Kelly Porcella - Associate General Counsel Brian Harris - CEO Marc Fox - CFO.
Steve DeLaney - JMP Securities Dan Altscher - FBR Jade Rahmani - KBW Rick Shane - JPMorgan Ken Bruce - Bank of America Merrill Lynch David Lapierre - Loomis Sayles Joseph Zhu - Frost Investment Advisors.
Welcome to the Ladder Capital Corporation Earnings Call for the Fourth Quarter 2015. [Operator Instructions]. I would now like to turn the conference over to Ms. Kelly Porcella, Associate General Counsel for Ladder Capital Corporation. Thank you, Ms. Porcella. You may now begin..
Thank you and good afternoon, everyone. I'd like to welcome you to Ladder Capital Corporation's earnings call for the fourth quarter 2015. With me this afternoon, are Brian Harris, the Company's Chief Executive Officer and Marc Fox, the Company's Chief Financial Officer.
This afternoon, we released our financial results for the quarter ended December 31, 2015. The earnings release is available in the Investor Relations section of the Company's website and our annual report will be filed with the SEC later this week.
Before the call begins, I'd like to remind everyone that certain statements made in the course of this call are not based on historical information and may constitute forward-looking statements.
These statements are based on Management's current expectations and beliefs and are subject to a number of trends and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those described in these forward-looking statements.
I refer you to Ladder Capital Corporation's Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2015, for a more detailed discussion of the risk factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied in any forward-looking statements made today.
Accordingly, you are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements. The Company undertakes no duty to update any forward-looking statements that may be made during the course of this call. Additionally, certain non-GAAP financial measures will be discussed on this conference call.
The Company's presentation of this information is not intended to be considered in isolation or as a substitute for the financial information presented in accordance with GAAP. Reconciliations of these non-GAAP financial measures to the most comparable measures prepared in accordance with GAAP are contained in our earnings release.
With that, I'll turn the call over to our Chief Executive Officer, Brian Harris..
Thank you, Kelly and thank you, everyone, for listening in on our call today. We're pleased to report that for the fourth quarter of 2015, Ladder reported core earnings of $50.1 million and for the full-year, we earned $191.5 million. Our pretax ROE for 2015, was 12.8% and 12% on an after tax basis.
In the fourth quarter, we originated a total of $935 million in loans comprised of $812.8 million of loans targeted for securitization and $122.4 million held for investment on our balance sheet.
During the quarter, we participated in three securitizations contributing a total of $604 million, resulting in a gain on sale of $13.3 million, for an average profit margin of 2.2%. For the full-year, we contributed a total of $2.58 billion into 10 securitizations, for a gain on sale of $67.6 million or an average of 2.6% profit margin.
All 10 of these securitizations were profitable. In January 2016, we contributed $82.4 million into our first securitization of the year, resulting in a gain of $800,000 or 1% profit margin to start us off. In our securities portfolio, we added $145.6 million and sold $56.7 million, in a relatively quiet fourth quarter.
In our real estate portfolio, we added 18 assets at a cost of $52.7 million and during the quarter, we also sold one office building and 41 condominium units for a core gain on sale of $11.6 million. At year-end, we held total assets of $5.89 billion, including $109 million in cash. We had a debt-to-equity ratio of 2.9 to 1.
Unfortunately, our current stock price is trading at a fairly steep discount to book value and when we saw our shares trading at 65% of book value in mid-January, we took some steps that seemed prudent against that backdrop. It seemed to us that the market was signaling concern around three main topics.
One, deterioration in credit spreads and how that might impact our large CMBS portfolio. Two, our origination to securitization business and three, our standing with the Federal Home Loan Bank after it was announced that we would be asked to phase out our membership over the next five years.
I would like to address each of these concerns in order starting with our CMBS portfolio. I would like to remind everyone that while we do own $2.4 billion in CMBS, the CU.S.IPs we own are about 99% investment grade with the vast majority being rated AAA. In addition, the average duration of our holdings is a relatively short 3.3 years.
First, a little history and some context, AAA 10-year securities have seen credit spreads balloon from approximately 90 basis points over swaps in the first quarter of 2015, to today's spread of about 170 basis points. This movement has caused the price of these securities to drop by about 5.5 points.
During that same 14 month period, BBB 10-year spreads have gone from 355 basis points to 800 basis points, causing these prices to drop by about 35 points. On shorter maturities, AAA 5-year securities have moved from 55 basis points to 105 basis points for a delta of about two points.
From this we can see that the largest losses in CMBS inventory are in lower rated BBBs and longer term 10-year CU.S.IPs. We do not own any long average life BBB securities. Our largest exposures to trusts are currently one, Hilton Hotels for $369.9 million with all rated classes due in November of 2018, but pre-payable without penalty now.
Our second-largest exposure is to Parkmerced Apartments in San Francisco, for $224.7 million, with all rated classes due in November of 2019, but pre-payable without penalty starting in November of 2018.
The third-largest CU.S.IP holding we have is Extended Stay America for $205.1 million, with all classes due by December 2019, but pre-payable without penalty today.
We believe that the total of $575 million related to the two hotel deals I mentioned, are likely to pay off at par within the next 12 months given that the underlying cash flows in both transactions have significantly increased since these bonds were issued.
We also believe the $224.7 million related to the Parkmerced transaction is quite likely to pay off in November of 2018.
You can see that in just these three largest positions we expect to be repaid about $800 million or almost one-third of our current portfolio on average in less than 18 months because these securities are all due by the end of 2019, a maximum of three years and 10 months, as long as the credit is viewed as solid, the prices of these securities will not deviate far from $0.100 on $1 because they are expected to pay off at 100 very soon.
Of our $2.4 billion of securities, over $1.9 billion have durations of less than five years with $990 million expected to pay off in three years or less.
We take this unusually detailed step to provide you with transparency into a very large part of our securities inventory that has not been very affected by the volatility in spreads that we have seen over the last year.
We generally own highly rated securities that are short in duration and they can be easily liquidated to provide cash to the Company if better opportunities arise. While we hold them, our ROE tends to be over 10%.
While there are some mark-to-market losses reflected in our financials, we wanted to point out that for a Company that owns $2.4 billion in CMBS, we have fared far better than most with our always cautious inventory management, owing very little of the asset class that experienced the greatest losses.
Next up, our conduit business, as we mentioned earlier, all 10 of our 2015 securitizations were profitable with an average profit margin of 2.6%.
We did participate in one securitization in 2016 so far and it was also profitable, however, we feel that the level of volatility in today's markets is just too risky for us to be conducting large-scale lending operations on 10-year loans. Caution is appropriate here.
We had dialed down our efforts in the conduit space as we originate with a view that we will hold much of our production on balance sheet until volatility settles down a little bit. Our originators have already begun to react to the increased volatility doing what we generally do in markets like this.
We're emphasizing five-year loans on acquisitions of commercial properties while being very selective on 10-year loans and especially cash out refinances on less favorable asset types. Note that none of this is unexpected.
For those of you who know us well, we have often mentioned that while our conduit business produces excellent returns, it occasionally seizes up during periods of increased volatility. Our business model is fundamentally constructed around these interruptions and allows us to manage through these periodic occurrences.
And when they happen, we reallocate capital into safer and less volatile, more liquid investments like AAA bonds with shorter maturities and balance sheet loans. We have seen this before and we believe we're well-equipped to handle the challenges of this market in a profitable yet safe way.
Why create more securities when the market is already having trouble absorbing the ones that are out there. Last, a note on our membership in the Federal Home Loan Bank. While most captive insurance members sponsored by REITs have seen their membership shortened to one year, we're fortunate to be on the short list with five years to exit the program.
We will continue to use this competitive advantage to the fullest while we have it. While we see no meaningful impact from this in the short term, we will need to be ready to finance our operations without this funding source in five years.
We should not have any difficulty making this adjustment as time goes by and remember, that we already have alternative secured bank lines as well as access to the unsecured debt markets with our BB rating. In fact, I'm pleased to report that we recently successfully upsized our corporate revolver by $68 million, from $75 million, to $143 million.
We believe this expanded facility will help us to react quickly to some of the investment opportunities that we're seeing in today's volatile market conditions. Now, I would like to review our strategy in today's current market.
While we're constantly seeking to allocate our capital in the most profitable and prudent manner possible, we have recently been able to take advantage of market volatility in ways that we have not acted on in the past.
In the first quarter of 2016, when high-yield bond prices collapsed primarily as a result of combination of a slowdown in China, the collapse in energy-related products and doubts about the safety of some large European banks, we were presented with the ability to purchase some of our own corporate debt.
We have two issues outstanding, a 7 3/8% interest rate due in 2017 and a 5 7/8% interest rate due in 2021. We previously had purchased $5.4 million of our shorter maturity bond in 2014.
In the first quarter of 2016, we purchased an additional $20.6 million of this bond at a price of 97.9% of par, generating a gain of $239,000 and eliminating the need to pay the 7 3/8 interest rate on these bonds through September of 2017.
We also purchased $21.7 million of our bonds due in 2021, at an average price of 82.6% of par generating a gain of $3.5 million dollars and also eliminating associated interest expenses through 2021.
Having purchased a total of $47.8 million of our own corporate debt, we delevered the Company and now have $577.2 million of corporate unsecured debt outstanding at the end of February 2016. Our penchant for holding large amounts of cash enabled us to move quickly to seize on these opportunities presented to us in the first two months of the year.
Lastly, we repurchased 84,200 shares of our common stock in the fourth quarter of 2015 and an additional 149,340 shares in the first two months of 2016, for a total of 233,590 about shares at a cost of $2.6 million. We still have $47.4 million remaining in our stock repurchase authorization.
We expect to continue these activities throughout the remainder of 2016 whenever they present themselves as attractive investment opportunities. We believe our book value is strong and relatively easy to understand.
Until our stock price recovers from its deep discount to book value, we will continue in our efforts to raise cash levels, invest in shorter, more highly rated securities, as well as balance sheet loans and other requalified assets that have become more attractive as liquidity in general has become more expensive.
We will continue to lend into our conduit program with an understanding that our contributions to securitizations over the next quarter, will be reduced as we continue to be very selective in this space.
This caution is appropriate for the current market and we expect that the current deterioration in market prices will curb the competitive environment before a more attractive market environment emerges down the road.
With the spread widening experienced over the last 14 months in CMBS, we feel it is best to continue our practice of avoiding losses rather than trying to be too courageous in ill liquid markets.
You should note that despite CMBS market volatility, our core REIT qualified assets have performed very well and have produced the steady stream of reliable and predictable cash flow. As such, we feel well-suited to handle these market conditions and what lies ahead.
For a Company that owned about $6 billion worth of spread products at a time when spreads moved violently against us for 14 months in a row, I'm very happy with the team's performance at Ladder.
Our active management of risk and liquidity has served us well in these difficult times and positioned us to go on full offense as assets have become attractively priced and competition has been cut back dramatically. We look forward to the rest of 2016 and beyond. I'll now turn you over to Marc Fox, our CFO..
Thank you and good evening. I will now review Ladder Capital's financial results for the quarter and year ended December 31, 2015. In 2015, Ladder generated core earnings of $50.1 million in the fourth quarter and $191.5 million for the year.
These amounts compare to $52.9 million and $219.3 million, for the fourth quarter and calendar year 2014 respectively. Core EPS for the fourth quarter of 2015, was $0.45 per share, compared to $0.32 per share in the same period last year. Core EPS for 2015, was $1.85 a share versus $1.36 per share in 2014.
Despite unfavorable market conditions and significant spread widening that affected securitization profit margins during the second half of the year, Ladder generated a 12.8% pretax return on average equity and an after tax ROAE of 12% during 2015, based on an average shareholders' equity balance of approximately $1.5 billion.
Looking back at the fourth quarter and calendar year 2015 and comparing the results for the prior year, the financial results were most heavily influenced by less favorable securitization market conditions, higher average level of investment assets held by Ladder during the past year and ongoing cost reduction efforts.
Brian has already discussed the conduit market conditions at length, so I will limit my comments. For perspective, in 2014 and 2015, Ladder participated in 10 securitization transactions in each year. The average securitization profit margin in 2014 was 3.65% overall and 4.08% for multi-asset transactions.
In 2015, a year in which we only executed multi-asset securitizations, the average securitization profit margin was 2.6%. The impact of 2015's higher levels of investment assets can be seen in the following fourth quarter comparisons. Interest income was $62.9 million in Q4 2015, $6 million higher than in the same quarter in 2014.
And net rental income was $14.4 million in the fourth quarter of 2015, $4.4 million higher in the same quarter a year earlier. Interest expense was also higher in 2015 as we financed our larger asset base.
Consistent with the prior quarters, net interest income shows a positive trend on a year-over-year basis, with the $127.6 million earned in 2015 reflecting a 16.9% increase over last year. The year-over-year declining trend in expenses continued in the fourth quarter, reflecting our Company-wide approach to cost reduction.
For calendar year 2015, the sum of our salary and employee benefits, operating expenses and fee expenses, declined by 17.5% or $19.3 million compared to 2014. I will now move on to discuss some key fourth quarter investment activity and balance sheet metrics.
We originated $935.2 million of loans during the three months ended December 31, 2015 which brought full-year loan production to $3.6 billion. Excluding the two large loans originated in 2014, 2015 origination volume was within $200 million of the prior year total.
In terms of asset yields on our loan originations, the average coupon on the loans held for sale that were originated in the fourth quarter of 2015, was approximately 4.92% versus 4.45% in a comparable quarter of the prior year, excluding one large loan originated in that period at a relatively low rate.
The average coupon on the loans held for investment originated in the quarter, reflected a weighted average spread of approximately 6.39% over one-month LIBOR versus a 6.52% spread in the fourth quarter of 2014.
At the end of the fourth quarter, our portfolio of loans held for investments stood at $1.7 billion, up $217.6 million since the end of the prior year. The weighted average loan-to-value ratio of the commercial real estate loans on our balance sheet was approximately 66% which has remained around the same range as that seen in recent quarters.
With regard to securities, 87% of our securities positions were rated AAA or backed by agencies of the U.S. Government as of December 31, 2015, 99% were rated investment grade. The weighted average duration of our securities portfolio was 3.3 years or 39 months, as of December 31, 2015, down from 49 months a year prior.
This short maturity profile coupled with the credit quality of the senior securities in which we invest protects during periods of high volatility. Brain discussed our recent real estate investment transaction activity which brought our total portfolio to $834.8 million spread across 108 investments as of year-end.
Total assets were approximately $5.9 billion. At the end of the quarter, approximately 94% of our debt investment assets were senior secured, including first mortgage loans and CMBS secured by first mortgage loans. Senior secured assets plus cash comprised 78% of our total asset base. This is consistent with the senior secured focus of the Company.
Total unencumbered assets including cash were $806.8 million at the end of the quarter, reflecting a 1.3 to 1 ratio to unsecured debt outstanding which totaled $619.6 million 12/31/15. The debt-to-equity ratio stood at 2.9 times at December 31. This is within the 2 to 3 times range we have historically targeted.
As we've discussed previously, if we were to exclude our securities portfolio and its associated leverage, Ladder's total debt-to-equity ratio would be 1.3 to 1.
With regard to financing, we continue to maintain a diverse set of funding sources and access a significant amount of additional financing availability while looking for opportunities to retire bond financing at a discount to face value. As Brian discussed, we have been actively repurchasing our common stock at current price levels as well.
Of importance, is the successful completion of our effort to expand the size of our long term committed syndicated revolving credit facility by $68 million to $143 million in February, on the same terms as agreed in 2014.
This valuable funding source which does not require the pledging of investment assets as collateral, provides Ladder with greater financing flexibility on a day-to-day basis. As of December 31, 2015, we had $4.3 billion of debt outstanding and committed financing availability of over $1.4 billion, for additional investments.
During the quarter, we secured a new loan repurchase facility with $35 million of committed financing capacity. In the fourth quarter of 2015, we increased our FHLD borrowings to $1.86 billion.
As discussed in the earnings release issued earlier today, Ladder's captive insurance subsidiary is one of a very small number of entities owned by mortgage REITs that have the benefit of a five-year transition period under the new membership eligibility rule published by the FHFA in January 2016.
During this five-year transition period, Ladder's subsidiary is eligible and continue to draw new additional advances, extend the maturities of existing advances and pay off outstanding advances in the same way it has historically and on the same terms as non-captive insurance company FHLB members, subject to two new conditions.
First, new advance, including any existing advances that are extended during the five-year transition period, will have maturity dates on or over February 19, 2021. Second, future advantages are subject to a requirement that total outstanding advances that do not exceed 40% of the subsidiaries total assets.
We have executed new advances since the effective date of the new rule in the ordinary course of business. Over the next few years, Ladder does not anticipate that the FHFA's final regulation would materially impact its operations.
In the latter stages of the five-year transition period in late 2019 and 2020, we expect to gradually replace the FHLB with alternative funding sources.
In conclusion, Ladder has remained cautious as market conditions have changed and has exercised the firm's operating flexibility to rotate between our complementary commercial real estate products in light of recent market conditions.
Thanks to our dynamic business plan and our focus on high credit quality senior secured assets we believe we're well-positioned for success in future quarters. At this point, let's open the line for questions and answers..
[Operator Instructions]. Our first question is from Steve DeLaney of JMP Securities. Please go ahead..
Brian, I was intrigued I know this is a time for people to play defense and be cautious but it seems like while you are doing that you are excited about I think to take your words, go on full offense. As you see this playing out in the months ahead, can you give us any sense of where you think the best risk-adjusted returns maybe for Ladder.
CMBS seems to be obvious but I'm wondering if you are also seeing better pricing opportunities on senior portfolio loans as well? Thank you..
Sure, Steve. Correct what you said. I think the two products that stand out as having gotten much more opportunistically priced are obviously spread related products in CMBS. As we said we don't own too many longer dated securities, they move around quite a bit in price volatility.
I will say that I think some of the longer dated securities that we have been avoiding for the last couple of years are now becoming much more in focus to us because you can imagine the BBB fallen by 35 to 40 points of value.
Thankfully we have sidestepped that devaluation but there are some that we might start waiting into there and that will take a little while for them to come back but if we can find good credit instruments I think that we would certainly start moving out on the maturity curve now and having avoided it for a while now.
Bridge loans also, I think the securitization market, the so-called conduit business has gotten very, very difficult because of the lack of liquidity and really the gaps and spread widening.
And this had a result not only on our corporate bonds that we mentioned we purchased causing the price of those to fall but also its caused a little bit of a liquidity crunch in that a bit of borrowers simply want to refinance into something short term until the volatility blows over. So Bridge loans certainly are the ultimate liquidity experience.
If you can provide short term financing that’s prepayable to a borrower you can charge more aggressively for that now. So that is where we're focusing our activities these days..
At the end of year you had $572 million of loans held for sale. We've noted one Deutsche Bank deal that looked like you sold 82 million. I know there is a comp deal in the market this week but thinking about the 572 and the 82 that's been reported, how do we think about the remaining loans? You were definitely sounding like you were pulling back.
Is it possible those loans will stay on the balance sheet for some time rather than committing them to a deal? And I assume if they are held on the balance sheet, are you required to mark those to market in some fashion? Thanks..
I'll let Marc answer the mark to market question but first before that I will just say that a lot of loans that we originate and then securitize, they are sold in the same quarter oftentimes and you did see a small contribution from us in a first quarter transaction I think as I said 82 million I think.
We may very well hold loans on our balance sheet but I don't you to think we have $572 million on our balance sheet of 10 year products.
In fact I'm going to ask Marc to correct me if I'm wrong but I believe the two largest loans that we wrote in the fourth quarter and into the first quarter were $240 million five-year loan that we were securitizing in pieces, so that’s now six months old.
I think we did that loan in September and I think we split that loan with another party, I think it was 2/3rds 1/3rd and the other large loan that we've written is a $125 million loans that I believe closed in December or early January and that is also a five-year loan going along with the theme I mentioned there that we will position five-year loans preferably.
In that transaction it was a $195 million refinance where the borrower paid down the loan $65 million dollars .So we're pretty comfortable with that from a credit perspective. Again, we have ample financing options and we're very comfortable owning five-year on balance sheet.
In fact one of the things that we see many times is we generally run a real estate investment operations but we occasionally access the capital markets to push our ROEs up but when it's not an appropriate thing to do we will certainly happy to hold them on the balance sheet.
You would ask me earlier I think earlier are we seeing opportunities in longer dated balance sheet for tenure loans that we might hold for securitization.
To tell you the truth, no and he reason why is because there are several parts of the capital stack in the securitization business right now that are to say they are mispriced it's somehow understated. So if you try to do a transaction today you’ve BPs buyers who are shaping polls and kicking loans out, they have a lot of pricing power.
In addition to that the BBB portion it can easily move a 100 basis points in the middle of the securitization when you’re trying to price your deal and then of course you have the larger classes which are the 10 year AAA's which are equally I'll-liquid although they at some point do catch a bid.
What Ladder is uniquely positioned for I think and one of the things that we’re exploring is first of all we can hold assets on our balance sheet and not only can we do that we can securitized those assets ourselves and we can hold our own BPs which we’re happy to do since we own it anyway.
We’ve underwritten the loans and as opposed to letting a BPs buyer cool [ph] shape the transaction and kick loans out and in addition to that as you know we own many AAA securities. So all the parts of the capital stack that appeared to be most problematic to most conduit lenders.
We're actually able to address all of them as a principal and we're able to do that internally with just Ladder collateral. So I feel like we're pretty comfortable there. I tried to price 10 year loans today to create a profit margin given where securities are trading. I think the rates would be at 6.5 right now.
So there is just not a lot of appetite for business up and there and what is happening is the banks and insurance companies are getting a lot of production right now. But to try to price a loan given the current interest rates on the government bonds against the backdrop of where spreads are is kind of a futile exercise.
So you’re trying to originate in the five-year in bridge loan sector more than the 10-year. We will add some 10 year but we prefer 5 by far..
It's nice to know what you are holding has the shorter spread duration than the five-year loans. That’s very helpful. Thank you, Brian..
Okay. Thanks, Steve..
The next question is from Dan Altscher of FBR. Please go ahead..
Brian, in the prepared remarks you talked a lot about some of your own corporate debt that you brought back and the values there seems to be pretty favorable.
Can you just maybe give us a little bit of color as to why you chose to get aggressive on the debt as opposed to maybe the common and is that may be -- can you do path that -- the extent of that still traded at discount if you can do that over the common at this point?.
I would tell you I don't think we have much of a preference necessarily. We're not actively seeking those investments on the debt side however we occasionally get phone calls where they are being offered. It seems there is a correlation on the 2021 bond to the price of oil and as oil falls that bond sometimes becomes available.
I suspect what's happening there is the margin calls in the energy sector are hitting the high yield market and they are selling things to meet those margin calls and our bonds maybe one of the things they offer for sale. So it's a very attractive yield obviously but it's not due to six years and so at a certain price we certainly will act on those.
The 2017 bond on the other hand is a fairly high rate bond at 7 -- 3.8s and when you’ve your stock trading at a discount to book value where it was, I think it's prudent to have a lot of cash and I think in general you want people to understand that you are very liquid and you're capable of purchasing things but I think sometimes rather than purchase a mortgage investments, you might want to show cash because the mortgage investments are clearly being discounted by the market.
So I felt at one point if we written a $10 million loan the market would've told me it was worth $6.5 million when I left the closing. So sometimes these aberrations take place and we try to take advantage of them.
On the other hand the given the 7 and 3.8s bond is due in 19 months if you’re holding a lot of cash and we hold a lot of cash generally you at some point realize that cash you're holding is costing you 7.5 points. So we're happy to move on that transaction also because it does save us interest expense and it is cash that we have laying around.
And as far as the stock goes I'll admit that in the fourth quarter when we began to repurchase our stock there was a bit of a learning curve for us.
As you know the stock is fairly thinly traded although that has picked up a little bit lately we're happy to see but when the stock is trading at 100,000 shares a day, there are strict limitations on what we're able to buy and in addition to that were additional rules that we weren't completely familiar with having never done this before where we could not put [indiscernible] in that at a certain time of day towards the end of the day.
So I don't want you to think that we're overlooking the stock but please understand that there are volume limitations however, we do look at the stock not from a standpoint that I just want to support the stock price.
When we think it's an attractive investment and we tend to look at it versus the dividend yield versus other investments we can make then we will act on that and as you know we have a $50 million authorization.
But I would also tell you that today there are many investment opportunities that far exceed 10.5% that we tend to act on rather than repurchasing the stock.
So it really depends on how liquid we're on that day and where the stock is trading but I think you should expect to see us to continue in that vein and probably at higher volumes going forward..
I think probably a question for Marc, in the prepared remarks and in the press release you talked about one of the new rules with FHLB being maybe the 40% limit.
Can you maybe give us an update as to how much debt is that cap relative to the assets where we have seen them before after the rule right now and if also you can give us an update on what the maturity profile of the advances look like, have you been able to extend those out, do a full 10 plus [Technical Difficulty] at this point? Or are you looking to?.
Sure. Let's start with where we're right now. We have about $2 billion worth of borrowing capacity at the FHLB based on the new rule. We've got a little bit more than $1.9 billion outstanding at this point in time. We have maturities that are spread out over a period of time extending all the way through September of 2024.
We have gone and since the new rule had the opportunity to move some of our maturities as they have rolled out to date but as you know we can't roll those maturities beyond February 2021. And so at this point, we have about -- it's about 40 different tranches of debt spread over that time frame. I think the biggest tranche we have is $65 million..
I was just hoping to follow-up, I cut you off but also the 40% question as well..
That's how I got to the $2 billion in capacity..
Got it, okay..
And what is our term left, I think he asked that question..
We’re at about 2.5 years on average..
The next question is from Jade Rahmani of KBW. Please go ahead..
I just wanted to ask how much concern related to the real estate cycle declining underwriting standards, commercial real estate valuations do you think is affecting CMBS or would you say it's purely technical? And also related to that in your past securitizations which I know you track as well as across your real estate portfolio are you seeing any signs of credit deterioration, a decline in fundamentals in either your on balance sheet held for investment debt portfolio or your owned real estate?.
Okay. I think first I think the problem that we're largely faced with these days is technical however I think that technical problem is being caused by a very real credit event in a sector.
I get asked a lot of times is this feel like 1998 or does this feel like 2008 and it feels like 1998 to me when long term capital caused the liquidity problem in the system and it was largely over in 90 days.
My general opinion is that because of the decline in prices in many parts of the energy sector I think the coal industry has all but gone bankrupt at this point. Those are real credit events and they are causing liquidity events in other places and you saw what MLP's did, that certainly caused some problems, too.
But as far as real estate underneath the reason I call it a technical problem, it's not a technical problem in North Dakota and it's not a technical problem in Houston.
So we're seeing inventories and past securitizations were delinquencies are kicking up actually rather rapidly especially in certain oil related cities and some of the fracking towns as far as Ladder goes we do not have exposure to those markets.
We do own one coal department store, I think it's in South Dakota but it has a 15 year lease so I wouldn't call that exposure to oil even though it's in the neighborhood where it could be.
So we do see some of these areas as definitely getting soft especially as I said Houston in particular is a problematic situation for CMBS because it's a very big city and there are a lot of assets there. But as far as on our balance sheet we're seeing none of that..
Based on your vantage point in your interactions with various players across the securitization markets, what do you think is a reasonable expectation for 2016 securitizations volumes for the broader market? Do you think it's too difficult to say right now or would you be comfortable putting out a number, something maybe in excess of $60 billion or $50 billion? I don’t know what you’re comfortable with that..
Jade, I'm uncomfortable with that question every day. I'm particularly uncomfortable with it now, I have no idea.
I tend to think that I will go so far as to say there is going to be very little supply in CMBS in about 60 days and if I'm correct and this is more of a technical event than a credit event with a couple of exceptions understood in the oil sector. I do think the spreads will rapidly come in here pretty soon.
We're not necessarily planning for that, I just tend to look out on the calendar on what I know is being securitized and it comes to a pretty abrupt halt because of this violent movement in spreads in the recent past year. So I think the technical nature of this should show up at some point.
I know that there are some different views of that but in a world were $4 trillion of sovereign debt is negative, I can't help but think at some point some alternative investment manager who hasn't been in CMBS before might start thinking a 9% BBB secured by real estate in a recovering economy might dollar based, it might be an attractive investment.
Unfortunately that alternative investment manager has not found that market yet..
Regarding your core businesses, can you provide a range of how much you think would be reasonable to expect to either originate from on balance sheet loans each quarter and also do you need to ratchet up production in order to keep originators busy and happy?.
I think rather than specifically going to those answers I would just tell you that Ladder is a balanced operations so that when one part of our business model turns off be it for whatever reason, usually another one goes on.
So we will oftentimes -- when you hear the CMBS I think the commercial mortgage had a headline a couple years ago that said giant loss in CMBS originators. Well it's a zero sum game, if somebody is losing money, somebody's making money.
And if you're selling securities and losing a fortune there is a good chance the guy who is buying those securities is probably going to do pretty well and the borrower is going to do well because you can't borrow at that rate anymore.
But I think that there is a reset going on right in pricing of liquidity and even to imply that I understand how many bridge loans on the balance sheet we can write at rates I really don't know and the reason why is because the rates are much different than they were even 90 days ago so it's a question of borrowers who have the ability to wait versus borrowers who need to fund right away.
In addition I think that the refinance pipeline is certainly slowing down because of where spreads are but let's not forget there is a hell of a lot of loans maturing.
So there's going to be a pile up in here soon at some point .So I wouldn't be surprised if this is a drastically lower quarter in the second quarter and maybe part of the third quarter as originations have nearly stopped and I down mean down 20%, I they are down 80%, 90%.
So the second quarter will be the first sign of that and the third quarter will probably have some hangover approach to it but I tend to think by the end of the summer, I think most of this will be back under control and back on track in a more normal environment..
In response to Steve's question I think you talked about playing in the gamut across the credit spectrum and you could pursue your own securitizations. It sounded like I felt a hint that you might be interested in the servicing business.
Just wanted to ask about that, would you be interested in acquiring or building a special service?.
Yes, we have looked at that a couple of times -- when I service I hear [indiscernible] and it's a very good business and there is another balancing component where it kind of works as a hedge against some of the securitization businesses but that we do not have one of those scheduled right now nor are we actively looking at one..
The next question is from Charles Nathan [ph] of Wells Fargo Securities. Please go ahead..
Could you comment on the net lease property acquisitions during the quarter and specifically what types of markets those acquisitions are in and what you're seeing in terms of pricing and sort of how it compares to comparable transactions you might've done in the past?.
I think we bought about 17 net lease properties I believe and based on the volume you can tell most of them were rather small individual investments and so as far as geographic go I think we’re spread at least in that quarter across Minnesota and a little bit along the snow belt.
Most of those are discount retailers with net leases for probably 15 years.
The cap rates we were buying them at were similar if not slightly wider to the ones we had been buying them a year ago and as far as transactions today go, it's fairly muted pipeline at this point, not really because they're not available at those cap rates but the financing rates that go along to fund those purchases have gotten very expensive.
So I would say the equity business for us is always hand-in-hand with the debt business and while we're selling some assets too all the time, I think we will always acquire them with an eye I towards what does it cost to finance them.
So when the cost to financing those purchases goes up dramatically as it has recently like the rest of the market we too pull to the sideline and our acquisition pipeline falls abruptly..
Okay.
As a follow-up we saw one smaller conduit lender close up shop last month and presumably there could be more in light of some of the volatility we've seen in the market so I was wondering if you could comment on the competitive landscape for conduit lenders and whether you see that as an opportunity once things hopefully get back on track in the second half of the year?.
Well this will certainly cut the herd for sure.
I think there's a couple things going on that impact especially some of the slower conduit players but for instance when a BPs [ph] buyer has a lot of authority and he kicks out 30% of the loans in the pool oftentimes those line lenders that finance those positions will ask those lenders to remove those positions from there lines.
So I think that causes one set of problems that was probably largely unanticipated by those lenders. So I think there is no real competitor right now in the conduit business because I don't think anyone is terribly active in the conduit business because the entire sector is being ceded to banks and insurances companies today.
We actively write loans that are five years as I mentioned earlier some of the large loans. So we function very much like a bank in shorter term products, five-year and bridge loans.
We're happy to write 10-year loans also but we have an eye toward securitization and hedging on those 10 year instruments and it's frankly just it's [indiscernible] right now and that's one of the reasons I think I would just indicate the conduit business is going to take a knee for about 90 days and that will start probably about 45 days from now..
Okay. Finally there's some legislation out there relating to Dodd Frank risk retention and single asset securitizations along with at the BP's could potentially be split.
Could you comment on the prospects of that legislation? I know you done some single asset securitizations in the past, how you think about that shaping the market over the next year or so?.
I'll answer this for the extent of my knowledge. I believe this came out last night and we have spoken to some government officials regarding exactly this topic but I don't know enough about it right now to see what is actually going to go through and what is going to pass.
I think that it's a bit of the big hill to climb but there have been certain things that made it easier especially in the single asset securitization world if it goes that way. But given the recent passage of something which was as early as last night, I really don't feel -- I don’t want to speak on it as an expert.
I don't know, our attorneys are downloading that information now..
[Operator Instructions]. Our next question is from Rick Shane of JPMorgan. Please go ahead. .
We're starting to see in the mortgage beat space bar little more activity in terms of strategic considerations, changes in structure, sales and acquisition. I'm curious given where you stand right now whether or not you see any opportunities and the other thing I would ask you is -- this is a company that historically was very well funded privately.
It appears that most of those original investors have not reduced their positions at all over time.
Does it make sense given the valuation to think about bringing this in?.
I'm sorry, Rick, what was the last line you said?.
Does it make sense to consider something along the lines of taking Ladder private at this point?.
That's an interesting question. It's one that has been debated. We do have many of our original investors still.
I don't think that the company will go private however if you were to see the price to book value stay very low for very long time and I can't speak on behalf of the owners of those shares but I know the numbers start clicking in my own head and although I’ve never really approached anybody to go about doing that, but you have to believe if you think that your book value is solid and you are trading at a 40-point discount to book value, yes of course, any financial expert would run those numbers in there head.
But so does it make sense? Yes, at some point it sure does but I don't see that happening in the near term.
I think our objective in the short term here is to really improve book value and get this discount dispensed with and I think we should be a lot to do that because I think one of the things that most of this market doesn't fully understand about Ladder as we’re rather new is our ability to generate cash very quickly.
So when we can deleverage the balance sheet by buying our own debt back or our own stock back and make appropriate investments considering where the market is we're not forced to be in anyone business at all and we're pretty comfortable in these volatile markets. They don't particularly bother us..
It's interesting. We understand the strategy and the ability to go to different corners and different markets and I think over the next few months we will really see the benefits of that. I also appreciate at least acknowledging the consideration of taking the company private.
I know it's a tough question in a forum like this but it's good to know that you are weighing all the options out there. I assume given the multiple that doing anything despite the fact that you might want to be a little more aggressive offensively in terms of making an acquisition is a little bit difficult..
Yes, of course it is. We would always look at things that realistically we took this company from $1.5 billion in assets to $6 billion in a short period of time.
And if you are trading at a premium to book value I think that number goes from $6 billion to $8 billion pretty quickly too but if you’re trading at discount to book value I think you really have to just face the realities of what you're looking at in the market and I think it's time at that point as I heard one other CEO of one of those REITs mention caution is prudent and prudent affects earnings.
That’s translated to mean cash and it needs to be around to make sure everybody is safe and we subscribe to that theory. So you will see higher cash balances.
The fact that we were able to upsize our unsecured revolver to $143 million is very, very helpful in this market and I think we will continue to do the things we can do while our stock is a little impaired but we're making every effort to move the stock up to book value and then we will start working on our outstanding are ROEs.
As a CEO of the place it doesn’t feel like it's an earnings conversation when you make $50 million in the quarter and stock drops 30%. I think it starts how much money are you down and we're happy to take that argument on and we will and when we return the stock to book value we will fighting off the front foot again..
It sounds honestly like the right thing to do. I think you will at least in the short term potentially be surprised by how confused people get by doing the right thing but in the long term it tends to work out..
Rick, we sat around one day, I know Facebook has hackathon's. We literally sit around offices and throw out wild ideas and think about what are the possibilities we can do and one person said, what if we showed up on New Year's Eve with no earnings, no dividend and $1.5 billion in cash and the answer was the stock is up 30%.
While I don't want anybody to misinterpret that line, we're not planning to do that. But there is a version of that doesn't involve a dividend cut and doesn't involve any form of selling anything because we have such a short book. Our book pays itself off very quickly.
We got paid off today in the $75 million hotel loan it was 50% leverage so we have now another $38 million in cash and frankly I don't have a big pipeline of applications for the conduit securitization business but I have plenty of investment opportunities..
The next question is from Ken Bruce from Bank of America Merrill Lynch. Please go ahead..
You have addressed a lot of the questions so I would try to keep this brief.
It sounds like you think that a lot of this dislocation in the market is going to pass over the course of next month and half, two months and because of that you're basically just going to keep your head down and just block and tackle with your lending portfolios in the like instead of CMBS but if that is not the case, if we have this prolonged period of the current market backdrop, what changes if any would you make to your business?.
As I said, we're pretty comfortable in times like this so what you are describing is a long period of time where there's a lot of volatility and a lack of liquidity. That would suit us very well. We would be comfortable with that because we stay liquid, we stay very short.
We're well financed through various vehicles, as you know we have the federal home loan bank for five more years. So I would tell you that given where securities are trading, where spreads have widened to they are extraordinarily attractive right now.
They are rather liquid and they can easily be financed so I think to take your chances on a 10-year conduit loans that has to go to a rating agency and BPs inquisition and partner up with a few people and get sold with AAA's and BBB's and see where the market is, I think that's a tall order when you can simplify buy those securities while the people selling those are suffering.
As I said it is a zero-sum game and we're able to acquire highly rated securities at relatively low prices. I don't mean AAA three year securities.
Those are selling around at par right now and they are very easy to sell and they are very easy to buy but if you want to extend out on the maturity a little bit more we feel like our credit skills in-house are capable of selecting the right assets that will not have any problems and we will continue to do that..
And in terms of the portfolio I understand but in terms of the operating platform would you make any changes there or do you think would with that business support your footprint?.
I don't believe the conduit business is nearly dead. I think this is an interruption I have seen many times. This may seem a little extreme because I don't think we've seen the energy sector collapse like this before but I've certainly seen recessions, I have seen Fed raising rates.
I have seen long term capital causing the head of the banks to all meet with Federal Reserve and liquidity problems and they are typically followed by very attractive investment periods.
So while I don't think the energy problems is going away anytime soon, I think that at some point there will be tremendous write-downs and once that gets over with I think some of this volatility will slow down. However there are other structural issues that are causing volatility that are not going away.
Dodd-Frank, I don't know what it's necessarily intended to do, it is absolutely causing liquidity problems. So I don't want to imply that volatility is going away in 45 days. I just think it's going to settle down but when you think about the investment and liquidity apparatus in the United States, it is drastically impaired..
Right, I guess that's the paradox I mean your business is set up benefits from these situations and it feels at the same time that you have to play bunch of defense when you get into one of these markets and maybe it's just a matter of time of being able to get better price discovery and at least some comfort in terms of where you are transacting everybody is kind of backed into a corner..
We used to do $5 billion and $7 billion transactions in 2006. We can't even approach that but yet you did see Apple do a large corporate bond offering, Exxon did another one the other day.
So it isn't like it's gone but I think that the CMBS sector and the REIT sector for that matter having been -- the CMBS world sometimes intersects with high yield and I think that the REIT investor world sometimes interests with MLPs, so I think that’s adding a little bit more pressure and the lack of liquidity in the few areas.
The mantra around here is be tight on principle and make sure you get paid back.
We're not overly concerned if we have the right interest rate as long as we get paid back and we keep the leverage in the sanity column and that has served us well for decades so we'll continue to do that and we'll be more liquid in these more volatile times that we've set of the organization.
Just the fact that we own $2.4 billion in CMBS that has a three-year average life is indicative of a fair understanding that liquidity can evaporate pretty quickly. We didn't become that in the first quarter when we saw liquidity problems, we became that five years when we started buying these things..
The next question is from David Lapierre of Loomis Sayles. Please go ahead..
I appreciate your comments on the FHLB and your funding profile, have you guys seen any changes from the big banks repo lines, on margins or anything there?.
We have not. I would hesitate to say it but if anything were slightly more aggressive terms from the banks on highly rated securities.
I'm not necessarily seeing any changes in the way we finance our home [ph] loan portfolio or our bridge loan portfolio however the two-year or three year AAA is very easier to finance business today than it was three months ago. I think what you're seeing is a flight to quality there.
Banks truly understand that those assets are money good so they are happy to be aggressive around that and I think what you’re seeing is they are less aggressive on the BBBs, BBs and A and AA portions of this sector. So the answer is neutral to positive changes as far as Ladder's inventory goes..
Our final question comes from Joseph Zhu of Frost Investment Advisors. Please go ahead..
Just quick question for you, do you have any off balance sheet unfunded commitment to your borrowers?.
Yes, we do but they are pretty limited because we're not a construction lender per se and that’s where you really end up seeing that..
I think the nature of your question is do we have any large commitments and the answer is we have very small ones and we set up a company that way and any time the volatility this company can ship the cash off going out the door very quickly..
Okay.
Would you say less or more than maybe $100 million or what is the magnitude of that commitment?.
I would think it's much less..
And also looking at the FHLB, the five-year thing, do you have difference in the quarter in terms of the asset encumbered for the line versus an unencumbered assets?.
The federal home loan bank is very conservative in what they will finance. They take AAA and AA securities, they do not take single A.
securities and they are not aggressive financers of home loans that when we make loans to properties, I tend to prefer multifamily properties as opposed to hotels but obviously the unsecured line is just the unsecured line but the home loan bank is not a very aggressive advanced rate lender.
The rates tend to be low but they are certainly not high leverage information at all and I think that's important because one of the things -- we took an unusual step today and we told some people in our largest holdings in securities and the reason we did that is because first of all we wanted them to know how short they were and of course everyone of you can check with the people you know in the mortgage business as to what those might be and we're pretty comfortable with all of you doing that.
But I also wanted you to know too that those positions that we own at least in the AAA and AA areas, if we were to remove them from the federal home loan bank and put them on our bank lines, the bank lines are more aggressive on the advanced rate and our actual ROEs would go up and not down..
So in another ways of saying that [indiscernible] the mainly not securities but they are more like loans, right?.
It's a combination of securities, loans and real estate..
Looking at your CMBS investment portfolio now and congrats your early kind of position you have been buying that in the past five years but as they mature do you have any big shift in terms of the size and also are you going to be slightly down in credit in terms of buying CMBS bonds going forward?.
That is a decision we make on a day-to-day basis. The reason we tend to keep things very short is with enough because they are investments in CMBS, they are really just better than in cash.
We don't like holding cash in the bank at zero and we're comfortable with price volatility or lack of price volatility on short AAA's and we can sell them pretty quickly if we need or want to when we see a better investment. Depending on where things are, we will easily move into down in credit if we'd like to.
Historically we haven't done that very much. We prefer liquidity, we do feel we can underwrite down credit very comfortably well at today's prices. If everything stayed right where it is right now we would certainly be going longer out on maturity and slightly down in credit, down in credit meaning A and BBB not down in credit unrated and BB..
Thank you. I would now like turn the conference back over to management for any additional closing comments..
That's it from here. And we just want to thank everybody for staying with this and it was rather long call but we felt additional detail was a little helpful here for you and hopefully you thought so too. So thanks very much..
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen this does conclude today's teleconference. You may disconnect your lines at this time and thank you for your participation..