Mark Tecotzky
Analyst · Credit Suisse
Thanks, Lisa. Looking at the fourth quarter and what we've experienced so far this year, interest rates have been a rollercoaster. Consider the five-year swap rate, a good proxy for durations and much of the mortgage market. In the fourth quarter, it increased 34 basis points. Already this year as of Tuesday's closing prices it has dropped and eye-popping 60 basis points. So we've had some incredible volatility. Our performance for the quarter showed an economic gain, a modest book value drop of 2% in core earnings that covered our dividend. We believe that this demonstrates our portfolio management approach, which emphasis limiting interest rate risk, diversifying hedges, focusing on identifying undervalued prepayment protect to capture outside net interest margin, and then augmenting that NIM by actively trading in efficiencies in the mortgage market is the best path to high sustainable dividends and limited book value volatility. At the end of the fourth quarter, we noted how Agency RMBS widened in sympathy with other spread products like high yields. But it's underperformances versus swaps was technical and it wasn't driven by any fundamental change in mortgage cash flows. Since the start of 2016, Agency RMBS performance has decoupled from other spread products, as investors are increasingly concerned about the falls in the yield market and a vicious downgrade cycle in investment grade corporate, Agency RMBS seemed like the safest way to capture spread over treasuries so the widening of Agency RMBS so far this year has been quite modest. If we look back over the year, EARN's economic performance is breakeven. The dividend we paid equaled our drop in book value. This is not the performance we look for, but we believe it will put us at the top of our peer group. What happened in 2015 is that Agency RMBS cheapened dramatically versus swap hedges. Consider two data points, from January 1 to December 31, 2015, Fannie Mae 3.5 dropped in price by 1.1 point, or the five-year swap rate and appropriate swap hedge went up in price by half a point. That large underperformance is what weighed on book value. Dramatic underperformance sets us up for a much more compelling evaluation entry point for 2016, because the underperformance can't be traced back to anything fundamental. There wasn't more prepayment volatility, or more policy risk or anything like that. It was just a material cheapening of mortgages relative to swap. The macro environment is also good. We've had a tremendous amount of volatility to start the year, but if the market is correcting its assumption that global headwinds will force the Fed into a much more muted heightened cycle, volatility could really drop, which is great for MBS. Despite the rate value prepayment protection can still be bought at reasonable levels, the big move in swap spreads last year was the short-term drag on book value, but long-term it leads to a better NIM. What matters the most to core earnings is whether the floating leg we receive on our swap tracks our repo expense, and it has. At the end of the third quarter, there were some balance sheet pressures on broker dealers in the widening in repo spreads, but levels have been lower since year end and we expect repo rates will continue to drop in the face of less concern about an aggressive Fed hiking cycle. It's always more art than science to interfere what is behind the market sentiment that drive that surprises, but we believe that the big drop in price to book level of Agency mortgage REIT last year was primarily driven by two concerns. First, until December there was tremendous uncertainty around the path of Fed hike. The market got us hike in December, and it turned out to be one of the least volatile days of the quarter for rates. And it now seems an aggressive heightened cycle is off the table. An environment where interest rates remain lower for a longer time should be great for mortgage REIT. The second biggest concern was stability in the repo market. Can mortgage REIT access enough repo and the rates that give them a wide NIM? This concern was appropriate. Look at Slide 7 which shows the dramatic -- which shows the quantity of Agency MBS repo over time. The decline is dramatic. Repo volumes are way down from 650 billion pre-crisis to 300 billion during the depth of the crisis, and incredibly now only 250 billion and dropping. So Agency RMBS REIT both is down by over 60% relative to pre-crisis levels. This is in the context of a five-trillion-dollar market. So repo is now only used for about 5% of the agency market. Repo was not a big factor in pricing Agency MBS, especially when most mortgage REITs are not growing, and in many cases they are shrinking. What has happened is that the capital treatments of the big banks, both U.S. and European make agency repo lending unattractive on a return on equity perspective. They have to hold too much capital against what is a relatively small spread, so lots of smaller broker dealers and non-U.S., non-European banks have stepped in. They have different capital requirements and repo lending can provide an attractive ROE for them. Granted, it's not an optimal situation where market share has shifted from the biggest best capitalized players to the most active in MBS trading to much smaller entities, but that seems to be the way things are headed. Nevertheless, we think that it's likely that over the course of the year, things will get better. As has been discussed on some of the calls, the problem is that there isn't cash available for agency repo. On the contrary, money market funds have lots of cash and agency repo is a great product for them. With the big U.S. and European banks stepping back from agency repo, the market is still figuring out how to put the borrowers and lenders together. We think the problem will get better over time. Since year end, things have gotten a little better. And our three months repo rate is now similar to three months LIBOR. That is particularly a significant this three months LIBOR is what we get paid on the floating leg of the swap where we paying the fixed rate to hedge against interest rate increases. This naturally through discussion of swap spread which have been very been volatile and we are source of the lot of the third quarter and some of the fourth quarter book value decline. So the question is where are swap spread going? Well, we don't know. But over the long run what matters to us is that our repo cost still tracks where we get paid on the floating leg of our swaps. When that happens, we can focus on the net interest margins, we can capture between the yields on fixed rate MBS and the fixed legs of swaps. That margin is very wide now. Part of the decline in swap spread is driven by large scale liquidations of treasuries and part is driven by the same limited dealer appetite for repo. We don't know what the new normal is, but lower swap spreads are one time hit to book value, but a long term benefit to NIM. That underperformance between in Fannie 3.5 and five-year swap, I mentioned earlier directly translates into a wider NIM. Agency RMBS are now much wider than where they started in 2015. So if mortgages just stay where they are, earnings could be strong. And these lower swap spreads primarily drove this NIM increase. The swap spreads become even more negative to outperform MBS prices, then that would additional headwind to book value, but it would also mean that the NIM would further increase. One caveat would be the possibility of the rates drop low enough to ignite a significant refinancing wave. With all the central bank quantitative easing and all the weakening in corporate bonds, what many bond investors now want is as an asset that can provide a spread over treasuries but doesn't have credit risk. That is what the agency mortgage market offers. When the market makes a big move in a short period of time, some investors need to act quickly in response to outflows or capital calls. And those moves in the short run can overwhelm relative value. Over the long term, relative value matters. As investors with long-time horizons like bank, pension funds, insurance companies will probably be attracted to the mortgage market. When huge positive for MBS is that the Fed will probably feel pressured by the recent market volatility to reinvest its Agency MBS principal pay downs for a longer period of time. That was a big source of uncertainty hanging over the market pre-hike. Now that risk seems off the table. With all the central bank selling of dollar assets, it seems unlikely that Fed would put more bonds into the market at this time. Looking ahead, the biggest risk now for Agency RMBS is something that we've not had to worry about recently; prepayment fees, so far they seem manageable. Full pay-ups have definitely increased but not by an unwarranted amount. The market is getting close to an inflection point where you could see faster prepayments fees really weigh on the price of mortgage pools that don't have prepayment protection. With that, I'll turn the call over to Larry.