Wellington Jamie Denahan-Norris
Analyst · JMP Securities
Thank you, Willa. And welcome to the Annaly Capital Third Quarter 2013 Earnings Call. And as Willa mentioned, joining me on the call today are Kevin Keyes, our President; and Glenn Votek, our CFO. I will make a few brief remarks before opening the call up for questions. Former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan, who famously coined the term irrational exuberance, recently admitted that he was unappreciative of the impact human behavior had on economic outcome. He underestimated the influence and response time of fear, while seemingly ignoring the propulsive power of greed when coupled with easy money. For an intelligent man who presided over several bubbles, you would think he would have stumbled upon that epiphany sooner. Greenspan was known to have dedicated a tremendous amount of time and energy to reading data, yet he somehow missed the plethora of news articles describing the raw animal spirits being unleashed by both the technology and housing bubbles years before they burst. Some of these blind spots are understandable, given that so often in economics, we focus on the change in data and not the data itself, the change in the price of an asset and not the price itself. Greenspan is just one of many policymakers who underappreciate the impact, behavior and incentives have on markets and outcomes. I do not envy the challenges facing our policymakers. But I do hope that they take a moment to question their econometric modeling and the potential for obscure, yet powerful, unintended consequences of an irrational reliance on modeled outcomes. No doubt, it is a healthy development for regulators to focus on reducing the risks posed by too much leverage in the system. However, it is worthy to note that GDP growth relies heavily on debt growth and debt growth relies heavily on the ability to lever any asset in any market. There continues to be press regarding mREITs and their participation in the repo markets. As banks are asked to hold more capital against their repo business, the impact on institutions like us, that own high-quality collateral like agency MBS is projected to be far less than the estimated 10% to 20% reduction for the overall market. All else equal, rates in the repo markets will likely rise 5 to 15 basis points for high-quality collateral to compensate for the increased capital requirements associated with repo activity. This slight adjustment equates to the range of daily volatility in the financing markets prior to the Fed's presence, we have been familiar with for the past 17 years. As we have mentioned many times on these calls, we have been mindful of the impacts reform and policy uncertainty would have on capital decision and have continued to maintain a fairly conservative stand. As we approach a potential monetary policy inflection point, we have further reduced our leverage to 5.4% from 6.2%; increased our hedges to 74% from 56% of our assets, while also reducing the underlying duration of our mortgage portfolio. All of which has resulted in a very solid net capital ratio of 14.8% and a stable core earnings profile ranging from $0.32 to $0.28 over the past 5 quarters. We remain on track for our capital investment of approximately $2 billion into the commercial real estate assets by year end. We have taken advantage of some very attractive opportunities, in large part due to the strength and experience of our team, coupled with our powerful and flexible capital position. On a standalone basis, our commercial business is now one of the largest among the publicly traded commercial REITs. Our commercial investment portfolio now accounts for roughly 11% of our capital, and at a 9.7% cash-on-cash return is responsible for 11% of our core earnings. As lawmakers continue to solve for the best solutions to housing finance reform, I firmly believe that we remain poised to play a powerful role as a capital provider to the housing market for years to come. The investment disciplines placed on REIT management team, who have to distribute 90% of their earnings annually who don't have the benefit of retained earnings and rely on capital markets for growth, are unparalleled in most of corporate America. At 1/10 the size, the $600 billion size of the equity REIT market, the mortgage REIT sector could provide the same type of capital solution to mortgage finance that the equity REITs provided to property ownership back in the early '90s. To transition the $5 trillion agency mortgage market from government's hand, we will need as many cap -- private capital providers the markets can find. We continue to prepare for policymaker blind spots, while keeping our focus on strategic opportunities in the ever-changing investment landscape. I want to commend our entire team on a job very well done in navigating through a very unique market environment. Thank you, all, for joining us on this call today. And with that, we will open the call for questions.