Peter Federico
Analyst · Credit Suisse
Thanks, Aaron. I’ll start with our financing summary on Slide 10. Our average repo funding cost in the second quarter was 2.48%, down 14 basis points from the prior quarter. Despite the decline, repo rates remained elevated in the third quarter. In mid-September, a confluence of factors including corporate tax payments, treasury settlements, cash withdrawals related to the oil price shock and the market carrying unusually high overnight repo balances due to uncertainty related to the September FED meeting, resulted in a significant spike in repo rates for both treasury and mortgage collateral. The repo shock in September negatively impacted our cost of funds, but the impact was relatively small, given it only affected incremental funding over the last two weeks of the quarter. On Slide 11, we provide additional color on the funding environment. The two graphs highlight the divergence between repo funding levels and other benchmark rates. The graph on the top shows the difference between three month repo and three month LIBOR. As the line shows, although funding cost by this measure improved somewhat during the quarter, they were still unusually volatile. The bottom graph shows the rate difference between one month’s repo and the one month overnight index swap rate, which is a good proxy for the expected average overnight FED funds’ rate over the same period. The large spike in mid-September, clearly shows the dislocation that occurred in the repo market relative to the FED’s primary benchmark rate. The disruptions in the repo market being so pronounced and so public turned out to be a catalyst for the FED to act, which over time, should be a positive for our business. First, the FED reinstituted daily open market repurchase operations. These overnight and term operations added significant liquidity to the repo market and quickly pushed funding rates back down. Second and more importantly, in mid-October, the FED announced its plan to purchase approximately $60 billion of treasury bills per month for at least six months, as well as upsized their overnight and term open market operations to $120 billion and $45 billion respectively. Together, these actions could add more than $500 billion of liquidity to the system over the next six months. As such, we are optimistic that the repo headwinds that we faced throughout 2019 will soon abate. That said, given balance sheet constraints at large banks and the fact that the FED’s purchases will take time to accumulate, we expect funding to remain a headwind in the fourth quarter before improving materially next year. Turning to Slide 12, we provide a summary of our hedge portfolio, which in aggregate increased to $97 billion and cover just over 100% of our funding liabilities. The increase was driven by additions to both our swap and swaptions portfolios. The increase in our swap position was predominantly through the addition of shorter term swaps that allowed us to lock in attractive all-in funding levels. We also transitioned a material percentage of our swap portfolio away from LIBOR-based swaps to swaps indexed OIS and SOFR. These swaps not only eliminated our exposure to LIBOR, but also carries substantially lower pay rates and we believe we better track our actual funding over time. All of these swaps were executed at prevailing market rates. As Gary mentioned in his opening remarks, our swap portfolio has already provided us substantial benefits. As a reminder, while we materially increase the size of our swap book in the second quarter, we also terminated a significant amount of longer-term pay fixed swaps and short treasury positions. In aggregate, these actions concentrated our hedge book on the front-end of the yield curve, which turned out to be a significant positive for our book value and economic return in the third quarter. Additionally, the carry on our swap portfolio benefited our aggregate cost to funds measure which dropped 39 basis points in the third quarter to 1.85%. On slide 13, we show our duration gap and duration gap sensitivity. Despite the significant rally in interest rates, our duration gap remains flat over the quarter as we continue to rebalance our hedge portfolio. In addition, as we show on the table, extension risk for our portfolio and for the market as a whole has increased and is important consideration and how we determine our duration gap and hedge portfolio composition. With that, I’ll turn the call back over to Gary.