Julian Evans
Analyst · JMP Securities. Your line is open
Thank you, Jay. Investment themes that were prominent in the third quarter rolled over into the fourth quarter. Heightened volatility, thinly liquid investment markets, widening spread sectors and a weakening equity markets were all influenced by a Fed determined to reduce inflation. All changed after the October and November CPI reports, as the reported inflationary numbers suggested that inflation was moderating faster than expected. Post the inflationary numbers, spread sector and equity markets tightened and interest rate markets firmed as investor sentiment changed. The sentiment change was driven by our perception that the Fed might end up doing fewer Fed fund rate increases than were initially expected. With that said, most inflationary measures have moderated but remained elevated above the Fed's 2% target for the first two months of 2023. Stubbornly high inflation has led to renewed predictions of the Fed having to increase the Fed's funds rate greater than what the market had initially perceived. The market is currently expecting a terminal Fed's fund rate level between 5.25% and 5.75%. As a result, we continue to employ a thoughtful hedging strategy in the fourth quarter to protect our book value and we believe those efforts have largely been working as intended. This investment strategy has carried over into the first quarter of 2023. At year-end, our MSR portfolio had a UPB of $21.7 billion and a market value of approximately $280 million. During the quarter, we purchased approximately $780 million UPB of new MSRs through our bulk and flow programs. At year-end, the MSRs and related assets represented approximately 38% of our equity capital and approximately 30% of our investable assets, excluding cash. Meanwhile, our RMBS portfolio accounted for approximately 45% of our equity capital. As a percentage of investable assets, the RMBS portfolio represented approximately 70%, excluding cash, at year-end. During the quarter, we continued to experience CPR improvements in both our MSR and RMBS portfolios. Our MSR portfolio's net CPR averaged approximately 5% for the fourth quarter, down from approximately 7% net CPR in the previous quarter. The decline was mainly driven by seasonality and the change in mortgage production coupons, which drove slower prepayment speeds in the quarter. The portfolio's recapture rate was lower at approximately 2% versus approximately 7% in the third quarter. As expected with mortgage rates rising as the incentive to refinance has lessened. Moving forward, we continue to expect low recapture rates and stable or [improved] (ph) net CPRs for the foreseeable future, given the current levels of interest in mortgage rates. The RMBS prepayment speeds remain low. The lower CPR was driven by a combination of new asset purchases as well as the fact that the current higher mortgage rate environment is compressing CPRs for the existing portfolio. As of today, the majority of the mortgage universe remains out of the money in terms of refinancing. We would expect prepayments to remain at low levels as long as interest rates stay at these levels or move higher. For the quarter, the RMBS portfolio's weighted average three-month CPR reduced to approximately 3.8% compared to approximately 4.7% in the third quarter. As of December 31, the RMBS portfolio, inclusive of TBAs, stood at approximately $646 million compared to $759 million at the previous quarter end. Quarter-over-quarter, the spec pool portion of the portfolio continue to grow as we opportunistically took advantage of higher interest rate levels and lower price premiums by putting new cash to work, as well as converting a few dollar rolls into pools as dollar rolls weaken further. The RMBS portfolio number is lower as we further utilized TBA securities to hedge a portion of the portfolio. We also continue to proactively change the portfolio's composition, moving into higher coupons and reducing spread duration for the portfolio. At the end of the fourth quarter, the 30-year securities position represented the entire RMBS portfolio, up from 96% at the end of third quarter. For the fourth quarter, we saw an increase in RMBS net interest spread to 3.77% as compared to 3.49% net interest spread reported for the third quarter. The improved NIM was driven by previously mentioned factors. One, we took advantage of wider mortgage spreads and higher yield levels by putting new money to work throughout the quarter. Two, we rotated our portfolio swapping out of low yielding assets and purchasing higher coupon mortgages with better yields. Overall, expenses were greater, but were more than offset by increased income, which was driven by the previously mentioned reasons. At year-end, the portfolio's financial leverage stood at approximately 3.8 times at the aggregate portfolio and the portfolio was managed with a negative duration gap. Looking forward, we remain mindful of the current environment as we expect the investment markets to remain choppy until there is a clear sense that the Fed is reaching its terminal rate. I will now turn the call over to Mike for fourth quarter financial discussion.