio is the percentage of the Balloon Payment of
      each  Qualified  Balloon  Loan in the Pool to the  appraised  value of the
      related Mortgage Property.

(4)   Total  Debt  Coverage  Ratio  is the  ratio  determined  by  dividing  the
      borrower's total annual net income (net of living expenses and taxes) from
      all  sources by the  borrower's  total  annual  debt  service  obligations
      (including  capital  lease  payments).  Those  loans  that were  processed
      through Fast Track will have no Total Debt Coverage Ratio calculated.

(5)   The Weighted  Average  Maturity  Date and the Weighted  Average Next Reset
      Date are both rounded to the closest payment date.

(6)   The Remaining Amortization Term represents the number of amortization
      periods covered in months.  For example, 300 months on an annual pay loan
      represents 25 amortization periods

</TABLE>


<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>


                         Distribution by Commodity Group
                                  Pool: QS1016
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                               Percentage of
                                                       Aggregate Principal       Aggregate
                                            Number    Balance As of Cut-Off  Principal Balance
 Commodity Group                           of Loans          Date            As of Cut-Off Date
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                         <C>        <C>                       <C>
 Dairy                                        3         $1,055,500.00              11%
 Feed Grains                                 15         $2,327,025.00              24%
 Oilseeds                                    13         $2,137,525.00              22%
 Permanent Plantings                         12         $2,997,500.00              31%
 Potatoes, Tomatoes, and Other Vegetables     2           $538,000.00               6%
 Sugarbeets, Cane and Other Crops             2           $592,500.00               6%
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Grand Total:                                           $9,648,050.00             100%
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

(1) The number of loans in each commodity  group will not equal the total number
of  loans  because  a  Mortgaged  Property  may  be  used  to  produce  multiple
commodities and thus the related Mortgage Loan may be allocated to more than one
commodity  group.  As to any Qualified Loan allocated to more than one commodity
group,  the principal  balance thereof is allocated among commodity groups based
on the  proportion  of the Mortgage  Property  used for the  production  of each
commodity
</TABLE>

<PAGE>






                                   Prospectus

                   Federal Agricultural Mortgage Corporation
                                    Guarantor

                  Farmer Mac Mortgage Securities Corporation
                                    Depositor

              Guaranteed Agricultural Mortgage-Backed Securities

      From time to time, we will a create a trust fund to:

          - hold pools of agricultural real estate mortgage loans and other
            assets; and

          - issue securities, or certificates, backed by those assets.

The trust fund may issue the certificates in one or more series with one or more
classes.  With  this  prospectus  and  supplements  to this  prospectus,  we are
offering these agricultural mortgage-backed certificates.

      The  Federal  Agricultural  Mortgage  Corporation,  which is also known as
Farmer Mac, will  guarantee  the timely  payment of interest on and principal of
the  certificates.  The  obligations  of Farmer  Mac under  this  guarantee  are
obligations  solely of Farmer Mac. Farmer Mac's  obligations under the guarantee
are  not   obligations   of,  and  are  not   guaranteed  by,  the  Farm  Credit
Administration, the United States or any agency or instrumentality of the United
States other than Farmer Mac. Farmer Mac's  obligations  under the guarantee are
not backed by the full faith and credit of the United States.



      We will not list the certificates on any national  securities  exchange or
on any automated quotation system of any registered securities association, such
as NASDAQ.


Consider  carefully  the risk factors  beginning  on page 11 in this  prospectus
before purchasing any certificate.

      Neither the  Securities and Exchange  Commission nor any state  securities
commission has approved or  disapproved  of these  securities or passed upon the
accuracy or adequacy of this  prospectus or the related  prospectus  supplement.
Any representation to the contrary is a criminal offense.

This prospectus may be used to offer and sell any series of certificates only if
accompanied by the prospectus supplement for that series.





We may offer the certificates  through one or more different methods,  including
through  underwriters,  as more fully  described in this  prospectus  and in the
related prospectus supplement.

                                 March 29, 2000


<PAGE>


                                TABLE OF CONTENTS

                                                                           Page

SUMMARY OF TERMS.............................................................4

RISK FACTORS................................................................11
   Your investment in the certificates will have limited liquidity..........11
   Farmer Mac's guarantee of the timely payment of interest
      on and principal of certificates is limited...........................11
   The rate and timing of principal payments on the mortgage loans
      could adversely affect your investment................................12
   Additional risks to your investment are associated with borrower
      prepayments...........................................................12
   If we do not issue the certificates in definitive form, your exercise
      of your rights may be limited.........................................13

SPECIFIC INFORMATION FOUND IN EACH PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT....................13

WHERE YOU CAN FIND ADDITIONAL INFORMATION...................................14

WE HAVE INCORPORATED SOME INFORMATIONBY REFERENCE TO OTHER DOCUMENTS........16

DESCRIPTION OF THE TRUST FUNDS..............................................17
   General..................................................................17
   The Assets in Each Trust Fund............................................17
   Qualified Loans..........................................................19
   QMBS.....................................................................25
   Guaranteed Portions......................................................27

USE OF PROCEEDS.............................................................28

YIELD CONSIDERATIONS........................................................29
   General..................................................................29
   Pass-Through Rate........................................................29
   Timing of Payment of Interest............................................29
   Payments of Principal; Prepayments.......................................29
   Prepayments, Maturity and Weighted Average Lives.........................31

THE DEPOSITOR...............................................................32

FEDERAL AGRICULTURAL MORTGAGE CORPORATION...................................32

DESCRIPTION OF THE CERTIFICATES.............................................34
   General..................................................................34
   Distributions............................................................35
   Distribution of Interest on the Certificates.............................36

<PAGE>

                                                                           Page

   Distributions of Principal of the Certificates...........................37
   Distributions on the Certificates of Prepayment Premiums and Yield
      Maintenance Charges...................................................37
   Advances in Respect of Delinquencies.....................................37
   Reports to Holders; Publication of Certificate Principal Factors.........38
   Termination..............................................................39
   Book-Entry Registration..................................................40
   The Fed System...........................................................40
   A Depository System......................................................41

DESCRIPTION OF THE AGREEMENTS...............................................43
   Assignment of Assets; Repurchases........................................44
   Representations and Warranties; Repurchases..............................45
   Collections..............................................................47
   Collection and Other Servicing Procedures................................50
   Events of Default........................................................52
   Rights Upon Event of Default.............................................53
   Supplemental Agreements..................................................53
   The Trustee..............................................................54
   Duties of the Trustee....................................................55
   Indemnification of the Trustee...........................................55
   Resignation and Removal of the Trustee...................................55

SELECTED LEGAL ASPECTS OF QUALIFIED LOANS AND OTHER MATTERS.................55
   General..................................................................56
   Borrower's Rights Laws Applicable to Agricultural Mortgage Loans.........57
   Environmental Regulation.................................................58
   Enforceability of Certain Provisions.....................................59
   Applicability of Usury Laws..............................................60

MATERIAL FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES....................................60
   General..................................................................61
   Grantor Trust Funds......................................................61
   REMICs...................................................................70

STATE TAX CONSIDERATIONS....................................................87

ERISA CONSIDERATIONS........................................................87
   General..................................................................87
   Plan Assets..............................................................89
   Prohibited Transactions..................................................89

LEGAL INVESTMENT............................................................91

METHOD OF DISTRIBUTION......................................................91

INDEX OF PRINCIPAL TERMS....................................................93

<PAGE>





                                SUMMARY OF TERMS

   This summary highlights selected  information from this document and does not
contain  all of the  information  that  you  need to  consider  in  making  your
investment  decision.  To  understand  all of the terms of the  offering  of the
certificates,  read carefully this entire document and the prospectus supplement
related to your series of certificates.


                               Offered Securities

   With this  prospectus  and  supplements to this  prospectus,  we are offering
guaranteed agricultural  mortgage-backed  securities. From time to time, we will
form a trust  fund to issue  the  securities,  or  certificates,  in one or more
series with one or more classes.

   The Trust Fund.  Each series of certificates will represent beneficial
ownership interests in a trust fund.  Each trust fund will consist of:

            (1)  real estate-related assets, which may include:

                 -agricultural real estate mortgage loans that meet our
                  qualifications; or

                 -portions of agricultural mortgage loans guaranteed by the
                  United States Secretary of Agriculture; or

                 -mortgage pass-through certificates or other mortgage-backed
                  securities representing interests in or secured by these
                  agricultural mortgage loans; or

                 -other agricultural mortgage-backed securities guaranteed by
                  Farmer Mac; or

                 -any combination of the assets listed above; and

            (2)  proceeds and collections on the real estate-related assets;
                 and

            (3)  Farmer  Mac's  guarantee  of the  timely  payment  of  required
                 distributions of interest on and principal of the certificates.

In each prospectus supplement,  we will name the entity that will act as trustee
for the trust  fund.  Farmer Mac may act as trustee or Farmer Mac may  designate
another entity to act as trustee.
<PAGE>


      The Certificates - General.  The prospectus  supplement for each series of
certificates  will  fully  describe  the  features  of the  certificates  we are
offering.  In general,  each series of certificates  will consist of one or more
classes  of   certificates   that  may  have  one  or  more  of  the   following
characteristics:

            (1)  provide for the accrual of interest on the certificates
                 based on fixed, variable or floating rates;

            (2)  be entitled to principal distributions with
                 disproportionately low, nominal or no interest distributions;

            (3)  be entitled to interest distributions with
                 disproportionately low, nominal or no principal
                 distributions;

            (4)  provide   for   distributions   of  accrued   interest  on  the
                 certificates   commencing   only  after  the  occurrence  of  a
                 specified  event,  such as the  retirement of one or more other
                 classes of certificates of the same series;

            (5)  provide for distributions of principal sequentially, based
                 on specified payment schedules or other methods; or

            (6)  be entitled to distributions of specified  premiums and charges
                 we collect from borrowers under our loans.

      Distributions on the Certificates. Each registered holder of a certificate
will be entitled to receive distributions under the terms of that certificate on
an annual, semi-annual,  quarterly or monthly basis, as specified in the related
prospectus supplement.  Distributions will be made on the dates specified in the
related prospectus supplement.

        Interest

            For  each  class  of  certificates  that is  entitled  to  interest,
            interest will accrue at a rate, which is called a pass-through rate,
            on the  outstanding  balance of the  certificate  or another  amount
            specified  in the  related  prospectus  supplement.  The  prospectus
            supplement will also specify the pass-through rate, if any, for each
            class of  certificates  or, in the case of a  variable  or  floating
            pass-through rate, the method for determining the pass-through rate.
<PAGE>


         Principal

            The  certificates  of each series will have an aggregate  balance no
            greater than the  outstanding  principal  balance of the real-estate
            related  assets in the trust  fund  when the trust  fund is  formed,
            after  application  of scheduled  payments on those assets due on or
            before that date, whether or not received.

            The certificate  balance of your certificate  outstanding at a given
            time  represents  the  maximum  principal  amount  that you are then
            entitled  to  receive  from  future  cash flows on the assets in the
            trust fund. The trustee will make distributions of principal on each
            distribution  date to the class or classes of certificates  entitled
            to  principal  until the  balances of those  certificates  have been
            reduced to zero. Distributions of principal will be in proportion to
            all of the  certificates  of that class or by random  selection,  as
            described in the related prospectus  supplement.  Those certificates
            with no  certificate  balance  will  not  receive  distributions  of
            principal.

      The trustee will make distributions on the certificates of any series only
from the assets of the related trust fund, including Farmer Mac's guarantee.

      The Guarantee. Farmer Mac will guarantee the timely payment of interest on
and principal of each class of certificates  entitled to receive those payments.
Although  Farmer  Mac is a  federally  chartered  instrumentality  of the United
States,  Farmer Mac's obligations are not backed by the full faith and credit of
the United States. However, if Farmer Mac's reserve account is exhausted, Farmer
Mac's  charter  authorizes  Farmer  Mac to  borrow up to $1.5  billion  from the
Secretary of the Treasury to cover its guarantee.

      Termination.  A series of certificates may be subject to optional early
repayment under the circumstances and in the manner described in the
prospectus supplement.


                               The Mortgage Loans

      Qualified Loans.  We will include in each trust fund only those
mortgage loans that meet our qualifications.  Some of our qualifications are
that:

            (1)  each mortgage loan must be secured by a fee simple  mortgage or
                 a mortgage on a lease having a remaining term at least equal to
                 five years more than the  amortization  period of the  mortgage
                 loan, with a first lien on agricultural  real estate,  which we
                 define as parcels of land,  which may be improved by  buildings
                 or other permanent structures, that:

                 -are used for the production of agricultural commodities; and

                 -include at least five acres or  produce  annual receipts of at
                  least $5,000;


            (2)  the agricultural real estate  securing each  mortgage loan must
                 be located within the United States;

            (3)  the borrower under each mortgage loan must be:

                 -a citizen or permanent resident of the United States; or

                 -a private corporation or partnership whose majority owners are
                  citizens or permanent residents of the United States;

            (4)  the borrower  under each  mortgage  loan must have  training or
                 farming  experience  to  ensure  a  reasonable   likelihood  of
                 repayment of the loan; and

            (5)  each mortgage loan must conform to the  requirements  set forth
                 in Farmer Mac's program guides.

      Terms of the Qualified Loans.  The mortgage loans in a trust fund may
have interest rates that:

                 -are fixed over their terms; or

                 -adjust from time to time; or

                 -are partially fixed and partially floating; or

                 -may be  converted  from  floating  to fixed,  or from fixed to
                  floating, from time to time at the mortgagor's election.

The floating  mortgage  interest rates on the mortgage loans in a trust fund may
be based on one or more indices.

      Mortgage loans in a trust fund may have:

                 -scheduled payments to maturity;

                 -payments that adjust from time to time to accommodate
                  changes in the mortgage interest rate or for other reasons;
                  or

                 -accelerated amortization.

A mortgage loan may be fully  amortizing or may require a balloon payment due on
its stated maturity date. A mortgage loan may provide for payments of principal,
interest or principal and interest, on due dates that occur monthly,  quarterly,
semi-annually, annually or another interval.



      A mortgage loan in a trust fund may contain  prohibitions on prepayment or
require  payment of a prepayment  premium or other charge in  connection  with a
prepayment.

      We will describe in more detail the terms of the mortgage  loans  included
in a trust fund in the related prospectus supplement.

      No  Guarantee.   Except  for  portions  of  agricultural   mortgage  loans
guaranteed by the United States  Secretary of  Agriculture,  the mortgage  loans
included in a trust fund will not be  guaranteed or insured by Farmer Mac or any
of its  affiliates or by any  governmental  agency or  instrumentality  or other
person.

      Mortgage Loan Groups.  The mortgage loans in a trust fund may be
divided into two or more groups.  Each group will be made up of loans having
similar characteristics, such as:

                 -similar due dates for scheduled payments;

                 -similar mortgage interest rates or methods of calculating
                  mortgage interest rates; and

                 -similar scheduled final maturities.

      We will  specify in the  prospectus  supplement  whether  we will  provide
separate  reporting  for a mortgage loan group within a trust fund. We will also
provide the numerical  designation  for each mortgage loan pool  comprising  the
related series. We will apply payments of interest and principal on the mortgage
loans in a mortgage loan group first to required  distributions  on the class or
classes of certificates related to that mortgage loan group.

      Thus,  each  mortgage  loan  group and each  related  class or  classes of
certificates  will be separate and distinct from every other mortgage loan group
and its  related  class or  classes  of  certificates,  except  with  respect to
certificates  evidencing  an  ownership  interest  only in interest  payments or
residual  payments from mortgage  loans in two or more mortgage loan groups.  We
will provide information about any mortgage loan group in the related prospectus
supplement.

      The Master  Servicer.  Farmer Mac will act as the master  servicer  of the
mortgage loans included in each trust fund.  Although Farmer Mac will be legally
and contractually  responsible for all servicing,  it will conduct its servicing
responsibilities  for each trust fund through one or more central servicers that
will be identified in the related prospectus supplement.


                         Tax Status of the Certificates

      The certificates of each series will be considered either:

                 -interests  in a trust fund  treated as a grantor  trust  under
                  subpart E, Part I of  subchapter  J of chapter 1 of subtitle A
                  of the  Internal  Revenue  Code of  1986,  as  amended,  if no
                  election  is made to treat  the  trust  fund as a real  estate
                  mortgage investment conduit or REMIC; or

                 -regular interests or residual  interests in a trust fund as to
                  which a REMIC election is made.

      Grantor Trust. If no election is made to treat the trust fund for a series
of certificates as a REMIC, the trust fund will be classified as a grantor trust
and not as an  association  taxable  as a  corporation  for  federal  income tax
purposes. Therefore, if you hold the certificates issued by a grantor trust, you
will be treated as the owner of an undivided  pro rata interest in the assets of
the trust fund.

      REMIC.  Regular  interests in a trust fund as to which a REMIC election is
made generally are debt  obligations  for federal  income tax purposes.  In some
cases,  REMIC regular  interests may be issued with original  issue discount for
federal income tax purposes. In general:

            (1)  certificates  held by a real  estate  investment  trust will be
                 treated as "real estate  assets"  within the meaning of section
                 856(c)(4)(A) of the Internal Revenue Code and interest on REMIC
                 regular  interests,  and any amounts  includible in income with
                 respect to residual interests in a trust fund for which a REMIC
                 election is made held by a real estate investment trust will be
                 considered  "interest  on  obligations  secured by mortgages on
                 real property" within the meaning of section 856(c)(3)(B), and

            (2)  REMIC  regular  interests  held by a REMIC  will be  considered
                 "obligation[s]  . . . which  [are]  principally  secured  by an
                 interest  in real  property"  within  the  meaning  of  section
                 860G(a)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code,

 in each case to the extent described in this prospectus and in the related
prospectus supplement.

      We urge you to consult  your tax advisor and to review  "Material  Federal
Income  Tax  Consequences"  in this  prospectus  and in the  related  prospectus
supplement.


<PAGE>
                              ERISA Considerations

      The  acquisition  of a  certificate  by a plan  subject  to  the  Employee
Retirement  Income  Security  Act of 1974,  as  amended,  which is also known as
ERISA,  or any other plan subject to section  4975 of the Internal  Revenue Code
could, in some instances,  result in violations of the fiduciary  responsibility
provisions  of  ERISA  and  section  4975  of the  Internal  Revenue  Code  or a
prohibited  transaction.  Exemptions from the prohibited transaction rules could
be  applicable.  Moreover,  the  Department  of Labor  has  advised  us that the
certificates  qualify  for  favorable  treatment  as  "guaranteed   governmental
mortgage pool certificates" for purposes of the Department of Labor's plan asset
regulations.   Accordingly,   certain   ERISA   standards   will  not  apply  to
administration  of assets of a trust  fund.  We suggest  that you review  "ERISA
Considerations" in this prospectus and in the related prospectus supplement.


                                Legal Investment

      The certificates will constitute  securities  guaranteed by Farmer Mac for
purposes of Farmer Mac's charter.  By statute,  the  certificates  will be legal
investments  for some types of  institutional  investors if those  investors are
authorized  under any applicable law to purchase,  hold or invest in obligations
issued by or guaranteed as to principal and interest by the United States or any
agency or instrumentality of the United States. If your investment  authority is
subject to legal  restrictions,  you should  consult your own legal  advisors to
determine  whether  and to what  extent  specific  classes  of the  certificates
constitute  legal  investments for you. You should review "Legal  Investment" in
this prospectus and in the related prospectus supplement.


     Offices of Farmer Mac and Farmer Mac Mortgage Securities Corporation

      The  principal  executive  offices of Farmer  Mac and Farmer Mac  Mortgage
Securities  Corporation are located at 919 18th Street, N.W.,  Washington,  D.C.
20006. Our telephone number is 202/872-7700.

<PAGE>
                                  RISK FACTORS

      You should carefully consider the following risks, together with the risks
set forth in "Risk Factors" in the prospectus  supplement,  before  investing in
any certificates.  If any of the following risks actually occur, your investment
could be materially and adversely affected.

Your investment in the certificates will have limited liquidity.

      No market  will exist for the  certificates  of any series  prior to their
issuance.  We do not know if a  secondary  market  for the  certificates  of any
series will develop.  If a secondary  market does develop,  we cannot assure you
that it will provide you with liquidity of your investment. Any secondary market
for the certificates may provide less liquidity to you than a comparable  market
for securities  backed by single-family  mortgage loans. The market value of the
certificates will fluctuate with changes in prevailing market rates of interest.
As a result, you may be forced to sell your certificates in any secondary market
that may  develop  at less than 100% of their  original  certificate  balance or
their  purchase  price.  Even if a  secondary  market  that  provides  you  with
liquidity for your  investment  does develop,  we cannot predict whether it will
continue while certificates you hold are outstanding.

      Except to the  extent  described  in this  prospectus  and in the  related
prospectus supplement,  you will have no redemption rights and your certificates
will be subject to early retirement only under specified circumstances described
in this prospectus and in the related prospectus supplement.

Farmer  Mac's  guarantee of the timely  payment of interest on and  principal of
certificates is limited.

      Farmer Mac's  obligations under its guarantee of interest on and principal
of certificates are obligations  solely of Farmer Mac. Farmer Mac's  obligations
are not backed by the full faith and credit of the United States.

      Farmer Mac must set aside in a segregated account a portion of the fees it
charges  for  providing  its  guarantee  as a reserve  against  losses  from its
guarantee  activities.  If Farmer Mac is  required  to make a payment  under its
guarantee,  it will use the fees in this reserve  account or its general assets.
If Farmer Mac's reserve  account is exhausted,  Farmer Mac's charter  authorizes
Farmer Mac to borrow up to $1.5  billion  from the  Secretary of the Treasury to
cover its  guarantee.  However,  Farmer  Mac  expects  that its  future  maximum
potential liability under its guarantees of outstanding  securities will greatly
exceed its  resources,  including its limited  ability to borrow from the United
States Treasury.  Therefore, if Farmer Mac's losses exceed $1.5 billion plus all
amounts in the reserve account and Farmer Mac's general  assets,  it is possible
that Farmer Mac will not have the funds to make payments under its guarantee.

      In addition,  if Farmer Mac is required to borrow money from the Secretary
of the  Treasury to fulfill its  guarantee  obligations,  the  Secretary  of the
Treasury  will  have up to ten  days  after it  receives  the  certification  it
requires  to get  Farmer  Mac the money it needs.  If Farmer Mac does not make a
timely demand upon the Secretary of the Treasury, Farmer Mac will not be able to
make payments of interest on and principal of certificates on a timely basis.


The rate and timing of principal  payments on the mortgage loans could adversely
affect your investment.

      Agricultural  lending  typically  involves  fewer,  larger loans to single
borrowers than does lending on single-family  residences.  For this reason,  the
yield on your certificates  could be adversely  affected if even one borrower on
one mortgage loan in the trust fund that issued your certificates does not repay
its loan as scheduled.

      A  borrower's  repayment  of an  agricultural  mortgage  loan is typically
dependent on the success of the related  farming  operation,  which is, in turn,
dependent  on many  factors  over which a farmer may have  little or no control.
These factors include weather  conditions,  domestic and international  economic
conditions  and even  political  conditions.  If the cash  flow  from a  farming
operation is reduced because, for example,  adverse weather conditions destroy a
crop or prevent the planting or  harvesting  of a crop,  the borrower may not be
able to repay the loan on time or at all.  If a borrower  defaults on a mortgage
loan, the mortgage may be  liquidated,  which would likely result in a principal
prepayment  on the  mortgage  loan.  Generally,  the yield to  maturity  on your
certificates  will be  sensitive  to some  extent  to the  rate  and  timing  of
principal payments,  including prepayments, on the mortgage loans in the related
trust fund.  We know that the rate and timing of principal  payments,  including
prepayments,  may fluctuate  significantly from time to time. However, we cannot
meaningfully  predict  the rate and  timing  of  principal  payments,  including
prepayments, on agricultural mortgage loans held in any one trust fund.

      In addition, the yield to maturity on your certificates may vary depending
on whether you purchased  them at a discount or premium.  If you purchased  your
certificates at a discount,  you should be aware that a slower than  anticipated
rate of  principal  payments  could result in an actual yield that is lower than
your anticipated  yield. If you purchased your certificates at a premium,  or if
your  certificates  entitle  you to  interest  payments  and low,  nominal or no
principal distributions, you should be aware that a faster than anticipated rate
of  principal  payments  could result in an actual yield that is lower than your
anticipated yield.

      You  should  fully  consider  all  of the  risks  described  above  before
investing  in  any  certificates.   In  particular,  if  you  are  investing  in
certificates that are entitled to interest distributions, but disproportionately
low, nominal or no principal  distributions,  you should fully consider the risk
that an extremely  rapid rate of principal  payments on the mortgage loans could
result in your failure to recoup your initial investment.

Additional risks to your investment are associated with borrower prepayments.

      Any principal  prepayment on a mortgage loan in the trust fund that issued
your  certificates,  whether  because of a borrower  default or  otherwise,  may
significantly affect the yield on and maturity of your certificates.


      For example,  many loans secured by agricultural  real estate require that
penalty amounts or other charges  accompany all  prepayments.  This provision is
designed  to prevent or  discourage  prepayments  under the  loans.  However,  a
borrower  under  this  type of  mortgage  loan may  decide  to make a  voluntary
prepayment on the mortgage loan despite the fact that he or she will be required
to pay a charge. The trustee will distribute a portion,  calculated as described
in the  related  prospectus  supplement,  of the amount of any  charge  actually
collected from the borrower to the holders of the related class of  certificates
to mitigate in part their  reinvestment  losses on the prepaid amount.  However,
Farmer Mac does not guarantee the collection of any charge imposed in connection
with a prepayment on a mortgage  loan.  For this reason,  your expected yield in
the certificates may be sensitive to some degree to the extent these charges are
not collected.

      In addition,  even if a charge on a prepaid mortgage loan is collected and
distributed, that charge may not be sufficient to maintain the yield to maturity
on the related mortgage loan, and the  corresponding  class of certificates,  at
the level you would have realized without the prepayment.

If we do not issue the  certificates  in definitive  form, your exercise of your
rights may be limited.

      We will state in the  prospectus  supplement if one or more classes of the
certificates will be:

            -  issued and maintained on the book-entry system of the federal
               reserve banks; or

            -  represented  initially by one or more certificates  registered in
               the name of a  nominee  for a central  depository,  which we will
               identify in the prospectus supplement; or

            -  issued and  maintained  on the  book-entry  system of the federal
               reserve   banks  and   represented   initially  by  one  or  more
               certificates  registered  in the name of a nominee  for a central
               depository, which we will identify in the prospectus supplement.

If you purchase  certificates  that are issued in any of these forms,  they will
not be registered  in your name.  Because of this,  unless and until  definitive
certificates are issued in your name:

            -  although you are the beneficial owner of the certificates, the
               trustee of the related trust fund, will not recognize you as
               the holder of the certificates; and

            -  you will be able to transfer your certificates and exercise other
               rights of holders  only  indirectly  through the federal  reserve
               banks and their participating  financial  institutions or through
               the  identified   central   depository   and  its   participating
               organizations.

           SPECIFIC INFORMATION FOUND IN EACH PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT

      As  more  particularly  described  in  this  prospectus,   the  prospectus
supplement  relating  to the  certificates  of  each  series  will  provide  the
following information about the certificates:


            -  a description of the class or classes of certificates,  including
               the  payment  provisions  with  respect  to  each  class  and the
               pass-through  rate or method of determining the pass-through rate
               with respect to each class;

            -  the aggregate principal amount and distribution dates relating to
               the series and, if  applicable,  the initial and final  scheduled
               distribution dates for each class;

            -  information about the assets comprising the trust fund,
               including the general characteristics of the assets;

            -  the circumstances, if any, under which the trust fund may be
               subject to early termination;

            -  additional information with respect to the method of
               distribution of the certificates;

            -  whether one or more REMIC elections will be made and
               designation of the regular interests and residual interests;

            -  information as to the terms of Farmer Mac's guarantee of the
               certificates;

            -  whether the certificates will be initially issued in
               definitive or book-entry form; and

            -  to what extent,  if any,  Farmer Mac's  guarantee  will cover the
               timely payment of balloon payments on balloon loans.

                   WHERE YOU CAN FIND ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

      Farmer Mac is subject to the informational  requirements of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, as amended.  In compliance  with the Exchange Act,  Farmer
Mac files reports and other information with the SEC.


      Farmer Mac Mortgage Securities Corporation,  as depositor,  has filed with
the SEC a registration  statement  under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended,
with  respect  to  the  certificates.  This  prospectus  forms  a  part  of  the
registration statement.  The depositor intends to establish a trust and cause it
to issue a series of certificates as soon as practicable  after the registration
statement is declared effective.  This prospectus and the prospectus  supplement
relating to each series of certificates  contain summaries of the material terms
of the documents  referred to in the prospectus  and the prospectus  supplement,
but do  not  contain  all  of the  information  set  forth  in the  registration
statement  pursuant  to the  rules  and  regulations  of the  SEC.  For  further
information, reference is made to the registration statement and the exhibits to
the registration statement.  The SEC maintains public reference facilities where
you can inspect and copy the  registration  statement  and its  exhibits.  These
facilities include the SEC's public reference section,  450 Fifth Street,  N.W.,
Washington, D.C. 20549, and its regional offices located as follows: in Chicago,
at Citicorp Center, 500 West Madison Street, Chicago, Illinois 60661; and in New
York, at Seven World Trade Center, New York, New York 10048. The SEC maintains a
web site on the Internet at http://www.sec.gov  that contains reports, proxy and
other information regarding registrants, including Farmer Mac and the depositor,
that file electronically with the SEC.

      Unless and until  definitive  certificates  are issued or unless otherwise
provided in the related prospectus  supplement,  Farmer Mac Mortgage  Securities
Corporation,  as depositor, will forward to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York
or the nominee for any private  depository,  as applicable,  periodic  unaudited
reports  concerning the related trust fund. When and if definitive  certificates
are issued,  the  depositor  will deliver those reports to holders of definitive
certificates. Reports may be available to beneficial owners of certificates upon
request to the appropriate participating  organization of the central depository
identified in the  prospectus  supplement,  through the facilities of the SEC or
through  information  vendors,  as  discussed  below.  See  "Description  of the
Certificates - Reports to Holders; Publication of Certificate Principal Factors"
and "Description of the Agreements."

      Farmer Mac Mortgage Securities Corporation,  as depositor,  made a written
request to the staff of the SEC for an order  pursuant  to Section  12(h) of the
Exchange Act exempting the depositor from some reporting  requirements under the
Exchange Act with respect to each trust fund. Though the SEC generally no longer
issues those orders with respect to  securities  such as the  certificates,  the
depositor  now files with the SEC reports with respect to each trust fund as are
required under the Exchange Act, as modified by prior SEC staff interpretations.
The depositor will provide those reports to holders of definitive  certificates,
if any.  Because  of the  limited  number of record  holders  expected  for each
series,  the depositor  anticipates that a significant  portion of its reporting
requirements will be permanently  suspended  following the first fiscal year for
the related trust fund.

      No  person  has been  authorized  to give any  information  or to make any
representations  other than those  contained in this  prospectus and any related
prospectus supplement. If given or made, you must not rely on the information or
representations  as having been  authorized  by Farmer Mac  Mortgage  Securities
Corporation  or any of the  underwriters.  This  prospectus  and any  prospectus
supplement do not constitute an offer to sell or a  solicitation  of an offer to
buy any securities  other than the  certificates  to any person by any person in
any  state or other  jurisdiction  in  which  an  offer or  solicitation  is not
authorized  or in which  the  person  making  an offer  or  solicitation  is not
qualified  to do  so or to  any  person  to  whom  it  is  unlawful  to  make  a
solicitation.  The delivery of this  prospectus  at any time does not imply that
information contained in this prospectus is correct as of any time subsequent to
its date;  however,  if any  material  change  occurs while this  prospectus  is
required by law to be delivered, we will amend or supplement it accordingly.


      Farmer  Mac  will  make  available  to  investors  information  about  the
certificates and pools underlying the certificates.  Generally,  Farmer Mac will
provide this  information on a periodic  scheduled basis after the date on which
the related  pool is formed.  The  information  will be  available  from various
sources,   including  several   information   vendors  that  provide  securities
information.  You can  obtain  the  names of those  vendors  disseminating  this
information by writing to Farmer Mac at 919 18th Street, N.W., Washington,  D.C.
20006 or calling  Farmer Mac's  Investor  Inquiry  Department at  1-800-TRY-FARM
(879-3276).  The information will also be made available at Farmer Mac's website
at www.farmermac.com.

                      WE HAVE INCORPORATED SOME INFORMATION
                         BY REFERENCE TO OTHER DOCUMENTS

      All  documents  and  reports  filed or caused  to be filed by  Farmer  Mac
Mortgage Securities Corporation,  as depositor,  with respect to a trust fund in
accordance with sections 13(a), 13(c), 14 or 15(d) of the Exchange Act, prior to
the termination of an offering of certificates evidencing interests in the trust
fund,  shall be deemed to be incorporated by reference in this prospectus and to
be a part of this  prospectus.  In addition,  Farmer Mac's Annual Report on Form
10-K for the year ended December 31, 1999, and any subsequent reports filed with
the SEC in  accordance  with  sections  13(a) or 15(d) of the Exchange Act shall
also be deemed to be  incorporated  by reference in this  prospectus and to be a
part of  this  prospectus.  All  documents  and  reports  Farmer  Mac  files  in
accordance with sections 13(a), 13(c), 14 or 15(d) of the Exchange Act after the
date of this  prospectus  and prior to the  termination  of any offering made by
this  prospectus will likewise be deemed to be incorporated by reference in this
prospectus and to be a part of this prospectus.  These documents and reports can
be inspected at the public  reference  facilities the SEC maintains listed above
under the caption "Where You Can Find Additional Information."

      The financial  statements and schedules  incorporated by reference in this
prospectus and elsewhere in the  registration  statement,  to the extent and for
the periods indicated in their reports, have been audited by Arthur Andersen LLP
and KPMG LLP, independent public accountants,  and are incorporated by reference
in this  prospectus  and in the  registration  statement  in  reliance  upon the
authority of said firms as experts in giving said reports.

      Upon request,  Farmer Mac Mortgage Securities  Corporation,  as depositor,
will provide or cause to be provided  without charge to each person to whom this
prospectus is delivered in  connection  with the offering of one or more classes
of certificates,  a copy of any or all documents or reports incorporated in this
prospectus  by  reference,  in each case to the extent the  documents or reports
relate  to one or  more of the  classes  of the  certificates,  other  than  the
exhibits to the documents,  unless the exhibits are specifically incorporated by
reference in the documents.  Requests for these documents  should be directed in
writing to Farmer Mac Mortgage Securities  Corporation,  919 18th Street,  N.W.,
Suite 200, Washington, D.C. 20006, Attention: Corporate Secretary. The depositor
has determined that its financial statements are not material to the offering of
any certificates.

                         DESCRIPTION OF THE TRUST FUNDS

General

      The  certificates of any series will receive payments only from the assets
of the related  trust fund and will not be  entitled to payments  from assets of
any other trust fund Farmer Mac Mortgage Securities Corporation establishes. The
certificates  of each series will not  represent an obligation of or interest in
Farmer Mac Mortgage Securities  Corporation,  any mortgage loan originator,  any
mortgage  loan  seller,   any  central  servicer  or  any  of  their  respective
affiliates, except to the limited extent described in this prospectus and in the
related  prospectus  supplement.  The  assets in each trust fund will be held in
trust for the benefit of the holders of the related  certificates  pursuant to a
trust agreement, as more fully described in this prospectus. See "Description of
the Agreements."

The Assets in Each Trust Fund

      Each series of  certificates  will  represent in the  aggregate the entire
beneficial ownership interest in a trust fund consisting primarily of:

                 -specified assets that we call Qualified Assets,

                 -proceeds and collections on the Qualified Assets, deposited
                  in, or held as investments in, one or more accounts, and

                 -Farmer Mac's  guarantee  of the timely  payment of interest on
                  and  principal  of each  class  of  certificates  entitled  to
                  receive interest or principal or interest and principal.

      Qualified Assets

      The "Qualified  Assets" with respect to each series of  certificates  will
consist of:

            (1)  one or more  segregated  pools of various types of agricultural
                 real  estate  mortgage  loans  (collectively,   the  "Qualified
                 Loans"),  which will not be guaranteed or insured by Farmer Mac
                 or any of its  affiliates  or by  any  governmental  agency  or
                 instrumentality or other person, or

            (2)  portions of loans guaranteed by the United States Secretary
                 of Agriculture pursuant to the Consolidated Farm and Rural
                 Development Act (7 U.S. section 921 et seq.) ("Guaranteed
                 Portions"), or

            (3)  other  guaranteed  agricultural   mortgage-backed  certificates
                 issued and offered pursuant to this  registration  statement or
                 registration   statements   Farmer  Mac   Mortgage   Securities
                 Corporation has previously or subsequently filed, or


            (4)  mortgage  pass-through  certificates  or other  mortgage-backed
                 securities  evidencing  interests  in or secured  by  Qualified
                 Loans or Guaranteed Portions (collectively, the "QMBS") or

            (5)  a combination of the foregoing.

      Farmer Mac's Guarantee

      The certificates of each series will be covered by a guarantee from Farmer
Mac. Because Farmer Mac's guarantee runs directly to holders of certificates, it
does not directly cover payments on the related  Qualified  Loans included in or
underlying  the related trust fund.  Each Farmer Mac guarantee  will provide for
the  payment by Farmer Mac to holders  of  certificates  of any and all  amounts
necessary to assure the timely payment of all required distributions of interest
and  principal  on the  certificates  to the  extent  set  forth in the  related
prospectus supplement. The related prospectus supplement will specify the extent
of Farmer Mac's guarantee obligation, if any, with respect to any Qualified Loan
in default as to its balloon  payment and will discuss any  resulting  impact on
the  expected  yield  of the  related  certificates.  In  addition,  Farmer  Mac
guarantees the distribution to holders of certificates of the principal  balance
of each class of  certificates in full no later than the related final scheduled
distribution  date,  whether  or  not  sufficient  funds  are  available  in the
Certificate  Account,  which we  define  in  "Description  of the  Agreements  -
Accounts - Withdrawals."


      Farmer Mac's  obligations  under each guarantee are obligations  solely of
Farmer Mac and are not backed by the full faith and credit of the United States.
Farmer Mac will not  guarantee  the  collection  from any  borrower of any yield
maintenance  charge or any other premium  payable in connection with a principal
prepayment  on a  Qualified  Loan.  In the event  the  related  trust  agreement
entitles  the  related  holders to receive  distributions  of yield  maintenance
charges or prepayment premiums,  the holders will receive a portion,  calculated
as described in the related  prospectus  supplement,  of those amounts  actually
collected from the borrower to mitigate in part their reinvestment losses on the
prepaid amount. Under Farmer Mac's charter,  Farmer Mac is required to establish
a segregated  account into which it will deposit a portion of the guarantee fees
it receives for its guarantee obligations as a loss reserve.  Farmer Mac expects
that its future  contingent  liabilities in respect of guarantees of outstanding
securities backed by agricultural  mortgage loans will substantially  exceed any
amounts on deposit in this reserve account. The amount on deposit in the reserve
account as of the end of any calendar  quarter is set forth as an allowance  for
losses  in Farmer  Mac's  consolidated  balance  sheets  filed  with the SEC and
incorporated by reference in this  prospectus.  See "We Have  Incorporated  Some
Information by Reference to Other Documents." If this reserve account,  together
with any remaining general Farmer Mac assets, is not sufficient to enable Farmer
Mac to make a required payment under any guarantee,  Farmer Mac will borrow from
the Secretary of the Treasury in an amount up to $1.5 billion.  The Secretary of
the  Treasury is required  to purchase  obligations  Farmer Mac issues not later
than ten  business  days after  receipt by the  Secretary  of the  Treasury of a
certification  by Farmer Mac in accordance  with the  requirements of the Farmer
Mac's  charter.  The trust  agreement  will contain  various  timing  mechanisms
designed to assure that Farmer Mac will have  sufficient  advance  notice of any
obligation  under a guarantee in order, to the extent  required,  to make timely
demand upon the  Secretary  of the  Treasury.  Farmer Mac  anticipates  that its
future contingent liabilities in respect of guarantees of outstanding securities
backed by  agricultural  mortgage  loans  will  greatly  exceed  its  resources,
including  its limited  ability to borrow from the United States  Treasury.  See
"Risk Factors - Farmer Mac's  guarantee of the timely payment of interest on and
principal of certificates is limited."

      Except for Farmer Mac's guarantee, neither the certificates nor any assets
in the related trust fund, other than Guaranteed Portions, will be guaranteed or
insured by any governmental agency or instrumentality or by any other person.

      Collections

      Each trust fund will include  proceeds and  collections  on the  Qualified
Assets,  which will be deposited in one or more  accounts  (each,  a "Collection
Account" and, collectively, the "Collection Accounts"). Collection Accounts will
include  collections  on various  pools of  Qualified  Assets and other funds of
Farmer Mac. Each central  servicer  named in the related  prospectus  supplement
will,  to the  extent  described  in  this  prospectus  and  in  the  prospectus
supplement,  deposit into the Collection  Accounts all payments and  collections
received or advanced with respect to the  Qualified  Assets in the trust fund. A
Collection  Account may be maintained as an interest  bearing or a  non-interest
bearing  account.  Funds held in each Collection  Account may be held as cash or
invested  in  short-term  obligations.  Prior to each  distribution  date,  each
central servicer will remit to Farmer Mac, as master servicer,  for deposit into
the  Certificate  Account  maintained  by  Farmer  Mac  funds  then  held in the
Collection  Accounts that are to be  distributed  on the following  distribution
date. See "Description of the Agreements - Accounts" in this prospectus.

Qualified Loans

      General

      The general  characteristics of, and eligibility  standards for, Qualified
Loans are as follows:

            (1)  each Qualified Loan must be secured by a fee simple mortgage or
                 a mortgage on a  leasehold  the  remaining  term of which is at
                 least five years  longer  than the  amortization  period of the
                 Qualified Loan, with a first lien on agricultural  real estate,
                 which we define as a parcel or  parcels  of land,  which may be
                 improved by buildings or other structures  permanently  affixed
                 to the parcel or parcels, that:

                  - are used for the production of one or more agricultural
                    commodities; and

                  - consist of at least five acres or produce annual receipts
                    of at least $5,000;

            (2)  the agricultural real estate securing each Qualified Loan
                 must be located within the United States;

            (3)  the borrower under each Qualified Loan must be:

                  - a citizen or national of the United States or an alien
                    lawfully admitted for permanent residence in the United
                    States; or

                  - a  private   corporation  or   partnership   whose  members,
                    stockholders or partners holding a majority  interest in the
                    corporation or partnership  are citizens or nationals of the
                    United  States or aliens  lawfully  admitted  for  permanent
                    residence in the United States;

            (4)  the borrower  under each  Qualified  Loan must have training or
                 farming experience sufficient to ensure a reasonable likelihood
                 of repayment of the loan according to its terms; and

            (5)  each  Qualified  Loan may be an  existing  or newly  originated
                 mortgage  loan that conforms to the  requirements  set forth in
                 Farmer Mac's program guides.

The principal amount of a Qualified Loan secured by agricultural  real estate of
more than one  thousand  acres may not exceed  $3.5  million,  as  adjusted  for
inflation as of October 31, 1998.

      All buildings and other  improvements on the mortgaged property securing a
Qualified  Loan that have been  given  value in Farmer  Mac's  appraisal  of the
mortgaged  property  must be covered  by a hazard  insurance  policy.  Each such
hazard  insurance  policy  covers  physical  damage  to or  destruction  of  the
improvements of the property by fire, lightning, explosion, smoke, windstorm and
hail, riot, strike and civil commotion, subject to the conditions and exclusions
specified  in  each  policy.  Farmer  Mac  may  require  flood  insurance  after
considering the risk of flood loss on the repayment  ability of the borrower and
the  contributory  value of buildings  located in an area  designated as a flood
plain by the federal government.

      Terms of Mortgage Loans

      Each  Qualified  Loan may provide for accrual of interest on the loan at a
mortgage interest rate that:

                 -is fixed over its term; or

                 -adjusts from time to time; or

                 -is partially fixed and partially floating; or

                 -may be  converted  from  floating  to fixed,  or from fixed to
                  floating, from time to time at the mortgagor's election.

The floating  mortgage interest rates on the Qualified Loans in a trust fund may
be based on one or more indices.

<PAGE>
      Each Qualified Loan may provide for:

                 -scheduled payments to maturity;

                 -payments that adjust from time to time to accommodate  changes
                  in the mortgage  interest rate or to reflect the occurrence of
                  specified events; or

                 -accelerated amortization.

A Qualified Loan may be fully amortizing or may require a balloon payment due on
its  stated  maturity  date.  A  Qualified  Loan may  provide  for  payments  of
principal,  interest or principal and interest, on due dates that occur monthly,
quarterly, semi-annually, annually or another interval.

      A Qualified Loan may contain prohibitions on prepayment or require payment
of a  prepayment  premium  or yield  maintenance  charge  in  connection  with a
prepayment.

      We will describe in more detail the terms of the Qualified  Loans included
in a trust fund in the related prospectus supplement.

      Farmer Mac's Underwriting Standards and Appraisal Standards

      In addition to the statutory  standards  described  above,  Farmer Mac has
established  supplemental  standards  described below in an effort to reduce the
risk of loss from defaults by borrowers and to provide guidance to a participant
in its guarantee program  concerning  management,  administration and conduct of
appraisals.

      Farmer Mac's Underwriting  Standards and Appraisal  Standards are based on
industry norms for mortgage loans qualified to be sold in the secondary  market.
Farmer Mac's  Underwriting  Standards  and  Appraisal  Standards are designed to
assess  the  creditworthiness  of the  borrower,  as  well as the  value  of the
mortgaged  properties relative to the amount of the Qualified Loan. While Farmer
Mac, either itself or through contract underwriters, reviews all loans submitted
to  it  for  purchase,  Farmer  Mac  generally  relies  on  representations  and
warranties made by originators or other sellers of Qualified Loans to Farmer Mac
(collectively,  "Sellers")  to ensure that the Qualified  Loans  included in the
trust fund conform to Farmer Mac's Underwriting Standards and other requirements
of Farmer Mac's program guides.

      Farmer Mac's Underwriting  Standards require, among other things, that the
loan-to-value  ratio for any  Qualified  Loan cannot  exceed 70%. In the case of
newly originated Qualified Loans secured by agricultural real estate,  borrowers
must also meet certain credit ratios, including:

                 -a pro forma debt-to-asset ratio, on a market value basis,
                  of 50% or less, after closing the new loan;

                 -a pro forma cash flow to debt service coverage ratio of not
                  less than 1:1 on the property;

                 -a total debt service  coverage ratio,  computed on a pro forma
                  basis,  of not less than 1.25:1,  including  farm and off-farm
                  income; and

                 -a ratio of current assets to current liabilities,  computed on
                  a pro forma market value basis, of not less than 1:1.

      In the  case of  existing  loans,  Farmer  Mac  considers  sustained  loan
performance to be a reliable  alternative  indicator of a borrower's  ability to
pay the loan according to its terms. An existing loan generally will be eligible
for pooling and inclusion in a trust fund if:

                 -it is at least three years old,

                 -has a loan-to-value ratio based on an updated appraisal of 60%
                  or less if the loan is at least  five years old or 70% or less
                  if the loan is less than five years old,

                 -there have been no payments  more than 30 days past due during
                  the three years prior to pooling, and

                 -there have been no material  restructurings  or  modifications
                  during the five years prior to pooling.

      Farmer Mac's  Underwriting  Standards provide that Farmer Mac may purchase
or guarantee  securities  backed by mortgage loans that do not conform to one or
more of the Underwriting Standards when:

            (1)  those loans exceed one or more of the Underwriting Standards to
                 which  they  do  conform  to  a  degree  that  compensates  for
                 noncompliance  with one or more other  Underwriting  Standards,
                 and

            (2)  those loans are made to  producers of  particular  agricultural
                 commodities in a segment of agriculture in which  noncompliance
                 with  some  of  the  Underwriting  Standards  and  compensating
                 strengths for others are typical of the financial  condition of
                 sound borrowers.

For example,  Farmer Mac will generally accept a newly originated Qualified Loan
secured by  agricultural  real estate that does not conform to the credit ratios
described in the previous paragraph if:

            (1)  the related  agricultural real estate includes a single-family,
                 owner-occupied,   detached   residence   that   constitutes   a
                 sufficient  portion,  as determined by Farmer Mac, of the total
                 appraised  value of the property and that  residence is used as
                 the borrower's primary residence;

            (2)  the borrower  generates  sufficient  income from all sources to
                 repay all creditors, as determined by two tests:

                  - the borrower's monthly house payment-to-income ratio is
                    28% or less, and

                  - the borrower's monthly debt payment-to-income ratio is
                    36% or less; and

            (3)  the borrower  has  demonstrated  sound  credit  characteristics
                 through a history of timely debt repayment,  generally based on
                 a credit  report with  information  from at least two  national
                 credit information repositories.

As with the Underwriting Standards,  the two tests are guidelines and deviations
from the  tests are  acceptable  if there are  clearly  identified  compensating
strengths.  Approval  of  variances  from these  guidelines  remains at the sole
discretion of Farmer Mac.

      Farmer Mac's  acceptance  of mortgage  loans that do not conform to one or
more of Farmer Mac's  Underwriting  Standards is not intended to provide a basis
for waiving or lessening in any way the  requirement  that mortgage  loans be of
high quality in order to be included in a trust fund.  The entity that  requests
the  acceptance  by Farmer Mac of  mortgage  loans that do not conform to Farmer
Mac's Underwriting  Standards bears the burden of convincing Farmer Mac that the
inclusion of such loans in a trust fund will strengthen, not weaken, the overall
performance of the trust fund.  For those  reasons,  Farmer Mac does not believe
that  the  inclusion  of  loans  that  do not  conform  to all of  Farmer  Mac's
Underwriting Standards in a particular trust fund creates any additional risk.

      Farmer Mac's Appraisal Standards for newly originated loans require, among
other things,  that the  appraisal  function be performed  independently  of the
credit decision making process.  Sellers are expected to develop,  implement and
maintain appraisal policies that ensure the following objectives are met:

            (1)  the collateral valuation function is conducted and
                 administered by qualified individuals;

            (2)  appraiser qualifications are verified and documented;

            (3)  there is uniform  reporting of reliable and accurate  estimates
                 of  market  value,   market  rent,  net  property   income  and
                 characteristics of the subject property; and

            (4)  Sellers  will  conduct,  in a timely and reliable  fashion,  an
                 administrative   appraisal   review  designed  to  ensure  that
                 appraisals  meet  expectations  communicated  in the engagement
                 process and  identify  apparent  departures  from Farmer  Mac's
                 Appraisal Standards.

Farmer  Mac will  review  selected  appraisals  to  ensure  compliance  with the
Appraisal  Standards  and  of  the  administration  of  the  appraisal  function
conducted by Sellers.
<PAGE>
Qualified Loan Groups

      The  Qualified  Loans  in a trust  fund  may be  divided  into two or more
groups.   Each  group  will  be  made  up  of  Qualified  Loans  having  similar
characteristics, such as:

                 -similar due dates for scheduled payments;

                 -similar mortgage interest rates or methods of calculating
                  mortgage interest rates; and

                 -similar scheduled final maturities.

      We will specify in the related  prospectus  supplement  whether a mortgage
loan group will, for our designation and reporting  purposes,  constitute a pool
of mortgage loans. We will also provide the numerical  designation for each pool
comprising  the  related  series.  Payments  of interest  and  principal  on the
Qualified  Loans in a mortgage  loan group  will be  applied  first to  required
distributions  on the class or classes of certificates  related to that mortgage
loan group.

      Thus,  each  mortgage  loan  group and each  related  class or  classes of
certificates  will be separate and distinct from every other mortgage loan group
and its  related  class or  classes  of  certificates,  except  with  respect to
certificates  evidencing  an  ownership  interest  only in interest  payments or
residual  payments from Qualified Loans in two or more mortgage loan groups.  We
will provide information about any mortgage loan group in the related prospectus
supplement.

Qualified Loan Information in Prospectus Supplements

      Each prospectus  supplement,  as of the date of the prospectus supplement,
will provide the following or similar information about the Qualified Loans:

            (1)  the aggregate  outstanding  principal  balance and the largest,
                 smallest  and  average  outstanding  principal  balance  of the
                 Qualified Loans as of the close of business on the first day of
                 formation of the related trust fund (the "Cut-off Date");

            (2)  the percentage by principal  balance of Qualified Loans secured
                 by mortgaged  properties upon which specified  commodity groups
                 are produced, for example:

                  - food grains,
                  - feed crops,
                  - cotton/tobacco,
                  - oilseeds,
                  -  potatoes,   tomatoes  and  other  vegetables,  -  permanent
                  plantings,  - sugarbeets,  cane and other crops,  - timber,  -
                  dairy,  -  cattle  and  calves,  and - sheep,  lamb and  other
                  livestock;

            (3)  the weighted average by principal balance of the original
                 and remaining terms to maturity of the Qualified Loans;

            (4)  the earliest and latest origination date and maturity date
                 of the Qualified Loans;

            (5)  the loan-to-value ratios and the weighted average by
                 principal balance of the current loan-to-value ratios of the
                 Qualified Loans;

            (6)  the mortgage interest rates or range of mortgage interest rates
                 and the weighted  average  mortgage  interest rate borne by the
                 Qualified Loans;

            (7)  the geographic distribution of Qualified Loans secured by
                 mortgaged properties;

            (8)  information  with respect to the  amortization  provisions  and
                 provisions  relating to  prepayment,  including any  prepayment
                 premiums,  yield maintenance  charges or lock-outs,  if any, of
                 the Qualified Loans;

            (9)  with respect to Qualified Loans with floating mortgage interest
                 rates,  the index,  the frequency of the adjustment  dates, the
                 highest,   lowest  and   weighted   average   note  margin  and
                 pass-through  margin, and the maximum mortgage interest rate or
                 monthly payment variation at the time of any adjustment thereof
                 and over the life of the loan and the frequency of such monthly
                 payment adjustments; and

            (10) information  regarding  the  payment   characteristics  of  the
                 Qualified  Loans,   including   without   limitation,   balloon
                 payments.

If specific information  respecting the Qualified Loans is not known at the time
certificates  are  initially  offered,  more general  information  of the nature
described  above will be provided in the  prospectus  supplement,  and  specific
information  will be set forth in a report that will be available to  purchasers
of  the  related   certificates  at  or  before  the  initial  issuance  of  the
certificates  and will be filed as part of a Current Report on Form 8-K with the
SEC within fifteen days after such initial issuance.

QMBS


      Any QMBS will have been issued pursuant to a  participation  and servicing
agreement, a pooling and servicing agreement, a trust agreement, an indenture or
similar  agreement (a "QMBS  Agreement").  A seller (the "QMBS  Issuer")  and/or
servicer (the "QMBS Servicer") of the underlying Qualified Loans (or "Underlying
QMBS") will have entered into the QMBS  Agreement  with a trustee or a custodian
under the QMBS  Agreement  (the "QMBS  Trustee"),  if any, or with the  original
purchaser of the interest in the underlying Qualified Loans or QMBS evidenced by
the QMBS.

      Distributions of any principal or interest, as applicable, will be made on
QMBS on the dates specified in the related prospectus  supplement.  The QMBS may
be issued in one or more classes with characteristics  similar to the classes of
certificates   described  in  this   prospectus.   Any   principal  or  interest
distributions will be made on the QMBS by the QMBS Trustee or the QMBS Servicer.
The QMBS Issuer or the QMBS Servicer or another person  specified in the related
prospectus  supplement  may  have the  right  or  obligation  to  repurchase  or
substitute assets underlying the QMBS for the breach of certain  representations
and  warranties  contained in the QMBS  Agreement  or under other  circumstances
specified in the related prospectus supplement.

      The  prospectus  supplement  for  a  series  of  certificates   evidencing
interests in Qualified Assets that include QMBS generally will specify:

            (1)  the aggregate  approximate  initial and  outstanding  principal
                 amount or notional amount, as applicable,  and type of the QMBS
                 to be included in the related trust fund;

            (2)  the original and remaining term to stated maturity of the
                 QMBS, if applicable;

            (3)  whether the QMBS is entitled only to interest payments, only
                 to principal payments or to both;

            (4)  the pass-through or bond rate of the QMBS or formula for
                 determining such rates, if any;

            (5)  the applicable payment provisions for the QMBS, including,
                 but not limited to, any priorities, payment schedules and
                 subordination features;

            (6)  the QMBS Issuer, QMBS Servicer and QMBS Trustee, as
                 applicable;

            (7)  certain  characteristics of the credit support, if any, such as
                 guarantees, subordination, reserve funds, insurance policies or
                 letters  of  credit  or  relating  to  the  related  underlying
                 Qualified Loans, the underlying QMBS or directly to the QMBS;

            (8)  the terms on which the related  underlying  Qualified  Loans or
                 underlying  QMBS for such QMBS or the QMBS may, or are required
                 to, be purchased prior to their maturity;

            (9)  the terms on which Qualified Loans or underlying QMBS may be
                 substituted for those originally underlying the QMBS;

            (10) the servicing fees payable under the QMBS Agreement;

            (11) the type of information in respect of the underlying  Qualified
                 Loans  described  under  "  Qualified  Loans -  Qualified  Loan
                 Information in Prospectus  Supplements"  above, and the type of
                 information in respect of the underlying QMBS described in this
                 paragraph;

            (12) the characteristics of any cash flow agreements that are
                 included as part of the trust fund evidenced or secured by
                 the QMBS; and

            (13) whether the QMBS is in  certificated  form,  book-entry form or
                 held through a depository such as The Depository  Trust Company
                 or the Participants Trust Company.

Guaranteed Portions

      The  participation  in a loan  guaranteed by the Secretary of  Agriculture
pursuant to the Consolidated  Farm and Rural  Development Act (7 U.S.C.  1921 et
seq.) is statutorily  included in the definition of loans eligible as "Qualified
Loans" for Farmer Mac secondary market programs.  Each such participation in the
related  whole  loan  (the  "Guaranteed  Loan")  is  referred  to  herein  as  a
"Guaranteed  Portion"  and the  related  guarantee  is  referred  to herein as a
"Secretary's  Guarantee."  Guaranteed Portions are exempt from all underwriting,
appraisal and repayment standards otherwise applicable to Qualified Loans.

      The maximum loss covered by a  Secretary's  Guarantee can never exceed the
lesser of:

            (1)  90% of principal and interest  indebtedness  on the  Guaranteed
                 Loan,  any loan subsidy due, and 90% of principal  and interest
                 indebtedness  on secured  authorized  protective  advances  for
                 protection and preservation of the related mortgaged  property;
                 and

            (2)  90% of the  principal  advanced  to or assured by the  borrower
                 under the  Guaranteed  Loan and any interest  due,  including a
                 loan subsidy.

      The  Secretary's  Guarantee is a full faith and credit  obligation  of the
United States.  Any Guaranteed  Portion is the portion of the loan that is fully
guaranteed as to principal and interest due on the loan as described  below. The
Secretary's  Guarantee  is  activated  if  a  lender  fails  to  repurchase  the
Guaranteed  Portion from the owner thereof (the "Owner") within thirty (30) days
of written demand from the Owner when:

                 -the borrower under the Guaranteed  Loan is in default not less
                  than  sixty  (60)  days in the  payment  of any  principal  or
                  interest due on the Guaranteed Portion, or

                 -the lender has failed to remit to the Owner the  payment  made
                  by the borrower on the Guaranteed  Portion or any related loan
                  subsidy  within  thirty  (30)  days  of the  lender's  receipt
                  thereof.

      If the lender  does not  repurchase  the  Guaranteed  Portion as  provided
above, the Secretary of Agriculture is required to purchase the unpaid principal
balance of the Guaranteed Portion together with accrued interest,  including any
loan subsidy,  to the date of purchase,  less the servicing  fee,  within thirty
(30) days of written demand from the Owner. While the Secretary's Guarantee will
not cover the note interest on Guaranteed  Portions  accruing  after ninety (90)
days  from the date of the  original  demand  letter  to the  lender  requesting
repurchase,  procedures  set forth in the related trust  agreement  will require
tendering  of  Guaranteed  Portions  in a timely  manner so as not to exceed the
90-day period.

      If, in the opinion of the lender, with the concurrence of the Secretary of
Agriculture,  or in the opinion of the  Secretary,  repurchase of the Guaranteed
Portion is necessary to service  adequately  the related  Guaranteed  Loan,  the
Owner will sell the  Guaranteed  Portion to the lender or the  Secretary  for an
amount equal to the unpaid principal balance and accrued interest, including any
loan  subsidy,  on such  Guaranteed  Portion  less the lender's  servicing  fee.
Regulations  prohibit  the lender  from  repurchasing  Guaranteed  Portions  for
arbitrage purposes.

      All Guaranteed Loans must be originated and serviced by eligible  lenders.
Under  regulations,  all eligible lenders must be subject to credit  examination
and supervision by either an agency of the United States or a state,  must be in
good standing with their licensing authorities and have met any licensing,  loan
making,  loan servicing and other applicable  requirements of the state in which
the  collateral  for a  Guaranteed  Loan  will be  located.  The  lender on each
Guaranteed Loan is required to retain the unguaranteed portion of the Guaranteed
Loan (the "Unguaranteed  Portion"),  to service the entire underlying Guaranteed
Loan,  including the Guaranteed  Portion and to remain  mortgagee and/or secured
party of record.  The  Guaranteed  Portion and the  Unguaranteed  Portion of the
underlying  Guaranteed  Loan are to be secured by the same  security  with equal
lien priority. The Guaranteed Portion cannot be paid later than or in any way be
subordinated to the related Unguaranteed Portion.

      Farmer Mac's  guarantee of  certificates  evidencing  interests in a trust
fund containing Guaranteed Portions will cover the timely payment of interest on
and principal of such certificates,  regardless of whether payment has been made
under the Secretary's Guarantee.

                                 USE OF PROCEEDS

      Farmer Mac Mortgage Securities Corporation,  as depositor,  will apply the
net proceeds it receives from its sale of a series of  certificates  to purchase
assets from Sellers and to pay for the expenses  incurred in connection with the
purchase  of assets  and sale of  certificates.  The  depositor  expects to sell
certificates  from time to time,  but the  timing  and  amount of  offerings  of
certificates  will  depend  on a number  of  factors,  including  the  volume of
Qualified Assets the depositor acquires, prevailing interest rates, availability
of funds and general market conditions.

      Rather  than  sell  certificates  directly  itself,  Farmer  Mac  Mortgage
Securities  Corporation,  as depositor,  expects that certificates  comprising a
substantial  number of series will be exchanged by it for Qualified Assets being
swapped to it by Sellers.


                              YIELD CONSIDERATIONS

General

      The  yield  on any  certificate  will  depend  on the  price  paid for the
certificate, the pass-through rate of the certificate, the receipt and timing of
receipt of  distributions  on the certificate and the weighted  average lives of
the Qualified  Assets in the related trust fund, all of which may be affected by
prepayments,  defaults, liquidations or repurchases. See "Risk Factors -The rate
and timing of principal  payments on the mortgage loans could  adversely  affect
your  investment" and " Additional  risks to your investment are associated with
borrower prepayments."

Pass-Through Rate

      Certificates  of any class  within a series may have  fixed,  variable  or
floating  pass-through  rates,  which may or may not be based upon the  interest
rates borne by the Qualified  Assets in the related trust fund.  The  prospectus
supplement  with  respect  to  any  series  of  certificates  will  specify  the
pass-through  rate for  each  class of such  certificates  or,  in the case of a
variable  or  floating   pass-through   rate,  the  method  of  determining  the
pass-through  rate,  and the effect,  if any, of the prepayment of any Qualified
Asset on the pass-through rate of one or more classes of certificates.

      If the interest  accrual  period for a class ends prior to a  distribution
date for the related series of certificates,  the effective yield to maturity to
each  holder  entitled to  payments  of  interest  will be below that  otherwise
produced  by the  applicable  pass-through  rate  and  purchase  price  of  such
certificate because,  while interest will accrue on each such certificate during
such interest accrual period,  the distribution of such interest will be made on
a day that may be several days, weeks or months following the period of accrual.

Timing of Payment of Interest

      Each  payment  of  interest  on  the  certificates,  or  addition  to  the
certificate  balance of a class of Accrual  Certificates  (as  defined  below in
"Description  of the  Certificates  -  General"),  on a  distribution  date will
include   interest   accrued  during  the  interest   accrual  period  for  such
distribution  date.  As  indicated  above  under "  Pass-Through  Rate,"  if the
interest  accrual period ends on a date other than a  distribution  date for the
related  series,  the yield realized by holders may be lower than the yield that
would result if the interest accrual period ended on such distribution date. The
interest  accrual period for any class of certificates  will be described in the
related prospectus supplement.

Payments of Principal; Prepayments


      The yield to maturity on the certificates  will be affected by the rate of
principal payments on the Qualified Assets (including  principal  prepayments on
Qualified Loans resulting from voluntary prepayments by the borrowers, defaults,
repurchases,  insurance proceeds, condemnations and involuntary liquidations). A
number of social, economic,  geographic,  climatic,  demographic, tax, legal and
other factors may influence the rate at which principal prepayments and defaults
occur on the Qualified Loans including, without limitation:

                 -the age of the Qualified Loans,

                 -the payment terms of the Qualified Loans,

                 -the availability of agricultural mortgage credit,

                 -enforceability of due-on-sale clauses,

                 -servicing decisions,

                 -the extent of the borrower's net equity in the related
                  mortgaged property,

                 -the characteristics of the borrowers,

                 -agricultural mortgage market interest rates in relation to
                  the effective interest rates on the Qualified Loans, and

                 -other    unforeseeable    variables,    both    domestic   and
                  international,  affecting  particular commodity groups and the
                  farming industry in general.

Generally,  however,  if prevailing  interest rates fall significantly below the
mortgage  interest  rates on the Qualified  Loans  comprising or underlying  the
Qualified  Assets in a particular trust fund, such Qualified Loans are likely to
be the subject of higher  principal  prepayments than if prevailing rates remain
at or above the rates borne by such Qualified  Loans. In this regard,  it should
be noted that  certain  Qualified  Assets may  consist of  Qualified  Loans with
different  mortgage  interest rates and the stated  pass-through  or pay-through
interest  rate of certain QMBS may be a number of  percentage  points  higher or
lower than  certain of the  underlying  Qualified  Loans.  The rate of principal
payments  on  some  or all of the  classes  of  certificates  of a  series  will
correspond  to the rate of  principal  payments on the  Qualified  Assets in the
related  trust fund and is likely to be  affected by the  existence  of lock-out
periods and prepayment premium or yield maintenance  provisions of the Qualified
Loans underlying or comprising such Qualified Assets, and by the extent to which
the  servicer of any such  Qualified  Loan is able to enforce  such  provisions.
Qualified  Loans  with a  lock-out  period  or a  prepayment  premium  or  yield
maintenance provision, to the extent enforceable, generally would be expected to
experience  a lower  rate of  principal  prepayments  than  otherwise  identical
Qualified Loans without such  provisions,  with shorter lock-out periods or with
lower prepayment premiums or yield maintenance.


      If the purchaser of a  certificate  offered at a discount  calculates  its
anticipated  yield to  maturity  based on an assumed  rate of  distributions  of
principal that is faster than that actually experienced on the certificate,  the
actual yield to maturity will be lower than that so calculated.  Conversely,  if
the purchaser of a certificate  offered at a premium  calculates its anticipated
yield to maturity based on an assumed rate of distributions of principal that is
slower than that actually  experienced on the  certificate,  the actual yield to
maturity will be lower than that so  calculated.  In either case, if so provided
in the prospectus  supplement for a series of certificates,  the effect on yield
on one or more classes of the  certificates of such series of prepayments of the
Qualified  Assets in the related trust fund may be mitigated or  exacerbated  by
any  provisions for  sequential or selective  distribution  of principal to such
classes.

      A prepayment  of principal,  whether full or partial,  is applied so as to
reduce the outstanding principal balance of the related Qualified Loan as of the
due date following the date on which such prepayment is received. As a result, a
prepayment  on a Qualified  Loan will not reduce the amount of  interest  passed
through to holders for each related interest accrual period.

      The timing of changes in the rate of principal  payments on the  Qualified
Assets may significantly affect an investor's actual yield to maturity,  even if
the average rate of  distributions of principal is consistent with an investor's
expectation.  In general,  the  earlier a  principal  payment is received on the
Qualified  Assets and  distributed on a  certificate,  the greater the effect on
such  investor's  yield  to  maturity.  The  effect  on an  investor's  yield of
principal  payments  occurring  at a  rate  higher,  or  lower,  than  the  rate
anticipated  by the  investor  during  a given  period  may not be  offset  by a
subsequent like decrease, or increase, in the rate of principal payments.

Prepayments, Maturity and Weighted Average Lives

      The rates at which principal payments are received on the Qualified Assets
included in or  comprising a trust fund for the related  series of  certificates
may affect the ultimate  maturity and the weighted average life of each class of
such series.  Prepayments  on the Qualified  Loans  comprising or underlying the
Qualified Assets in a particular  trust fund will generally  accelerate the rate
at which principal is paid on some or all of the classes of the  certificates of
the related series.

      As  described  in  the  related  prospectus  supplement  for a  series  of
certificates,   each  class  of   certificates   will  have  a  final  scheduled
distribution  date,  which is the date on or  prior  to  which  the  certificate
balance  thereof is required to be reduced to zero,  calculated  on the basis of
the  assumptions   applicable  to  such  series  set  forth  in  the  prospectus
supplement.  Payment  of the  entire  certificate  balance of each such class no
later  than such  final  distribution  date  will be  covered  by  Farmer  Mac's
guarantee.

      Weighted  average  life  refers  to the  average  amount of time that will
elapse from the date of issue of a security  until each dollar of  principal  of
such  security will be repaid to the  investor.  The weighted  average life of a
class  of  certificates  of a  series  will be  influenced  by the rate at which
principal on the Qualified Loans  comprising or underlying the Qualified  Assets
is paid to such class,  which may be in the form of  scheduled  amortization  or
prepayments.  For this purpose, the term "prepayment" includes  prepayments,  in
whole or in part, and liquidations due to default.


      In  addition,  the  weighted  average  lives  of the  certificates  may be
affected  by  the  varying  maturities  of the  Qualified  Loans  comprising  or
underlying the Qualified Assets. If any Qualified Loans comprising or underlying
the Qualified Assets in a particular trust fund have actual terms to maturity of
less than those assumed in calculating  final scheduled  distribution  dates for
the classes of certificates  of the related series,  one or more classes of such
certificates  may be  fully  paid  prior  to their  respective  final  scheduled
distribution  dates,  even  in the  absence  of  prepayments.  Accordingly,  the
prepayment  experience  of the  Qualified  Assets  will,  to some  extent,  be a
function of the mix of mortgage  interest  rates and maturities of the Qualified
Loans  comprising or underlying such Qualified  Assets.  See "Description of the
Trust Funds" herein.

      Prepayments on loans are also commonly  measured  relative to a prepayment
standard or model,  such as the  Constant  Prepayment  Rate  ("CPR")  prepayment
model.  CPR represents a constant assumed rate of prepayment each month relative
to the then  outstanding  principal  balance  of a pool of loans for the life of
such loans. Neither CPR nor any other prepayment model or assumption purports to
be an historical  description  of  prepayment  experience or a prediction of the
anticipated  rate of  prepayment  of any pool of loans,  including the Qualified
Loans underlying or comprising the Qualified Assets. Moreover, CPR was developed
based  upon  historical  prepayment  experience  for  single-family  residential
mortgage  loans.  Thus,  it is likely that  prepayment  of any  Qualified  Loans
comprising or underlying the Qualified Assets for any series will not conform to
any particular level of CPR.

      Farmer Mac Mortgage Securities  Corporation is not aware of any meaningful
prepayment statistics for Qualified Loans secured by agricultural real estate.

      The prospectus  supplement with respect to each series of certificates may
contain tables, if applicable, setting forth the projected weighted average life
of each class of  certificates  of such series and the percentage of the initial
certificate  balance of each such class that would be  outstanding  on specified
distribution   dates  based  on  the  assumptions   stated  in  such  prospectus
supplement,  including  assumptions  that  prepayments  on the  Qualified  Loans
comprising  or  underlying  the  related  Qualified  Assets  are  made at  rates
corresponding to various  percentages of CPR or at such other rates specified in
such  prospectus  supplement.  Such  tables  and  assumptions  are  intended  to
illustrate the  sensitivity  of weighted  average lives of the  certificates  to
various  prepayment  rates and will not be  intended  to  predict  or to provide
information  that will enable  investors to predict the actual weighted  average
lives of the certificates. It is unlikely that prepayment of any Qualified Loans
comprising or underlying the Qualified Assets for any series will conform to any
particular  level of CPR or any other rate  specified in the related  prospectus
supplement.

                                  THE DEPOSITOR

      The depositor,  Farmer Mac Mortgage  Securities  Corporation,  is a wholly
owned subsidiary of Farmer Mac that was incorporated in the State of Delaware in
December 1991. The principal  executive  offices of the depositor are located at
919 18th Street, N.W., Washington,  D.C. 20006. The depositor's telephone number
is (202) 872-7700.

                   FEDERAL AGRICULTURAL MORTGAGE CORPORATION


      The  Federal  Agricultural  Mortgage  Corporation,  which is also known as
Farmer Mac,  is a  federally  chartered  instrumentality  of the United  States.
Farmer  Mac was  established  by Title VIII of the Farm  Credit Act of 1971,  as
amended (12 U.S.C. section 2279aa et seq.), which is Farmer Mac's charter.Farmer
Mac was  established  primarily  to attract  new capital  for the  financing  of
agricultural  real estate and rural  housing  loans and to provide  liquidity to
agricultural  real estate and rural housing  lenders.  Farmer Mac is intended to
aid the development of a secondary market for agricultural real estate and rural
housing  loans made by  participating  originators,  secured  by first  liens on
agricultural  real estate,  including rural housing,  by guaranteeing the timely
payment  of  interest  and  principal  on  obligations  backed by such loans and
securities representing interests in such loans or in Guaranteed Portions.

      Section  503  of  the  Food,  Agriculture,  Conservation,  and  Trade  Act
Amendments  of 1991  provided for the creation of an Office of Secondary  Market
Oversight within the Farm Credit  Administration  that is managed by a full-time
director  selected by and  reporting  to the Farm Credit  Administration  Board.
Through this office,  the Farm Credit  Administration has general regulatory and
enforcement  authority  over Farmer Mac,  including  the authority to promulgate
rules and  regulations  governing the  activities of Farmer Mac and to apply its
general  enforcement  powers  to  Farmer  Mac  and  its  activities.  The  Food,
Agriculture,  Conservation,  and Trade Act Amendments also  established  certain
minimum and critical capital levels for Farmer Mac.

      The Farm Credit System Reform Act of 1996, Pub. L. 104-105, which the
President of the United States signed into law on February 10, 1996, modified
Farmer Mac's charter as it theretofore existed in several major respects, by,
among other things:

            (1)  authorizing  Farmer  Mac to  purchase  Qualified  Loans  and to
                 include such purchased  Qualified  Loans in trust funds serving
                 as the basis for securities guaranteed by Farmer Mac,

            (2)  extending  from  December  1996 to December  1999 the statutory
                 deadline for the full imposition of certain  regulatory capital
                 requirements applicable to Farmer Mac, and

            (3)  eliminating statutory  requirements for credit support features
                 aggregating not less than ten percent of the initial  principal
                 balances of pools of Qualified Loans in a trust fund.

The Farm Credit System Reform Act also made various  statutory  changes intended
to further streamline program operations and clarify certain ambiguous statutory
provisions.

      The Farm Credit System Reform Act also imposed certain  additional capital
requirements  upon  Farmer  Mac and timing  limitations  therefor,  including  a
requirement that Farmer Mac increase its capital to at least $25 million.  As of
December 31, 1999,  Farmer  Mac's  regulatory  capital as reported on its Annual
Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 1999 was $88.8 million.


      Farmer Mac's  charter  authorizes  Farmer Mac to borrow up to $1.5 billion
from the Secretary of the  Treasury,  subject to certain  conditions,  to enable
Farmer  Mac to  fulfill  its  guarantee  obligations.  The debt  created by such
borrowing  will bear  interest  at a rate  determined  by the  Secretary  of the
Treasury taking into  consideration  the average rate on outstanding  marketable
obligations of the United States as of the last day of the calendar month ending
before the date of the purchase of such  obligations.  Farmer Mac is required to
repurchase its debt obligations from the Treasury within a reasonable time.

      Public offerings of securities guaranteed by Farmer Mac must be registered
with the SEC pursuant to the Securities  Act.  Farmer Mac is also subject to the
periodic  reporting  requirements  of the Exchange Act and,  accordingly,  files
reports  with  the SEC  pursuant  thereto.  Pursuant  to  existing  Farm  Credit
Administration regulations,  Farmer Mac is required to file quarterly reports of
condition  with  the  Farm  Credit  Administration,  as  well as  copies  of all
documents filed with the SEC under the Securities Act and the Exchange Act.

      Farmer  Mac's  charter  authorizes  the  Comptroller   General  to  review
annually,  and submit to the Congress a report regarding the actuarial soundness
and reasonableness of the fees Farmer Mac charges for providing its guarantee.

      Although Farmer Mac is an institution of the Farm Credit System, it is not
liable for any debt or  obligation of any other  institution  of the Farm Credit
System (a "System  Institution").  Neither the Farm Credit  System nor any other
individual  System  Institution  is liable for any debt or  obligation of Farmer
Mac. For more  information  about Farmer Mac, see the documents  incorporated by
reference  in this  prospectus  and  referred to in "We Have  Incorporated  Some
Information by Reference to Other Documents."

      Farmer Mac maintains its principal executive offices at 919 18th
Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20006.  Its telephone number is (202) 872-7700.

                         DESCRIPTION OF THE CERTIFICATES

General

      The  certificates of each series,  including any class of certificates not
offered  by  this  prospectus,  will  represent  in  the  aggregate  the  entire
beneficial  ownership interest in the trust fund created pursuant to the related
trust agreement and issue supplement.  The prospectus supplement for each series
of  certificates  will fully  describe the features of the  certificates  we are
offering.  In general,  each series of certificates  will consist of one or more
classes of certificates that may have the following characteristics:

            (1)  provide for the accrual of interest on the certificates
                 based on fixed, variable or floating rates;

            (2)  be entitled to principal  distributions with disproportionately
                 low,  nominal  or  no  interest  distributions   (collectively,
                 "Stripped Principal Certificates");

            (3)  be entitled to interest  distributions with  disproportionately
                 low,  nominal  or  no  principal  distributions  (collectively,
                 "Stripped Interest Certificates");

            (4)  provide   for   distributions   of  accrued   interest  on  the
                 certificates   commencing   only  after  the  occurrence  of  a
                 specified  event,  such as the  retirement of one or more other
                 classes  of  certificates  of the  same  series  (collectively,
                 "Accrual Certificates");

            (5)  provide for distributions of principal  sequentially,  based on
                 specified payment schedules,  from only a portion of the assets
                 in such trust fund or based on specified  calculations,  to the
                 extent of available funds;

            (6)  be entitled to distributions of any prepayment premium and
                 yield maintenance charge to the extent collected; and/or

            (7)  provide for distributions based on a combination of two or more
                 components  thereof  with  one or more  of the  characteristics
                 described  above,  including a Stripped  Principal  Certificate
                 component and a Stripped Interest Certificate component, to the
                 extent of available funds.

With respect to certificates  with two or more components,  references herein to
certificate  balance,  notional  amount  and  pass-through  rate  refer  to  the
principal  balance,  if any, notional amount, if any, and the pass-through rate,
if any, for any such component.

      Each  class  of  certificates  of a  series  will  be  issued  in  minimum
denominations   corresponding  to  stated  principal  amounts,   or  certificate
balances, or, in the case of Stripped Interest Certificates, notional amounts or
percentage  interests  specified  in  the  related  prospectus  supplement.  The
transfer of any  certificates  may be  registered  and the  certificates  may be
exchanged  without the payment of any service charge payable in connection  with
such  registration of transfer or exchange,  but Farmer Mac Mortgage  Securities
Corporation,  as  depositor,  the trustee,  or any agent of the depositor or the
trustee  may  require  payment  of a sum  sufficient  to cover  any tax or other
governmental  charge.  One or more  classes of  certificates  of a series may be
issued in definitive  form  ("Definitive  Certificates")  or in book-entry  form
("Book-Entry  Certificates"),  as provided in the related prospectus supplement.
See "  Book-Entry  Registration"  and  "Risk  Factors  If we do  not  issue  the
certificates  in definitive  form, your exercise of your rights may be limited."
Definitive  Certificates will be exchangeable for other certificates of the same
class and series of a like aggregate  certificate  balance,  notional  amount or
percentage interest but of different authorized denominations.

Distributions


      Distributions  on the  certificates  of each  series will be made by or on
behalf of Farmer  Mac on each  distribution  date as  specified  in the  related
prospectus supplement. Distributions (other than the final distribution) will be
made to the persons in whose names the  certificates are registered at the close
of business on the last  business day of the month  preceding the month in which
the  distribution  date  occurs  (the  "Record  Date"),  and the  amount of each
distribution  will be determined on or before the fifth  business day during the
month of such  distribution  date or such other date as may be  specified in the
trust  agreement  and  described  in  the  related  prospectus  supplement  (the
"Determination   Date").  All  distributions  with  respect  to  each  class  of
certificates  on each  distribution  date will be  allocated  pro rata among the
outstanding  certificates in such class or by random selection,  as described in
the  related  prospectus  supplement  or  otherwise  established  by Farmer Mac.
Payments will be made either by wire transfer in immediately  available funds to
the account of a holder at a bank or other entity having appropriate  facilities
therefor, if such holder has so notified the trustee or other person required to
make such  payments no later than the date  specified in the related  prospectus
supplement  and,  if so provided in the  related  prospectus  supplement,  holds
certificates in the requisite  amount specified  therein,  or by check mailed to
the  address of the  person  entitled  thereto as it appears on the  Certificate
Register;  provided,  however,  that the final  distribution  in  retirement  of
Definitive Certificates will be made only upon presentation and surrender of the
certificates  at the location  specified in the notice to holders of  Definitive
Certificates of such final distribution.

      All  distributions on the certificates of each series on each distribution
date will be made from the amount on deposit in the related  Certificate Account
on such  distribution  date as  supplemented,  to the extent  necessary,  by any
amount paid by Farmer Mac under its guarantee.  As described  below,  the entire
amount on deposit  in the  Certificate  Account  will be  distributed  among the
related  certificates  or  otherwise  released  from  the  trust  fund  on  each
distribution  date,  and  accordingly  will  not be  available  for  any  future
distributions.

Distribution of Interest on the Certificates

      Interest  on each class of  certificates  (other than  Stripped  Principal
Certificates  and certain  classes of Stripped  Interest  Certificates)  of each
series  will  accrue  at the  applicable  pass-through  rate on the  outstanding
certificate  balance  thereof and will be  distributed to holders as provided in
the related  prospectus  supplement.  Distributions  with respect to interest on
Stripped  Interest  Certificates  may be made on each  distribution  date on the
basis of a notional  amount as described in the related  prospectus  supplement.
Stripped Principal Certificates with no stated pass-through rate will not accrue
interest.

      Each class of  certificates,  other than  classes  of  Stripped  Principal
Certificates   (which  have  no  pass-through   rate),   may  have  a  different
pass-through  rate,  which will be a fixed,  variable or floating  rate at which
interest  will  accrue  on  such  class  or a  component  thereof.  The  related
prospectus  supplement  will  specify  the  pass-through  rate for each class or
component  or, in the case of a variable  or  floating  pass-through  rate,  the
method for determining the pass-through rate.


      Distributions of interest in respect of the certificates of any class will
be made on each distribution date (other than any class of Accrual Certificates,
which will be entitled to distributions  of accrued interest  commencing only on
the  distribution  date,  or under the  circumstances,  specified in the related
prospectus supplement, and any class of Stripped Principal Certificates that are
not entitled to any distributions of interest) based on the Accrued  Certificate
Interest for such class and such  distribution  date. Prior to the time interest
is  distributable  on any class of Accrual  Certificates,  the amount of Accrued
Certificate Interest otherwise  distributable on such class will be added to the
certificate  balance  thereof on each  distribution  date.  With respect to each
class of certificates and each  distribution date (other than certain classes of
Stripped Interest Certificates), "Accrued Certificate Interest" will be equal to
interest accrued for a specified period on the outstanding  certificate  balance
thereof   immediately  prior  to  the  distribution   date,  at  the  applicable
pass-through   rate.   Accrued   Certificate   Interest  on  Stripped   Interest
Certificates  will be equal to interest  accrued  for a specified  period on the
outstanding notional amount thereof immediately prior to each distribution date,
at the applicable  pass-through  rate.  The method of  determining  the notional
amount for any class of Stripped Interest  Certificates will be described in the
related  prospectus  supplement.  Reference  to a notional  amount is solely for
convenience in certain  calculations and does not represent the right to receive
any distributions of principal.

Distributions of Principal of the Certificates

      The  certificates  of each series,  other than certain classes of Stripped
Interest  Certificates,  will have a certificate balance that, at any time, will
equal the then maximum  amount that the holder thereof is entitled to receive in
respect of principal  out of the future cash flow on the assets  included in the
related trust fund. The outstanding certificate balance of a certificate will be
reduced to the extent of  distributions  of principal  thereon from time to time
and, in the case of Accrual Certificates prior to the distribution date on which
distributions  of interest are  required to  commence,  will be increased by any
related Accrued Certificate Interest.  The initial aggregate certificate balance
of all  classes  of  certificates  of a  series  will  not be  greater  than the
outstanding  aggregate  principal  balance of the related Qualified Assets as of
the Cut-off Date. The initial aggregate certificate balance of a series and each
class  thereof  will  be  specified  in  the  related   prospectus   supplement.
Distributions of principal will be made on each  distribution  date to the class
or classes of  certificates  entitled  thereto in accordance with the provisions
described in such prospectus  supplement  until the certificate  balance of such
class has been  reduced  to zero.  Distributions  of  principal  of any class of
certificates  will be made on a pro rata basis among all of the  certificates of
such  class or by random  selection,  as  described  in the  related  prospectus
supplement.  Stripped Interest  Certificates with no certificate balance are not
entitled to any distributions of principal.

Distributions on the Certificates of Prepayment Premiums and Yield
Maintenance Charges

      If so  provided  in the related  prospectus  supplement,  a portion of any
prepayment  premiums or yield  maintenance  charges  that are  collected  on the
Qualified  Assets  in  the  related  trust  fund  may  be  distributed  on  each
distribution  date to the class or classes of certificates  entitled  thereto in
accordance with the provisions described in such prospectus supplement.

Advances in Respect of Delinquencies

      With  respect to any series of  certificates,  each  central  servicer  or
another entity described in the related  prospectus  supplement will be required
to advance on or before each  Certificate  Account  Deposit  Date (as defined in
"Description  of the Agreements - Accounts -  Withdrawals")  its own funds in an
amount equal to the  aggregate of payments of principal and interest (net of the
related fee to the central  servicer)  that were due on the  Qualified  Loans in
such trust fund and were  delinquent on such  Certificate  Account Deposit Date,
subject to the central servicer's (or another entity's) good faith determination
that such advances (each, an "Advance") will be reimbursable  from recoveries on
the  Qualified  Loans  respecting  which  such  Advances  were  made  (as to any
Qualified Loan, "Related Proceeds").


      Neither Farmer Mac Mortgage Securities Corporation,  as depositor, nor any
of its affiliates will have any  responsibility to make such Advances,  although
Farmer  Mac may make  Advances  if it deems  such  Advances  appropriate.  If no
Advance is made,  Farmer Mac will remain  obligated  to make  required  payments
under its guarantee.

      Because  Farmer  Mac  guarantees  timely   distribution  of  interest  and
principal on the certificates (including any balloon payments),  the presence or
absence of an Advancing obligation will not affect distributions of interest and
principal to such holders.

      Advances are reimbursable  generally from subsequent recoveries in respect
of such Qualified Loans and otherwise to the extent described in this prospectus
and in the related prospectus supplement.

      The  prospectus  supplement for any series of  certificates  evidencing an
interest in a trust fund that  includes  QMBS will  describe  any  corresponding
advancing obligation of any person in connection with such QMBS.

Reports to Holders; Publication of Certificate Principal Factors

      With  each  distribution  to  holders  of any class of  certificates  of a
series,  the  master  servicer  will  forward  or cause to be  forwarded  to the
trustee, Farmer Mac Mortgage Securities Corporation,  as depositor,  the Federal
Reserve  Bank  of New  York  or the  nominee  for  any  private  depository,  if
applicable,  the holders of Definitive  Certificates,  if any, and to such other
parties as may be specified in the related Agreement (as defined in "Description
of the Agreements"), and will generally make available to financial publications
and electronic  services,  a statement setting forth, in each case to the extent
applicable and available:

            (1)  information  sufficient  to  enable  holders  of each  class to
                 calculate  the  amount  of  such   distribution   allocable  to
                 principal,  separately  identifying the aggregate amount of any
                 principal  prepayments  and,  if so  specified  in the  related
                 prospectus   supplement,   any  prepayment  premiums  or  yield
                 maintenance charges included therein;

            (2)  information  sufficient  to  enable  holders  of each  class to
                 calculate the amount of such distribution  allocable to Accrued
                 Certificate Interest;

            (3)  the   certificate   principal   factor   for   each   class  of
                 certificates, which is the percentage, carried to eight places,
                 that, when  multiplied by the  denomination of a certificate of
                 such  class,  will  produce  the  certificate  balance  of such
                 certificate  or, in the case of an interest  only  certificate,
                 the notional amount of such certificate  immediately  following
                 such distribution date;

            (4)  in the case of certificates with a variable  pass-through rate,
                 the  pass-through  rate applicable to such  distribution  date,
                 and, if  available,  the  immediately  succeeding  distribution
                 date, as calculated in accordance with the method  specified in
                 the related prospectus supplement; and

            (5)  any  other  information  required  to be  distributed  to  such
                 parties as specified in the related  prospectus  supplement  or
                 Agreement.

      On or before the  Determination  Date for a class of certificates,  Farmer
Mac will calculate the  certificate  distribution  amount for such  distribution
date, and, as soon as possible thereafter, will make available for such class of
certificates  comprising such series the certificate  principal  factor therefor
described in clause (3) above.

      In the case of  information  furnished  pursuant  to  clauses  (1) and (2)
above,   the  amounts  shall  be  expressed  as  a  dollar  amount  per  minimum
denomination of certificates or for such other specified  portion  thereof.  The
master  servicer  or  the  trustee,  as  specified  in  the  related  prospectus
supplement,  will make available any information it receives with respect to any
QMBS.

      Within a reasonable  period of time after the end of each  calendar  year,
the  master  servicer,  shall  make  available  the  information  set  forth  in
subclauses (1) and (2) above, aggregated for such calendar year. This obligation
of the master servicer shall be deemed to have been satisfied to the extent that
the master servicer provides  substantially  comparable  information pursuant to
any requirements of the Internal Revenue Code as are from time to time in force.

      Unless and until Definitive  Certificates are issued,  or unless otherwise
provided in the related prospectus  supplement,  the foregoing statement will be
forwarded by the master  servicer to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York or the
nominee for the private depository, as applicable. Such statements are available
through the facilities of the SEC and  information  vendors,  may be accessed on
Farmer Mac's website  (www.farmermac.com)  and may be obtained by the Beneficial
Owner (as defined  below under " A Depository  System") by requesting a copy and
certifying  to the trustee  and the master  servicer  that it is the  Beneficial
Owner of a certificate.  See " Book-Entry  Registration" and "Where You Can Find
Additional Information."  Communication among Beneficial Owners may be conducted
through the facilities of the related depository or financial intermediary.

Termination

      Farmer  Mac's  responsibilities  and  obligations  created  by  the  trust
agreement for each series of certificates  will terminate upon the  distribution
to holders of that series of all  amounts  required  to be  distributed  to them
pursuant to such trust agreement following:

            (1)  the final payment of the last Qualified Asset subject
                 thereto,

            (2)  the  purchase  of all of the  assets of the  trust  fund by the
                 party   entitled   to  effect  such   termination,   under  the
                 circumstances  and in  the  manner  set  forth  in the  related
                 prospectus supplement, or

            (3)  distribution  by Farmer Mac pursuant to Farmer Mac's  guarantee
                 on the final distribution date for the latest maturing class of
                 such series of an amount  sufficient to reduce the  certificate
                 balance thereof to zero.

In no event,  however,  will any trust created by the trust  agreement  continue
beyond a date which is 21 years  subsequent  to the death of the survivor of the
descendants  of Joseph P. Kennedy,  the late  ambassador of the United States to
the Court of St.  James's,  living on the Cut-off  Date for the related  series.
Farmer  Mac shall  make  available  to  financial  publications  and  electronic
services notice for the benefit of holders that the final  distribution  will be
made on the specified  distribution  date. The final  distribution  will be made
only upon, in the case of any Definitive Certificate, presentation and surrender
of such Definitive  Certificate at the location to be specified in the notice of
termination.

      If so  specified  in  the  related  prospectus  supplement,  a  series  of
certificates may be subject to early termination through the optional repurchase
of the assets in the related trust fund by the party specified in the prospectus
supplement,  under  the  circumstances  and  in  the  manner  described  in  the
prospectus supplement. If so provided in the related prospectus supplement, upon
the  reduction  of the  certificate  balance of a specified  class or classes of
certificates by a specified percentage or amount or on or after a date specified
in the related  prospectus  supplement,  the party  specified in the  prospectus
supplement  will solicit bids for the purchase of all of the assets of the trust
fund,  or of a sufficient  portion of the assets to retire such class or classes
or  purchase  such  assets  at a  price  set  forth  in the  related  prospectus
supplement, in each case, under the circumstances and in the manner set forth in
the prospectus supplement. In addition, if so provided in the related prospectus
supplement,  certain classes of certificates may be purchased subject to similar
conditions.

Book-Entry Registration

      If so provided in the related prospectus  supplement,  one or more classes
of the certificates of any series will be issued as Book-Entry Certificates, and
each such class will either

                 -be issued and maintained only on the book-entry system of
                  the Federal Reserve Banks (the "Fed System"), or

                 -be represented by one or more single  certificates  registered
                  in the name of a nominee for the depository  identified in the
                  prospectus supplement (the "Depository").

The Fed System


      Book-Entry  Certificates issued and maintained under the Fed System may be
held of record only by entities  eligible to maintain  book-entry  accounts with
the Federal  Reserve  Banks.  Such entities whose names appear on the book-entry
records of the Federal  Reserve  Banks as the  entities  for whose  accounts the
certificates  have  been  deposited  are  herein  referred  to  as  "Holders  of
Book-Entry Certificates." A Holder of Book-Entry Certificates is not necessarily
the  Beneficial  Owner  of a  Book-Entry  Certificate.  Beneficial  Owners  will
ordinarily hold beneficial  interests in Book-Entry  Certificates through one or
more financial  intermediaries,  such as banks,  brokerage  firms and securities
clearing  organizations.  A Holder of  Book-Entry  Certificates  that is not the
Beneficial Owner of a certificate,  and each other financial intermediary in the
chain to the Beneficial Owner, will have the  responsibility of establishing and
maintaining  accounts  for  their  respective  customers.   The  rights  of  the
Beneficial  Owner of a Book-Entry  Certificate  with  respect to the  applicable
trust fund and the  Federal  Reserve  Banks may be  exercised  only  through the
Holder of Book-Entry  Certificates.  None of Farmer Mac, the trustee, the master
servicer  or the  Federal  Reserve  Banks  will  have a direct  obligation  to a
Beneficial  Owner of a  Book-Entry  Certificate  that is not also the  Holder of
Book-Entry  Certificates.  The  Federal  Reserve  Banks  will act only  upon the
instructions of the Holders of Book-Entry Certificates in recording transfers of
Book-Entry Certificates.

      A fiscal agency agreement  between Farmer Mac and the Federal Reserve Bank
of New York makes generally applicable to the Book-Entry Certificates:

                 -regulations governing Farmer Mac's use of the book-entry
                  system, and

                 -such  procedures,  insofar as applicable,  as may from time to
                  time  be  established  by  regulations  of the  United  States
                  Department of the Treasury governing United States securities,
                  as now set forth in Treasury  Department  Circular Number 300,
                  31 C.F.R. Part 306 (other than Subpart O).

The Book-Entry  Certificates are also governed by applicable operating circulars
and letters of the Federal Reserve Banks.

A Depository System

      Any Depository will be a limited-purpose trust company organized under the
laws of the  State of New  York,  a member  of the  Federal  Reserve  System,  a
"clearing  corporation"  within the meaning of the New York  Uniform  Commercial
Code ("UCC") and a "clearing  agency"  registered  pursuant to the provisions of
section 17A of the Exchange Act. The  Depository  will have been created to hold
securities for its participating  organizations  ("Participants") and facilitate
the clearance and  settlement of securities  transactions  between  Participants
through electronic book-entry changes in their accounts, thereby eliminating the
need  for  physical  movement  of  certificates.  Participants,  which  maintain
accounts  with the  Depository,  will  include  securities  brokers and dealers,
banks,  trust companies and clearing  corporations and may include certain other
organizations.  Indirect access to a Depository system will also be available to
others such as banks, brokers, dealers and trust companies that clear through or
maintain  a  custodial  relationship  with a  Participant,  either  directly  or
indirectly ("Indirect Participants").


      Generally,  investors that are not  Participants or Indirect  Participants
but  desire to  purchase,  sell or  otherwise  transfer  ownership  of, or other
interests in,  Book-Entry  Certificates may do so only through  Participants and
Indirect  Participants.  In addition,  such investors ("Beneficial Owners") will
receive all distributions on the Book-Entry  Certificates through the Depository
and its Participants.  Under a book-entry format, Beneficial Owners will receive
payments  after the  related  distribution  date  because,  while  payments  are
required to be forwarded to the nominee, as nominee for the Depository,  on each
such date, the Depository will forward such payments to its  Participants  which
thereafter  will be  required  to  forward  them  to  Indirect  Participants  or
Beneficial  Owners.  So long as a certificate  is in book-entry  form,  the only
Holder of Book-Entry  Certificates  will be the nominee for the Depository.  The
trustee will not  recognize the  Beneficial  Owners as the Holders of Book-Entry
Certificates  under the  Agreements.  Beneficial  Owners  will be  permitted  to
exercise  the rights of Holders of  Book-Entry  Certificates  under the  related
Agreements only indirectly  through the  Participants  who in turn will exercise
their rights through the Depository.

      Under the rules,  regulations  and  procedures  creating and affecting the
Depository  and  its  operations,  the  Depository  will  be  required  to  make
book-entry  transfers among Participants on whose behalf it acts with respect to
the  Book-Entry  Certificates  and will be  required  to  receive  and  transmit
distributions  of principal  of, and interest on, the  Book-Entry  Certificates.
Participants  and  Indirect  Participants,  with which  Beneficial  Owners  have
accounts with respect to the Book-Entry Certificates, similarly will be required
to make book-entry transfers and receive and transmit such payments on behalf of
their respective Beneficial Owners.

      Because the Depository will be able to act only on behalf of Participants,
who in turn will act on behalf of Indirect  Participants  and certain banks, the
ability  of a  Beneficial  Owner  to  pledge  its  interest  in  the  Book-Entry
Certificates  to persons or entities that do not  participate  in the Depository
system,  or otherwise  take actions in respect of its interest in the Book-Entry
Certificates,  may  be  limited  due  to  the  lack  of a  physical  certificate
evidencing such interest.

      Under the  Depository's  procedures,  the Depository  will take any action
permitted to be taken by a Holder of Book-Entry  Certificates under an Agreement
only at the  direction  of one or more  Participants  to whose  account with the
Depository  interests  in the  Book-Entry  Certificates  are  credited and whose
aggregate  holdings  represent no less than any minimum amount of Voting Rights,
if any,  required  therefor.  Therefore,  Beneficial Owners will only be able to
exercise their Voting Rights,  if any, to the extent  permitted,  and subject to
the procedures established, by their Participant and/or Indirect Participant, as
applicable.  The  Depository  may take  conflicting  actions to the extent  that
Participants authorize such actions. None of Farmer Mac, the trustee, the master
servicer,  Farmer Mac Mortgage Acceptance Company, as depositor, or any of their
respective  affiliates  will have any  liability  for any aspect of the  records
relating to or payments made on account of beneficial ownership interests in the
Book-Entry  Certificates,  or for  maintaining,  supervising  or  reviewing  any
records relating to such beneficial ownership interests.

      Certificates  initially  issued in book-entry form will be issued in fully
registered,  certificated  form to Beneficial  Owners or their nominees,  rather
than to the Depository or its nominee only if:

            (1)  Farmer Mac Mortgage Securities  Corporation,  as the depositor,
                 advises the trustee in writing that the Depository is no longer
                 willing or able to properly discharge its  responsibilities  as
                 depository with respect to the  certificates  and the Depositor
                 is unable to locate a qualified successor, or

            (2)  the Depositor, at its option, elects to terminate the
                 book-entry system through the Depository.


      Upon the occurrence of either of the events  described in the  immediately
preceding paragraph,  the Depository will be required to notify all Participants
of the  availability  through the Depository of Definitive  Certificates for the
Beneficial  Owners.  Upon  surrender by the  Depository  of the  certificate  or
certificates   representing   the   Book-Entry   Certificates,   together   with
instructions for  re-registration,  the trustee will issue or cause to be issued
to  the  Beneficial  Owners  identified  in  such  instructions  the  Definitive
Certificates  to which  they are  entitled,  and  thereafter  the  trustee  will
recognize the Beneficial Owners as the holders of Definitive Certificates.

                          DESCRIPTION OF THE AGREEMENTS

      The certificates of each series evidencing  interests in a trust fund will
be issued  pursuant to a trust  agreement  among Farmer Mac Mortgage  Securities
Corporation, as depositor, Farmer Mac, in the capacities of guarantor and master
servicer, and the trustee.

      If  Qualified  Loans are  included  in a trust  fund,  Farmer  Mac will be
responsible  for the  servicing  of those  Qualified  Loans as master  servicer.
Farmer  Mac's  servicing  responsibilities  under  the trust  agreement  will be
performed on its behalf by one or more central  servicers  pursuant to servicing
contracts, as supplemented,  with Farmer Mac. A central servicer may subcontract
the performance of certain of its servicing duties to a subservicer,  who may be
the Seller or originator of the Qualified Loans.

      The depositor will have purchased the Qualified  Assets it deposits into a
trust fund from  Sellers  pursuant to a master loan sale  agreement or a selling
and servicing  agreement  (each a "Sale  Agreement").  Each Sale  Agreement will
include  representations  and warranties of the Seller  concerning the Qualified
Assets.  The  representations  and  warranties and the remedies for their breach
will be  assigned  to the  trustee for the benefit of the holders of the related
series of certificates.

      The trust  agreement,  each  servicing  contract  and each Sale  Agreement
relating to a particular series of certificates are herein collectively referred
to as the  "Agreements."  The  provisions of each  Agreement will vary depending
upon the nature of the related certificates and the related trust fund. Forms of
a trust agreement,  a servicing contract and a Sale Agreement have been filed as
exhibits to the Registration Statement of which this prospectus is a part.

      The following  summaries  describe  certain  provisions that may appear in
each  Agreement.  The prospectus  supplement for a series of  certificates  will
describe any material  provision of the Agreements  relating to such series that
are not covered by the  descriptions in this  prospectus.  The summaries are not
complete and you should read them together with any  additional  description  in
the related prospectus supplement. Furthermore, the provisions of the Agreements
for each trust fund are controlling.  As used herein with respect to any series,
the term "certificate" refers to all of the certificates of that series, whether
or not  offered  hereby and by the  related  prospectus  supplement,  unless the
context  otherwise  requires.  Farmer Mac Mortgage  Securities  Corporation,  as
depositor, will provide a copy of the Agreements,  without exhibits, relating to
any series of  certificates  without charge upon the written request by a holder
of a certificate  of that series  addressed to the  depositor,  919 18th Street,
N.W., Washington, D.C. 20006.


Assignment of Assets; Repurchases

      At the time of issuance of any series of certificates, Farmer Mac Mortgage
Securities Corporation, as depositor, will assign or cause to be assigned to the
trustee, on behalf of holders of the certificates,  the assets to be included in
the related trust fund,  together with all principal and interest to be received
on or with respect to such assets after the Cut-off Date,  other than  principal
and interest due on or before the Cut-off Date.  The trustee will,  concurrently
with such assignment,  deliver the certificates to the depositor in exchange for
the assets comprising the trust fund for such series.  Each Qualified Asset will
be  identified in a schedule  appearing as an exhibit to the related  Agreement.
The schedule will include detailed information

            (1)  in respect of each Qualified Loan included in the trust
                 fund, including:

                  - the address of the related mortgaged property and type of
                    such property;

                  - the mortgage interest rate and, if applicable, the
                    applicable index, margin, adjustment date and any rate
                    cap information;

                  - the original and remaining term to maturity; and

                  - the original and outstanding principal balance; and

            (2)  in respect of each QMBS included in the trust fund,
                 including:

                  - the QMBS Issuer, QMBS Servicer and QMBS Trustee;

                  - the pass-through or bond rate or formula for determining
                    the pass-through or bond rate;

                  - the issue date and original and remaining term to
                    maturity, if applicable;

                  - the original and outstanding principal amount; and

                  - payment provisions, if applicable.

      With  respect  to each  Qualified  Loan,  Farmer Mac  Mortgage  Securities
Corporation,  as depositor, will deliver or cause to be delivered to the trustee
or to the  custodian  hereinafter  referred to,  certain loan  documents.  These
documents  will,  unless the  Qualified  Loan is  evidenced  by a  participation
certificate, include:

                 -the original mortgage note endorsed, without recourse, in
                  blank or to the order of the trustee,

                 -the original mortgage (or a certified copy thereof) with
                  evidence of recording indicated thereon, and

                 -an assignment of the mortgage to the trustee in recordable
                  form.

The  related  Agreements  will  require  that  Farmer  Mac  Mortgage  Securities
Corporation,  as depositor,  or another party specified therein,  promptly cause
each assignment of mortgage to be recorded in the appropriate  public office for
real property records.

      The trustee or a custodian will review the Qualified Loan documents within
a specified  period of days after  receiving  them. The trustee or the custodian
will then hold the  Qualified  Loan  documents  in trust for the  benefit of the
holders of certificates.  If any document is found to be missing or defective in
any material  respect,  the trustee or custodian  shall  immediately  notify the
Seller in writing.  If the Seller  cannot cure the  omission or defect  within a
specified  number of days after receipt of such notice,  then the Seller will be
obligated,  within a  specified  number of days of  receipt of such  notice,  to
repurchase  the related  Qualified  Loan from the trustee at the Purchase  Price
(defined below in "Representations and Warranties;  Repurchases") or replace the
Qualified Loan with an eligible substitute Qualified Loan.

      With  respect  to each QMBS in  certificated  form,  Farmer  Mac  Mortgage
Securities Corporation,  as depositor,  will deliver or cause to be delivered to
the trustee or the  custodian,  the  original  certificate  or other  definitive
evidence  of  such  QMBS  together  with  a bond  power  or  other  instruments,
certifications or documents  required to transfer fully such QMBS to the trustee
for the  benefit of the holders of  certificates.  The  related  Agreement  will
require  that either the  depositor  or the trustee  promptly  cause any QMBS in
certificated form not registered in the name of the trustee to be re-registered,
with the applicable  persons,  in the name of the trustee.  With respect to each
QMBS  in   uncertificated  or  book-entry  form  or  held  through  a  "clearing
corporation"  within the meaning of the UCC, the  depositor and the trustee will
cause  such QMBS to be  registered  directly  or on the  books of such  clearing
corporation  or of a financial  intermediary  in the name of the trustee for the
benefit of the holders of certificates.

Representations and Warranties; Repurchases

      There will be assigned to the trustee pursuant to each trust agreement the
representations  and warranties of the Seller in the related Sale Agreement,  as
of a specified date covering, by way of example, the following types of matters:

                 -the accuracy of the  information  set forth for each Qualified
                  Loan on the  schedule  of  Qualified  Assets  appearing  as an
                  exhibit to the trust agreement;

                 -the existence of title insurance insuring, or a title
                  opinion assuring, the lien priority of the Qualified Loan;

                 -the authority of the Seller to sell the Qualified Loan;

                 -the  payment  status of the  Qualified  Loan and the status of
                  payments of taxes, assessments and other charges affecting the
                  related mortgaged property;

                 -the status of such Qualified Loan as a "Qualified  Loan" under
                  Farmer  Mac's  charter  and  its  conformity  in all  material
                  respects with Farmer Mac's program guides; and

                 -the existence of customary  provisions in the related mortgage
                  note and  mortgage  that permits the holder of the mortgage to
                  obtain  marketable  title to the  mortgaged  property upon the
                  borrower's default.

      Unless otherwise specified in the related Sale Agreement,  in the event of
a material  breach of any such  representation  or warranty,  the related Seller
will be  obligated  either to cure such  breach in all  material  respects or to
repurchase or replace the affected  Qualified Loan as described  below.  Because
the  representations  and warranties  will not usually address events that occur
following  the date as of which  they were made,  the  Seller  will have a cure,
repurchase or  substitution  obligation  in  connection  with a breach of such a
representation  and warranty only if the relevant  event that causes such breach
occurs prior to the date as of which the  representations  and  warranties  were
made (usually the date it sells the Qualified Loan to the depositor). The Seller
would have no such  obligation  if the  relevant  event that  causes such breach
occurs after that date.

      The Agreements  will provide that the master  servicer and/or trustee will
be  required  to  notify  promptly  the  relevant  Seller  of any  breach of any
representation  or  warranty  it  made  in  respect  of a  Qualified  Loan  that
materially  and  adversely  affects  the  value  of such  Qualified  Loan or the
interests therein of the holders of certificates. If the Seller cannot cure such
breach within a specified  period following the date on which it was notified of
such breach, then the Seller will be obligated to repurchase such Qualified Loan
from the trustee within a specified period from the date on which the Seller was
notified of such breach,  at the Purchase  Price.  For any Qualified  Loan,  the
"Purchase Price" is equal to the sum of the loan's unpaid principal balance plus
unpaid accrued interest  thereon at the mortgage  interest rate from the date as
to which  interest  was last paid to the due date in the Due Period in which the
purchase is to occur, plus certain  servicing  expenses that are reimbursable to
the master servicer and central servicer.  A Seller's  repurchase of a Qualified
Loan may also  include  payment of a  prepayment  premium  or yield  maintenance
charge to the extent described in the related prospectus  supplement.  A Seller,
rather than repurchase a Qualified Loan as to which a breach has occurred,  will
have the option if so specified in the related prospectus supplement, within two
years after initial issuance of the related series of certificates, to cause the
removal of such  Qualified  Loan from the trust fund and substitute in its place
one or more other Qualified  Loans, in accordance with standards  established by
Farmer Mac to assure that any such  substitution  will not materially  alter the
characteristics of the trust fund.

      Neither Farmer Mac Mortgage Securities  Corporation nor Farmer Mac will be
obligated to purchase or substitute for a Qualified Loan if a Seller defaults on
its  obligation  to do so. No assurance can be given that Sellers will carry out
their obligations with respect to Qualified Loans. Any resultant loss to a trust
fund that would result in a deficiency in any required  distribution  to holders
of certificates  will be covered by Farmer Mac's guarantee.  Therefore,  holders
will  suffer no loss of  principal  or  accrued  interest  by reason of any such
Seller  default.  However,  Farmer Mac's guarantee does not extend to prepayment
premiums  or yield  maintenance  charges if a Seller was  obligated  to pay such
amounts as part of the Purchase Price.

      The Seller will,  with respect to a trust fund that  includes  QMBS,  make
certain  representations or warranties,  as of a specified date, with respect to
such QMBS, covering

                 -the accuracy of the information set forth for such QMBS on
                  the schedule of Qualified Assets appearing as an exhibit to
                  the related Agreement, and

                 -the authority of the Seller to sell such Qualified Assets.

Collections

      General

      To the extent described in the related prospectus supplement,  the central
servicer  will  deposit all payments and  collections  on the related  Qualified
Assets  into one or more  Collection  Accounts.  Each  Collection  Account  will
consist  only of funds of Farmer Mac and the types of deposits  described  below
for trust funds.  Trust fund  collections  in a  Collection  Account will not be
separated  from those included in other trust funds or from funds of Farmer Mac.
Each Collection  Account must be an account or accounts with any Federal Reserve
Bank or any other depository institution or trust company approved in writing by
Farmer  Mac,  incorporated  under  the laws of the  United  States  or any state
thereof and subject to supervision  and  examination by federal or state banking
authorities  (an  "Eligible   Depository").   Each  Collection  Account  may  be
maintained  as an interest  bearing or a  non-interest  bearing  account and the
funds held therein may be invested pending each succeeding  Certificate  Account
Deposit Date in certain  short-term direct obligations of, and obligations fully
guaranteed  by,  the  United   States,   Farmer  Mac  or  any  other  agency  or
instrumentality  of the  United  States  or any  other  obligation  or  security
approved by Farmer Mac  ("Eligible  Investments").  Any interest or other income
earned  on funds  in a  Collection  Account  will be paid to  Farmer  Mac or the
related central servicer or its designee as additional  servicing  compensation,
as specified in the related servicing contract, and the risk of loss of funds in
a Collection Account resulting from such investments will be borne by Farmer Mac
or such  central  servicer,  as the case may be. The amount of such loss will be
required to be deposited  by Farmer Mac or such central  servicer in the related
Collection Account immediately as realized.

      Deposits

      The central servicer will deposit or cause to be deposited in a Collection
Account the following payments and collections received, or Advances made, by it
with respect to a trust fund:

                 -all payments on account of principal, including principal
                  prepayments, on the Qualified Assets;

                 -all payments on account of interest on the  Qualified  Assets,
                  including any default interest collected,  in each case net of
                  any  portion  thereof   retained  by  a  central  servicer  as
                  servicing compensation;

                 -all proceeds of any insurance policies ("Insurance  Proceeds")
                  to  be  maintained  on  each  mortgaged  property  securing  a
                  Qualified  Loan in the trust fund (to the extent such proceeds
                  are not  applied to the  restoration  or repair of the related
                  mortgaged  property or released to the borrower in  accordance
                  with the normal  servicing  procedures of a central  servicer,
                  subject  to the terms of the  related  mortgage  and  mortgage
                  note)  and  all  other   amounts   received  and  retained  in
                  connection with the  liquidation of defaulted  Qualified Loans
                  in the trust fund, by  foreclosure,  condemnation or otherwise
                  ("Liquidation Proceeds");

                 -any Advances  made by the central  servicer or other entity as
                  described under "Description of the Certificates - Advances in
                  Respect of Delinquencies";

                 -to  the  extent  required  to be  distributed  to  holders  of
                  certificates any amounts representing  prepayment premiums and
                  yield maintenance charges paid by borrowers; and

                 -proceeds from the operation of foreclosed mortgaged properties
                  held in the trust fund ("REO Proceeds").

      Withdrawals

      Generally,  all such  deposits in a  Collection  Account with respect to a
trust fund will, to the exent specified in the prospectus supplement,  be net of
the following amounts to be retained by the central servicer:

                 -amounts to reimburse  the central  servicer  for  unreimbursed
                  amounts  advanced  as  described  under  "Description  of  the
                  Certificates  - Advances  in Respect of  Delinquencies,"  such
                  reimbursement  to be made out of  amounts  received  that were
                  identified  and  applied  by  such  central  servicer  as late
                  collections  on interest on, and principal of, the  particular
                  Qualified Loans with respect to which the Advances were made;

                 -amounts to reimburse the central servicer for unpaid servicing
                  fees  earned  and  certain  unreimbursed   servicing  expenses
                  incurred  with  respect  to  Qualified  Loans  and  properties
                  acquired in respect thereof, such reimbursement to be made out
                  of amounts that represent  Liquidation  Proceeds and Insurance
                  Proceeds  collected  on the  particular  Qualified  Loans  and
                  properties,  and  REO  Proceeds  collected  on the  particular
                  properties,  with  respect to which  such fees were  earned or
                  such expenses were incurred;

                 -amounts to  reimburse  the central  servicer  for any Advances
                  described  above and any servicing  expenses  described  above
                  which, in the central servicer's good faith judgment, will not
                  be recoverable as described  above,  such  reimbursement to be
                  made from amounts collected on other assets in the trust fund;
                  and

                 -to  make  any  other  withdrawals  permitted  by  the  related
                  Agreement and described in the related prospectus supplement.

      On or before the issuance of a series of certificates, Farmer Mac is
required to either

                 -open with an Eligible Depository one or more trust accounts in
                  the name of the trustee  applicable  to the related trust fund
                  (collectively, the "Certificate Account") or

                 -in lieu of maintaining any such account or accounts,  maintain
                  the Certificate Account for the related trust fund by means of
                  appropriate   entries  on  Farmer   Mac's  books  and  records
                  designating  all  amounts  credited  thereto in respect of the
                  related  Qualified  Assets as being held by it for the related
                  holders evidencing beneficial ownership of such trust fund.

If the Certificate Account for any trust fund is maintained by Farmer Mac on its
books as described above, all references herein to deposits and withdrawals from
the  Certificate  Account  shall be deemed to refer to credits and debits to the
related books of Farmer Mac.

      On or before a date (the  "Certificate  Account  Deposit  Date") that, for
each trust fund, will be approximately ten days before each  distribution  date,
the related  central  servicer will be required to withdraw from the  applicable
Collection  Account  and  remit to Farmer  Mac for  deposit  in the  Certificate
Account  all  funds  held  therein  (other  than  amounts   relating  to  future
distribution  dates).  In the event that the amount so  remitted  on or before a
Certificate  Account  Deposit Date is less than the amount to be distributed for
the related distribution date as previously calculated by Farmer Mac, Farmer Mac
is required by the trust agreement to provide an officer's certificate stating

                 -the amount of such insufficiency,

                 -whether  Farmer Mac is certain that funds will be available to
                  it on such  distribution  date in an amount sufficient to cure
                  such  insufficiency  pursuant to its  guarantee of the related
                  certificates  without  the  necessity  of  borrowing  from the
                  United States Treasury, and

                 -in the event borrowing from the United States Treasury will be
                  necessary,  attaching to such officer's  certificate a copy of
                  the  certification  furnished to the Secretary of the Treasury
                  requesting  that  funds  in  the  necessary   amount  be  made
                  available to Farmer Mac on or before such distribution date to
                  satisfy its guarantee obligations.


      Amounts on deposit in the Certificate Account on a distribution date for a
series will be  withdrawn  by Farmer Mac in the amount  required,  to the extent
funds are available therefor, for application as follows:

                 -towards the distribution to holders of certificates in
                  federal funds of the amount to be distributed on such
                  distribution date;

                 -to the reimbursement to Farmer Mac of any amount previously
                  paid by it in respect of such series pursuant to its
                  guarantee of the related certificates;

                 -to the  payment of any portion of the  Guarantee  Fee for such
                  distribution date or any prior  distribution date that has not
                  otherwise been paid; and

                 -to the payment to Farmer Mac of any amounts  remaining  in the
                  Certificate  Account after the withdrawals  referred to above,
                  any such  amounts  being deemed to be payable to Farmer Mac as
                  compensation  for its master  servicing  activities and to the
                  reimbursement  of  expenses   incurred  by  it  in  connection
                  therewith.

Collection and Other Servicing Procedures

      Collection Procedures

      Each  servicing  contract  will  provide that the central  servicer  will,
consistent  with Farmer Mac's program  guides and in accordance  with  customary
industry  standards for  agricultural  mortgage loan servicing,  make reasonable
efforts to collect all payments called for under the terms and provisions of the
Qualified  Loans.  Consistent  with the above,  the central  servicer may in its
discretion waive, postpone, reschedule, modify or otherwise compromise the terms
of  payment  of any  Qualified  Loan so long as any such  waiver,  postponement,
rescheduling,  modification or compromise is not inconsistent with the servicing
contract or is  consented  to in writing in advance by Farmer Mac.  Any required
adjustment  to the  payment  schedule of any  Qualified  Loan as a result of the
foregoing will not affect the computation of the amount due on the  certificates
under the formula applicable thereto, subject to any exceptions set forth in the
related prospectus supplement.

      As part of its servicing activities,  the central servicer may, but is not
required to, enforce any due-on-sale or  due-on-encumbrance  clause contained in
any  mortgage  note or  mortgage,  in  accordance  with the  provisions  of such
mortgage  note or mortgage and in the best  interests of Farmer Mac. In cases in
which the  mortgaged  property is to be  conveyed to a person by a borrower  and
such person enters into an  assumption  agreement or a  substitution  agreement,
pursuant to which a new borrower is substituted for the existing  borrower,  the
central servicer is obligated to certify that

                 -the new borrower qualifies under Farmer Mac's credit
                  underwriting standards,

                 -the Qualified Loan will continue to be secured by a first
                  mortgage lien pursuant to the terms of the mortgage,

                 -no material term of the  Qualified  Loan,  including,  but not
                  limited to, the mortgage  interest rate and any term affecting
                  the amount or timing of payment, will be altered, nor will the
                  term of the Qualified Loan be increased, and

                 -if the  seller/transferor  of the mortgaged  property is to be
                  released from  liability on the Qualified  Loan,  such release
                  will not adversely affect the  collectability of the Qualified
                  Loan.

      Realization Upon Defaulted Qualified Loans

      Subject to the conditions set forth in the servicing contract, the central
servicer is required  to  foreclose  upon or  otherwise  comparably  convert the
ownership of mortgaged  properties  securing such of the Qualified Loans as come
into and  continue in default and as to which no  arrangements  consistent  with
Farmer  Mac's  program  guides  have  been  made for  collection  of  delinquent
payments.

      Borrowers who do not wish to proceed  through  foreclosure  may assign the
deed of their  mortgaged  property  to the trust  fund with the  consent  of the
central  servicer.  The central servicer will then take the appropriate steps to
liquidate the property and pay off the Qualified Loan.

      In the  event  that  title  to  any  mortgaged  property  is  acquired  in
foreclosure  or by  delivery  of a deed  in  lieu of  foreclosure,  the  deed or
certificate of sale will be issued to the trustee or to its nominee on behalf of
holders.  Notwithstanding  any such acquisition of title and cancellation of the
related  Qualified  Loan, such Qualified Loan will be considered for purposes of
calculation  of amounts due on the  certificates  under any  formula  applicable
thereto to be an  outstanding  Qualified  Loan held in the trust fund until such
time as the  mortgaged  property  is sold  and such  Qualified  Loan  becomes  a
liquidated  Qualified  Loan. The central  servicer,  on behalf of Farmer Mac, is
required to use its best efforts to dispose of any mortgaged  property  acquired
by  foreclosure,  deed in lieu  of  foreclosure  or  otherwise  in a  reasonably
expeditious  manner, in accordance with applicable local and environmental  laws
to the extent applicable and consistent,  if applicable,  with the status of the
trust fund as a REMIC.

      The Servicing  Agreements give the related central servicer the option, in
lieu of  foreclosure  (but without any  obligation),  to purchase any  Qualified
Loans that become 90 or more days delinquent for an amount equal to the Purchase
Price.  A  central   servicer's   purchase  of  a  Qualified  Loan  under  these
circumstances  will not  require the  payment of a  prepayment  premium or yield
maintenance charge.

      Compensation and Payment of Expenses

      The  central  servicer  will  receive a fee  payable  out of the  interest
payments  received on each Qualified Loan. The amount of such  compensation with
respect to the  certificates  may decrease as the Qualified Loans amortize,  and
will be affected by principal  prepayments on the Qualified  Loans. In addition,
Farmer Mac, as master  servicer,  may be entitled to compensation for its master
servicing  duties.  The trustee will receive a fee for services  rendered in its
capacity as trustee. Farmer Mac will be responsible for paying the trustee fees.

      The  central  servicer  will,  to the extent  provided  in the  prospectus
supplement,  be entitled to retain, as additional  compensation,  all assumption
fees, late payment charges and other charges (other than prepayment  premiums or
yield  maintenance  charges),  to the extent  collected  from  borrowers  and as
described in the servicing contract,  and may be entitled to retain any earnings
on the  investment  of funds  held by it  pending  remittance  to Farmer Mac for
deposit  in the  Certificate  Account  to the  extent  provided  in the  related
servicing contract.  The central servicer will also be entitled to reimbursement
for  certain  expenses  incurred by it in  connection  with the  liquidation  of
defaulted Qualified Loans including, under certain circumstances,  reimbursement
of  expenditures  incurred in connection  with the  preservation  of the related
mortgaged properties.

      Certain Matters Regarding Farmer Mac

      The trust  agreement  provides  that  Farmer Mac may not  resign  from its
obligations and duties thereunder.

      The trust  agreement  also provides that neither Farmer Mac nor Farmer Mac
Mortgage  Securities  Corporation,  as  depositor,  nor any of their  respective
directors,  officers,  employees or agents will be under any  liability  for any
action  taken or for  refraining  from the  taking of any  action in good  faith
pursuant to the trust agreement, or for errors in judgment;  provided,  however,
that  neither  Farmer  Mac  nor the  depositor  will be  protected  against  any
liability that would otherwise be imposed by reason of willful misfeasance,  bad
faith or  negligence  in the  performance  of duties  or by  reason  of  willful
disregard of obligations and duties thereunder. In addition, the trust agreement
will  provide  that  neither  Farmer  Mac nor the  depositor  will be under  any
obligation  to appear  in,  prosecute  or defend  any legal  action  that is not
incidental to their responsibilities under the trust agreement and that in their
opinion  may  involve  them in any  expense  or  liability.  Farmer  Mac and the
depositor may, however, in their discretion undertake any such legal action that
they may deem necessary or desirable with respect to the trust agreement and the
rights  and duties of the  parties  thereto  and the  interests  of the  holders
thereunder.

Events of Default

      Events of default by Farmer Mac under the trust agreement will consist of:


                 -any  failure  by  Farmer  Mac  to  distribute  to  holders  of
                  certificates  of any  class  in the  related  trust  fund  any
                  distribution  required  to be  made  under  the  terms  of the
                  related trust agreement (including, for this purpose, pursuant
                  to Farmer Mac's  guarantee)  that  continues  unremedied for a
                  period of five days after the date upon which  written  notice
                  of such failure, requiring the same to be remedied, shall have
                  been given to Farmer Mac by the  holders  of  certificates  of
                  such class having  certificate  balances or notional  balances
                  aggregating   not  less  than  5%  of  the  aggregate  of  the
                  certificate  balances  or  notional  balances  of  all  of the
                  certificates of such class,

                 -failure  on the part of Farmer  Mac duly to observe or perform
                  in  any  material  respect  any  other  of  the  covenants  or
                  agreements  on the part of Farmer  Mac in the trust  agreement
                  which  continues  unremedied for a period of 60 days after the
                  date on which written  notice of such  failure,  requiring the
                  same to be  remedied,  shall  have been given to Farmer Mac by
                  the holders of  certificates of any class in the related trust
                  fund  having   certificate   balances  or  notional   balances
                  aggregating  not  less  than  25%  of  the  aggregate  of  the
                  certificate  balances  or  notional  balances  of  all  of the
                  certificates of such class, and

                 -certain   events   of   insolvency,   readjustment   of  debt,
                  marshalling of assets and  liabilities or similar  proceedings
                  regarding Farmer Mac indicating its insolvency or inability to
                  pay its obligations.

Rights Upon Event of Default

      So  long as an  event  of  default  remains  unremedied,  the  holders  of
certificates of any class in the related trust fund having certificate  balances
or  notional  balances  aggregating  not less than 25% of the  aggregate  of the
certificate balances or notional balances of such class may

                 -terminate all  obligations  and duties imposed upon Farmer Mac
                  (other than its  obligations  under  Farmer  Mac's  guarantee)
                  under the trust agreement, and

                 -name and appoint a successor or successors to succeed to
                  and assume all of such obligations and duties.

Such  actions  shall be  effected  by notice in  writing to Farmer Mac and shall
become effective upon receipt of such notice by Farmer Mac and the acceptance of
such appointment by such successor or successors.

Supplemental Agreements

      The parties to the trust agreement may,  without the consent of any of the
holders,  enter into an agreement or other instrument  supplemental to the trust
agreement,  which shall thereafter form a part of the trust agreement,  in order
to:

                 -add to the covenants of Farmer Mac;

                 -evidence the succession of another person or persons to
                  Farmer Mac pursuant to the trust agreement;

                 -eliminate any right reserved to or conferred upon Farmer
                  Mac;


                 -take such action to cure any ambiguity or correct or
                  supplement any provision of the trust agreement; or

                 -modify,  eliminate  or  add  to the  provision  of  the  trust
                  agreement to the extent necessary to maintain the trust fund's
                  tax exempt status under federal and state law.

      With the  consent  of the  holders  of  certificates  of each class in the
related trust fund having certificate balances and notional balances aggregating
not less than 66% of the  aggregate  of the  certificate  balances  or  notional
balances, as applicable, of all of the certificates of such class

                 -compliance by Farmer Mac with any of the terms of the
                  related trust agreement may be waived, or

                 -Farmer Mac may enter into any  supplemental  agreement for the
                  purpose of adding any  provisions to or changing in any manner
                  or eliminating  any of the provisions of such trust  agreement
                  or of modifying in any manner the rights of the holders issued
                  under such trust  agreement;  provided  that no such waiver or
                  supplemental agreement shall:

                 -without the consent of all holders  affected thereby reduce in
                  any   manner   the   amount   of,  or  delay  the  timing  of,
                  distributions that are required to be made on any certificate;
                  or

                 -without the consent of all  holders  (a)  terminate  or modify
                  Farmer Mac's  guarantee  with respect to the  certificates  of
                  such  series,  or (b)  reduce  the  aforesaid  percentages  of
                  certificates,  the holders of which are required to consent to
                  any waiver or any supplemental agreement.

      Notwithstanding the foregoing, the trustee will not be entitled to consent
to any such amendment  without  having first received an opinion of counsel,  to
the extent  applicable,  to the effect  that such  amendment  will not cause the
trust fund to fail to qualify as a REMIC if a REMIC election has been made.

The Trustee

      In each  prospectus  supplement,  we will name the entity that will act as
trustee  for the trust  fund.  Farmer Mac may act as trustee  under the  related
trust  agreement or Farmer Mac may  designate  another  entity to act as trustee
under the related trust agreement. If specified in the prospectus supplement,  a
commercial bank,  national  banking  association,  banking  corporation or trust
company that Farmer Mac may designate as trustee may have a banking relationship
with  Farmer  Mac and its  affiliates  and with  any  central  servicer  and its
affiliates.


Duties of the Trustee

      The trustee will make no representations as to the validity or sufficiency
of any  Agreement,  the  certificates  or any asset in a trust  fund or  related
document and is not  accountable  for the use or  application by or on behalf of
any central servicer or Farmer Mac of any funds paid to such central servicer or
Farmer Mac in respect of the  Qualified  Loans,  or deposited  into or withdrawn
from any Account or any other account by or on behalf of any central servicer or
Farmer Mac. If no event of default has occurred and is  continuing,  the trustee
is required to perform only those duties specifically required under the related
Agreement.  However, upon receipt of the various certificates,  reports or other
instruments  required to be  furnished to it, the trustee is required to examine
such documents and to determine  whether they conform to the requirements of the
Agreement.

Indemnification of the Trustee

      If Farmer Mac is not acting as  trustee,  Farmer Mac shall  indemnify  the
trustee and any  director,  officer,  employee or agent of the trustee  for, and
hold  them  harmless  against,  any loss or  liability  incurred  by any of them
without  negligence or bad faith in connection with the trustee's  acceptance or
administration of the trusts created by the related trust agreement.

Resignation and Removal of the Trustee

      If  Farmer  Mac is not  acting  as  trustee,  the  trustee  under  a trust
agreement may at any time resign and be  discharged  from the trust fund created
by the trust  agreement by giving  written  notice  thereof to Farmer Mac.  Upon
receiving such notice of resignation,  Farmer Mac is required promptly to act as
trustee or appoint a  successor  trustee.  If Farmer Mac does not act as trustee
and no  successor  trustee  shall  have  been so  appointed  and  have  accepted
appointment  within 90 days after the giving of such notice of resignation,  the
resigning  trustee may  petition  any court of  competent  jurisdiction  for the
appointment of a successor trustee.

      If at any  time a  trustee,  other  than  Farmer  Mac,  shall  cease to be
eligible to continue  as such under the related  Agreement,  or if at any time a
trustee  shall  become  incapable  of acting,  or shall be adjudged  bankrupt or
insolvent,  or a receiver of a trustee or of its property shall be appointed, or
any public  officer shall take charge or control of a trustee or of its property
or affairs for the purpose of rehabilitation,  conservation or liquidation, then
Farmer  Mac may  remove the  trustee  and act as trustee or appoint a  successor
trustee.

      Any  resignation  or removal of a trustee and  appointment  of a successor
trustee  shall not become  effective  until  acceptance  of  appointment  by the
successor trustee.

          SELECTED LEGAL ASPECTS OF QUALIFIED LOANS AND OTHER MATTERS


      The following  discussion  contains summaries of selected legal aspects of
mortgage  loans,  including  the  Qualified  Loans,  that are general in nature.
Because these legal aspects are governed in part by applicable  state law, which
laws may differ  substantially,  the summaries do not purport to be complete nor
to reflect the laws of any  particular  state nor to  encompass  the laws of all
states in which the  mortgaged  properties  may be situated.  The  summaries are
qualified in their  entirety by reference  to the  applicable  federal and state
laws  governing the Qualified  Loans.  Because  Farmer Mac guarantees the timely
payment of principal and interest on the  certificates  to holders,  and because
Farmer Mac is  authorized to borrow up to $1.5 billion from the Secretary of the
Treasury,  the impact of any  adverse  effects  described  in the  summaries  of
selected  legal  aspects of the  Qualified  Loans  below is not likely to affect
Farmer Mac's guarantee or distributions to holders.  However, because Farmer Mac
anticipates that its future  contingent  liabilities in respect of guarantees of
outstanding securities will greatly exceed its resources,  including its limited
ability to borrow  from the United  States  Treasury,  it is  possible  that the
adverse effects described below could affect distributions to holders. See "Risk
Factors  Farmer  Mac's  guarantee  of the  timely  payment  of  interest  on and
principal  of each  class  of  certificates  entitled  to  receive  interest  or
principal or interest and principal is limited."

General

      The Qualified Loans will be evidenced by promissory notes,  which we refer
to as  mortgage  notes,  and  secured  by  either  deeds of trust or  mortgages,
depending  upon the  prevailing  practice  in the  state in which  the  property
subject to a Qualified Loan is located.  A mortgage creates a lien upon the real
property  encumbered  by the  mortgage.  Foreclosure  of a mortgage is generally
accomplished  by judicial  action.  Foreclosure  of a deed of trust is generally
accomplished by a non-judicial  trustee's sale under a specific provision in the
deed of trust that  authorizes the trustee to sell the property to a third party
upon any default by the  borrower  under the terms of the note or deed of trust.
In some  states,  after sale  pursuant  to a deed of trust or  foreclosure  of a
mortgage,  the  borrower  and  foreclosed  junior  lienors are given a statutory
period in which to redeem the property from the foreclosure  sale. The effect of
a statutory right of redemption is to diminish the ability of the lender to sell
the foreclosed  property in a timely manner.  Some states have imposed statutory
prohibitions that limit the remedies of a beneficiary under a deed of trust or a
mortgagee  under a mortgage.  In some  states,  statutes  limit the right of the
beneficiary  or mortgagee to obtain a deficiency  judgment  against the borrower
following foreclosure or sale under a deed of trust.

      In addition to laws limiting or prohibiting deficiency judgments, numerous
other statutory provisions, including the federal bankruptcy laws and state laws
affording  relief to debtors,  may  interfere  with or affect the ability of the
secured  mortgage  lender to realize  upon  collateral  or enforce a  deficiency
judgment.  In addition,  the terms of a mortgage loan secured by property of the
debtor may be modified in a federal  bankruptcy  case. These  modifications  may
include  reducing  the amount of each  periodic  payment,  changing  the rate of
interest,  extending or otherwise altering the repayment schedule,  and reducing
the lender's security interest to the value of the collateral,  thus leaving the
lender a general unsecured  creditor for the difference between the value of the
collateral and the outstanding  balance of the loan. The federal Bankruptcy Code
also  includes  provisions  under  which a "family  farmer with  regular  annual
income" is permitted to file and obtain  confirmation  of a plan on an expedited
basis, and protections for such debtors that are not available to other types of
debtors.  Federal  bankruptcy laws and applicable  state laws may also limit the
ability to enforce any assignment by a borrower of rents and leases related to a
mortgaged property.


      The Internal Revenue Code provides  priority to certain tax liens over the
lien of a mortgage.  In  addition,  substantive  requirements  are imposed  upon
mortgage  lenders in connection  with the  origination and servicing of mortgage
loans by numerous  federal and some state consumer  protection  laws. These laws
include the federal Truth-in-Lending Act, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act,
Equal Credit Opportunity Act, Fair Credit Billing Act, Fair Credit Reporting Act
and related statutes.  These federal laws impose specific statutory  liabilities
upon  lenders  who  originate  mortgage  loans and who fail to  comply  with the
provisions of the law. In some cases, this liability may affect assignees of the
mortgage loans.

Borrower's Rights Laws Applicable to Agricultural Mortgage Loans

      Farm Credit Act

      In general,  borrowers with loans,  including mortgage loans, from lenders
which are  institutions of the Farm Credit System,  are entitled to rights under
sections 4.14,  4.14A,  4.14B,  4.14C,  4.14D and 4.36 of the Farm Credit Act of
1971,  as  amended  (12  U.S.C.  section  2001 et seq.).  These  rights  include
restructuring  and  favorable  treatment of certain  borrower  money held by the
lender in case of the liquidation of the lender.  Section 8.9 of the Farm Credit
Act  provides  that the rights as conferred  under such  sections  4.14,  4.14A,
4.14B, 4.14C, 4.14D and 4.36 are not applicable to any Qualified Loan.

      State Laws

      Some states have enacted  legislation  granting  rights to borrowers under
agricultural mortgage loans. These rights may include, among others:

                 -restructuring of loans,
                 -mediation prior to foreclosure,
                 -moratoria on foreclosures or payments,
                 -access by a dispossessed borrower to previously planted
                  crops,
                 -redemption provisions that are more favorable to farm
                  borrowers than to other commercial borrowers, and
                 -restrictions on disposition of agricultural property
                  acquired through foreclosure.

Section 8.6(b)(5) of Farmer Mac's charter specifically provides that such rights
apply to Qualified  Loans.  Section  8.6(b)(5)  allows a Seller or Farmer Mac to
require  discounts  or charge  fees  reasonably  related  to costs and  expenses
arising from such borrowers'  rights provisions but prohibits a Seller or Farmer
Mac from refusing to purchase such Qualified Loans.

      Sellers  will  represent  and  warrant  in the Sale  Agreements  that each
Qualified Loan was originated in compliance  with  applicable  state laws in all
material  respects and that no homestead  exemption is available to the borrower
unless  the value of the  portion of the  mortgaged  property  not  subject to a
homestead  exemption would result in a current  loan-to-value  ratio of not more
than 70%.


Environmental Regulation

      Real property pledged as a security to a lender may be subject to known or
unforeseen  environmental  risks.  Of particular  concern may be those mortgaged
properties  that have been the site of  manufacturing,  industrial  or  disposal
activity. Such environmental risks may give rise to:

            (1)  a diminution in value of the mortgaged property or the
                 inability to foreclose against such property or

            (2)  in some cases,  as more fully  described  below,  liability for
                 clean-up costs or other remedial actions, which liability could
                 exceed the value of such property or the Qualified Loan related
                 to such property.

      Under  the  Comprehensive   Environmental  Response,   Compensation,   and
Liability  Act,  which  is  also  known  as  CERCLA,  as  amended  by the  Asset
Conservation,  Lender Liability, and Deposit Insurance Protection Act of 1996, a
lender may be liable as an "owner or operator" for costs of addressing  releases
or threatened  releases of hazardous  substances on a mortgaged property if such
lender or its agents or employees have  "participated  in the management" of the
operations of the borrower,  even though the environmental  damage or threat was
caused by a prior owner or other third party.  Excluded from CERCLA's definition
of "owner or  operator,"  however,  is a person "who is a lender  that,  without
participating  in the  management  of a vessel or  facility,  holds  indicia  of
ownership primarily to protect the security interest of the person in the vessel
or facility" (the "secured creditor exemption"). This exemption for holders of a
security  interest such as a secured lender applies only when the lender acts in
a manner that is consistent with the protection of its security  interest in the
contaminated  facility or  property.  Thus,  if a lender's  activities  begin to
encroach on the  interest in the  contaminated  facility  or  property,  and the
lender  actively  participates  in the  management  of the  facility in a manner
inconsistent  with activities  necessary to protect his security  interest,  the
lender  faces  potential  liability  as an "owner  or  operator"  under  CERCLA.
Similarly,  when a lender forecloses and takes title to a contaminated  facility
or property  (unless  the  foreclosure  and any  subsequent  disposition  of the
facility or property are primarily for the protection of the security interest),
the  lender   may  incur   CERCLA   liability   if  the   foreclosing   lender's
post-foreclosure   actions  exceed  the  parameters  of  the  secured   creditor
exemption.

      A decision  in May 1990 of the  United  States  Court of  Appeals  for the
Eleventh  Circuit in United  States v. Fleet Factors  Corp.  construed  CERCLA's
original exemption for secured creditors.  The court held that a lender need not
have  involved   itself  in  the  day-to-day   operations  of  the  facility  or
participated  in  decisions  relating  to the  use,  handling,  or  disposal  of
hazardous waste to be liable under CERCLA;  rather,  liability could attach to a
lender if its  involvement  with the management of the facility was broad enough
to support  the  inference  that the lender had the  capacity to  influence  the
borrower's  treatment  of  hazardous  waste.  The court  added  that a  lender's
capacity to influence  such  decisions  could be inferred from the extent of its
involvement in the facility's financial management.


      The United States  Environmental  Protection  Agency sought to clarify and
limit the effects of Fleet Factors by issuing a Final Rule delineating the range
of  permissible  actions that may be  undertaken  by a holder of a  contaminated
facility  without  exceeding  the  bounds  of  the  secured-creditor  exemption.
However,  that rule was  vacated by the United  States  Court of Appeals for the
District of  Columbia  on  February 4, 1994 on the grounds  that the EPA did not
have the authority to issue rules interpreting any terms contained in CERCLA.

      In September 1996,  Congress  amended CERCLA,  as noted above, in order to
clarify whether and under what circumstances clean-up costs or the obligation to
take  remedial  actions  could be imposed on a secured  lender such as the trust
fund.  However,  the  amendment,  which is  intended  to  relieve  lenders  from
liability under CERCLA if they did not  "participate in management," has not yet
been tested by the courts.  Moreover,  the EPA has  announced  its  intention to
challenge  certain aspects of the amendment on the grounds that Congress did not
fully or accurately codify the EPA's lender liability rule, although the EPA has
not yet challenged  any aspect of the amendment.  It is thus still not clear the
extent to which management  participation  may be undertaken by a lender without
exposing it to the risk of environmental liability.

      If the lender is or becomes  liable for  clean-up  costs,  it may bring an
action for contribution  against the current owners or operators,  the owners or
operators  at the time of  on-site  disposal  activity  or any  other  party who
contributed  to the  environmental  hazard,  but such persons or entities may be
bankrupt or  otherwise  judgment  proof.  Furthermore,  such action  against the
borrower  may be  adversely  affected  by any  limitations  on  recourse  in the
underlying mortgage loans. Similarly, in some states anti-deficiency legislation
and other statutes  requiring the lender to exhaust its security before bringing
an action  against the  borrower-trustor  may curtail  the  lender's  ability to
recover from its borrower the environmental clean-up and other related costs and
liabilities incurred by the lender.

      Some states have enacted legislation similar to CERCLA,  which gives those
states the legal  authority to impose a lien for any cleanup  costs  incurred by
such state on the property  that is the subject of such cleanup  costs (a "State
Environmental  Lien"). All subsequent liens on such property are subordinated to
such State Environmental Lien and, in some states, even prior recorded liens are
subordinated  to such  State  Environmental  Liens.  In the latter  states,  the
security  interest of the trustee in a property  that is subject to such a State
Environmental  Lien could be adversely  affected.  Each servicing  contract will
provide that title to a mortgaged  property securing a defaulted  Qualified Loan
shall not be taken by the trust fund if the  central  servicer  determines  that
cleanup  costs would exceed the  potential  recovery  upon  liquidation  of such
Qualified Loan.

Enforceability of Certain Provisions

      General


      Upon foreclosure,  courts have imposed general equitable principles. These
equitable  principles  are  generally  designed to relieve the borrower from the
legal  effect of his  defaults  under the loan  documents.  Examples of judicial
remedies that have been fashioned include judicial  requirements that the lender
undertake  affirmative  and  expensive  actions to determine  the causes for the
borrower's  default  and  the  likelihood  that  the  borrower  will  be able to
reinstate the loan. In some cases,  courts have  substituted  their judgment for
the lender's  judgment and have required that lenders  reinstate loans or recast
payment  schedules in order to  accommodate  borrowers  who are  suffering  from
temporary financial disability. In other cases, courts have limited the right of
the lender to foreclose  if the default  under the  mortgage  instrument  is not
monetary,  such as the borrower  failing to adequately  maintain the property or
the  borrower  executing  a  second  mortgage  or deed of  trust  affecting  the
property.  Finally, some courts have been faced with the issue of whether or not
federal or state constitutional  provisions  reflecting due process concerns for
adequate notice require that borrowers under deeds of trust or mortgages receive
notices in addition to the statutorily  prescribed  minimum.  For the most part,
these cases have upheld the notice  provisions as being reasonable or have found
that the sale by a trustee under a deed of trust,  or under a mortgage  having a
power of sale, does not involve sufficient state action to afford constitutional
protection to the borrower.

      Due-on-Sale Clauses

      Some or all of the  Qualified  Loans in a trust fund,  as set forth in the
related prospectus  supplement,  may contain due-on-sale clauses.  These clauses
permit the lender to accelerate the maturity of the loan if the borrower  sells,
transfers or conveys the property.  The enforceability of these clauses has been
the subject of legislation  or litigation in many states,  and in some cases the
enforceability of these clauses was limited or denied.  Federal legislation that
overrides  state laws  restricting  the  enforceability  of due-on-sale  clauses
applies only to mortgage loans secured by a residence  occupied by the borrower.
Similar  state laws may restrict the  enforceability  of any  due-on-encumbrance
provisions contained in the Qualified Loans.

      Any  inability to enforce a  due-on-sale  clause may result in a Qualified
Loan bearing an interest  rate below the current  market rate being assumed by a
new purchaser of the mortgaged  property  rather than being paid off,  which may
have an impact upon the average  life of the  Qualified  Loans and the number of
Qualified Loans which may be outstanding until maturity.

Applicability of Usury Laws

      Section 8.12(d) of Farmer Mac's charter  expressly  excludes any Qualified
Loan Farmer Mac Mortgage  Securities  Corporation  purchases  within 180 days of
such Qualified Loan's date of origination from any provision of the constitution
or law of any state  that  expressly  limits  the rate or  amount  of  interest,
discount  points,   financial  charges,   or  other  charges,   including  yield
maintenance  charges  and  prepayment  premiums,  that  may be  charged,  taken,
received, or reserved.

                   MATERIAL FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES

      The  following  summary of the  anticipated  material  federal  income tax
consequences of the purchase, ownership and disposition of certificates is based
on the advice of Andrews & Kurth L.L.P., counsel to the Depositor.  This summary
is based on laws,  regulations,  including the REMIC regulations  promulgated by
the Treasury Department, rulings and decisions now in effect or (with respect to
regulations)  proposed,  all of which are subject to change either prospectively
or  retroactively.  Andrews  & Kurth  L.L.P.  will  deliver  an  opinion  to the
Depositor that the information set forth under this caption,  "Material  Federal
Income Tax  Consequences,"  to the extent that it constitutes  matters of law or
legal conclusions,  is correct in all material  respects.  This summary does not
address the federal  income tax  consequences  of an investment in  certificates
applicable to all categories of investors, some of which (for example, banks and
insurance  companies)  may be subject to special  rules.  Prospective  investors
should consult their tax advisors  regarding the federal,  state,  local and any
other tax  consequences  to them of the purchase,  ownership and  disposition of
certificates.

General

      The federal  income tax  consequences  to holders  will vary  depending on
whether an  election is made to treat the trust fund  relating  to a  particular
series  of  certificates  as a  REMIC  under  the  Internal  Revenue  Code.  The
prospectus  supplement for each series of  certificates  will specify  whether a
REMIC election will be made.

Grantor Trust Funds

      If a REMIC election is not made,  Andrews & Kurth L.L.P.  will deliver its
opinion that the trust fund will be  classified as a grantor trust under subpart
E, Part I of  subchapter  J of chapter 1 of subtitle A of the  Internal  Revenue
Code, and not as an association taxable as a corporation. Accordingly, owners of
certificates generally will be treated for federal income tax purposes as owners
of a portion of the trust fund's assets,  as described below. In this portion of
this summary  (under the caption  "Material  Federal  Income Tax  Consequences -
Grantor Trust  Funds"),  the  certificates  offered by this  prospectus  will be
referred to as "Grantor Trust  Certificates," and the term "Qualified Loan" will
be used to refer to the Qualified Loans  (including for this purpose  Guaranteed
Portions)  held by a trust fund as well as the  mortgage  loans  underlying  any
Qualified Assets (other than Qualified Loans) held by a trust fund.

      a.    Single Class of Grantor Trust Certificates

      Characterization  and General Rules.  The trust fund may be created with a
single class of Grantor  Trust  Certificates  relating to each Pool of Qualified
Assets  comprising the trust fund. In this case,  each holder of a Grantor Trust
Certificate  will be treated as the owner of a pro rata  undivided  interest  in
each of the Qualified Assets in the related Pool.


      Each holder of a Grantor Trust  Certificate  will be required to report on
its federal  income tax  return,  in  accordance  with such  holder's  method of
accounting, its pro rata share of the entire income from the Qualified Assets in
the trust fund represented by Grantor Trust  Certificates,  including  interest,
original issue discount ("OID"),  if any,  prepayment fees,  assumption fees and
any late payment charges received by the master  servicer.  Any amounts received
by a holder in lieu of amounts due with respect to any  Qualified  Asset because
of a default or  delinquency in payment should be treated for federal income tax
purposes  as having the same  character  as the  payments  they  replace.  Under
sections 162 or 212 of the Internal Revenue Code, each holder of a Grantor Trust
Certificate  will be  entitled to deduct its pro rata share of  servicing  fees,
prepayment fees, assumption fees, any loss recognized upon an assumption and any
late payment charges retained by the master servicer,  the central  servicers or
any  subservicer  (collectively,  "Servicers"),  provided  that such amounts are
reasonable  compensation  for  services  rendered by the  Servicers to the trust
fund.  Holders of Grantor Trust  Certificates  that are individuals,  estates or
trusts will be entitled to deduct  their share of the expenses of the trust fund
as itemized  deductions only to the extent such expenses plus all other Internal
Revenue Code section 212  expenses  incurred by such holders  exceed 2% of their
adjusted gross income. In addition,  the amount of itemized deductions otherwise
allowable  to an  individual  whose  adjusted  gross  income for a taxable  year
exceeds an amount  specified  in the  Internal  Revenue  Code  (which  amount is
adjusted each year for inflation) will be reduced by the lesser of (i) 3% of the
excess of adjusted  gross  income over the  specified  amount or (ii) 80% of the
amount of itemized  deductions  otherwise  allowable  for such  taxable  year. A
holder using the cash method of accounting  generally must take into account its
pro rata  share of income  and  deductions  of the  trust  fund as and when such
income  is  collected  by the trust  fund or the  expenses  giving  rise to such
deductions  are paid by the trust  fund.  A holder  using an  accrual  method of
accounting must take into account its pro rata share of income and deductions of
the trust fund as they become due to, or are paid by, the trust fund,  whichever
is earlier.

      Note that if the  servicing  fees paid to the Servicers are treated by the
Internal Revenue Service as exceeding a reasonable compensation for the services
provided by the  Servicers,  the amount of such excess would be considered as an
ownership  interest  retained by the Servicers (or any person to whom a Servicer
assigned for value all or a portion of the  servicing  fees) in a portion of the
interest payments on the Qualified Loans. In that event, the trust fund would be
treated as having  issued  more than one class of  interests  in each Pool,  the
rules described in the preceding paragraph would not apply to holders of Grantor
Trust Certificates,  and instead,  the rules described below under " b. Multiple
Classes of Grantor Trust Certificates" would apply.

      Original Issue Discount.  The IRS has stated in published rulings that the
rules of the Internal Revenue Code relating to OID and the Treasury  regulations
implementing  such rules (the "OID  Regulations")  are applicable to a holder of
Grantor Trust  Certificates'  interest in those Qualified Loans issued with OID.
These rules are applicable to mortgages of corporations originated after May 27,
1969, mortgages of non-corporate  mortgagors (other than individuals) originated
after July 1, 1982, and mortgages of individuals originated after March 2, 1984.
As discussed in more detail below,  under the OID rules,  OID generally  must be
reported as ordinary  gross income as it accrues under a constant  yield method;
thus in the event that a Pool  contains  one or more  Qualified  Loans that were
issued with OID, holders of Grantor Trust Certificates relating to that Pool may
recognize  income in advance of the  receipt  of the cash  associated  with such
income.  In the case of the  Qualified  Loans,  OID could arise by  financing of
points or other  charges by the  originator  of such Loans in an amount  greater
than a statutory  de minimis  amount,  to the extent that the points are not for
services  provided  by the  lender.  OID could also arise if the  interest  rate
structure of a Qualified  Loan  includes a "teaser"  rate.  In addition,  a Pool
could contain  Qualified  Assets that constitute  "stripped  bonds" or "stripped
coupons,"  within the meaning of section 1286 of the Internal  Revenue Code, and
each of those kinds of  instruments  could be treated  under that section of the
Internal Revenue Code as bearing OID.


      Each Qualified  Loan  underlying  the Grantor Trust  Certificates  will be
treated as having  been issued on the date it was  originated  with an amount of
OID equal to the excess of such  Qualified  Loan's "stated  redemption  price at
maturity" over its "issue price." The "stated redemption price at maturity" of a
Qualified  Loan is the sum of all  payments  to be made on such  Qualified  Loan
other than  payments that are treated as "qualified  stated  interest"  payments
(generally,  payments  of interest at a single  fixed or variable  rate  payable
unconditionally  at least  annually).  The "issue price" of a Qualified  Loan is
generally the amount lent to the  mortgagor,  which may be adjusted to take into
account  certain  loan  origination  fees.  If the excess of a Qualified  Loan's
stated  redemption  price at maturity over its issue price is less than 0.25% of
the stated  redemption  price at maturity  multiplied  by the number of complete
years to maturity  of the  Qualified  Loan (in the case of a Qualified  Loan the
principal of which is payable in more than one installment, the weighted average
maturity of the Qualified Loan is  substituted  for the number of complete years
to maturity)  (the "de minimis  amount"),  the Qualified  Loan is treated as not
bearing OID.

      Generally, the holder of a Grantor Trust Certificate must include in gross
income  the  sum of the  "daily  portions"  of the  OID on the  Qualified  Loans
underlying such Grantor Trust Certificate for each day on which such holder owns
the Grantor  Trust  Certificate.  "Daily  portions"  are  generally  computed by
determining  the amount of OID accruing  during each  "accrual  period" and then
dividing such amount by the number of days in such accrual  period.  An "accrual
period" is generally the period of time between payment dates. The amount of OID
that accrues during any accrual period is generally the product of the "yield to
maturity" of the Qualified Loan and its "adjusted  issue price" at the beginning
of such  accrual  period less any  qualified  stated  interest  allocable to the
accrual  period.  The "yield to maturity" of a Qualified  Loan is generally  the
interest rate that,  when used to compute the present values of all the payments
due  under  the  Qualified  Loan as of its issue  date,  causes  the sum of such
present  values to equal the issue price of such  Qualified  Loan. The "adjusted
issue  price" of a Qualified  Loan as of the  beginning  of any  accrual  period
generally  equals  the  issue  price of such  Qualified  Loan,  plus all the OID
previously accrued on such Qualified Loan, minus all payments previously made on
such Qualified Loan, other than payments of qualified  stated  interest.  In the
event that a Qualified Loan has an initial accrual period longer or shorter than
the regular accrual period for such Qualified Loan, appropriate  adjustments are
made to take into account such longer or shorter period.

      Section  1272(a)(6) of the Internal Revenue Code provides that in the case
of an  instrument,  the  payments  on which  may be  accelerated  by  reason  of
prepayments on other obligations securing such instrument, OID computations must
take into account a "prepayment  assumption" (the "Prepayment Assumption Rule").
As a result of  amendments to the Internal  Revenue Code in 1997,  effective for
tax years  beginning  after  August 5,  1997,  the  Internal  Revenue  Code also
requires the use of the Prepayment  Assumption Rule in the computation of OID in
the case of "any pool of debt  instruments the yield on which may be affected by
reason of prepayments (or to the extent  provided in  regulations,  by reason of
other events)." This provision  appears to apply the Prepayment  Assumption Rule
to computations of OID with respect to all Grantor Trust Certificates, including
Grantor Trust  Certificates  issued by a trust fund as part of a single class of
certificates.  Because the relevant  legislative  history  contains very limited
guidance as to how the provision is meant to work, it is uncertain whether,  and
if so, how, the provision will be applicable to Grantor Trust  Certificates.  In
the absence of clear  authority,  the master servicer does not intend to compute
OID on Grantor Trust  Certificates  that are issued as part of a single class of
certificates  in  accordance  with the  Prepayment  Assumption  Rule.  Potential
investors  should  consult their own tax advisors  regarding the  application of
this provision of the Internal Revenue Code.


      Market  Discount.  The price  paid for a Grantor  Trust  Certificate  by a
holder will be allocated to such holder's  undivided  interest in each Qualified
Loan in the related Pool based on each  Qualified  Loan's  relative  fair market
value, so that such holder's undivided interest in each Qualified Loan will have
its own tax basis.  To the  extent  that a  holder's  tax basis in an  undivided
interest in a Qualified  Loan is less than such holder's  share of the principal
amount of such  Qualified  Loan (or, if such Qualified Loan was issued with OID,
the adjusted  issue price of such  Qualified  Loan),  such Qualified Loan may be
considered to have been purchased at a "market  discount," subject to the market
discount rules of Internal Revenue Code sections 1276-1278.  The market discount
rules  provide that if the amount of market  discount with respect to a holder's
interest in a Qualified  Loan exceeds a  statutorily-defined  de minimis  amount
(described below),  gain on disposition of the Qualified Loan and the receipt of
any  principal  payment on such  Qualified  Loan  (whether  scheduled or not) is
taxable as ordinary  income to the extent of the amount of market  discount that
has  accrued  (but has not been  included in income) as of the time such gain is
recognized  or such  principal  payment is  received.  Holders of Grantor  Trust
Certificates  will be entitled to elect to include market discount  currently as
it accrues,  rather than upon disposition or receipt of a principal payment,  in
which case such election  generally would apply to all debt  instruments  (i.e.,
not only to interests in Qualified  Loans)  acquired by such holders  during the
year in which such election is made and in all subsequent years.

      The  method of  accruing  market  discount  in the case of  Grantor  Trust
Certificates,  which  represent  interests in Qualified  Loans,  is not entirely
clear.  The Internal  Revenue Code grants the Treasury  Department  authority to
issue  regulations  providing for the method of accruing market discount on debt
instruments,  such as the Qualified  Loans, the principal of which is payable in
more than one  installment.  Since the  Treasury  Department  has not yet issued
those regulations,  rules described in the relevant  legislative  history should
apply.  Under those  rules,  the holder of a market  discount  bond may elect to
accrue  market  discount  either  on the  basis of a  constant  yield  method or
according to one of the following  methods:  (a)in the case of a Qualified  Loan
issued with OID, the amount of market  discount that accrues  during any accrual
period would be equal to the product of (i)the total  remaining  market discount
and (ii)a fraction, the numerator of which is the OID accruing during the period
and the  denominator of which is the total remaining OID at the beginning of the
accrual  period;  or (b)in the case of a Qualified Loan not issued with OID, the
amount of market  discount that accrues  during a period is equal to the product
of (i)the total remaining market discount and (ii) a fraction,  the numerator of
which is the amount of stated  interest  paid during the accrual  period and the
denominator of which is the total amount of stated interest remaining to be paid
at the beginning of the accrual  period.  Because the  regulations  implementing
these rules have not been issued,  it is impossible to predict what effect those
regulations  might have on the tax treatment of a Grantor Trust  Certificate (or
the underlying Qualified Loans) purchased at a discount in the secondary market.

      A holder who acquires a Grantor Trust Certificate  (i.e., an interest in a
Qualified  Loan) at a market discount also may be required to defer a portion of
its interest  deductions for the taxable year  attributable to any  indebtedness
incurred  or  continued  to purchase or carry such  Grantor  Trust  Certificate,
unless the holder makes the election  described above to include market discount
currently as it accrues. Holders that incur or continue indebtedness to purchase
or carry their Grantor Trust  Certificates  should consult their tax advisors as
to the proper application of this rule.

      If the amount of market  discount  on a holder's  interest  in a Qualified
Loan is less  than an  amount  equal to 0.25% of such  holder's  portion  of the
Qualified Loan's stated redemption price at maturity multiplied by the number of
complete years to maturity  remaining after the date of purchase  (i.e.,  the de
minimis amount),  the market discount on that interest will be not be subject to
the rules  described  above.  In the case of a Qualified  Loan the  principal of
which is payable in more than one  installment,  while it is not  certain due to
the  absence  of  applicable  authority,  by  analogy  to the  OID  rules,  that
computation  should be made by substituting the weighted average maturity of the
Qualified  Loan for the number of complete  years to  maturity of the  Qualified
Loan.

      Treasury  regulations  implementing the market discount rules have not yet
been  issued;  therefore,  holders of Grantor  Trust  Certificates  are urged to
consult their own tax advisors  regarding the application of these rules and the
advisability of making any of the elections allowed under these rules.

      Premium. In the event a holder of a Grantor Trust Certificate  acquires an
interest in a Qualified Loan at an  "acquisition  premium,"  i.e., for an amount
greater than the Qualified  Loan's then  adjusted  issue price but less than the
sum of the remaining  payments due on the Qualified Loan (other than payments of
qualified stated  interest),  the holder will be entitled to offset a portion of
the OID that  accrues  in each  subsequent  accrual  period by a portion of that
excess.

      In the event a holder of a Grantor Trust Certificate  acquires an interest
in a Qualified  Loan at a premium  (i.e.,  for an amount greater than the sum of
the  remaining  payments  due on the  Qualified  Loan,  other than  payments  of
qualified stated interest),  the holder may elect to amortize such premium under
a constant yield method,  provided that such Qualified Loan was originated after
September  27, 1985.  Amortized  premium under these rules will be treated as an
offset  to  interest  income  on such  Qualified  Loan,  and the tax basis of an
interest  in a  Qualified  Loan will be reduced to the extent  that  amortizable
premium is applied to offset interest payments. A holder that elects to amortize
premium  under  these  rules will be deemed to have made an election to amortize
premium with  respect to all debt  instruments  (i.e.,  not only with respect to
interests in Qualified  Loans) having  amortizable bond premium that such holder
holds during the year of the election or acquires thereafter.  Premium allocable
to  Qualified  Loans  originated  on or before  September  27,  1985,  should be
allocated among the principal payments on such Qualified Loans and allowed as an
ordinary deduction as principal payments are made.


      Election to Treat All  Interest  as OID.  The OID  Regulations  permit the
holder of a Grantor Trust Certificate to elect to accrue all interest,  discount
(including de minimis market or original  issue  discount) and premium in income
as interest,  based on a constant  yield method.  If such an election were to be
made with respect to a Grantor  Trust  Certificate  representing  an interest in
Qualified  Loans  with  market  discount,  the  holder  of  such  Grantor  Trust
Certificate  would be deemed to have made an election to include market discount
in income  currently  with respect to all other debt  instruments  having market
discount  that  such  holder  acquires  during  the  year  of  the  election  or
thereafter.  Similarly,  a holder that makes this  election for a Grantor  Trust
Certificate that represents an interest in Qualified Loans acquired at a premium
will be deemed to have made an election to amortize  bond  premium on a constant
yield  method  with  respect to all debt  instruments  having  amortizable  bond
premium  that  such  holder  owns in the  year  of the  election  or  thereafter
acquires.  The  election  to accrue  all  interest,  discount  and  premium on a
constant   yield  method  with  respect  to  a  Grantor  Trust   Certificate  is
irrevocable.

      Prepayment Premiums and Yield Maintenance Charges.  Because of the absence
of clear  authority,  it is  uncertain  whether  the  portion of any  prepayment
premium or yield  maintenance  charge  received by any holder of a Grantor Trust
Certificate  should be  treated  as  capital  gain  (assuming  a  Grantor  Trust
Certificate  is held as a capital  asset) or as ordinary  income.  Holders  that
receive  distributions  from a  trust  fund  of  prepayment  premiums  or  yield
maintenance  charges  should  consult  their tax advisors  regarding the taxable
status of such amounts.

      Characterization  of Grantor  Trust  Certificates  with respect to Certain
Holders. As to each series of certificates issued in a single class with respect
to a Pool, Andrews & Kurth L.L.P. will advise the Depositor that:

            (i) a Grantor Trust  Certificate  owned by a real estate  investment
      trust  representing  an interest in Qualified  Loans will be considered to
      represent "real estate assets" within the meaning of section  856(c)(4)(A)
      of the Internal  Revenue Code, and interest  income on the Qualified Loans
      will be considered  "interest on obligations  secured by mortgages on real
      property"  within  the  meaning of section  856(c)(3)(B)  of the  Internal
      Revenue  Code,  in each  case  to the  extent  that  the  Qualified  Loans
      represented  by the Grantor Trust  Certificate  are of a type described in
      such Internal Revenue Code section; and

            (ii) a Grantor Trust  Certificate owned by a REMIC will represent an
      interest in  "obligation[s]  . . . which [are]  principally  secured by an
      interest in real property"  within the meaning  section  860G(a)(3) of the
      Internal  Revenue Code to the extent that the Qualified Loans  represented
      by the Grantor Trust  Certificate are of a type described in such Internal
      Revenue Code section.

      If the value of the real property  securing a Qualified Loan is lower than
the amount of such  Qualified  Loan,  such Qualified Loan may not qualify in its
entirety under the foregoing sections of the Internal Revenue Code.

      b.    Multiple Classes of Grantor Trust Certificates


      If a trust fund is created with two classes of Grantor Trust  Certificates
relating to a Pool,  one class of Grantor Trust  Certificates  may represent the
right to principal and some interest,  or principal only, on all or a portion of
the Qualified Assets in the Pool (the "Stripped Bond  Certificates"),  while the
other class of Grantor Trust Certificates may represent the right to some or all
of the interest on such  portion (the  "Stripped  Coupon  Certificates").  Under
section 1286 of the Internal  Revenue Code,  the  separation of ownership of the
right to receive  some or all of the  interest  payments on an  obligation  from
ownership of the right to receive some or all of the  principal  payments on the
obligation results in the creation of "stripped bonds" with respect to principal
payments and "stripped coupons" with respect to interest payments.  For purposes
of the OID,  market  discount  and related  rules,  section 1286 of the Internal
Revenue Code treats a stripped bond or a stripped coupon as an obligation issued
on the date that such  stripped  interest is purchased and provides that the OID
rules  are  applied  to that  obligation,  rather  than to the  underlying  debt
instrument  that has been  "stripped." As noted above under " a. Single Class of
Grantor Trust Certificates  Characterization  and General Rules," servicing fees
that are treated by the IRS as  exceeding a reasonable  fee  ("excess  servicing
fee") will be treated as  creating  stripped  coupons  (the right to receive the
excess servicing fee) and stripped bonds (the right to receive all the principal
of, and all the interest, other than the amount of the excess servicing fee, on,
the Qualified Loans).

      Although not entirely clear due to the absence of applicable authority,  a
Stripped  Bond  Certificate  generally  should  be  treated  as an  interest  in
Qualified  Assets issued on the date such Stripped Bond Certificate is purchased
for purposes of  calculating  any OID, and the issue price of such Stripped Bond
Certificate  should  be the  amount  paid for such  certificate.  Discount  on a
Stripped Bond  Certificate  will be treated as market  discount,  subject to the
rules  described  above under " a. Single Class of Grantor Trust  Certificates -
Market  Discount,"  rather  than as OID, if either (i) the amount of OID on such
certificate  is  less  than  the de  minimis  amount  (generally  calculated  as
described  above as 0.25% of the  stated  redemption  price at  maturity  of the
certificate  multiplied by the weighted  average maturity of the certificate) or
(ii)the annual stated  interest rate payable on the  certificate  (including any
amounts  treated as a  reasonable  servicing  fee) is more than 100 basis points
less than the  annual  stated  interest  rate  payable  on the  Qualified  Loans
(including  all  amounts  paid as  servicing  fees)  before the  creation of the
Stripped  Coupon  Certificates.  The  treatment  of discount as market  discount
rather than as OID under this rule  constitutes a method of  accounting  for tax
purposes;  thus any holder of a Grantor Trust  Certificate that adopted a method
of accounting  for stripped bonds prior to its  acquisition of any  certificates
subject to the rule described in this  paragraph  should consult its tax advisor
to determine whether it is required to change its  previously-adopted  method of
accounting, and if so, how to make that change.

      The tax  treatment  of Stripped  Coupon  Certificates  is  uncertain.  The
Internal  Revenue Code could be read literally to require that OID  computations
be made  separately  for each  payment  from each  Qualified  Loan.  The  better
treatment,  however,  appears to be to treat all  payments  to be  received on a
Stripped Coupon  Certificate as a single  installment  obligation subject to the
OID rules, in which case, all payments on such certificate  would be included in
the certificate's stated redemption price at maturity.

      The  computation  of OID with respect to Stripped  Bond  Certificates  and
Stripped  Coupon  Certificates  is  uncertain  due to the absence of  applicable
authority.  In the absence of any  authoritative  guidance,  the master servicer
intends to  compute  OID on  Stripped  Bond  Certificates  and  Stripped  Coupon
Certificates in accordance with the Prepayment Assumption Rule.


      Under  the  Prepayment  Assumption  Rule,  OID for any  accrual  period is
generally  determined  by (a) adding (i) the present  value as of the end of the
accrual  period of all  remaining  payments to be  received  on the  certificate
(determined by using as a discount  factor the original yield to maturity of the
certificate  and  taking  into  account a  prepayment  assumption)  and (ii) any
payments  received  during such accrual  period that were  included in the state
redemption  price at maturity,  and (b)  subtracting  from that sum the adjusted
issue price of the  certificate  at the  beginning of such accrual  period.  The
Internal  Revenue  Code  provides  that  the  prepayment  assumption  is  to  be
determined in the manner  prescribed by regulations.  These regulations have not
yet been issued.  However, the legislative history to the Prepayment  Assumption
Rule  indicates  that the  regulations  are to require that the same  prepayment
assumption  used  to  determine  the  offering  price  of  a  certificate   (the
"Prepayment Assumption") be used to make OID computations. It is unclear whether
that rule would apply in the case of Stripped  Bond  Certificates  and  Stripped
Coupon  Certificates,  or whether,  assuming any prepayment  assumption is to be
used with respect to such  certificates,  such  prepayment  assumption  would be
determined based on conditions  existing at the time such stripped interests are
created  (e.g.,  in the case of a  subsequent  holder,  at the time such  holder
acquires such certificate).  Neither the Depositor, the Guarantor nor the master
servicer will make any representation that any certificate will prepay at a rate
consistent with the Prepayment Assumption or at any other rate.

      It is unclear  under  what  circumstances,  if any,  the  prepayment  of a
Qualified  Loan  will  give  rise to a loss to the  holder  of a  Stripped  Bond
Certificate  purchased  at a premium  or a  Stripped  Coupon  Certificate.  If a
Stripped Bond Certificate is treated as a single  instrument  (rather than as an
interest in discrete Qualified Loans) and the Prepayment Assumption Rule applies
in the computation of OID with respect to such  certificate,  it appears that no
loss will be allowable as a result of any particular prepayment,  and instead, a
prepayment should be treated as a partial payment of the stated redemption price
of the  Stripped  Bond  Certificate  and  accounted  for  under  the  Prepayment
Assumption  Rule.  However,  if a  Stripped  Bond  Certificate  is treated as an
interest in discrete Qualified Loans, then when a Qualified Loan is prepaid, the
holder of such  certificate  should  recognize a loss equal to the excess of the
portion of the holder's  adjusted basis for such  certificate  allocable to such
Qualified  Loan over the  amount of  principal  prepaid.  If a  Stripped  Coupon
Certificate is treated as a single instrument and the Prepayment Assumption Rule
applies, it appears that no loss will be available as a result of any particular
prepayment,  unless prepayments on the Qualified Loans generally occur at a rate
faster  than  the  assumed  prepayment  rate.  However,  if  a  Stripped  Coupon
Certificate is treated as an interest in discrete  Qualified Loans,  then when a
Qualified Loan is prepaid,  the holder of such  certificate  should  recognize a
loss equal to the portion of the holder's  adjusted  basis for such  certificate
allocable to such  Qualified  Loan. If a Stripped Bond  Certificate  or Stripped
Coupon  Certificate  is  treated  as a  single  instrument  but  the  Prepayment
Assumption  Rule does not apply,  it appears that no loss will be allowable as a
result of any  particular  prepayment,  and a holder would be entitled to a loss
only upon  receiving a final  payment with respect to such  certificate  that is
less than such holder's remaining adjusted basis for such certificate.

      As noted,  the tax  treatment of Stripped Bond  Certificates  and Stripped
Coupon Certificates is subject to significant uncertainties. Holders of Stripped
Bond  Certificates  and Stripped Coupon  Certificates  are urged to consult with
their own tax advisors  regarding the proper treatment of these certificates for
federal income tax purposes.


      Characterization   of  Stripped  Bond  Certificates  and  Stripped  Coupon
Certificates  with respect to Certain Holders.  As noted above under " a. Single
Class  of  Grantor  Trust  Certificates  -  Characterization  of  Stripped  Bond
Certificates and Stripped Coupon  Certificates with respect to Certain Holders,"
certificates  issued in a single  class with  respect  to a Pool will  represent
permissible   investments  for  real  estate  investment  trusts,  provided  the
underlying  Qualified Assets  constitute  permissible  investments.  There is no
specific authority regarding whether  certificates that constitute Stripped Bond
Certificates or Stripped  Coupon  Certificates  will also represent  permissible
investments  for such holders.  However,  the Internal  Revenue Code  provisions
governing  stripped  obligations  by their  terms  apply  only for  purposes  of
determining OID, market discount and similar matters.  Therefore, while not free
from doubt,  Stripped Bond Certificates and Stripped Coupon  Certificates should
represent "real estate assets" within the meaning of section 856(c)(4)(A) of the
Internal  Revenue Code, and interest income  attributable  to such  certificates
should represent "interest on obligations secured by mortgages on real property"
within  the  meaning of  section  856(c)(3)(B)  of the  Internal  Revenue  Code,
provided that in each case the underlying  Qualified Assets and interest on such
Qualified  Assets qualify for such  treatment.  Prospective  purchasers to which
such  characterization  of an  investment  in  certificates  is material  should
consult  their own tax advisors  regarding the  characterization  of the Grantor
Trust  Certificates  and the income  therefrom.  Stripped Bond  Certificates and
Stripped Coupon Certificates held by a REMIC will constitute  "obligation[s] . .
 . which [are]  principally  secured by an interest in real property"  within the
meaning of section  860G(a)(3)  of the Internal  Revenue Code to the extent that
the Qualified Loans underlying such certificates are of a type described in such
Internal Revenue Code section.

      c.    Sale or Exchange of a Grantor Trust Certificate

      Sale or exchange of a Grantor Trust Certificate prior to its maturity will
result in gain or loss  equal to the  difference,  if any,  between  the  amount
received and the holder's adjusted basis in the Grantor Trust Certificate.  Such
adjusted basis generally will equal the holder's  purchase price for the Grantor
Trust  Certificate,  increased by the OID included in the holder's  gross income
with respect to the Grantor Trust Certificate, and reduced by principal payments
on the Grantor Trust Certificate previously received by the holder. Such gain or
loss  will be  capital  gain  or loss to a  holder  for  which a  Grantor  Trust
Certificate is a "capital  asset" and will be long-term or short-term  depending
on whether  the  Grantor  Trust  Certificate  has been  owned for the  long-term
holding period (currently more than one year).  Grantor Trust  Certificates will
be "evidences of  indebtedness"  within the meaning of section  582(c)(1) of the
Internal  Revenue  Code,  so that  gain or loss  recognized  from  the sale of a
Grantor  Trust  Certificate  by a bank or a thrift  institution  to  which  such
section applies will be treated as ordinary income or loss.

      d.    Non-U.S. Persons

      Generally,  a holder of a  Grantor  Trust  Certificate  that is not a U.S.
Person (as defined below) and for which income derived from a certificate  would
not be  effectively  connected with the conduct of a U.S. trade or business will
not be  subject  to  U.S.  federal  income  or  withholding  tax in  respect  of
distributions on a certificate,  provided that such holder complies with certain
identification  requirements  (including delivery of a statement,  signed by the
holder  under  penalties of perjury,  certifying  that such holder is not a U.S.
Person and providing the holder's name and address).  This rule may not apply to
a holder in the event (i) such holder owns 10% or more of the  interests  in the
obligor  under a  Qualified  Loan,  (ii) such  holder is a  "controlled  foreign
corporation"  for  U.S.  federal  income  tax  purposes,  or  (iii)  one or more
Qualified  Loans in the related Pool were originated on or before July 18, 1984.
If any of these  circumstances exist with respect to a holder that is not a U.S.
Person,  distributions made to such holder could be subject to withholding,  and
such holder should consult its own tax advisor  regarding the federal income tax
consequences of holding a certificate.


      A Grantor Trust  Certificate  held by a holder who is a nonresident  alien
individual and for whom  distributions  would be exempt from tax as described in
the preceding paragraph will not be included in the U.S. estate of such holder.

      As used  herein,  a "U.S.  Person"  means a person who is (a) a citizen or
resident of the United States, (b) a corporation or a partnership,  including an
entity  treated as a corporation  or a partnership  for U.S.  federal income tax
purposes, created in the United States or organized under the laws of the United
States or any state thereof or the District of Columbia (except,  in the case of
a partnership, as otherwise provided by Treasury regulations), (c) an estate the
income of which is  includable  in gross income for federal  income tax purposes
regardless of its connection  with the conduct of a trade or business within the
United  States,  or (d) a trust whose  administration  is subject to the primary
supervision  of a United  States court and that has one or more of U.S.  Persons
who have the authority to control all substantial decisions of the trust.

      Final  regulations   dealing  with  backup   withholding  and  information
reporting  on income  paid to foreign  persons  and  related  matters  (the "New
Withholding  Regulations") were published in the Federal Register on October 14,
1997. In general, the New Withholding Regulations do not significantly alter the
substantive  withholding and information  reporting  requirements,  but do unify
current certification  procedures and forms and clarify reliance standards.  The
New Withholding  Regulations generally will be effective for payments made after
December 31, 2000, subject to certain transition rules. The discussion set forth
above does not take the New Withholding  Regulations  into account.  Prospective
non-U.S.  Persons who own interests in mortgage loans are strongly encouraged to
consult their own tax advisors with respect to the New Withholding Regulations.

      e.    Information Reporting and Backup Withholding

      The master  servicer will furnish or make  available,  within a reasonable
time after the end of each  calendar  year,  to each person or entity who held a
Grantor Trust  Certificate at any time during such year, such information as may
be  required  by  applicable  rules to assist such  holders in  preparing  their
federal  income  tax  returns,  or to enable  holders  to make such  information
available  to  beneficial  owners  or  financial  intermediaries  that hold such
certificates as nominees on behalf of beneficial owners. If a holder, beneficial
owner,  financial  intermediary  or other  recipient of a payment on behalf of a
beneficial owner fails to supply a certified taxpayer  identification  number or
if the  Secretary  of the  Treasury  owner fails to supply a certified  taxpayer
identification  number or if the Secretary of the Treasury  determines that such
person has not reported all interest and dividend income required to be shown on
its  federal  income tax return,  31% backup  withholding  may be required  with
respect to any payments.  Any amounts  deducted and withheld from a distribution
to a recipient  would be allowed as a credit  against such  recipient's  federal
income tax liability.

REMICs


      The  trust  fund  relating  to a series  of  certificates  may elect to be
treated as a REMIC.  Qualification as a REMIC requires  ongoing  compliance with
certain conditions.  Although a REMIC is not generally subject to federal income
tax (see, however " b. Taxation of Owners of REMIC Residual  Certificates" and "
e.  Prohibited  Transactions"  below),  if a trust fund with  respect to which a
REMIC  election  is made  fails  to  comply  with  one or  more  of the  ongoing
requirements  of the Internal  Revenue Code for REMIC status  during any taxable
year,  including the implementation of restrictions on the purchase and transfer
of the residual interests in the REMIC as described below under " a. Taxation of
Owners of REMIC Residual  Certificates," the Internal Revenue Code provides that
the trust fund will not be treated as a REMIC for such year and  thereafter.  In
that  event,  such  entity may be taxable  as a  separate  corporation,  and the
related  certificates (the "REMIC  Certificates") may not be accorded the status
or given the tax  treatment  described  below.  While the Internal  Revenue Code
authorizes the Treasury Department to issue regulations  providing relief in the
event of an inadvertent termination of the status of a trust fund as a REMIC, no
such regulations have been issued. Any such relief, moreover, may be accompanied
by sanctions,  such as the  imposition of a corporate tax on all or a portion of
the REMIC's income for the period during which the  requirements for such status
were not satisfied. With respect to each trust fund, or portion of a trust fund,
that  elects  REMIC  status,  Andrews & Kurth  L.L.P.  will  deliver its opinion
generally to the effect that,  under then  existing law and assuming  compliance
with all provisions of the related Trust  Agreement and any related  agreements,
such trust fund will qualify as a REMIC,  and the related  certificates  will be
considered to be regular  interests  ("REMIC Regular  Certificates") or residual
interests ("REMIC Residual  Certificates") in the REMIC. The related  prospectus
supplement for each series of certificates will indicate whether the trust fund,
or such portion, will make a REMIC election, and if so, whether the certificates
of a  particular  class will be treated as regular or residual  interests in the
REMIC.

      In general,  with respect to each series of certificates for which a REMIC
election is made, (i) certificates  held by a real estate  investment trust will
constitute  "real estate assets" within the meaning of section  856(c)(4)(A)  of
the Internal Revenue Code; and (ii) interest on REMIC Regular  Certificates held
by a real estate  investment  trust and any income  includible with respect to a
REMIC  Residual  Certificate  held by a real  estate  investment  trust  will be
considered  "interest on  obligations  secured by  mortgages  on real  property"
within  the  meaning of  section  856(c)(3)(B)  of the  Internal  Revenue  Code.
However,  if less than 95% of the REMIC's  assets qualify as real estate assets,
the certificates  will be qualifying  assets only to the extent that the REMIC's
assets  are  qualifying  assets.  It is unclear  whether  property  acquired  by
foreclosure held pending sale and amounts in reserve accounts (to the extent not
invested in real estate assets) would be considered to be real estate assets, or
whether such assets  otherwise would receive the same treatment as the Qualified
Assets  for  purposes  of all of  the  foregoing  sections.  Also,  payments  on
Qualified  Assets held pending  distribution on the REMIC  Certificates  will be
considered to be part of the Qualified  Assets for purposes of section 856(c) of
the  Internal  Revenue  Code and thus will be treated as real  estate  assets as
described above. In addition, REMIC Regular Certificates held by a REMIC will be
considered  "obligation[s] ... which [are] principally secured by an interest in
real property" within the meaning of section  860G(a)(3) of the Internal Revenue
Code.


      Tiered REMIC  Structures.  For certain  series of  certificates,  separate
elections  may be made to treat  separately  designated  portions of the related
trust fund as REMICs for federal  income tax purposes.  Upon the issuance of any
such series of  certificates,  Andrews & Kurth  L.L.P.  will deliver its opinion
generally to the effect that,  assuming  compliance  with all  provisions of the
related Trust  Agreement,  each of the portions will qualify as a REMIC, and the
REMIC  Certificates  issued by both each of the portions will  constitute  REMIC
Regular Certificates or REMIC Residual Certificates,  as the case may be, in the
related REMIC.

      Such  REMICs  will  be  treated  as  one  REMIC  solely  for  purposes  of
determining (i) whether the REMIC  Certificates  will be considered "real estate
assets" within the meaning of section  856(c)(4)(A) of the Internal Revenue Code
and (ii)  whether  the income on such  certificates  is  interest  described  in
section 856(c)(3)(B) of the Internal Revenue Code.

      a.    Taxation of Owners of REMIC Regular Certificates

      General.  Except as otherwise  stated in this  discussion,  REMIC  Regular
Certificates will be treated for federal income tax purposes as debt instruments
issued by the REMIC and not as  ownership  interests in the REMIC or its assets.
Moreover,  holders of REMIC Regular  Certificates  that otherwise  report income
under a cash method of accounting will be required to report income with respect
to REMIC Regular Certificates under an accrual method.

      Original Issue Discount. The REMIC Regular Certificates may be issued with
OID. Holders of any class of REMIC Regular  Certificates issued with OID will be
required to include such OID in gross income for federal  income tax purposes as
it accrues,  in accordance with a constant yield method based on the compounding
of  interest  as it  accrues,  rather  than in  accordance  with the  receipt of
distributions on the REMIC Regular Certificates.  The amount and rate of accrual
of OID  will  be  determined  by  taking  into  account  the  expected  rate  of
prepayments  on the  Qualified  Assets held by the REMIC and will be adjusted to
reflect the rate of  prepayments  as they actually  occur.  As described in more
detail below,  under this method, if the actual  prepayments during a particular
period exceed the expected prepayments, the amount of OID accrued in that period
will be greater than the amount of OID that would accrue if  prepayments  during
that period equaled the amount expected.  Similarly,  if the actual  prepayments
during a particular period are less than the expected prepayments, the amount of
OID accrued in that period will be less than the amount of OID that would accrue
if prepayments  during that period  equaled the amount  expected (but in no case
less than zero).  The OID rules provide that the expected rate of prepayments to
be used for these  computations be determined as prescribed by regulations which
have not yet been  issued.  The  legislative  history to these  rules  provides,
however,  that  the  regulations  should  require  that  the  rate  used  be the
prepayment  assumption that is used in determining the initial offering price of
the REMIC Regular  Certificates  the ("Prepayment  Assumption").  The Prepayment
Assumption  with respect to a series of REMIC Regular  Certificates  will be set
forth in the related prospectus supplement.  However, neither the Depositor, the
trustee nor the master servicer or central servicer will make any representation
that the  REMIC  Regular  Certificates  will in fact  prepay  at the  Prepayment
Assumption  or at any other  rate.  The OID rules  applicable  to REMIC  Regular
Certificates  are very  complex  and are  subject  to  uncertainties  due to the
absence of applicable  authority;  thus,  holders are urged to consult their own
tax advisors regarding the tax consequences of purchasing,  owning and disposing
of the REMIC Regular Certificates.


      In general,  each REMIC  Regular  Certificate  will be treated as a single
installment  obligation  issued with an amount of OID equal to the excess of its
"stated  redemption  price at  maturity"  over its "issue  price."  The  "stated
redemption  price at  maturity"  of a REMIC  Regular  Certificate  includes  the
original  principal  amount of the  certificate  and all other  payments  on the
certificate  other than payments that constitute  "qualified  stated  interest."
"Qualified  stated interest"  generally means interest at a single fixed rate or
qualified variable rate (as described below) that is unconditionally  payable at
intervals  of one year or less  during  the  entire  term of the  REMIC  Regular
Certificate.  Interest is treated as payable at a single  fixed rate only if the
rate  appropriately  takes  into  account  the  length of the  interval  between
payments.  Where the interval between the issue date and the first  distribution
date on a REMIC  Regular  Certificate  is  shorter  than  the  interval  between
subsequent  distribution  dates,  interest due on the first distribution date in
excess of the amount that  accrued  during the first  period may be added to the
certificate's stated redemption price at maturity.  The "issue price" of a REMIC
Regular  Certificate of a particular class is generally the first price at which
a substantial amount of REMIC Regular  Certificates of that class are first sold
to the public (excluding bond houses, brokers, underwriters or wholesalers).

      Under  a "de  minimis"  rule,  OID on a  REMIC  Regular  Certificate  will
generally be considered to be zero if the OID  calculated as described  above is
less than 0.25% of the stated  redemption  price at maturity of the  certificate
multiplied by the weighted  average  maturity of the REMIC Regular  Certificate.
For this purpose,  the weighted  average maturity of the certificate is computed
as the sum of the amounts  determined  by  multiplying  the number of full years
(i.e.,  rounding down partial years) from the issue date until each distribution
in reduction of stated redemption price at maturity is scheduled to be made by a
fraction,  the  numerator  of which is the amount of such  distribution  and the
denominator  of  which  is  the  stated  redemption  price  at  maturity  of the
certificate).  Although not entirely clear, it appears that the schedule of such
distributions   should  be  determined   taking  into  account  the   Prepayment
Assumption.  Holders  generally must report de minimis OID pro rata as principal
payments are received, and such income will be capital gain if the REMIC Regular
Certificate is held as a capital asset.


      Generally,  a holder of a REMIC Regular  Certificate must include in gross
income the "daily  portions,"  as determined  below,  of the OID that accrues on
such  certificate  for  each day  such  holder  holds  the  certificate.  "Daily
portions"  are  generally  computed by  determining  the amount of OID  accruing
during each "accrual period" and then dividing such amount by the number of days
in such accrual  period.  An "accrual  period" is  generally  the period of time
between payment dates on the REMIC Regular  Certificate.  The amount of OID that
accrues in any  accrual  period is  generally  determined  by (a) adding (i) the
present value at the end of the accrual  period of all remaining  payments to be
received  on the  certificate  (determined  by using as a  discount  factor  the
original  yield to maturity  of the REMIC  Regular  Certificate  and taking into
account the Prepayment  Assumption)  and (ii) any payments  received during such
accrual  period that were included in the stated  redemption  price at maturity,
and (b) subtracting  from that sum the "adjusted issue price" of the certificate
at the  beginning  of such  accrual  period.  The "yield to maturity" of a REMIC
Regular  Certificate  is generally the interest rate that,  when used to compute
the present values of all the payments due under the certificate as of its issue
date (taking the Prepayment  Assumption  into  account),  causes the sum of such
present values to equal the issue price of such certificate. The "adjusted issue
price" of a REMIC  Regular  Certificate  at the  beginning of the first  accrual
period  is its issue  price;  the  "adjusted  issue  price"  of a REMIC  Regular
Certificate  at the  beginning  of a subsequent  accrual  period is the adjusted
issue price at the beginning of the immediately  preceding accrual period,  plus
the amount of OID accrued  during such accrual  period,  and minus the amount of
any payments made on the certificate during such accrual period,  other than any
payment of qualified  stated  interest.  As noted above,  the calculation of OID
under this  method will cause the  accrual of OID with  respect to a  particular
accrual period either to increase or decrease (but never below zero) relative to
the certificate's  original yield to maturity to reflect prepayments during such
accrual period that exceeded or were less than the Prepayment Assumption.

      Certain REMIC Regular  Certificates may be issued at prices  significantly
exceeding their principal amounts or based on notional principal balances (e.g.,
so-called  "interest-only"  or "I/O"  strips).  The income tax treatment of such
certificates is not entirely certain.  For information  reporting purposes,  the
trust fund  intends to take the  position  that the stated  redemption  price at
maturity  of such  certificates  is the sum of all  payments  to be made on such
certificates  determined taking the Prepayment Assumption into account, with the
result  that  such  certificates  would be  treated  as  issued  with  OID.  The
calculation  of  income  in this  manner  could  result  in  negative  OID  when
prepayments on the Qualified Assets occur faster than the Prepayment Assumption;
however  negative OID is not  deductible  in the period  accrued,  but should be
allowed as an offset to future  accruals of positive OID.  Alternatively,  it is
possible  that the stated  redemption  price at maturity  of these  certificates
should be limited to their stated principal  amount,  so that such REMIC Regular
Certificates  would be considered to be issued at a premium.  In such case,  the
rules described below under "Premium" would apply. It is unclear when a loss may
be claimed for any unrecovered basis in a REMIC Regular Certificate described in
this  paragraph;  it is  possible  that a loss  may  only be  claimed  when  the
remaining basis in the certificate exceeds the maximum amount of future payments
to be received on the certificate,  assuming no further prepayments,  or perhaps
only when the final payment is received with respect to such certificate.

      Certain REMIC  Regular  Certificates  may provide for interest  based on a
variable rate. The OID Regulations  provide that interest based on certain kinds
of variable rates will constitute  qualified stated interest;  thus certificates
that bear  interest at one of these  kinds of variable  rates would not have OID
(unless the certificates were issued at a discount from their principal amount).
However,  a certificate  that bears  interest based on a variable rate that does
not  constitute  qualified  stated  interest  would have OID,  because  all such
interest  would be  included in the  certificate's  stated  redemption  price at
maturity. The prospectus supplement with respect to an issuance of REMIC Regular
Certificates  that bear interest at a variable  rate will indicate  whether such
interest will be treated as qualified stated interest.


      Market Discount.  A holder that purchases a REMIC Regular Certificate at a
market  discount,  that is, in the case of a REMIC  Regular  Certificate  issued
without  OID,  at a purchase  price  less than its  remaining  stated  principal
amount,  or in the case of a REMIC  Regular  Certificate  issued  with OID, at a
purchase price less than its adjusted  issue price,  will be required to include
as  ordinary  income a portion of such market  discount  upon the receipt of any
distribution of an amount included in such certificate's stated redemption price
at maturity.  Under the market discount rules, each such distribution is treated
as  ordinary  income  up to the  amount  of  market  discount  accrued  (and not
previously included) as of the date of such distribution.  Upon disposition of a
REMIC Regular Certificate,  holders are required to treat any gain recognized as
ordinary income to the extent of the market  discount  accrued as of the date of
disposition. Holders may elect to include market discount in income currently as
it accrues rather than including it on the deferred basis  described  above.  If
made, such election will apply to all market  discount bonds (i.e.,  not only to
REMIC interests)  acquired by such holder during the year in which such election
is made and in all subsequent years.

      The  method  of  accruing  market  discount  in the case of REMIC  Regular
Certificates  is not  entirely  clear.  The  Internal  Revenue  Code  grants the
Treasury Department  authority to issue regulations  providing for the method of
accruing  market  discount  on  debt  instruments,  such  as the  REMIC  Regular
Certificates,  the  principal of which is payable in more than one  installment.
Since the  Treasury  Department  has not yet  issued  those  regulations,  rules
described in the relevant  legislative  history should apply. Under those rules,
the holder of a market  discount bond may elect to accrue market discount either
on the basis of a constant  yield method or  according  to one of the  following
methods:  (a) in the case of a REMIC  Regular  Certificate  issued with OID, the
amount of market  discount that accrues during any accrual period would be equal
to the product of (i) the total  remaining  market discount and (ii) a fraction,
the numerator of which is the OID accruing during the period and the denominator
of which is the total remaining OID at the beginning of the accrual  period;  or
(b) in the case of a REMIC Regular  Certificate  not issued with OID, the amount
of market  discount that accrues  during a period is equal to the product of (i)
the total remaining market discount and (ii) a fraction,  the numerator of which
is the  amount of  stated  interest  paid  during  the  accrual  period  and the
denominator of which is the total amount of stated interest remaining to be paid
at the  beginning  of the accrual  period.  The  calculation  of accrued  market
discount  under any of the above  methods  will be made taking into  account the
same Prepayment  Assumption applicable to the calculation of the accrual of OID,
as described above.  Because the regulations  implementing  these rules have not
been issued,  it is  impossible to predict what effect those  regulations  might
have on the tax treatment of a REMIC Regular Certificate purchased at a discount
in the secondary market.

      A holder who acquires a REMIC  Regular  Certificate  at a market  discount
also may be  required  to defer a portion  of its  interest  deductions  for the
taxable year attributable to any indebtedness  incurred or continued to purchase
or carry such certificate,  unless the holder makes the election described above
to include  market  discount  currently  as it  accrues.  Holders  that incur or
continue  indebtedness  to purchase or carry  their REMIC  Regular  Certificates
should consult their tax advisors as to the proper application of this rule.

      If the amount of market  discount on a REMIC Regular  Certificate  is less
than a de minimis amount equal to 0.25% of the  certificate's  remaining  stated
redemption  price at  maturity  multiplied  by the  weighted  average  remaining
maturity of the certificate, the market discount on that certificate will not be
subject to the rules  described  above.  Although not entirely clear, it appears
that  the  computation  of the de  minimis  amount  should  be made  taking  the
Prepayment  Assumption  into  account.  De  minimis  market  discount  should be
allocated  among  the  distributions  representing  stated  redemption  price at
maturity of the  certificate,  and the allocable  portion of the market discount
should be  included in income at the time each such  distribution  is made or is
due.

      Treasury  regulations  implementing the market discount rules have not yet
been  issued;  therefore,  holders are urged to consult  their own tax  advisors
regarding the  application of these rules and the  advisability of making any of
the elections allowed under these rules.


      Premium.  In the event a holder  acquires an  interest in a REMIC  Regular
Certificate  at an  acquisition  premium,  i.e.,  for an amount greater than the
certificate's  then adjusted issue price but less than its then remaining stated
redemption price at maturity, the holder will be entitled to offset a portion of
the OID that  accrues  in each  subsequent  accrual  period by a portion of that
excess.

      In the event a holder  acquires a REMIC Regular  Certificate  at a premium
(i.e., for an amount greater than its then remaining stated  redemption price at
maturity),  the holder may elect to amortize such premium under a constant yield
method.  Amortized  premium  under  these  rules will be treated as an offset to
interest income on such  certificate,  and the tax basis of the certificate will
be reduced to the extent that amortizable  premium is applied to offset interest
payments.  A holder that elects to  amortize  premium  under these rules will be
deemed to have made an  election to amortize  premium  with  respect to all debt
instruments  (i.e., not only with respect to REMIC interests) having amortizable
bond  premium that such holder holds during the year of the election or acquires
thereafter.

      Because of the absence of applicable regulations, it is not clear whether,
and if so,  how,  the  Prepayment  Assumption  should be taken  into  account in
computing the amortization of premium under these rules. However, the applicable
legislative  history  generally  states  that the same  rules  that apply to the
accrual of market discount  (which rules require use of a prepayment  assumption
in accruing market discount with respect to REMIC Regular Certificates,  without
regard to whether such certificates have OID) will also apply in amortizing bond
premium under these rules.

      Election to Treat All Interest as OID. The OID Regulations permit a holder
of a REMIC  Regular  Certificate  to  elect to  accrue  all  interest,  discount
(including de minimis market or original  issue  discount) and premium in income
as interest,  based on a constant  yield method.  If such an election were to be
made with  respect to a REMIC  Regular  Certificate  with market  discount,  the
holder  would be deemed to have made an election to include  market  discount in
income  currently  with  respect to all other  debt  instruments  having  market
discount  that  such  holder  acquires  during  the  year  of  the  election  or
thereafter.  Similarly, a holder that makes this election for a certificate that
is  acquired  at a premium  will be deemed to have made an  election to amortize
bond premium on a constant  yield  method with  respect to all debt  instruments
having  amortizable  bond  premium  that  such  holder  owns in the  year of the
election or thereafter acquires.  The election to accrue interest,  discount and
premium on a constant yield method with respect to a certificate is irrevocable.


      Sale or  Other  Disposition  of a REMIC  Regular  Certificate.  If a REMIC
Regular Certificate is sold,  exchanged,  redeemed or otherwise disposed of, the
seller will recognize  gain or loss equal to the  difference  between the amount
received on the sale or other disposition and the seller's adjusted tax basis in
the  certificate.  Such adjusted basis  generally will equal the initial cost of
the  certificate  to the  seller,  increased  by any  OID  and  market  discount
previously   included  in  the  seller's   gross  income  with  respect  to  the
certificate, and reduced (but not below zero) by payments previously received by
the seller of amounts included in the  certificate's  stated redemption price at
maturity and by any amortized  premium  previously  recognized by the seller.  A
holder who receives a final payment on a REMIC Regular  Certificate that is less
than the  holder's  adjusted  tax basis in the  certificate  will  generally  be
entitled to recognize a loss. Except as provided in the following paragraphs and
as  provided  under " Market  Discount"  above,  any such  gain or loss  will be
capital gain or loss,  provided that the REMIC Regular  Certificate is held as a
capital asset.

      Gain from the sale or other  disposition  of a REMIC  Regular  Certificate
that would  otherwise  be treated  as  capital  gain will  instead be treated as
ordinary income to the extent that such gain does not exceed the excess, if any,
of (i) the amount that would have been  includible in such holder's  income with
respect to the REMIC Regular  Certificate  had income accrued  thereon at a rate
equal to 110% of the "applicable  federal rate" as defined in section 1274(d) of
the Internal Revenue Code  (generally,  an average of current yields on Treasury
securities  of  comparable  maturity),  determined as of the date of purchase of
such REMIC Regular Certificate, over (ii) the amount actually includible in such
holder's income.

      The certificates will be "evidences of indebtedness" within the meaning of
section  582(c)(1) of the Internal Revenue Code, so that gain or loss recognized
from the sale of a REMIC Regular  Certificate by a bank or a thrift  institution
to which such section applies will be ordinary income or loss.

      Non-Interest  Expenses of the REMIC.  As  discussed  in more detail  below
under " b. Taxation of Holders of REMIC Residual  Certificates - Pass-Through of
Non-Interest  Expenses  of  the  REMIC,"  if the  REMIC  is  considered  to be a
"single-class  REMIC," a portion of the REMIC's  servicing,  administrative  and
other  non-interest  expenses  will be  allocated  as a  separate  item to those
holders of REMIC Regular  Certificates  that are  individuals  or  "pass-through
interest holders." Holders that are individuals or pass-through interest holders
should  consult  their  tax  advisors  about  the  impact  of these  rules on an
investment in the REMIC Regular Certificates.

      Prepayment Premiums and Yield Maintenance Charges.  Because of the absence
of clear  authority,  it is  uncertain  whether  the  portion of any  prepayment
premium or yield maintenance  charge received by any holder should be treated as
capital gain  (assuming a certificate is held as a capital asset) or as ordinary
income.  Holders should consult their tax advisors  regarding the taxable status
of such amounts.

      Non-U.S.  Persons.  Generally,  a  holder  that is not a U.S.  Person  (as
defined above under " Grantor  Trust Funds d.  Non-U.S.  Persons") and for which
income  derived  from a  REMIC  Regular  Certificate  would  not be  effectively
connected  with the conduct of a U.S.  trade or business  will not be subject to
U.S.  federal income or withholding tax in respect of  distributions  on a REMIC
Regular   Certificate,   provided   that  such  holder   complies  with  certain
identification  requirements  (including delivery of a statement,  signed by the
holder  under  penalties of perjury,  certifying  that such holder is not a U.S.
Person and  providing  the name and address of such  holder).  This rule may not
apply to a holder that owns,  directly or indirectly,  a 10% or greater interest
in the REMIC Residual  Certificates.  If a holder of a REMIC Regular Certificate
is not exempt from U.S. tax as  described  above,  distributions  of interest to
such holder,  including  distributions in respect of accrued OID, may be subject
to a 30% withholding  tax, subject to reduction under any applicable tax treaty.
Holders of REMIC Regular Certificates that also own REMIC Residual  Certificates
and are not U.S.  Persons  should  consult  their  tax  advisors  as to  whether
distributions to them from the REMIC are exempt from U.S. federal income tax.

      A REMIC Regular  Certificate  held by a nonresident  alien  individual for
whom  distributions on such certificate would be exempt from tax as described in
the preceding paragraph will not be included in the U.S. estate of such holder.

      As previously mentioned, the New Withholding Regulations were published in
the Federal  Register on October 14, 1997 and  generally  will be effective  for
payments made after December 31, 2000,  subject to certain transition rules. The
discussion set forth above does not take the New  Withholding  Regulations  into
account.  Prospective  non-U.S.  Persons who own interests in mortgage loans are
strongly  encouraged  to consult  their own tax advisors with respect to the New
Withholding Regulations.

      Information  Reporting and Backup  Withholding.  The master  servicer will
furnish  or make  available,  within a  reasonable  time  after  the end of each
calendar year, to each person or entity who held a REMIC Regular  Certificate at
any time during such year,  such  information  as may be required by  applicable
rules to assist such holders in preparing  their federal income tax returns,  or
to enable  holders to make such  information  available to beneficial  owners or
financial  intermediaries  that hold such  certificates  on behalf of beneficial
owners. In particular, such information will include a statement of the adjusted
issue price of the REMIC  Regular  Certificate  at the beginning of each accrual
period. In addition,  the reports will include information  necessary to compute
the  accrual of any market  discount  that may arise upon  secondary  trading of
REMIC  Regular   Certificates.   If  a  holder,   beneficial  owner,   financial
intermediary  or other  recipient of a payment on behalf of a  beneficial  owner
fails to supply a certified taxpayer  identification  number or if the Secretary
of the  Treasury  determines  that such person has not reported all interest and
dividend  income  required  to be shown on its federal  income tax  return,  31%
backup  withholding  may be required with respect to any  payments.  Any amounts
deducted and withheld from a distribution  to a recipient  would be allowed as a
credit against such recipient's federal income tax liability.

      b.    Taxation of Holders of REMIC Residual Certificates

      Holders of REMIC Residual Certificates will be subject to rules, described
below,  that differ from those that would apply if such  holders were treated as
owning  undivided  interests  in the  Qualified  Assets  held by the REMIC or as
owning debt instruments  issued by the REMIC. The rules applicable to holders of
REMIC Residual  Certificates are very complex; such holders are urged to consult
their tax advisors before making an investment in REMIC Residual Certificates.


      Allocation of the Income of the REMIC to the REMIC Residual  Certificates.
The REMIC itself will not be subject to federal income tax,  except as described
below with respect to "prohibited  transactions" and certain other transactions.
See " e. Prohibited  Transactions and Other Taxes" below. Instead, each original
holder of a REMIC  Residual  Certificate  is required to report its share of the
taxable income, or subject to the limitations  described below, the net loss, of
the REMIC for each day during the  taxable  year on which such  holder  owns any
REMIC Residual  Certificates.  Such income or loss is treated as ordinary income
or loss. The taxable income or loss of the REMIC for each day will be determined
by allocating the taxable income or loss of the REMIC for each calendar  quarter
ratably to each day in the quarter. Such holder's share of the taxable income or
loss  of the  REMIC  for  each  day  will  be  based  on the  proportion  of the
outstanding  REMIC Residual  Certificates that such holder owns on that day. The
taxable  income or loss of the REMIC will be determined  under an accrual method
and will be includible  by the holder of a REMIC  Residual  Certificate  without
regard to the timing or amounts of cash distributions made to such holder by the
REMIC.  Ordinary  income  derived  from  REMIC  Residual  Certificates  will  be
characterized as "portfolio  income" for purposes of determining  limitations on
the deductibility by certain taxpayers of "passive losses."

      A holder  of a REMIC  Residual  Certificate  may be  required  to  include
taxable  income  from the  certificate  in excess of the cash  distributed.  For
example,  a structure where principal  distributions  are made serially on REMIC
Regular Certificates (that is, a so-called  "fast-pay,  slow-pay" structure) may
generate a  mismatching  of income  and cash  distributions  (that is,  "phantom
income")  to a  holder  of a REMIC  Residual  Certificate.  Depending  upon  the
structure of a particular  transaction,  phantom income may significantly reduce
the after-tax yield of an investment in a REMIC Residual Certificate.  Potential
investors  should  consult their own tax advisors  concerning the federal income
tax treatment to them of a REMIC Residual Certificate and the impact of such tax
treatment on the after-tax yield of the certificate.

      The  legislative  history  to  the  REMIC  rules  indicates  that  certain
adjustments  may  be  appropriate  to  reduce  (or  increase)  the  income  of a
subsequent   holder  of  a  REMIC  Residual   Certificate  that  purchased  such
certificate  at a price  greater  than (or less than) the  adjusted tax basis of
such  certificate in the hands of the previous  holder of such  certificate.  No
regulations have been issued providing for such adjustments.  As a result, it is
not clear whether such adjustments will in fact be permitted or required and, if
so, how they would be made.

      The requirement that holders of REMIC Residual  Certificates  report their
pro rata shares of the REMIC's  taxable  income or net loss will continue  until
there are no certificates of any class of the related series outstanding.

      Taxable Income of the REMIC.  The taxable income of the REMIC will reflect
a netting of the income from the  Qualified  Assets and the REMIC's other assets
and the  deductions  allowed  to the  REMIC  for  interest  and OID on the REMIC
Regular  Certificates  and, except as described  below under " -Pass-Through  of
Non-Interest  Expenses of the REMIC," other  expenses.  REMIC taxable  income is
generally  determined in the same manner as the taxable  income of an individual
using the accrual method of  accounting,  with certain  exceptions.  The REMIC's
gross income  generally  includes  interest,  original issue discount income and
market discount income, if any, on the Qualified Loans,  reduced by amortization
of any premium on the Qualified Loans, plus income on reinvestment of cash flows
and reserve  assets,  but does not include any income in respect of a prohibited
transaction,  as  described  below.  The REMIC's  deductions  generally  include
interest and original issue discount expense on the REMIC Regular  Certificates,
servicing  fees on the Qualified  Loans,  other  administrative  expenses of the
REMIC and realized losses on the Qualified  Loans. The REMIC will not be subject
to the Internal  Revenue Code section 67  limitation  on deduction of servicing,
administrative  and  other  non-interest   expenses  (so-called   "miscellaneous
itemized  deductions"),  but holders who are individuals and who are allocated a
share of such expenses will be subject to that limitation.


      For purposes of  determining  its taxable  income,  the REMIC will have an
initial  aggregate  tax basis in its assets equal to the sum of the issue prices
of the REMIC Regular Certificates and the REMIC Residual Certificates. The issue
price of the REMIC Residual  Certificates  will be determined  under the general
OID rules (or, if such certificates are not offered initially,  will be the fair
market value of such  certificates).  Such aggregate tax basis will be allocated
among the Qualified  Assets and other assets of the REMIC in proportion to their
respective  fair market  values.  A Qualified  Asset will be deemed to have been
acquired  with  discount or premium to the extent  that the REMIC's  initial tax
basis  therein  is  less  than  or  greater  than  its  adjusted   issue  price,
respectively.  Any  such  discount  (whether  market  discount  or OID)  will be
includible in the REMIC's taxable income as it accrues under a method similar to
the method  described above for accruing OID on the REMIC Regular  Certificates.
The REMIC expects to elect to amortize any premium on the Qualified  Assets on a
constant  yield method.  It is not clear whether the yield of a Qualified  Asset
would be  calculated  for this purpose  based only on  scheduled  payments or by
taking into account the Prepayment Assumption.

      The REMIC will be allowed a deduction  for stated  interest and OID on the
REMIC Regular  Certificates.  OID  deductions  (including  deductions for any de
minimis OID that would not be  includible as OID by the holders of REMIC Regular
Certificates)  will generally  accrue in the same manner as described above with
respect  to  REMIC  Regular  Certificates,  except  that no  adjustments  to OID
deductions  will be made to reflect the purchase of a REMIC Regular  Certificate
at an acquisition premium. If a class of REMIC Regular Certificates is issued at
a price in excess of the stated  redemption price at maturity of such class, the
net  amount of  interest  deductions  that will be  allowed to the REMIC in each
taxable year with respect to the REMIC Regular  Certificates  of such class will
be reduced by an amount  equal to the portion of such excess that is  considered
to be amortized or repaid in such year.

      A holder of a REMIC Residual Certificate will not be permitted to amortize
the cost of the  certificate  as an offset to such holder's share of the REMIC's
taxable income.  However, REMIC taxable income will not include cash received by
the REMIC that represents a recovery of the REMIC's basis in its assets, and, as
described  above,  the issue price of the REMIC  Residual  Certificates  will be
added to the issue price of the REMIC Regular  Certificates  in determining  the
REMIC's initial basis in its assets.

      Net Losses of the REMIC.  The REMIC will have a net loss for any  calendar
quarter in which its deductions  exceed its gross income.  Such net loss will be
allocated among the holders of REMIC Residual Certificates in the same manner as
the  REMIC's  taxable  income.  The net loss  allocable  to any  REMIC  Residual
Certificate  will not be  deductible  by the holder to the extent  that such net
loss exceeds such holder's adjusted tax basis in such certificate.  Any net loss
that is not currently  deductible by reason of this  limitation may only be used
by such  holder to  offset  its share of the  REMIC's  taxable  income in future
periods,   but  not  otherwise.   The  ability  of  holders  of  REMIC  Residual
Certificates to deduct net losses may be subject to additional limitations under
the Internal  Revenue  Code, as to which  holders  should  consult their own tax
advisors.


      Excess Inclusions. A portion of the income on a REMIC Residual Certificate
(referred to in the  Internal  Revenue  Code as an "excess  inclusion")  for any
calendar  quarter may be subject to federal income tax in all events.  Thus, for
example,  an excess  inclusion  (i) may not be offset by any  unrelated  losses,
deductions or loss  carryovers of the holder of the REMIC Residual  Certificate,
(ii) will be treated as "unrelated  business  taxable income" within the meaning
of  Internal  Revenue  Code  section  512 if the  holder of the  REMIC  Residual
Certificate is a pension fund or any other  organization  that is subject to tax
only on its unrelated business taxable income, and (iii) is not eligible for any
reduction  in the rate of  withholding  tax in the  case of a holder  of a REMIC
Residual Certificate that is not a U.S. Person.

      Except as discussed in the following paragraph, with respect to any holder
of a REMIC Residual  Certificate,  the excess inclusion for any calendar quarter
will be the excess,  if any, of (i) the income allocable to such holder for that
calendar  quarter with respect to its REMIC Residual  Certificate  over (ii) the
sum of the "daily  accruals"  for each day during the calendar  quarter on which
such holder holds such certificate.  For this purpose, the "daily accruals" with
respect to a REMIC Residual Certificate are determined by allocating to each day
in the  calendar  quarter  its ratable  portion of the product of the  "adjusted
issue price" of the certificate at the beginning of the calendar quarter and 120
percent of the "federal long-term rate" in effect at the time the certificate is
issued.  For this  purpose,  the  "adjusted  issue  price"  of a REMIC  Residual
Certificate  at the beginning of any calendar  quarter equals the issue price of
the  certificate,  increased  by the  amount  of daily  accruals  for all  prior
quarters,  and  decreased  (but not  below  zero)  by the  aggregate  amount  of
distributions made on the certificate before the beginning of such quarter.  The
"federal long-term rate" is an average of current yields on Treasury  securities
with a remaining term of greater than nine years, computed and published monthly
by the IRS.

      As an  exception  to  the  general  rule  described  above,  the  Treasury
Department has authority to issue  regulations,  which  regulations have not yet
been issued,  that would treat the entire  amount of income  accruing on a REMIC
Residual  Certificate as an excess inclusion if the REMIC Residual  Certificates
in the aggregate are  considered  not to have  "significant  value."  Applicable
legislative history provides that for this purpose,  REMIC Residual Certificates
should be  treated as having  "significant  value" if the  certificates  have an
aggregate  issue price that is at least equal to 2% of the aggregate issue price
of all REMIC Residual  Certificates and REMIC Regular  Certificates with respect
to the REMIC. It is impossible to predict whether any such  regulations  will be
issued, and if so, how they will define "significant value" for purposes of this
rule.

      In the  case of any  REMIC  Residual  Certificates  held by a real  estate
investment  trust,  the aggregate  excess  inclusions with respect to such REMIC
Residual  Certificates,  reduced  (but  not  below  zero)  by  the  real  estate
investment trust taxable income (within the meaning of section  857(b)(2) of the
Internal Revenue Code,  excluding any net capital gain), will be allocated among
the  shareholders of such trust in proportion to the dividends  received by such
shareholders  from such trust, and any amount so allocated will be treated as an
excess  inclusion  with  respect  to a  REMIC  Residual  Certificate  as if held
directly by such shareholder. Regulated investment companies, common trust funds
and certain cooperatives are subject to similar rules.


      Pass-through of Non-Interest Expenses of the REMIC. As a general rule, all
of the fees and expenses of a REMIC will be taken into account by holders of the
REMIC Residual Certificates. In the case of a "single-class" REMIC, however, the
expenses and a matching amount of additional  income will be allocated among the
holders of the REMIC Regular Certificates and the REMIC Residual Certificates on
a daily basis in proportion to the relative  amounts of income  accruing to each
holder with respect to that day. In general terms, a  "single-class"  REMIC is a
REMIC that either (i) would qualify,  under existing  regulations,  as a grantor
trust if it were not a REMIC  (treating  all interests in the REMIC as ownership
interests,  even if they are in fact  classified as debt for federal  income tax
purposes)  or (ii) is  similar  to a grantor  trust and is  structured  with the
principal purpose of avoiding the "single-class" REMIC rules.

      In the case of  individuals  (or  trusts,  estates or other  persons  that
compute their income in the same manner as individuals) who own an interest in a
REMIC Regular Certificate or a REMIC Residual  Certificate directly or through a
"pass-through  interest  holder"  (as  defined  below)  that is required to pass
miscellaneous  itemized deductions through to its owners or beneficiaries (e.g.,
a  partnership,  an S  corporation  or a grantor  trust),  such expenses will be
deductible, under Internal Revenue Code section 67, only to the extent that such
expenses,  plus other  "miscellaneous  itemized  deductions" of the  individual,
exceed 2% of such  individual's  adjusted  gross income.  In addition,  Internal
Revenue  Code  section  68  provides  that the  amount  of  itemized  deductions
otherwise  allowable to an  individual  whose  adjusted  gross income  exceeds a
specified amount (the "Applicable  Amount") will be reduced by the lesser of (i)
3% of the excess of the  individual's  adjusted gross income over the Applicable
Amount or (ii) 80% of the amount of itemized deductions  otherwise allowable for
the taxable year. The amount of additional  taxable income recognized by holders
of REMIC  Residual  Certificates  who are subject to the  limitations  of either
section  67 or  section  68 of the  Internal  Revenue  Code may be  substantial.
Further, a holder (other than a corporation)  subject to the alternative minimum
tax may not deduct any  miscellaneous  itemized  deductions in determining  such
holder's  alternative minimum taxable income, even though an amount equal to the
amount of such  deductions  will be included in such holder's gross income.  The
REMIC is required to report to each pass-through  interest holder and to the IRS
such holder's allocable share, if any, of the REMIC's non-interest expenses. The
term  "pass-through  interest  holder"  generally  includes  entities  taxed  as
individuals and certain pass-through  entities, but does not include real estate
investment  trusts.   Prospective   investors  that  are  individuals  or  other
pass-through  interest holders should consider the impact of these rules on them
prior to making an investment in REMIC Regular  Certificates  or REMIC  Residual
Certificates.

      Mark-to-Market  Rules. REMIC Residual  Certificates are not subject to the
mark-to-market rules and may not be marked-to-market.

      Distributions.  In general,  any distribution made with respect to a REMIC
Residual  Certificate will be treated as a non-taxable  return of capital to the
extent it does not exceed the holder's adjusted tax basis in such REMIC Residual
Certificate.  To the extent a distribution  exceeds such adjusted tax basis,  it
will be treated as gain from the sale of the REMIC Residual Certificate.


      Amounts paid to holders of REMIC Residual  Certificates  that are not U.S.
Persons are treated as interest  for  purposes of the 30% (or lower treaty rate)
United States withholding tax. Amounts  distributed to holders of REMIC Residual
Certificates  should qualify as "portfolio  interest," subject to the conditions
described  above under " a. Taxation of Owners of REMIC  Regular  Certificates,"
but only to the extent that the underlying  mortgage loans were originated after
July 18,1984. If the portfolio interest exemption is unavailable,  distributions
will be subject to United  States  withholding  tax when made (or when the REMIC
Residual   Certificate  is  disposed  of)  under  rules  similar  to  those  for
withholding  upon  disposition of debt  instruments  that have OID. The Internal
Revenue  Code,  however,  grants  the  Treasury  Department  authority  to issue
regulations,  which regulations have not been issued,  imposing  withholding tax
without regard to whether  distributions  are made,  where  necessary to prevent
avoidance  of tax.  If the  amounts  distributed  to holders  of REMIC  Residual
Certificates  that are not U.S.  Persons are  effectively  connected  with their
conduct of a trade or business in the United  States,  the 30% (or lower  treaty
rate)  withholding  will not apply.  Instead,  the amounts  distributed  will be
subject  to U.S.  federal  taxation  at regular  graduated  rates.  For  special
restrictions on the transfer of REMIC Residual Certificates to non-U.S. Persons,
see "c.  Tax-Related  Restrictions on Transfers of REMIC Residual  Certificates"
below.

      Sale or  Exchange  of REMIC  Residual  Certificates.  If a REMIC  Residual
Certificate is sold or exchanged,  the seller will  generally  recognize gain or
loss equal to the difference between the amount realized on the sale or exchange
and its adjusted tax basis in the REMIC  Residual  Certificate  (except that the
recognition of loss may be limited under the "wash sale" rules described below).
A holder's adjusted tax basis in a REMIC Residual  Certificate  generally equals
the cost of such REMIC  Residual  Certificate  to such holder,  increased by the
taxable  income of the REMIC that was included in the income of such holder with
respect to such REMIC Residual  Certificate,  and decreased (but not below zero)
by the net losses  that have been  allowed as  deductions  to such  holder  with
respect to such REMIC Residual  Certificate  and by the  distributions  received
with respect  thereto by such  holder.  In general any such gain or loss will be
capital  gain or loss  provided  the  REMIC  Residual  Certificate  is held as a
capital  asset.  However,  REMIC  Residual  Certificates  will be  "evidences of
indebtedness"  within the meaning of section  582(c)(1) of the Internal  Revenue
Code, so that gain or loss recognized from sale of a REMIC Residual  Certificate
by a bank or thrift  institution to which such section applies would be ordinary
income or loss.

      Except as provided in Treasury regulations yet to be issued, if the seller
of a REMIC Residual Certificate  reacquires such REMIC Residual Certificate,  or
acquires any other REMIC Residual Certificate,  any residual interest in another
REMIC or similar  interest in a "taxable  mortgage pool" (as defined in Internal
Revenue Code section 7701(i)) during the period beginning six months before, and
ending six months after, the date of such sale, such sale will be subject to the
"wash sale" rules of section 1091 of the Internal  Revenue  Code. In that event,
any loss  realized  by the  holder  on the sale  will  not be  deductible,  but,
instead,  will increase such holder's  adjusted tax basis in the newly  acquired
asset.

      Administrative   Matters   Applicable   to  Holders   of  REMIC   Residual
Certificates.  Solely for the purpose of the  administrative  provisions  of the
Internal  Revenue Code, the REMIC generally will be treated as a partnership and
the  holders of REMIC  Residual  Certificates  will be treated as the  partners.
Certain  information  will be  furnished  quarterly  to each  holder  of a REMIC
Residual  Certificate  who held a REMIC  Residual  Certificate on any day in the
previous calendar quarter.


      Each holder of a REMIC Residual  Certificate is required to treat items on
its return  consistently with their treatment on the REMIC's return,  unless the
holder either files a statement  identifying  the  inconsistency  or establishes
that the  inconsistency  resulted from incorrect  information  received from the
REMIC.  The IRS may assert a deficiency  resulting from a failure to comply with
the consistency requirement without instituting an administrative  proceeding at
the REMIC level. The REMIC does not intend to register as a tax shelter pursuant
to Internal  Revenue Code section  6111 because it is not  anticipated  that the
REMIC  will  have a net  loss for any of the  first  five  taxable  years of its
existence.  Any person that holds a REMIC Residual  Certificate as a nominee for
another person may be required to furnish the REMIC,  in a manner to be provided
in  Treasury  regulations,  with the name and  address of such  person and other
information.

c.    Tax-Related Restrictions on Transfers of REMIC Residual Certificates

      Disqualified  Organizations.  An entity may not qualify as a REMIC  unless
there are reasonable  arrangements designed to ensure that residual interests in
such entity are not held by "disqualified  organizations" (as defined below) and
information necessary for the application of the tax described in this paragraph
is made  available by the REMIC.  A tax is imposed on the transfer of a residual
interest  in a REMIC to a  "disqualified  organization."  The  amount of the tax
equals the product of (i) an amount (as determined under  regulations)  equal to
the present value of the total anticipated  "excess  inclusions" with respect to
such  interest  for periods  after the  transfer  and (ii) the highest  marginal
federal income tax rate  applicable to  corporations.  The tax is imposed on the
transferor  unless the transfer is through an agent (including a broker or other
middleman) for a disqualified organization, in which event the tax is imposed on
the agent.  The person otherwise liable for the tax is relieved of liability for
the tax if the  transferee  furnishes  to such  person  an  affidavit  that  the
transferee is not a disqualified  organization and, at the time of the transfer,
such person does not have actual knowledge that the affidavit is false. For this
purpose, a "disqualified  organization"  means (A) the United States, any State,
possession  or  political  subdivision  thereof,  any  foreign  government,  any
international  organization  or  any  agency  or  instrumentality  of any of the
foregoing  (provided that such term does not include an  instrumentality  if all
its activities are subject to tax and, except for FHLMC, a majority of its board
of  directors  is not  selected  by  any  such  governmental  agency),  (B)  any
organization  (other than certain farmers'  cooperatives)  generally exempt from
federal income tax, unless such organization is subject to the tax on "unrelated
business taxable income" and (C) a rural electric or telephone cooperative.

      A tax is imposed on a  "pass-through  entity" (as defined below) holding a
residual  interest  in a REMIC if at any time  during  the  taxable  year of the
pass-through  entity a  disqualified  organization  is the  record  holder of an
interest  in such  entity.  The amount of the tax is equal to the product of (i)
the amount of excess  inclusions for the taxable year applicable to the interest
held by the  disqualified  organization  and (ii) the highest  marginal  federal
income tax rate applicable to corporations.  The  pass-through  entity otherwise
liable for the tax, for any period during which the disqualified organization is
the record  holder of an interest in such entity,  will be relieved of liability
for the tax if such record  holder  furnishes to such entity an  affidavit  that
such record holder is not a disqualified  organization and, for such period, the
pass-through  entity does not have actual knowledge that the affidavit is false.
For this  purpose,  a  "pass-through  entity"  means (A) a regulated  investment
company,  real estate  investment trust or common trust fund, (B) a partnership,
trust or estate  and (C)  certain  cooperatives.  Except as may be  provided  in
Treasury  regulations  not yet  issued,  any  person  holding an  interest  in a
pass-through  entity  as a  nominee  for  another  will,  with  respect  to such
interest, be treated as a pass-through entity.

      In order to comply with these rules,  the  Agreement  will provide that no
record or beneficial  ownership interest in a REMIC Residual  Certificate may be
purchased,  transferred  or sold,  directly or  indirectly,  without the express
written  consent of the trustee and/or the master  servicer.  The trustee and/or
master  servicer  will grant such  consent  to a  proposed  transfer  only if it
receives the  following:  (i) an affidavit  from the proposed  transferee to the
effect that it is not a disqualified organization and is not acquiring the REMIC
Residual  Certificate as a nominee or agent for a disqualified  organization and
(ii) a covenant  by the  proposed  transferee  to the effect  that the  proposed
transferee  agrees  to be bound by and to  abide  by the  transfer  restrictions
applicable to the REMIC Residual Certificate.

      Noneconomic REMIC Residual  Certificates.  The REMIC rules disregard,  for
federal  income tax  purposes,  any transfer of a  "noneconomic  REMIC  Residual
Certificate" to a U.S. Person (or generally to a non-U.S.  Person that holds the
REMIC Residual  Certificate in connection with a U.S. trade or business)  unless
no significant purpose of the transfer is to enable the transferor to impede the
assessment or collection of tax. A "noneconomic  REMIC Residual  Certificate" is
any REMIC Residual  Certificate  (including a REMIC Residual  Certificate with a
positive  value at  issuance),  unless,  at the time of  transfer,  taking  into
account the Prepayment  Assumption and any required or permitted  clean up calls
or required  liquidation provided for in the REMIC's  organizational  documents,
(i) the present value of the expected future distributions on the REMIC Residual
Certificate at least equals the product of the present value of the  anticipated
excess  inclusions and the highest  corporate  income tax rate in effect for the
year in which the transfer  occurs and (ii) the  transferor  reasonably  expects
that the transferee  will receive  distributions  from the REMIC at or after the
time at which taxes accrue on the  anticipated  excess  inclusions  in an amount
sufficient to satisfy the accrued  taxes.  A  significant  purpose to impede the
assessment or collection of tax is treated as existing if the transferor, at the
time of the transfer, either knew or should have known that the transferee would
be  unwilling  or unable to pay taxes due on its share of the taxable  income of
the REMIC.  A  transferor  is  presumed  not to have such  knowledge  if (A) the
transferor  conducted a reasonable  investigation  of the transferee and (B) the
transferee  acknowledges to the transferor  that the REMIC Residual  Certificate
may  generate  tax  liabilities  in excess  of the cash flow and the  transferee
represents  that it intends to pay such taxes as they  become due. If a transfer
of a noneconomic REMIC Residual Certificate is disregarded, the transferor would
continue to be treated as the owner of the  certificate and would continue to be
subject to tax on its allocable portion of the net income of the REMIC.


      Non-U.S.  Persons.  The REMIC rules  provide  that the transfer of a REMIC
Residual Certificate that has a "tax avoidance  potential" to a non-U.S.  Person
will be disregarded for federal income tax purposes.  This rule appears to apply
to a transferee who is not a U.S.  Person,  unless such  transferee's  income in
respect of the REMIC  Residual  Certificate  is  effectively  connected with the
conduct of a United States trade or business.  A REMIC  Residual  Certificate is
deemed to have a tax avoidance  potential unless,  at the time of transfer,  the
transferor  reasonably  expect that the REMIC will  distribute to the transferee
amounts that will equal at least 30 percent of each excess  inclusion,  and that
such  amounts  will be  distributed  at or after the time the  excess  inclusion
accrues and not later than the end of the calendar  year  following  the year of
accrual.  If the non-U.S.  Person transfers the REMIC Residual  Certificate to a
U.S. Person,  the transfer will be disregarded,  and the foreign transferor will
continue to be treated as the owner,  if the transfer has the effect of allowing
the  transferor to avoid tax on accrued  excess  inclusions.  The Agreement will
provide  that no record or  beneficial  ownership  interest in a REMIC  Residual
Certificate may be  transferred,  directly or indirectly,  to a non-U.S.  Person
unless such person  provides the trustee and/or the master  servicer with a duly
completed IRS Form 4224 and the trustee and/or master servicer  consents to such
transfer in writing.

      Any attempted transfer or pledge in violation of the transfer restrictions
will be  absolutely  null and void and shall  vest no  rights  in any  purported
transferee.  Investors  in REMIC  Residual  Certificates  are advised to consult
their  own  tax  advisors  with  respect  to  transfers  of the  REMIC  Residual
Certificates  and, in  addition,  pass-through  entities  are advised to consult
their own tax  advisors  with  respect  to any taxes  which may be  imposed on a
pass-through entity.

      d.    Tax-Exempt Holders of REMIC Residual Certificates

      As  noted  above  under  "  b.  Taxation  of  Holders  of  REMIC  Residual
Certificates - Excess  Inclusions,"  any holder of a REMIC Residual  Certificate
that is a  pension  fund or other  entity  that is  subject  to  federal  income
taxation only on its "unrelated  business  taxable income" within the meaning of
Internal Revenue Code section 512 will be subject to such tax on that portion of
the distributions received on a REMIC Residual Certificate that is considered an
excess inclusion.

      e.    Prohibited Transactions and Other Taxes

      The  Internal  Revenue  Code imposes a tax on a REMIC equal to 100% of the
net income derived from "prohibited  transactions" (the "Prohibited Transactions
Tax").  In  general,  subject to certain  specified  exceptions,  a  "prohibited
transaction"  includes  the  disposition  of a Qualified  Asset,  the receipt of
income from a source  other than a Qualified  Asset or certain  other  permitted
investments,  the  receipt  of  compensation  for  services,  or gain  from  the
disposition of an asset  purchased  with the payments  received on the Qualified
Assets for temporary investment pending distribution on the certificates.  It is
not anticipated  that the trust fund for any series of certificates  will engage
in any prohibited  transactions in which it would recognize a material amount of
net income.

      In addition,  certain contributions to a REMIC made after the day on which
the REMIC issues all of its interests could result in the imposition of a tax on
the  REMIC  equal  to  100%  of the  value  of  the  contributed  property  (the
"Contributions  Tax").  No trust fund that makes an  election to be treated as a
REMIC will accept contributions that would subject it to such tax.

      In  addition,  a REMIC may also be subject  to  federal  income tax at the
highest corporate rate on "net income from foreclosure  property," determined by
reference to the rules applicable to real estate investment trusts.  "Net income
from  foreclosure  property"  generally means income from  foreclosure  property
other than qualifying income for a real estate investment trust.


      Where any  Prohibited  Transactions  Tax,  Contributions  Tax,  tax on net
income from foreclosure  property or state or local income or franchise tax that
may be imposed on a REMIC relating to any series of  certificates  arises out of
or  results  from  (i) a  breach  of  the  related  master  servicer's,  central
servicer's,  trustee's  or Seller's  obligations,  as the case may be, under the
related  Agreement  for such  series,  such  tax  will be  borne by such  master
servicer,  central  servicer,  trustee or Seller, as the case may be, out of its
own funds or (ii) the Seller's  obligation to repurchase a Qualified  Loan, such
tax will be borne by the Seller. In the event that the master servicer,  central
servicer, trustee or Seller, as the case may be, fails to pay or is not required
to pay any such tax as provided above, such tax will be payable out of the trust
fund for such series and will be covered under Farmer Mac's guarantee.

      f.    Liquidation and Termination

      If the REMIC adopts a plan of complete liquidation,  within the meaning of
section 860F(a)(4)(A)(i) of the Internal Revenue Code, which may be accomplished
by  designating in the REMIC's final tax return a date on which such adoption is
deemed to occur,  and sells all of its assets  (other than cash) within a 90-day
period  beginning on such date,  the REMIC will not be subject to any Prohibited
Transaction  Tax,  provided that the REMIC credits or distributes in liquidation
all of the sale proceeds plus its cash (other than the amounts  retained to meet
claims) to holders of REMIC Regular Certificates and REMIC Residual Certificates
within the 90-day period.

      The REMIC will  terminate  shortly  following the  retirement of the REMIC
Regular Certificates.  If the adjusted tax basis in a REMIC Residual Certificate
of a  holder  of a  REMIC  Residual  Certificate  exceeds  the  amount  of  cash
distributed to such holder of a REMIC Residual  Certificate in final liquidation
of its  interest,  then it would  appear  that the  holder  of a REMIC  Residual
Certificate  would be entitled to a loss equal to the amount of such excess.  It
is  unclear  whether  such a loss,  if  allowed,  will be a  capital  loss or an
ordinary loss.

                            STATE TAX CONSIDERATIONS

      In  addition  to the  federal  income  tax  consequences  described  under
"Material Federal Income Tax Consequences," you should consider the state, local
and foreign tax  consequences of the  acquisition,  ownership and disposition of
certificates.  State,  local and  foreign  income  and other tax laws may differ
substantially  from federal law. The discussion  under "Material  Federal Income
Tax  Consequences" is not intended to describe any aspect of the income tax laws
of any state, locality or foreign country.

                              ERISA CONSIDERATIONS

General

      This  section   summarizes  some  important   issues  under  the  Employee
Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as amended, which is known as ERISA, and
the prohibited  transaction  provisions of section 4975 of the Internal  Revenue
Code that you should consider before purchasing any certificates.


      ERISA imposes restrictions on:

                 -employee benefit plans and other retirement arrangements
                  subject to ERISA ("Plans"), and

                 -persons who are parties in interest or disqualified persons
                  with respect to those Plans.

Some employee benefit plans, such as governmental  plans and church plans (if no
election has been made under  Internal  Revenue Code  section  410(d)),  are not
subject to the  requirements of ERISA.  Assets of those plans may be invested in
certificates without regard to the ERISA considerations described below, subject
to the provisions of other applicable  federal and state law. If the assets of a
trust fund were deemed to be plan assets,

                 -the  prudence  standards  and other  provisions  of Title I of
                  ERISA applicable to investments by Plans and their fiduciaries
                  would  extend  (as to all  fiduciaries)  to all  assets of the
                  trust fund, and

                 -transactions  involving  the  assets  of the  trust  fund  and
                  parties in interest or  disqualified  persons  with respect to
                  such plans might be  prohibited  under  ERISA  section 406 and
                  Internal  Revenue  Code  section  4975 unless an  exemption is
                  applicable.

Under ERISA,  parties in interest include,  among others,  fiduciaries,  service
providers and employers whose employees are covered by a Plan.

      A fiduciary with respect to a Plan is a person who:

            (1)  exercises any discretionary  authority or discretionary control
                 respecting  management  of a Plan or exercises any authority or
                 control respecting management or disposition of its assets,

            (2)  renders  investment  advice  for a fee or  other  compensation,
                 direct  or  indirect,  with  respect  to any  monies  or  other
                 property of such Plan, or has any  authority or  responsibility
                 to do so, or

            (3)  has any discretionary authority or discretionary
                 responsibility in the administration of such Plan.

      In  considering  an investment  in the  certificates,  a fiduciary  should
consider:

            (1)  whether the  investment is prudent and in  accordance  with the
                 documents and instruments governing the Plan and is appropriate
                 for the Plan in light of the Plan's investment  portfolio taken
                 as a whole,


            (2)  whether the investment satisfies the diversification
                 requirements of section 404(a)(1)(C) of Title I of ERISA, and

            (3)  in the  case  of a Plan  described  in  Internal  Revenue  Code
                 section 401(a) ("Qualified  Plan") or an individual  retirement
                 account,   or  IRA,  whether  the  investment  will  result  in
                 unrelated business taxable income to the Qualified Plan or IRA.

Plan Assets

      ERISA  standards of conduct are imposed on parties,  such as  fiduciaries,
who have  authority  to deal with "plan  assets."  The  Department  of Labor has
issued final regulations defining plan assets in the context of plan investments
in other entities  ("Final  Regulations").  The Final  Regulations set forth the
general  rule that,  when a Plan (which term shall  include for purposes of this
discussion Qualified Plans, IRAs and any other plan described in section 4975 of
the Internal Revenue Code) invests in another entity,  the Plan's assets include
its investment, but do not, solely by reason of such investment,  include any of
the underlying assets of the entity.  The general rule does not apply,  however,
for a Plan's  purchase and holding of  "guaranteed  governmental  mortgage  pool
certificates."  The Final  Regulations  provide  that  where a Plan  acquires  a
guaranteed governmental mortgage pool certificate, the Plan's assets include the
certificate  and  all of its  rights  with  respect  to such  certificate  under
applicable  law,  but do not,  solely by reason of the  Plan's  holding  of such
certificate,  include any of the mortgages underlying such certificate. The term
"guaranteed  governmental mortgage pool certificate" is defined as a certificate
backed by, or evidencing an interest in,  specified  mortgages or  participation
interests  therein,  and with respect to which  interest and  principal  payable
pursuant to the  certificate are guaranteed by the United States or an agency or
instrumentality thereof. The Department of Labor has advised Farmer Mac that the
certificates  satisfy the conditions set forth in the Final Regulations and thus
qualify as "guaranteed  governmental  mortgage pool certificates."  Accordingly,
none of Farmer Mac, the  trustee,  the master  servicer or any central  servicer
will be subject to ERISA  standards of conduct in dealing with Qualified  Loans,
QMBS or other trust fund assets.

Prohibited Transactions

      A broad range of transactions  between  parties-in-interest  and Plans are
prohibited by ERISA. The acquisition of a certificate by a Plan subject to ERISA
or any IRA or any other Plan  subject to  Internal  Revenue  Code  section  4975
could, in some instances,  result in prohibited transactions or other violations
of the fiduciary  responsibility  provisions of ERISA and Internal  Revenue Code
section  4975.  An  exemption  from the  prohibited  transaction  rules could be
applicable,  depending  in part  upon  the type  and  circumstances  of the Plan
fiduciary making the decision to acquire a certificate.

      For a particular Plan desiring to invest in the certificates, a prohibited
transaction  class  exemption  issued by the  Department of Labor might apply as
follows:


                 -PTCE 84-14 - Class Exemption for Plan Asset Transactions
                  Determined by Independent Qualified Professional Asset
                  Managers;

                 -PTCE 96-23 - Class Exemption for Plan Asset Transactions
                  Determined by In-House Asset Managers;

                 -PTCE 91-38 - Class Exemption for Certain Transactions
                  Involving Bank Collective Investment Funds;

                 -PTCE 90-1 - Class Exemption for Certain Transactions
                  Involving Insurance Company Pooled Separate Accounts; or

                 -PTCE  95-60  -  Class   Exemption  for  Certain   Transactions
                  Involving Insurance Company General Accounts.

There can be no  assurance  that any of these class  exemptions  will apply with
respect to any particular Plan desiring to invest in the  certificates  or, even
if it  were to  apply,  that  the  exemption  would  apply  to all  transactions
involving the trust fund.

      Before  purchasing  any  certificates  in  reliance  on any  of the  above
referenced  class  exemptions,  a fiduciary of a Plan should itself confirm that
the requirements set forth in such class exemptions would be satisfied.

      Special  caution should be exercised  before the assets of a Plan are used
to purchase a certificate in circumstances where an affiliate of the Seller, the
originator, the central servicer, the trustee or the borrower either:

            (1)  has investment discretion with respect to the investment of
                 such assets of such Plan or

            (2)  has authority or  responsibility  to give,  or regularly  gives
                 investment  advice  with  respect to such  assets for a fee and
                 pursuant to an agreement or understanding that such advice will
                 serve as a primary basis for investment  decisions with respect
                 to such  assets  and  that  such  advice  will be  based on the
                 particular investment needs of the Plan.

      Any Plan fiduciary  considering  whether to purchase any  certificates  on
behalf of a Plan should consult with its counsel  regarding the applicability of
the fiduciary  responsibility and prohibited transaction provisions of ERISA and
the Internal Revenue Code to such investment,  and the potential consequences on
their specific circumstances, prior to making an investment in the certificates.
Each Plan fiduciary also should determine  whether,  under the general fiduciary
standards of  investment  prudence and  diversification,  an  investment  in the
certificates is appropriate for the Plan taking into  consideration  the overall
investment  policy  of the Plan and the  composition  of the  Plan's  investment
portfolio.


                                LEGAL INVESTMENT

      The certificates will constitute  securities  guaranteed by Farmer Mac for
purposes of Farmer Mac's charter. As such, the certificates will, by statute, be
legal investments for any

                 -persons,
                 -trusts,
                 -corporations,
                 -partnerships,
                 -associations,
                 -business trusts, and
                 -business entities, including depository institutions, life
                  insurance companies and pension funds

created  pursuant to or existing  under the laws of the United States or, except
as indicated  below,  of any state,  the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico to
the same extent that, under applicable law,  obligations issued by or guaranteed
as  to  principal   and  interest  by  the  United   States  or  any  agency  or
instrumentality  thereof  constitute legal investments for such entities.  Under
Farmer Mac's charter,  if a state enacted  legislation  prior to January 6, 1996
specifically  limiting the legal  investment  authority  of any  state-chartered
entities with respect to Farmer Mac guaranteed securities,  such securities will
constitute  legal  investments for entities  subject to such legislation only to
the  extent  provided  therein.  Farmer  Mac is not aware of any state  that has
enacted such legislation prior to the deadline therefor in Farmer Mac's charter.

      Farmer Mac's charter thus allows federal savings and loan associations and
federal  savings  banks to invest in Farmer Mac  guaranteed  securities  without
limitation as to the  percentage of their assets  represented  thereby;  federal
credit unions to invest in Farmer Mac guaranteed  securities  without limitation
as to percentage of capital and surplus,  and allows  national banks to purchase
Farmer Mac  guaranteed  securities  for their own account  without regard to the
limitation generally applicable to investment  securities set forth in 12 U.S.C.
Section 24 (Seventh), subject in each case to such regulations as the applicable
federal regulatory  authority may prescribe.  In addition,  on July 9, 1990, the
Comptroller of the Currency issued an interpretation  that Farmer Mac guaranteed
securities  of  the  type  offered  hereby  are  eligible  for  dealing  in  and
underwriting by national banks.

      Relevant regulatory authorities may impose administrative  restrictions on
investment in certificates with special  characteristics,  such as interest only
and principal only certificates.

      You should consult you own legal  advisors in  determining  whether and to
what extent the certificates constitute legal investments for you.

                             METHOD OF DISTRIBUTION

      The certificates offered by the related prospectus supplements may be:

            (1)  issued to Sellers or originators in exchange for Qualified
                 Loans or

            (2)  sold either directly or to underwriters for immediate resale
                 in a public offering.

The  prospectus  supplement for each series of  certificates  will set forth the
method  of  distribution,  and,  in the case of any sale to  underwriters,  will
additionally  set forth the terms of the  offering of the  certificates  of such
series offered thereby, including:

                 -the name or names of the underwriters,

                 -the purchase price of the certificates,

                 -the proceeds from the sale, and

                 -in the  case of an  underwritten  fixed  price  offering,  the
                  initial public offering  price,  the discounts and commissions
                  to the underwriters  and any discounts or concessions  allowed
                  or reallowed to certain dealers.

      The certificates of a series may be acquired by underwriters for their own
account  and may be  resold  from  time  to  time  in one or more  transactions,
including  negotiated  transactions,  at a fixed  public  offering  price  or at
varying  prices  determined  at  the  time  of  sale.  The  obligations  of  any
underwriters  will  be  subject  to  certain   conditions   precedent  and  such
underwriters will be severally  obligated to purchase all of the certificates of
a  series  offered  by the  prospectus  supplement  for such  series  if any are
purchased.  If the  certificates  of a series are  offered  other  than  through
underwriters, the prospectus supplement for such series will contain information
regarding the nature of such offering and any agreements to be entered into with
respect to the purchase of such certificates.

      The place and time of delivery for the certificates of a series in respect
of which  this  prospectus  is  delivered  will be set  forth in the  prospectus
supplement for such series.

      In addition to purchasing the  certificates  pursuant to the  underwriting
agreements  among Farmer Mac,  Farmer Mac Mortgage  Securities  Corporation,  as
depositor, and the appropriate underwriters, each underwriter named on the cover
page of a prospectus  supplement and their  affiliates may be engaged in several
ongoing business relationships with Farmer Mac.

      Each  underwriting  agreement  provides  that  Farmer  Mac and  Farmer Mac
Mortgage  Securities  Corporation will indemnify each  underwriter  named on the
cover page of any prospectus  supplement against certain civil liabilities under
the  Securities  Act, or  contribute to payments  each such  underwriter  may be
required to make in respect thereof.

                            INDEX OF PRINCIPAL TERMS

      Unless the context indicates  otherwise,  the following  capitalized terms
shall have the meanings set forth on the pages indicated below:

Accrual Certificates........................................................35
accrual period..........................................................63, 73
Accrued Certificate Interest................................................36
acquisition premium.........................................................65
adjusted issue price................................................63, 73, 81
Advance(s)..................................................................37
Agreements..................................................................43
Applicable Amount...........................................................82
Beneficial Owners...........................................................41
Book-Entry Certificates.....................................................35
Certificate Account.........................................................49
Certificate Account Deposit Date............................................49
Collection Account(s).......................................................19
Contributions Tax...........................................................86
CPR.........................................................................32
Cut-off Date................................................................24
daily accruals..............................................................81
Daily portions..........................................................63, 73
de minimis amount...........................................................63
Definitive Certificates.....................................................35
Depository..................................................................40
Determination Date..........................................................35
disqualified organization...................................................84
Eligible Depository.........................................................47
Eligible Investments........................................................47
excess servicing fee........................................................67
Fed System..................................................................40
federal long-term rate......................................................81
Final Regulations...........................................................89
Grantor Trust Certificates..................................................61
guaranteed governmental mortgage pool certificate...........................89
Guaranteed Loan.............................................................27
Guaranteed Portions.........................................................17
Holders of Book-Entry Certificates..........................................40
Indirect Participants.......................................................41
Insurance Proceeds..........................................................48
issue price.................................................................63
Liquidation Proceeds........................................................48
Mortgage Notes..............................................................56
Net income from foreclosure property........................................86
New Withholding Regulations.................................................70
noneconomic REMIC Residual Certificate......................................85
<PAGE>
OID.........................................................................61
OID Regulations.............................................................62
Owner.......................................................................27
Participants................................................................41
pass-through entity.........................................................84
pass-through interest holder................................................82
phantom income..............................................................79
Plan(s).....................................................................88
portfolio income............................................................79
Prepayment Assumption...................................................68, 72
Prepayment Assumption Rule..................................................63
prohibited transaction......................................................86
Prohibited Transactions Tax.................................................86
Purchase Price..............................................................46
QMBS........................................................................18
QMBS Agreement..............................................................25
QMBS Issuer.................................................................25
QMBS Servicer...............................................................25
QMBS Trustee................................................................25
Qualified Assets............................................................17
Qualified Loans.............................................................17
Qualified Plan..............................................................89
Qualified stated interest...................................................73
Record Date.................................................................35
Related Proceeds............................................................37
REMIC Certificates..........................................................71
REMIC Regular Certificates..................................................71
REMIC Residual Certificates.................................................71
REO Proceeds................................................................48
Sale Agreement..............................................................43
secured-creditor exemption..................................................58
Sellers.....................................................................21
Servicers...................................................................61
State Environmental Lien....................................................59
stated redemption price at maturity.....................................62, 72
Stripped Bond Certificates..................................................66
Stripped Coupon Certificates................................................66
Stripped Interest Certificates..............................................34
Stripped Principal Certificates.............................................34
System Institution..........................................................34
U.S. Person.................................................................70
Underlying QMBS.............................................................25
Unguaranteed Portion........................................................28
yield to maturity.......................................................63, 73


<PAGE>


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                                   $10,633,750

                             Guaranteed Agricultural

                                 Mortgage-Backed

                                   Securities

                                   FARMER MAC

                              Federal Agricultural

                              Mortgage Corporation

                              PROSPECTUS SUPPLEMENT

                               September 27, 2000











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