NYSE:DX Dynex Capital Q1 2025 Earnings Report $12.18 -0.01 (-0.08%) Closing price 05/2/2025 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$12.24 +0.05 (+0.45%) As of 05/2/2025 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 Dynex Capital EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.20Consensus EPS $0.14Beat/MissBeat by +$0.06One Year Ago EPSN/ADynex Capital Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$17.13 millionExpected Revenue$11.41 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$5.73 millionYoY Revenue GrowthN/ADynex Capital Announcement DetailsQuarterQ1 2025Date4/21/2025TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateMonday, April 21, 2025Conference Call Time10:00AM ETConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Dynex Capital Q1 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrApril 21, 2025 ShareLink copied to clipboard.PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. Operator00:00:02It is now my pleasure to introduce Alison Griffin, VP, Investor Relations. Thank you. You may begin. Alison GriffinVP, IR at Dynex Capital00:00:09Good morning. The press release associated with today's call was issued and filed with the SEC this morning, 04/21/2025. You may view the press release on the homepage of the Dynex website at dynexcapital.com as well as on the SEC's website at sec.gov. Before we begin, we wish to remind you that this conference call may contain forward looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. The words believe, expect, forecast, anticipate, estimate, project, plan and similar expressions identify forward looking statements that are inherently subject to risks and uncertainties, some of which cannot be predicted or quantified. Alison GriffinVP, IR at Dynex Capital00:00:52The company's actual results and timing of certain events could differ considerably from those projected and or contemplated by those forward looking statements as a result of unforeseen external factors or risks. For additional information on these factors or risks, please refer to our disclosures filed with the SEC, which may be found on the Dynex website under Investors as well as on the SEC's website. This conference call is being broadcast live over the Internet with a streaming slide presentation, which can be found through the webcast link on the homepage of our website. The slide presentation may also be referenced under Quarterly Reports on the Investor Center page. Joining me on the call today are Byron Boston, Chairman and Co Chief Executive Officer Smriti Papineau, Co Chief Executive Officer and President Rob Colligan, Chief Financial Officer and Chief Operating Officer and TJ Connolly, Chief Investment Officer. Alison GriffinVP, IR at Dynex Capital00:01:47I will now turn the call over to Smriti. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:01:51Thank you, Alison, and thanks to all of you for joining us on the call today. We have viewed and continue to view this environment as being favorable to our business model. The yield curve is steeper, asset prices are now reflecting higher risk premiums, financing costs are lower and our ability to generate an above average dividend yield remains largely intact. However, we must manage our business through the rapid transitions that are happening across the global and U. S. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:02:22Economy. My goal for you today is to leave our call with a better understanding of Dynex, our long term approach to the business and why we continue to feel comfortable owning Dynex stock in our personal portfolios. From the very beginning of our time here at Dynex, we've been very disciplined in our approach, not being swayed by the hot investment ideas that crop up from time to time. We recognize very early in the last decade how investing in global markets continue to become more complex. We focus on the multiple demographic, social and political factors that are interacting to create potential surprises. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:03:04This thought process is the foundation of our approach to the markets and the management of our shareholders' capital. So what we're experiencing now is not unfamiliar territory for us. It's a moment we have planned and prepared for. Over the past several quarters, we have deliberately positioned ourselves for a more dynamic macro environment. We've taken decisive steps to build resilience, including raising capital at attractive terms, preserving liquidity and adding flexibility across our portfolio. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:03:37This proactive approach has given us optionality so that rather than react to market shocks, we can make strategic decisions from a position of strength. To give you a better sense of the environment and how we're responding, I'm going to ask and answer a series of questions. And after that, I'll turn it over to Rob and TJ who'll give you more details. Let me start with why do we feel comfortable owning Dynex personally. It starts with the team and our process. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:04:07Our experience and our mindset and discipline continue to serve us in making clear decisions. Our investment strategy is simple. And yes, we must make the right decision through volatility. We are relying on our experience and our processes to do so. Finally, the dividend. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:04:27It cushions a lot here. In these moments, dividend paying stocks, particularly Dynex, where you can rely on the asset quality and the team, really shine. So what happened in the last three weeks? The April 2 tariff announcement was a shock for the markets. As announced, it was larger than anticipated and if implemented could be described as one of the most significant trade policy changes in many decades. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:04:56We've seen an immediate de risking to reflect the degree of uncertainty that this posture brings. Deleveraging of the riskiest positions such as treasury basis trades drove some of the moves. Many companies exposed to tariff uncertainty have experienced large declines in share prices. Credit spreads in both investment grade and high yield bonds are wider. We also saw that long and treasury yields unexpectedly rose reflecting some type of selling and the dollar experienced weakness versus major currencies that has only been seen during times of severe crisis. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:05:32So what did Dynex experience during this time? Most of the turbulence directly affecting us was in the treasury and swap market. And as T. J. Will outline, it had some impact on our book value. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:05:44Besides that, we followed our normal discipline. We have made minor adjustments to the portfolio, margin and cash collateral change hands in both directions as markets gyrated. Repo availability is excellent and short term fluctuations in interest rates seem reflective of the flows. We have had no trouble terming out our financing and we remain engaged with our major counterparties as we have always prioritized openness and proactive communication. Next, how is your portfolio constructed today given the global complex backdrop? Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:06:21First, we are long term investors and we've constructed the portfolio to perform in a variety of market environments. Second, our strategy is simple, to extract the spread between agency RMBS and our hedge financing costs. Both instruments are dollar denominated and they're relatively correlated. The most important decisions we make are our hedge ratio, how much liquidity to hold and how much leverage risk to take. Our track record shows we have extensive experience and success making these decisions in some of the most volatile moments in markets over the last decade. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:07:00In 2019, we began operating with a significantly higher liquidity position, a feature of our risk management process, which remains to this day. It's a core part of how we are able to withstand volatility like what we've just experienced without making significant adjustments or crystallizing losses. We are entering the coming period with a robust liquidity position and a liquid balance sheet, allowing us to remain agile even as the external environment shifts. We have also operated with generally lower leverage. Next question. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:07:40Why are you invested in Agency RMBS? Will there be changes to the GSEs and what should we expect? So we have been up in credit and up in liquidity for several years now. We believe that Agency MBS are still an excellent choice in terms of where to allocate our shareholders' capital. T. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:07:57J. Will give you more detail on how we are positioned within this market. In terms of a change to the GSEs, here's our current thinking. The US housing finance system has underpinned the American dream for over a century, helping millions of families build wealth and economic security through home ownership. It stands as one of the most effective and dynamic in the world. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:08:21Agency MBS remain a foundational component of The U. S. Financial system, central to bank balance sheets, retail money market and bond mutual funds and an integral part of the wealth of average Americans. With over $8,000,000,000,000 in agency MBS outstanding, any disruption to the current guarantee structure would have immediate and far reaching implications for capital markets, mortgage rates and systemic risk. We are preparing for the possibility of accelerated policy action around the GSEs, evaluating outlier scenarios for market reactions and we'll take proactive steps to protect shareholder capital across our exposures. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:09:04Regardless of the pace or path, our focus remains disciplined risk management and real time adjustments as the regulatory and political landscape evolves. How are we thinking about the dollar and the demand for U. S. Fixed income assets? Will that go down? Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:09:21How does that impact Dynex? The answer here is that it depends on how policy evolves. As it stands today, U. S. Equities and sovereign bonds represent 70% of total global market capitalization and outstandings. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:09:37So while investors could start to sell dollar assets in the short term, it'll take a lot of time to move into other currencies because there just isn't enough out there to move into. We do believe that the trend will be towards some caution on The U. S. Due to shifting policy. So you could see some selling of bond holdings, including MBS, but that could present a more durable opportunity for Dynex to step in and earn those extra returns. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:10:05Next question. How are we preparing for changes across other fronts such as the structure of the Fed or other policy changes? Look, we recognize that change is not only inevitable, but it's accelerating. From tariffs to monetary policy to regulatory shifts and power dynamics, we are preparing for potential transitions across many fronts, often with little warning. Our strategy acknowledges this reality. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:10:31We're not waiting for stability to return, we're actually building for agility. That means maintaining a wide field of vision, engaging in disciplined scenario planning, keeping an open and flexible mindset and ensuring our capital is protected and ready to be deployed when opportunities align with our risk framework. As we always say, we don't predict, we prepare. Next, will the global financial and economic environments continue their volatile trend? The short answer to this question is that we are prepared for yes. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:11:08We have talked about this for the last eleven years. We expect the future will be full of surprises and we will be managing our business from this perspective. Finally, how are we thinking about the dividend? The dividend is a long term decision that we make very carefully and we have made it in the context of a capital risk management decision. We set our dividend based on many factors, including our view on long term returns, availability of capital, yields on comparable instruments, liquidity risk, overall risk and taxable income. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:11:46We raised our monthly dividend in February, reflecting our confidence in our continued ability to generate attractive returns. In the long term, we're operating at the intersection of global capital markets and The U. S. Housing finance system. This is a business we feel is strongly supported by demographic trends. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:12:05In the shorter term, we believe Agency MBS are still an excellent choice in terms of where to allocate our shareholders' capital, and we are managing our risk in this sector with the rigor and discipline I have outlined for you thus far. I'll now turn it over to Rob and TJ. Robert ColliganCFO & COO at Dynex Capital00:12:24Thank you, Smriti. We have several highlights this quarter that we'd like to share. First, as you can see from our results, net interest income continues to trend up as new investments carrying attractive yields are added to our portfolio and financing costs continue to trend down. Despite another quarter of volatile rates and a 70 basis point intra quarter move in the ten year treasury, the mark to market impact of our MBS investments compared to our hedges was close to neutral. This year, we've significantly strengthened our capital position. Robert ColliganCFO & COO at Dynex Capital00:12:59Year to date, we've raised $270,000,000 of new capital. And given the strength on our stock during the first quarter, we raised capital at a premium to book value, which is accretive to shareholders. Raising capital above book value has allowed us to grow, achieve scale and deploy into an attractive market. We've invested some of the new capital into the agency portfolio, which TJ will cover, but we also continue to keep ample levels of liquidity to maintain flexibility going forward. Similar to last year's first quarter, this quarter we had an accelerated vesting condition for equity compensation. Robert ColliganCFO & COO at Dynex Capital00:13:40The impact of this acceleration compared to a standard vesting schedule was about $1,000,000 during the quarter. While expenses are up this quarter, I do expect expenses to level out and trend down over the course of the year. And combined with our equity growth, we are planning for a lower expense ratio this year compared to 2024. We continue to have a commitment for expense efficiency, which drives shareholder value over the long term. I'll now turn it over to T. Robert ColliganCFO & COO at Dynex Capital00:14:08J. For the investment portfolio outlook. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:14:12Thank you, Rob. I'll cover our performance and decisions for the first quarter before addressing quarter to date changes and our outlook. Our 2.6% TER was delivered during the quarter with significant swings in rates. Current coupon mortgage yields, for example, moved over 70 basis points high to low, and the yield curve moved 20 basis points flatter before steepening again. This performance validates what I have long emphasized about this market regime. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:14:38Skilled investors can earn substantial risk premiums from mortgage backed securities while effectively hedging interest rate risk. The portfolio generated a solid total return despite mortgage spreads widening from around 138 basis points on the current coupon versus seven year treasuries to around 144 basis points by the end of the quarter. As Rob mentioned, we raised a significant amount of capital and regularly deployed it. We invested about two thirds and held the balance to allow us to remain flexible, which served as a cushion during the post tariff market turbulence. We also chose to shift our exposures down in coupon towards more duration stability, added some call swaptions and maintained our portfolio bias towards neutral duration with the curve steepening bias. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:15:26Most of our hedges are concentrated in the long end of the yield curve. By quarter end, our leverage had declined to 7.4 times. Turning to the current quarter. The April 2 tariff announcement was a vol event, not a mortgage event. Initially, we saw a classic risk off reaction that started with equity price declines and then interest rates dropping sharply. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:15:50However, this quickly evolved as investor concerns about potential de dollarization and treasury selling caused yields to spike. We also experienced a tightening in swap spreads as some hedge funds were forced to unwind overleveraged positions. Some of the price action in these markets was very volatile, indicative of poor market debt. By last week, realized volatility has subsided modestly, and uncertainty still remains high. Agency RMBS spreads widened sharply this month. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:16:22Spreads have ranged from 145 to 160 basis points over treasuries, or nearly 200 basis points over interest rate swaps. Trading in the Agency RMBS markets has been orderly. While bid offers widen during certain periods, we have not experienced the gappy price action we saw during the COVID crisis, the LDI crisis, or even the volatility of October 2023. Our book value as of Thursday's market close was estimated between $11.55 and $11.65 per share. Leverage to total capital was at 7.8, up $04 since quarter end due entirely to lower book value. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:17:07We have followed our disciplined liquidity focused risk management process. We continue to keep an open and flexible mind as we navigate the markets. Our robust liquidity position placed us in a position of strength, where we were not forced to crystallize losses or adjust positions amid the volatility. We are actively managing several risk factors. First, volatility risk. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:17:33The April tariff induced volatility underscores the importance of our hedging strategy and liquidity management. We expect options will be a core part of our hedging strategy going forward. Second, prepayment risk. This has intensified following Rocket Mortgage's acquisition of Mr. Cooper, creating a formidable originator servicer capable of offering expedited refinancing. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:17:59We've adjusted our portfolio to focus on specified pools with strong prepayment protection, and we shifted our exposures towards lower coupon mortgages backed by borrowers with lower mortgage rates. Third, GSE transition. The FHFA continues to implement changes at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac that could introduce spread volatility. Our team remains engaged with Washington policymakers developments. Finally, regulatory changes. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:18:28The regime is changing rapidly, and there is scope for sharp movement in assets as capital requirements for banks evolve in both the short and medium term. In the short term, we could see changes to the supplemental leverage ratio that could make it easier for banks to hold treasury securities. There is also scope for broader changes that will lessen the bank regulatory burden and ease capital treatment for many of their assets. Looking ahead, the recent volatility and spread widening has strengthened our conviction in the opportunity to earn attractive returns through the spread premium available in Agency RMBS. Mortgage spreads to swaps and treasuries remain close to historic wide, offering double digit ROEs, positioning us to generate solid returns even without spread tightening from today's historically wide levels. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:19:17The supply and demand balance in the market remains healthy. While money managers saw redemptions as investors reallocated from bonds to stocks after the equity price decline, we expect a broader trend in fund flows towards income producing assets to resume. Demographics still strongly support a need for income in portfolios. Moreover, there is scope for bank demand, which was strong early in the first quarter, to reaccelerate as the monetary and regulatory policy environments become less uncertain. Spread tightening from today's levels will be a function of a reduction in overall macroeconomic uncertainty and policy uncertainty. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:19:57If we enter any type of recession, as expected by many in the market, Agency RMBS should outperform credit sensitive assets as investors rotate away from default risk. In this scenario, lower financing costs could also support strong returns. While our portfolio can generate outsized returns from spread tightening, my optimism is tempered with a deep respect for the complexity of the global macroeconomic environment. Even in quarters without a major vol event like we've seen this month, we expect realized volatility will remain above average. In addition to insulating our portfolio from these moves by adjusting our exposure and adding swaptions, as I mentioned, we have continued to pursue opportunities in the Agency CMBS market, where we can add credit protected bonds with much more certain durations. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:20:48We added exposures to Fannie Mae Dust in the first quarter and expect to make further additions in the coming quarters as opportunities arise. Financing markets were remarkably stable throughout the recent volatility, and we expect repo rates relative to SOFR to remain in a tight 15 to 20 basis point range. Availability of funding is good, with nearly $7,000,000,000,000 in money market fund balances. Our disciplined approach to leverage and expert management of liquidity, hallmarks of Dynex Capital, will be needed to navigate us through this environment. That is something this team is very proud to have demonstrated over more cycles than any other publicly traded mortgage REIT. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:21:31With that, I'd like to turn the call to our Chairman and Co CEO, Byron Boston. Byron BostonChairman and Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:21:38Thank you, TJ. Our goal today is to give you a clear picture of the complex environment in which we currently invest. For our shareholders, we would like to leave you with the reinforced impression that you can continue to trust your capital with this management team. We came into this decade believing the globe was complex. We have continued to make deliberate decisions for capital management, personnel, technology, risk and investments with this mindset. Byron BostonChairman and Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:22:08Let me reiterate. We continue to see a compelling opportunity to invest in agency residential mortgage backed securities, but we must manage our company through a rapidly changing landscape. We have ample dry powder to protect our capital and take advantage of attractive investment opportunities as they develop. Second, it is important now more than ever to be able to rely on our team. We have been building our bench for the long term, and the experience we have will be critical to developing the strategy and navigating this complex environment. Byron BostonChairman and Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:22:42It's also important to have transparency in your investments. The Dynex balance sheet can be clearly and cleanly valued. All of our assets are marked and reflected in earnings and book value. We do not have any held to maturity investments or other unrealized losses that are hidden from sight. These are essential aspects in assessing not only who manages your capital, but where your capital is invested. Byron BostonChairman and Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:23:10We take responsibility as managers and stewards of your savings very seriously. The Dynex team is personally invested alongside our existing shareholders, and we will continue to manage risk and invest as we see value. As stewards of your capital, we want you to know we're in this together. The executive team collectively owns nearly 2% of the company, making us the fourth largest shareholder with a significant portion of our personal net worth invested alongside yours through long term incentive grants and direct ownership, aligning our interests fully with yours for the long haul. I thank you for your trust, and I look forward to updating you on our performance and the environment next quarter. Byron BostonChairman and Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:23:55I'll now open the line to questions. Operator? Operator00:24:00Thank you. We will now be conducting a question and answer session. Our first question comes from the line of Bose George with KBW. Please proceed with your questions. Bose GeorgeManaging Director at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW)00:24:33Hey, everyone. Good morning. Thanks for all that color. The first question is just on the repo. I guess it sounds like the availability remains strong. Bose GeorgeManaging Director at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW)00:24:41Can you just provide more color on repo funding costs? Have you seen much in terms of increases? T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:24:47Yes. Hi, Bose. Good morning. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:24:49Good morning. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:24:50Repo funding costs have been very remarkably stable between fifteen and seventeen basis points over SOFR across maybe on the longer end. Now of course, the forward SOFR's are moving quickly, but maybe on six months, you're three or four basis points wider than where we were before this. But overall, it's been impressive how much availability there is in the financing markets. And it's a testament to the plumbing of the system working very well. Bose GeorgeManaging Director at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW)00:25:19Okay, great. Thanks. And then just on the hedging side, given the volatility, is there anything that changes your views on whether to hedge with treasuries versus swaps? Yes, any change there? T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:25:33I'd say broadly swaps tend to be a more natural hedge for a mortgage portfolio. We are very comfortable with how we're set up at this point in terms of the hedge composition. There is some room for us to adjust in both directions as opportunities arise, but I think where we are today is a very natural position for the portfolio at this point. Bose GeorgeManaging Director at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW)00:25:56Okay, great. Thanks. Operator00:26:01Thank you. Our next questions come from the line of Jason Weaver with Jones Trading. Please proceed with your questions. Jason WeaverManaging Director - Equity Research at Jones Trading00:26:07Hi, good morning. Thanks for taking my question. Maybe for TJ, I was wondering if you might be able to frame the investing opportunity you see today versus historically, steeper curve and wide spreads seems to imply some really high ROE potential, but how do you frame that against what is increasingly a more volatile interest rate backdrop? T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:26:29Yes, great question, Jason, and good morning. As you said, the steeper curve environment spreads are wider, we're out to around 200 basis points versus interest rate swap hedges. There's the opportunity for significant ROE. And against the volatility, to your question, how do you balance it versus the volatility, some of it is really, number one, there's no better free lunch in the marketplace than diversification. So we have a nice opportunity to diversify the portfolio across the coupon stack, as you've seen this quarter or last quarter rather. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:27:08And that enables us to get a little more duration certainty into the book. And now at this point, you also have opportunities arising on the Agency CMBS side of things, which I think is increasingly interesting. So yes, to your point, it is a great environment for things going forward with a lot of positive carry. Jason WeaverManaging Director - Equity Research at Jones Trading00:27:28Got it. And just one follow-up. I was curious about your sort of pace of capital deployment from the ending of the first quarter into the second, if it's been relatively even. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:27:42Jason. So I think we announced that the leverage had gone up from 7.4 to 7.8 times, and that was entirely due to book value decline. Jason WeaverManaging Director - Equity Research at Jones Trading00:27:56Right. Okay. That's fair. Thank Jason WeaverManaging Director - Equity Research at Jones Trading00:27:58you. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:27:59Sure. Operator00:28:01Thank you. Our next questions come from the line of Doug Harter with UBS. Please proceed with your questions. Douglas HarterEquity Research Analyst at UBS Group00:28:08Thanks. Just Douglas HarterEquity Research Analyst at UBS Group00:28:10first off, hoping to get a clarification on the book value update you gave and how that factors in the dividend that goes ex this week? T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:28:21Yes. Good morning, Doug. The is the book value I stated includes the dividend accrued through Thursday, through that day where I've quoted the book value. Douglas HarterEquity Research Analyst at UBS Group00:28:36Great. Appreciate that. And as you just mentioned, leverage is at 7.8 times. Do you think about the right range of leverage in this environment where things are volatile, spreads are wide? How do you think about that? Douglas HarterEquity Research Analyst at UBS Group00:28:57And in the context of kind of earning attempting to kind of earn the dividend? Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:29:07Hi, Doug. Yes. Thank you for the question. So this is really like a tale of two situations, right? One is the good situation is that you have mortgages at 200 over swaps. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:29:22These are really good returns. On the other hand, you're managing through a world in transition. And so one of the things we respect, as you know, as long as you've been covering us, I think we've been saying, the globe is complex and managing our business in this environment requires a great deal So yes, there are returns available and we must manage ourselves through this environment. And so for now, what I would say is, we're watching and seeing how things develop. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:30:03The bar to add risk here is quite high. So I would say that's something definitely a mindset in which we're operating. We have operated with lower leverage coming into this quarter. And so that just is reflective of our stance on this environment. Douglas HarterEquity Research Analyst at UBS Group00:30:24And I guess along the lines of the bar being high to add risk, do you think about continuing to use the ATM to add to the portfolio at these spreads? Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:30:43Yes. Once again, I think we've always followed the discipline of when there are risk adjusted returns that are available to us that we feel are accretive to the cost of capital, we should raise capital and deploy that capital. We are looking at the risk environment with somebody else just asked a question, how do we see these returns in the context of historical returns? These are very, very good long term returns on capital. So that is driving some of our thought process with respect to capital raising. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:31:17And as you can imagine, raising capital above book was very good for us in the first quarter. As the stock has declined and book value commensurately, you can see you expect us to adjust our thought process around that as well. We've been very disciplined generally in terms of when and how much capital that we're raising. And really, we used to think of it as just us doing the same thing on the equity side as we do on the investing side. So we're opportunistic about that as well. Douglas HarterEquity Research Analyst at UBS Group00:31:50Great. Appreciate the answers. Thank you, guys. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:31:53Sure. Thanks, Doug. Operator00:31:56Thank you. Our next questions come from the line of Trevor Cranston with Citizens JMP. Please proceed with your questions. Trevor CranstonDirector, Mortgage Finance Equity Research at Citizens JMP00:32:03Hey, thanks. And appreciate all the color you guys have given this morning. I wanted to follow-up on your commentary around kind of how you guys approach risk and thinking about your scenario planning. Two of the things you mentioned were potential for changes at the GSEs and also some potential for foreign selling, including in MBS. I was wondering if you could just provide some context around kind of how you think about those scenarios and how much sort of incremental spread widening they could cause in MBS from where we are today? Trevor CranstonDirector, Mortgage Finance Equity Research at Citizens JMP00:32:41Thanks. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:32:42Yes. Thanks, Trevor. Yes, of course. So I'll tackle the GSE question first. As I mentioned in my comments, it's very interesting. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:32:52This is a market that is not only big in The U. S. Economy in terms of its size, with respect to just housing, but it's also super embedded in the financial system, right? So banks own 2,800,000,000,000 of agency RMBS, the Fed owns another $2,000,000,000,000 And any changes to the guarantee thought process in and of itself is going to have consequences, directly affects the mortgage rate and so on. So logic would have it that when something is so entrenched and entwined in the system, there would be a fair amount of caution with respect to changing those things. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:33:36Right? So if you think logically, yes, things could go just fine. And so what we're preparing for is if things don't go fine, we're looking to scenario analysis to say how much could mortgage really widen, should there be some kind of announcement that changes the level of pricing. You can look to the non agency market as an indicator there in terms of that spread. So we've thought through those types of scenarios. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:34:07And in reality, what our framework is that there'll be an announcement of some sort that maybe the market doesn't like, the market reacts to that And then there's an adjustment in the policy. So it's what the market prices versus what actually happens. That's something we really focus on in terms of the framework. So I hope that helps you understand how we're thinking GSE wise. Logic would have it that things would be well thought out, and we're just prepared for some kind of shock in the event that it isn't. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:34:41On the second question that you asked about kind of selling of MBS or just negative sentiment on the dollar, etcetera, etcetera, there's a short, medium and long term aspect to these things. In the short term, obviously, there's been a knee jerk reaction. The dollar is selling off. We've seen some mutual fund selling or bond fund selling of agency MBS. But again, the long term, as I mentioned, it's super difficult for large investors to really reallocate away from the dollar and reallocate some dollar instruments. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:35:17So over time, could that happen? Will that happen? We're actually preparing for that to happen. And then on spread widening side, very difficult to really say how much that could widen spreads. And again, we run scenarios through all of this stuff. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:35:38Yes. And I would just add on the supply and demand balance there in the mortgage market, as we forecast out the year and look at supply relative to potential demand this year, we really were not assuming anything in the way of demand from foreign investors. And I expect that selling and I don't think we'll see much selling, right? Their portfolios, even on the treasury side, official portfolios anyway, are fairly short in duration, and they can just allow a lot of these securities to mature and roll off. And on the mortgage side, really haven't been very active players for some time now. Trevor CranstonDirector, Mortgage Finance Equity Research at Citizens JMP00:36:15Got it. Okay. That's helpful. Thank you. Operator00:36:20Thank you. Our next questions come from the line of Eric Hagen with BTIG. Please proceed with your questions. Eric HagenManaging Director at BTIG00:36:27Hey, thanks. Good morning, guys. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:36:30Eric. Eric HagenManaging Director at BTIG00:36:30Maybe just a follow-up on the portfolio here. Mean, much yield do you think you pick up in the current coupon in the TBAs? And is there a scenario in which you'd actually maybe crystallize the losses in these lower coupons and reinvest in the current coupon? Or are we basically sitting with those bonds at this point? And is there even a scenario in which you'd add to the lower coupons at this point? T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:36:52Yes. I think the lower coupons actually offer a lot of value. They have tremendous amount of duration certainty to them at this point. The speak as a mortgage guy, the convexity of those securities is very compelling relative to the rest of the coupon stack. And I think there's a place to those in our portfolio, at least as far as I can have an outlook on things at this point. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:37:15So in terms of yield available, you're talking about 155 basis points or more of spread to treasuries, two zero five, even two ten, 20 at points of spread versus the interest rate swap curve. So, yes, that I think there's a tremendous amount of yield available to be earned and a lot of cushion. Really, when you think about that yield, it's a tremendous amount of cushion relative to any sort of duration uncertainties, sort of the classic metrics that are that at times can make it difficult to manage a mortgage portfolio. So and some of those the other thing I'll point out is relative to some mortgage portfolios in our space, we have we do have a bias towards higher coupons because we're very cognizant of the prepayment risk on the higher coupons. We saw kind of what I'll call a refi wavelet in September, and it was really nasty. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:38:16And to be honest, that's some of what our economy needs. Those borrowers who are sitting with rates that are six plus percent are consumers, and they're being pinched in a big way. So they're going to need to refinance at some point, in order to continue to drive the economy forward. So I think that's a very reasonable probability at this point. So yes, highly diversified coupon stack makes a ton of sense, avoiding those borrowers who could be the fastest to prepay and the overall yield spread available today gives a tremendous amount of cushion for the mortgage market. Eric HagenManaging Director at BTIG00:38:52Got you. That's really helpful. All right. So just to maybe drill down a little bit on the capital and liquidity. I hear you on the leverage and where that currently stands. Eric HagenManaging Director at BTIG00:38:59But of the $240,000,000 that you raised last quarter, how much has actually been deployed up to this point? And what's your current liquidity after these last couple of weeks of spread widening? And then I have another follow-up. Was going to say, is there an internal philosophy for how much liquidity you guys keep as a percentage of your capital base? Or how are you benchmarking your liquidity right now? T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:39:23Yes, I'll start with this. Go ahead and take a little bit. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:39:25Well, just the last question Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:39:27because I think that'll help you with the detail. So yes, we have been running a higher level of liquidity in general versus our total capital. That is how we think about it. We also think about it in terms of how much cash we have relative to unencumbered assets. In times like these, you'll see us run with a higher level of cash as a total of unencumbered, plus unencumbered. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:39:56And then we'll also you also see us running somewhere between we tried to target between 67% of equity, over time. And that's typically how we think about liquidity as a level of, versus capital. Eric HagenManaging Director at BTIG00:40:16That's really helpful. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:40:17It's versus assets actually. It's versus assets, right? Yes. Not capital. Eric HagenManaging Director at BTIG00:40:23Yes. Eric HagenManaging Director at BTIG00:40:26I mean, how about Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:40:2660% to 70% of equity. That's Of T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:40:30equity, right. Yes, exactly. And in terms of the amount that we deployed, I think about two thirds, as I had mentioned, of that capital was deployed and the remaining has been a buffer for liquidity. I'll note that some of the reason you carry so much liquidity in a portfolio like this is because there is a lot of margin movement between the assets and the liability side of the portfolio and that has functioning extremely well. So again, it's another part of the system that has been very healthy throughout all this volatility. Eric HagenManaging Director at BTIG00:41:06Got you. Thank you guys very much. Operator00:41:10Thank you. Our next questions come from the line of Jason Stewart with Janney Montgomery. Please proceed with your questions. Jason StewartDirector - Mortgage Finance at Janney Montgomery Scott00:41:17Yes. Thank you. Can we go back to the GSE question for a moment? Pick your number in terms of where spreads would go to, but what are the ways you are preparing for that potential price action? Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:41:33Hi, Jason. How are doing? Jason StewartDirector - Mortgage Finance at Janney Montgomery Scott00:41:35Thanks, Mercy. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:41:37So really there's it starts the number one thing is having the liquidity available to withstand the price shock, right? So pick a number of 25, 30, 50 basis points. One of the things that we do is we stress our liquidity to make sure that we can withstand a significant degree of shock. The second piece is just our mindset as we're coming into this situation. We are operating with lower levels of leverage. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:42:11We are thinking about dry powder. And there has to be, as I've mentioned, a very high bar right now to raise levels of risk in the portfolio. So the number one defense against any of this stuff is the ability to withstand a shock and that starts with our liquidity position. Jason StewartDirector - Mortgage Finance at Janney Montgomery Scott00:42:32Okay. That's helpful. And then obviously, it's an uncertain environment, but is there any marker that you're looking at in particular for this acceleration in GSE policy action? Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:42:46I mean, it's interesting. I think there's a massive recognition, by people in charge that how big the mortgage market is and what an integral part it is of The U. S. Economy. I think there's also been a stated objective of bringing mortgage rates down. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:43:04So those are things that as we listen to the rhetoric or what's out there, those are things that go in the favor of saying, there's some recognition of how important this is. On the other hand, there are steps that could be taken that get misunderstood by the market. And that's the part that we really get concerned about more than sort of a deliberate policy in one direction or another. So that's what we're really preparing for more of like a a surprise for the market that then gets adjusted somehow. Jason StewartDirector - Mortgage Finance at Janney Montgomery Scott00:43:43Got it. Okay. Thanks, Smriti. And then on the hedge portfolio, were there any notable changes since quarter end to hedge construction? Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:43:52We've made very minor adjustments is what we mentioned on the call. Jason StewartDirector - Mortgage Finance at Janney Montgomery Scott00:43:58Okay. And so it looks like I mean, looks like four plus rate cuts are priced in. Historically, you've taken the opportunity when forward rate markets pricing a substantial amount of cuts to lock in some of that lower funding costs. Is this a particular I guess, maybe just speak to how you think about maybe forwards on the short end of the curve, the hedge portfolio and how you see that evolving and the hedge portfolio moving going forward? T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:44:28Right. We're thinking a lot about that in terms of where we position the repo portfolio, and there are opportunities to extend out. You also have a lot of uncertainty coming this summer. We still have to deal with debt ceiling, things of that nature. So we're considering all of those when we think about where to and how to position the repo book. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:44:50And in the context of that, the nice thing is we have the opportunity to hedge across the spectrum of SOFR futures and interest rate swap options. So it is a great environment in that sense. There's been a lot of opportunity both up and down to lock in lower funding costs over time. Jason StewartDirector - Mortgage Finance at Janney Montgomery Scott00:45:13Okay, got it. Thanks for taking the questions. Appreciate it. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:45:17You bet. Operator00:45:19Thank you. That does conclude our question and answer session. I would now like to turn the floor back over to Smriti Popono for closing comments. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:45:27Great. Thank you everyone for your attention today and we look forward to updating you on our call next week, next month, next quarter. I beg your pardon. Operator00:45:38Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for your participation. This does conclude today's teleconference. You may now disconnect your lines. Have a wonderful day.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesAlison GriffinVP, IRSmriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEORobert ColliganCFO & COOT.J. ConnellyChief Investment OfficerByron BostonChairman and Co-CEOAnalystsBose GeorgeManaging Director at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW)Jason WeaverManaging Director - Equity Research at Jones TradingDouglas HarterEquity Research Analyst at UBS GroupTrevor CranstonDirector, Mortgage Finance Equity Research at Citizens JMPEric HagenManaging Director at BTIGJason StewartDirector - Mortgage Finance at Janney Montgomery ScottPowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallDynex Capital Q1 202500:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipants Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Dynex Capital Earnings Headlines4 Stocks Paying 14% Ultra-High-Yield Monthly Dividends Deliver Huge Passive Income StreamsMay 4 at 6:43 AM | 247wallst.comComparing Dynex Capital (NYSE:DX) & JBG SMITH Properties (NYSE:JBGS)May 4 at 1:57 AM | americanbankingnews.comGold Hits New Highs as Global Markets SpiralWhen Trump took office in 2017, gold was just $1,100 an ounce. By the time he left, it had soared to $1,839. Now… as new tariffs take effect, gold is breaking records again. You've hopefully already seen this in action… but gold is surpassing $3,000 per ounce for the first time EVER.May 4, 2025 | Premier Gold Co (Ad)Dynex Capital expands at-the-market stock offeringMay 3 at 6:54 PM | investing.comDecoding Dynex Capital Inc (DX): A Strategic SWOT InsightMay 3 at 12:42 AM | gurufocus.comDynex Capital (NYSE:DX) Downgraded by StockNews.com to "Sell"April 26, 2025 | americanbankingnews.comSee More Dynex Capital Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Dynex Capital? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Dynex Capital and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Dynex CapitalDynex Capital (NYSE:DX), a mortgage real estate investment trust, invests in mortgage-backed securities (MBS) on a leveraged basis in the United States. It invests in agency and non-agency MBS consisting of residential MBS, commercial MBS (CMBS), and CMBS interest-only securities. Agency MBS have a guaranty of principal payment by an agency of the U.S. government or a U.S. government-sponsored entity, such as Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Non-Agency MBS have no such guaranty of payment. The company has qualified as a real estate investment trust for federal income tax purposes. It generally would not be subject to federal income taxes if it distributes at least 90% of its taxable income to its stockholders as dividends. Dynex Capital, Inc. was incorporated in 1987 and is headquartered in Glen Allen, Virginia.View Dynex Capital 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 Amazon Earnings: 2 Reasons to Love It, 1 Reason to Be CautiousMeta Takes A Bow With Q1 Earnings - Watch For Tariff Impact in Q2Palantir Earnings: 1 Bullish Signal and 1 Area of ConcernVisa Q2 Earnings Top Forecasts, Adds $30B Buyback PlanMicrosoft Crushes Earnings, What’s Next for MSFT Stock?Qualcomm's Earnings: 2 Reasons to Buy, 1 to Stay AwayAMD Stock Signals Strong Buy Ahead of Earnings Upcoming Earnings Palantir Technologies (5/5/2025)Vertex Pharmaceuticals (5/5/2025)Realty Income (5/5/2025)Williams Companies (5/5/2025)CRH (5/5/2025)Advanced Micro Devices (5/6/2025)American Electric Power (5/6/2025)Constellation Energy (5/6/2025)Marriott International (5/6/2025)Energy Transfer (5/6/2025) Get 30 Days of MarketBeat All Access for Free Sign up for MarketBeat All Access to gain access to MarketBeat's full suite of research tools. 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PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. Operator00:00:02It is now my pleasure to introduce Alison Griffin, VP, Investor Relations. Thank you. You may begin. Alison GriffinVP, IR at Dynex Capital00:00:09Good morning. The press release associated with today's call was issued and filed with the SEC this morning, 04/21/2025. You may view the press release on the homepage of the Dynex website at dynexcapital.com as well as on the SEC's website at sec.gov. Before we begin, we wish to remind you that this conference call may contain forward looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. The words believe, expect, forecast, anticipate, estimate, project, plan and similar expressions identify forward looking statements that are inherently subject to risks and uncertainties, some of which cannot be predicted or quantified. Alison GriffinVP, IR at Dynex Capital00:00:52The company's actual results and timing of certain events could differ considerably from those projected and or contemplated by those forward looking statements as a result of unforeseen external factors or risks. For additional information on these factors or risks, please refer to our disclosures filed with the SEC, which may be found on the Dynex website under Investors as well as on the SEC's website. This conference call is being broadcast live over the Internet with a streaming slide presentation, which can be found through the webcast link on the homepage of our website. The slide presentation may also be referenced under Quarterly Reports on the Investor Center page. Joining me on the call today are Byron Boston, Chairman and Co Chief Executive Officer Smriti Papineau, Co Chief Executive Officer and President Rob Colligan, Chief Financial Officer and Chief Operating Officer and TJ Connolly, Chief Investment Officer. Alison GriffinVP, IR at Dynex Capital00:01:47I will now turn the call over to Smriti. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:01:51Thank you, Alison, and thanks to all of you for joining us on the call today. We have viewed and continue to view this environment as being favorable to our business model. The yield curve is steeper, asset prices are now reflecting higher risk premiums, financing costs are lower and our ability to generate an above average dividend yield remains largely intact. However, we must manage our business through the rapid transitions that are happening across the global and U. S. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:02:22Economy. My goal for you today is to leave our call with a better understanding of Dynex, our long term approach to the business and why we continue to feel comfortable owning Dynex stock in our personal portfolios. From the very beginning of our time here at Dynex, we've been very disciplined in our approach, not being swayed by the hot investment ideas that crop up from time to time. We recognize very early in the last decade how investing in global markets continue to become more complex. We focus on the multiple demographic, social and political factors that are interacting to create potential surprises. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:03:04This thought process is the foundation of our approach to the markets and the management of our shareholders' capital. So what we're experiencing now is not unfamiliar territory for us. It's a moment we have planned and prepared for. Over the past several quarters, we have deliberately positioned ourselves for a more dynamic macro environment. We've taken decisive steps to build resilience, including raising capital at attractive terms, preserving liquidity and adding flexibility across our portfolio. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:03:37This proactive approach has given us optionality so that rather than react to market shocks, we can make strategic decisions from a position of strength. To give you a better sense of the environment and how we're responding, I'm going to ask and answer a series of questions. And after that, I'll turn it over to Rob and TJ who'll give you more details. Let me start with why do we feel comfortable owning Dynex personally. It starts with the team and our process. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:04:07Our experience and our mindset and discipline continue to serve us in making clear decisions. Our investment strategy is simple. And yes, we must make the right decision through volatility. We are relying on our experience and our processes to do so. Finally, the dividend. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:04:27It cushions a lot here. In these moments, dividend paying stocks, particularly Dynex, where you can rely on the asset quality and the team, really shine. So what happened in the last three weeks? The April 2 tariff announcement was a shock for the markets. As announced, it was larger than anticipated and if implemented could be described as one of the most significant trade policy changes in many decades. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:04:56We've seen an immediate de risking to reflect the degree of uncertainty that this posture brings. Deleveraging of the riskiest positions such as treasury basis trades drove some of the moves. Many companies exposed to tariff uncertainty have experienced large declines in share prices. Credit spreads in both investment grade and high yield bonds are wider. We also saw that long and treasury yields unexpectedly rose reflecting some type of selling and the dollar experienced weakness versus major currencies that has only been seen during times of severe crisis. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:05:32So what did Dynex experience during this time? Most of the turbulence directly affecting us was in the treasury and swap market. And as T. J. Will outline, it had some impact on our book value. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:05:44Besides that, we followed our normal discipline. We have made minor adjustments to the portfolio, margin and cash collateral change hands in both directions as markets gyrated. Repo availability is excellent and short term fluctuations in interest rates seem reflective of the flows. We have had no trouble terming out our financing and we remain engaged with our major counterparties as we have always prioritized openness and proactive communication. Next, how is your portfolio constructed today given the global complex backdrop? Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:06:21First, we are long term investors and we've constructed the portfolio to perform in a variety of market environments. Second, our strategy is simple, to extract the spread between agency RMBS and our hedge financing costs. Both instruments are dollar denominated and they're relatively correlated. The most important decisions we make are our hedge ratio, how much liquidity to hold and how much leverage risk to take. Our track record shows we have extensive experience and success making these decisions in some of the most volatile moments in markets over the last decade. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:07:00In 2019, we began operating with a significantly higher liquidity position, a feature of our risk management process, which remains to this day. It's a core part of how we are able to withstand volatility like what we've just experienced without making significant adjustments or crystallizing losses. We are entering the coming period with a robust liquidity position and a liquid balance sheet, allowing us to remain agile even as the external environment shifts. We have also operated with generally lower leverage. Next question. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:07:40Why are you invested in Agency RMBS? Will there be changes to the GSEs and what should we expect? So we have been up in credit and up in liquidity for several years now. We believe that Agency MBS are still an excellent choice in terms of where to allocate our shareholders' capital. T. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:07:57J. Will give you more detail on how we are positioned within this market. In terms of a change to the GSEs, here's our current thinking. The US housing finance system has underpinned the American dream for over a century, helping millions of families build wealth and economic security through home ownership. It stands as one of the most effective and dynamic in the world. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:08:21Agency MBS remain a foundational component of The U. S. Financial system, central to bank balance sheets, retail money market and bond mutual funds and an integral part of the wealth of average Americans. With over $8,000,000,000,000 in agency MBS outstanding, any disruption to the current guarantee structure would have immediate and far reaching implications for capital markets, mortgage rates and systemic risk. We are preparing for the possibility of accelerated policy action around the GSEs, evaluating outlier scenarios for market reactions and we'll take proactive steps to protect shareholder capital across our exposures. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:09:04Regardless of the pace or path, our focus remains disciplined risk management and real time adjustments as the regulatory and political landscape evolves. How are we thinking about the dollar and the demand for U. S. Fixed income assets? Will that go down? Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:09:21How does that impact Dynex? The answer here is that it depends on how policy evolves. As it stands today, U. S. Equities and sovereign bonds represent 70% of total global market capitalization and outstandings. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:09:37So while investors could start to sell dollar assets in the short term, it'll take a lot of time to move into other currencies because there just isn't enough out there to move into. We do believe that the trend will be towards some caution on The U. S. Due to shifting policy. So you could see some selling of bond holdings, including MBS, but that could present a more durable opportunity for Dynex to step in and earn those extra returns. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:10:05Next question. How are we preparing for changes across other fronts such as the structure of the Fed or other policy changes? Look, we recognize that change is not only inevitable, but it's accelerating. From tariffs to monetary policy to regulatory shifts and power dynamics, we are preparing for potential transitions across many fronts, often with little warning. Our strategy acknowledges this reality. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:10:31We're not waiting for stability to return, we're actually building for agility. That means maintaining a wide field of vision, engaging in disciplined scenario planning, keeping an open and flexible mindset and ensuring our capital is protected and ready to be deployed when opportunities align with our risk framework. As we always say, we don't predict, we prepare. Next, will the global financial and economic environments continue their volatile trend? The short answer to this question is that we are prepared for yes. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:11:08We have talked about this for the last eleven years. We expect the future will be full of surprises and we will be managing our business from this perspective. Finally, how are we thinking about the dividend? The dividend is a long term decision that we make very carefully and we have made it in the context of a capital risk management decision. We set our dividend based on many factors, including our view on long term returns, availability of capital, yields on comparable instruments, liquidity risk, overall risk and taxable income. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:11:46We raised our monthly dividend in February, reflecting our confidence in our continued ability to generate attractive returns. In the long term, we're operating at the intersection of global capital markets and The U. S. Housing finance system. This is a business we feel is strongly supported by demographic trends. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:12:05In the shorter term, we believe Agency MBS are still an excellent choice in terms of where to allocate our shareholders' capital, and we are managing our risk in this sector with the rigor and discipline I have outlined for you thus far. I'll now turn it over to Rob and TJ. Robert ColliganCFO & COO at Dynex Capital00:12:24Thank you, Smriti. We have several highlights this quarter that we'd like to share. First, as you can see from our results, net interest income continues to trend up as new investments carrying attractive yields are added to our portfolio and financing costs continue to trend down. Despite another quarter of volatile rates and a 70 basis point intra quarter move in the ten year treasury, the mark to market impact of our MBS investments compared to our hedges was close to neutral. This year, we've significantly strengthened our capital position. Robert ColliganCFO & COO at Dynex Capital00:12:59Year to date, we've raised $270,000,000 of new capital. And given the strength on our stock during the first quarter, we raised capital at a premium to book value, which is accretive to shareholders. Raising capital above book value has allowed us to grow, achieve scale and deploy into an attractive market. We've invested some of the new capital into the agency portfolio, which TJ will cover, but we also continue to keep ample levels of liquidity to maintain flexibility going forward. Similar to last year's first quarter, this quarter we had an accelerated vesting condition for equity compensation. Robert ColliganCFO & COO at Dynex Capital00:13:40The impact of this acceleration compared to a standard vesting schedule was about $1,000,000 during the quarter. While expenses are up this quarter, I do expect expenses to level out and trend down over the course of the year. And combined with our equity growth, we are planning for a lower expense ratio this year compared to 2024. We continue to have a commitment for expense efficiency, which drives shareholder value over the long term. I'll now turn it over to T. Robert ColliganCFO & COO at Dynex Capital00:14:08J. For the investment portfolio outlook. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:14:12Thank you, Rob. I'll cover our performance and decisions for the first quarter before addressing quarter to date changes and our outlook. Our 2.6% TER was delivered during the quarter with significant swings in rates. Current coupon mortgage yields, for example, moved over 70 basis points high to low, and the yield curve moved 20 basis points flatter before steepening again. This performance validates what I have long emphasized about this market regime. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:14:38Skilled investors can earn substantial risk premiums from mortgage backed securities while effectively hedging interest rate risk. The portfolio generated a solid total return despite mortgage spreads widening from around 138 basis points on the current coupon versus seven year treasuries to around 144 basis points by the end of the quarter. As Rob mentioned, we raised a significant amount of capital and regularly deployed it. We invested about two thirds and held the balance to allow us to remain flexible, which served as a cushion during the post tariff market turbulence. We also chose to shift our exposures down in coupon towards more duration stability, added some call swaptions and maintained our portfolio bias towards neutral duration with the curve steepening bias. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:15:26Most of our hedges are concentrated in the long end of the yield curve. By quarter end, our leverage had declined to 7.4 times. Turning to the current quarter. The April 2 tariff announcement was a vol event, not a mortgage event. Initially, we saw a classic risk off reaction that started with equity price declines and then interest rates dropping sharply. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:15:50However, this quickly evolved as investor concerns about potential de dollarization and treasury selling caused yields to spike. We also experienced a tightening in swap spreads as some hedge funds were forced to unwind overleveraged positions. Some of the price action in these markets was very volatile, indicative of poor market debt. By last week, realized volatility has subsided modestly, and uncertainty still remains high. Agency RMBS spreads widened sharply this month. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:16:22Spreads have ranged from 145 to 160 basis points over treasuries, or nearly 200 basis points over interest rate swaps. Trading in the Agency RMBS markets has been orderly. While bid offers widen during certain periods, we have not experienced the gappy price action we saw during the COVID crisis, the LDI crisis, or even the volatility of October 2023. Our book value as of Thursday's market close was estimated between $11.55 and $11.65 per share. Leverage to total capital was at 7.8, up $04 since quarter end due entirely to lower book value. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:17:07We have followed our disciplined liquidity focused risk management process. We continue to keep an open and flexible mind as we navigate the markets. Our robust liquidity position placed us in a position of strength, where we were not forced to crystallize losses or adjust positions amid the volatility. We are actively managing several risk factors. First, volatility risk. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:17:33The April tariff induced volatility underscores the importance of our hedging strategy and liquidity management. We expect options will be a core part of our hedging strategy going forward. Second, prepayment risk. This has intensified following Rocket Mortgage's acquisition of Mr. Cooper, creating a formidable originator servicer capable of offering expedited refinancing. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:17:59We've adjusted our portfolio to focus on specified pools with strong prepayment protection, and we shifted our exposures towards lower coupon mortgages backed by borrowers with lower mortgage rates. Third, GSE transition. The FHFA continues to implement changes at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac that could introduce spread volatility. Our team remains engaged with Washington policymakers developments. Finally, regulatory changes. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:18:28The regime is changing rapidly, and there is scope for sharp movement in assets as capital requirements for banks evolve in both the short and medium term. In the short term, we could see changes to the supplemental leverage ratio that could make it easier for banks to hold treasury securities. There is also scope for broader changes that will lessen the bank regulatory burden and ease capital treatment for many of their assets. Looking ahead, the recent volatility and spread widening has strengthened our conviction in the opportunity to earn attractive returns through the spread premium available in Agency RMBS. Mortgage spreads to swaps and treasuries remain close to historic wide, offering double digit ROEs, positioning us to generate solid returns even without spread tightening from today's historically wide levels. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:19:17The supply and demand balance in the market remains healthy. While money managers saw redemptions as investors reallocated from bonds to stocks after the equity price decline, we expect a broader trend in fund flows towards income producing assets to resume. Demographics still strongly support a need for income in portfolios. Moreover, there is scope for bank demand, which was strong early in the first quarter, to reaccelerate as the monetary and regulatory policy environments become less uncertain. Spread tightening from today's levels will be a function of a reduction in overall macroeconomic uncertainty and policy uncertainty. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:19:57If we enter any type of recession, as expected by many in the market, Agency RMBS should outperform credit sensitive assets as investors rotate away from default risk. In this scenario, lower financing costs could also support strong returns. While our portfolio can generate outsized returns from spread tightening, my optimism is tempered with a deep respect for the complexity of the global macroeconomic environment. Even in quarters without a major vol event like we've seen this month, we expect realized volatility will remain above average. In addition to insulating our portfolio from these moves by adjusting our exposure and adding swaptions, as I mentioned, we have continued to pursue opportunities in the Agency CMBS market, where we can add credit protected bonds with much more certain durations. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:20:48We added exposures to Fannie Mae Dust in the first quarter and expect to make further additions in the coming quarters as opportunities arise. Financing markets were remarkably stable throughout the recent volatility, and we expect repo rates relative to SOFR to remain in a tight 15 to 20 basis point range. Availability of funding is good, with nearly $7,000,000,000,000 in money market fund balances. Our disciplined approach to leverage and expert management of liquidity, hallmarks of Dynex Capital, will be needed to navigate us through this environment. That is something this team is very proud to have demonstrated over more cycles than any other publicly traded mortgage REIT. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:21:31With that, I'd like to turn the call to our Chairman and Co CEO, Byron Boston. Byron BostonChairman and Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:21:38Thank you, TJ. Our goal today is to give you a clear picture of the complex environment in which we currently invest. For our shareholders, we would like to leave you with the reinforced impression that you can continue to trust your capital with this management team. We came into this decade believing the globe was complex. We have continued to make deliberate decisions for capital management, personnel, technology, risk and investments with this mindset. Byron BostonChairman and Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:22:08Let me reiterate. We continue to see a compelling opportunity to invest in agency residential mortgage backed securities, but we must manage our company through a rapidly changing landscape. We have ample dry powder to protect our capital and take advantage of attractive investment opportunities as they develop. Second, it is important now more than ever to be able to rely on our team. We have been building our bench for the long term, and the experience we have will be critical to developing the strategy and navigating this complex environment. Byron BostonChairman and Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:22:42It's also important to have transparency in your investments. The Dynex balance sheet can be clearly and cleanly valued. All of our assets are marked and reflected in earnings and book value. We do not have any held to maturity investments or other unrealized losses that are hidden from sight. These are essential aspects in assessing not only who manages your capital, but where your capital is invested. Byron BostonChairman and Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:23:10We take responsibility as managers and stewards of your savings very seriously. The Dynex team is personally invested alongside our existing shareholders, and we will continue to manage risk and invest as we see value. As stewards of your capital, we want you to know we're in this together. The executive team collectively owns nearly 2% of the company, making us the fourth largest shareholder with a significant portion of our personal net worth invested alongside yours through long term incentive grants and direct ownership, aligning our interests fully with yours for the long haul. I thank you for your trust, and I look forward to updating you on our performance and the environment next quarter. Byron BostonChairman and Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:23:55I'll now open the line to questions. Operator? Operator00:24:00Thank you. We will now be conducting a question and answer session. Our first question comes from the line of Bose George with KBW. Please proceed with your questions. Bose GeorgeManaging Director at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW)00:24:33Hey, everyone. Good morning. Thanks for all that color. The first question is just on the repo. I guess it sounds like the availability remains strong. Bose GeorgeManaging Director at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW)00:24:41Can you just provide more color on repo funding costs? Have you seen much in terms of increases? T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:24:47Yes. Hi, Bose. Good morning. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:24:49Good morning. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:24:50Repo funding costs have been very remarkably stable between fifteen and seventeen basis points over SOFR across maybe on the longer end. Now of course, the forward SOFR's are moving quickly, but maybe on six months, you're three or four basis points wider than where we were before this. But overall, it's been impressive how much availability there is in the financing markets. And it's a testament to the plumbing of the system working very well. Bose GeorgeManaging Director at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW)00:25:19Okay, great. Thanks. And then just on the hedging side, given the volatility, is there anything that changes your views on whether to hedge with treasuries versus swaps? Yes, any change there? T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:25:33I'd say broadly swaps tend to be a more natural hedge for a mortgage portfolio. We are very comfortable with how we're set up at this point in terms of the hedge composition. There is some room for us to adjust in both directions as opportunities arise, but I think where we are today is a very natural position for the portfolio at this point. Bose GeorgeManaging Director at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW)00:25:56Okay, great. Thanks. Operator00:26:01Thank you. Our next questions come from the line of Jason Weaver with Jones Trading. Please proceed with your questions. Jason WeaverManaging Director - Equity Research at Jones Trading00:26:07Hi, good morning. Thanks for taking my question. Maybe for TJ, I was wondering if you might be able to frame the investing opportunity you see today versus historically, steeper curve and wide spreads seems to imply some really high ROE potential, but how do you frame that against what is increasingly a more volatile interest rate backdrop? T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:26:29Yes, great question, Jason, and good morning. As you said, the steeper curve environment spreads are wider, we're out to around 200 basis points versus interest rate swap hedges. There's the opportunity for significant ROE. And against the volatility, to your question, how do you balance it versus the volatility, some of it is really, number one, there's no better free lunch in the marketplace than diversification. So we have a nice opportunity to diversify the portfolio across the coupon stack, as you've seen this quarter or last quarter rather. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:27:08And that enables us to get a little more duration certainty into the book. And now at this point, you also have opportunities arising on the Agency CMBS side of things, which I think is increasingly interesting. So yes, to your point, it is a great environment for things going forward with a lot of positive carry. Jason WeaverManaging Director - Equity Research at Jones Trading00:27:28Got it. And just one follow-up. I was curious about your sort of pace of capital deployment from the ending of the first quarter into the second, if it's been relatively even. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:27:42Jason. So I think we announced that the leverage had gone up from 7.4 to 7.8 times, and that was entirely due to book value decline. Jason WeaverManaging Director - Equity Research at Jones Trading00:27:56Right. Okay. That's fair. Thank Jason WeaverManaging Director - Equity Research at Jones Trading00:27:58you. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:27:59Sure. Operator00:28:01Thank you. Our next questions come from the line of Doug Harter with UBS. Please proceed with your questions. Douglas HarterEquity Research Analyst at UBS Group00:28:08Thanks. Just Douglas HarterEquity Research Analyst at UBS Group00:28:10first off, hoping to get a clarification on the book value update you gave and how that factors in the dividend that goes ex this week? T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:28:21Yes. Good morning, Doug. The is the book value I stated includes the dividend accrued through Thursday, through that day where I've quoted the book value. Douglas HarterEquity Research Analyst at UBS Group00:28:36Great. Appreciate that. And as you just mentioned, leverage is at 7.8 times. Do you think about the right range of leverage in this environment where things are volatile, spreads are wide? How do you think about that? Douglas HarterEquity Research Analyst at UBS Group00:28:57And in the context of kind of earning attempting to kind of earn the dividend? Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:29:07Hi, Doug. Yes. Thank you for the question. So this is really like a tale of two situations, right? One is the good situation is that you have mortgages at 200 over swaps. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:29:22These are really good returns. On the other hand, you're managing through a world in transition. And so one of the things we respect, as you know, as long as you've been covering us, I think we've been saying, the globe is complex and managing our business in this environment requires a great deal So yes, there are returns available and we must manage ourselves through this environment. And so for now, what I would say is, we're watching and seeing how things develop. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:30:03The bar to add risk here is quite high. So I would say that's something definitely a mindset in which we're operating. We have operated with lower leverage coming into this quarter. And so that just is reflective of our stance on this environment. Douglas HarterEquity Research Analyst at UBS Group00:30:24And I guess along the lines of the bar being high to add risk, do you think about continuing to use the ATM to add to the portfolio at these spreads? Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:30:43Yes. Once again, I think we've always followed the discipline of when there are risk adjusted returns that are available to us that we feel are accretive to the cost of capital, we should raise capital and deploy that capital. We are looking at the risk environment with somebody else just asked a question, how do we see these returns in the context of historical returns? These are very, very good long term returns on capital. So that is driving some of our thought process with respect to capital raising. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:31:17And as you can imagine, raising capital above book was very good for us in the first quarter. As the stock has declined and book value commensurately, you can see you expect us to adjust our thought process around that as well. We've been very disciplined generally in terms of when and how much capital that we're raising. And really, we used to think of it as just us doing the same thing on the equity side as we do on the investing side. So we're opportunistic about that as well. Douglas HarterEquity Research Analyst at UBS Group00:31:50Great. Appreciate the answers. Thank you, guys. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:31:53Sure. Thanks, Doug. Operator00:31:56Thank you. Our next questions come from the line of Trevor Cranston with Citizens JMP. Please proceed with your questions. Trevor CranstonDirector, Mortgage Finance Equity Research at Citizens JMP00:32:03Hey, thanks. And appreciate all the color you guys have given this morning. I wanted to follow-up on your commentary around kind of how you guys approach risk and thinking about your scenario planning. Two of the things you mentioned were potential for changes at the GSEs and also some potential for foreign selling, including in MBS. I was wondering if you could just provide some context around kind of how you think about those scenarios and how much sort of incremental spread widening they could cause in MBS from where we are today? Trevor CranstonDirector, Mortgage Finance Equity Research at Citizens JMP00:32:41Thanks. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:32:42Yes. Thanks, Trevor. Yes, of course. So I'll tackle the GSE question first. As I mentioned in my comments, it's very interesting. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:32:52This is a market that is not only big in The U. S. Economy in terms of its size, with respect to just housing, but it's also super embedded in the financial system, right? So banks own 2,800,000,000,000 of agency RMBS, the Fed owns another $2,000,000,000,000 And any changes to the guarantee thought process in and of itself is going to have consequences, directly affects the mortgage rate and so on. So logic would have it that when something is so entrenched and entwined in the system, there would be a fair amount of caution with respect to changing those things. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:33:36Right? So if you think logically, yes, things could go just fine. And so what we're preparing for is if things don't go fine, we're looking to scenario analysis to say how much could mortgage really widen, should there be some kind of announcement that changes the level of pricing. You can look to the non agency market as an indicator there in terms of that spread. So we've thought through those types of scenarios. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:34:07And in reality, what our framework is that there'll be an announcement of some sort that maybe the market doesn't like, the market reacts to that And then there's an adjustment in the policy. So it's what the market prices versus what actually happens. That's something we really focus on in terms of the framework. So I hope that helps you understand how we're thinking GSE wise. Logic would have it that things would be well thought out, and we're just prepared for some kind of shock in the event that it isn't. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:34:41On the second question that you asked about kind of selling of MBS or just negative sentiment on the dollar, etcetera, etcetera, there's a short, medium and long term aspect to these things. In the short term, obviously, there's been a knee jerk reaction. The dollar is selling off. We've seen some mutual fund selling or bond fund selling of agency MBS. But again, the long term, as I mentioned, it's super difficult for large investors to really reallocate away from the dollar and reallocate some dollar instruments. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:35:17So over time, could that happen? Will that happen? We're actually preparing for that to happen. And then on spread widening side, very difficult to really say how much that could widen spreads. And again, we run scenarios through all of this stuff. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:35:38Yes. And I would just add on the supply and demand balance there in the mortgage market, as we forecast out the year and look at supply relative to potential demand this year, we really were not assuming anything in the way of demand from foreign investors. And I expect that selling and I don't think we'll see much selling, right? Their portfolios, even on the treasury side, official portfolios anyway, are fairly short in duration, and they can just allow a lot of these securities to mature and roll off. And on the mortgage side, really haven't been very active players for some time now. Trevor CranstonDirector, Mortgage Finance Equity Research at Citizens JMP00:36:15Got it. Okay. That's helpful. Thank you. Operator00:36:20Thank you. Our next questions come from the line of Eric Hagen with BTIG. Please proceed with your questions. Eric HagenManaging Director at BTIG00:36:27Hey, thanks. Good morning, guys. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:36:30Eric. Eric HagenManaging Director at BTIG00:36:30Maybe just a follow-up on the portfolio here. Mean, much yield do you think you pick up in the current coupon in the TBAs? And is there a scenario in which you'd actually maybe crystallize the losses in these lower coupons and reinvest in the current coupon? Or are we basically sitting with those bonds at this point? And is there even a scenario in which you'd add to the lower coupons at this point? T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:36:52Yes. I think the lower coupons actually offer a lot of value. They have tremendous amount of duration certainty to them at this point. The speak as a mortgage guy, the convexity of those securities is very compelling relative to the rest of the coupon stack. And I think there's a place to those in our portfolio, at least as far as I can have an outlook on things at this point. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:37:15So in terms of yield available, you're talking about 155 basis points or more of spread to treasuries, two zero five, even two ten, 20 at points of spread versus the interest rate swap curve. So, yes, that I think there's a tremendous amount of yield available to be earned and a lot of cushion. Really, when you think about that yield, it's a tremendous amount of cushion relative to any sort of duration uncertainties, sort of the classic metrics that are that at times can make it difficult to manage a mortgage portfolio. So and some of those the other thing I'll point out is relative to some mortgage portfolios in our space, we have we do have a bias towards higher coupons because we're very cognizant of the prepayment risk on the higher coupons. We saw kind of what I'll call a refi wavelet in September, and it was really nasty. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:38:16And to be honest, that's some of what our economy needs. Those borrowers who are sitting with rates that are six plus percent are consumers, and they're being pinched in a big way. So they're going to need to refinance at some point, in order to continue to drive the economy forward. So I think that's a very reasonable probability at this point. So yes, highly diversified coupon stack makes a ton of sense, avoiding those borrowers who could be the fastest to prepay and the overall yield spread available today gives a tremendous amount of cushion for the mortgage market. Eric HagenManaging Director at BTIG00:38:52Got you. That's really helpful. All right. So just to maybe drill down a little bit on the capital and liquidity. I hear you on the leverage and where that currently stands. Eric HagenManaging Director at BTIG00:38:59But of the $240,000,000 that you raised last quarter, how much has actually been deployed up to this point? And what's your current liquidity after these last couple of weeks of spread widening? And then I have another follow-up. Was going to say, is there an internal philosophy for how much liquidity you guys keep as a percentage of your capital base? Or how are you benchmarking your liquidity right now? T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:39:23Yes, I'll start with this. Go ahead and take a little bit. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:39:25Well, just the last question Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:39:27because I think that'll help you with the detail. So yes, we have been running a higher level of liquidity in general versus our total capital. That is how we think about it. We also think about it in terms of how much cash we have relative to unencumbered assets. In times like these, you'll see us run with a higher level of cash as a total of unencumbered, plus unencumbered. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:39:56And then we'll also you also see us running somewhere between we tried to target between 67% of equity, over time. And that's typically how we think about liquidity as a level of, versus capital. Eric HagenManaging Director at BTIG00:40:16That's really helpful. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:40:17It's versus assets actually. It's versus assets, right? Yes. Not capital. Eric HagenManaging Director at BTIG00:40:23Yes. Eric HagenManaging Director at BTIG00:40:26I mean, how about Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:40:2660% to 70% of equity. That's Of T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:40:30equity, right. Yes, exactly. And in terms of the amount that we deployed, I think about two thirds, as I had mentioned, of that capital was deployed and the remaining has been a buffer for liquidity. I'll note that some of the reason you carry so much liquidity in a portfolio like this is because there is a lot of margin movement between the assets and the liability side of the portfolio and that has functioning extremely well. So again, it's another part of the system that has been very healthy throughout all this volatility. Eric HagenManaging Director at BTIG00:41:06Got you. Thank you guys very much. Operator00:41:10Thank you. Our next questions come from the line of Jason Stewart with Janney Montgomery. Please proceed with your questions. Jason StewartDirector - Mortgage Finance at Janney Montgomery Scott00:41:17Yes. Thank you. Can we go back to the GSE question for a moment? Pick your number in terms of where spreads would go to, but what are the ways you are preparing for that potential price action? Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:41:33Hi, Jason. How are doing? Jason StewartDirector - Mortgage Finance at Janney Montgomery Scott00:41:35Thanks, Mercy. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:41:37So really there's it starts the number one thing is having the liquidity available to withstand the price shock, right? So pick a number of 25, 30, 50 basis points. One of the things that we do is we stress our liquidity to make sure that we can withstand a significant degree of shock. The second piece is just our mindset as we're coming into this situation. We are operating with lower levels of leverage. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:42:11We are thinking about dry powder. And there has to be, as I've mentioned, a very high bar right now to raise levels of risk in the portfolio. So the number one defense against any of this stuff is the ability to withstand a shock and that starts with our liquidity position. Jason StewartDirector - Mortgage Finance at Janney Montgomery Scott00:42:32Okay. That's helpful. And then obviously, it's an uncertain environment, but is there any marker that you're looking at in particular for this acceleration in GSE policy action? Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:42:46I mean, it's interesting. I think there's a massive recognition, by people in charge that how big the mortgage market is and what an integral part it is of The U. S. Economy. I think there's also been a stated objective of bringing mortgage rates down. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:43:04So those are things that as we listen to the rhetoric or what's out there, those are things that go in the favor of saying, there's some recognition of how important this is. On the other hand, there are steps that could be taken that get misunderstood by the market. And that's the part that we really get concerned about more than sort of a deliberate policy in one direction or another. So that's what we're really preparing for more of like a a surprise for the market that then gets adjusted somehow. Jason StewartDirector - Mortgage Finance at Janney Montgomery Scott00:43:43Got it. Okay. Thanks, Smriti. And then on the hedge portfolio, were there any notable changes since quarter end to hedge construction? Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:43:52We've made very minor adjustments is what we mentioned on the call. Jason StewartDirector - Mortgage Finance at Janney Montgomery Scott00:43:58Okay. And so it looks like I mean, looks like four plus rate cuts are priced in. Historically, you've taken the opportunity when forward rate markets pricing a substantial amount of cuts to lock in some of that lower funding costs. Is this a particular I guess, maybe just speak to how you think about maybe forwards on the short end of the curve, the hedge portfolio and how you see that evolving and the hedge portfolio moving going forward? T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:44:28Right. We're thinking a lot about that in terms of where we position the repo portfolio, and there are opportunities to extend out. You also have a lot of uncertainty coming this summer. We still have to deal with debt ceiling, things of that nature. So we're considering all of those when we think about where to and how to position the repo book. T.J. ConnellyChief Investment Officer at Dynex Capital00:44:50And in the context of that, the nice thing is we have the opportunity to hedge across the spectrum of SOFR futures and interest rate swap options. So it is a great environment in that sense. There's been a lot of opportunity both up and down to lock in lower funding costs over time. Jason StewartDirector - Mortgage Finance at Janney Montgomery Scott00:45:13Okay, got it. Thanks for taking the questions. Appreciate it. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:45:17You bet. Operator00:45:19Thank you. That does conclude our question and answer session. I would now like to turn the floor back over to Smriti Popono for closing comments. Smriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEO at Dynex Capital00:45:27Great. Thank you everyone for your attention today and we look forward to updating you on our call next week, next month, next quarter. I beg your pardon. Operator00:45:38Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for your participation. This does conclude today's teleconference. You may now disconnect your lines. Have a wonderful day.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesAlison GriffinVP, IRSmriti PopenoePresident & Co-CEORobert ColliganCFO & COOT.J. ConnellyChief Investment OfficerByron BostonChairman and Co-CEOAnalystsBose GeorgeManaging Director at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW)Jason WeaverManaging Director - Equity Research at Jones TradingDouglas HarterEquity Research Analyst at UBS GroupTrevor CranstonDirector, Mortgage Finance Equity Research at Citizens JMPEric HagenManaging Director at BTIGJason StewartDirector - Mortgage Finance at Janney Montgomery ScottPowered by