Peter Federico
Analyst · Credit Suisse. Please go ahead
Thanks, Chris. I'll begin with our financing summary on slide eight. Our repo funding cost at quarter end was 136 basis points, up from 127 basis points the prior quarter. As repo rates during the quarter fully reflected the Fed's June 14 rate increase. Similarly our aggregate cost of funds, which includes the cost of our repo funding, the implied funding cost on our TBA position, and the cost of our pay fixed swaps also increased during the quarter to 146 basis points, from a 131 basis points the prior quarter. This increase was driven by three factors. First, as I mentioned, repo costs were higher throughout the quarter in response to the Fed's rate hike. Second, there was only a small decrease in cost associated with our pay fixed swaps during the quarter as three-month LIBOR, which drives the rate we receive on our swaps, increased by just three basis points. And lastly, consistent with the growth in our asset portfolio, we shifted the composition of our hedge portfolio to include a greater share of longer-term swaps. Looking ahead I would expect our cost of funds to be more stable in the fourth quarter as repo rates relative to LIBOR have improved somewhat. Turning to slide nine, I'll briefly review our hedge portfolio. Given the increase in our assets, our hedge portfolio increased by $4.1 billion over the quarter, with the increase being split relatively evenly between longer-term pay fixed swaps and treasury hedges. As a result, our overall hedge ratio remained very high, at 92% of our funding liabilities at quarter end. On slide 10, we provide a summary of our interest rate risk position. As shown on the table, the hedges that we added during the quarter allowed us to keep our duration gap unchanged at 0.4 years. Additionally, as we show, our duration gap remains well contained across a wide range of interest rate scenarios. Should interest rates increase by a 100 basis points, for example, our duration gap would widen to only about one-and-a-half years. Given that our asset portfolio would be close to fully extended in that scenario with 10-year rates at or above 3.25% we would likely be comfortable operating with a larger duration gap, all other things equal. With that, I'll turn the call back over to Gary.