Earnings Labs

Ellington Financial Inc. (EFC)

Q4 2024 Earnings Call· Fri, Feb 28, 2025

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Transcript

Operator

Operator

Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Ellington Financial Fourth Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. Today's call is being recorded. At this time, all participants have been placed in a listen-only mode. The floor will be open for your questions following the presentation. If you would like to ask a question during that time, simply press star and two. Lastly, if you should require operator assistance, you may press star and zero. It is now my pleasure to turn the call over to Alaael-Deen Shilleh. You may begin.

Alaael-Deen Shilleh

Management

Thank you. Before we begin, I'd like to remind everyone that this conference call may include forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Safe Harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements are not historical in nature and involve risks and uncertainties detailed in our annual quarterly reports filed with the SEC. Actual results may differ materially from these statements. They should not be considered to be predictions of future events. The company undertakes no obligation to update these forward-looking statements. Joining me today are Larry Penn, Chief Executive Officer of Ellington Financial, Mark Tecotzky, Co-Chief Investment Officer, and JR Herlihy, Chief Financial Officer. Our fourth quarter earnings conference call presentation is available on our website ellingtonfinancial.com. Today's call will track that presentation. All statements and references to figures are qualified in their entirety by the important notice and end notes in the presentation. With that, I'll hand the call over to Larry.

Larry Penn

Management

Thanks, Alaael-Deen. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. Q4 was a very strong quarter for Ellington Financial, capping off a very successful 2024. In the fourth quarter, as throughout the year, we expanded our loan portfolios and sourcing channels, strengthened our financing and balance sheet, and steadily grew adjusted distributable earnings. I'll begin on slide three of the presentation. In the fourth quarter, we generated net income of $0.25 per share, while our adjusted distributable earnings increased by another $0.05 per share sequentially to $0.45 per share, comfortably covering our quarterly dividends of $0.39 per share. Key drivers of our results included another excellent quarter from our Longbridge reverse mortgage segment, continued strong performance from our non-QM and other loan originator affiliates, and sizable gains from several securitizations that we completed during the quarter. We continue to scale up our credit portfolio in the fourth quarter. Our closed-end second lien HELOC, proprietary reverse, and commercial mortgage bridge loan portfolios grew by a combined 39%. This substantial growth reflected further expansion of our proprietary loan origination businesses, where we closed on yet another mortgage originator joint venture investment in the quarter. As is typical of how we structure these JVs, we tied our equity investment to a forward flow agreement with that originator. These forward flow agreements have been key to our portfolio growth and earnings growth, as they enable us to lock in sources of high-quality loans at attractive pricing and at a predictable pace. Meanwhile, we strengthened the liability side of our balance sheet in the fourth quarter in three key ways: executing on securitizations, adding and improving warehouse lines, and redeeming our high-cost debt and preferred stock. In securitizations, we capitalized on the tightest securitization spreads we had seen all year by completing four…

JR Herlihy

Management

Thanks, Larry. Good morning, everyone. For the fourth quarter, we reported GAAP net income of $0.25 per share on a fully mark-to-market basis and ADE of $0.45 per share. On slide five, you can see the net income breakdown by strategy: $0.32 per share from credit, $0.30 from Longbridge, and negative $0.04 from Agency. And on slide six, you can see the ADE breakdown by segment: $0.28 per share from the investment portfolio segment, net of corporate expenses, and $0.17 from the Longbridge segment. Positive performance in the credit portfolio was driven by sequentially higher net interest income, which reflected a wider net interest margin and larger portfolio quarter over quarter. Net gains from non-agency RMBS, HELOCs, forward MSR investments, and ABS, and net gains on our loan originator equity investments. Offsetting a portion of these gains were modest net losses on non-QM loans and retained tranches, commercial mortgage loans, and consumer loans, in each case driven by a slight decline in credit performance. In addition, we had negative operating income on REO workouts. Turning to Longbridge, the robust results from that segment were attributable to an excellent quarter for originations driven by higher volumes, which increased 18% sequentially across all products, improved origination margins in HECM, and net gains related to the prop reverse securitization. Longbridge also had a net gain on its MSRs, driven by tighter HMBS yield spreads, as well as net gains on interest rate hedges with rates higher during the quarter. Meanwhile, the agency strategy generated a modest loss for the quarter as rising interest rates and intra-quarter volatility around the presidential election drove underperformance of Agency RMBS relative to hedging instruments market-wide. Our results for the quarter also reflected a net loss on our senior notes. We fair value those fixed-rate liabilities in our…

Mark Tecotzky

Management

Thanks, JR. I was really happy to see the strong portfolio growth this past quarter. Much of it was organic growth resulting from our vertical integration, which allows us to effectively manufacture our own loan investments and partner affiliates. Early in 2024, we were also able to take advantage of attractive opportunities in the secondary market, but those secondary opportunities are more cyclical in contrast to the loan origination market where we are more in control of our own destiny. Generally speaking, the current high interest rate environment has led to relatively depressed levels of both home purchases and mortgage refinancings industry-wide. Despite that, if you look at the roster of mortgage originators that we partner with, in the origination sectors that we focus on, those originators have actually been growing volume and by all indications gaining market share. With their strong origination teams, reliable financing sources, and with EFC as a partner, these platforms have the potential to really grow volumes should interest rates decline and housing activity pick up later in 2025. While asset spreads are now tighter across the board compared to, say, a year ago, we've been able to consistently lower our average financing spreads, almost in lockstep with the assets. In March, I expect to add a new financing counterparty providing us with the lowest financing rates we will have in both non-QM and second liens. As Larry mentioned, we were very active securitizers in Q4, taking advantage of consistently strong execution on the new issue investment-grade bonds. Importantly, thanks to the excellent historical performance of our EMT shelf, the debt spreads that we were able to lock in were some of the best levels in the market. Our consistently strong deal execution is a real competitive advantage, which not only helps drive our earnings…

Larry Penn

Management

Thank you, Mark. With our accomplishments in the fourth quarter, I am pleased to have closed a successful year on a high note, with great momentum heading into 2025. I'm proud of what we accomplished in 2024. Early in the year, we laid out the drivers to growing adjusted distributable earnings, which included growing the credit portfolio and returning to origination profitability at Longbridge Financial. And we delivered with 25% year-over-year growth of the credit portfolio and with a strong second-half performance from Longbridge. Altogether, we increased our ADE from $0.28 per share in the first quarter of 2024 all the way up to $0.45 per share in the fourth quarter. We are excited about the momentum at Longbridge and, in particular, the growing demand for our proprietary reverse mortgage products. While I'm not counting on Longbridge's ADE contribution being quite so high each and every quarter, we do anticipate that EFC's overall ADE will continue to cover the dividend moving forward, which, of course, is always our goal. As we discussed earlier, our ADE will also be supported as we redeploy the capital from some remaining delinquencies in our commercial mortgage loan book. Mark talked about the upticks in delinquencies that we're seeing market-wide. Being careful and diversifying across sectors have avoided the kinds of serious problems that you've seen at other companies. I can't stress enough how diversification has been key to our success. I believe that we're as diversified as any other mortgage REIT out there, and I'd like to close by highlighting the many ways that we benefit from this diversification. First of all, we benefit from asset diversification in multiple dimensions. We diversify by actively investing in both securities and loans. And we've built up a formidable loan generation machine, which has been crucial for…

Operator

Operator

Absolutely. At this time, if you'd like to ask a question, please press the star and one keys on your telephone keypad. Keep in mind, you can remove yourself from the question queue at any time by pressing star and two. We'll take our first question from Douglas Harter with UBS. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Douglas Harter

Analyst

Thanks. Can you talk a little bit more about some of the originator investments that you're making and kind of the appetite for non-QM given the commentary you made around delinquencies? Mark, do you want to take that?

Mark Tecotzky

Management

Yeah. Hey, Doug. So the playbook we've had for originator stakes goes back to 2014, where we tend to make relatively small investments in platforms where we know the principles and we think there's a meeting of the minds on credit quality and underwriting. And what we look for is situations that are synergistic. And by that, I mean, can we help them lower their warehousing costs with EFC's financial heft, maybe putting a guarantee in place? Can we help them by being a more consistent pricing for their loan? Can we help them by informing some of their underwriting processes with the data we have? And that has worked well. You know, we've done a handful of them since 2014. Now what I said about delinquencies, this has been sort of going on for the past couple of years. And the response from us, but also, I say, from the market generally, has been to move up in FICO, move down in LTV. You've basically seen that. Even with those adjustments, though, delinquencies are higher than what they were, you know, in the years right after COVID. I think, you know, for a long time, so we did our first non-QM loan, I think, in 2015. And so for many, many years, the credit losses on the loans were much, much smaller than our underwriting assumptions. Right? And I just think you're going into a period of time where you might see credit losses more consistent with how we underwrite. It's nothing shocking. And it's nothing that you haven't seen incrementally in other market cycles. And it's also it's not anything that we don't think we have the requisite tools to control and to monitor and to, you know, minimize the damage on. So you know, it does inform though our loss expectations on non-QM, which then informs our pricing. But, you know, with where we are now and the assumptions we have, we still find a lot of value in that market.

Douglas Harter

Analyst

Great. Appreciate that. And then on Longbridge, can you just help kind of, you know, I understand that that's always going to be a slightly more volatile earning stream. But can you help contextualize, you know, kind of the ranges, you know, of earnings that you would expect, you know, kind of and where kind of Q4 would sit where Q3 sits kind of in that as we kind of think about the, you know, the go-forward earnings power of the business?

JR Herlihy

Management

Sure. Hey. Hey, Doug. It's JR. You know, last quarter, we talked about $0.09 per share per quarter coming from Longbridge, which we see as kind of a longer-term run rate target and what we think is achievable. So we almost doubled that in Q4. And Larry mentioned we shouldn't expect such a high level, but I think that $0.09 run rate plus or minus is a good number to think about it. If you multiply their capital allocation by our dividend run rate, it's actually above their contribution, if you will, but we have been able to exceed the dividend here in the last couple of quarters. So I think a direct answer would be that kind of reiterating what we said on our earnings call.

Douglas Harter

Analyst

Great. Appreciate that. Thanks.

Operator

Operator

We'll take our next question from Eric Hagen with BTIG. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Eric Hagen

Analyst · BTIG. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Hi. Thanks. Good morning, guys. Good to hear from you. Back to the agency portfolio and the allocation there, can you share why that maybe isn't more attractive to you at these valuations? And if you guys had maybe, you know, more incremental capital, like, what you would potentially do with that? Thank you.

Mark Tecotzky

Management

Alright. Sure. Yeah. You know, for the last, I'd say, two or three years, one of the sort of high-level decisions we've thought about at Ellington Financial is to really have it more credit-focused, really have it take advantage of, you know, vertical integration, which we think gives us a big competitive advantage versus just going out there and buying CUSIPs in these sectors. And so to do that, you know, it's fairly capital-intensive between, you know, originator stakes and bulking up, you know, loans for securitization and having the risk retention obligation. So, you know, the opportunity in agencies has been pretty good, and I had a good 2024. And, you know, the start of this year, broadly speaking, for agency portfolios, has been good. So, you know, we don't it's not that we don't think it's an attractive sector. It's just over cycles. You know, the advantage you have a permanent capital vehicle to invest in credit we think is substantial, you know, and that the agency strategy is a good strategy, but it doesn't need to be done in a permanent capital vehicle. And, you know, for the capital we have in EFC, we think it can be put to better use taking advantage of being able to go down in liquidity and sort of going down in the mortgage food chain and getting closer to borrowers, controlling underwriting, and that's done, you know, on the residential side and the commercial side. We didn't really talk about it on this call, but, you know, we made the investment in a commercial mortgage, originated that we've partnered with for years. And they've been very helpful for us on overseeing, property management. And construction and, you know, those kind of investments need permanent capital. And so while we have that permanent capital on Ellington Financial, it's just our conclusion that over cycles, we're going to generate better returns and more stable returns doing this vertical integration on the lending side. And it's just, you know, we think it's sort of a superior return than we'll get on the agency side. You can get, you know, you can get massive dislocation in the agency market. You saw them in 2022. And we have the ability to be opportunistic there. And we retain that ability. And, you know, and we'll do it. And it's certainly a core competence of the firm. But for right now, you know, when you're seeing this growth in non-agency securitizations, you were seeing Fannie and Freddie retrench a little bit. And more parts of the mortgage market that they used to dominate are now going or getting a credit enhanced by private capital. We just think right now that's the more exciting opportunity.

Eric Hagen

Analyst · BTIG. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Definitely makes sense. I appreciate that. So following up on the non-QM delinquencies, is there a read-through in managing the securitization trust? Like, is there an expectation from investors that you buy those loans out of the trust even if you don't expect an eventual credit loss? Do you need to maybe temporarily manage your liquidity any differently as a result of that?

Mark Tecotzky

Management

I don't think there's that expectation. You know, by and large, we've been risk retainers, and we've kept a lot of the credit risk on our deals. And, you know, we can, you know, it's a little bit different than, like, what you see in the pre-CLO market that I think, you know, it's you're talking about not chunky loans. Right? So I think we have, you know, I think our expectation now is to work those out and resolve those while the loans are in the securitization.

Eric Hagen

Analyst · BTIG. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Gotcha. Thank you, guys.

Mark Tecotzky

Management

Thanks, Eric.

Operator

Operator

We'll take our next question from Bose George with KBW. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Bose George

Analyst · KBW. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Hey, guys. Good morning. Hi. So first, the net interest income, so you guys noted obviously the work you've done on the liability side. Is the net interest income this quarter kind of a good run rate to think about going forward?

JR Herlihy

Management

Sorry. I missed the middle of the question. We just saying net interest income. We gonna Yeah. It's a good run rate. As a run rate or anything like that?

Bose George

Analyst · KBW. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Yeah. So I was just checking if that was a good run rate since it was up around five cents, I guess, on the improvement you've had on the liability side. So just

JR Herlihy

Management

I mean, that should be remember, those improvements are ongoing and didn't take place at the beginning of the quarter. So yeah, I think I think that, you know, we should be seeing something better. Yeah. I think that's I would echo that. I mean, we mentioned that the NIM on the credit portfolio it widened, and the weight average cost of funds decline which is okay. Which is what you're pointing out, declined by, you know, fifty beats plus during the quarter. That's a combination of negotiating tighter spreads with several financial providers and the drop of short-term rates. But so I do think that it's it's also a function of product mix. I think it's representative, what we saw in Q4 in terms of, you know, the portfolio composition adding more resi loans, adding more commercial bridge loans. So, yeah, I think it's a I think it's a good run rate to Yeah. I mean, look, on the other hand, on some of the loans that we're buying now, for example, you know, we've seen some spread compression in RTLs. So and other products. So I think as the portfolio turns over, you know, you may see some tightening on the, on the asset side. So it's this current and countercurrents, I guess, you could say. But I think for certainly for the first quarter, you know, I don't see any reason why that's not a good guidepost.

Bose George

Analyst · KBW. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Okay. Great. Thanks. And then, actually, on the expense side as well, you know, it went up last quarter. It's kind of a similar level. I think you guys have suggested it might take back down, but is this kind of a decent run rate where it just Yeah. I think it I think it's a good it's a decent run rate. We did have some, you know, one-time option-related tick up last quarter that you identify, you know, I think that you're referencing. The quarter over quarter now is it's just a small percentage increase with no real movement in any of the individual line items. Yeah. I think, in short, I think it's a I think it's a good run rate to use going forward, that kind of the Q4 results. Yeah. And I just wouldn't I'd like to add a little bit of color to that. That option line. So before we had owned basically, half of Longbridge. Until a few years ago. And yeah. Partner owning the other half was a was a private equity firm, and you know, there was some thought back then of potentially having a sale of the company and a realization of that. I mean, I'm going back several years. And, ultimately, we actually so sorry. So the way that employees had been compensated back then, especially senior management, was partially through granting options in the company. Again, anticipating some sort of a realization event down the road. When we bought the other half, and basically owned all the company at that point and had, you know, no no intention or let's just say, you know, no specific plans to ever sell the company. Which we think works really well. Within Ellington Financial for all the reasons that we've said so far. You know, those options didn't really make as much sense, right, to have an option in a in a subsidiary. That those, you know, employees can never monetize. Right? So we we basically bought them out at, you know, a fair at a fair price given, you know, given what had happened in the ensuing years between when the options were were granted and when we when we repurchased them. So that was that's why it was a one-time. And now there are no more options outstanding. And sorry to go back, JR.

JR Herlihy

Management

Yeah. No. I think that I think that that covers it. Okay.

Bose George

Analyst · KBW. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Okay. Great. Thanks. And actually, just a follow-up on the agency MBS discussion. Actually, where do you see current levered yields and or sort of ROEs? Let's and also just in terms of spreads, do you look at, you know, nominal spreads, z spreads, OAS, just, you know, kind of what's the spread you look at mainly on the math for that?

Mark Tecotzky

Management

On the agency space?

Bose George

Analyst · KBW. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Yeah. On the agency space. Yeah. So I would say this. Right? We've always run it a little bit differently than some of the peer group. So we've liked so the use of TBA hedges when we have mortgages, hedged with swaps or treasuries, so not versus TBAs. There's a few things we look at. So on the specified pools, we look a lot at OAS. I do think that is the best measure to capture sort of value you're gonna capture over market moves. So we'd we look about we look at OAS, we also look a lot we think a lot about sort of optionality and pay-ups. Right? Like, there's sometimes you can buy pools with a very low payout, and in certain market environments, the pay-up can go up substantially. Right? So I'd say it's primarily OAS. It's less zero vol spread. Now when we have pools versus TBA, then it's a lot of well, okay. How does that pool carry versus what the roll is on the TBA? That's a big part of it. And what's the convexity of our pool gonna be like with TBA? Are there market moves where we think, you know, pay-up and go from a handful of ticks up to, you know, maybe, like, twenty-four, twenty-five ticks, and that could be, you know, half point about performance. So they were looking a lot of sort of we kinda call it pay-up convexity, but so what what kind of volatility and what kind of upside do you have in the pay-up? And the other thing is, when we have TBA longs versus rate hedges, then we care a lot about what the roles are. And there are sometimes where roles can be so compelling over a long period of time that's far superior than being long specified pools net. So, like, it definitely harkens back, like, 2021, when, you know, these discount rolls like Fannie twos and Fannie two and a half were consistently delivering, you know, substantial returns over what pools could have done then. And just, you know, and and the hedging cost. So I think it it depends a little bit on is it pools? How are they hedged? But zero vol spread versus OAS. We're firmly in the camp that you need to really look at OAS. We were reluctant to buy things to have a very low zero vol spread because I just think you have fewer other participants that want them, but you know, gun to our head, we're gonna pick a higher OAS and a lower zero vol spread than something that's the reverse.

Bose George

Analyst · KBW. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Okay. Great. That's helpful. Thank you. Hey, Bob. Hey.

JR Herlihy

Management

Both. Thanks, Louis.

Bose George

Analyst · KBW. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Yep.

Larry Penn

Management

Hi. Yeah. I'd actually wanted to follow-up a little bit on your expense question because, we were just looking at some of the numbers offline here. So there are a few things going on. So we're look. We're always looking to make sure we're efficient on expenses. And you know, we definitely made some improvements even so far this year, but when you think about the fact that we're more and more focusing on loans versus securities, you know, obviously, not a, you know, credit versus agencies. But even just loans versus securities, those are gonna require more people. And so compensation cost, again, I think when you look to the extent that they're rising versus what our income has been in these sectors. You know, it's it's not a question that this is what we need to be doing. Longbridge, by the way, also in particular, right, as we're growing, that proprietary business as they've increased their, you know, servicing portfolio. I mean, all these things that are making us a lot of money. They've been also growing in terms of headcount as well. And, again, we're always gonna look at efficiency there? But I think that these investments, you know, in what are really been modest increases, I think, in compensation and personnel costs have been absolutely more than rewarded in terms of what you've seen in the long version, what you've seen in terms of what we're doing on the loan side of our portfolio. So so yeah.

Bose George

Analyst · KBW. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Okay. Great. No. Makes a lot of sense. Thanks a lot.

Operator

Operator

We'll take our next question from Trevor Cranston with Citizens JMP. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Trevor Cranston

Analyst · Citizens JMP. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Hey. Thanks. Question on related to Longbridge. I know a lot of the focus there is on the proprietary side of things, but wondering if you guys could comment on, you know, whether or not you guys have seen or or you foresee any any impact on the HMBS market and the rollout of HMBS two point o, you know, related to staffing cuts at HUD and other places. You know, what the overall impact of that could be on on Longbridge. Thanks.

Larry Penn

Management

Yeah. Look. It's a it's a it's an important question. And and I wish I had a better answer than to tell you. We'll have to see just like with a lot of things going on right now. On the other hand, the you know, we do have the prop business, which, you know, has really been driving the earnings. So I think we'll just have to wait and see on the HEcum side. The HEcum side did have you know, the agency side basically has been, you know, seeing improving results as well. We're just gonna have to wait and see. I mean, look, there were a lot of questions in the, you know, the first Trump administration, and there'll be questions in administration exactly where, they're going to, you know, the and and HMVS two point o, I remember whether you refer to it or not of that, but so we were anticipating a change in some of the regulations that would actually be up you there? Boost? To pack and profitability, but we'll just have to wait and see. Maybe this won't materialize. That'll just be, you know, the absence of of a positive. But, again, we're just gonna have to wait and see.

Trevor Cranston

Analyst · Citizens JMP. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Yeah. And I would just add it. I mean, it's hard to read the tea leaves on the regulatory change front and the like, but could also see if there is an interruption on the Hekam HCBS product, it could drive demand to prop. That's right. And we have low we believe we have larger market share approximately than we do in heck of even though we have a, you know, very large market share in Hacken. So, yeah. So we'll just have to wait and see.

Trevor Cranston

Analyst · Citizens JMP. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Okay. Yeah. That makes sense. Thank you, guys.

Larry Penn

Management

Thanks.

Operator

Operator

We'll take our next question from Randy Binner with B. Riley. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Randy Binner

Analyst · B. Riley. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Hey. Thanks. Actually, just on the HUD, that's a really interesting area. So you understood that there's a lot to to monitor with what the new administration, but I believe they've already had some pretty significant staffing cuts at HUD. So is there just kind of real time? Are you y'all feeling anything just from a procedural perspective? In in dealing with the the government?

Larry Penn

Management

Haven't heard anything. No.

Randy Binner

Analyst · B. Riley. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Okay.

JR Herlihy

Management

So yeah. I think my question this has all been very comprehensive. Appreciate it. Just on the the REO workouts, I you know, in the in the prepared script, you provided some details on a couple loans. It sounds like they're in the kind of last stages of negotiation. Have you have you quantified how much capital gets freed up and what the timing of that would be, you know, as a result of these REO workouts?

Larry Penn

Management

Yeah. It's not yeah. I'll I'm just gonna say it's not it's probably not as much as you think. But, you know, go ahead, JR. Yeah. So the short answer, Randy, is we've not quantified it. You know what? At year-end, we had less than a hundred million invested in commercial, in REOs and delinquent loans altogether. About, you know, more than half of that is is the three loans that we talked about, those three constitute more than half of that, you know, ninety-five million, call it. We have beyond that, we haven't we haven't quantified. That's actually so but if you just assume for argument's sake that it was something in the high forties. Then you know I mean, again, this is not Got it. Yeah. It's it's great. It's great. Don't get me wrong. We we wanna see, you know, these resolved quickly and move on. But you're not talking about anything game-changing. Yeah. Some is financed. Some is not. But, also, we have a it's it it doesn't contribute to ADE as as we mentioned prepared remarks. And in some cases, it has negative AD implications during a quarter. So it can have a despite the smaller size relative to the overall pool of capital, can have a disproportionately negative impact on AVE both through not generating EDE, but also being a drag in some cases. Right. So we're looking forward to getting past that.

Randy Binner

Analyst · B. Riley. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Okay. Yeah. I understand. So not not gonna add that to the model. And then I guess on reverse, you know, it's it's you doubled your guide and and you have this this demographic wave of the boomers and, I mean, seemingly aging in place would be preferable for a number of different reasons. And so I I I mean, just taking a step back, are you this has been it's it's a it's a tremendous business I think, and it's generally underappreciated. You know, do you do you get the sense that you're gonna get more mainstream competitors in that area, or do you think this can kinda still stay kind of a a nichey market where where you can you can have a lot of share reverse mortgage kind of that large.

Larry Penn

Management

Yeah. And by the way, the other thing I just wanna mention, it's I think it addresses your questions some extent is that Longbridge is actually we're actively working with some other partners to create some other products. For seniors that, you know, may not technically be reverse mortgages, but have a lot of similar characteristics. So I don't wanna sort of give away too much, but but there's just yeah. There's a lot of ways with the relationships we have with the compliance program that is, you know, I'd say unique to the reverse mortgage originators that have to, you know, do so much more when dealing with the seniors, for example. So yeah, so we're excited, and and we're hopeful that we can even announce some interesting new products in the near future.

Randy Binner

Analyst · B. Riley. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Would that be, like, in partnership with Life Insurers?

Larry Penn

Management

Or thanks. No. No. With with other types of loan originators.

Randy Binner

Analyst · B. Riley. Please go ahead. Your line is open.

Okay. Okay. Yeah. Alright. Very good. Thank you.

Larry Penn

Management

Thanks.

Operator

Operator

And we'll take our next question from Crispin Love with Sandler. Thank you. Appreciate taking my question. Can you just dig a little bit deeper into closed-end seconds HELOCs and the opportunity there? It looks like you more than doubled the portfolio there in the fourth quarter. Is that rate driven along with affordability and HPA moves? And was that growth mostly through acquisitions? And just curious on how demand could be in that space if rates do come down. Meaning, is there still a bunch of runway if rates do come down just with where rates are today? Thank you.

Mark Tecotzky

Management

Hi, Mark. Hi, Mark. Yep. Hey, Crispin. Thanks for the question. So that opportunity set for what we've been buying. And we've been buying just loans, second liens, where the first lien is from Fannie Freddie, and the borrower, you know, the borrower has a low note rate first, you know, three and a half or three and a quarter note rate first. And, you know, they've amortized down the first a little bit. They've had home price appreciation. So most of these things are now, you know, they're they're you know, FICO's in the, you know, seven forty, seven fifty type range. The combined loan to value ratio. So the first lien plus the second lien, you know, typically high sixty, so you got a lot of equity. And it's borrowers that have, in some cases, been in their house eight, ten years because a lot of the activity in 2021, as you remember, where we activity. Right? The guys person's been in his house family's been in the house eight, ten years. They got a really valuable first rate mortgage. Right? If you're paying three and a half or three and a quarter on a first, that's an asset. Right? So you don't wanna part with that. But yet, maybe you wanna renovate your kitchen, maybe you wanna do some landscaping and you wanna borrow against your home. Right? Because it's a heck of a lot cheaper than credit cards, heck of a lot cheaper than unsecured. So you take out a second lien, you know, nine odd percent or whatever it is, and it's a smart way to tap some of the equity in your home. So that's that's a big opportunity set because, you know, even though it's been years since we've had those super low…

Crispin Love

Analyst

Great, Mark. I appreciate that. I'll I'll really help you. And then just last one for me. Just big picture question. On the potential for GSEs coming out of conservatorship and the new administration. Just how do you view the probability of that happening? And impacts the EFC as you'd see it. And is there any way for you to position and I'm on that maybe occurring over the next few years?

Mark Tecotzky

Management

You know, I think it's a great question. I think it depends on leadership at FHFA, but it's certainly a possibility. It was certainly on the radar for the first Trump administration. And they've been talking about it now. So I definitely think it's possible. I definitely think you've had a lot of comments from the treasury secretary that it needs to be done in a way that does not raise the cost of homeownership. I think they're very focused on that. So I think it could certainly happen. You know, whether there is an ultimate backstop to the government or not, I don't know. And I think what I what I think it does create though is the possibility of some short-term volatility. So in the end, whenever it happens, maybe it's done in a way where, you know, agency mortgages still have a backstop, and they're extremely liquid. And they really do compete with investment-grade corporate bonds and treasury bonds for they invest in great dollars the way they are now. They're a big part of the ag, but you know, going from where we are now, to what finally happens, you can certainly get comments made and and suggestions put out there. That can cause some short-term volatility. So I think I think the opportunity set is short-term volatility. I think the bigger picture that we've been focused on for a couple years and which I think is a very substantial opportunity set for Ellington Financial. Is the fact that and it sort of I I think this this this trend is is accelerated with the current administration is that Fannie and Freddie, Jenny, are gradually shrinking their footprint, and it's clear with Fannie and Freddie, you know, they have a mentality of cross subsidies, where, you…

Larry Penn

Management

Mark, I'm just gonna, you know, I don't usually make predictions, but I think that the odds of course, anything's possible. I think the odds are lower than people like, but I think if there is gonna be an eventual release, I think it's a lot more complicated than a lot of people think. So I think you're talking about something that takes a really long time. Meanwhile, the agencies are actually through the you know, the cash and stacker program's right. CRTs. They're actually reinsuring a lot of their risk. You know, they I I believe they model to, you know, global financial crisis type levels. Terms of what could happen to housing. They are generating massive profits that are going right to the treasury. And those obviously, you've got a lot of things on the table now that are going to increase deficits potentially. I think, you know, even though there was a lot of talk of this in the first administration again and I think it's much more complicated than people think to sort of disentangle them as well. From the markets. So I think it's gonna take a very long time. I think the odds are lower than people think.

Crispin Love

Analyst

Great. Well, I appreciate you both taking my questions. Details is great. Thank you.

Operator

Operator

And that was our final question today. We thank you for participating in the Ellington Financial fourth quarter 2024 earnings conference call. You may disconnect your line at this time, and have a wonderful day.