Peter Federico
Analyst · Rick Shane with JPMorgan. Please go ahead
Yes, I appreciate the question, Rick. Yes, I think I didn’t hear the – actually the first part of your question, but I think you’re talking about swap spreads and swap spread performance to some extent. And that was an important driver of performance because swap spreads tightened a lot. But when you think about our net interest margin, we talked a lot about this. Our net interest margin has remained really, really robust. Last quarter, it was 298 basis points and that is not consistent with the economics that we just went through. If you think about that net interest margin at around 300 basis points, and you divide that and think about that from an ROE perspective, you’re going to get an ROE of 25%, 26% or take our net spread and dollar roll income and divide that by our common equity, which would be consistent with that 300 basis points of net interest margin, you’re going to get an ROE of 25%, 26%. The economics of our business, as we just talked about, are in the mid to high teens. And what’s going to happen over time is as those swaps run off and you are right, we have about $8.5 billion still maturing and we had about $5 billion mature, by the way, in the first quarter and that contributed to somewhat that slight decline in our net interest margin. Those will roll off over time and our net spread in dollar – or our net interest margin because of those swaps rolling off will come down. There are other factors, though, that you got to consider. So it’s not as easy as just those swaps rolling off. We will put other swaps on that have positive carry on them. If you put on longer-term swap today, it’s still a positive carry by, for example, a 10-year by 150 or so basis points. And also, our asset yield is still below market yields. Our asset yield is still 25, 30 basis points below market yields. So, as Chris and team roll the portfolio over, and we continue to move our assets around, we’ll end up seeing some uptick in our asset yield like you saw last quarter. But over time, that net interest margin over a longer time will come down more in-line with the economics of our business. So that’s what you’ll see over the next several quarters to years as old swaps roll off, new swaps come on, assets get replaced, net interest margin should come back down in alignment with the economics of our business, which is really the mark-to-market yield that we just talked about in the previous question.