OLD GREENWICH, Conn.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Ellington Residential Mortgage REIT (NYSE: EARN) today reported financial results for the quarter ended September 30, 2020.
Highlights
- Net income of $8.1 million, or $0.66 per share; year-to-date net income of $12.7 million, or $1.03 per share.
- Core Earnings1 of $4.8 million, or $0.39 per share.
- Book value of $13.17 per share as of September 30, 2020, which includes the effect of a third quarter dividend of $0.28 per share. Economic return of 5.1% for the quarter, and year-to-date economic return of 8.5%.
- Net interest margin2 of 2.21%.
- Weighted average constant prepayment rate ("CPR") for the fixed-rate Agency specified pool portfolio of 21.4%.
- Dividend yield of 10.1% based on the November 4, 2020 closing stock price of $11.13.
- Debt-to-equity ratio of 6.5:1 as of September 30, 2020; adjusted for unsettled purchases and sales, the debt-to-equity ratio was also 6.5:1.
- Net mortgage assets-to-equity ratio of 5.6:1 3 as of September 30, 2020.
- Cash and cash equivalents of $61.2 million as of September 30, 2020, in addition to other unencumbered assets of $28.1 million.
Third Quarter 2020 Results
"During the third quarter, Ellington Residential generated net income of $0.66 per share, while Core Earnings increased to $0.39 per share, driven by a strong net interest margin," said Laurence Penn, Chief Executive Officer and President. "EARN has now produced an annualized economic return of 11.5% through the first nine months of 2020, despite the extreme volatility experienced earlier this year.
"The drivers of our strong third quarter results were substantially similar to those that drove our strong second quarter performance. Pay-ups on our specified pools appreciated further, as prepayments remained elevated; our non-Agency RMBS portfolio had another great quarter, as prices continued to recover from the March selloff; and by maintaining our long positions in current coupon TBAs, we again benefited from attractive dollar rolls, which continue to be driven by Federal Reserve purchasing activity. Additionally, the low level of interest rates, together with the low level of interest rate volatility, kept our hedging costs low and supported Agency RMBS valuations.
"During the third quarter, with a presidential election approaching and with the economy still struggling from the pandemic, we kept our overall leverage well below our historical averages. I am extremely pleased that we were able to deliver such strong performance for the quarter while still maintaining this conservative portfolio profile.
"Finally, with mortgage rates persisting at historically low levels, and with the vast majority of outstanding mortgages refinanceable, we are decidedly in the middle of a bona fide refinancing wave. While this presents many challenges for the MBS market—especially in higher coupons—we believe that this environment plays right to our core strengths of prepayment modeling, asset selection, and dynamic interest rate hedging. As we move into the final weeks of the year, we expect this environment to create numerous attractive investment opportunities for us, and our current high levels of liquidity should enable us to capitalize on these opportunities as they arise."
The Company's Agency RMBS holdings decreased by 2% to $1.076 billion as of September 30, 2020, from $1.098 billion as of June 30, 2020. Over the same period, the Company's non-Agency RMBS holdings decreased by 41% to $24.6 million, from $42.0 million, as the Company monetized gains in this sector during the third quarter. The Company's Agency RMBS portfolio turnover was 16% for the quarter, as compared to 13% in the prior quarter. In total, the Company's overall RMBS portfolio declined by 3.5% to $1.114 billion as of September 30, 2020, as compared to $1.154 billion as of June 30, 2020.
The increase in shareholders' equity during the quarter, combined with the slight decline in the size of the overall RMBS portfolio, caused the Company's debt-to-equity ratio, adjusted for unsettled purchases and sales, to decrease to 6.5:1 as of September 30, 2020, as compared to 6.8:1 as of June 30, 2020. The Company's net mortgage assets-to-equity ratio also decreased over the same period, to 5.6:1 from 5.9:1. Similar to the prior quarter end, substantially all of the Company's borrowings were secured by specified pools as of September 30, 2020.
As of September 30, 2020, the Company had cash and cash equivalents of approximately $61.2 million, along with other unencumbered assets of $28.1 million. Earlier this year, in response to the significant volatility caused by the spread of COVID-19, the Company strategically reduced the size of its portfolio in order to lower its leverage and enhance its liquidity position. As of September 30, 2020, the size of its portfolio and its debt-to-equity ratio remained lower than historical averages, while its cash and cash equivalents remained higher than historical averages.
The Company's Agency RMBS portfolio performed well during the quarter, driven by strong net interest income and increased pay-ups on its specified pools. During the quarter, mortgage rates declined further and actual and expected prepayment rates rose, which benefited pay-ups on the Company's prepayment-protected specified pools. Average pay-ups on the Company's specified pools increased to 2.55% as of September 30, 2020, as compared to 2.50%4 as of June 30, 2020. Pay-ups are price premiums for specified pools relative to their TBA counterparts. During the quarter, the Company also increased its holdings of long TBAs held for investment, which it concentrated in current coupon production. These investments performed well, driven by Federal Reserve purchasing activity.
During the third quarter the Company continued to hedge interest rate risk, primarily through the use of interest rate swaps, and to a lesser extent through the use of short positions in TBAs, U.S. Treasury securities, and futures. The low level of interest rates, together with the low level of interest rate volatility, kept the Company's hedging costs low during the third quarter. During the third quarter, the Company increased the amount of long TBAs held for investment, especially in lower coupon TBAs. Even with these additional purchases, the Company still maintained, as it had throughout the second quarter, a small net short overall TBA position on a notional basis. However, as measured by 10-year equivalents, the Company ended the third quarter with a small net long overall TBA position, as compared to a small net short overall TBA position at the end of the second quarter. Ten-year equivalents for a group of positions represent the amount of 10-year U.S. Treasury securities that would be expected to experience a similar change in market value under a standard parallel move in interest rates.
After opportunistically increasing the size of its non-Agency RMBS portfolio in the prior quarter, the Company sold a significant portion of this portfolio during the third quarter, generating net realized gains. The Company expects to continue to vary its allocation to non-Agency RMBS as market opportunities change over time.
Net interest margin and core earnings increased significantly quarter over quarter. These increases were driven by a lower cost of funds, mainly on the Company's repo borrowings, which more than offset lower asset yields.
4 Conformed to current period calculation methodology.
Reconciliation of Core Earnings to Net Income (Loss)
Core Earnings consists of net income (loss), excluding realized and change in net unrealized gains and (losses) on securities and financial derivatives, and excluding, if applicable, any non-recurring items of income or loss. Core Earnings also excludes the effect of the Catch-up Premium Amortization Adjustment on interest income. The Catch-up Premium Amortization Adjustment is a quarterly adjustment to premium amortization triggered by changes in actual and projected prepayments on the Company's Agency RMBS (accompanied by a corresponding offsetting adjustment to realized and unrealized gains and losses). The adjustment is calculated as of the beginning of each quarter based on the Company's then-current assumptions about cashflows and prepayments, and can vary significantly from quarter to quarter. Core Earnings includes net realized and change in net unrealized gains (losses) associated with periodic settlements on interest rate swaps.
Core Earnings is a supplemental non-GAAP financial measure. The Company believes that Core Earnings provides information useful to investors because it is a metric that the Company uses to assess its performance and to evaluate the effective net yield provided by the portfolio. Moreover, one of the Company's objectives is to generate income from the net interest margin on the portfolio, and Core Earnings is used to help measure the extent to which this objective is being achieved. In addition, the Company believes that presenting Core Earnings enables its investors to measure, evaluate and compare its operating performance to that of its peer companies. However, because Core Earnings is an incomplete measure of the Company's financial results and differs from net income (loss) computed in accordance with GAAP, it should be considered as supplementary to, and not as a substitute for, net income (loss) computed in accordance with GAAP.
About Ellington Residential Mortgage REIT
Ellington Residential Mortgage REIT is a mortgage real estate investment trust that specializes in acquiring, investing in and managing residential mortgage- and real estate-related assets, with a primary focus on residential mortgage-backed securities for which the principal and interest payments are guaranteed by a U.S. government Agency or a U.S. government-sponsored enterprise. Ellington Residential Mortgage REIT is externally managed and advised by Ellington Residential Mortgage Management LLC, an affiliate of Ellington Management Group, L.L.C.