Peter Federico
Analyst · KBW. Please go ahead
Thanks Chris. I'll begin with our financing summary on Slide 8. The cost of our repo funding increased slightly during the quarter to 83 basis points, up from 78 basis points in the prior quarter. This increase was driven primarily by higher LIBOR rates observed during the quarter. As I mentioned on our last call, we expected to begin financing activity through our broker-dealer Bethesda Securities in the third quarter following the completion of our build out and receipt of final membership approval from the Fixed Income Clearing Corporation. We achieve these milestones at quarter end had financed $1.2 billion of our agency MBS through Bethesda Securities. We will continue to expand our financing activity through Bethesda Securities over the next several quarters. Turning to the next couple pages, I would like to spend a few minutes discussing the favorable funding dynamic that Gary mentioned. If you recall throughout 2015, the narrative around agency MBS funding was rather negative due to capital related balance sheet constraints at large banks, the significant selling of U.S. treasuries by foreign central banks and the uncertainty associated with money market reform. On our fourth quarter 2015 earnings call, we said the agency MBS funding paradigm was beginning to shift in a positive way as balance sheet repositioning by larger banks had been substantially completed and treasury related funding pressures was expected to be temporary. In retrospect these proved to be the case and as a result, our funding capacity has remained strong throughout 2016. We also discussed our view that money market reform could be a significant positive for agency MBS. Specifically we mentioned that the floating NAV requirement by prime funds could lead to a shift in money out of prime funds and into government funds. This requirement became effective just a couple of weeks ago and it did in fact drive a dramatic reallocation of money within the money fund complex. We show this dynamic on the chart on the bottom left of Slide 9. As you can, see nearly a $1 trillion has been withdrawn from prime funds and redeployed into government funds over the last several quarters. This shift to government funds has led to a pickup in demand for high quality short-term assets like repo backed by agency MBS. In turn, the increase in demand has favorably impacted agency repo levels. This improvement can be seen on the graph on the bottom right of Slide 9, we show the spread between generic three-month agency repo and three month LIBOR. As you can see there has been a significant improvement in recent months. At the beginning of the year, three months repo rates were about 25 basis points above LIBOR. At quarter end, they were seven basis points through LIBOR, a dramatic improvement in funding levels. We show the spread relationship because our repo funding spread to three month LIBOR is a key variable in our overall cost of funds equation as a significant portion of our funding is hedged with pay fixed swaps. Turning to Slide 10 we provide some additional data that will help quantify the improvement in our overall cost of funds based on this dynamic. To review in a pay fixed swap contract, we pay a fixed rate and receive a floating rate that is typically three month LIBOR. When our debt is hedged with the swap, the critical variable is the difference between the cost of our repo funding and the rate we receive on the floating leg of our swap. If the spread between our repo funding and the received floating rate on our swap gets larger or widens, we incur a higher all in cost of funds. Conversely if the spread between the two tightened, we realize a lower all in cost of funds on the portion of our debt that is hedged with pay fixed swaps. The graph on the bottom left of the page shows our actual repo cost relative to three month LIBOR. As you can see, our cost has improved by about 15 basis points over the last four quarters. The graph on the bottom right of the page shows how this trend has positively impacted our overall cost of funds. Here we show our actual repo rate compared to the rate we received on the floating leg of our swaps. Again because we are paying the repo rate and receiving the floating rate, it is the differential between these two lines that matters for our cost of funds on the swap portion of our portfolio. As you can, see the differential between these two lines has narrowed considerably over the course of the year from 20 basis points at the beginning of the year to five basis points at the end of the third quarter. Said another way, the all in cost of our debt that is hedged with pay fixed swaps has improved by 15 basis points this year. It is also important to note that this spread was improving throughout the third quarter. So the full benefit will not be realized until the fourth quarter. Lastly on Slide 12, we provide a summary of our interest rate risk position. Given the increase in rates during the quarter, our duration gap at quarter end was three tenth of a year, up from a zero duration gap last quarter. And with that, I'll turn the call back over to Gary.