Thomas Capasse
Analyst · Jade Rahmani with KBW
Thank you, Andrew. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining today's call. The first quarter of 2026 represents ongoing progress in our balance sheet repositioning strategy initiated in the fourth quarter of '25. First, year-to-date, we have generated $1.4 billion in cash from loan sales and liquidations. These proceeds have facilitated the paydown of over $1.1 billion in warehouse debt and generated $270 million in net liquidity, which was utilized to retire $184 million of corporate debt. Second, we are continuing to resolve non- and subscriptions-performing positions to reduce earnings drag and facilitate recycling into current market-yielding opportunities. And third, we are transitioning the business model toward a lower leverage, more capital-efficient platform that positions the company for long-term sustainable earnings growth. As we stated in the fourth quarter of 2025, our liquidity plan is projected to span 4 quarters, and we are confident it is the right approach to reset the company's platform for success in the future. We began the year with $650 million of corporate debt across 4 different 2026 maturities. Given the company's current cost of funds and performance of the legacy portfolio, we made the decision to delever the balance sheet with aggressive asset management focused primarily on loan sales. We retired our $117 million, 5.75% senior unsecured bond in February and our $67 million, 6.2% senior unsecured bond in April, leaving $450 million across our fourth quarter '26 maturities. Year-to-date, we have generated liquidity from 2 primary sources. First, the sale of 48 loans with total unpaid principal balance of approximately $1 billion across 4 transactions for a net liquidity of $177 million. These sales consisted of 66% performing and 30% non and sub-performing loans. Second, portfolio runoff of $550 million provided $93 million in net liquidity. As we look forward, our liquidity plan contemplates an incremental $400 million liquidity from the sale and runoff of $2 billion to $2.5 billion of CRE loans and REO assets through year-end. Based on current projections, we believe these remaining actions, along with current liquidity are sufficient to retire our remaining '26 maturities and satisfy the future cash flow needs of the business. Post completion of our liquidity plan and the payment of our fourth quarter debt maturities, we believe that the remaining legacy CRE portfolio will total approximately $2 billion. We anticipate this will include $800 million, $900 million of sub and nonperforming loans and REO assets, which we believe have a better net present value via exit from aggressive asset management strategies versus sale at current market discounts. This sub-portfolio of non- and sub-performing assets has a current quarterly earnings drag of approximately $0.06 per share with cash outflows of $9.3 million per quarter. Furthermore, we expect the anticipated long-term benefits of our repositioning plan will be a reset balance sheet to allow for future earnings growth and a more conservative leverage profile anticipated to stabilize around 2.5x. Upon the expected second quarter completion of the final CRE loan pool sale contemplated in our liquidity plan, we anticipate the material book value pressure that the company has experienced in the past several quarters will be substantially behind us. We also expect several changes to the business model that we will discuss in greater detail in subsequent quarters. First, we intend to focus our investment activity on allocations to CRE sectors where we see best relative value. We expect average investment size to double relative to our historical average of $17 million. Similarly, we expect that our financing strategy will be more opportunistic and less securitization driven. Each change is intended to help scale the business with a more efficient operational footprint and allow us to be flexible in pursuing market opportunities. Second, we intend to simplify our business model through increased integration with our external manager, Waterfall Asset Management and to refocus on 2 core businesses, middle market CRE debt investing and SBA 7(a) lending. During this period of constrained investing, we can generate fee income in lieu of net interest margin by originating for Waterfall, where we have funded $172 million year-to-date and for third parties, including through our new $1 billion flow arrangement. In the future, as we recycle legacy assets to generate liquidity for CRE investing, we expect that a combination of our rightsized CRE operations in concert with allocation from waterfall's CRE desk will result in a lower operating expense ratio. And third, we intend to increase capital allocation to our small business lending platform, which we expect to represent 20% of the company's capital going forward. Sequentially, we believe that the high relative ROE of this business will lead the earnings recovery over the period that the legacy CRE portfolio is recycled into new vintage CRE investments. Historically, the small business platform has provided 300 to 500 basis points of core ROE alongside the CRE net interest margin. I would also like to provide an update on 2 additional items. First, the Ritz property remains our largest single equity allocation, representing 18% of quarter end stockholders' equity. On the condominiums, we have sold 43 units and have additional 4 units under contract, which would bring our total sellout to 36% of the 132 total units. The average selling price of the 32 condos sold year-to-date was $745 per square foot compared to $900 per square foot for all condos sold. This is a deliberate pricing strategy designed to drive momentum towards the full sellout at higher average prices. The hotel's occupancy increased 5% year-over-year to 46%, marking steady progress towards our 60% target. This increased occupancy, along with a 1% increase in ADR to $482 resulted in a 13% increase in RevPAR to $221. Separately, lower SBA 7(a) originations in the first quarter reflected the prioritization of capital to debt repayment, limiting new SBA deployment to existing warehouse capacity. We anticipate that will change with the pending launch of our $158 million SBA 7(a) securitization. We expect second quarter securitization to generate capacity for $500 million of incremental go-forward volume, resulting in the second half of the year climbing towards historical production levels, which were $1.1 billion in 2024. We continue to take deliberate steps to enhance liquidity and strengthen the platform. Specifically, we have generated 67% of our target liquidity and begun to streamline business lines to reduce operating costs in conjunction with greater integration with our external manager, Waterfall. There's certainly more work ahead, but we are encouraged by the progress made to date and remain focused on disciplined execution. With that said, I'll now turn it over to Andrew for a detailed review of the quarterly results.