Q2 2024 Ellington Financial Inc Earnings Call

In This Article:

Participants

Alaael-Deen Shilleh; Associate General Counsel and Secretary; Ellington Financial Inc

Laurence Penn; President, Chief Executive Officer, Director; Ellington Financial Inc

J. R. Herlihy; Chief Financial Officer, Treasurer; Ellington Financial Inc

Mark Tecotzky; Co-Chief Investment Officer; Ellington Financial Inc

Bose George; Analyst; Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, Inc.

Crispin Love; Analyst; Piper Sandler & Co.

Douglas Harter; Analyst; UBS Equities

Eric Hagen; Analyst; BTIG, LLC

Matthew Erdner; Analyst; JonesTrading Institutional Services LLC

Lee Cooperman; Analyst; Omega Family Office Inc.

Presentation

Operator

Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Ellington Financial second quarter 2024 earnings conference call. Today's call is being recorded. (Operator Instructions)
I'd now like to turn the call over to Alaael-Deen Shilleh. Please go ahead.

Alaael-Deen Shilleh

Thank you. Before we start, I would like to remind everyone that certain statements made during this conference call may constitute forward-looking statements within the meaning of the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements are non-historical in nature.
As described under Item 1A of our annual report on Form 10-K and Part 2, Item 1A of our quarterly report on Form 10-Q. Forward-looking statements are subject to a variety of risks and uncertainties that could cause the Company's actual results to differ from its beliefs, expectations, estimates and projections.
Consequently, you should not rely on these forward-looking statements as predictions of future events. Statements made during this conference call are made as of the date of this call. The Company undertakes no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.
I am joined on the call today by Larry Penn, Chief Executive Officer of Ellington Financial; Mark Tecotzky, Co-Chief Investment Officer of EFC; and JR Herlihy, Chief Financial Officer of EFC. As described in our earnings press release, our first quarter earnings conference call presentation is available on our website at ellingtonfinancial.com. Management's prepared remarks will track the presentation.
Please note that any references to figures in this presentation are qualified in their entirety by the end notes at the back of the presentation.
With that, I will now turn the call over to Larry.

Laurence Penn

Thanks, Alaael-Deen, and good morning, everyone. As always, thank you for your time and interest in Ellington Financial. I'll begin on Slide 3 of the presentation. In the second quarter, broad based contributions from our diversified credit and agency portfolios as well as from a reverse mortgage platform Longbridge drove strong results for Ellington Financial.
For the quarter, we generated an economic return of 4.5% non-annualized. We grew our book value per share after paying dividends, and we increased adjusted distributable earnings per share by a full $0.05 to $0.33 per share, and we see momentum for our ADE to keep increasing from here. I'm very pleased with these results.
I'll first highlight the strong performance of our non-QM loan business in the quarter. In April, we completed our first non-QM securitization in 14 months. Taking advantage of the tightest AAA yield spreads we've seen in two years and booking a significant gain as a result. In the months leading up to that April deal, we've been taking advantage of strong whole loan bids in the marketplace by selling many of our non-QM loans rather than securitizing them.
While the whole loan bid for non-QM loans remained very strong, we saw AAA securitization spreads tightened back to early 2022 levels, and so in April, we decided to securitize some of our non-QM loans rather than sell them. That securitization transaction not only provided attractive economics, but it also provided us with high yielding residual retain trashes to boot. Following that April securitization, we proceeded to sell other non-QM loans into that strong home loan bid.
As you can imagine, given the recent risk off move in the financial markets, all this activity turned out to be extremely well timed. In addition, the continued strong demand for non-QM loans drove improved origination volumes and gain on sale margins industry-wide, which generated excellent results at our affiliate non-QM loan originators, LendSure, and American Heritage Lending, and led to market-to-market gains on our equity investments in those affiliates.
Meanwhile, Longbridge also contributed robust earnings for the quarter led by both strong origination volumes and strong performance of proprietary reverse mortgage loans.
Similar to the boost in industry non-QM volumes, HECM origination volumes were also of significantly for the quarter including for Longbridge. But unlike non-QM, we saw wider yield spreads in the HMBS securitization markets. As a result, gain on sale margins for Longbridge's HECM business actually compressed in the quarter, which mostly offset the benefit of their high origination volumes.
Finally, following quarter end, but prior to the recent market volatility, we successfully completed our second securitization of proprietary reverse mortgage loans originated by Longbridge, achieving incrementally stronger execution than our inaugural deal that we executed in the first quarter. This securitization converted another slug of short-term repo financing into long-term, locked in non-market to market financing.
Again, given the risk off move we've seen in August, this was another well time transaction. That transaction also provided us with high yielding residual retain tranches. On last quarter's earnings call, we predicted a second quarter turnaround at Longbridge, and Longbridge did a great job and delivered both on a GAAP basis and ADE basis. Longbridge is an important part of that ADE momentum I mentioned earlier.
Also in the second quarter, Ellington Financials results benefited significantly from the very solid performance of a residential transition and commercial mortgage loan strategies, as well as non-agency RMBS.
Both for the second quarter and continuing into the third, we have added attractive high yielding investments over a wide array of our credit strategies, especially HELOCs and closed-end second, comp reverse, commercial mortgage loans, residential RPL NPL, CMBS and CLOs. The growth of the commercial mortgage portfolio has included both new originations as well as the purchase of two additional non-performing commercial mortgage loans.
At the same time, we have continued to call securities and lower yielding sectors, including agency and non-agency RMBS. Since we generally utilize higher amounts of leverage in our MBS portfolios, especially our agency MBS portfolio, these MBS sales coupled with the non-QM securitization drove down our leverage ratios overall in the second quarter, despite the increased capital deployment in our credit strategies.
Moving forward, we have plenty of cash and borrowing capacity to drive portfolio and earnings growth with significant unencumbered assets plus other lightly leveraged assets. That dry powder is particularly valuable given recent spread widening.
And with that, I'll turn the call over to JR to discuss the second quarter financial results in more detail. JR?