NASDAQ:AGNC AGNC Investment Q2 2025 Earnings Report $9.48 +0.05 (+0.53%) Closing price 08/1/2025 04:00 PM EasternExtended Trading$9.46 -0.02 (-0.16%) As of 08/1/2025 08:00 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. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast AGNC Investment EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.38Consensus EPS $0.42Beat/MissMissed by -$0.04One Year Ago EPS$0.53AGNC Investment Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$830.00 millionExpected Revenue$447.37 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$382.63 millionYoY Revenue GrowthN/AAGNC Investment Announcement DetailsQuarterQ2 2025Date7/21/2025TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateTuesday, July 22, 2025Conference Call Time8:30AM ETUpcoming EarningsAGNC Investment's Q3 2025 earnings is scheduled for Monday, October 20, 2025, with a conference call scheduled on Tuesday, October 21, 2025 at 8:30 AM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by AGNC Investment Q2 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrJuly 22, 2025 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Negative Sentiment: Elevated governmental policy risk and investor sentiment turned sharply negative in April, causing agency MBS underperformance and a negative 1% economic return for Q2. Positive Sentiment: AGNC entered Q2 with a strong liquidity position—65% of tangible equity held in cash and unencumbered agency MBS—allowing it to navigate volatility without selling assets. Positive Sentiment: During the quarter, AGNC raised nearly $800 million through its ATM program at a premium to book value and is opportunistically deploying the proceeds into higher-coupon specified pools. Positive Sentiment: Key policymakers reaffirmed the implicit government guarantee for agency MBS and committed to a “do no harm” approach in GSE reform, bolstering credit quality and investor confidence. Positive Sentiment: Outlook remains encouraging as manageable MBS supply, anticipated bank and foreign demand growth, stabilizing spreads and supportive regulatory reforms create a favorable investment environment. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallAGNC Investment Q2 202500:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipantsPresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good morning, and welcome to the AGNC Investment Corp. Second Quarter twenty twenty five Shareholder Call. All participants will be in listen only mode. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. Please note this event is being recorded. Operator00:00:31I would now like to turn the conference over to Katie Turlington in Investor Relations. Please go ahead. Katherine TurlingtonIR Analyst at AGNC Investment00:00:38Thank you all for joining AGNC Investment Corp. Second Quarter twenty twenty five Earnings Call. Before we begin, I'd like to review the safe harbor statement. This conference call and corresponding slide presentation contains statements that, to the extent they are not recitations of historical fact, constitute forward looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. All such forward looking statements are intended to be subject to the safe harbor protection provided by the Reform Act. Katherine TurlingtonIR Analyst at AGNC Investment00:01:11Actual outcomes and results could differ materially from those forecasts due to the impact of many factors beyond the control of AGNC. All forward looking statements included in this presentation are made only as of the date of this presentation and are subject to change without notice. Certain factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those contained in the forward looking statements are included in AGNC's periodic reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Copies are available on the SEC's website at sec.gov. We disclaim any obligation to update our forward looking statements unless required by law. Katherine TurlingtonIR Analyst at AGNC Investment00:01:49Participants on the call include Peter Federico, President, Chief Executive Officer and Chief Investment Officer Bernie Bell, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer and Sean Reed, Executive Vice President, Strategy and Corporate Development. With that, I'll turn the call over to Peter Federico. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:02:08Good morning, and thank you all for joining our second quarter earnings call. Following the administration's tariff announcement in early April, elevated governmental policy risk caused investor sentiment to turn sharply negative and financial markets to reassess the macroeconomic and monetary policy outlook. After a sharp repricing in April, most markets retraced their early period losses and ended the quarter at better valuation levels. The performance of agency mortgage backed securities relative to benchmark interest rates, however, was notably weaker quarter over quarter. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:02:51As a result of this underperformance, AGNC's economic return for the second quarter was negative 1%. During the April, when the financial market stress was most pronounced, the yield on the ten year treasury fluctuated by more than 100 basis points and the S and P 500 stock index declined by 12%. This volatility and macroeconomic uncertainty adversely impacted agency mortgage backed securities with spreads to treasury and swap rates widening meaningfully. A primary focus of AGNC's risk management framework is maintaining sufficient liquidity to withstand episodes of significant financial market stress. One important measure of this capacity is the percentage of equity that we hold in unencumbered cash and agency mortgage backed securities, which are available to meet margin calls in the normal course of business. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:03:58This focus enabled us to begin the second quarter with a strong liquidity position and to navigate the financial market volatility without issue and importantly without selling assets. Moreover, we were able to take advantage of the wider MBS spread environment by raising accretive capital during the quarter and opportunistically deploying a portion of that capital in attractively priced assets. Over the last two months of the quarter, most financial markets retraced the April losses and in some cases set new record highs. For example, the S and P five hundred Index rallied 25% from the April low and ended the quarter about 10% higher. Investment grade and high yield debt also performed well with spreads tightening ten and fifty basis points respectively. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:05:00The one notable performance exception was agency mortgage backed securities as the current coupon spread to a blend of treasury and swap benchmarks ended the quarter seven and fourteen basis points wider respectively. Although the Fed and Treasury have indicated that beneficial regulatory reforms are forthcoming, bank demand for MBS still appears to be constrained. Similarly, foreign investor demand may be hindered by US dollar weakness and geopolitical risk. Looking ahead, we expect banks and foreign demand for Agency MBS to grow. In addition, as we enter the third quarter, the seasonal supply pattern for MBS issuance should improve. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:05:55We expect the net supply of new MBS will be about $200,000,000,000 this year, the low end of most forecast. Since quarter end, MBS spreads have tightened slightly and are showing signs of stabilization. As a levered and hedged investor in agency mortgage backed securities, AGNC's return profile is most favorable in environments in which mortgage spreads are wide and stable. Our favorable outlook for Agency MBS was further improved in the second quarter by the very positive message from key decision makers related to the potential recapitalization and release from conservatorship of the GSEs. The White House, the Treasury Department, and FHFA affirmed the government's commitment to maintaining the implicit guarantee for agency MBS and also indicated that they are taking a do no harm approach to GSE reform. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:07:04Specifically, president Trump made an unprecedented statement in late May regarding the GSEs and the ongoing role of the government in the housing finance system. He said, our great mortgage agencies, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, provide a vital service to our nation helping hardworking Americans reach the American dream of home ownership. I am working on taking these amazing companies public, but I want to be clear. The US government will keep its implicit guarantees with the word guarantees emphasized in all capital letters. Treasury secretary Besson also made several important statements regarding the GSEs during the quarter. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:07:55The one that stood out the most to us was when he said, the one requirement of this privatization is that they are privatized in such a way that mortgage spreads do not widen. And in fact, is there a way that we can make the spread between the risk free rate and mortgages tighten as Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae are privatized? Finally, director Pulte weighed in with similar positive statements saying, our number one thing is to do no harm and keep the implicit guarantees intact. We cannot have any disruption to the mortgage market. There cannot be any upward pressure on the mortgage rate. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:08:49And I am very confident that the mortgage market will be safer and sounder as a result of any option that the president takes. These statements individually and collectively clarify the administration's approach and more importantly, should provide investors greater confidence that the credit quality of the $8,000,000,000,000 of outstanding agency mortgage backed securities, as it is understood to be today, will not be impaired by actions associated with privatization. In fact, given the explicit statement of credit support made by the president of The United States that the implicit guarantee of agency MBS will be preserved, investors could reasonably conclude that the credit quality of the outstanding stock of agency mortgage backed securities has never been stronger. These statements also make it clear that maintaining stability in the mortgage market and lowering mortgage costs are two important guiding principles of GSE's reform. This is a very positive development that should lead to tighter mortgage spreads over time. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:10:16With that, I'll now turn the call over to our chief financial officer, Bernie Bell, to discuss our financial results in greater detail. Bernice BellEVP & CFO at AGNC Investment00:10:26Thank you, Peter. For the second quarter, AGNC reported a comprehensive loss of $0.13 per common share. Our economic return on tangible common equity was negative 1% consisting of $0.36 of dividends declared per common share and a $0.44 decline in tangible net book value per share as mortgage spreads ended the quarter moderately wider. As of late last week, our tangible net book value per common share was up about 1% for July after deducting our monthly dividend accrual. Quarter end leverage increased slightly to 7.6x tangible equity compared to 7.5x at the end of Q1. Bernice BellEVP & CFO at AGNC Investment00:11:08Average leverage for the quarter rose to 7.5x from 7.3x in prior quarter. As of quarter end, our liquidity position totaled $6,400,000,000 in cash and unencumbered agency MBS, representing 65% of tangible equity, up from 63% as of the prior quarter. As Peter noted, we were able to navigate the substantial financial market volatility in April with our portfolio intact as a result of our risk management positioning and ample liquidity entering that period. Additionally, during the quarter, we opportunistically raised just under $800,000,000 of common equity through our At the Market Offering Program at a significant premium to tangible net book value. As of quarter end, we had deployed slightly less than half of the proceeds and we have continued to deploy the remaining capital post quarter end. Bernice BellEVP & CFO at AGNC Investment00:12:06In utilizing the ATM, we attempt to maximize both the accretion benefit associated with the stock issuance premium and the investment returns on acquired assets. However, the optimal timing for stock issuances and capital deployment may not fully align. As a result, our investment of the new capital may lag the issuance as it did this quarter as we evaluate market conditions and wait for favorable entry points. Net spread and dollar roll income declined $06 to $0.38 per common share for the quarter, primarily due to the timing of deployment of the new capital raised over the quarter with moderately higher swap costs also contributing to the decline. Our net interest rate spread decreased 11 basis points to two zero one basis points for the quarter, largely due to higher swap costs. Bernice BellEVP & CFO at AGNC Investment00:13:00Our treasury based hedges contributed additional net spread income of approximately $01 per share for the quarter, which is not reflected in our reported net spread and dollar roll income. Lastly, the average projected life CPR of our portfolio declined to 7.8% at quarter end from 8.3% as of Q1, consistent with higher mortgage rates. Actual CPRs averaged 8.7% for the quarter, up from 7% in the prior quarter. And with that, I'll now turn the call back over to Peter for his concluding remarks. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:13:37Thank you, Bernie. I'll provide a brief review of our portfolio before taking your questions. Trade, fiscal and monetary policy uncertainty caused agency MBS spreads to widen across the coupon stack with higher coupon MBS performing slightly better than lower coupon MBS. MBS performance also varied considerably by hedge type and maturity as the yield curve steepened significantly during the quarter and swap spreads tightened five ten basis points. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:14:15As a result, MBS hedged with longer dated treasury based hedges performed materially better than MBS hedged with short and intermediate term swap based hedges. Our asset portfolio totaled $82,000,000,000 at quarter end, up about $3,500,000,000 from the prior quarter. The mortgages that we added were largely higher coupon specified pools with favorable prepayment characteristics. As a result, the percentage of our assets with some form of positive prepayment attribute increased to 81%. Our aggregate TBA position remained relatively stable at about 8,000,000,000 consistent with our preference for specified pools in the current environment. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:15:09With both our pool and TBA activity concentrated in higher coupons, the weighted average coupon of our asset portfolio increased to 5.13% during the quarter. The notional balance of our hedge portfolio increased to $65,500,000,000 at quarter end. In duration dollar terms, our hedge portfolio consisted of 46% treasury based hedges and 54% swap based hedges. In summary, despite the second quarter volatility and elevated geopolitical and government policy risk that still remains, we continue to have a very positive outlook for agency mortgage backed securities. In fact, we believe the outlook actually improved in the second quarter due to four factors. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:16:05First, MBS supply appears to be manageable as seasonality factors turn more favorable and the mortgage rate remains high. Second, the demand for MBS appears poised to grow as a result of anticipated regulatory changes and relative value attractiveness. Third, agency spreads appear to be stabilizing at historically cheap levels. And lastly, key policymakers appear to be taking a cautious do no harm approach to GSE reform while reaffirming the government's ongoing role in the housing finance system. Collectively, we believe these positive developments create a very favorable investment outlook for agency mortgage backed securities as a fixed income asset class. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:17:02With that, we'll now open the call up to your questions. Operator00:17:07We will now begin the question and answer session. The first question comes from Doug Harter with UBS. Douglas HarterEquity Research Analyst at UBS Group00:17:35Just kind of digging into the last comments you made about the attractive environment. As you look at that environment and you look to continue to take advantage of that, do you think that, that comes in the form of looking to raise additional capital? Or is increasing leverage from kind of this area where you've been for the past couple of quarters a consideration as well? Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:18:11Sure. Well, appreciate that question. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:18:13And as you mentioned, our outlook really is favorable as we sort of start the second half of the year given some of the developments of the second quarter, particularly related to the GSEs. I think it sets up a strong backdrop for agency mortgage backed securities. But what we're seeing now is really some stabilization. And I do expect spreads to move sort of gradually tighter, but it doesn't seem to be a big catalyst for them to move sharply lower over the near term. And I say that because that's important. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:18:45As Bernie mentioned, we haven't we've sort of taken a a patient measured approach to the deployment of capital that we raised in the second quarter. She mentioned that we deployed a little less than half of that. So from that perspective, we still have capacity to deploy those proceeds at what are still very attractive levels today. Agency mortgage backed securities current coupon to a blend of swap rates is at about 200 basis points. That's about the upper end of the range over the last four years. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:19:16And then, of course, to the extent that we have capacity at some point during the quarter to raise accretive capital and deploy those proceeds, we would certainly look to do that as well as a way of generating incremental value for our shareholders. But we can we feel like we're in a good position now to deploy capital at a at a sort of a patient measured pace. And I think these opportunities are gonna be with us for a little while, but we could certainly also have the capacity to operate with slightly higher leverage. Bernie mentioned that our unencumbered cash position at the end of the quarter was at $6,400,000,000 or 65%. That's 2% higher actually than it was at the end of the first quarter. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:20:00So despite all the volatility, despite growing our portfolio by $3,500,000,000 we still have actually more unencumbered cash as a percentage of our equity at the end of the second quarter. So we're in a good position, Doug, essentially to do everything that you just described. We'll let the market dictate the pace of that and then the levers that we pull as we see mortgage spreads develop. And we see the backdrop of some of this still ongoing political uncertainty get resolved, which hopefully will get resolved over the next couple weeks with respect to government policy and tariffs. And then, of course, we have a little bit of uncertainty still ongoing with monetary policy, but those should be resolved really over the next month or two. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:20:46So we have a lot of capacity, a lot of flexibility to be opportunistic in this environment. Douglas HarterEquity Research Analyst at UBS Group00:20:52Great. Thank you. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:20:54Thank you. Operator00:20:55The next question comes from Crispin Love with Piper Sandler. Please go ahead. Crispin LoveDirector at Piper Sandler Companies00:21:02Hi, Chris. Thanks. Good morning. Peter, can you speak to your views on the core earnings trajectory and what that means for the dividend level? Core returns are high, spreads are pretty wide, swaps continue to roll off. Crispin LoveDirector at Piper Sandler Companies00:21:14But curious what you view to be the run rate for earnings and core returns over that near to intermediate term. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:21:22Yes. We've talked about our net spread in dollar roll income for lot of quarters now in terms of it coming down to be more aligned with the economics of our portfolio as we see it. And, obviously, there's a lot of there's a lot of considerations when you're looking at net spread and dollar roll income in terms of the way accounting works for asset yields and for hedge costs, And it doesn't reflect necessarily the long term ongoing economic earnings power of your portfolio. It's a current period earnings measure. So you have to look at it in that context. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:21:58But that said, it has come down more in line with the economics of our portfolio today, and I'll share with you a couple points. One, if you look at that 38¢, that 38¢ in terms of a return on equity is I think in the 19 and a half type range. I don't know exactly what that number, but something in the eight nineteen, nineteen and a half percent range. I point that out because if you look at where mortgage valuations are today, that ref the number I just talked about with current coupon to a blend of treasury rates and the current coupon to a blend of swap rates. Current coupon to treasury rates right now at about a 160 basis points, a blend of rates across the curve from three years to ten years, and 200 basis points to swap. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:22:43So you're looking at about a 180 basis point return spread in the current environment. Leverage the way we leverage our portfolio, that translates again to about a 19 or so percent ROE for marginal investments. So I would say that the the environment that we're in right now, given where spreads are, I would call it in the high teens, you know, somewhere between 18 to 20% returns that aligns with our net spread in dollar roll income. But there's gonna be period to period volatility in that number. Bernie mentioned it came down this last quarter because of the slow pace of deployment primarily of the proceeds of the capital that we raised. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:23:27And obviously, as we deploy that, that'll sort of eliminate that drag that we saw in the second quarter. But also, there will be a continued drag from our swap hedges rolling off. We had about $5,000,000,000 roll off in the second quarter. We replaced 2,300,000,000 of those. So over time, our swap cost will go up. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:23:50I expect our repo cost to come down over time, particularly as the Fed eventually gets back into easing. And I expect our asset yields to gradually rise. They're still below market. So there's a bunch of different factors, but I would say our net spread and dollar roll income should stay generally in the kind of range that we're seeing, maybe high mid to high thirties to low to mid forties cents range. Gave you a lot there. I hope that answers your question. Crispin LoveDirector at Piper Sandler Companies00:24:20Absolutely. No. That was very helpful, Peter. And then just following up on Doug's issuance question and comments you've made about deployment. You raised accretive capital, deployed about 50% of that, in the second quarter. Crispin LoveDirector at Piper Sandler Companies00:24:33I believe that was the comment or it might be 50% to date. But can you just share where you stand today? How much more have you deployed And then just where are the best opportunities, coupons, investments, etcetera? And then just given the outsized issuance in the second quarter, would you expect, issuance in the third to come down versus historical levels? Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:24:55Say that last part again, the issuance? Crispin LoveDirector at Piper Sandler Companies00:24:59Yeah. Just given the issuance that you did in the second quarter, more elevated with and just with what you have to still deploy, would you expect lower issuance compared to historical levels? Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:25:10Yeah. I'll start with that one first, then we'll we'll we'll go back. You you gave me a lot there. I I again, it's gonna be opportunistic, and I think we're in a good position to be patient with respect to our raising of capital. We really like the opportunity in the second quarter, particularly because there was so much volatility and we were able to raise it accretively. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:25:31It gave us a lot of additional liquidity, if you will, to withstand further disruptions should they have occurred and then also allowed us to deploy that those proceeds. So I wouldn't I wouldn't say that the second quarter is indicative of future quarters. We'll we'll have to just take those as as they come. Tell me the repeat the first part of Crispin LoveDirector at Piper Sandler Companies00:25:53your question for me. Yes. So you talked about deploying 50% of the capital. And just the timing of that, was that in the second quarter or to date? And I'm just curious where you are right now. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:26:05Bernie was in the second quarter, but she did mention that have continued to deploy. We purchased about a billion dollars worth of mortgages earlier earlier this month. So we still we still like the market. We are still deploying capital at a very sort of disciplined measured measured pace. And in terms of where we like, as I mentioned, we continue to really favor the sort of upper coupons, particularly in specified pools with, you know, higher coupons, call it, in the five and five to 6% range, specified pools with some form of favorable prepayment characteristic. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:26:44We like the yield profile there, and we like the prepayment protection we can buy with certain characteristics. Crispin LoveDirector at Piper Sandler Companies00:26:50Great. Thank you, Peter. I know there was a lot there. Appreciate you taking my questions. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:26:53Yep. Yes. Appreciate it. Operator00:26:55The next question comes from Trevor Cranston with Citizens JMP. Please go ahead. Trevor CranstonMD - Mortgage Finance Equity Research at JMP Securities LLC00:27:03Hey, thanks. Good morning, Peter. Another question on the capital raising. You know, obviously, the last several quarters, you guys have been able to do a decent amount at pretty accretive levels. And, obviously, there's a lot of benefits to being able to to, you know, issue so accretively. Trevor CranstonMD - Mortgage Finance Equity Research at JMP Securities LLC00:27:22But I guess, big picture, can you kinda give us an update on your thoughts as to how you think about kind of the optimal size of the of the company and, you know, particularly if you're continuing to be able to to issue accretively for the foreseeable future? Thanks. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:27:38Yeah. That that's a great question, and it's it's one that we've talked about periodically. I would start by saying, we're not growing for the sake of growing. We're growing because we can raise this capital accretively to the benefit of our existing shareholders and deploy those proceeds in a way that's supportive of our dividend. And to the extent that we can continue to do that, we would certainly look to continue to take advantage of that opportunity. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:28:05And and further, I would say that there are significant benefits of the scale that we operate. So first, if you look at our at our operating cost this last quarter, it was a 111 basis points. So I think we're the lowest operating cost in the industry, but that's certainly very compelling. So that's one point. The other is that I think you're also seeing tremendous liquidity in our stock, which is also really valuable for shareholders. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:28:38We are obviously now concentrated our portfolio in agency or agency like securities. So investors who wanna get this exposure have a way now to buy our stock in a very liquid form. Our market cap our our our common equity is over $8,000,000,000, so we have a lot of liquidity in our stock. It's very easy for investors who want this fixed income exposure in their portfolio to buy our stock in a very liquid way. So that's also very beneficial. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:29:11And then the last point with respect to size from a positive perspective is that clearly as we grow in size and our outstanding market cap, if you will, grows in size, it does make us more accessible for other indexes to add us as as we grow in size. So there's, you know, that sort of virtuous benefit of growing in size and having more liquidity and being added to more indices and so forth. So those are the positives that we look at. On the negative, I would say the that there there are market capacity constraints, if you will, that we're very cognizant of in terms of size. The liquidity in the fixed income market, as I've talked about a lot in the past, is not as good today as it was ten, fifteen years ago, pre great financial crisis. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:30:04So we are very cognizant of the size of our asset portfolio, the ability to transact both in the hedge market and in the asset market, And those are considerations on the other side of that equation. So we're trying to find that perfect efficient frontier, if you will, between all of those various points. But there's a lot of benefits to and I think investors now are seeing it in size and scale and liquidity, but we're also cognizant that there's a limit to how big we will be. Trevor CranstonMD - Mortgage Finance Equity Research at JMP Securities LLC00:30:33Yes. Okay. That's helpful. Thanks, Peter. Operator00:30:38The next question comes from Bose George with KBW. Go ahead. Bose GeorgeManaging Director at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW)00:30:43Yes. Good morning. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:30:45Good morning. Bose GeorgeManaging Director at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW)00:30:45First, just given the level of swap spreads, how do you see the appropriate balance between swap hedges and treasury futures? And then when you give the ROE number, that 19 plus, is that kind of reflective mix that you guys currently have in the portfolio? Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:31:01It does. When I did that calculation on the ROE, I came to a 180 basis points because I used the fifty fifty blend. And that's probably the right blend for us, we think, long term. Meaning that there's a lot of diversification benefits that we like about having sort of an equal mix of treasuries and swaps. But that said, we are a little overweighted swaps still on aggregate. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:31:28And if you look at the way we hedged our purchases in the second quarter, about two thirds of the hedges were in swap based hedges. So we're a little little more overweight. As we go forward in the current environment, I would say at the margin, we would probably favor a little bit higher percent of swaps than the long term fifty fifty average because I do expect stability in swap spreads to sort of develop over time, and I do expect some downward pressure or I should say upward pressure, meaning swap spreads should widen, which would be beneficial to us as the supplemental leverage ratio reform actually takes place likely by the fourth quarter, but maybe even in the third quarter. And when you really look at what happened in the swap market in the second quarter, that was really one of the sort of the most important points about mortgage performance. I mean, the move we saw in swap spreads with longer term swap spreads moving almost 10 basis points narrower was really dramatic, and it's indicative of sort of the balance sheet constraints that still exist in the market today, swaps versus treasuries. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:32:38We do expect that balance sheet pressure to ease as bank regulation is implemented, and particularly, the supplemental leverage ratio is changed. So over time, I think we'll we'll benefit from having this this overweight right now in swaps. But fifty fifty is probably the right long term mix going forward. Bose GeorgeManaging Director at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW)00:33:00Okay. Great. Thanks. And then in terms of your CPR, so it looks like the lifetime CPR declined. Does that just reflect the, you know, the market expectation on rates? Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:33:12Exactly right. And particularly, you look at what happened in the second quarter with respect to the yield curve steepening. There was when you look at what happened to 10, ten year was almost unchanged over the quarter. I mean, I think it was up two or three basis points. We had a big rally, 17 basis point rally in two years. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:33:31But the back end of the yield curve was really the story and that was a particularly sort of negative event for mortgage portfolio. I tried to point that out in my prepared remarks because the twenty and thirty year parts of the curve moved higher. The thirty year moved higher by 21 basis points. And mortgages do have key rate duration out there and the propagation of mortgages is effect mortgage rate, propagation of mortgage rate is affected by that thirty year move. So in sense, forward mortgage rates were pushed higher in the second quarter by that movement in the twenty and thirty year part of the curve. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:34:09And so that that's what led to the the lifetime CPR change. So that's something to watch because most portfolios, ourselves included, don't typically hedge the very long cash flows in a mortgage. We hedge really, as you well know, predominantly in the intermediate part of the curve, maybe out to about fifteen years. The back end is so idiosyncratic. It's and and it's difficult to hedge from a mortgage perspective. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:34:37So most of our hedging is concentrated in the ten year part of the curve to cover that long duration. So to the extent that the tens, thirties curve moves significantly, that could be a driver of mortgage performance. Bose GeorgeManaging Director at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW)00:34:51Okay. Helpful. Thanks, Peter. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:34:53Sure. Operator00:34:57The next question comes from Jason Weaver with Jones Trading. Please go ahead. Jason WeaverMD - Head Specialty Finance & Real Estate Research at Jones Trading00:35:03Hey. Good morning, everyone. Thanks for taking my question. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:35:06Yeah. Jason WeaverMD - Head Specialty Finance & Real Estate Research at Jones Trading00:35:07Hey, Peter. Despite the relative value implications we mentioned, I I know we've been talking about the level of MBS spreads for quite a while now just given the the wideness. Would you say this that would it be fair to say that spreads have entered just a a bigger secular trend over time just given that the level of vol has come down, but we're still here at, you know, 200 over on swaps? Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:35:29Yeah. Yes and no. Clearly, we have, I believe, established a new trading range. And, certainly, over when you look back at mortgage spreads, I looked over the last four years. So taking out the actual COVID event, but since COVID, if you will, we are at the sort of high end of the range. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:35:54And we we we sort of broke out barely in this last episode of that range, and we got the 220 basis points on the as a closing mark versus swaps. But we are that range is still intact. So I would I would say that range for mortgages versus swaps is probably in the 160 to 100 to 200 basis point range. And I would say that range versus treasuries is in the, call it, 160 to maybe 100 and a 120 basis point range. I think that's the new norm. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:36:32And I think in the current environment, we're gonna stay maybe in the upper half of that range because of the geopolitical and the and the fiscal policy and the monetary policy uncertainty. But I don't see a lot of catalyst for us breaking out of that range. And that I think is the important development over the second quarter. Clearly, there was significant tariff related market stress that we got through. That's important. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:37:00But also the one other big catalyst that could have sort of redefined the trading range, Jason, was GSE reform because there was so much uncertainty as to how that may play out. I think the key policymakers did a really, really good job of explaining their thought process and their approach and what was meaningful to them in terms of preserving the very special attributes that the market has today. And I think that takes some of that upward spread pressure out of the equation. So I think I think you're right. We're in a new range, but I think we're at the top of the range, and I don't expect it to continue up. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:37:42I expect it to stay in this range and and move lower. Jason WeaverMD - Head Specialty Finance & Real Estate Research at Jones Trading00:37:46Got it. That's that's helpful. And then, just another one on the capital deployment progress, in two Q and and even currently. How are you looking at relative value within the specified pool product, just among the different sort of, you know, warehouses there? Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:38:04Yeah. Well, I gave you I gave a measure in my prepared remarks that that about 81% of our portfolio has what I call some form of positive prepayment attribute. And in one of our tables, I think at the beginning of our presentation on the on the asset portfolio, we have another called high quality specified pools. It's about 41%, I believe the number was. The point is that we believe there's lots of attributes out there beyond just the typical high quality attributes like low loan balance that, you know, can translate to really good mortgage performance and more stable cash flows. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:38:49They they include characteristics like FICO and LTV and other geographies where taxes are recording or LTV characteristics or house price characteristics, a loan type, whether it's a primary residence or a second or an investor. So we think there's a whole bunch of other characteristics. So that's why we like adding specified pools, particularly the higher coupons, as I mentioned, where there's a significant yield pickup. But also, we know we're taking a more there's more convexity risk there. But by buying some of these characteristics, particularly in the current environment where house prices are sort of stabilizing and maybe moving lower in particular areas, we think there's a lot of value to adding those specified pools or pools with those kind of characteristics. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:39:42The other thing I would say is in the current environment, and we saw this in the second quarter, there is some specialness, some benefit to TBA position in terms of the role implied role financing levels, particularly for certain coupons in Ginnie Mae securities with that make up most of our long position. But there isn't a lot of benefit for conventional TBA positions right now. There's no there's no real funding advantage there. So given that, we prefer to have these higher coupon specified pools rather than a TBA position in the current environment. Jason WeaverMD - Head Specialty Finance & Real Estate Research at Jones Trading00:40:23Got it. That's helpful. Thank you very much. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:40:25Sure. Operator00:40:26The next question comes from Jason Stewart with Janney. Please go ahead. Jason StewartDirector - Mortgage Finance at Janney Montgomery Scott00:40:32Hey, good morning. Thanks. Thanks, Peter. So it appears to us like the curve steepener trade is a pretty crowded trade. And we've talked about hedges, but could you go through a little bit more on the asset side? I think you started in response to Jason's question. You know, in a post steepener trade, you know, how do you position the and is there enough flexibility? How do you position the asset side of the balance sheet in terms of coupons, etcetera, to to optimize returns going forward? Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:40:59Yeah. There's certainly a lot of flexibility. I mean, we we and you see us shifting our coupon position, you know, quite significantly quarter over quarter. There's lots of liquidity and capacity to do that. Shifting between TBAs and specified pools, the characteristics that we talked about change our our profile. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:41:21So there's lots of ways on the asset side for us to do that, Particularly, if we have a TBA position, we could do that. We can move from TBAs to pools and different coupons. So as the yield curve changes, we can certainly change the asset side of our equation. And as you point out, it's really it's really gonna be driven by hedge location. That's really critical, and we have a lot of capacity to do that. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:41:44But most of our hedges are concentrated in the, call it, seven to twelve year range. I think about 83% of our hedge duration is greater than seven years. And what that tells you is that when you think about our asset key rate duration profile and then you overlay our hedge profile, given that concentration, one could conclude that we have positioned our aggregate portfolio to benefit when the yield curve steepens two years to ten years. And so we have benefit and will continue to benefit if two year rates come down and ten year rates either stay the same or go higher, our aggregate portfolio, given our asset composition and our hedge composition, would benefit in that scenario. And we do expect that steepening that curve steepening to continue, particularly in light of all of this pressure that we're seeing with respect to the Fed. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:42:44The two year to ten year part of the curve right now today, I think, is at about 52 basis points. And that's about 50 or 60 basis points flatter than the twenty five year average. So I expect the two year to ten year part of the curve to steepen over time and I expect our portfolio to benefit from that. Jason StewartDirector - Mortgage Finance at Janney Montgomery Scott00:43:04Got it. Okay. So perhaps too early to think about post steepening trades. And then I apologize if I missed this in the comments or the questions. Did you give an updated estimate for book value quarter to date in 3Q? Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:43:17Yes. Bernie mentioned at the end of as the end of last week, it was up about 1%. Jason StewartDirector - Mortgage Finance at Janney Montgomery Scott00:43:22Nothing since then. End of last oh, yeah. Okay. Got it. Okay. Thank you. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:43:27Sure. Operator00:43:29The next question comes from Eric Hagen with BTIG. Please go ahead. Eric HagenManaging Director at BTIG00:43:33Hey, thanks. Good morning, guys. I hope you're well. Just one for me. In the repo market, I mean, you see the government budget deficit being a risk to the repo market? Eric HagenManaging Director at BTIG00:43:44Assuming it means the government's going be issuing a bunch of longer term debt, how do you think that might trickle down to driving spreads for wholesale funding and other repo venues that you guys are active in? And then, I mean, maybe most importantly, if we assume the Fed has the tools to control repo volatility, all else equal, I mean, that support a higher range for your leverage versus where you've operated historically? Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:44:07Yeah. There's a lot there. So you might have to reask some of those questions. But first, I would say that I don't expect the treasury issuance or the deficit, certainly over the near term, to have any impact on the repo market. And the treasury secretary has been really clear, and I think it's been really beneficial to the market for them to really give stability in the refunding announcement. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:44:35And it's not gonna change. I think they continue to stay for several quarters. But I do expect the composition of their issuance to change. I do expect them to issue more shorter term and less long term. They're very focused on the ten year part of the curve in terms of that rate. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:44:51And so there could be a little bit of crowding out of those bills get issued and some of that money comes out of the repo market. But I don't expect that to have any material really impact on pricing. There's plenty of liquidity in the markets. There's $7,000,000,000,000 of money in money market funds. There's plenty of liquidity there. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:45:10The other thing that I would point out, and this is really important with respect to the Fed, they continue to make really positive changes to the repo market. And I I expect one, I expect quantitative tightening to essentially end relatively soon, although may likely go through the end of the year. But it's clearly a topic of discussion. It was in the minutes last meeting, so I expect it to be ongoing, and I expect them to stop the runoff of their balance sheet. But they also they also made some changes, positive changes to their standing repo facility that may or may not be understood. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:45:50One of is one of them was at at quarter ends, they increased the number of operations. They added an operation in the morning, which is beneficial to the market. But the big change that the Fed is considering that has not yet been implemented is that it's likely that the Fed will, in a sense, join the FICC for transactions on its on the standing repo facility. And if they do that, that would eliminate the balance sheet constraints that currently exist and make that program less effective. So if they join the FICC and they've written about this widely, and I think they are considering it, it takes time, That would really enhance the liquidity associated with the standing repo facility. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:46:38So that would be a really positive development. And I suspect they'll be doing that in conjunction with the changing of their bill issuance. So I don't know if I covered all your questions. You can ask me again. Eric HagenManaging Director at BTIG00:46:50Yeah. That was really helpful. I mean, the second half of the question was just whether it the whole dynamic allows you guys to take more leverage or how you how you feel about your leverage just given the support the Fed has for the repo market in general? Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:47:04It's certainly a consideration that doesn't make us feel like we gotta take our leverage lower. I'll put it that way. Yeah. I I think that's what's unique about our asset class. It is well, I think it's the the only fixed income asset class that lends itself to a levered investment strategy because of the liquidity and pricing transparency of of our security. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:47:27But most importantly, as you point out, where the repo market is today versus where it was pre 2019 is so dramatically different. This asset class from a funding perspective, Clearly, the the treasury and the Fed in particular is focused every day on the liquidity in the repo market for treasury securities and for mortgage backed securities. And when they talk about balance sheet and ending their quantitative tightening, they are looking at that market every single day to determine whether or not reserves have hit the ample level or not. And so they they are keenly aware of any repo pressure, and they will adjust as soon as they see that repo pressure, which makes us very confident in our funding. In addition, we, of course, have our captive broker dealer and almost 30 individual counterparties. So we love that diversification as well. Eric HagenManaging Director at BTIG00:48:24Great perspective. I appreciate that. Actually, a follow-up here. I mean, some changes to the credit scoring at the GSEs, FICO, VantageScore. Sure you guys are up on that. Eric HagenManaging Director at BTIG00:48:34Do you see that driving or changing the prepayment environment in any way? Like, does it support lower mortgage rates for some borrowers who may have not have had access under the prior scoring regime? Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:48:44Yeah. It's funny. From our perspective, this seems to be getting more attention than it's really worth from an investor perspective. We obviously, this has been discussed. The Vantage alternative, the name that's the name of the alternative, has been discussed, I think, for ten plus years. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:49:04From our perspective, yes, it will likely lead to borrowers having the capacity for a better higher credit score, which ultimately could increase their capacity and lead to higher, slightly higher prepayments, if you will. But from our perspective, as an investor perspective, it's not that not that significant and not that complicated. What we would need to know as an investor is, one, we not we need to know the source of the data. The GSEs given us FICO or Vantage. And then two, we need to have sufficient time to implement so that we can then quantify the impact. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:49:44And we'll all adjust it for we'll all adjust for the, you know, difference in speeds once we have sufficient data between the two data data sources. Eric HagenManaging Director at BTIG00:49:58Very helpful from you guys. Thank you. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:50:01It's also worth pointing out on on that one. You know, the the VantageScore, I think, has some benefit over FICO in that it includes, rent payment history, whereas FICO did not. So I think it could provide investors sort of a more comprehensive picture on credit. Operator00:50:20The next question comes from Rick Shane with JPMorgan. Please go ahead. Richard ShaneAnalyst at JP Morgan00:50:26Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my questions this morning. Look, the bear case in the space is always higher rates. But as you know well, the existential risk is actually sharply lower rates and rapid repayments. The mortgage industry is evolving. Richard ShaneAnalyst at JP Morgan00:50:46Strategically, it's evolving. From a technology perspective, it's evolving. You have borrowers. I think there's a evolving cohort of borrowers with a lot of pent up demand for refi. Yes. Richard ShaneAnalyst at JP Morgan00:51:01You guys talk about your prepayment protection. Is there a risk that there's been enough of a change in terms of the underlying factors that speeds in a and we saw this in December where speeds picked up very quickly based on a brief movement in rates that the thesis behind the prepayment protection doesn't actually provide as much protection as as you're assuming. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:51:33Sure. There's a risk of that. And again, there's a lot there. So I think what you're describing is in a sense the market is becoming much more efficient. Technology, all the access, all those things are happening. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:51:46In a sense, it's making the prepayment curve, if you will, more steep. The s curve is is more steep today than it was five plus years ago, pre COVID certainly. And you're right. We have seen episodes where the mortgage rate has dropped very briefly, you know, into windows down around 6%, and we had little bits of spike in prepayments. But it's also important to think about where the market is in aggregate. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:52:12Today, with the mortgage rate at six seventy five, there's only about 5% of the universe that has a 50 basis point incentive. And from our portfolio's perspective, as I mentioned, our average weighted average coupon is five point, call it, 13%. That's 60 basis points out of the money still. So you need a significant move in the mortgage rate to get a significant amount of prepayments. Another point here, the mortgage rate would have to drop from six seventy five down to 5%. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:52:54So you're talking about a dramatic movement in interest rates, in order for the market to have I think at that point, we would have about 27 of the universe would be refinanceable. So it sort of bookends the issue for you. You're right. As we move down in mortgage rate and if we get down to six, there is a a population of pools, particularly the post 2022 pools, will prepay the high you know, the seven seven those will will prepay very fast. But in order for you to have a really significant sort of market wide refinance event, you're looking at a dramatically lower mortgage rate, which is hard to envision. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:53:43It's not impossible, but hard to envision in the context of all the other questions we had this morning where you're talking about deficit spending and and pressure on interest rates. And if the Fed were to ease and the chairman Powell were to change and the yield curve steepened, all those things should keep the mortgage rate maybe higher than it otherwise would be. But you're right. There there's certainly that risk. And, you know, and you're also right that there are characteristics that we believe are gonna give us protection that may not give us protection. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:54:18But, you know, you'll have to wait and see. And you also have to wait and see what happens with the GSEs. This is the other important point over time. The GSE sort of footprint, if you will, may may change. They may change their their their mortgage the mortgage capacity to various borrowers. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:54:46They may they may they may curtail some of the some of the business that they can do today may get curtailed over time as they shift toward more toward a sort of a profitable profitability, you know, objective. And so that may limit borrowers' capacity to refinance that have a capacity today. Those loans may not be GSE eligible in a future state. We don't know that. But we do know that there is some attention toward shrinking that capacity. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:55:14And also, it's also also important to point out that house prices seem to be topped topping, certainly slowing nationally. But at the regional level, there are there's real variation. And that, again, is gonna translate into a change in the refinance capacity for borrowers. So there's a lot that you'll have to consider as we go to lower rates. Richard ShaneAnalyst at JP Morgan00:55:39Hey, Peter. Thank you so much for quantifying that. It's it's really helpful. And look, we've both done this long enough. You know it's not the punch you're looking for that hurts you. Richard ShaneAnalyst at JP Morgan00:55:48It's the one that you're not looking that does the damage. Agreed. Appreciate it. Thanks, guys. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:55:55Sure. Operator00:55:57And our last question comes from the line of Harsh Hamnani with Green Street. Harsh HemnaniSenior Analyst at Green Street Advisors, LLC00:56:08Just thinking through one more on leverage. As we think back to maybe early April, leverage sort of drifted up just by virtue of market price changes to, call it, high seven, seven, nine. And then perhaps rebalanced throughout the quarter to and basically where at Q1 levels. How are you thinking about leverage? Right? Harsh HemnaniSenior Analyst at Green Street Advisors, LLC00:56:35Are there certain sort of rebalancing triggers that you're looking at in shock scenarios? Is is it preserving that unencumbered asset that you talked about? And then maybe if we look ahead in the, call it, near to intermediate term, given you have more certainty in spread spread volatility given all the positives in GSE reform, etcetera. Could you would you be more comfortable with letting leverage drift up today than maybe a quarter ago? Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:57:08Yeah. Yeah. Well, a lot there. So first, I would say when you when you refer to rebalancing in the quarter, you're right. The biggest driver of the leverage, obviously, is the change in our book value in the second quarter, and that's gonna put upward pressure on our leverage. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:57:23And what's important though, and I pointed this out in my prepared remarks, and this is key for a levered investment strategy. That's why I mentioned that we were able to navigate the quarter and not having to sell assets. So we rebalanced, if you will, our risk position by raising capital accretively and deploying that at a slow pace. And over time, as conditions change and we become more confident in the macroeconomic outlook, we can have more confidence and deploy all of those proceeds. But importantly, what we didn't have to do is you didn't have to sell assets. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:57:58You didn't have to rebalance the asset side of our balance sheet, if you will, by selling assets when spreads were really wide. In doing that, you crystallize those losses. If you hold all of those assets, then our existing shareholders will get the benefit of the recovery over time whenever that may happen. Now that's really important from a from a risk management perspective and from a levered investment portfolio perspective. That's why I pointed it out in my prepared remarks this time is that making sure that we have capacity to withstand those spread moves gives us the ability to gain back that value by not having to sell assets. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:58:39And you're right. Over time, as the market sort of evolves, we look at today's environment and where we stand today. And what I was trying to communicate is that I'm more confident about the outlook today than I was, you know, than I than I was in April. And that's important because we're at widespread. Don't think spreads while they could certainly widen, I don't think that they will stay wider if they do move wider for some macroeconomic reason. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:59:06And over time, I think they can go lower. And that does inform us about our leverage, and it does give us more confidence. To the extent that we get more and more confident that mortgages are gonna stay in a range or not break out to the upside of the range gives us more and more confidence that we could operate with higher leverage. But all that being said all that being said, if you look at our portfolio today, let's just say at about seven and a half times leverage, we are able to generate really attractive returns that are consistent with our dividend and give us a lot of unencumbered liquidity and risk management capacity. And that's sort of the perfect combination of the two, and we look to optimize those two things. Harsh HemnaniSenior Analyst at Green Street Advisors, LLC00:59:55Got it. Thank you. Operator00:59:57Sure. We have now completed the question and answer session. I'd like to turn the call back over to Peter Federico for concluding remarks. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment01:00:07Again, we appreciate everybody's time and participation on our call today, and we look forward to speaking to you all again at the end of the third quarter. Operator01:00:17Thank you for joining the call. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesKatherine TurlingtonIR AnalystPeter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment OfficerBernice BellEVP & CFOAnalystsDouglas HarterEquity Research Analyst at UBS GroupCrispin LoveDirector at Piper Sandler CompaniesTrevor CranstonMD - Mortgage Finance Equity Research at JMP Securities LLCBose GeorgeManaging Director at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW)Jason WeaverMD - Head Specialty Finance & Real Estate Research at Jones TradingJason StewartDirector - Mortgage Finance at Janney Montgomery ScottEric HagenManaging Director at BTIGRichard ShaneAnalyst at JP MorganHarsh HemnaniSenior Analyst at Green Street Advisors, LLCPowered by Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) AGNC Investment Earnings HeadlinesAGNC: The 2 Preferreds Questions On Everyone's MindsJuly 31 at 11:09 AM | seekingalpha.comDividend Harvesting Portfolio Week 230: $23,000 Allocated, $2,428.39 In Projected DividendsJuly 31 at 9:11 AM | seekingalpha.comThis Crypto Is Set to Explode in JanuaryBillions Flowing Into Crypto (Here’s Where It’s Going!) Institutional money is flooding into crypto... Discover which coins they’re buying at the Crypto Hedge Fund Summit, before prices catch up. | Crypto 101 Media (Ad)AGNC And Interest RatesJuly 28, 2025 | seekingalpha.com5 Revealing Analyst Questions From AGNC Investment’s Q2 Earnings CallJuly 28, 2025 | msn.comIs AGNC Investment Stock a Buy Now?July 27, 2025 | fool.comSee More AGNC Investment Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like AGNC Investment? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on AGNC Investment and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About AGNC InvestmentAGNC Investment (NASDAQ:AGNC), formerly American Capital Agency Corp., is a real estate investment trust. The Company invests in agency residential mortgage-backed securities on a leveraged basis. Its investments consist of residential mortgage pass-through securities and collateralized mortgage obligations (CMOs) for which the principal and interest payments are guaranteed by a government-sponsored enterprise, such as the Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae) and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (Freddie Mac), or by the United States Government agency, such as the Government National Mortgage Association (Ginnie Mae) (collectively, GSEs). Its agency securities include agency residential mortgage-backed securities (Agency RMBS) and to-be-announced forward contracts (TBAs). Its Non-Agency Securities include credit risk transfer securities (CRT), non-agency residential mortgage-backed securities (Non-Agency RMBS) and commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS).View AGNC Investment 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's Earnings: What Comes Next and How to Play ItApple Stock: Big Earnings, Small Move—Time to Buy?Microsoft Blasts Past Earnings—What’s Next for MSFT?Visa Beats Q3 Earnings Expectations, So Why Did the Market Panic?Spotify's Q2 Earnings Plunge: An Opportunity or Ominous Signal?RCL Stock Sinks After Earnings—Is a Buying Opportunity Ahead?Amazon's Pre-Earnings Setup Is Almost Too Clean—Red Flag? 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PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good morning, and welcome to the AGNC Investment Corp. Second Quarter twenty twenty five Shareholder Call. All participants will be in listen only mode. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. Please note this event is being recorded. Operator00:00:31I would now like to turn the conference over to Katie Turlington in Investor Relations. Please go ahead. Katherine TurlingtonIR Analyst at AGNC Investment00:00:38Thank you all for joining AGNC Investment Corp. Second Quarter twenty twenty five Earnings Call. Before we begin, I'd like to review the safe harbor statement. This conference call and corresponding slide presentation contains statements that, to the extent they are not recitations of historical fact, constitute forward looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. All such forward looking statements are intended to be subject to the safe harbor protection provided by the Reform Act. Katherine TurlingtonIR Analyst at AGNC Investment00:01:11Actual outcomes and results could differ materially from those forecasts due to the impact of many factors beyond the control of AGNC. All forward looking statements included in this presentation are made only as of the date of this presentation and are subject to change without notice. Certain factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those contained in the forward looking statements are included in AGNC's periodic reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Copies are available on the SEC's website at sec.gov. We disclaim any obligation to update our forward looking statements unless required by law. Katherine TurlingtonIR Analyst at AGNC Investment00:01:49Participants on the call include Peter Federico, President, Chief Executive Officer and Chief Investment Officer Bernie Bell, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer and Sean Reed, Executive Vice President, Strategy and Corporate Development. With that, I'll turn the call over to Peter Federico. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:02:08Good morning, and thank you all for joining our second quarter earnings call. Following the administration's tariff announcement in early April, elevated governmental policy risk caused investor sentiment to turn sharply negative and financial markets to reassess the macroeconomic and monetary policy outlook. After a sharp repricing in April, most markets retraced their early period losses and ended the quarter at better valuation levels. The performance of agency mortgage backed securities relative to benchmark interest rates, however, was notably weaker quarter over quarter. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:02:51As a result of this underperformance, AGNC's economic return for the second quarter was negative 1%. During the April, when the financial market stress was most pronounced, the yield on the ten year treasury fluctuated by more than 100 basis points and the S and P 500 stock index declined by 12%. This volatility and macroeconomic uncertainty adversely impacted agency mortgage backed securities with spreads to treasury and swap rates widening meaningfully. A primary focus of AGNC's risk management framework is maintaining sufficient liquidity to withstand episodes of significant financial market stress. One important measure of this capacity is the percentage of equity that we hold in unencumbered cash and agency mortgage backed securities, which are available to meet margin calls in the normal course of business. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:03:58This focus enabled us to begin the second quarter with a strong liquidity position and to navigate the financial market volatility without issue and importantly without selling assets. Moreover, we were able to take advantage of the wider MBS spread environment by raising accretive capital during the quarter and opportunistically deploying a portion of that capital in attractively priced assets. Over the last two months of the quarter, most financial markets retraced the April losses and in some cases set new record highs. For example, the S and P five hundred Index rallied 25% from the April low and ended the quarter about 10% higher. Investment grade and high yield debt also performed well with spreads tightening ten and fifty basis points respectively. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:05:00The one notable performance exception was agency mortgage backed securities as the current coupon spread to a blend of treasury and swap benchmarks ended the quarter seven and fourteen basis points wider respectively. Although the Fed and Treasury have indicated that beneficial regulatory reforms are forthcoming, bank demand for MBS still appears to be constrained. Similarly, foreign investor demand may be hindered by US dollar weakness and geopolitical risk. Looking ahead, we expect banks and foreign demand for Agency MBS to grow. In addition, as we enter the third quarter, the seasonal supply pattern for MBS issuance should improve. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:05:55We expect the net supply of new MBS will be about $200,000,000,000 this year, the low end of most forecast. Since quarter end, MBS spreads have tightened slightly and are showing signs of stabilization. As a levered and hedged investor in agency mortgage backed securities, AGNC's return profile is most favorable in environments in which mortgage spreads are wide and stable. Our favorable outlook for Agency MBS was further improved in the second quarter by the very positive message from key decision makers related to the potential recapitalization and release from conservatorship of the GSEs. The White House, the Treasury Department, and FHFA affirmed the government's commitment to maintaining the implicit guarantee for agency MBS and also indicated that they are taking a do no harm approach to GSE reform. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:07:04Specifically, president Trump made an unprecedented statement in late May regarding the GSEs and the ongoing role of the government in the housing finance system. He said, our great mortgage agencies, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, provide a vital service to our nation helping hardworking Americans reach the American dream of home ownership. I am working on taking these amazing companies public, but I want to be clear. The US government will keep its implicit guarantees with the word guarantees emphasized in all capital letters. Treasury secretary Besson also made several important statements regarding the GSEs during the quarter. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:07:55The one that stood out the most to us was when he said, the one requirement of this privatization is that they are privatized in such a way that mortgage spreads do not widen. And in fact, is there a way that we can make the spread between the risk free rate and mortgages tighten as Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae are privatized? Finally, director Pulte weighed in with similar positive statements saying, our number one thing is to do no harm and keep the implicit guarantees intact. We cannot have any disruption to the mortgage market. There cannot be any upward pressure on the mortgage rate. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:08:49And I am very confident that the mortgage market will be safer and sounder as a result of any option that the president takes. These statements individually and collectively clarify the administration's approach and more importantly, should provide investors greater confidence that the credit quality of the $8,000,000,000,000 of outstanding agency mortgage backed securities, as it is understood to be today, will not be impaired by actions associated with privatization. In fact, given the explicit statement of credit support made by the president of The United States that the implicit guarantee of agency MBS will be preserved, investors could reasonably conclude that the credit quality of the outstanding stock of agency mortgage backed securities has never been stronger. These statements also make it clear that maintaining stability in the mortgage market and lowering mortgage costs are two important guiding principles of GSE's reform. This is a very positive development that should lead to tighter mortgage spreads over time. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:10:16With that, I'll now turn the call over to our chief financial officer, Bernie Bell, to discuss our financial results in greater detail. Bernice BellEVP & CFO at AGNC Investment00:10:26Thank you, Peter. For the second quarter, AGNC reported a comprehensive loss of $0.13 per common share. Our economic return on tangible common equity was negative 1% consisting of $0.36 of dividends declared per common share and a $0.44 decline in tangible net book value per share as mortgage spreads ended the quarter moderately wider. As of late last week, our tangible net book value per common share was up about 1% for July after deducting our monthly dividend accrual. Quarter end leverage increased slightly to 7.6x tangible equity compared to 7.5x at the end of Q1. Bernice BellEVP & CFO at AGNC Investment00:11:08Average leverage for the quarter rose to 7.5x from 7.3x in prior quarter. As of quarter end, our liquidity position totaled $6,400,000,000 in cash and unencumbered agency MBS, representing 65% of tangible equity, up from 63% as of the prior quarter. As Peter noted, we were able to navigate the substantial financial market volatility in April with our portfolio intact as a result of our risk management positioning and ample liquidity entering that period. Additionally, during the quarter, we opportunistically raised just under $800,000,000 of common equity through our At the Market Offering Program at a significant premium to tangible net book value. As of quarter end, we had deployed slightly less than half of the proceeds and we have continued to deploy the remaining capital post quarter end. Bernice BellEVP & CFO at AGNC Investment00:12:06In utilizing the ATM, we attempt to maximize both the accretion benefit associated with the stock issuance premium and the investment returns on acquired assets. However, the optimal timing for stock issuances and capital deployment may not fully align. As a result, our investment of the new capital may lag the issuance as it did this quarter as we evaluate market conditions and wait for favorable entry points. Net spread and dollar roll income declined $06 to $0.38 per common share for the quarter, primarily due to the timing of deployment of the new capital raised over the quarter with moderately higher swap costs also contributing to the decline. Our net interest rate spread decreased 11 basis points to two zero one basis points for the quarter, largely due to higher swap costs. Bernice BellEVP & CFO at AGNC Investment00:13:00Our treasury based hedges contributed additional net spread income of approximately $01 per share for the quarter, which is not reflected in our reported net spread and dollar roll income. Lastly, the average projected life CPR of our portfolio declined to 7.8% at quarter end from 8.3% as of Q1, consistent with higher mortgage rates. Actual CPRs averaged 8.7% for the quarter, up from 7% in the prior quarter. And with that, I'll now turn the call back over to Peter for his concluding remarks. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:13:37Thank you, Bernie. I'll provide a brief review of our portfolio before taking your questions. Trade, fiscal and monetary policy uncertainty caused agency MBS spreads to widen across the coupon stack with higher coupon MBS performing slightly better than lower coupon MBS. MBS performance also varied considerably by hedge type and maturity as the yield curve steepened significantly during the quarter and swap spreads tightened five ten basis points. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:14:15As a result, MBS hedged with longer dated treasury based hedges performed materially better than MBS hedged with short and intermediate term swap based hedges. Our asset portfolio totaled $82,000,000,000 at quarter end, up about $3,500,000,000 from the prior quarter. The mortgages that we added were largely higher coupon specified pools with favorable prepayment characteristics. As a result, the percentage of our assets with some form of positive prepayment attribute increased to 81%. Our aggregate TBA position remained relatively stable at about 8,000,000,000 consistent with our preference for specified pools in the current environment. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:15:09With both our pool and TBA activity concentrated in higher coupons, the weighted average coupon of our asset portfolio increased to 5.13% during the quarter. The notional balance of our hedge portfolio increased to $65,500,000,000 at quarter end. In duration dollar terms, our hedge portfolio consisted of 46% treasury based hedges and 54% swap based hedges. In summary, despite the second quarter volatility and elevated geopolitical and government policy risk that still remains, we continue to have a very positive outlook for agency mortgage backed securities. In fact, we believe the outlook actually improved in the second quarter due to four factors. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:16:05First, MBS supply appears to be manageable as seasonality factors turn more favorable and the mortgage rate remains high. Second, the demand for MBS appears poised to grow as a result of anticipated regulatory changes and relative value attractiveness. Third, agency spreads appear to be stabilizing at historically cheap levels. And lastly, key policymakers appear to be taking a cautious do no harm approach to GSE reform while reaffirming the government's ongoing role in the housing finance system. Collectively, we believe these positive developments create a very favorable investment outlook for agency mortgage backed securities as a fixed income asset class. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:17:02With that, we'll now open the call up to your questions. Operator00:17:07We will now begin the question and answer session. The first question comes from Doug Harter with UBS. Douglas HarterEquity Research Analyst at UBS Group00:17:35Just kind of digging into the last comments you made about the attractive environment. As you look at that environment and you look to continue to take advantage of that, do you think that, that comes in the form of looking to raise additional capital? Or is increasing leverage from kind of this area where you've been for the past couple of quarters a consideration as well? Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:18:11Sure. Well, appreciate that question. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:18:13And as you mentioned, our outlook really is favorable as we sort of start the second half of the year given some of the developments of the second quarter, particularly related to the GSEs. I think it sets up a strong backdrop for agency mortgage backed securities. But what we're seeing now is really some stabilization. And I do expect spreads to move sort of gradually tighter, but it doesn't seem to be a big catalyst for them to move sharply lower over the near term. And I say that because that's important. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:18:45As Bernie mentioned, we haven't we've sort of taken a a patient measured approach to the deployment of capital that we raised in the second quarter. She mentioned that we deployed a little less than half of that. So from that perspective, we still have capacity to deploy those proceeds at what are still very attractive levels today. Agency mortgage backed securities current coupon to a blend of swap rates is at about 200 basis points. That's about the upper end of the range over the last four years. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:19:16And then, of course, to the extent that we have capacity at some point during the quarter to raise accretive capital and deploy those proceeds, we would certainly look to do that as well as a way of generating incremental value for our shareholders. But we can we feel like we're in a good position now to deploy capital at a at a sort of a patient measured pace. And I think these opportunities are gonna be with us for a little while, but we could certainly also have the capacity to operate with slightly higher leverage. Bernie mentioned that our unencumbered cash position at the end of the quarter was at $6,400,000,000 or 65%. That's 2% higher actually than it was at the end of the first quarter. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:20:00So despite all the volatility, despite growing our portfolio by $3,500,000,000 we still have actually more unencumbered cash as a percentage of our equity at the end of the second quarter. So we're in a good position, Doug, essentially to do everything that you just described. We'll let the market dictate the pace of that and then the levers that we pull as we see mortgage spreads develop. And we see the backdrop of some of this still ongoing political uncertainty get resolved, which hopefully will get resolved over the next couple weeks with respect to government policy and tariffs. And then, of course, we have a little bit of uncertainty still ongoing with monetary policy, but those should be resolved really over the next month or two. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:20:46So we have a lot of capacity, a lot of flexibility to be opportunistic in this environment. Douglas HarterEquity Research Analyst at UBS Group00:20:52Great. Thank you. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:20:54Thank you. Operator00:20:55The next question comes from Crispin Love with Piper Sandler. Please go ahead. Crispin LoveDirector at Piper Sandler Companies00:21:02Hi, Chris. Thanks. Good morning. Peter, can you speak to your views on the core earnings trajectory and what that means for the dividend level? Core returns are high, spreads are pretty wide, swaps continue to roll off. Crispin LoveDirector at Piper Sandler Companies00:21:14But curious what you view to be the run rate for earnings and core returns over that near to intermediate term. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:21:22Yes. We've talked about our net spread in dollar roll income for lot of quarters now in terms of it coming down to be more aligned with the economics of our portfolio as we see it. And, obviously, there's a lot of there's a lot of considerations when you're looking at net spread and dollar roll income in terms of the way accounting works for asset yields and for hedge costs, And it doesn't reflect necessarily the long term ongoing economic earnings power of your portfolio. It's a current period earnings measure. So you have to look at it in that context. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:21:58But that said, it has come down more in line with the economics of our portfolio today, and I'll share with you a couple points. One, if you look at that 38¢, that 38¢ in terms of a return on equity is I think in the 19 and a half type range. I don't know exactly what that number, but something in the eight nineteen, nineteen and a half percent range. I point that out because if you look at where mortgage valuations are today, that ref the number I just talked about with current coupon to a blend of treasury rates and the current coupon to a blend of swap rates. Current coupon to treasury rates right now at about a 160 basis points, a blend of rates across the curve from three years to ten years, and 200 basis points to swap. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:22:43So you're looking at about a 180 basis point return spread in the current environment. Leverage the way we leverage our portfolio, that translates again to about a 19 or so percent ROE for marginal investments. So I would say that the the environment that we're in right now, given where spreads are, I would call it in the high teens, you know, somewhere between 18 to 20% returns that aligns with our net spread in dollar roll income. But there's gonna be period to period volatility in that number. Bernie mentioned it came down this last quarter because of the slow pace of deployment primarily of the proceeds of the capital that we raised. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:23:27And obviously, as we deploy that, that'll sort of eliminate that drag that we saw in the second quarter. But also, there will be a continued drag from our swap hedges rolling off. We had about $5,000,000,000 roll off in the second quarter. We replaced 2,300,000,000 of those. So over time, our swap cost will go up. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:23:50I expect our repo cost to come down over time, particularly as the Fed eventually gets back into easing. And I expect our asset yields to gradually rise. They're still below market. So there's a bunch of different factors, but I would say our net spread and dollar roll income should stay generally in the kind of range that we're seeing, maybe high mid to high thirties to low to mid forties cents range. Gave you a lot there. I hope that answers your question. Crispin LoveDirector at Piper Sandler Companies00:24:20Absolutely. No. That was very helpful, Peter. And then just following up on Doug's issuance question and comments you've made about deployment. You raised accretive capital, deployed about 50% of that, in the second quarter. Crispin LoveDirector at Piper Sandler Companies00:24:33I believe that was the comment or it might be 50% to date. But can you just share where you stand today? How much more have you deployed And then just where are the best opportunities, coupons, investments, etcetera? And then just given the outsized issuance in the second quarter, would you expect, issuance in the third to come down versus historical levels? Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:24:55Say that last part again, the issuance? Crispin LoveDirector at Piper Sandler Companies00:24:59Yeah. Just given the issuance that you did in the second quarter, more elevated with and just with what you have to still deploy, would you expect lower issuance compared to historical levels? Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:25:10Yeah. I'll start with that one first, then we'll we'll we'll go back. You you gave me a lot there. I I again, it's gonna be opportunistic, and I think we're in a good position to be patient with respect to our raising of capital. We really like the opportunity in the second quarter, particularly because there was so much volatility and we were able to raise it accretively. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:25:31It gave us a lot of additional liquidity, if you will, to withstand further disruptions should they have occurred and then also allowed us to deploy that those proceeds. So I wouldn't I wouldn't say that the second quarter is indicative of future quarters. We'll we'll have to just take those as as they come. Tell me the repeat the first part of Crispin LoveDirector at Piper Sandler Companies00:25:53your question for me. Yes. So you talked about deploying 50% of the capital. And just the timing of that, was that in the second quarter or to date? And I'm just curious where you are right now. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:26:05Bernie was in the second quarter, but she did mention that have continued to deploy. We purchased about a billion dollars worth of mortgages earlier earlier this month. So we still we still like the market. We are still deploying capital at a very sort of disciplined measured measured pace. And in terms of where we like, as I mentioned, we continue to really favor the sort of upper coupons, particularly in specified pools with, you know, higher coupons, call it, in the five and five to 6% range, specified pools with some form of favorable prepayment characteristic. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:26:44We like the yield profile there, and we like the prepayment protection we can buy with certain characteristics. Crispin LoveDirector at Piper Sandler Companies00:26:50Great. Thank you, Peter. I know there was a lot there. Appreciate you taking my questions. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:26:53Yep. Yes. Appreciate it. Operator00:26:55The next question comes from Trevor Cranston with Citizens JMP. Please go ahead. Trevor CranstonMD - Mortgage Finance Equity Research at JMP Securities LLC00:27:03Hey, thanks. Good morning, Peter. Another question on the capital raising. You know, obviously, the last several quarters, you guys have been able to do a decent amount at pretty accretive levels. And, obviously, there's a lot of benefits to being able to to, you know, issue so accretively. Trevor CranstonMD - Mortgage Finance Equity Research at JMP Securities LLC00:27:22But I guess, big picture, can you kinda give us an update on your thoughts as to how you think about kind of the optimal size of the of the company and, you know, particularly if you're continuing to be able to to issue accretively for the foreseeable future? Thanks. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:27:38Yeah. That that's a great question, and it's it's one that we've talked about periodically. I would start by saying, we're not growing for the sake of growing. We're growing because we can raise this capital accretively to the benefit of our existing shareholders and deploy those proceeds in a way that's supportive of our dividend. And to the extent that we can continue to do that, we would certainly look to continue to take advantage of that opportunity. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:28:05And and further, I would say that there are significant benefits of the scale that we operate. So first, if you look at our at our operating cost this last quarter, it was a 111 basis points. So I think we're the lowest operating cost in the industry, but that's certainly very compelling. So that's one point. The other is that I think you're also seeing tremendous liquidity in our stock, which is also really valuable for shareholders. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:28:38We are obviously now concentrated our portfolio in agency or agency like securities. So investors who wanna get this exposure have a way now to buy our stock in a very liquid form. Our market cap our our our common equity is over $8,000,000,000, so we have a lot of liquidity in our stock. It's very easy for investors who want this fixed income exposure in their portfolio to buy our stock in a very liquid way. So that's also very beneficial. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:29:11And then the last point with respect to size from a positive perspective is that clearly as we grow in size and our outstanding market cap, if you will, grows in size, it does make us more accessible for other indexes to add us as as we grow in size. So there's, you know, that sort of virtuous benefit of growing in size and having more liquidity and being added to more indices and so forth. So those are the positives that we look at. On the negative, I would say the that there there are market capacity constraints, if you will, that we're very cognizant of in terms of size. The liquidity in the fixed income market, as I've talked about a lot in the past, is not as good today as it was ten, fifteen years ago, pre great financial crisis. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:30:04So we are very cognizant of the size of our asset portfolio, the ability to transact both in the hedge market and in the asset market, And those are considerations on the other side of that equation. So we're trying to find that perfect efficient frontier, if you will, between all of those various points. But there's a lot of benefits to and I think investors now are seeing it in size and scale and liquidity, but we're also cognizant that there's a limit to how big we will be. Trevor CranstonMD - Mortgage Finance Equity Research at JMP Securities LLC00:30:33Yes. Okay. That's helpful. Thanks, Peter. Operator00:30:38The next question comes from Bose George with KBW. Go ahead. Bose GeorgeManaging Director at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW)00:30:43Yes. Good morning. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:30:45Good morning. Bose GeorgeManaging Director at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW)00:30:45First, just given the level of swap spreads, how do you see the appropriate balance between swap hedges and treasury futures? And then when you give the ROE number, that 19 plus, is that kind of reflective mix that you guys currently have in the portfolio? Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:31:01It does. When I did that calculation on the ROE, I came to a 180 basis points because I used the fifty fifty blend. And that's probably the right blend for us, we think, long term. Meaning that there's a lot of diversification benefits that we like about having sort of an equal mix of treasuries and swaps. But that said, we are a little overweighted swaps still on aggregate. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:31:28And if you look at the way we hedged our purchases in the second quarter, about two thirds of the hedges were in swap based hedges. So we're a little little more overweight. As we go forward in the current environment, I would say at the margin, we would probably favor a little bit higher percent of swaps than the long term fifty fifty average because I do expect stability in swap spreads to sort of develop over time, and I do expect some downward pressure or I should say upward pressure, meaning swap spreads should widen, which would be beneficial to us as the supplemental leverage ratio reform actually takes place likely by the fourth quarter, but maybe even in the third quarter. And when you really look at what happened in the swap market in the second quarter, that was really one of the sort of the most important points about mortgage performance. I mean, the move we saw in swap spreads with longer term swap spreads moving almost 10 basis points narrower was really dramatic, and it's indicative of sort of the balance sheet constraints that still exist in the market today, swaps versus treasuries. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:32:38We do expect that balance sheet pressure to ease as bank regulation is implemented, and particularly, the supplemental leverage ratio is changed. So over time, I think we'll we'll benefit from having this this overweight right now in swaps. But fifty fifty is probably the right long term mix going forward. Bose GeorgeManaging Director at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW)00:33:00Okay. Great. Thanks. And then in terms of your CPR, so it looks like the lifetime CPR declined. Does that just reflect the, you know, the market expectation on rates? Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:33:12Exactly right. And particularly, you look at what happened in the second quarter with respect to the yield curve steepening. There was when you look at what happened to 10, ten year was almost unchanged over the quarter. I mean, I think it was up two or three basis points. We had a big rally, 17 basis point rally in two years. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:33:31But the back end of the yield curve was really the story and that was a particularly sort of negative event for mortgage portfolio. I tried to point that out in my prepared remarks because the twenty and thirty year parts of the curve moved higher. The thirty year moved higher by 21 basis points. And mortgages do have key rate duration out there and the propagation of mortgages is effect mortgage rate, propagation of mortgage rate is affected by that thirty year move. So in sense, forward mortgage rates were pushed higher in the second quarter by that movement in the twenty and thirty year part of the curve. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:34:09And so that that's what led to the the lifetime CPR change. So that's something to watch because most portfolios, ourselves included, don't typically hedge the very long cash flows in a mortgage. We hedge really, as you well know, predominantly in the intermediate part of the curve, maybe out to about fifteen years. The back end is so idiosyncratic. It's and and it's difficult to hedge from a mortgage perspective. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:34:37So most of our hedging is concentrated in the ten year part of the curve to cover that long duration. So to the extent that the tens, thirties curve moves significantly, that could be a driver of mortgage performance. Bose GeorgeManaging Director at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW)00:34:51Okay. Helpful. Thanks, Peter. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:34:53Sure. Operator00:34:57The next question comes from Jason Weaver with Jones Trading. Please go ahead. Jason WeaverMD - Head Specialty Finance & Real Estate Research at Jones Trading00:35:03Hey. Good morning, everyone. Thanks for taking my question. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:35:06Yeah. Jason WeaverMD - Head Specialty Finance & Real Estate Research at Jones Trading00:35:07Hey, Peter. Despite the relative value implications we mentioned, I I know we've been talking about the level of MBS spreads for quite a while now just given the the wideness. Would you say this that would it be fair to say that spreads have entered just a a bigger secular trend over time just given that the level of vol has come down, but we're still here at, you know, 200 over on swaps? Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:35:29Yeah. Yes and no. Clearly, we have, I believe, established a new trading range. And, certainly, over when you look back at mortgage spreads, I looked over the last four years. So taking out the actual COVID event, but since COVID, if you will, we are at the sort of high end of the range. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:35:54And we we we sort of broke out barely in this last episode of that range, and we got the 220 basis points on the as a closing mark versus swaps. But we are that range is still intact. So I would I would say that range for mortgages versus swaps is probably in the 160 to 100 to 200 basis point range. And I would say that range versus treasuries is in the, call it, 160 to maybe 100 and a 120 basis point range. I think that's the new norm. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:36:32And I think in the current environment, we're gonna stay maybe in the upper half of that range because of the geopolitical and the and the fiscal policy and the monetary policy uncertainty. But I don't see a lot of catalyst for us breaking out of that range. And that I think is the important development over the second quarter. Clearly, there was significant tariff related market stress that we got through. That's important. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:37:00But also the one other big catalyst that could have sort of redefined the trading range, Jason, was GSE reform because there was so much uncertainty as to how that may play out. I think the key policymakers did a really, really good job of explaining their thought process and their approach and what was meaningful to them in terms of preserving the very special attributes that the market has today. And I think that takes some of that upward spread pressure out of the equation. So I think I think you're right. We're in a new range, but I think we're at the top of the range, and I don't expect it to continue up. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:37:42I expect it to stay in this range and and move lower. Jason WeaverMD - Head Specialty Finance & Real Estate Research at Jones Trading00:37:46Got it. That's that's helpful. And then, just another one on the capital deployment progress, in two Q and and even currently. How are you looking at relative value within the specified pool product, just among the different sort of, you know, warehouses there? Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:38:04Yeah. Well, I gave you I gave a measure in my prepared remarks that that about 81% of our portfolio has what I call some form of positive prepayment attribute. And in one of our tables, I think at the beginning of our presentation on the on the asset portfolio, we have another called high quality specified pools. It's about 41%, I believe the number was. The point is that we believe there's lots of attributes out there beyond just the typical high quality attributes like low loan balance that, you know, can translate to really good mortgage performance and more stable cash flows. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:38:49They they include characteristics like FICO and LTV and other geographies where taxes are recording or LTV characteristics or house price characteristics, a loan type, whether it's a primary residence or a second or an investor. So we think there's a whole bunch of other characteristics. So that's why we like adding specified pools, particularly the higher coupons, as I mentioned, where there's a significant yield pickup. But also, we know we're taking a more there's more convexity risk there. But by buying some of these characteristics, particularly in the current environment where house prices are sort of stabilizing and maybe moving lower in particular areas, we think there's a lot of value to adding those specified pools or pools with those kind of characteristics. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:39:42The other thing I would say is in the current environment, and we saw this in the second quarter, there is some specialness, some benefit to TBA position in terms of the role implied role financing levels, particularly for certain coupons in Ginnie Mae securities with that make up most of our long position. But there isn't a lot of benefit for conventional TBA positions right now. There's no there's no real funding advantage there. So given that, we prefer to have these higher coupon specified pools rather than a TBA position in the current environment. Jason WeaverMD - Head Specialty Finance & Real Estate Research at Jones Trading00:40:23Got it. That's helpful. Thank you very much. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:40:25Sure. Operator00:40:26The next question comes from Jason Stewart with Janney. Please go ahead. Jason StewartDirector - Mortgage Finance at Janney Montgomery Scott00:40:32Hey, good morning. Thanks. Thanks, Peter. So it appears to us like the curve steepener trade is a pretty crowded trade. And we've talked about hedges, but could you go through a little bit more on the asset side? I think you started in response to Jason's question. You know, in a post steepener trade, you know, how do you position the and is there enough flexibility? How do you position the asset side of the balance sheet in terms of coupons, etcetera, to to optimize returns going forward? Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:40:59Yeah. There's certainly a lot of flexibility. I mean, we we and you see us shifting our coupon position, you know, quite significantly quarter over quarter. There's lots of liquidity and capacity to do that. Shifting between TBAs and specified pools, the characteristics that we talked about change our our profile. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:41:21So there's lots of ways on the asset side for us to do that, Particularly, if we have a TBA position, we could do that. We can move from TBAs to pools and different coupons. So as the yield curve changes, we can certainly change the asset side of our equation. And as you point out, it's really it's really gonna be driven by hedge location. That's really critical, and we have a lot of capacity to do that. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:41:44But most of our hedges are concentrated in the, call it, seven to twelve year range. I think about 83% of our hedge duration is greater than seven years. And what that tells you is that when you think about our asset key rate duration profile and then you overlay our hedge profile, given that concentration, one could conclude that we have positioned our aggregate portfolio to benefit when the yield curve steepens two years to ten years. And so we have benefit and will continue to benefit if two year rates come down and ten year rates either stay the same or go higher, our aggregate portfolio, given our asset composition and our hedge composition, would benefit in that scenario. And we do expect that steepening that curve steepening to continue, particularly in light of all of this pressure that we're seeing with respect to the Fed. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:42:44The two year to ten year part of the curve right now today, I think, is at about 52 basis points. And that's about 50 or 60 basis points flatter than the twenty five year average. So I expect the two year to ten year part of the curve to steepen over time and I expect our portfolio to benefit from that. Jason StewartDirector - Mortgage Finance at Janney Montgomery Scott00:43:04Got it. Okay. So perhaps too early to think about post steepening trades. And then I apologize if I missed this in the comments or the questions. Did you give an updated estimate for book value quarter to date in 3Q? Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:43:17Yes. Bernie mentioned at the end of as the end of last week, it was up about 1%. Jason StewartDirector - Mortgage Finance at Janney Montgomery Scott00:43:22Nothing since then. End of last oh, yeah. Okay. Got it. Okay. Thank you. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:43:27Sure. Operator00:43:29The next question comes from Eric Hagen with BTIG. Please go ahead. Eric HagenManaging Director at BTIG00:43:33Hey, thanks. Good morning, guys. I hope you're well. Just one for me. In the repo market, I mean, you see the government budget deficit being a risk to the repo market? Eric HagenManaging Director at BTIG00:43:44Assuming it means the government's going be issuing a bunch of longer term debt, how do you think that might trickle down to driving spreads for wholesale funding and other repo venues that you guys are active in? And then, I mean, maybe most importantly, if we assume the Fed has the tools to control repo volatility, all else equal, I mean, that support a higher range for your leverage versus where you've operated historically? Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:44:07Yeah. There's a lot there. So you might have to reask some of those questions. But first, I would say that I don't expect the treasury issuance or the deficit, certainly over the near term, to have any impact on the repo market. And the treasury secretary has been really clear, and I think it's been really beneficial to the market for them to really give stability in the refunding announcement. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:44:35And it's not gonna change. I think they continue to stay for several quarters. But I do expect the composition of their issuance to change. I do expect them to issue more shorter term and less long term. They're very focused on the ten year part of the curve in terms of that rate. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:44:51And so there could be a little bit of crowding out of those bills get issued and some of that money comes out of the repo market. But I don't expect that to have any material really impact on pricing. There's plenty of liquidity in the markets. There's $7,000,000,000,000 of money in money market funds. There's plenty of liquidity there. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:45:10The other thing that I would point out, and this is really important with respect to the Fed, they continue to make really positive changes to the repo market. And I I expect one, I expect quantitative tightening to essentially end relatively soon, although may likely go through the end of the year. But it's clearly a topic of discussion. It was in the minutes last meeting, so I expect it to be ongoing, and I expect them to stop the runoff of their balance sheet. But they also they also made some changes, positive changes to their standing repo facility that may or may not be understood. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:45:50One of is one of them was at at quarter ends, they increased the number of operations. They added an operation in the morning, which is beneficial to the market. But the big change that the Fed is considering that has not yet been implemented is that it's likely that the Fed will, in a sense, join the FICC for transactions on its on the standing repo facility. And if they do that, that would eliminate the balance sheet constraints that currently exist and make that program less effective. So if they join the FICC and they've written about this widely, and I think they are considering it, it takes time, That would really enhance the liquidity associated with the standing repo facility. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:46:38So that would be a really positive development. And I suspect they'll be doing that in conjunction with the changing of their bill issuance. So I don't know if I covered all your questions. You can ask me again. Eric HagenManaging Director at BTIG00:46:50Yeah. That was really helpful. I mean, the second half of the question was just whether it the whole dynamic allows you guys to take more leverage or how you how you feel about your leverage just given the support the Fed has for the repo market in general? Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:47:04It's certainly a consideration that doesn't make us feel like we gotta take our leverage lower. I'll put it that way. Yeah. I I think that's what's unique about our asset class. It is well, I think it's the the only fixed income asset class that lends itself to a levered investment strategy because of the liquidity and pricing transparency of of our security. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:47:27But most importantly, as you point out, where the repo market is today versus where it was pre 2019 is so dramatically different. This asset class from a funding perspective, Clearly, the the treasury and the Fed in particular is focused every day on the liquidity in the repo market for treasury securities and for mortgage backed securities. And when they talk about balance sheet and ending their quantitative tightening, they are looking at that market every single day to determine whether or not reserves have hit the ample level or not. And so they they are keenly aware of any repo pressure, and they will adjust as soon as they see that repo pressure, which makes us very confident in our funding. In addition, we, of course, have our captive broker dealer and almost 30 individual counterparties. So we love that diversification as well. Eric HagenManaging Director at BTIG00:48:24Great perspective. I appreciate that. Actually, a follow-up here. I mean, some changes to the credit scoring at the GSEs, FICO, VantageScore. Sure you guys are up on that. Eric HagenManaging Director at BTIG00:48:34Do you see that driving or changing the prepayment environment in any way? Like, does it support lower mortgage rates for some borrowers who may have not have had access under the prior scoring regime? Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:48:44Yeah. It's funny. From our perspective, this seems to be getting more attention than it's really worth from an investor perspective. We obviously, this has been discussed. The Vantage alternative, the name that's the name of the alternative, has been discussed, I think, for ten plus years. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:49:04From our perspective, yes, it will likely lead to borrowers having the capacity for a better higher credit score, which ultimately could increase their capacity and lead to higher, slightly higher prepayments, if you will. But from our perspective, as an investor perspective, it's not that not that significant and not that complicated. What we would need to know as an investor is, one, we not we need to know the source of the data. The GSEs given us FICO or Vantage. And then two, we need to have sufficient time to implement so that we can then quantify the impact. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:49:44And we'll all adjust it for we'll all adjust for the, you know, difference in speeds once we have sufficient data between the two data data sources. Eric HagenManaging Director at BTIG00:49:58Very helpful from you guys. Thank you. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:50:01It's also worth pointing out on on that one. You know, the the VantageScore, I think, has some benefit over FICO in that it includes, rent payment history, whereas FICO did not. So I think it could provide investors sort of a more comprehensive picture on credit. Operator00:50:20The next question comes from Rick Shane with JPMorgan. Please go ahead. Richard ShaneAnalyst at JP Morgan00:50:26Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my questions this morning. Look, the bear case in the space is always higher rates. But as you know well, the existential risk is actually sharply lower rates and rapid repayments. The mortgage industry is evolving. Richard ShaneAnalyst at JP Morgan00:50:46Strategically, it's evolving. From a technology perspective, it's evolving. You have borrowers. I think there's a evolving cohort of borrowers with a lot of pent up demand for refi. Yes. Richard ShaneAnalyst at JP Morgan00:51:01You guys talk about your prepayment protection. Is there a risk that there's been enough of a change in terms of the underlying factors that speeds in a and we saw this in December where speeds picked up very quickly based on a brief movement in rates that the thesis behind the prepayment protection doesn't actually provide as much protection as as you're assuming. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:51:33Sure. There's a risk of that. And again, there's a lot there. So I think what you're describing is in a sense the market is becoming much more efficient. Technology, all the access, all those things are happening. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:51:46In a sense, it's making the prepayment curve, if you will, more steep. The s curve is is more steep today than it was five plus years ago, pre COVID certainly. And you're right. We have seen episodes where the mortgage rate has dropped very briefly, you know, into windows down around 6%, and we had little bits of spike in prepayments. But it's also important to think about where the market is in aggregate. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:52:12Today, with the mortgage rate at six seventy five, there's only about 5% of the universe that has a 50 basis point incentive. And from our portfolio's perspective, as I mentioned, our average weighted average coupon is five point, call it, 13%. That's 60 basis points out of the money still. So you need a significant move in the mortgage rate to get a significant amount of prepayments. Another point here, the mortgage rate would have to drop from six seventy five down to 5%. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:52:54So you're talking about a dramatic movement in interest rates, in order for the market to have I think at that point, we would have about 27 of the universe would be refinanceable. So it sort of bookends the issue for you. You're right. As we move down in mortgage rate and if we get down to six, there is a a population of pools, particularly the post 2022 pools, will prepay the high you know, the seven seven those will will prepay very fast. But in order for you to have a really significant sort of market wide refinance event, you're looking at a dramatically lower mortgage rate, which is hard to envision. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:53:43It's not impossible, but hard to envision in the context of all the other questions we had this morning where you're talking about deficit spending and and pressure on interest rates. And if the Fed were to ease and the chairman Powell were to change and the yield curve steepened, all those things should keep the mortgage rate maybe higher than it otherwise would be. But you're right. There there's certainly that risk. And, you know, and you're also right that there are characteristics that we believe are gonna give us protection that may not give us protection. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:54:18But, you know, you'll have to wait and see. And you also have to wait and see what happens with the GSEs. This is the other important point over time. The GSE sort of footprint, if you will, may may change. They may change their their their mortgage the mortgage capacity to various borrowers. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:54:46They may they may they may curtail some of the some of the business that they can do today may get curtailed over time as they shift toward more toward a sort of a profitable profitability, you know, objective. And so that may limit borrowers' capacity to refinance that have a capacity today. Those loans may not be GSE eligible in a future state. We don't know that. But we do know that there is some attention toward shrinking that capacity. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:55:14And also, it's also also important to point out that house prices seem to be topped topping, certainly slowing nationally. But at the regional level, there are there's real variation. And that, again, is gonna translate into a change in the refinance capacity for borrowers. So there's a lot that you'll have to consider as we go to lower rates. Richard ShaneAnalyst at JP Morgan00:55:39Hey, Peter. Thank you so much for quantifying that. It's it's really helpful. And look, we've both done this long enough. You know it's not the punch you're looking for that hurts you. Richard ShaneAnalyst at JP Morgan00:55:48It's the one that you're not looking that does the damage. Agreed. Appreciate it. Thanks, guys. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:55:55Sure. Operator00:55:57And our last question comes from the line of Harsh Hamnani with Green Street. Harsh HemnaniSenior Analyst at Green Street Advisors, LLC00:56:08Just thinking through one more on leverage. As we think back to maybe early April, leverage sort of drifted up just by virtue of market price changes to, call it, high seven, seven, nine. And then perhaps rebalanced throughout the quarter to and basically where at Q1 levels. How are you thinking about leverage? Right? Harsh HemnaniSenior Analyst at Green Street Advisors, LLC00:56:35Are there certain sort of rebalancing triggers that you're looking at in shock scenarios? Is is it preserving that unencumbered asset that you talked about? And then maybe if we look ahead in the, call it, near to intermediate term, given you have more certainty in spread spread volatility given all the positives in GSE reform, etcetera. Could you would you be more comfortable with letting leverage drift up today than maybe a quarter ago? Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:57:08Yeah. Yeah. Well, a lot there. So first, I would say when you when you refer to rebalancing in the quarter, you're right. The biggest driver of the leverage, obviously, is the change in our book value in the second quarter, and that's gonna put upward pressure on our leverage. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:57:23And what's important though, and I pointed this out in my prepared remarks, and this is key for a levered investment strategy. That's why I mentioned that we were able to navigate the quarter and not having to sell assets. So we rebalanced, if you will, our risk position by raising capital accretively and deploying that at a slow pace. And over time, as conditions change and we become more confident in the macroeconomic outlook, we can have more confidence and deploy all of those proceeds. But importantly, what we didn't have to do is you didn't have to sell assets. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:57:58You didn't have to rebalance the asset side of our balance sheet, if you will, by selling assets when spreads were really wide. In doing that, you crystallize those losses. If you hold all of those assets, then our existing shareholders will get the benefit of the recovery over time whenever that may happen. Now that's really important from a from a risk management perspective and from a levered investment portfolio perspective. That's why I pointed it out in my prepared remarks this time is that making sure that we have capacity to withstand those spread moves gives us the ability to gain back that value by not having to sell assets. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:58:39And you're right. Over time, as the market sort of evolves, we look at today's environment and where we stand today. And what I was trying to communicate is that I'm more confident about the outlook today than I was, you know, than I than I was in April. And that's important because we're at widespread. Don't think spreads while they could certainly widen, I don't think that they will stay wider if they do move wider for some macroeconomic reason. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment00:59:06And over time, I think they can go lower. And that does inform us about our leverage, and it does give us more confidence. To the extent that we get more and more confident that mortgages are gonna stay in a range or not break out to the upside of the range gives us more and more confidence that we could operate with higher leverage. But all that being said all that being said, if you look at our portfolio today, let's just say at about seven and a half times leverage, we are able to generate really attractive returns that are consistent with our dividend and give us a lot of unencumbered liquidity and risk management capacity. And that's sort of the perfect combination of the two, and we look to optimize those two things. Harsh HemnaniSenior Analyst at Green Street Advisors, LLC00:59:55Got it. Thank you. Operator00:59:57Sure. We have now completed the question and answer session. I'd like to turn the call back over to Peter Federico for concluding remarks. Peter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer at AGNC Investment01:00:07Again, we appreciate everybody's time and participation on our call today, and we look forward to speaking to you all again at the end of the third quarter. Operator01:00:17Thank you for joining the call. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesKatherine TurlingtonIR AnalystPeter FedericoDirector, President, CEO & Chief Investment OfficerBernice BellEVP & CFOAnalystsDouglas HarterEquity Research Analyst at UBS GroupCrispin LoveDirector at Piper Sandler CompaniesTrevor CranstonMD - Mortgage Finance Equity Research at JMP Securities LLCBose GeorgeManaging Director at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods (KBW)Jason WeaverMD - Head Specialty Finance & Real Estate Research at Jones TradingJason StewartDirector - Mortgage Finance at Janney Montgomery ScottEric HagenManaging Director at BTIGRichard ShaneAnalyst at JP MorganHarsh HemnaniSenior Analyst at Green Street Advisors, LLCPowered by