Ellington Financial Q3 2024 Earnings Report $11.54 -0.57 (-4.67%) Closing price 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$11.59 +0.05 (+0.48%) As of 07:55 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Polygon.io. Learn more. Earnings HistoryForecast Ellington Financial EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.40Consensus EPS $0.36Beat/MissBeat by +$0.04One Year Ago EPS$0.33Ellington Financial Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$33.63 millionExpected Revenue$37.95 millionBeat/MissMissed by -$4.32 millionYoY Revenue GrowthN/AEllington Financial Announcement DetailsQuarterQ3 2024Date11/6/2024TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateThursday, November 7, 2024Conference Call Time11:00AM ETUpcoming EarningsEllington Financial's Q1 2025 earnings is scheduled for Tuesday, May 6, 2025, with a conference call scheduled on Wednesday, May 7, 2025 at 11:00 AM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)SEC FilingEarnings HistoryEFC ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Ellington Financial Q3 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrNovember 7, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 8 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. Operator00:00:01Thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Ellington Financial Third 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. Operator00:00:31It is now my pleasure to turn the call over to Aladdin Shalei. You may begin. Speaker 100:00:37Thank 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 not historical in nature. As described under 1A of our annual report on Form 10 ks 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. Speaker 100:01:15Statements made during this conference call are made as of the day of this call and the company undertakes no obligation to update or revise any forward looking statement, whether Speaker 200:01:25as a result Speaker 100:01:26of 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 VFC. As described in our earnings press release, our Q3 earnings conference call presentation is available on our website, ellingtonfinancial.com. Management's prepared remarks will track this presentation. Please note that any references to figures in this presentation are qualified in their entirety by the notes at the back of the presentation. Speaker 100:01:59With that, I will now turn the call over to Larry. Speaker 300:02:02Thanks, Eladine, 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. Perhaps the highlight of the quarter was the increase in our adjusted distributable earnings to $0.40 per share, which was a $0.07 increase from the 2nd quarter and which covered our $0.39 in dividends for the quarter. The main driver of this quarter's increase in ADE was the contribution from our proprietary reverse mortgage business in our Longbridge segment, which included our 2nd proper reverse securitization of the year. Speaker 300:02:40Back in the Q1 of this year, ADE in our Long Ridge segment was actually negative, but it has increased each quarter since then and it registered $0.12 per share in the Q3. Our Long Ridge segment represents about 12% of our equity capital allocation. So it's great to see ADE having steadily improved in that segment. I've been consistently highlighting our Longbridge segment as holding significant untapped potential for Ellington Financial. Even if Longbridge's ADE can stabilize around $0.09 per share per quarter, we should be in excellent shape from a dividend coverage standpoint. Speaker 300:03:20In the Q3, Ellington Financial's investment portfolio expanded as we utilized our strong balance sheet to continue growing our high yielding loan portfolios. For the quarter, our non QM, RTL, commercial mortgage bridge, HELOC and closed end second lien loan portfolios increased by a combined 26%. That portfolio growth drove our overall leverage a bit higher to 1.8 times from 1.6 times, even as we continue to shrink our lower yielding agency portfolio and maintain additional dry powder to invest. At quarter end, our agency portfolio had shrunk another 14% sequentially and cash plus unencumbered assets totaled $765,000,000 which was just under 50% of our total equity. Not surprisingly, much of the expansion of our loan portfolios has been a direct result of the loan origination businesses that we have cultivated across a variety of credit sectors and over a number of years. Speaker 300:04:22Our originator relationships, including the equity stakes we hold in many loan originators and our emphasis on striking forward flow agreements with a diversified roster of originators have enabled us to adjust the acquisition volume and the underwriting criteria of our loan investments. This has enabled our loan portfolios to become among our largest, highest yielding and best performing strategies. Meanwhile, the profits generated from our originator equity stakes have been a nice boost to our earnings and book value, while also enhancing the diversification of our earnings stream. This continued in the Q3 with strong profits at LendSure and American Heritage Lending, where continued robust demand for NonQM loans drove strong origination volumes and wider origination margins. Recently, our loan portfolio expansion has also included adding meaningful exposure to the HELOC and closed end second lien sectors, where we have both bought loans with an eye towards securitization as well as participated as securitization co sponsor with a large mortgage originator. Speaker 300:05:29We currently see the retained tranches and call options from these securitizations as offering very attractive risk adjusted returns. The mortgage securitization markets are in great shape and in turn that's been great for Ellington Financial. During the Q3, we priced a non QM securitization that achieved AAA yield spreads near their 2 year lows. And as I mentioned earlier, we also completed a proprietary reverse mortgage securitization backed by loans originated by Longbridge with incrementally stronger execution than our inaugural deal earlier this year. Finally, even aside from these excellent securitization executions, we're also continuing to improve the rest of the liability side of our balance sheet. Speaker 300:06:12Recently, we've added new financing lines on NonQM loans, closed in seconds and HELOCs and consumer loans. And before the end of the year, we expect to add several cost effective lines for our reverse mortgage business as well as a new financing line on the forward MSRs that we acquired through the Arlington merger. We anticipate using some of the proceeds from these financing lines to replace some of our existing higher cost debt and floating rate preferred equity. For example, we announced yesterday that we are redeeming our Series E preferred stock that we inherited in the Arlington merger, now carries a cost of funds of well over 10% following its fixed to floating rate conversion earlier this year. These types of refinancing should be immediately accretive to earnings since in the current environment, we see returns on equity on incremental asset acquisitions reaching well into the teens. Speaker 300:07:05Meanwhile, with our overall leverage still low, we have additional capacity to issue more long term unsecured debt and we look forward to doing so. With that, I'll turn the call over to JR to discuss the Q3 financial results in more detail. JR? Thanks, Larry, and Speaker 400:07:21good morning, everyone. For the Q3, we are reporting GAAP net income of $0.19 per share on a fully mark to market basis and adjusted distributable earnings of $0.40 per share. On Slide 5, you can see the attribution of net income between Credit, Agency and Longbridge. The Credit strategy generated $0.45 per share of net income in the quarter, including associated financing costs and hedging gains losses. We had strong net interest income and net gains from non QM loans and retained tranches, non agency RMBS, closed end second lien loans and CMBS. Speaker 400:07:59We also benefited from mark to market gains on our equity investments in LendSure and American Heritage Lending, which reflected strong performance at those originators driven by increased volumes and wider origination margins. Offsetting a portion of these gains were net losses on our consumer loan portfolio and a related equity investment in the consumer loan originator as well as negative operating income on certain non performing commercial mortgage loans in REO. Finally, we had a net loss on the Great Ajax common shares we purchased in connection with last year's terminated merger. Meanwhile, despite strong results and originations, the Longbridge segment generated a GAAP net loss of $0.03 per share for the Q3, but this net loss was driven by interest rate hedges as rates fell during the quarter. We had a mark to market gain on our HMBS MSR equivalent, but this gain was muted by wider HMBS yield spreads. Speaker 400:08:52So the gain didn't keep pace with the net losses on interest rate hedges that we hold against this position. Wider HMBS yield spreads adversely affect the value of our HMBS MSR equivalent because they lower the component of projected servicing income that stems from the right to fund and securitize future borrower draws. In Hekkem originations, a decline in origination margins also driven by wider HMBS yield spreads was partially offset by higher volumes, whereas in prop reverse originations results were boosted by the securitization we completed in July along with improved origination margins and higher volumes and this led to strong profits in that product line. In total, origination volume at Longbridge increased 16.5% sequentially even as industry wide volumes were down overall for the quarter. Notably, Longbridge contributed $0.12 per share of the ADE in the 3rd quarter driven by the strong quarter from PropReversed. Speaker 400:09:51For the quarter, our agency strategy generated net income of $0.06 per share with net gains on our agency RMBS exceeding net losses on interest rate hedges. In the quarter, interest rates fell, the yield curve steepened and agency MBS yield spreads tightened as the market anticipated the beginning of the Federal Reserve's interest rate cutting cycle. Indeed in September, the Fed reduced the target range for the Fed funds rate by 50 basis points and also released updated projections that implied another 50 basis points of interest rate cuts later in 2024, although that expectation is no longer shared by the market. Finally, our results for the quarter also reflect a net loss on our senior notes driven by the decline in rates. This loss was partially offset by a net gain also driven by the decrease in interest rates on the fixed receiver interest rate swaps that we used to hedge the fixed payments on both our unsecured long term debt and our preferred equity. Speaker 400:10:49Turning to slide 6, you can see the breakout of ADE by segment. Here's where you can see the $0.12 per share contribution from Longbridge, which drove the overall increase in EFC's ADE to $0.40 per share for the quarter. Turning next to loan credit performance. In our residential mortgage loan portfolio, the percentage of delinquent loans decreased quarter over quarter. In our commercial mortgage loan portfolio, the percentage of delinquent loans increased with 4 small balance commercial mortgage loans moving to 90 plus day delinquency during the quarter. Speaker 400:11:22But I'll note that subsequent to quarter end, one of those loans paid off at par plus all past due interest, 2 others are expected to resolve favorably in the 4th quarter. And for the 4th, we believe that the property value roughly approximates the UPB. We also continue to work through these 2 larger non performing multifamily bridge loans that we referenced last quarter. Moving into next year, we expect that resolutions of delinquent loans in REO together with redeployment of resolution proceeds will be a tailwind to ADE. Next, please turn to slide 7. Speaker 400:11:58In the Q3, our total loan credit portfolio increased by 19 percent to $3,250,000,000 as of September 30. The increase was primarily driven by net purchases of non QM loans, closed end seconds, HELOCs, commercial mortgage bridge loans and non agency RMBS. A portion of the increase was offset by smaller CLO and CMBS portfolios driven by net sales. For our RTL, commercial mortgage and consumer loan portfolios, we received total principal paydowns of $318,000,000 during the Q3, which represented 21% of the combined fair value of those portfolios coming into the quarter as those short duration portfolios continue to return capital steadily. On Slide 8, you can see that our total long agency RMBS portfolio declined by another 14% in the quarter to $395,000,000 We continue to sell down that portfolio and rotate the capital into higher yielding opportunities. Speaker 400:12:58Slide 9 illustrates that our Longbridge portfolio decreased by 5% sequentially to $494,000,000 driven primarily by the completion of our securitization of prop reverse mortgage loans, partially offset by new proprietary reverse mortgage loan originations during the quarter. Please turn next to Slide 10 for a summary of our borrowings. On our recourse borrowings, the total weighted average borrowing rate decreased by 21 basis points to 6.77% at September 30. We continue to benefit from positive carry on our interest rate swap hedges where we overall receive a higher floating rate and pay a lower fixed rate. The net interest margin on our credit portfolio declined modestly quarter over quarter while the NIM on agency assets increased. Speaker 400:13:45Our recourse debt to equity ratio increased to 1.8:one at September 30th, up from 1.6:one at June 30th, primarily driven by an increase in borrowings on our larger credit portfolio, partially offset by a decrease in borrowings on our smaller agency portfolio, the proprietary reverse mortgage securitization, which converted certain recourse borrowings to non recourse borrowings and an increase in shareholders' equity. Our overall debt to equity ratio ticked up as well to 8.3:one from 8.2:one. Since mid June, we've added 3 new loan financing facilities that have increased total borrowing capacity by $550,000,000 At September 30, our combined cash and unencumbered assets totaled approximately $765,000,000 roughly unchanged from June 30. Our book value per common share was $13.66 at quarter end and our total economic return was 0.9 percent non annualized for the Q3. Now Speaker 300:14:45over to Mark. Speaker 500:14:47Thanks, JR. This was a strong quarter for EFC. We had a lot of portfolio growth in our core strategies. That portfolio growth together with strong ADE at Longbridge helped our ADE cover our dividend, which has been a primary goal of ours. We had solid contributions from our core strategies that should be repeatable. Speaker 500:15:07Our origination partners continue to grow their franchises and gain market share, which helped us acquire the loans we like at attractive valuations and at the volumes we've been targeting. The vertical integration of EFC was on full display this quarter. Our non QM and RTL partners generally grew market share and increased profitability. These greater origination volumes allowed EFC to buy more loans with the credit profiles we seek. EFC's consistent loan pricing then allows our originators to offer more stable pricing to their broker and correspondent relationships, which makes them the counterparty of choice in many cases and helps them grow market share. Speaker 500:15:47With the securitization arb is as attractive as it's been this year, our securitization team takes over right after EFC approaches a critical mass of purchase loans. For the quarter, non agency mortgage bond spreads remained range bound and much tighter than much of last year. Our securitization team optimizes deal structure based on investor preferences and rating agency feedback. Including the deal that priced last week, we've now completed 3 securitizations since the end of July, 2 of non QM loans and 1 of Prop Reverse loans. Securitization serve 3 important objectives for EFC. Speaker 500:16:27Firstly, they allow us to replace short dated repo with match funded non mark to market securitization financing. That both lowers the cost of financing and reduces the risks of funding hiccups in margin calls. Secondly, by leveraging loans with wide yield spreads with the investment grade bonds that we sell at tighter yield spreads, we manufacture high yielding retained tranches that are often more attractively priced than similar securities available in the secondary market, while also affording us with superior visibility and input on the credit profile. Thirdly, after a lockup period, these securitizations have call features, which provide us with significant economic benefits if interest rates drop and or yield spreads tighten sufficiently. Another big trend for EFC this quarter is our growing presence in both the home equity line of credit market and the closed end second lien market. Speaker 500:17:22To frame this opportunity, there's currently more than $30,000,000,000,000 of home equity, much of which is controlled by homeowners with low fixed rate first lien mortgages. In fact, 85% of Fannie Freddie mortgages now have interest rates below current mortgage rates and nearly 70% of those mortgages are at least 2% below current mortgage rates. Over time, many of these borrowers will want to tap some of this home equity for a variety of reasons like home renovation or debt consolidation without disturbing their first mortgage. Currently, the 2 dominant loan products to facilitate this equity extraction are fixed rate second lien loans and floating rate HELOCs. We have worked diligently to develop sourcing channels to acquire these products and have made a lot of progress in the past 6 months. Speaker 500:18:10Meanwhile, our research teams developed prepayment loss models for these products as a natural extension of our long standing agency and non agency models. Based on these efforts, we concluded that these growing sectors represent another attractive high yielding sector of the mortgage market for EFC's diversified credit portfolio. As you can see on Slide 7, we not only bought CUSIPs back by 2nd lien loans in the Q3, but we also added both HELOCs and 2nd lien loans to the portfolio. That's the slice of the pie labeled D. And our buying in these sectors has continued at a brisk pace post quarter end. Speaker 500:18:47Both second liens and HELOCs fit seamlessly into EFC's portfolio as natural complements to our Non QM loan business. We have secured attractive financing terms so we can finance these loans and pocket a levered NIM. In addition, much like NonQM, we can also securitize these loans, selling investment grade bonds at terms we believe are more favorable to us than repo and retaining high yielding tranches for our investment portfolio. Just like NonQM, these securitizations have valuable call features after a lockup period, which gives us the ability to refinance or sell the collateral down the road. Getting back to earnings, not only did our loan strategies have a good quarter, but we also had solid contributions from many of our CUSIP strategies such as CLOs, CMBS and other ABS. Speaker 500:19:36We also had meaningful contributions from our investments in loan originators. And while it continues to shrink, we also had a strong contribution from our Agency MBS portfolio. We did face some headwinds, however, we had some write downs in our consumer portfolio and a write down of our investment in the consumer loan originator, but these were one off events that should be behind us. We continue to work out a few non performing assets and while those should not be a continuing drag on GAAP earnings, they will continue to be a modest drag on ADE until we can resolve the assets and redeploy the proceeds. Financing terms continue to improve for virtually all our assets and we continue to expand and broaden our financing relationships. Speaker 500:20:20The combination of our stable credit portfolio was consistent and well received new issue securitization calendar has resulted in greater appetite among our repo lenders to provide us with repo financing and at more attractive terms. Being able to negotiate better financing terms from our repo lenders drops directly to the bottom line GAAP earnings and ADE. Q3 brought us the 1st Fed cut in 4 years. Even with the post election surge in interest rates, the market is still pricing in a few more cuts, which should be a bit of a tailwind for ADE and spread products going forward. Spread products typically do quite well in an easing cycle and we still haven't really seen much of incremental bank demand for structured products. Speaker 500:21:03So there is certainly still room for spread tightening. At the same time, let's not forget that the rate cuts are in part a response to a slowing employment picture. We can't be complacent and we need to remain very focused on credit performance. We noted in our earnings release that our residential delinquency rate dropped in the 3rd quarter. As the job market cools, we need to continue watching these metrics closely and tighten underwriting guidelines as necessary. Speaker 500:21:29We have already seen how higher debt costs, insurance costs and property taxes have been a challenge for some multifamily properties. We've been moving up in FICO in our residential loan portfolios and are making good progress managing and stabilizing our few commercial assets that are under stress. I'm happy about our portfolio growth and the resulting ADE growth in the Q3. I believe in time, resources and effort we have put into our loan origination platforms can continue to deliver strong returns going forward. Now back to Larry. Speaker 300:22:03Thanks, Mark. It's great to see the growth of our adjusted attributable earnings during the Q3 hand in hand with the continued expansion of our integrated loan origination businesses, which now effectively drive the returns of our investment portfolio. I believe that we've established genuine franchise value in our securitization businesses, where our EFMT shelf has now added 2 successful proprietary reverse securitizations to the 16 total Non QM securitizations that we have completed since 2017. Performance of our NonQM EFMT securitizations continues to be very strong. We have rightfully earned a long roster of repeat investors in the tranches that we issue. Speaker 300:22:49We've also helped our loan originator partners to build significant franchise value themselves, as we provide them with capital, help them secure favorable warehouse financing, collaborate with them on credit decisions and work together with them on strategic initiatives. Ellington Financial benefits not only from high quality loan flow, but in many cases from our pro rata share of both of their profits as well as the increase in the value of their platforms. Ellington Financial's Q4 has started off with a good October. Our credit portfolio grew further during the month in what was a broad based expansion across sectors. It performed well from both the credit performance and total return perspective and it benefited from yet another strong execution in the NonQM securitization market. Speaker 300:23:38Meanwhile, in our Longbridge segment, Prop Reverse Origination volumes, origination margins and loan performance were again all strong in October. As is our typical practice, later this month, we will be putting out our estimated October month end book value per share. Finally, I should also add that we were positioned conservatively going into Election Day from a leverage, liquidity and interest rate exposure perspective. So the post election volatility in interest rates has not materially affected us. With that, we'll now open the call up to questions. Speaker 300:24:12Operator, please go ahead. Operator00:24:14Thank you. And we will take our first question from Trevor Cranston with Citizens JMP. Please go ahead. Speaker 200:24:37Hi, thanks. Good morning. Good morning. Yes, there's obviously been some significant moves in interest rates and agency spreads in particular so far in the Q4. Can you guys maybe just give us an update on kind of how you're thinking about relative value between agencies and credit opportunities as things stand today? Speaker 200:25:00Thanks. Speaker 500:25:01Sure. Hey, Trevor, it's Mark. Yes, you had pretty aggressive spread widening sort of middle October towards the end of the month. And in the last 4 or 5 days, you've had pretty aggressive spread tightening. So the reduction in the size of the agency portfolio in EFC, I don't think you should interpret it as a comment on relative value of agencies versus non agencies. Speaker 500:25:33It's more a process we started a while ago where we want to devote most of the capital non agency origination securitization businesses, RTL, our commercial bridge. And so that's been behind the capital rotation. There's certainly times when you get this, bouts of spread widening in the agency market that it offers compelling relative value. But for EFC, I think what you should expect is a continued decline in the amount of capital allocated to the agency portfolio. It's already very small. Speaker 500:26:19And the pace of that decline, I don't think is going to be too impacted by sort of relative value. I mean that portfolio is small right now and we see growing capital needs in some of our loan businesses where we think we can create sort of better longer term franchise value. Speaker 300:26:37And if I could just add one more thing. One thing on the mortgage basis that you don't really see, but it goes on behind the scenes is that we can be opportunistic and we can vary the extent to which we hedge our non QM portfolio as we're accumulating non QM loans for securitization, for example, or just to hold them, we often, but not always, hedge them with TBA mortgages because they have a lot of the same convexity characteristics in terms of they prepay faster when rates go down, they prepays lower when rates go up, right? So it's and that's something that depending upon our view on the mortgage baseness, we can dial up the extent to which we're hedging on non QMs with TBAs versus more vanilla instruments like interest rate swaps. Speaker 500:27:34Yes, it's a great point. We actually did when we saw that big spread widening, 3rd week of October, we did reduce the TBA hedge on the non QM and moved it more into swaps. Look, you're at a point in the agency market that if rates stay where they are, origination volumes are going to be pretty low and you're going to have a very large treasury calendar. So it's things that are there's reasons to be constructive on the mortgage basis here for sure. Speaker 200:28:06Yes. Okay. Makes sense. And then on Longbridge, you guys highlighted in the prepared comments the improvement in earnings there, which has been a nice tailwind. And Larry, you kind of mentioned the $0.09 number is a level that would give you decent dividend coverage. Speaker 200:28:28Is that kind of a level that's a good baseline to think about if we see more stability and rates and spreads from here? Or any sort of color you can give around kind of what you think about as a baseline contribution from them would be helpful? Speaker 300:28:42Yes. Sure. Thanks. I have mentioned before that Longbridge's business, it being in the reverse mortgage business, it's definitely rate sensitive. So as rates go up, borrowers can just because of the way the math works, borrowers can borrow less against their houses and vice versa. Speaker 300:29:08As rates go down, they can borrow more. So just big picture, they tend to see I mean, there's seasonal factors, other factors too, but they do the market share obviously is going to factor into it. But they tend to see more origination volume when rates are lower. So we actually have a hedge at Longbridge, which makes this money when rates go up sort of buffer against the fact that we expect to see lower volumes and therefore lower profits as rates go up. So you will see volatility there from an ADE perspective because that hedge is it's an interest rate hedge. Speaker 300:29:47So it doesn't contribute to ADE if it's profitable. It's more of a gain or loss, like a capital gain or loss. So yes, so I think the $0.09 number is something that was just we obviously beat it by $0.03 or not obviously, but that's what we reported. That segment beat it by $0.03 this quarter. So we're just I'm really just trying to make the point that, A, it's achievable and B, that's kind of a number where we think will be ADE will cover dividend. Speaker 300:30:23In terms of a target, It's not an unreasonable target, but we will see volatility with rates. And we did beat it in this quarter. And I think the other thing that I mentioned was that our ability to do securitizations, we've done 2 so far, that's going to really help that number too. That was a nice boost. I can't quantify it, but that was a nice boost as well to the ADE, right, because it sort of improves the technically not a sale for accounting purposes, but you could sort of think of it as improves your gain on sale margins in that business. Speaker 300:31:01So yes, so I think from a modeling perspective, I'm not uncomfortable with that as a long term sort of stabilized value. And of course, over time, Longbridge getting into other businesses, Prop Reverse was not a big business for it, call it, a year ago or 18 months ago. So there's lots of ways that Long Ridge can add ADE in the future even away from its existing business lines. Speaker 200:31:36Got it. Okay. That's helpful. Thank you, guys. Operator00:31:41Thank you. And we will take our next question from Bose George with KBW. Speaker 500:31:48Hi, good morning. This is Frank Ylavetta on for Bose. I just want to start, can you discuss the competition you're seeing within the non QM market? And also how has the more active participation from insurance companies impacted that market? Thanks. Speaker 500:32:04Sure. This is Mark. Those are great questions. So Ellington, like most people in the NonQM space, has seen aggressive consistent buying of NonQM loans from a lot of insurance companies, a lot of them that are fixed annuity sellers, really I'd say for the last 2.25 years, 2.5 years. So that has been a fixture of the market for a while. Speaker 500:32:37I think it's done a couple of things. One is it has stabilized loan prices. So you used to see a lot of volatility in non chem loan prices. I really think about early in the sell off in 2022. It was a market that had a lot more price volatility than the agency market. Speaker 500:33:01And I think the presence of consistent buying from insurance companies has taken out some of that volatility. So for our originators, I think it's been welcome because they sell to Ellington, but they sell to other buyers as well. It creates competition, right? The insurance companies have different yield bogeys, a different liability structure than an Ellington Financial or an Annaly that is really funding on repo and then doing securitization. So there can be times where the competition from insurance companies can be serious and it really can push levels around to places where it doesn't look as attractive as it does at other times. Speaker 500:33:50But I'd say for now, it's been sort of a consistent presence that has stabilized the market. It's been a welcome diversifier for our originators. And you also see insurance companies buying the securitization. So I feel like in some ways they're competitors, in some ways they're also clients. There's been enough volume to go around, but it's definitely created a different dynamic than what we had, I'd say, pre COVID when it was not a market where you saw a lot of active insurance company participation. Speaker 500:34:32Thank you. That helps a lot. And then just to move to operating expenses, they're roughly up 18% over the quarter. Can you just discuss what drove that increase and can we expect to see higher OpEx going forward? Speaker 400:34:47Sure. So part of that is we converted we redeemed, I guess, you could say, options at the Longbridge level. So that's one of the largest drivers of the which is a one time thing, employee held option. Thank you. So that's a non recurring that we would not see next quarter in Q4. Speaker 400:35:05That's probably the biggest driver. Speaker 500:35:08Thank you. Operator00:35:12Thank you. And we will take our next question from Matthew Erdner with Jones Trading. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:35:19Hey guys, thanks for taking the question. You talk about your expectation for pace of securitizations? And then can you speak a little to the execution and how that's been on the reverse deals? Speaker 300:35:35Well, on the reverse deals, I mean, when you say how it's been, I mean, we're happy with the executions. I don't want to not sure exactly how you'd like me to elaborate further on that. We've got it's not as uniform in that space in terms of the structures that people use in the reverse mortgage space are different and that there's not a lot of issuance there and different issuers use slightly different structures in terms of the how the debt is structured. But we've been very pleased. We've got repeat buyers and we Speaker 200:36:25are Speaker 300:36:25accumulating for another deal. And we think that debt really helps us having that securitization outlet, right, and that long term locked in financing on a what's a very long term product, obviously, is something that gives us a lot of confidence to continue to ramp up that origination at Longbridge. Mark, do you want to speak to Speaker 700:36:55Yes. Yes. Speaker 500:36:55Pace of non QM securitizations next year, I think 4 to 6 deals is sort of a cadence I would expect us to do. It's going to depend on origination volumes and deal structures and there were times where we perceive repo financing is a better way to go. But if the market kind of looks broadly similar to how it is now, I think 4 to 6 is where we should be. Got it. Speaker 300:37:22That's helpful. One thing that we've really tried to build here and have succeeded now is we not only have a diversified portfolio, but we have a really diversified and robust sourcing of all these different loan products, whether it's non QM, RTL, we have many sellers. We're buying a lot of loans each month. And we can dial up or down small balance commercial bridge lending. We're seeing also now increased volume there. Speaker 300:38:01So we can dial up and down where we don't it's like a faucet, right? And you're you turn the faucet a little higher and you get a little more flow, but then you can turn one faucet down and you could turn the other faucet up and the different products that we buy. So I think we're in a great place to take advantage of where we see opportunities. We mentioned before that if at some point the insurance bid in a particular month, let's just say, is so strong that we'd rather take our turn the faucet down in our non QM buying, well, we can pick it up RTL or small balance commercial bridge or just CUSIPs, right? So I really feel good about the diversity of our sources of growing the portfolio. Speaker 600:38:52Got it. That's very helpful. And that kind of led into my second question about where are you guys seeing opportunities right now? I know in the past you've talked about commercial. You just touched on the bridge lending there. Speaker 600:39:03But is it just kind of factor of what the market's thrown at you? And then could you expand a little more on what you guys are seeing and plan on doing it in the HELOC and second lien Speaker 500:39:12space? Dan, Mark? Sure. Yes, I would say in terms of opportunity, buying the loans we like, getting to critical mass for securitization, executing the deals and keeping retained tranches that we expect you're going to have very high yield and the ability via call options to get loans back in the future. That's a good opportunity for us right now and we're pursuing that and it's been that way last 6 months for sure. Speaker 500:39:48And I expect that to be the case. We've also seen very good opportunity in CUSIP. I mentioned in my prepared remarks, we had great contributions in some of our non agency stuff, CRT. We've done well in CMBS. CLO, we mentioned that we shrunk it a little bit because we took gains. Speaker 500:40:06So we have a broad platform at Ellington and really, I mean I think a phenomenal suite of PMs. And so we have a lot of different sort of arrows in the quiver. So and I like having some CUSIPs as well as some loans. It's sort of a different return stream. It's nice to sort of get the alpha that you can get from CUSIPs. Speaker 500:40:29So and then the second part of your question, 2nd liens and HELOCs. Again, the prepared remarks to us, we think we engage with that product the same way we do with NonQM. It's a high yielding asset. It has a big spread versus our financing. So just having it on portfolio on a levered basis with an interest rate hedge on the close end seconds, you don't need 1 on the HELOCs because they're floating off a prime. Speaker 500:40:55Prime's kind of been locked to sulfur. So with the appropriate interest rate hedge from time to time a credit hedge, that gives a nice levered return. But there's also securitization opportunities there. So I would expect us to do a securitization relatively soon on one or both of those products and follow the same playbook we have for NonQM, retaining some high yielding assets, keeping our call rights in place and replacing repo financing with selling investment grade bonds that we think have a lower yield than the yield on the repo. And we talked about in the prepared remarks, it's match funding, you reduce margin calls. Speaker 500:41:41So that's our plan for that product. And it can be anything we can do in non QM, we can do that in the HELOCs and then the closed end seconds. So all that sort of that whole skill set we have and the whole playbook there, it's really transferable. Speaker 600:42:01Yes, that's great. Thank you Speaker 200:42:02for all the color. Speaker 500:42:03Sure. Operator00:42:06Thank you. And we will take our next question from Eric Hagen with BTIG. Please go ahead. Speaker 400:42:13Hey, thanks. How are we doing? As you retire the preferred and make a move toward more unsecured, is that going to change the optics of your leverage? Is there maybe like a change in philosophy around how you manage with the secured leverage and the repo and where that leverage gets applied to certain assets as you retire the pref? Okay. Speaker 400:42:34I'll start out, Eric. Thanks for the question. So, I guess first off, retiring that preferred, which is now that it's floating is well over 10% cost of funds. Like that seems like a no brainer to us. And it's small, it's $24,000,000 $25,000,000 We have a few different channels to add financing to the balance sheet, okay, secured and unsecured. Speaker 400:43:00I mean, on the unsecured side, Larry mentioned that we have I would say an appetite to do more. Of course, we need to balance what the pricing is going to look like relative to secured financing other options. I mean when we did our current $210,000,000 deal couple of years ago, it was at a spread of $322,000,000 and now recent deals in the mortgage REIT sector have been much wider spreads perhaps that are coming in. But that the cost of financing on the unsecured is an important consideration. But big picture, we want to do more. Speaker 400:43:36In terms of secured financing, so I mentioned in my prepared remarks that since June, we've added 3 new facilities, secured facilities for loans. That's added $550,000,000 of capacity. We've utilized some but not all of that. So we have more to draw on new lines. We're expecting to add a new line for the MSRs that we got from Arlington. Speaker 400:44:05I think Larry mentioned that as well. Those spreads on those are attractive and between those two sources we're talking about a few $100,000,000 of additional financing compared to where we were at September 30. A few other things to think about we have unencumbered assets on balance sheet of $550,000,000 atquarterend. The bulk of that are agency and resi loans. And if you do 2 to 1 leverage on that, you're talking about another couple of 100,000,000 of secured financing available on existing lines. Speaker 400:44:38And then we have cash. So we had $220,000,000 of cash at quarter end and at least some of that I would consider to be surplus debt. And we've been working on deploying in October and Larry mentioned that the portfolio, the credit portfolio is bigger in October. So there was a lot of different pieces, but hopefully that gets it it gets your question. Speaker 300:44:56Yes. And then I'd just add that from a leverage perspective, with unsecured financing, we're more comfortable increasing the leverage. So I do think that if we can do 1 or more unsecured deals, then you'll see our leverage tick up. And then we'd love to replace just over time. Now this is really more of a longer term goal. Speaker 300:45:23But if we can replace a lot of our short term repo financing with longer term financing, that obviously just a more just a better company, frankly. So that's something that's Speaker 700:45:37a longer term aspirational goal. Speaker 300:45:38If you look at the mortgage REITs, aspirational goal. If you look at the mortgage REITs, there's on the residential mortgage REITs, they don't really haven't been able to pull that off as well, frankly. But that's something that we definitely would have an eye towards long term. But short term, we're just looking at, as Gerrard said, some of the like the floating rate preferred that now we can replace. And yes, and that decreases our equity and increases our debt. Speaker 300:46:09So yes, that's going to definitely at least show up as an increase in leverage. So we have to we try to manage portfolio very conservatively from a liquidity management perspective. So we'll keep a close eye on that, right? Speaker 400:46:26And there's various steps and we are 1.8x debt to equity at September 30. All those different pieces maybe get us into the low 2s here in Speaker 300:46:34the next quarter or 2. And that's probably recourse, right? Recourse, yes. Correct. Speaker 400:46:41Great stuff. Appreciate you guys very much. Thanks, Eric. Speaker 500:46:46Thanks, Eric. Operator00:46:48Thank you. And we will take our next question from Matthew Howlett with B. Riley. Please go ahead. Speaker 700:46:54Hi, everybody. Thanks for taking my question. Just to follow-up on the preferred. I mean, you could replace that preferred, right, with some of your other shares, the ATMs and if you wanted to at lower costs or is there a ratio you want to take down? Sorry, which Speaker 400:47:08ATMs? The preferred ATMs? Yes. Yes. I mean the look, I think the preferred the new issuance on preferred has been pretty low in our sector in the past couple of years. Speaker 400:47:22So we do have ATM facilities on different common and preferred as you point out. I mean volumes have been pretty low on preferred. So it doesn't seem like there's a huge at least new it's not exactly what you asked, but a new issue preferred doesn't seem to be there as much as the big bonds and other types of unsecured. So it's like I think that we try to be opportunistic on the capital structure and that's another potential tool, but the volumes in preferred are pretty low and it seems like investor appetite for unsecured is a lot greater than for new issued preferred. Yes. Speaker 400:47:59And if Speaker 300:47:59you look at where those are trading, it would still be expensive, right? So So the lower the one that hasn't the one that's still fixed, yes, right, is trading at a pretty big discount. So I'm not sure if you true, that's not we can't replace that coupon at bar. So yes, so I think debt is a better just if we really which we don't want to do, if we really want to reduce our I call it cost of funds, not technically debt, right? But from the common's perspective, it is. Speaker 300:48:35So if we really want to reduce the load, the cost of funds on the common, I think we're going to have to look to replace preferred with some form of debt, whether it's secured or unsecured. Speaker 700:48:48Right. Got you. You're always the market leader on low cost preferred. That's why I asked the question. But if it does open up, I'm sure you'll be back involved. Speaker 700:48:57The second question on the duration of the credit book, you guys have always been sort of short duration, high yields, short duration. You've always pulled this off time and time again. As you start to invest more in retained tranches, NonQM, I mean, do you want to take a little more duration on the credit book given where we are on the right cycle? Or do you foresee still being in that short and intermediate term? Speaker 300:49:20Yes. I think non QM retained tranches, there are the BP subordinated tranches that we retain that are long, but there's also excess IO that's quite short in duration. So I think and then as you mentioned, the other products are shorter duration products with its turnover fast, a lot of principal repayments, whether it's RTL, bridge loans, etcetera. So I think all those things being equal, I think we like to stay shorter in duration. But we're not afraid like look at the reverse mortgage space, that's really long duration. Speaker 300:50:00So when we our retained tranches there. So I think it depends, yes. Speaker 700:50:06Well, you're picking up great yields. Can you quantify what could be what you could call securitization wise next year? I mean, how much was the stuff issued? And I'm assuming if 2,002, 2,003, all the stuff issued back then could be called if rates move lower going forward? Speaker 300:50:23Yes. I don't have that at my fingertips, sorry. But you're right, there's going to be some deals that are going to pass the lockup period at some point. I don't have that. Speaker 400:50:36Yes. And when we put out our Q early next week, it will have more information about the existing deals and we can you can put the pieces together versus with what's outstanding and then what you can see from Bloomberg in terms of coupons on the remaining tranches. But yes, we Speaker 700:50:54I can point you to that. Speaker 500:50:55Yes, Matt, it's Speaker 300:50:57Mark, do you know? Speaker 500:50:58Yes. No, I would just say, Matt, it's an interesting point. You did see Verus call a few deals a couple of weeks ago. So basically on the 9QM side, the rules are, you can call it the earlier of 3 years or when the amount of loans in the deal by current face are less than 30% of the at deal closing. So I think given the prepayment environment we've been in so far, what's going to come sooner is the 3 year date. Speaker 500:51:27So anything 'twenty two and when we get to 2025, it's going to be anything 'twenty two and earlier, you'll have the right to call them and you definitely Speaker 300:51:40Right. Funded. Speaker 500:51:41Some of that activity. Speaker 300:51:43Right. Some of those deals obviously had very low coupons on them. Speaker 500:51:47Yes, yes. We have deals out there where the senior bond had a coupon below 1%. So Speaker 700:51:55you know Yes. Speaker 400:51:56We're not calling Speaker 500:51:56up. That's going to be out there. Well, Speaker 700:51:59just to be Yes. No, there's Speaker 500:52:00going to be some deals out there that got done with pretty high note rates that are going to get in the call window soon. Speaker 700:52:08Right. That's interesting. It's upside. It's clearly U. S. Speaker 700:52:11Have the option of doing it. So if spreads remain tight, I'm assuming you'll look at a lot of these deals. Speaker 500:52:17Yes. I mean to be fair and when we do a deal, we know about the call and depending on what the note rate is and what the forward curve is, we may ascribe some value to it. We discount that value at a really high discount rate. But so, we take it into account. It's not like 100 percent found money, but we've called a bunch of deals in the past and when we have, it's been certainly a profitable event. Speaker 700:52:50Yes. Great. Well, I look forward to that and we look forward to the queue. Last question is, and I've covered Ellington for a long, long time. The company as it evolves, it's growing, these originators, these stakes and originators are all growing. Speaker 700:53:01And of course, you have Longbridge. Just to clarify, Longbridge is not that's just consolidated in the balance sheet. There's no mark to market fair value on Longbridge versus AmerisourceBergen and the others. Speaker 400:53:12Yes. We mark to market there that the assets that are consolidated on the balance sheet. So we fair value those loans like we fair value everything else. But yes, that's right. There's no Speaker 300:53:23equity value for the originator explicitly on the balance sheet. Speaker 700:53:27So my question for the shareholders, I mean, the book, Speaker 400:53:29I know you update the 13.66 book, but Speaker 700:53:31I mean, when you start to think about the potential value of something like Glan Bridge or even your other originators, and you look at these other originators, Rocket, Penny, Kopera, they're trading way above reported book. And as these businesses grow, I'm assuming they're going to continue to grow here. I mean, what can you tell investors to let EFC is sort of the 1366, hey, we're different than the books we've given you over the last decade, because we have embedded value in these stakes that might be worth a lot more in a public or private valuation setting. I just would love to hear your comments on how investors should look at something like Longbridge. Speaker 300:54:13Right. Well, I think, look, we I think if you look just even recently, right, like I mentioned earlier that Longbridge had negative ADE in the Q1 of this year, right? So I don't want I think we need to put up some stability there. And like I said before, there's great signs that that's where if we're not there yet, we're heading there soon. So but you're absolutely right that it would be great. Speaker 300:54:46And I think once we can achieve that stability, where you can say, okay, there's a and this is really frankly more your expertise than ours and more your job than ours, but you would say, okay, so there's a chunk of this company that should be trading in a multiple of earnings, not a percentage of book value, right? I mean, that's really, I think, what you're getting at. Absolutely. And I agree with that 100%. And we said that right now, our capital allocation, as I said earlier, our capital allocation long range is 12%. Speaker 300:55:19But you can even a high multiple on 12% of the company can have a meaningful impact in your overall way you trade overall. But look, I think it's for now, it's about covering the dividend and our ADE covered the dividend in the Q3. And I think we're it's I Speaker 400:55:45feel good about it. Yes. And I would just I think underscoring the point, we talked about $0.09 as kind of a stabilized, maybe run rate or target on numbers that's a lot more than 12% of our dividend, right? So there are 12% of capital, right? That's 23% of our $0.39 dividend. Speaker 700:56:09I'm assuming all entities are hiring and all among originators are all hiring now? I'm assuming you guys are in growth modes for all these stakes you have. Speaker 300:56:19Yes. Everybody is trying to be more efficient. So I don't know that we're necessarily at our originator, whether it's ones that we own stakes in or the ones that we don't or Longbridge, obviously, which is part of us. I don't know if you're going to see massive hiring at this point. I think everybody has been able to, over the past few years, just get a lot more efficient after the rates spiked in 2022, right? Speaker 300:56:50And so I think they've I don't think you're necessarily going to see a huge amount of hiring there. But you might see some, especially as product lines increase, things like that. Speaker 700:57:05Great. Well, I look forward to continued contribution from Longbridge and the others. Appreciate it. Speaker 400:57:11Absolutely. Thanks, Matt. Operator00:57:14Thank you. That was our final question for today. We thank you for participating in the Ellington Financial Third Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. You may disconnect your line at this time and have a wonderful day.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallEllington Financial Q3 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xRemove Ads Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Ellington Financial Earnings HeadlinesEllington Financial (EFC) Shares Cross Below 200 DMAApril 6, 2025 | nasdaq.comEllington Financial Declares Monthly Common DividendApril 3, 2025 | gurufocus.comDOGE officially begins retirement transformationElon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency ("DOGE") just announced the first-ever "fully digital retirement" process . This fired the starting gun on the biggest economic transformation in American history.April 10, 2025 | Altimetry (Ad)Ellington Financial's Series B Preferred Stock Crosses Above 7.5% Yield TerritoryApril 3, 2025 | nasdaq.comEllington Financial Inc. (NYSE:EFC) Receives $14.00 Consensus Target Price from AnalystsMarch 31, 2025 | americanbankingnews.comEllington Financial: Shifting To The Series C Preferred Shares, Yielding 8.6%March 30, 2025 | seekingalpha.comSee More Ellington Financial Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Ellington Financial? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Ellington Financial and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Ellington FinancialEllington Financial (NYSE:EFC), through its subsidiary, Ellington Financial Operating Partnership LLC, acquires and manages mortgage-related, consumer-related, corporate-related, and other financial assets in the United States. The company acquires and manages residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS) backed by prime jumbo, Alt-A, manufactured housing, and subprime mortgage; RMBS for which the principal and interest payments are guaranteed by the U.S. government agency or the U.S. government-sponsored entity; residential mortgage loans; commercial mortgage-backed securities; and commercial mortgage loans and other commercial real estate debt. It also provides collateralized loan obligations; mortgage-related and non-mortgage-related derivatives; corporate debt and equity securities; corporate loans; and other strategic investments; and consumer loans and asset-backed securities backed by consumer and commercial assets. The company qualifies as a real estate investment trust (REIT) for federal income tax purposes. As a REIT, it intends to distribute at least 90% of its taxable income as dividends to shareholders. Ellington Financial LLC was incorporated in 2007 and is headquartered in Old Greenwich, Connecticut.View Ellington Financial ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Earnings By Country U.S. Earnings Reports Canadian Earnings Reports U.K. Earnings Reports Latest Articles Why Analysts Boosted United Airlines Stock Ahead of EarningsLamb Weston Stock Rises, Earnings Provide Calm Amidst ChaosIntuitive Machines Gains After Earnings Beat, NASA Missions AheadCintas Delivers Earnings Beat, Signals More Growth AheadNike Stock Dips on Earnings: Analysts Weigh in on What’s NextAfter Massive Post Earnings Fall, Does Hope Remain for MongoDB?Semtech Rallies on Earnings Beat—Is There More Upside? 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There are 8 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. Operator00:00:01Thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Ellington Financial Third 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. Operator00:00:31It is now my pleasure to turn the call over to Aladdin Shalei. You may begin. Speaker 100:00:37Thank 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 not historical in nature. As described under 1A of our annual report on Form 10 ks 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. Speaker 100:01:15Statements made during this conference call are made as of the day of this call and the company undertakes no obligation to update or revise any forward looking statement, whether Speaker 200:01:25as a result Speaker 100:01:26of 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 VFC. As described in our earnings press release, our Q3 earnings conference call presentation is available on our website, ellingtonfinancial.com. Management's prepared remarks will track this presentation. Please note that any references to figures in this presentation are qualified in their entirety by the notes at the back of the presentation. Speaker 100:01:59With that, I will now turn the call over to Larry. Speaker 300:02:02Thanks, Eladine, 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. Perhaps the highlight of the quarter was the increase in our adjusted distributable earnings to $0.40 per share, which was a $0.07 increase from the 2nd quarter and which covered our $0.39 in dividends for the quarter. The main driver of this quarter's increase in ADE was the contribution from our proprietary reverse mortgage business in our Longbridge segment, which included our 2nd proper reverse securitization of the year. Speaker 300:02:40Back in the Q1 of this year, ADE in our Long Ridge segment was actually negative, but it has increased each quarter since then and it registered $0.12 per share in the Q3. Our Long Ridge segment represents about 12% of our equity capital allocation. So it's great to see ADE having steadily improved in that segment. I've been consistently highlighting our Longbridge segment as holding significant untapped potential for Ellington Financial. Even if Longbridge's ADE can stabilize around $0.09 per share per quarter, we should be in excellent shape from a dividend coverage standpoint. Speaker 300:03:20In the Q3, Ellington Financial's investment portfolio expanded as we utilized our strong balance sheet to continue growing our high yielding loan portfolios. For the quarter, our non QM, RTL, commercial mortgage bridge, HELOC and closed end second lien loan portfolios increased by a combined 26%. That portfolio growth drove our overall leverage a bit higher to 1.8 times from 1.6 times, even as we continue to shrink our lower yielding agency portfolio and maintain additional dry powder to invest. At quarter end, our agency portfolio had shrunk another 14% sequentially and cash plus unencumbered assets totaled $765,000,000 which was just under 50% of our total equity. Not surprisingly, much of the expansion of our loan portfolios has been a direct result of the loan origination businesses that we have cultivated across a variety of credit sectors and over a number of years. Speaker 300:04:22Our originator relationships, including the equity stakes we hold in many loan originators and our emphasis on striking forward flow agreements with a diversified roster of originators have enabled us to adjust the acquisition volume and the underwriting criteria of our loan investments. This has enabled our loan portfolios to become among our largest, highest yielding and best performing strategies. Meanwhile, the profits generated from our originator equity stakes have been a nice boost to our earnings and book value, while also enhancing the diversification of our earnings stream. This continued in the Q3 with strong profits at LendSure and American Heritage Lending, where continued robust demand for NonQM loans drove strong origination volumes and wider origination margins. Recently, our loan portfolio expansion has also included adding meaningful exposure to the HELOC and closed end second lien sectors, where we have both bought loans with an eye towards securitization as well as participated as securitization co sponsor with a large mortgage originator. Speaker 300:05:29We currently see the retained tranches and call options from these securitizations as offering very attractive risk adjusted returns. The mortgage securitization markets are in great shape and in turn that's been great for Ellington Financial. During the Q3, we priced a non QM securitization that achieved AAA yield spreads near their 2 year lows. And as I mentioned earlier, we also completed a proprietary reverse mortgage securitization backed by loans originated by Longbridge with incrementally stronger execution than our inaugural deal earlier this year. Finally, even aside from these excellent securitization executions, we're also continuing to improve the rest of the liability side of our balance sheet. Speaker 300:06:12Recently, we've added new financing lines on NonQM loans, closed in seconds and HELOCs and consumer loans. And before the end of the year, we expect to add several cost effective lines for our reverse mortgage business as well as a new financing line on the forward MSRs that we acquired through the Arlington merger. We anticipate using some of the proceeds from these financing lines to replace some of our existing higher cost debt and floating rate preferred equity. For example, we announced yesterday that we are redeeming our Series E preferred stock that we inherited in the Arlington merger, now carries a cost of funds of well over 10% following its fixed to floating rate conversion earlier this year. These types of refinancing should be immediately accretive to earnings since in the current environment, we see returns on equity on incremental asset acquisitions reaching well into the teens. Speaker 300:07:05Meanwhile, with our overall leverage still low, we have additional capacity to issue more long term unsecured debt and we look forward to doing so. With that, I'll turn the call over to JR to discuss the Q3 financial results in more detail. JR? Thanks, Larry, and Speaker 400:07:21good morning, everyone. For the Q3, we are reporting GAAP net income of $0.19 per share on a fully mark to market basis and adjusted distributable earnings of $0.40 per share. On Slide 5, you can see the attribution of net income between Credit, Agency and Longbridge. The Credit strategy generated $0.45 per share of net income in the quarter, including associated financing costs and hedging gains losses. We had strong net interest income and net gains from non QM loans and retained tranches, non agency RMBS, closed end second lien loans and CMBS. Speaker 400:07:59We also benefited from mark to market gains on our equity investments in LendSure and American Heritage Lending, which reflected strong performance at those originators driven by increased volumes and wider origination margins. Offsetting a portion of these gains were net losses on our consumer loan portfolio and a related equity investment in the consumer loan originator as well as negative operating income on certain non performing commercial mortgage loans in REO. Finally, we had a net loss on the Great Ajax common shares we purchased in connection with last year's terminated merger. Meanwhile, despite strong results and originations, the Longbridge segment generated a GAAP net loss of $0.03 per share for the Q3, but this net loss was driven by interest rate hedges as rates fell during the quarter. We had a mark to market gain on our HMBS MSR equivalent, but this gain was muted by wider HMBS yield spreads. Speaker 400:08:52So the gain didn't keep pace with the net losses on interest rate hedges that we hold against this position. Wider HMBS yield spreads adversely affect the value of our HMBS MSR equivalent because they lower the component of projected servicing income that stems from the right to fund and securitize future borrower draws. In Hekkem originations, a decline in origination margins also driven by wider HMBS yield spreads was partially offset by higher volumes, whereas in prop reverse originations results were boosted by the securitization we completed in July along with improved origination margins and higher volumes and this led to strong profits in that product line. In total, origination volume at Longbridge increased 16.5% sequentially even as industry wide volumes were down overall for the quarter. Notably, Longbridge contributed $0.12 per share of the ADE in the 3rd quarter driven by the strong quarter from PropReversed. Speaker 400:09:51For the quarter, our agency strategy generated net income of $0.06 per share with net gains on our agency RMBS exceeding net losses on interest rate hedges. In the quarter, interest rates fell, the yield curve steepened and agency MBS yield spreads tightened as the market anticipated the beginning of the Federal Reserve's interest rate cutting cycle. Indeed in September, the Fed reduced the target range for the Fed funds rate by 50 basis points and also released updated projections that implied another 50 basis points of interest rate cuts later in 2024, although that expectation is no longer shared by the market. Finally, our results for the quarter also reflect a net loss on our senior notes driven by the decline in rates. This loss was partially offset by a net gain also driven by the decrease in interest rates on the fixed receiver interest rate swaps that we used to hedge the fixed payments on both our unsecured long term debt and our preferred equity. Speaker 400:10:49Turning to slide 6, you can see the breakout of ADE by segment. Here's where you can see the $0.12 per share contribution from Longbridge, which drove the overall increase in EFC's ADE to $0.40 per share for the quarter. Turning next to loan credit performance. In our residential mortgage loan portfolio, the percentage of delinquent loans decreased quarter over quarter. In our commercial mortgage loan portfolio, the percentage of delinquent loans increased with 4 small balance commercial mortgage loans moving to 90 plus day delinquency during the quarter. Speaker 400:11:22But I'll note that subsequent to quarter end, one of those loans paid off at par plus all past due interest, 2 others are expected to resolve favorably in the 4th quarter. And for the 4th, we believe that the property value roughly approximates the UPB. We also continue to work through these 2 larger non performing multifamily bridge loans that we referenced last quarter. Moving into next year, we expect that resolutions of delinquent loans in REO together with redeployment of resolution proceeds will be a tailwind to ADE. Next, please turn to slide 7. Speaker 400:11:58In the Q3, our total loan credit portfolio increased by 19 percent to $3,250,000,000 as of September 30. The increase was primarily driven by net purchases of non QM loans, closed end seconds, HELOCs, commercial mortgage bridge loans and non agency RMBS. A portion of the increase was offset by smaller CLO and CMBS portfolios driven by net sales. For our RTL, commercial mortgage and consumer loan portfolios, we received total principal paydowns of $318,000,000 during the Q3, which represented 21% of the combined fair value of those portfolios coming into the quarter as those short duration portfolios continue to return capital steadily. On Slide 8, you can see that our total long agency RMBS portfolio declined by another 14% in the quarter to $395,000,000 We continue to sell down that portfolio and rotate the capital into higher yielding opportunities. Speaker 400:12:58Slide 9 illustrates that our Longbridge portfolio decreased by 5% sequentially to $494,000,000 driven primarily by the completion of our securitization of prop reverse mortgage loans, partially offset by new proprietary reverse mortgage loan originations during the quarter. Please turn next to Slide 10 for a summary of our borrowings. On our recourse borrowings, the total weighted average borrowing rate decreased by 21 basis points to 6.77% at September 30. We continue to benefit from positive carry on our interest rate swap hedges where we overall receive a higher floating rate and pay a lower fixed rate. The net interest margin on our credit portfolio declined modestly quarter over quarter while the NIM on agency assets increased. Speaker 400:13:45Our recourse debt to equity ratio increased to 1.8:one at September 30th, up from 1.6:one at June 30th, primarily driven by an increase in borrowings on our larger credit portfolio, partially offset by a decrease in borrowings on our smaller agency portfolio, the proprietary reverse mortgage securitization, which converted certain recourse borrowings to non recourse borrowings and an increase in shareholders' equity. Our overall debt to equity ratio ticked up as well to 8.3:one from 8.2:one. Since mid June, we've added 3 new loan financing facilities that have increased total borrowing capacity by $550,000,000 At September 30, our combined cash and unencumbered assets totaled approximately $765,000,000 roughly unchanged from June 30. Our book value per common share was $13.66 at quarter end and our total economic return was 0.9 percent non annualized for the Q3. Now Speaker 300:14:45over to Mark. Speaker 500:14:47Thanks, JR. This was a strong quarter for EFC. We had a lot of portfolio growth in our core strategies. That portfolio growth together with strong ADE at Longbridge helped our ADE cover our dividend, which has been a primary goal of ours. We had solid contributions from our core strategies that should be repeatable. Speaker 500:15:07Our origination partners continue to grow their franchises and gain market share, which helped us acquire the loans we like at attractive valuations and at the volumes we've been targeting. The vertical integration of EFC was on full display this quarter. Our non QM and RTL partners generally grew market share and increased profitability. These greater origination volumes allowed EFC to buy more loans with the credit profiles we seek. EFC's consistent loan pricing then allows our originators to offer more stable pricing to their broker and correspondent relationships, which makes them the counterparty of choice in many cases and helps them grow market share. Speaker 500:15:47With the securitization arb is as attractive as it's been this year, our securitization team takes over right after EFC approaches a critical mass of purchase loans. For the quarter, non agency mortgage bond spreads remained range bound and much tighter than much of last year. Our securitization team optimizes deal structure based on investor preferences and rating agency feedback. Including the deal that priced last week, we've now completed 3 securitizations since the end of July, 2 of non QM loans and 1 of Prop Reverse loans. Securitization serve 3 important objectives for EFC. Speaker 500:16:27Firstly, they allow us to replace short dated repo with match funded non mark to market securitization financing. That both lowers the cost of financing and reduces the risks of funding hiccups in margin calls. Secondly, by leveraging loans with wide yield spreads with the investment grade bonds that we sell at tighter yield spreads, we manufacture high yielding retained tranches that are often more attractively priced than similar securities available in the secondary market, while also affording us with superior visibility and input on the credit profile. Thirdly, after a lockup period, these securitizations have call features, which provide us with significant economic benefits if interest rates drop and or yield spreads tighten sufficiently. Another big trend for EFC this quarter is our growing presence in both the home equity line of credit market and the closed end second lien market. Speaker 500:17:22To frame this opportunity, there's currently more than $30,000,000,000,000 of home equity, much of which is controlled by homeowners with low fixed rate first lien mortgages. In fact, 85% of Fannie Freddie mortgages now have interest rates below current mortgage rates and nearly 70% of those mortgages are at least 2% below current mortgage rates. Over time, many of these borrowers will want to tap some of this home equity for a variety of reasons like home renovation or debt consolidation without disturbing their first mortgage. Currently, the 2 dominant loan products to facilitate this equity extraction are fixed rate second lien loans and floating rate HELOCs. We have worked diligently to develop sourcing channels to acquire these products and have made a lot of progress in the past 6 months. Speaker 500:18:10Meanwhile, our research teams developed prepayment loss models for these products as a natural extension of our long standing agency and non agency models. Based on these efforts, we concluded that these growing sectors represent another attractive high yielding sector of the mortgage market for EFC's diversified credit portfolio. As you can see on Slide 7, we not only bought CUSIPs back by 2nd lien loans in the Q3, but we also added both HELOCs and 2nd lien loans to the portfolio. That's the slice of the pie labeled D. And our buying in these sectors has continued at a brisk pace post quarter end. Speaker 500:18:47Both second liens and HELOCs fit seamlessly into EFC's portfolio as natural complements to our Non QM loan business. We have secured attractive financing terms so we can finance these loans and pocket a levered NIM. In addition, much like NonQM, we can also securitize these loans, selling investment grade bonds at terms we believe are more favorable to us than repo and retaining high yielding tranches for our investment portfolio. Just like NonQM, these securitizations have valuable call features after a lockup period, which gives us the ability to refinance or sell the collateral down the road. Getting back to earnings, not only did our loan strategies have a good quarter, but we also had solid contributions from many of our CUSIP strategies such as CLOs, CMBS and other ABS. Speaker 500:19:36We also had meaningful contributions from our investments in loan originators. And while it continues to shrink, we also had a strong contribution from our Agency MBS portfolio. We did face some headwinds, however, we had some write downs in our consumer portfolio and a write down of our investment in the consumer loan originator, but these were one off events that should be behind us. We continue to work out a few non performing assets and while those should not be a continuing drag on GAAP earnings, they will continue to be a modest drag on ADE until we can resolve the assets and redeploy the proceeds. Financing terms continue to improve for virtually all our assets and we continue to expand and broaden our financing relationships. Speaker 500:20:20The combination of our stable credit portfolio was consistent and well received new issue securitization calendar has resulted in greater appetite among our repo lenders to provide us with repo financing and at more attractive terms. Being able to negotiate better financing terms from our repo lenders drops directly to the bottom line GAAP earnings and ADE. Q3 brought us the 1st Fed cut in 4 years. Even with the post election surge in interest rates, the market is still pricing in a few more cuts, which should be a bit of a tailwind for ADE and spread products going forward. Spread products typically do quite well in an easing cycle and we still haven't really seen much of incremental bank demand for structured products. Speaker 500:21:03So there is certainly still room for spread tightening. At the same time, let's not forget that the rate cuts are in part a response to a slowing employment picture. We can't be complacent and we need to remain very focused on credit performance. We noted in our earnings release that our residential delinquency rate dropped in the 3rd quarter. As the job market cools, we need to continue watching these metrics closely and tighten underwriting guidelines as necessary. Speaker 500:21:29We have already seen how higher debt costs, insurance costs and property taxes have been a challenge for some multifamily properties. We've been moving up in FICO in our residential loan portfolios and are making good progress managing and stabilizing our few commercial assets that are under stress. I'm happy about our portfolio growth and the resulting ADE growth in the Q3. I believe in time, resources and effort we have put into our loan origination platforms can continue to deliver strong returns going forward. Now back to Larry. Speaker 300:22:03Thanks, Mark. It's great to see the growth of our adjusted attributable earnings during the Q3 hand in hand with the continued expansion of our integrated loan origination businesses, which now effectively drive the returns of our investment portfolio. I believe that we've established genuine franchise value in our securitization businesses, where our EFMT shelf has now added 2 successful proprietary reverse securitizations to the 16 total Non QM securitizations that we have completed since 2017. Performance of our NonQM EFMT securitizations continues to be very strong. We have rightfully earned a long roster of repeat investors in the tranches that we issue. Speaker 300:22:49We've also helped our loan originator partners to build significant franchise value themselves, as we provide them with capital, help them secure favorable warehouse financing, collaborate with them on credit decisions and work together with them on strategic initiatives. Ellington Financial benefits not only from high quality loan flow, but in many cases from our pro rata share of both of their profits as well as the increase in the value of their platforms. Ellington Financial's Q4 has started off with a good October. Our credit portfolio grew further during the month in what was a broad based expansion across sectors. It performed well from both the credit performance and total return perspective and it benefited from yet another strong execution in the NonQM securitization market. Speaker 300:23:38Meanwhile, in our Longbridge segment, Prop Reverse Origination volumes, origination margins and loan performance were again all strong in October. As is our typical practice, later this month, we will be putting out our estimated October month end book value per share. Finally, I should also add that we were positioned conservatively going into Election Day from a leverage, liquidity and interest rate exposure perspective. So the post election volatility in interest rates has not materially affected us. With that, we'll now open the call up to questions. Speaker 300:24:12Operator, please go ahead. Operator00:24:14Thank you. And we will take our first question from Trevor Cranston with Citizens JMP. Please go ahead. Speaker 200:24:37Hi, thanks. Good morning. Good morning. Yes, there's obviously been some significant moves in interest rates and agency spreads in particular so far in the Q4. Can you guys maybe just give us an update on kind of how you're thinking about relative value between agencies and credit opportunities as things stand today? Speaker 200:25:00Thanks. Speaker 500:25:01Sure. Hey, Trevor, it's Mark. Yes, you had pretty aggressive spread widening sort of middle October towards the end of the month. And in the last 4 or 5 days, you've had pretty aggressive spread tightening. So the reduction in the size of the agency portfolio in EFC, I don't think you should interpret it as a comment on relative value of agencies versus non agencies. Speaker 500:25:33It's more a process we started a while ago where we want to devote most of the capital non agency origination securitization businesses, RTL, our commercial bridge. And so that's been behind the capital rotation. There's certainly times when you get this, bouts of spread widening in the agency market that it offers compelling relative value. But for EFC, I think what you should expect is a continued decline in the amount of capital allocated to the agency portfolio. It's already very small. Speaker 500:26:19And the pace of that decline, I don't think is going to be too impacted by sort of relative value. I mean that portfolio is small right now and we see growing capital needs in some of our loan businesses where we think we can create sort of better longer term franchise value. Speaker 300:26:37And if I could just add one more thing. One thing on the mortgage basis that you don't really see, but it goes on behind the scenes is that we can be opportunistic and we can vary the extent to which we hedge our non QM portfolio as we're accumulating non QM loans for securitization, for example, or just to hold them, we often, but not always, hedge them with TBA mortgages because they have a lot of the same convexity characteristics in terms of they prepay faster when rates go down, they prepays lower when rates go up, right? So it's and that's something that depending upon our view on the mortgage baseness, we can dial up the extent to which we're hedging on non QMs with TBAs versus more vanilla instruments like interest rate swaps. Speaker 500:27:34Yes, it's a great point. We actually did when we saw that big spread widening, 3rd week of October, we did reduce the TBA hedge on the non QM and moved it more into swaps. Look, you're at a point in the agency market that if rates stay where they are, origination volumes are going to be pretty low and you're going to have a very large treasury calendar. So it's things that are there's reasons to be constructive on the mortgage basis here for sure. Speaker 200:28:06Yes. Okay. Makes sense. And then on Longbridge, you guys highlighted in the prepared comments the improvement in earnings there, which has been a nice tailwind. And Larry, you kind of mentioned the $0.09 number is a level that would give you decent dividend coverage. Speaker 200:28:28Is that kind of a level that's a good baseline to think about if we see more stability and rates and spreads from here? Or any sort of color you can give around kind of what you think about as a baseline contribution from them would be helpful? Speaker 300:28:42Yes. Sure. Thanks. I have mentioned before that Longbridge's business, it being in the reverse mortgage business, it's definitely rate sensitive. So as rates go up, borrowers can just because of the way the math works, borrowers can borrow less against their houses and vice versa. Speaker 300:29:08As rates go down, they can borrow more. So just big picture, they tend to see I mean, there's seasonal factors, other factors too, but they do the market share obviously is going to factor into it. But they tend to see more origination volume when rates are lower. So we actually have a hedge at Longbridge, which makes this money when rates go up sort of buffer against the fact that we expect to see lower volumes and therefore lower profits as rates go up. So you will see volatility there from an ADE perspective because that hedge is it's an interest rate hedge. Speaker 300:29:47So it doesn't contribute to ADE if it's profitable. It's more of a gain or loss, like a capital gain or loss. So yes, so I think the $0.09 number is something that was just we obviously beat it by $0.03 or not obviously, but that's what we reported. That segment beat it by $0.03 this quarter. So we're just I'm really just trying to make the point that, A, it's achievable and B, that's kind of a number where we think will be ADE will cover dividend. Speaker 300:30:23In terms of a target, It's not an unreasonable target, but we will see volatility with rates. And we did beat it in this quarter. And I think the other thing that I mentioned was that our ability to do securitizations, we've done 2 so far, that's going to really help that number too. That was a nice boost. I can't quantify it, but that was a nice boost as well to the ADE, right, because it sort of improves the technically not a sale for accounting purposes, but you could sort of think of it as improves your gain on sale margins in that business. Speaker 300:31:01So yes, so I think from a modeling perspective, I'm not uncomfortable with that as a long term sort of stabilized value. And of course, over time, Longbridge getting into other businesses, Prop Reverse was not a big business for it, call it, a year ago or 18 months ago. So there's lots of ways that Long Ridge can add ADE in the future even away from its existing business lines. Speaker 200:31:36Got it. Okay. That's helpful. Thank you, guys. Operator00:31:41Thank you. And we will take our next question from Bose George with KBW. Speaker 500:31:48Hi, good morning. This is Frank Ylavetta on for Bose. I just want to start, can you discuss the competition you're seeing within the non QM market? And also how has the more active participation from insurance companies impacted that market? Thanks. Speaker 500:32:04Sure. This is Mark. Those are great questions. So Ellington, like most people in the NonQM space, has seen aggressive consistent buying of NonQM loans from a lot of insurance companies, a lot of them that are fixed annuity sellers, really I'd say for the last 2.25 years, 2.5 years. So that has been a fixture of the market for a while. Speaker 500:32:37I think it's done a couple of things. One is it has stabilized loan prices. So you used to see a lot of volatility in non chem loan prices. I really think about early in the sell off in 2022. It was a market that had a lot more price volatility than the agency market. Speaker 500:33:01And I think the presence of consistent buying from insurance companies has taken out some of that volatility. So for our originators, I think it's been welcome because they sell to Ellington, but they sell to other buyers as well. It creates competition, right? The insurance companies have different yield bogeys, a different liability structure than an Ellington Financial or an Annaly that is really funding on repo and then doing securitization. So there can be times where the competition from insurance companies can be serious and it really can push levels around to places where it doesn't look as attractive as it does at other times. Speaker 500:33:50But I'd say for now, it's been sort of a consistent presence that has stabilized the market. It's been a welcome diversifier for our originators. And you also see insurance companies buying the securitization. So I feel like in some ways they're competitors, in some ways they're also clients. There's been enough volume to go around, but it's definitely created a different dynamic than what we had, I'd say, pre COVID when it was not a market where you saw a lot of active insurance company participation. Speaker 500:34:32Thank you. That helps a lot. And then just to move to operating expenses, they're roughly up 18% over the quarter. Can you just discuss what drove that increase and can we expect to see higher OpEx going forward? Speaker 400:34:47Sure. So part of that is we converted we redeemed, I guess, you could say, options at the Longbridge level. So that's one of the largest drivers of the which is a one time thing, employee held option. Thank you. So that's a non recurring that we would not see next quarter in Q4. Speaker 400:35:05That's probably the biggest driver. Speaker 500:35:08Thank you. Operator00:35:12Thank you. And we will take our next question from Matthew Erdner with Jones Trading. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:35:19Hey guys, thanks for taking the question. You talk about your expectation for pace of securitizations? And then can you speak a little to the execution and how that's been on the reverse deals? Speaker 300:35:35Well, on the reverse deals, I mean, when you say how it's been, I mean, we're happy with the executions. I don't want to not sure exactly how you'd like me to elaborate further on that. We've got it's not as uniform in that space in terms of the structures that people use in the reverse mortgage space are different and that there's not a lot of issuance there and different issuers use slightly different structures in terms of the how the debt is structured. But we've been very pleased. We've got repeat buyers and we Speaker 200:36:25are Speaker 300:36:25accumulating for another deal. And we think that debt really helps us having that securitization outlet, right, and that long term locked in financing on a what's a very long term product, obviously, is something that gives us a lot of confidence to continue to ramp up that origination at Longbridge. Mark, do you want to speak to Speaker 700:36:55Yes. Yes. Speaker 500:36:55Pace of non QM securitizations next year, I think 4 to 6 deals is sort of a cadence I would expect us to do. It's going to depend on origination volumes and deal structures and there were times where we perceive repo financing is a better way to go. But if the market kind of looks broadly similar to how it is now, I think 4 to 6 is where we should be. Got it. Speaker 300:37:22That's helpful. One thing that we've really tried to build here and have succeeded now is we not only have a diversified portfolio, but we have a really diversified and robust sourcing of all these different loan products, whether it's non QM, RTL, we have many sellers. We're buying a lot of loans each month. And we can dial up or down small balance commercial bridge lending. We're seeing also now increased volume there. Speaker 300:38:01So we can dial up and down where we don't it's like a faucet, right? And you're you turn the faucet a little higher and you get a little more flow, but then you can turn one faucet down and you could turn the other faucet up and the different products that we buy. So I think we're in a great place to take advantage of where we see opportunities. We mentioned before that if at some point the insurance bid in a particular month, let's just say, is so strong that we'd rather take our turn the faucet down in our non QM buying, well, we can pick it up RTL or small balance commercial bridge or just CUSIPs, right? So I really feel good about the diversity of our sources of growing the portfolio. Speaker 600:38:52Got it. That's very helpful. And that kind of led into my second question about where are you guys seeing opportunities right now? I know in the past you've talked about commercial. You just touched on the bridge lending there. Speaker 600:39:03But is it just kind of factor of what the market's thrown at you? And then could you expand a little more on what you guys are seeing and plan on doing it in the HELOC and second lien Speaker 500:39:12space? Dan, Mark? Sure. Yes, I would say in terms of opportunity, buying the loans we like, getting to critical mass for securitization, executing the deals and keeping retained tranches that we expect you're going to have very high yield and the ability via call options to get loans back in the future. That's a good opportunity for us right now and we're pursuing that and it's been that way last 6 months for sure. Speaker 500:39:48And I expect that to be the case. We've also seen very good opportunity in CUSIP. I mentioned in my prepared remarks, we had great contributions in some of our non agency stuff, CRT. We've done well in CMBS. CLO, we mentioned that we shrunk it a little bit because we took gains. Speaker 500:40:06So we have a broad platform at Ellington and really, I mean I think a phenomenal suite of PMs. And so we have a lot of different sort of arrows in the quiver. So and I like having some CUSIPs as well as some loans. It's sort of a different return stream. It's nice to sort of get the alpha that you can get from CUSIPs. Speaker 500:40:29So and then the second part of your question, 2nd liens and HELOCs. Again, the prepared remarks to us, we think we engage with that product the same way we do with NonQM. It's a high yielding asset. It has a big spread versus our financing. So just having it on portfolio on a levered basis with an interest rate hedge on the close end seconds, you don't need 1 on the HELOCs because they're floating off a prime. Speaker 500:40:55Prime's kind of been locked to sulfur. So with the appropriate interest rate hedge from time to time a credit hedge, that gives a nice levered return. But there's also securitization opportunities there. So I would expect us to do a securitization relatively soon on one or both of those products and follow the same playbook we have for NonQM, retaining some high yielding assets, keeping our call rights in place and replacing repo financing with selling investment grade bonds that we think have a lower yield than the yield on the repo. And we talked about in the prepared remarks, it's match funding, you reduce margin calls. Speaker 500:41:41So that's our plan for that product. And it can be anything we can do in non QM, we can do that in the HELOCs and then the closed end seconds. So all that sort of that whole skill set we have and the whole playbook there, it's really transferable. Speaker 600:42:01Yes, that's great. Thank you Speaker 200:42:02for all the color. Speaker 500:42:03Sure. Operator00:42:06Thank you. And we will take our next question from Eric Hagen with BTIG. Please go ahead. Speaker 400:42:13Hey, thanks. How are we doing? As you retire the preferred and make a move toward more unsecured, is that going to change the optics of your leverage? Is there maybe like a change in philosophy around how you manage with the secured leverage and the repo and where that leverage gets applied to certain assets as you retire the pref? Okay. Speaker 400:42:34I'll start out, Eric. Thanks for the question. So, I guess first off, retiring that preferred, which is now that it's floating is well over 10% cost of funds. Like that seems like a no brainer to us. And it's small, it's $24,000,000 $25,000,000 We have a few different channels to add financing to the balance sheet, okay, secured and unsecured. Speaker 400:43:00I mean, on the unsecured side, Larry mentioned that we have I would say an appetite to do more. Of course, we need to balance what the pricing is going to look like relative to secured financing other options. I mean when we did our current $210,000,000 deal couple of years ago, it was at a spread of $322,000,000 and now recent deals in the mortgage REIT sector have been much wider spreads perhaps that are coming in. But that the cost of financing on the unsecured is an important consideration. But big picture, we want to do more. Speaker 400:43:36In terms of secured financing, so I mentioned in my prepared remarks that since June, we've added 3 new facilities, secured facilities for loans. That's added $550,000,000 of capacity. We've utilized some but not all of that. So we have more to draw on new lines. We're expecting to add a new line for the MSRs that we got from Arlington. Speaker 400:44:05I think Larry mentioned that as well. Those spreads on those are attractive and between those two sources we're talking about a few $100,000,000 of additional financing compared to where we were at September 30. A few other things to think about we have unencumbered assets on balance sheet of $550,000,000 atquarterend. The bulk of that are agency and resi loans. And if you do 2 to 1 leverage on that, you're talking about another couple of 100,000,000 of secured financing available on existing lines. Speaker 400:44:38And then we have cash. So we had $220,000,000 of cash at quarter end and at least some of that I would consider to be surplus debt. And we've been working on deploying in October and Larry mentioned that the portfolio, the credit portfolio is bigger in October. So there was a lot of different pieces, but hopefully that gets it it gets your question. Speaker 300:44:56Yes. And then I'd just add that from a leverage perspective, with unsecured financing, we're more comfortable increasing the leverage. So I do think that if we can do 1 or more unsecured deals, then you'll see our leverage tick up. And then we'd love to replace just over time. Now this is really more of a longer term goal. Speaker 300:45:23But if we can replace a lot of our short term repo financing with longer term financing, that obviously just a more just a better company, frankly. So that's something that's Speaker 700:45:37a longer term aspirational goal. Speaker 300:45:38If you look at the mortgage REITs, aspirational goal. If you look at the mortgage REITs, there's on the residential mortgage REITs, they don't really haven't been able to pull that off as well, frankly. But that's something that we definitely would have an eye towards long term. But short term, we're just looking at, as Gerrard said, some of the like the floating rate preferred that now we can replace. And yes, and that decreases our equity and increases our debt. Speaker 300:46:09So yes, that's going to definitely at least show up as an increase in leverage. So we have to we try to manage portfolio very conservatively from a liquidity management perspective. So we'll keep a close eye on that, right? Speaker 400:46:26And there's various steps and we are 1.8x debt to equity at September 30. All those different pieces maybe get us into the low 2s here in Speaker 300:46:34the next quarter or 2. And that's probably recourse, right? Recourse, yes. Correct. Speaker 400:46:41Great stuff. Appreciate you guys very much. Thanks, Eric. Speaker 500:46:46Thanks, Eric. Operator00:46:48Thank you. And we will take our next question from Matthew Howlett with B. Riley. Please go ahead. Speaker 700:46:54Hi, everybody. Thanks for taking my question. Just to follow-up on the preferred. I mean, you could replace that preferred, right, with some of your other shares, the ATMs and if you wanted to at lower costs or is there a ratio you want to take down? Sorry, which Speaker 400:47:08ATMs? The preferred ATMs? Yes. Yes. I mean the look, I think the preferred the new issuance on preferred has been pretty low in our sector in the past couple of years. Speaker 400:47:22So we do have ATM facilities on different common and preferred as you point out. I mean volumes have been pretty low on preferred. So it doesn't seem like there's a huge at least new it's not exactly what you asked, but a new issue preferred doesn't seem to be there as much as the big bonds and other types of unsecured. So it's like I think that we try to be opportunistic on the capital structure and that's another potential tool, but the volumes in preferred are pretty low and it seems like investor appetite for unsecured is a lot greater than for new issued preferred. Yes. Speaker 400:47:59And if Speaker 300:47:59you look at where those are trading, it would still be expensive, right? So So the lower the one that hasn't the one that's still fixed, yes, right, is trading at a pretty big discount. So I'm not sure if you true, that's not we can't replace that coupon at bar. So yes, so I think debt is a better just if we really which we don't want to do, if we really want to reduce our I call it cost of funds, not technically debt, right? But from the common's perspective, it is. Speaker 300:48:35So if we really want to reduce the load, the cost of funds on the common, I think we're going to have to look to replace preferred with some form of debt, whether it's secured or unsecured. Speaker 700:48:48Right. Got you. You're always the market leader on low cost preferred. That's why I asked the question. But if it does open up, I'm sure you'll be back involved. Speaker 700:48:57The second question on the duration of the credit book, you guys have always been sort of short duration, high yields, short duration. You've always pulled this off time and time again. As you start to invest more in retained tranches, NonQM, I mean, do you want to take a little more duration on the credit book given where we are on the right cycle? Or do you foresee still being in that short and intermediate term? Speaker 300:49:20Yes. I think non QM retained tranches, there are the BP subordinated tranches that we retain that are long, but there's also excess IO that's quite short in duration. So I think and then as you mentioned, the other products are shorter duration products with its turnover fast, a lot of principal repayments, whether it's RTL, bridge loans, etcetera. So I think all those things being equal, I think we like to stay shorter in duration. But we're not afraid like look at the reverse mortgage space, that's really long duration. Speaker 300:50:00So when we our retained tranches there. So I think it depends, yes. Speaker 700:50:06Well, you're picking up great yields. Can you quantify what could be what you could call securitization wise next year? I mean, how much was the stuff issued? And I'm assuming if 2,002, 2,003, all the stuff issued back then could be called if rates move lower going forward? Speaker 300:50:23Yes. I don't have that at my fingertips, sorry. But you're right, there's going to be some deals that are going to pass the lockup period at some point. I don't have that. Speaker 400:50:36Yes. And when we put out our Q early next week, it will have more information about the existing deals and we can you can put the pieces together versus with what's outstanding and then what you can see from Bloomberg in terms of coupons on the remaining tranches. But yes, we Speaker 700:50:54I can point you to that. Speaker 500:50:55Yes, Matt, it's Speaker 300:50:57Mark, do you know? Speaker 500:50:58Yes. No, I would just say, Matt, it's an interesting point. You did see Verus call a few deals a couple of weeks ago. So basically on the 9QM side, the rules are, you can call it the earlier of 3 years or when the amount of loans in the deal by current face are less than 30% of the at deal closing. So I think given the prepayment environment we've been in so far, what's going to come sooner is the 3 year date. Speaker 500:51:27So anything 'twenty two and when we get to 2025, it's going to be anything 'twenty two and earlier, you'll have the right to call them and you definitely Speaker 300:51:40Right. Funded. Speaker 500:51:41Some of that activity. Speaker 300:51:43Right. Some of those deals obviously had very low coupons on them. Speaker 500:51:47Yes, yes. We have deals out there where the senior bond had a coupon below 1%. So Speaker 700:51:55you know Yes. Speaker 400:51:56We're not calling Speaker 500:51:56up. That's going to be out there. Well, Speaker 700:51:59just to be Yes. No, there's Speaker 500:52:00going to be some deals out there that got done with pretty high note rates that are going to get in the call window soon. Speaker 700:52:08Right. That's interesting. It's upside. It's clearly U. S. Speaker 700:52:11Have the option of doing it. So if spreads remain tight, I'm assuming you'll look at a lot of these deals. Speaker 500:52:17Yes. I mean to be fair and when we do a deal, we know about the call and depending on what the note rate is and what the forward curve is, we may ascribe some value to it. We discount that value at a really high discount rate. But so, we take it into account. It's not like 100 percent found money, but we've called a bunch of deals in the past and when we have, it's been certainly a profitable event. Speaker 700:52:50Yes. Great. Well, I look forward to that and we look forward to the queue. Last question is, and I've covered Ellington for a long, long time. The company as it evolves, it's growing, these originators, these stakes and originators are all growing. Speaker 700:53:01And of course, you have Longbridge. Just to clarify, Longbridge is not that's just consolidated in the balance sheet. There's no mark to market fair value on Longbridge versus AmerisourceBergen and the others. Speaker 400:53:12Yes. We mark to market there that the assets that are consolidated on the balance sheet. So we fair value those loans like we fair value everything else. But yes, that's right. There's no Speaker 300:53:23equity value for the originator explicitly on the balance sheet. Speaker 700:53:27So my question for the shareholders, I mean, the book, Speaker 400:53:29I know you update the 13.66 book, but Speaker 700:53:31I mean, when you start to think about the potential value of something like Glan Bridge or even your other originators, and you look at these other originators, Rocket, Penny, Kopera, they're trading way above reported book. And as these businesses grow, I'm assuming they're going to continue to grow here. I mean, what can you tell investors to let EFC is sort of the 1366, hey, we're different than the books we've given you over the last decade, because we have embedded value in these stakes that might be worth a lot more in a public or private valuation setting. I just would love to hear your comments on how investors should look at something like Longbridge. Speaker 300:54:13Right. Well, I think, look, we I think if you look just even recently, right, like I mentioned earlier that Longbridge had negative ADE in the Q1 of this year, right? So I don't want I think we need to put up some stability there. And like I said before, there's great signs that that's where if we're not there yet, we're heading there soon. So but you're absolutely right that it would be great. Speaker 300:54:46And I think once we can achieve that stability, where you can say, okay, there's a and this is really frankly more your expertise than ours and more your job than ours, but you would say, okay, so there's a chunk of this company that should be trading in a multiple of earnings, not a percentage of book value, right? I mean, that's really, I think, what you're getting at. Absolutely. And I agree with that 100%. And we said that right now, our capital allocation, as I said earlier, our capital allocation long range is 12%. Speaker 300:55:19But you can even a high multiple on 12% of the company can have a meaningful impact in your overall way you trade overall. But look, I think it's for now, it's about covering the dividend and our ADE covered the dividend in the Q3. And I think we're it's I Speaker 400:55:45feel good about it. Yes. And I would just I think underscoring the point, we talked about $0.09 as kind of a stabilized, maybe run rate or target on numbers that's a lot more than 12% of our dividend, right? So there are 12% of capital, right? That's 23% of our $0.39 dividend. Speaker 700:56:09I'm assuming all entities are hiring and all among originators are all hiring now? I'm assuming you guys are in growth modes for all these stakes you have. Speaker 300:56:19Yes. Everybody is trying to be more efficient. So I don't know that we're necessarily at our originator, whether it's ones that we own stakes in or the ones that we don't or Longbridge, obviously, which is part of us. I don't know if you're going to see massive hiring at this point. I think everybody has been able to, over the past few years, just get a lot more efficient after the rates spiked in 2022, right? Speaker 300:56:50And so I think they've I don't think you're necessarily going to see a huge amount of hiring there. But you might see some, especially as product lines increase, things like that. Speaker 700:57:05Great. Well, I look forward to continued contribution from Longbridge and the others. Appreciate it. Speaker 400:57:11Absolutely. Thanks, Matt. Operator00:57:14Thank you. That was our final question for today. We thank you for participating in the Ellington Financial Third Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. You may disconnect your line at this time and have a wonderful day.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by