Jay Lown
Analyst · B Riley FBR. Please go ahead
Thanks, Rory, and welcome to today’s call. First and foremost, we hope you and your families are remaining safe and healthy. We would like to express our deepest gratitude to those on the front lines who work tirelessly to keep us all healthy and safe.In addition, we continue to work through our subservicing partners to provide support to our borrowers, who have been affected by the COVID-19 pandemic and ensure that they are receiving the appropriate level of forbearance assistance that they need with respect to their mortgage payments during this difficult period. These are unprecedented times for all of us, and we very much appreciate that you are taking the time to be with us on this call.I want – also want to give very special thanks to our entire Cherry Hill team, who have been working tirelessly in terms of managing our portfolio and operations. The entire team has been working remotely since mid-March and will continue to do so until state and federal authorities provide guidelines for our people to safely return to our offices.A few years ago, we made significant investments in our technology platform and moved to a cloud-based solution for our computing needs. This technology permitted a seamless transition to a work from home environment for the entire team with no loss of productivity in managing our portfolio.Since our last earnings call on February, we have seen a complete shift in the world. At the time of our earnings call, we and the financial markets were watching the COVID-19 pandemic very closely, as it pertained to global productivity and how it was impacting Asia and Europe. A few short weeks later, the pandemic gripped the United States with ferocity and has not really let go despite some states beginning to reopen for business.Overnight fund rates were cut to zero by the Fed. The equity markets experienced a major correction and mortgage rates across the industry were suddenly under siege as liquidity tightened and margin calls on all asset classes forced many to delever their portfolios.On top of that, the government wavered regarding mortgage loan forbearance programs before the CARES Act was signed into law, which exacerbated the fears of a mortgage collapse. Unlike the 2008-2009 Great Recession, which saw the impact on markets gradually building over time, the reaction of the world markets to the pandemic and its feared consequences was sudden and violent.At Cherry Hill, we have always been proactive managers of our portfolio, and it has served us well over the past six years in terms of our ability to generate core earnings and preserve book value, despite some very volatile interest rate environments. However, this was, by far, our biggest challenge to date, one that demanded use of every tool in our tool belt to navigate dislocated markets and respond to the liquidity squeeze.Early on, we knew that liquidity had become absolutely paramount. In March, we acted quickly and decisively to delever our company in an orderly manner, which enabled us to be well-positioned following what we hope is the worst of the crisis.We reduced the leverage on our aggregate portfolio from 6.1 times at December 31 to 3.9 times at April 30. We also reduced our investments in credit risk transfer bonds by 88% over the same period. And as of April 30, we own 100% of the remaining position outright. We met all of our advancing obligations, and believe we did a good job managing through a very difficult period.As we communicated in our update in mid-April, we anticipated pressure on book value. For the first quarter of 2020, book value per common share was reduced to $13.73 as of March 31, while we generated strong core earnings of $0.47. Julian will talk more about the circumstances affecting our book value per common share in Q1.We distributed 100% of our first quarter dividends declared on March 12 to both preferred and common shareholders, with half of the first quarter common dividend paid in shares of common stock.Since the end of the first quarter, we have continued to do delever our portfolio and build our liquidity position. These steps will help us address the continued uncertainty regarding the timing and effectiveness of the country reopening, as well as the impact of the historic levels of unemployment on our servicing portfolio.As a result, our aggregate portfolio as of April 30 is smaller than on March 31. Over the past two months, we have essentially recast our portfolio. And as of April 30, we held approximately $90 million in unrestricted cash.Although this strong cash position will negatively impact earnings in the near-term, we believe it is the wise and prudent approach until greater economic clarity emerges and in light of our expectation of the increased cost of service loans in forbearance due to COVID-19 and elevated prepayment speeds on our RMBS portfolio.Lastly, with historically low interest rates and outsized origination volumes, MSRs look compelling today. And where we see select opportunities that made our risk reward criteria, we will look to utilize our flow program to invest capital there.With that, I’ll turn the call over to Julian, who will cover more details regarding our investment portfolio and its performance over the first quarter.