The Federal Agricultural Mortgage Corporation (Farmer Mac) is a secondary market for agricultural mortgages. It purchases loans from originating lenders and provides other risk management tools to facilitate the agricultural lending market. It was created by Congress as a privately funded government-sponsored enterprise (GSE) similar to the housing GSEs, such as Fannie Mae.
Farmer Mac is governed by a 15-member board of directors, five of whom are nominated by the President and confirmed by the Senate. The Senate confirmed one board member during the Biden Administration: Chester John Culver in May 2022. On September 30, 2025, President Trump removed Chester Culver and nominated Jeffrey Kaufmann, who was renominated on January 13, 2026.
Congressional oversight of Farmer Mac is provided by the House Committee on Agriculture and Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry, which have primary jurisdiction for the Farmer Mac statutes.
Farmer Mac was established in the Agricultural Credit Act of 1987 (P.L. 100-233, Title VII) as a secondary market for agricultural loans. It purchases and pools qualified loans and may sell them to investors as securities or hold them in its own portfolio. It provides risk management tools to originating lenders that let them make more loans to agricultural borrowers and satisfy regulatory requirements.
Statutorily, Farmer Mac is codified in the Farm Credit Act of 1971 (12 U.S.C. §2279aa et seq.), which also established the Farm Credit System (FCS; see CRS Report RS21278, Farm Credit System). Financially and corporately, however, Farmer Mac is a separate entity from the FCS. Each has no liability for any of the others' debt. For oversight, Farmer Mac and the FCS have the same federal regulator—the Farm Credit Administration (see CRS In Focus IF10767, Farm Credit Administration and Its Board Members).
Farmer Mac is an investor-owned corporation, not a member-owned cooperative like the FCS. Two classes of voting stock exist for (1) banks and insurance companies and (2) the FCS. Any investor may own nonvoting stock. As an independent entity, Farmer Mac is not supported by congressional appropriations and is not part of the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA).
Farmer Mac operates in four primary lines of business: farm and ranch, USDA guarantees, rural utilities, and institutional credit. In the farm and ranch business line, most activity is from Farmer Mac purchasing and retaining eligible agricultural mortgage loans. In that line of business, Farmer Mac also guarantees securities held by third parties that are backed by eligible loans and promises to buy specific agricultural mortgages under future adverse conditions by selling "long-term standby purchase commitments" to financial institutions. The purchase commitments guarantee loans against default risk, while the originating lender retains interest rate risk and loan servicing responsibilities.
In the guarantee line, Farmer Mac purchases the portion of loans that are guaranteed by USDA, thereby accepting the interest rate risk but carrying no default risk. The rural utilities business line involves mostly loans to rural electric cooperatives. The institutional credit portion supports the general obligations of eligible financial institutions, defined as having borrowers and portfolios that are eligible for other Farmer Mac business.
As of September 30, 2025, Farmer Mac's total business volume (similar to assets) was $31 billion. The largest share of Farmer Mac's business is farm and ranch loans, followed by rural utilities and broadband, renewable energy, and corporate agricultural finance. Its core earnings (which exclude the effects of valuation fluctuations and infrequent or unusual transactions) were nearly $50 million for the third quarter of 2025, greater than the $45 million for the same period in 2024.
Congress prescribes a 15-member board of directors for Farmer Mac (12 U.S.C. §2279aa-2). Five are presidentially appointed and Senate confirmed, five are elected by stockholders to represent banks and insurance companies, and five are elected by other stockholders to represent the FCS.
For the five presidentially appointed and Senate-confirmed members (Table 1), statute does not specify a term length but says that such board members serve at the pleasure of the President. The President names one of the appointees to be chair of the board (12 U.S.C. §2279aa-2(a)).
|
Name |
Description |
|
Lowell Junkins |
Chair. Confirmed in 1996. |
|
LaJuana Wilcher |
Vice chair. Confirmed in 2019. |
|
Sara Faivre |
Confirmed in 2010. |
|
Charles Stones |
Confirmed in 2020. |
|
— |
Vacant. Nomination pending. |
Source: CRS using data at Farmermac.com and Congress.gov (accessed January 23, 2026).
The presidential appointees are to represent the general public and may not have been officers or directors of financial institutions. Not more than three may be of the same political party, and at least two shall be farmers or ranchers (12 U.S.C. §2279aa-2(a)(2)(C)(i)-(iv)).
Nominations for the Farmer Mac board are considered in the Senate to be privileged nominations, making them subject to special procedures that may streamline their consideration (CRS Report R46273, Consideration of Privileged Nominations in the Senate).
Lowell Junkins was designated by President Biden as chair of the board in March 2022. LaJuana Wilcher was voted by the board to be vice chair in 2022; she had been chair from 2020 to 2022.
Chester Culver, a presidentially appointed and confirmed member of the board from 2022 to 2025, was informed by the White House on September 30, 2025, that his service had ended. Culver had also served another term on the board from 2012 to 2019.
President Trump nominated Jeffrey Kaufmann for the board on September 30, 2025 (PN560-4), but his nomination was returned to the President, unconfirmed, on January 3, 2026. Kaufmann was renominated on January 13, 2026 (PN730-35).
For the statutory requirement that not more than three of the presidential appointees be of the same political party, two are affiliated with the Democratic Party (Junkins and Faivre), and two are affiliated with the Republican Party (Wilcher and Stones). The nominee, Kaufmann, is affiliated with the Republican party.
The other 10 members on the Farmer Mac board, who represent commercial banks and the FCS, are elected to one-year terms by the shareholders of the respective classes of stock (12 U.S.C. §2279aa-2(a)(5)). They may serve until their successors take office and may be reelected. Statute expresses no other qualifications.
Title 12, Part 651, of the Code of Federal Regulations prescribes a "Code of Business Conduct and Ethics" for Farmer Mac. This code states that the board may recommend to the President that a presidential appointee on the Farmer Mac board be removed if the board determines that the member has violated the code.