NYSE:TWO Two Harbors Investments Q4 2025 Earnings Report $12.28 +0.03 (+0.20%) Closing price 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$12.25 -0.04 (-0.28%) As of 07:19 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 Massive. Learn more. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast Two Harbors Investments EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.26Consensus EPS $0.30Beat/MissMissed by -$0.04One Year Ago EPSN/ATwo Harbors Investments Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$182.18 millionExpected Revenue($15.44) millionBeat/MissBeat by +$197.61 millionYoY Revenue GrowthN/ATwo Harbors Investments Announcement DetailsQuarterQ4 2025Date2/2/2026TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateTuesday, February 3, 2026Conference Call Time9:00AM ETConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Annual Report (10-K)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Two Harbors Investments Q4 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrFebruary 3, 2026 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Positive Sentiment: Merger with United Wholesale Mortgage announced — management says the deal doubles the MSR portfolio to a pro forma $400 billion and combines UWM's origination scale with Two's capital‑markets and RoundPoint servicing to drive accelerated growth and shareholder upside. Positive Sentiment: Portfolio performance was strong in Q4, generating a +3.9% total economic return (book value rose to $11.13) as mortgage assets outperformed hedges and low‑coupon MSR continued to earn its carry. Negative Sentiment: Full‑year 2025 book‑value return was reported at -12.6% after a $3.60 per‑share litigation settlement; management notes adjusted 2025 return would be +12.1% excluding that one‑time charge. Negative Sentiment: RMBS spreads have tightened materially (Fed cuts, GSE buying), which management warns reduces near‑term upside and prompted modest reductions in leverage and mortgage exposure, lowering prospective returns. Positive Sentiment: Liquidity and funding flexibility are intact — >$800M cash at quarter end, repayment of $261.9M convertible notes, ~$1.1B unused MSR financing capacity, stable repo markets, and a record DTC quarter funding $94M — supporting operations and integration plans. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallTwo Harbors Investments Q4 202500:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipantsPresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good morning. My name is Ruth, and I will be your conference facilitator. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to Two's fourth quarter 2025 financial results call. All participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speaker's remarks, there will be a question-and-answer period. I would now like to turn the call over to Maggie Karr. Maggie KarrHead of Investor Relations at Two Harbors00:00:21Good morning, everyone, and welcome to our call to discuss Two's fourth quarter 2025 financial results. With me on the call this morning are Bill Greenberg, our President and Chief Executive Officer. Nick Letica, our Chief Investment Officer. And William Dellal, our Chief Financial Officer. The earnings press release and presentation associated with today's call have been filed with the SEC and are available on the SEC's website as well as the Investor Relations page of our website at 2inv.com. In our earnings release and presentation, we have provided reconciliations of GAAP to non-GAAP financial measures, and we urge you to review this information in conjunction with today's call. As a reminder, our comments today will include forward-looking statements, which are subject to risks and uncertainties that may cause our results to differ materially from expectations. Maggie KarrHead of Investor Relations at Two Harbors00:01:13These are described on page 2 of the presentation and in our Form 10-K and subsequent reports filed with the SEC. Except as may be required by law, Two Harbors does not update forward-looking statements and disclaims any obligation to do so. I will now turn the call over to Bill. Bill GreenbergCEO at Two Harbors00:01:31Thank you, Maggie. Good morning, everyone, and welcome to our fourth quarter earnings call. I'm very excited to be able to speak to you all publicly for the first time about our recently announced merger with United Wholesale Mortgage. The rationale for this transaction should be familiar to most mortgage market participants and observers, and was especially fitting given our own history as a company. So let me take a step back and describe why I say that. We were one of the first, if not the first, mortgage REIT to invest in MSR as part of our asset mix, obtaining our GSE approvals and state licenses to own and manage MSR, and then buying our first pool in 2013. Bill GreenbergCEO at Two Harbors00:02:12We started out using third-party subservicers to service the asset, but as our servicing portfolio grew to a certain scale, it became clear to us that we could extract even more value from the asset and increase returns by bringing the servicing in-house, which we did in 2023 through our acquisition of RoundPoint. The last several years, really post-COVID, have highlighted the need for investors to be able to protect their MSR portfolio by providing recapture capabilities. Hence, we spun up a direct-to-consumer lending platform in 2024. However, in 2025, the mortgage finance landscape shifted again, with scale becoming more important than ever. It became clear to us that in order to succeed and compete effectively, our origination effort needed to be much, much bigger. Bill GreenbergCEO at Two Harbors00:03:00This merger brings us together with the number one mortgage originator in the country, UWM, and doubles the size of the MSR portfolio to a pro forma $400 billion. UWM, in turn, also benefits from our expertise in capital markets and asset management, and they can leverage RoundPoint's best-in-class and low-cost servicing capabilities. In many ways, this transaction is the culmination of the business plan that we've been aiming at for some time, and it creates, I believe, a very powerful strategic alignment and positions the combined company for accelerated growth and enhanced outcomes, which should deliver meaningful upside to shareholders. Now, please turn to slide 3. Our investment portfolio performed well as mortgage assets significantly outperformed their hedges, and our low-coupon MSR continued to behave as it was designed to do, earning its carry. For the fourth quarter, we generated a total economic return of +3.9%. Bill GreenbergCEO at Two Harbors00:04:01For the full calendar year 2025, we generated a total economic return on book value of -12.6%, though if you exclude the previously recorded litigation settlement expense of $3.60 per share, we returned a +12.1%. Mortgage assets have thus far continued to outperform into the first quarter, driven in part by increased GSE buying and announcements from the administration committing to buying significant sizes of MBS. In situations like this, we take the administration's clear desire for lower mortgage rates at face value, and we recognize the possibility that they will ultimately succeed and create increased mortgage and origination activity in 2026. One question that we've heard from investors is around our securities portfolio and if, following the merger, we intend to liquidate the portfolio. In the short term, the answer is that we intend to manage our business in the ordinary course. Bill GreenbergCEO at Two Harbors00:05:00Looking further out, I would say that while no decisions have been made yet, we will be thoughtful about how we proceed. There are some paths that lead to selling some or all of these assets over time, and there are other paths where the combined company will need many or even more than our existing TBA and specified pool positions. These are still early days with respect to the merger, so when those details are more clear, we will be sure to update you. Please turn to slide 4. Performance across fixed income was positive in the fourth quarter. The release of major conventional economic indicators was severely interrupted by the federal government shutdown, leaving the Fed and market participants without key data often used to assess the economy. Bill GreenbergCEO at Two Harbors00:05:43Despite this, and in line with market expectations seen in figure 1, the Fed still delivered 2 25 basis point cuts in October and December. As a result, and as you can see in figure 2, the yield curve steepened, with two-year Treasury yields down 14 basis points to 3.47%, while 10-year Treasury yields rose by 2 basis points to 4.17%, returning the yield curve to its steepest level since January 2022. Equity markets continued to react positively to the Fed cuts, with the S&P 500 up by 2.3% at quarter end after setting all-time record highs earlier in the quarter. Please turn to slide 5. Bill GreenbergCEO at Two Harbors00:06:27We settled on the sale of an additional $10 billion UPB of MSR out of our portfolio, increasing our total third-party subservicing to $40 billion at year end compared to $30 billion at the end of the third quarter, while reducing our total owned servicing to approximately $162 billion from $176 billion the prior quarter. Despite its small size, our DTC platform is punching above its weight and had a record quarter funding $94 million in first and second liens, a 90% increase from the third quarter. At quarter end, we had an additional $38 million in our pipeline. We also brokered $58.5 million in second liens in the quarter, which was nearly unchanged quarter-over-quarter. Bill GreenbergCEO at Two Harbors00:07:13Looking ahead, we are confident that the partnership with UWM will bring the benefits we have envisioned from the increased scale, and we believe this merger is extraordinarily positive for our company and for our shareholders. Now, I'd like to hand the call over to William to discuss our financial results. William DellalCFO at Two Harbors00:07:32Thank you, Bill. Please turn to slide 6. Our book value increased to $11.13 per share at December 31st compared to $11.04 per share at September 30th. Including the $0.34 common stock dividend, this resulted in a +3.9% quarterly economic return. Please turn to slide 7. The company generated comprehensive income of $50.4 million or $0.48 per share. Net interest and servicing income, which is the sum of GAAP net interest expense and net servicing income before operating costs, decreased as a result of MSR sales and lower float income. Float income decreased largely as a result of lower interest rates and end-of-year seasonals that lowered balances. The net overall decline in portfolio asset yields was offset by lower financing costs. Mark-to-market gains and losses were lower in the fourth quarter by $15.5 million due to MSR portfolio runoff and the bull steepening in rates. William DellalCFO at Two Harbors00:08:47You can see the individual components of net interest and servicing income and mark-to-market gains and losses on appendix slide 20. Please turn to slide 8. On the left-hand side of this slide, you can see a breakdown of our balance sheet at quarter end. We ended the quarter with over $800 million of cash on the balance sheet, and in accordance with our previously disclosed plans, we repaid our convertible senior notes of $261.9 million in full on their January 15, 2026, maturity date. RMBS funding markets remained stable and available throughout the quarter, with repurchase spreads at around SOFR +23 basis points. At quarter end, our weighted average days to maturity for our Agency RMBS repo was 54 days. William DellalCFO at Two Harbors00:09:45As a reminder, our days to maturity are typically lower at December 31st, as we intentionally roll repos in the third quarter past year end to avoid any disruption in funding that can sometimes occur. We finance our MSR, including the MSR asset and related servicing advance obligations, across five lenders, with $1.6 billion of outstanding borrowings under bilateral facilities. We ended the quarter with a total of $1.1 billion in unused MSR asset financing capacity. We have $71.5 million drawn on our servicing advances facility, with an additional $78.5 million of available capacity. I will now turn the call over to Nick. Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:10:39Thank you, William. Please turn to slide 9. Our portfolio performed well in the fourth quarter, as both MSR and RMBS returns benefited from the decline of interest rate volatility, together with strong demand for spread assets. At December 31st, the portfolio was $13.2 billion, including $9 billion in settled positions and $4.2 billion in TBAs. Our primary risk metrics quarter-over-quarter were not materially different. Our economic debt to equity was slightly lower at 7 times, and our portfolio sensitivity to spread changes marginally increased from 2.3%-3.7% if spreads were to tighten by 25 basis points. We kept interest rate risks low in aggregate and across the yield curve. You can see more details on our risk exposures on appendix slide 17. Please turn to slide 10. Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:11:32The trend of lower interest rate volatility continued throughout the fourth quarter, resulting in the 1-month realized volatility of 10-year swap rates falling into the bottom fifth percentile over the past decade, dragging implied volatility down as well. As you can see in Figure 1, 2-year options on 10-year swap rates, shown by the green line, closed the quarter at 79 basis points, 4 basis points below its average level over the past 10 years. RMBS spreads responded very positively to the decline in volatility, the steepening of the yield curve, and the prospect of strong demand in 2026, primarily from banks, REITs, and the GSEs. The nominal spread for current coupon RMBS tightened by 30 basis points to 114 basis points of the swap curve, while option-adjusted spreads relative to SOFR finished 23 basis points tighter at 45 basis points, as shown by the purple and blue lines, respectively. Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:12:28This decline in current coupon nominal spreads brought mortgages to their tightest level since the second quarter of 2022. Figure 1 includes data up to January 29th, and as you can see, spreads have continued to tighten further into this quarter. It wasn't just current coupon mortgages that outperformed. Spreads across the coupon stack, both on a static and option-adjusted basis, shifted lower, as you can see in Figure 2. Please turn to Slide 11 to review our Agency RMBS portfolio. Figure 1 shows the performance of TBAs and specified pools we owned throughout this quarter. Hedged RMBS performance was positive across the 30-year coupon stack, with the best performance in 4.5% and 5% coupons, where we have our largest pool exposures. Notably, the hedged performance of RMBS was aided by the widening of swap spreads, which have made up over 75% of our hedges. Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:13:25To give a sense of magnitude, 10-year swap spreads widened by 13 basis points to an 18-month high. Our pass-through position was largely stable quarter-over-quarter. However, although we continue to like the sector and the carefully selected prepayment-protected collateral behind our bonds, we reduced our Inverse IO position by almost 50% to reduce our exposure to higher coupons. Primary mortgage rates drifted a little lower over the quarter, stabilizing around 6.25%. The share of the universe of 30-year loans eligible for refinance returned to nearly 20% for the first time in years, and as we had anticipated, speeds for refinanceable coupons continued to increase. The prepayment S-curve steepened back to a more regular shape associated with periods when a larger share of mortgages are refinanceable, such as in late 2019. Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:14:18Figure 2 on the bottom right shows our Specified Pool prepayment speeds by coupon, which on aggregate increased only very slightly to 8.6% from 8.3% CPR, coming from increases in speeds from 5.5% coupons and higher. That said, the CPR increases on our pools were small and in line with our expectations, evidencing the value of careful pool selection. Please turn to slide 12. You can see in Figure 1 the volume of MSR available in 2025 declined from prior years. The market continues to be well-subscribed, with strong demand from originators as well as bank and non-bank portfolios competing for greater scale in MSRs. Indeed, as Bill said, scale has become increasingly important for mortgage companies to compete in the MSR market. Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:15:06The merger of Two and UWM will result in a combined company that is positioned for accelerated growth and has the ability to compete effectively in this market. Figure 2 shows that with mortgage rates at their current level of around 6.25%, only about 3% of our MSR portfolio is considered in the money. If mortgage rates were to drop to around 5%, the portion of our portfolio in the money would rise to about 9%. Given that the current administration in Washington is focused on policies to stimulate the housing market and increase home ownership, we anticipate that home prices will continue to rise and housing turnover will trend higher from its current historically low levels. Please turn to slide 13, where we will discuss our MSR portfolio. Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:15:52Figure 1 is an overview of our portfolio at quarter end, further details of which can be found on appendix slide 23. In the fourth quarter, we settled about $400 million UPB of MSR from flow acquisitions and recapture, and we sold $9.6 billion UPB on a servicing-retained basis. The price multiple of our MSR was consistent quarter-over-quarter at 5.8x, and 60-plus-day delinquencies remained low at under 1%. Figure 2 compares CPRs across those implied security coupons and our portfolio of MSR versus TBAs. Quarter-over-quarter, our MSR portfolio experienced a minor 0.4 percentage point pickup in prepayment rates to 6.4%. Importantly, prepays have remained below our projections for the majority of our portfolio, which has been a positive tailwind for returns. Finally, please turn to slide 14, our return potential and outlook slide. Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:16:48This is a forward-looking projection of our expected portfolio returns, which takes into account the repayment of the $262 million of convertible notes that occurred in January. We estimate that about 65% of our capital is allocated to servicing, with a static return projection of 10%-13%. The remaining capital is allocated to securities, with a static return estimate of 10%-14%. With our portfolio allocation shown in the top half of the table and after expenses, the static return estimate for our portfolio would be between 6.9%-10.2% before applying any capital structure leverage to the portfolio. After giving effect to our unsecured notes and preferred stock, we believe that the potential static return on common equity falls in the range of 5.8%-11.1% or a prospective quarterly static return per share of $0.16-$0.31. Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:17:40The reduction in return potential quarter-over-quarter is driven primarily by the large tightening of RMBS spreads and the sales of Inverse IOs. Since quarter end, the announcement of explicit support for MBS spreads from the FHFA director has led to more spread tightening. Spreads for Agency RMBS have now fully retraced their widening over the past three-plus years, leaving spreads historically rich on some measures, like Treasury-based OAS, for example, to fair versus swaps in periods when the GSEs have been active. As RMBS spreads have normalized, the potential for more tightening and resulting book value benefit of holding RMBS has been significantly reduced. That said, continued GSE buying and/or other future policy actions aimed at supporting mortgage spreads could keep spreads tight and limit their widening and risk-off scenarios. Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:18:31Given all that, we believe that this environment favors our paired portfolio construction of MSR and Agency RMBS, which has less exposure to fluctuations in mortgage spreads. We expect that demand for MSR will remain strong among the origination and investor communities. Though RMBS spreads have tightened, the paired construction of our low mortgage-rate MSR with RMBS generates attractive risk-adjusted returns with lower expected volatility than a portfolio of RMBS hedged with rates. Thank you very much for joining us today, and now I'll be happy to take any questions you might have. Operator00:19:08Thank you. If you are dialed in via the telephone and would like to ask a question, please signal by pressing star 1 on your telephone keypad. If you're using a speakerphone, please make sure your mute function is turned off to allow your signal to reach our equipment. Again, please press star 1 to ask a question. We'll pause for just a moment. We'll go first to Rick Shane with J.P. Morgan. Rick ShaneExecutive Director Relationship Executive at JPMorgan00:19:36Thanks, guys, for taking my questions. Congratulations on the announcement. I am curious, as we sort of move through this period, tactically how you think about portfolio construction. I realize that you guys continue to and need to, from a governance perspective, operate as an independent company, but obviously, there are strategic reasons for the acquisition. Is that shifting your tactical allocation of capital in any way as you construct a portfolio into year-end? And is that one of the other factors that's impacting your static return outlook? Bill GreenbergCEO at Two Harbors00:20:20Yeah. Good morning, Rick. Thanks for the question. No, I think you put your finger on it. We're operating as an independent company. We're managing our portfolio as we normally would in the ordinary course. The changes you've seen in the portfolio have been in response to market assessments of risk and reward, and we're continuing to manage the portfolio as we ordinarily would and do, and the investment decisions that we're making are in line with the way that we have always historically managed the portfolio. Rick ShaneExecutive Director Relationship Executive at JPMorgan00:20:55Got it. Okay. Thank you. And then I must have gotten up especially early today because I'm first in queue. I don't think I heard you talk about an update on book value, but I get to ask the question this time. So where is book value most recent, Mark? Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:21:09Hey, Rick. This is Nick. It's good that you got the opportunity to ask that question this quarter. We are up about 1.5%-2% as of Friday, January 30th. Rick ShaneExecutive Director Relationship Executive at JPMorgan00:21:20Terrific. Thank you, guys. Bill GreenbergCEO at Two Harbors00:21:23Thanks, Rick. Operator00:21:25We'll go next to Doug Harter with UBS. Doug HarterEquity Research at UBS00:21:31Thanks and good morning. Hoping you could just talk about how you're thinking about leverage, Nick, given your comments around kind of the MBS market, and just how interested you would be in continuing to kind of add at these spreads, kind of given the cross-currents that you mentioned, and just overall your view on risk-reward? Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:21:59Hey, Doug. Sure. As you alluded to from my comments, the administration has made it pretty clear that they want to do what they can to try to tighten spreads in this environment and potentially, as well, reduce mortgage rates. So we have become a little more defensive this quarter as a result of that. And just the general movement in spreads, if you look at where spreads are now historically, I think you can say that they are, I think you can definitely say they're symmetric in terms of risks. You might even say they're asymmetric in terms of the amount of widening versus tightening in here. Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:22:39That being said, there are things that the administration can do that have been widely discussed, for example, raising the caps that the GSEs have on their portfolio, which they can do without congressional input, and other measures to continue to drive the mortgage spread tighter or just limit it from a risk perspective of widening. So it is very much of a double-edged sword. We have decided, and our portfolio construction being what it is, we do like the paired construction overall, as you know, and it depends less on betting on which way spreads are going to go and more about just putting together a hedged portfolio that extracts the spread of the combined assets. So that's what we're really focused on. But we have reduced our leverage a little bit this quarter, as well as our mortgage risk. Doug HarterEquity Research at UBS00:23:36Appreciate it. Thank you. Operator00:23:40We'll go next to Bose George with KBW. Bose GeorgeManaging Director at KBW00:23:45Hey, guys. Good morning. Actually, what do you think are the chances of an LLPA, guarantee fee reduction at the GSEs? And how is the agency market kind of viewing that possibility? Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:23:58Hey, Bose. I think there's a reasonable reduction. There'll be some reasonable chance that there will be some changes on the LLPA grid. And I think it's somewhat priced into the market, but not entirely. There's a lot of optionality, I think, now in terms of the policy actions that can be done. And it's a lot for the market to digest, and hard, consequently, to fully understand whether just an LLPA change is being baked in or not. But I think there has been some amount of discounting of that. Bose GeorgeManaging Director at KBW00:24:33Okay. Great. And then actually, in terms of the MSR market, have you seen any changes in sort of bank interest or activity, just given it looks like the capital rules there might make it a little more favorable for them to hold onto MSRs? Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:24:50I can't say that we've seen anything notable about that. Overall, all I can say is that the interest in the MSR market continues to be rock solid and strong. So from our perspective, we haven't seen anything particularly new that we have not seen in the past year or two. Bose GeorgeManaging Director at KBW00:25:06Okay. Great. Thanks. Operator00:25:10We'll go next to Trevor Cranston with Citizens JMP. Trevor CranstonManaging Director at Citizens JMP00:25:17Hey. Thanks. A question on the prospective return outlook. Could you maybe give us an update on kind of where you would see those levels today subsequent to the additional spread tightening that we've seen in January? And maybe comment on if there's any kind of near-term read-through from kind of where you're seeing prospective returns to sort of how you're thinking about the appropriate dividend level in the near term. Thanks. Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:25:51Hey, Trevor. Thank you for the question. I'll talk about your first part, and I'll let William discuss the dividend part of it. Yeah. So spreads are tighter since we published this at the end of December. So it would be reasonable to expect that our dividend levels would be a little marginally from where they were back then on the 31st of December. We see spreads overall as being, on our whole portfolio, maybe about five basis points or so. So that will have an effect of lowering our dividend marginally. William DellalCFO at Two Harbors00:26:28Good morning, Trevor. On the dividend, obviously, we'll go through the normal routine of deciding that later in the quarter together with the board. I will say, still young in the quarter, so it's too early to say what the trend will be on the dividend. Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:26:48Sorry, I realize I just misspoke at the end of my. I said lower the dividend. That's not what I meant to say. Lower the return potential marginally. Trevor CranstonManaging Director at Citizens JMP00:26:56Yeah, I assumed. But thank you for the clarification. And then I guess the second question, since the news came out about the GSE buying, it seems to have had kind of a varied impact on the various coupons. Can you say if you guys have had any kind of material changes with your coupon exposures so far in January and sort of how you're thinking about the coupon stack in light of the initial announcement and the potential for kind of additional announcements aimed at targeting mortgage rates? Thanks. Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:27:32We haven't changed it materially. We have lowered our mortgage exposure overall to some degree. I think there are two effects that are going on. I think the GSEs, if I were implementing this and you wanted the effect of lowering the mortgage rate, lowering current coupon spreads, you would buy current coupons. So I think that there is a natural that's the sight where I would imagine that the GSE buying is focused. Commensurate with that, I think we've seen a fair amount of down in coupon trades coming out of various entities, including money managers, that haven't materially lowered their allocation yet to mortgages but do seem to have gone down in coupons. So thus far on the year, we've seen the biggest positive effect on the lower coupons, followed by current coupons. And then the higher coupons have actually widened a little bit. Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:28:18We've seen quite a bit of expansion of the coupon sorry, contraction of the coupon stack as you go up. Some of the higher coupons are actually now wider on the year. Trevor CranstonManaging Director at Citizens JMP00:28:30Okay. Appreciate the comments. Thank you. Operator00:28:34Our next question comes from the line of Harsh Hemnani with Green Street. Harsh HemnaniManaging Director at Green Street Advisors00:28:40Thank you. So we've obviously discussed the GSE buying and its impact on spreads. But one of the other things that's justifying spreads today is how low rate volatility is. Maybe there's a few events upcoming on the calendar, particularly with a new Federal Reserve in the middle of this year. How would you expect any, I guess, uncertainty or changes in policy on that front to, first off, impact rate volatility and then also funding markets for Agency MBS? Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:29:24Hey, Harsh. Very good question. I can't say I really have a firm answer. I mean, volatility has drifted back to being on the historically low side. We have had periods where it's been lower than it is right now. As you mentioned, we have a new nominee for the Fed chair. And it'll take a little bit of time to fully assess what he wants to do at the Fed. And also, it'll take him some time, likely, to develop the consensus to make that happen. So I mean, I would expect that we might see a mild amount of increase in volatility as a result of that. And we're still in an environment where, from a macro perspective, the economy seems to be humming along, but inflation is still running a little hotter than I think the Fed would like. Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:30:22And it's not clear where those paths are going to settle out here. So it would make sense that volatility would pick up a little bit. And that's a little bit of our overall thesis of being a little more defensive here on mortgage spreads, that vol is kind of drifted historically low, and there could be some things that kick it off. It's always hard to say ahead of time what's going to be the catalyst to make that happen, but it's reasonable to think that we could be in for a little bit of a higher level of volatility. What was the second part of your question? I'm sorry. Harsh HemnaniManaging Director at Green Street Advisors00:30:54Oh, funding markets. Any impacts on Agency funding markets? Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:30:59We haven't really seen much of an impact on funding markets. I mean, there's been a few people who have postulated that that could be one of the things that the administration does or the Fed does to try to lower funding rates for mortgages and other spread assets to drive that tighter. That's possible. But funding markets have been stable. We don't really see any disturbance on the horizon on that front. Harsh HemnaniManaging Director at Green Street Advisors00:31:24Got it. Thank you. And then maybe on the hedge portfolio front, it feels like you moved a little bit heavier into the shorter-duration hedges. Any thoughts on what's driving that and how that could evolve going forward? Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:31:41No. I mean, I would say that we've continued to have a little bit of a curve steepening bias in the portfolio. It has not been big. I think there are still reasons to believe that the curve could steepen further here. So no, I don't. We can talk about it more specifically offline. But I don't see us as having shifted our hedges very much in that way. Harsh HemnaniManaging Director at Green Street Advisors00:32:04Thank you. Operator00:32:07Our next question comes from the line of Eric Hagan with BTIG. Eric HaganManaging Director at BTIG00:32:14Hey, thanks. Good morning. Do you guys have a rough breakdown of the channel mix for your current MSR portfolio? What percentage were originated in the broker channel versus the retail channel? And how do you guys feel like the origination channel impacts the prepayment behavior of your portfolio? Bill GreenbergCEO at Two Harbors00:32:34Good morning, Eric. Thanks for the question. I don't have those at my fingertips here. We've been, over the years, active buyers both across flow and bulk channels. They do have different prepayment characteristics, and we attribute different prices to those loans and those characteristics. So whatever differences there are in prepayment behaviors are generally reflected in the prices at which we acquire them at, right? All of that is incorporated into the way that we manage the portfolio. I don't have the specific numbers of what's broker versus retail versus correspondent handy with me right now. Eric HaganManaging Director at BTIG00:33:20Got you. Okay. Some recent commentary from other originators noted that the GSE cash window has been more active as a delivery execution channel for community banks and small retail originators. Are you guys seeing the same thing? And how do you guys feel like the cash window impacts volatility and MSR valuations in the market? Bill GreenbergCEO at Two Harbors00:33:46I think that the MSR market is reasonably diversified in terms of the products that are coming to market and so forth. Those are affected in the prices. We continue to see robust MSR demand. Volumes in the MSR market are lower than what they have been in recent years. We have a chart in the deck on that. And so I think this is just a normal MSR environment as we're changing regimes to lower supply than what we've seen in the past. Eric HaganManaging Director at BTIG00:34:25Got it. But does the GSEs being active with the cash window is that a reflection of MSR valuations in any way? Bill GreenbergCEO at Two Harbors00:34:34No, I don't think so. Eric HaganManaging Director at BTIG00:34:36Okay. All right. Thank you, guys, for the comments. Bill GreenbergCEO at Two Harbors00:34:40Thanks, Eric. Operator00:34:42This concludes today's question-and-answer session. I would like to turn the call over to Bill for any additional or closing comments. Bill GreenbergCEO at Two Harbors00:34:50Just like to thank you all for joining our call today. As we said in the earlier prepared remarks, we view the merger with UWM to be extremely exciting, and we expect that it's going to deliver meaningful upside for our shareholders. Have a great day, and we look forward to speaking with you all again soon. Operator00:35:08This concludes today's call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesWilliam DellalCFOAnalystsBill GreenbergCEO at Two HarborsBose GeorgeManaging Director at KBWDoug HarterEquity Research at UBSEric HaganManaging Director at BTIGHarsh HemnaniManaging Director at Green Street AdvisorsMaggie KarrHead of Investor Relations at Two HarborsNick LeticaCIO at Two HarborsRick ShaneExecutive Director Relationship Executive at JPMorganTrevor CranstonManaging Director at Citizens JMPPowered by Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Annual report(10-K) Two Harbors Investments Earnings HeadlinesSetting the Record Straight: CrossCountry Mortgage's Acquisition of Two Harbors Is the Only Certain Path to Value for StockholdersMay 5 at 10:05 PM | finance.yahoo.comUWM Holding Challenges Two Harbors Board Over Rejected BidMay 4 at 6:50 PM | tipranks.comI’m sounding the alarmMeta is cutting 10% of its workforce. Microsoft offered voluntary retirement to 7% of U.S. employees. Oracle, Amazon, Snap, and Block have done the same. Most assume this is about AI - but investor Porter Stansberry says the real driver runs far deeper. Goldman Sachs estimates 12,400 Americans are being financially harmed every day by this shift, while others grow wealthier. Stansberry - who predicted the internet economy's rise and recommended Amazon, Qualcomm, and Texas Instruments before they were household names - is now releasing a new investigation he calls The Final Displacement.May 6 at 1:00 AM | Porter & Company (Ad)Two Harbors Reaffirms Support for CrossCountry Deal, Rejects Revised UWM BidMay 4 at 5:35 PM | marketwatch.comUWMC Responds to TWO Board's Latest Failing for TWO StockholdersMay 4 at 4:51 PM | businesswire.comTwo Harbors Investments (NYSE:TWO) Shares Gap Up - Time to Buy?May 3 at 3:53 AM | americanbankingnews.comSee More Two Harbors Investments Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Two Harbors Investments? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Two Harbors Investments and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Two Harbors InvestmentsTwo Harbors Investments (NYSE:TWO). is a mortgage real estate investment trust (mREIT) that primarily invests in residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS) issued or guaranteed by government-sponsored enterprises, as well as non-agency residential mortgage loans, mortgage servicing rights and credit risk transfer securities. The company seeks to generate attractive risk-adjusted returns for its shareholders by employing leverage to enhance net interest income derived from its portfolio of high-quality fixed-income assets. Headquartered in Minneapolis, Minnesota, Two Harbors operates through a self-managed platform that combines portfolio management, risk-management and securitization expertise. Its investment strategy emphasizes the use of interest-rate and prepayment hedges, active sector rotation and credit analysis to exploit relative value opportunities across the U.S. residential mortgage market. In addition to agency mortgage-backed securities, the firm selectively allocates capital to private label RMBS and other structured credit instruments that complement its core holdings. Founded in 2009, Two Harbors has grown its platform through a series of strategic portfolio acquisitions and securitization ventures, including transactions that transfer credit risk from government agencies to private-sector investors. The company is led by President and Chief Executive Officer Michael A. Strauss, whose tenure has overseen the expansion of Two Harbors’ investment capabilities and the refinement of its risk-management framework. Two Harbors remains focused on delivering sustainable dividend income and long-term value to its shareholders through disciplined portfolio construction and capital management.View Two Harbors Investments 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 Latest Articles Boarding Passes Now Being Issued for the Ultimate eVTOL ArbitrageDigitalOcean’s AI Surge: How Far Can This Rally Go?Years in the Making, AMD’s Upside Movement Has Just BegunCapital One’s Big Bet Faces Rising Credit RiskWestern Digital: The Storage Behemoth Skyrocketing on AI DemandOld Money, New Tech: Western Union's Crypto RebootHow Williams Companies Is Cashing in on the AI Power Boom Upcoming Earnings Coinbase Global (5/7/2026)Airbnb (5/7/2026)argenex (5/7/2026)Datadog (5/7/2026)Ferrovial (5/7/2026)Gilead Sciences (5/7/2026)Microchip Technology (5/7/2026)MercadoLibre (5/7/2026)Monster Beverage (5/7/2026)Canadian Natural Resources (5/7/2026) Get 30 Days of MarketBeat All Access for Free Sign up for MarketBeat All Access to gain access to MarketBeat's full suite of research tools. 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PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good morning. My name is Ruth, and I will be your conference facilitator. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to Two's fourth quarter 2025 financial results call. All participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speaker's remarks, there will be a question-and-answer period. I would now like to turn the call over to Maggie Karr. Maggie KarrHead of Investor Relations at Two Harbors00:00:21Good morning, everyone, and welcome to our call to discuss Two's fourth quarter 2025 financial results. With me on the call this morning are Bill Greenberg, our President and Chief Executive Officer. Nick Letica, our Chief Investment Officer. And William Dellal, our Chief Financial Officer. The earnings press release and presentation associated with today's call have been filed with the SEC and are available on the SEC's website as well as the Investor Relations page of our website at 2inv.com. In our earnings release and presentation, we have provided reconciliations of GAAP to non-GAAP financial measures, and we urge you to review this information in conjunction with today's call. As a reminder, our comments today will include forward-looking statements, which are subject to risks and uncertainties that may cause our results to differ materially from expectations. Maggie KarrHead of Investor Relations at Two Harbors00:01:13These are described on page 2 of the presentation and in our Form 10-K and subsequent reports filed with the SEC. Except as may be required by law, Two Harbors does not update forward-looking statements and disclaims any obligation to do so. I will now turn the call over to Bill. Bill GreenbergCEO at Two Harbors00:01:31Thank you, Maggie. Good morning, everyone, and welcome to our fourth quarter earnings call. I'm very excited to be able to speak to you all publicly for the first time about our recently announced merger with United Wholesale Mortgage. The rationale for this transaction should be familiar to most mortgage market participants and observers, and was especially fitting given our own history as a company. So let me take a step back and describe why I say that. We were one of the first, if not the first, mortgage REIT to invest in MSR as part of our asset mix, obtaining our GSE approvals and state licenses to own and manage MSR, and then buying our first pool in 2013. Bill GreenbergCEO at Two Harbors00:02:12We started out using third-party subservicers to service the asset, but as our servicing portfolio grew to a certain scale, it became clear to us that we could extract even more value from the asset and increase returns by bringing the servicing in-house, which we did in 2023 through our acquisition of RoundPoint. The last several years, really post-COVID, have highlighted the need for investors to be able to protect their MSR portfolio by providing recapture capabilities. Hence, we spun up a direct-to-consumer lending platform in 2024. However, in 2025, the mortgage finance landscape shifted again, with scale becoming more important than ever. It became clear to us that in order to succeed and compete effectively, our origination effort needed to be much, much bigger. Bill GreenbergCEO at Two Harbors00:03:00This merger brings us together with the number one mortgage originator in the country, UWM, and doubles the size of the MSR portfolio to a pro forma $400 billion. UWM, in turn, also benefits from our expertise in capital markets and asset management, and they can leverage RoundPoint's best-in-class and low-cost servicing capabilities. In many ways, this transaction is the culmination of the business plan that we've been aiming at for some time, and it creates, I believe, a very powerful strategic alignment and positions the combined company for accelerated growth and enhanced outcomes, which should deliver meaningful upside to shareholders. Now, please turn to slide 3. Our investment portfolio performed well as mortgage assets significantly outperformed their hedges, and our low-coupon MSR continued to behave as it was designed to do, earning its carry. For the fourth quarter, we generated a total economic return of +3.9%. Bill GreenbergCEO at Two Harbors00:04:01For the full calendar year 2025, we generated a total economic return on book value of -12.6%, though if you exclude the previously recorded litigation settlement expense of $3.60 per share, we returned a +12.1%. Mortgage assets have thus far continued to outperform into the first quarter, driven in part by increased GSE buying and announcements from the administration committing to buying significant sizes of MBS. In situations like this, we take the administration's clear desire for lower mortgage rates at face value, and we recognize the possibility that they will ultimately succeed and create increased mortgage and origination activity in 2026. One question that we've heard from investors is around our securities portfolio and if, following the merger, we intend to liquidate the portfolio. In the short term, the answer is that we intend to manage our business in the ordinary course. Bill GreenbergCEO at Two Harbors00:05:00Looking further out, I would say that while no decisions have been made yet, we will be thoughtful about how we proceed. There are some paths that lead to selling some or all of these assets over time, and there are other paths where the combined company will need many or even more than our existing TBA and specified pool positions. These are still early days with respect to the merger, so when those details are more clear, we will be sure to update you. Please turn to slide 4. Performance across fixed income was positive in the fourth quarter. The release of major conventional economic indicators was severely interrupted by the federal government shutdown, leaving the Fed and market participants without key data often used to assess the economy. Bill GreenbergCEO at Two Harbors00:05:43Despite this, and in line with market expectations seen in figure 1, the Fed still delivered 2 25 basis point cuts in October and December. As a result, and as you can see in figure 2, the yield curve steepened, with two-year Treasury yields down 14 basis points to 3.47%, while 10-year Treasury yields rose by 2 basis points to 4.17%, returning the yield curve to its steepest level since January 2022. Equity markets continued to react positively to the Fed cuts, with the S&P 500 up by 2.3% at quarter end after setting all-time record highs earlier in the quarter. Please turn to slide 5. Bill GreenbergCEO at Two Harbors00:06:27We settled on the sale of an additional $10 billion UPB of MSR out of our portfolio, increasing our total third-party subservicing to $40 billion at year end compared to $30 billion at the end of the third quarter, while reducing our total owned servicing to approximately $162 billion from $176 billion the prior quarter. Despite its small size, our DTC platform is punching above its weight and had a record quarter funding $94 million in first and second liens, a 90% increase from the third quarter. At quarter end, we had an additional $38 million in our pipeline. We also brokered $58.5 million in second liens in the quarter, which was nearly unchanged quarter-over-quarter. Bill GreenbergCEO at Two Harbors00:07:13Looking ahead, we are confident that the partnership with UWM will bring the benefits we have envisioned from the increased scale, and we believe this merger is extraordinarily positive for our company and for our shareholders. Now, I'd like to hand the call over to William to discuss our financial results. William DellalCFO at Two Harbors00:07:32Thank you, Bill. Please turn to slide 6. Our book value increased to $11.13 per share at December 31st compared to $11.04 per share at September 30th. Including the $0.34 common stock dividend, this resulted in a +3.9% quarterly economic return. Please turn to slide 7. The company generated comprehensive income of $50.4 million or $0.48 per share. Net interest and servicing income, which is the sum of GAAP net interest expense and net servicing income before operating costs, decreased as a result of MSR sales and lower float income. Float income decreased largely as a result of lower interest rates and end-of-year seasonals that lowered balances. The net overall decline in portfolio asset yields was offset by lower financing costs. Mark-to-market gains and losses were lower in the fourth quarter by $15.5 million due to MSR portfolio runoff and the bull steepening in rates. William DellalCFO at Two Harbors00:08:47You can see the individual components of net interest and servicing income and mark-to-market gains and losses on appendix slide 20. Please turn to slide 8. On the left-hand side of this slide, you can see a breakdown of our balance sheet at quarter end. We ended the quarter with over $800 million of cash on the balance sheet, and in accordance with our previously disclosed plans, we repaid our convertible senior notes of $261.9 million in full on their January 15, 2026, maturity date. RMBS funding markets remained stable and available throughout the quarter, with repurchase spreads at around SOFR +23 basis points. At quarter end, our weighted average days to maturity for our Agency RMBS repo was 54 days. William DellalCFO at Two Harbors00:09:45As a reminder, our days to maturity are typically lower at December 31st, as we intentionally roll repos in the third quarter past year end to avoid any disruption in funding that can sometimes occur. We finance our MSR, including the MSR asset and related servicing advance obligations, across five lenders, with $1.6 billion of outstanding borrowings under bilateral facilities. We ended the quarter with a total of $1.1 billion in unused MSR asset financing capacity. We have $71.5 million drawn on our servicing advances facility, with an additional $78.5 million of available capacity. I will now turn the call over to Nick. Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:10:39Thank you, William. Please turn to slide 9. Our portfolio performed well in the fourth quarter, as both MSR and RMBS returns benefited from the decline of interest rate volatility, together with strong demand for spread assets. At December 31st, the portfolio was $13.2 billion, including $9 billion in settled positions and $4.2 billion in TBAs. Our primary risk metrics quarter-over-quarter were not materially different. Our economic debt to equity was slightly lower at 7 times, and our portfolio sensitivity to spread changes marginally increased from 2.3%-3.7% if spreads were to tighten by 25 basis points. We kept interest rate risks low in aggregate and across the yield curve. You can see more details on our risk exposures on appendix slide 17. Please turn to slide 10. Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:11:32The trend of lower interest rate volatility continued throughout the fourth quarter, resulting in the 1-month realized volatility of 10-year swap rates falling into the bottom fifth percentile over the past decade, dragging implied volatility down as well. As you can see in Figure 1, 2-year options on 10-year swap rates, shown by the green line, closed the quarter at 79 basis points, 4 basis points below its average level over the past 10 years. RMBS spreads responded very positively to the decline in volatility, the steepening of the yield curve, and the prospect of strong demand in 2026, primarily from banks, REITs, and the GSEs. The nominal spread for current coupon RMBS tightened by 30 basis points to 114 basis points of the swap curve, while option-adjusted spreads relative to SOFR finished 23 basis points tighter at 45 basis points, as shown by the purple and blue lines, respectively. Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:12:28This decline in current coupon nominal spreads brought mortgages to their tightest level since the second quarter of 2022. Figure 1 includes data up to January 29th, and as you can see, spreads have continued to tighten further into this quarter. It wasn't just current coupon mortgages that outperformed. Spreads across the coupon stack, both on a static and option-adjusted basis, shifted lower, as you can see in Figure 2. Please turn to Slide 11 to review our Agency RMBS portfolio. Figure 1 shows the performance of TBAs and specified pools we owned throughout this quarter. Hedged RMBS performance was positive across the 30-year coupon stack, with the best performance in 4.5% and 5% coupons, where we have our largest pool exposures. Notably, the hedged performance of RMBS was aided by the widening of swap spreads, which have made up over 75% of our hedges. Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:13:25To give a sense of magnitude, 10-year swap spreads widened by 13 basis points to an 18-month high. Our pass-through position was largely stable quarter-over-quarter. However, although we continue to like the sector and the carefully selected prepayment-protected collateral behind our bonds, we reduced our Inverse IO position by almost 50% to reduce our exposure to higher coupons. Primary mortgage rates drifted a little lower over the quarter, stabilizing around 6.25%. The share of the universe of 30-year loans eligible for refinance returned to nearly 20% for the first time in years, and as we had anticipated, speeds for refinanceable coupons continued to increase. The prepayment S-curve steepened back to a more regular shape associated with periods when a larger share of mortgages are refinanceable, such as in late 2019. Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:14:18Figure 2 on the bottom right shows our Specified Pool prepayment speeds by coupon, which on aggregate increased only very slightly to 8.6% from 8.3% CPR, coming from increases in speeds from 5.5% coupons and higher. That said, the CPR increases on our pools were small and in line with our expectations, evidencing the value of careful pool selection. Please turn to slide 12. You can see in Figure 1 the volume of MSR available in 2025 declined from prior years. The market continues to be well-subscribed, with strong demand from originators as well as bank and non-bank portfolios competing for greater scale in MSRs. Indeed, as Bill said, scale has become increasingly important for mortgage companies to compete in the MSR market. Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:15:06The merger of Two and UWM will result in a combined company that is positioned for accelerated growth and has the ability to compete effectively in this market. Figure 2 shows that with mortgage rates at their current level of around 6.25%, only about 3% of our MSR portfolio is considered in the money. If mortgage rates were to drop to around 5%, the portion of our portfolio in the money would rise to about 9%. Given that the current administration in Washington is focused on policies to stimulate the housing market and increase home ownership, we anticipate that home prices will continue to rise and housing turnover will trend higher from its current historically low levels. Please turn to slide 13, where we will discuss our MSR portfolio. Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:15:52Figure 1 is an overview of our portfolio at quarter end, further details of which can be found on appendix slide 23. In the fourth quarter, we settled about $400 million UPB of MSR from flow acquisitions and recapture, and we sold $9.6 billion UPB on a servicing-retained basis. The price multiple of our MSR was consistent quarter-over-quarter at 5.8x, and 60-plus-day delinquencies remained low at under 1%. Figure 2 compares CPRs across those implied security coupons and our portfolio of MSR versus TBAs. Quarter-over-quarter, our MSR portfolio experienced a minor 0.4 percentage point pickup in prepayment rates to 6.4%. Importantly, prepays have remained below our projections for the majority of our portfolio, which has been a positive tailwind for returns. Finally, please turn to slide 14, our return potential and outlook slide. Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:16:48This is a forward-looking projection of our expected portfolio returns, which takes into account the repayment of the $262 million of convertible notes that occurred in January. We estimate that about 65% of our capital is allocated to servicing, with a static return projection of 10%-13%. The remaining capital is allocated to securities, with a static return estimate of 10%-14%. With our portfolio allocation shown in the top half of the table and after expenses, the static return estimate for our portfolio would be between 6.9%-10.2% before applying any capital structure leverage to the portfolio. After giving effect to our unsecured notes and preferred stock, we believe that the potential static return on common equity falls in the range of 5.8%-11.1% or a prospective quarterly static return per share of $0.16-$0.31. Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:17:40The reduction in return potential quarter-over-quarter is driven primarily by the large tightening of RMBS spreads and the sales of Inverse IOs. Since quarter end, the announcement of explicit support for MBS spreads from the FHFA director has led to more spread tightening. Spreads for Agency RMBS have now fully retraced their widening over the past three-plus years, leaving spreads historically rich on some measures, like Treasury-based OAS, for example, to fair versus swaps in periods when the GSEs have been active. As RMBS spreads have normalized, the potential for more tightening and resulting book value benefit of holding RMBS has been significantly reduced. That said, continued GSE buying and/or other future policy actions aimed at supporting mortgage spreads could keep spreads tight and limit their widening and risk-off scenarios. Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:18:31Given all that, we believe that this environment favors our paired portfolio construction of MSR and Agency RMBS, which has less exposure to fluctuations in mortgage spreads. We expect that demand for MSR will remain strong among the origination and investor communities. Though RMBS spreads have tightened, the paired construction of our low mortgage-rate MSR with RMBS generates attractive risk-adjusted returns with lower expected volatility than a portfolio of RMBS hedged with rates. Thank you very much for joining us today, and now I'll be happy to take any questions you might have. Operator00:19:08Thank you. If you are dialed in via the telephone and would like to ask a question, please signal by pressing star 1 on your telephone keypad. If you're using a speakerphone, please make sure your mute function is turned off to allow your signal to reach our equipment. Again, please press star 1 to ask a question. We'll pause for just a moment. We'll go first to Rick Shane with J.P. Morgan. Rick ShaneExecutive Director Relationship Executive at JPMorgan00:19:36Thanks, guys, for taking my questions. Congratulations on the announcement. I am curious, as we sort of move through this period, tactically how you think about portfolio construction. I realize that you guys continue to and need to, from a governance perspective, operate as an independent company, but obviously, there are strategic reasons for the acquisition. Is that shifting your tactical allocation of capital in any way as you construct a portfolio into year-end? And is that one of the other factors that's impacting your static return outlook? Bill GreenbergCEO at Two Harbors00:20:20Yeah. Good morning, Rick. Thanks for the question. No, I think you put your finger on it. We're operating as an independent company. We're managing our portfolio as we normally would in the ordinary course. The changes you've seen in the portfolio have been in response to market assessments of risk and reward, and we're continuing to manage the portfolio as we ordinarily would and do, and the investment decisions that we're making are in line with the way that we have always historically managed the portfolio. Rick ShaneExecutive Director Relationship Executive at JPMorgan00:20:55Got it. Okay. Thank you. And then I must have gotten up especially early today because I'm first in queue. I don't think I heard you talk about an update on book value, but I get to ask the question this time. So where is book value most recent, Mark? Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:21:09Hey, Rick. This is Nick. It's good that you got the opportunity to ask that question this quarter. We are up about 1.5%-2% as of Friday, January 30th. Rick ShaneExecutive Director Relationship Executive at JPMorgan00:21:20Terrific. Thank you, guys. Bill GreenbergCEO at Two Harbors00:21:23Thanks, Rick. Operator00:21:25We'll go next to Doug Harter with UBS. Doug HarterEquity Research at UBS00:21:31Thanks and good morning. Hoping you could just talk about how you're thinking about leverage, Nick, given your comments around kind of the MBS market, and just how interested you would be in continuing to kind of add at these spreads, kind of given the cross-currents that you mentioned, and just overall your view on risk-reward? Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:21:59Hey, Doug. Sure. As you alluded to from my comments, the administration has made it pretty clear that they want to do what they can to try to tighten spreads in this environment and potentially, as well, reduce mortgage rates. So we have become a little more defensive this quarter as a result of that. And just the general movement in spreads, if you look at where spreads are now historically, I think you can say that they are, I think you can definitely say they're symmetric in terms of risks. You might even say they're asymmetric in terms of the amount of widening versus tightening in here. Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:22:39That being said, there are things that the administration can do that have been widely discussed, for example, raising the caps that the GSEs have on their portfolio, which they can do without congressional input, and other measures to continue to drive the mortgage spread tighter or just limit it from a risk perspective of widening. So it is very much of a double-edged sword. We have decided, and our portfolio construction being what it is, we do like the paired construction overall, as you know, and it depends less on betting on which way spreads are going to go and more about just putting together a hedged portfolio that extracts the spread of the combined assets. So that's what we're really focused on. But we have reduced our leverage a little bit this quarter, as well as our mortgage risk. Doug HarterEquity Research at UBS00:23:36Appreciate it. Thank you. Operator00:23:40We'll go next to Bose George with KBW. Bose GeorgeManaging Director at KBW00:23:45Hey, guys. Good morning. Actually, what do you think are the chances of an LLPA, guarantee fee reduction at the GSEs? And how is the agency market kind of viewing that possibility? Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:23:58Hey, Bose. I think there's a reasonable reduction. There'll be some reasonable chance that there will be some changes on the LLPA grid. And I think it's somewhat priced into the market, but not entirely. There's a lot of optionality, I think, now in terms of the policy actions that can be done. And it's a lot for the market to digest, and hard, consequently, to fully understand whether just an LLPA change is being baked in or not. But I think there has been some amount of discounting of that. Bose GeorgeManaging Director at KBW00:24:33Okay. Great. And then actually, in terms of the MSR market, have you seen any changes in sort of bank interest or activity, just given it looks like the capital rules there might make it a little more favorable for them to hold onto MSRs? Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:24:50I can't say that we've seen anything notable about that. Overall, all I can say is that the interest in the MSR market continues to be rock solid and strong. So from our perspective, we haven't seen anything particularly new that we have not seen in the past year or two. Bose GeorgeManaging Director at KBW00:25:06Okay. Great. Thanks. Operator00:25:10We'll go next to Trevor Cranston with Citizens JMP. Trevor CranstonManaging Director at Citizens JMP00:25:17Hey. Thanks. A question on the prospective return outlook. Could you maybe give us an update on kind of where you would see those levels today subsequent to the additional spread tightening that we've seen in January? And maybe comment on if there's any kind of near-term read-through from kind of where you're seeing prospective returns to sort of how you're thinking about the appropriate dividend level in the near term. Thanks. Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:25:51Hey, Trevor. Thank you for the question. I'll talk about your first part, and I'll let William discuss the dividend part of it. Yeah. So spreads are tighter since we published this at the end of December. So it would be reasonable to expect that our dividend levels would be a little marginally from where they were back then on the 31st of December. We see spreads overall as being, on our whole portfolio, maybe about five basis points or so. So that will have an effect of lowering our dividend marginally. William DellalCFO at Two Harbors00:26:28Good morning, Trevor. On the dividend, obviously, we'll go through the normal routine of deciding that later in the quarter together with the board. I will say, still young in the quarter, so it's too early to say what the trend will be on the dividend. Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:26:48Sorry, I realize I just misspoke at the end of my. I said lower the dividend. That's not what I meant to say. Lower the return potential marginally. Trevor CranstonManaging Director at Citizens JMP00:26:56Yeah, I assumed. But thank you for the clarification. And then I guess the second question, since the news came out about the GSE buying, it seems to have had kind of a varied impact on the various coupons. Can you say if you guys have had any kind of material changes with your coupon exposures so far in January and sort of how you're thinking about the coupon stack in light of the initial announcement and the potential for kind of additional announcements aimed at targeting mortgage rates? Thanks. Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:27:32We haven't changed it materially. We have lowered our mortgage exposure overall to some degree. I think there are two effects that are going on. I think the GSEs, if I were implementing this and you wanted the effect of lowering the mortgage rate, lowering current coupon spreads, you would buy current coupons. So I think that there is a natural that's the sight where I would imagine that the GSE buying is focused. Commensurate with that, I think we've seen a fair amount of down in coupon trades coming out of various entities, including money managers, that haven't materially lowered their allocation yet to mortgages but do seem to have gone down in coupons. So thus far on the year, we've seen the biggest positive effect on the lower coupons, followed by current coupons. And then the higher coupons have actually widened a little bit. Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:28:18We've seen quite a bit of expansion of the coupon sorry, contraction of the coupon stack as you go up. Some of the higher coupons are actually now wider on the year. Trevor CranstonManaging Director at Citizens JMP00:28:30Okay. Appreciate the comments. Thank you. Operator00:28:34Our next question comes from the line of Harsh Hemnani with Green Street. Harsh HemnaniManaging Director at Green Street Advisors00:28:40Thank you. So we've obviously discussed the GSE buying and its impact on spreads. But one of the other things that's justifying spreads today is how low rate volatility is. Maybe there's a few events upcoming on the calendar, particularly with a new Federal Reserve in the middle of this year. How would you expect any, I guess, uncertainty or changes in policy on that front to, first off, impact rate volatility and then also funding markets for Agency MBS? Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:29:24Hey, Harsh. Very good question. I can't say I really have a firm answer. I mean, volatility has drifted back to being on the historically low side. We have had periods where it's been lower than it is right now. As you mentioned, we have a new nominee for the Fed chair. And it'll take a little bit of time to fully assess what he wants to do at the Fed. And also, it'll take him some time, likely, to develop the consensus to make that happen. So I mean, I would expect that we might see a mild amount of increase in volatility as a result of that. And we're still in an environment where, from a macro perspective, the economy seems to be humming along, but inflation is still running a little hotter than I think the Fed would like. Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:30:22And it's not clear where those paths are going to settle out here. So it would make sense that volatility would pick up a little bit. And that's a little bit of our overall thesis of being a little more defensive here on mortgage spreads, that vol is kind of drifted historically low, and there could be some things that kick it off. It's always hard to say ahead of time what's going to be the catalyst to make that happen, but it's reasonable to think that we could be in for a little bit of a higher level of volatility. What was the second part of your question? I'm sorry. Harsh HemnaniManaging Director at Green Street Advisors00:30:54Oh, funding markets. Any impacts on Agency funding markets? Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:30:59We haven't really seen much of an impact on funding markets. I mean, there's been a few people who have postulated that that could be one of the things that the administration does or the Fed does to try to lower funding rates for mortgages and other spread assets to drive that tighter. That's possible. But funding markets have been stable. We don't really see any disturbance on the horizon on that front. Harsh HemnaniManaging Director at Green Street Advisors00:31:24Got it. Thank you. And then maybe on the hedge portfolio front, it feels like you moved a little bit heavier into the shorter-duration hedges. Any thoughts on what's driving that and how that could evolve going forward? Nick LeticaCIO at Two Harbors00:31:41No. I mean, I would say that we've continued to have a little bit of a curve steepening bias in the portfolio. It has not been big. I think there are still reasons to believe that the curve could steepen further here. So no, I don't. We can talk about it more specifically offline. But I don't see us as having shifted our hedges very much in that way. Harsh HemnaniManaging Director at Green Street Advisors00:32:04Thank you. Operator00:32:07Our next question comes from the line of Eric Hagan with BTIG. Eric HaganManaging Director at BTIG00:32:14Hey, thanks. Good morning. Do you guys have a rough breakdown of the channel mix for your current MSR portfolio? What percentage were originated in the broker channel versus the retail channel? And how do you guys feel like the origination channel impacts the prepayment behavior of your portfolio? Bill GreenbergCEO at Two Harbors00:32:34Good morning, Eric. Thanks for the question. I don't have those at my fingertips here. We've been, over the years, active buyers both across flow and bulk channels. They do have different prepayment characteristics, and we attribute different prices to those loans and those characteristics. So whatever differences there are in prepayment behaviors are generally reflected in the prices at which we acquire them at, right? All of that is incorporated into the way that we manage the portfolio. I don't have the specific numbers of what's broker versus retail versus correspondent handy with me right now. Eric HaganManaging Director at BTIG00:33:20Got you. Okay. Some recent commentary from other originators noted that the GSE cash window has been more active as a delivery execution channel for community banks and small retail originators. Are you guys seeing the same thing? And how do you guys feel like the cash window impacts volatility and MSR valuations in the market? Bill GreenbergCEO at Two Harbors00:33:46I think that the MSR market is reasonably diversified in terms of the products that are coming to market and so forth. Those are affected in the prices. We continue to see robust MSR demand. Volumes in the MSR market are lower than what they have been in recent years. We have a chart in the deck on that. And so I think this is just a normal MSR environment as we're changing regimes to lower supply than what we've seen in the past. Eric HaganManaging Director at BTIG00:34:25Got it. But does the GSEs being active with the cash window is that a reflection of MSR valuations in any way? Bill GreenbergCEO at Two Harbors00:34:34No, I don't think so. Eric HaganManaging Director at BTIG00:34:36Okay. All right. Thank you, guys, for the comments. Bill GreenbergCEO at Two Harbors00:34:40Thanks, Eric. Operator00:34:42This concludes today's question-and-answer session. I would like to turn the call over to Bill for any additional or closing comments. Bill GreenbergCEO at Two Harbors00:34:50Just like to thank you all for joining our call today. As we said in the earlier prepared remarks, we view the merger with UWM to be extremely exciting, and we expect that it's going to deliver meaningful upside for our shareholders. Have a great day, and we look forward to speaking with you all again soon. Operator00:35:08This concludes today's call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesWilliam DellalCFOAnalystsBill GreenbergCEO at Two HarborsBose GeorgeManaging Director at KBWDoug HarterEquity Research at UBSEric HaganManaging Director at BTIGHarsh HemnaniManaging Director at Green Street AdvisorsMaggie KarrHead of Investor Relations at Two HarborsNick LeticaCIO at Two HarborsRick ShaneExecutive Director Relationship Executive at JPMorganTrevor CranstonManaging Director at Citizens JMPPowered by