NYSE:EIC Eagle Point Income Q1 2026 Earnings Report $10.20 -0.02 (-0.15%) Closing price 07/2/2026 03:58 PM EasternExtended Trading$10.20 +0.00 (+0.05%) As of 07/2/2026 05:32 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 Eagle Point Income EPS ResultsActual EPSN/AConsensus EPS $0.33Beat/MissN/AOne Year Ago EPSN/AEagle Point Income Revenue ResultsActual RevenueN/AExpected Revenue$13.04 millionBeat/MissN/AYoY Revenue GrowthN/AEagle Point Income Announcement DetailsQuarterQ1 2026Date5/19/2026TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateTuesday, May 19, 2026Conference Call Time11:30AM ETConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Eagle Point Income Q1 2026 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrMay 19, 2026 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Positive Sentiment: Net investment income rose to $0.36 per share in Q1 2026, and recurring cash flows covered both common distributions and total company expenses. Negative Sentiment: NAV fell to $11.99 per share from $13.31 at year-end, mainly due to mark-to-market pressure from wider spreads and weaker risk appetite for CLO junior debt. Positive Sentiment: The company said it rebounded in April, with estimated NAV rising to between $12.48 and $12.58 per share, partially offsetting first-quarter weakness. Positive Sentiment: Eagle Point deployed $56 million into new investments at a weighted average effective yield of 16% and completed multiple CLO resets/refinancings that lowered debt costs by 48 basis points and extended reinvestment periods. Positive Sentiment: The company improved its capital structure by issuing 6% Series AA and AB perpetual preferred stock and later redeeming its 8% Series C term preferred stock, while also repurchasing shares at a discount to NAV that added $0.04 per share of NAV accretion in the quarter. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallEagle Point Income Q1 202600:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipantsPresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. At this time, I will turn the conference over to Mr. Darren Daugherty from Prosek Partners. You may now begin. Darren DaughertyManaging Director at Prosek Partners00:00:12Thank you, operator, and good morning. Welcome to Eagle Point Income Company's earnings conference call for the first quarter of 2026. Speaking on the call today are Thomas Majewski, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of the company, Dan Ko, Senior Principal and Portfolio Manager for the company's advisor, and Lena Umnova, Chief Accounting Officer for the advisor. Before we begin, I would like to remind everyone that the matters discussed on this call include forward-looking statements or projected financial information that involve risks and uncertainties that may cause the company's actual results to differ materially from such projections. For further information on factors that could impact the company and the statements and projections contained herein, please refer to the company's filings with the SEC. Darren DaughertyManaging Director at Prosek Partners00:00:58Each forward-looking statement or projection of financial information made during this call is based on the information available to us as of the date of this call. We disclaim any obligation to update our forward-looking statements unless required by law. Earlier today, we filed our first quarter 2026 financial statements and investor presentation with the Securities and Exchange Commission. These are also available in the investor relations section of the company's website, eaglepointincome.com. A replay of this call will also be made available later today. I will now turn the call over to Thomas Majewski, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Eagle Point Income Company. Tom? Thomas MajewskiChairman and CEO at Eagle Point00:01:40Thank you, Darren. Good morning, everyone. We're glad you're joining us today for Eagle Point Income Company's quarterly earnings call. Despite facing some broader market challenges, EIC had a strong first quarter. During the quarter, we had an increase in our net investment income from the prior quarter. Our recurring cash flows covered our distributions and our total company expenses. The CLO market faced challenging conditions in much of the first quarter of 2026. The company was not immune to these broader dynamics. While CLO fundamentals remained relatively stable, a decline in loan prices, especially in the software sector, and a cautious tone across credit markets due to the ongoing war in Iran weighed on our NAV during the quarter. Thomas MajewskiChairman and CEO at Eagle Point00:02:27The software sector was a particular area of focus during the first quarter, and investors continued to assess the potential impact of artificial intelligence on certain business models and revenue streams. Importantly, however, our exposure is principally through broadly syndicated loans, not middle-market loans that are commonly found in BDCs. The loans in our CLOs are typically larger, more liquid, institutionally syndicated credits with observable market pricing. While this observable pricing can result in more immediate mark-to-market volatility during periods of volatility, it provides clarity to investors as to the valuation of the underlying investments. While that volatility impacted quarterly valuations of many CLOs, we believe it also created opportunities for CLO collateral managers to reinvest proceeds from sales and pay downs into discounted loans with attractive forward return potential. Thomas MajewskiChairman and CEO at Eagle Point00:03:28While these factors led to a decline in CLO valuations during the quarter for many securities, we believe the market typically undervalues the reinvestment option embedded in CLOs during times of volatility. The ability to buy loans at material discounts to par has allowed CLO equity to deliver attractive intermediate and long-term returns many times in the past. In addition, we believe our floating rates CLO junior debt portfolio will benefit from higher income should we see an upward movement in short-term rates. With an increase in inflation more and more the outlook by many market participants, it seems the potential for a rise in short-term rates may be more on the table than we thought even just three months ago. Thomas MajewskiChairman and CEO at Eagle Point00:04:17During the quarter, we deployed $56 million into new investments across multiple credit asset classes with a weighted average effective yield of 16% as we took advantage of compelling relative value opportunities created by a particularly uncertain macro environment. Throughout the quarter, we continued to actively manage our CLO portfolio by completing four resets and two refinancings of our CLO equity positions. This resulted in weighted average CLO debt cost savings of 48 basis points for those CLOs. In addition to lowering debt costs, the reset positions extended their reinvestment periods to five years. While CLO junior debt remains central to EIC's strategy, we opportunistically increase our exposure to other credit classes, including infrastructure credit, regulatory capital relief transactions, portfolio debt securities, and other structured and private credit investments. Thomas MajewskiChairman and CEO at Eagle Point00:05:14Eagle Point's platform has a dedicated team with deep, specialized expertise across all of these asset classes, and this is a meaningful platform advantage enabling EIC to access originated investment opportunities, increase portfolio diversification, and generate excess returns above traditional CLO securities. NAV decreased to $11.99 per share as of March 31st from $13.31 per share at year-end. The decrease primarily reflects negative mark-to-market adjustments on the company's CLO debt portfolio, driven by wider spreads and weaker risk appetite for CLO junior debt during the quarter. Our GAAP return on first equity was -7.2%. That said, we saw a meaningful rebound in April, and indeed, EIC's NAV increased to between $12.48 and $12.58 per share. This is a 4.5% increase at the midpoint of the range. Thomas MajewskiChairman and CEO at Eagle Point00:06:22Despite the decline in NAV during the first quarter, our net investment income increased quarter-over-quarter to $0.36 per share. That's up from $0.35 per share in the fourth quarter of 2025. Both of these measures are in excess of the $0.33 per common share in distributions that we paid. Turning to our capital structure, during the first quarter, we launched our 6% Series AA and Series AB convertible perpetual preferred stock offering. This provides the company with a source of low-cost, long-duration capital and increases our financial flexibility. We are unaware of any other publicly traded entity that invests primarily in CLO debt with perpetual financing and consider this to be a material competitive advantage for our company. Thomas MajewskiChairman and CEO at Eagle Point00:07:16Subsequent to quarter end, we completed the full redemption of our 8% Series C Term Preferred Stock, which had been our highest cost debt financing. These actions reflect our continued focus on lowering our cost of capital, lengthening our maturity profile, all with the goal to enhancing our long-term's earning power. During the quarter, we repurchased almost 390,000 shares of our common stock at an average discount to NAV of 19.3%. This resulted in NAV accretion of $0.04 per share. Since June of 2025, when the board initially announced the share repurchase authorization, through March 31st of this year, we've repurchased a total of $50 million of common stock at an average discount of 13% of NAV, resulting in NAV accretion of $0.26 per share. Thomas MajewskiChairman and CEO at Eagle Point00:08:11We plan to selectively continue our common share buybacks as market opportunities present themselves. We believe the actions we've taken during the quarter, together with our current portfolio positioning, leave us well-situated for the quarters ahead. I'll now turn the call over to Senior Principal and Portfolio Manager Dan Ko for an update on the market. Dan KoSenior Principal and Portfolio Manager at Eagle Point00:08:32Thanks, Tom. I'll provide a brief update on the loan and CLO markets. In the first quarter, the S&P/LSTA Leveraged Loan Index fell by 0.5%, rebounded by 1.2% during the month of April. Despite this mixed performance in loan returns, underlying loan borrower fundamentals have remained stable as corporate revenue and EBITDA growth remain positive, supporting overall credit performance across the broadly syndicated loan market. The trailing 12-month default rate ended the period at 1.4%, modestly higher than year-end levels, well below the long-term average of 2.5%. While lower loan prices have pressured CLO valuations in the near term, they are also creating a more attractive reinvestment environment. Dan KoSenior Principal and Portfolio Manager at Eagle Point00:09:19With many loans trading below par and repricing activity slowing in the first quarter, we saw a greater potential for par build, wider spreads on new investments, and improved forward returns. For junior CLO debt securities, we believe this rate environment is constructive. With intermediate and long-term rates increasing, we expect short-term rates, including SOFR, which CLO debt floats off of, to follow. Indeed, the market is pricing in potential Fed rate hikes in the next year. With the potential for higher short-term rates, junior CLO debt investments continue to offer attractive floating rate income potential, which we would expect to support higher income on the portfolio in the future. In addition, periods of market volatility can create opportunities to purchase CLO debt at discounts, providing the potential for pull to par as markets normalize. Dan KoSenior Principal and Portfolio Manager at Eagle Point00:10:11We believe that the combination of income generation, structural protection, and potential convexity makes junior CLO debt particularly compelling in the current environment. In terms of CLO new issuance, we saw $47 billion of volume during the quarter, down slightly from $55 billion in the fourth quarter of 2025. Reset activity for the first quarter was $32 billion, down from $54 billion last quarter, while refinancing activity was $24 billion, up from $20 billion last quarter. With the broader markets normalizing into the second quarter, we expect CLO volumes to remain robust going forward. With that, I'll hand it over to our advisor's Chief Accounting Officer, Lena Umnova, to walk through our financial results. Lena UmnovaChief Accounting Officer at Eagle Point00:10:56Thank you, Dan. During the first quarter, the company generated net investment income or NII of $0.36 per share and NII less realized losses of $0.34 per share. This compares to NII less realized losses of $0.03 per share last quarter and NII and realized gains of $0.44 per share for the first quarter of 2025. Including unrealized portfolio losses, GAAP net loss was $22 million or $0.95 per share for the first quarter of 2026. This compares to GAAP net loss of $0.60 per share last quarter and a GAAP net loss of $0.46 per share for the first quarter of 2025. Recurring cash flows from the company's investment portfolio totaled $14 million or $0.62 per share during the quarter and exceeded the company's common stock distributions and expenses. Lena UmnovaChief Accounting Officer at Eagle Point00:11:56During the quarter, we paid three monthly common stock distributions of $0.11 per share, and last week we declared three monthly common stock distributions of $0.11 per share for the third quarter of 2026. As of March month end, the company had outstanding preferred equity securities equal to 34% of total assets less current liabilities, which is within our target range of 25%-35%, where we expect to operate the company under normal market conditions. Looking at our portfolio activity during the month of April, the company received recurring cash flows on its investment portfolio of $11 million. Note that some of the company's investments are still expected to make payments later in the quarter. As of April month end, net of pending investment transactions and settlements, the company had $15 million of cash and revolver capacity available for investment and other purposes. Lena UmnovaChief Accounting Officer at Eagle Point00:12:56Management's unaudited estimate of the company's NAV as of April month end was between $12.48 and $12.58 per share. At the midpoint, this was an increase of 4.5% from March month end. I will now turn the call back over to Tom to provide closing remarks before we take your questions. Thomas MajewskiChairman and CEO at Eagle Point00:13:19Thanks, Lena. In our view, the combination of lower loan prices, reduced loan repricing activity, and the potential for higher short-term rates is improving the outlook for our earnings power. Combined with our disciplined capital allocation and access to the full Eagle Point origination platform, we believe we are well-positioned to translate this environment into stronger results for shareholders over time. We appreciate your continued support, and thank you for your time and interest in Eagle Point Income Company. Lena, Dan, and I will now open the call to your questions. Operator? Operator00:13:58Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, if you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad, and a confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star two if you would like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. One moment please while we call for questions. Our first question comes from the line of Erik Zwick with Lucid Capital Markets. Please proceed. Erik ZwickAnalyst at Lucid Capital Markets00:14:34Thank you. Good morning again. Wanted to start with a question on software. You mentioned it in your comments, and it's obviously been very topical of late in the leveraged loan market. Looking at your, I think it's slide 22 maybe, where you know, kind of show the concentration of different industries in the portfolio, technology and software. You know, I guess kind of double at least the next largest one at the 12%, 12.5%. Curious, you know, what the lasting kind of and I guess maybe, Thomas, this is a bigger picture question. Just think if the impact could be, you know, is it likely to result in, you know, changes to volume in the leveraged loan issuance as potentially, you know, fewer IPOs in software? Erik ZwickAnalyst at Lucid Capital Markets00:15:20Do you think it, you know, leads to increased defaults and credit quality issues? Maybe more importantly, how are you thinking about this and, you know, your desired kind of a target for exposure to software in the portfolio? Thomas MajewskiChairman and CEO at Eagle Point00:15:36A lot of questions packed into one there. Erik ZwickAnalyst at Lucid Capital Markets00:15:39Yeah, sorry for that. Thomas MajewskiChairman and CEO at Eagle Point00:15:39Overall, indeed, you know, you can see it's, it is software and services is the largest, you know, category by a factor of more than two compared to the second place. I guess one of the first things we think about broadly is not all software companies are created equally. You know, at a high level, there's statistics that 70% of Fortune 500 companies still use mainframes. Forget about, you know, blades or SaaS or things like that. The risks are more pronounced in some sectors of software than others. A good example, like an airline reservation system would be something so critical not to be SaaS-ed away anytime soon. At Eagle Point, our internal books and records, like the official custodian records, I think it's a long time away before we see that. Thomas MajewskiChairman and CEO at Eagle Point00:16:33At the same time, how we track vacation time and things like that, you know, I'm sure we subscribe for some silly thing that we could probably just make and do it less expensive. Broadly, the criticality of a tool is an important factor in its SaaS vulnerability, first off. Then two, you know, I'll make an analogy back to techno- to e-commerce and amazon.com's IPO, which I think was back in 1997, give or take. One of the things, you know, we talked about then, you could probably find Bloomberg articles and other mass media articles, you know, the end of retail as we know it. Indeed, Amazon has significantly changed retail. We're going on 29 years ago that that IPO happened, and there's still plenty of stores. Thomas MajewskiChairman and CEO at Eagle Point00:17:23One stat I saw recently actually said retail was had the highest occupancy rate of any category in CMBS, in the CMBS markets, the lowest vacancy. While the predictions of doom are always great in the credit market, in my opinion and experience, they are often overstated. That said, there are snakes lurking in the grass and risks are out there. There are, you know, software loans in the syndicated market that are, you know, trading in the 50s, perhaps some even lower at this point. That's the exception. That's not the majority. It is certainly greater than 0. When we look at our portfolios, we're not buying or selling specific loans in any CLOs. Thomas MajewskiChairman and CEO at Eagle Point00:18:13The collateral managers are the ones doing that. That said, the software industry is an area of significant focus for us, both in our monitoring and ongoing diligence of existing investments in the ground, including the decisions potentially to sell investments, as well as an important part of our decision when we're selecting a new security to invest in. We don't sit here and say we have a target software exposure. All else equal, I would seek to lower it. That said, due to activity in the underlying portfolios, it's possible it goes the other way as well. Overall, I suspect that trend is gonna be in the downward direction. But I highlight and I really underscore the pace of transition. Thomas MajewskiChairman and CEO at Eagle Point00:19:01While it's probably faster this time than it was with e-commerce 29 years ago, we're not in an immediate situation. There are a small number of watch names. That said, I think many companies have a fair bit of runway to go. It's something we're actively watching. We're in active dialogue with our collateral managers, and it is impacting our investment decisions, but it's by no means the only factor we consider when we decide to buy, sell, or make the decision to hold a security. Erik ZwickAnalyst at Lucid Capital Markets00:19:35Thanks, Tom. I appreciate the insight on that topic. Last question from me, then I'll step aside. Just given, especially looking at the, you know, update for the April NAV, that the stock continues to trade at a discount to NAV. Is it, you know, fair to say that the share repurchases still remain, you know, attractive from your viewpoint and likely to, you know, continue for the repurchasing for the near term? Thomas MajewskiChairman and CEO at Eagle Point00:20:02We have continued to use the program, although I'll say it's not been as aggressive as we've used it in the past. If you listen to prior calls, I definitively use that word or a similar word. One of the things we balance is the potency of the buybacks in terms of NAV accretion, and I think we've built up about $0.24 of NAV through discounted buybacks. The flip side, we also balance liquidity in the stock and the actual potency of our buying to the stock price. It's something we continue to monitor and tweak. The program remains open and active, and we do have open capacity on it. Thomas MajewskiChairman and CEO at Eagle Point00:20:42I will say I balance We love buying our stock cheap, we love volume in our stock, and we like to use our powder when we can really move the stock price. It's a collage of all of those three that may inform our decision every day. I would no longer say right now we're aggressively buying back stock, but the program is open and active. Erik ZwickAnalyst at Lucid Capital Markets00:21:09Thank you for the update. Operator00:21:14The next question comes from the line of Christopher Nolan with Ladenburg Thalmann. Please proceed. Christopher NolanAnalyst at Ladenburg Thalmann00:21:21Hi, Dan. Actually, for anyone. The 12-month default rate was 1.40, and part of my notes is 1.20 last quarter. Was software the reason for that change? Dan KoSenior Principal and Portfolio Manager at Eagle Point00:21:36Yeah. I mean, we haven't seen really the software names, you know, default significantly. It's more so it was not necessarily in a specific sector yet. I mean, a lot of the software names we're kind of seeing kind of them play out in terms of kind of whether they'll survive or not. You know, we think that there's been a lot of baby thrown out with the bath water for software names and that about 75% of them still trade above 90. There's actually pretty decent kind of par building opportunities there. I mean, a lot of the CLO collateral managers were selling software last year in 2025 'cause they were kinda getting ahead of this AI disruption risk. This is not anything that's new to the CLO market. Dan KoSenior Principal and Portfolio Manager at Eagle Point00:22:20And with kind of the lower concentrations than kind of private credit and the ability to trade loans, there is an ability to kinda make those relative value swaps. You know, maybe, there certainly will be defaults kind of in some of the software names that could lead to kind of higher defaults in the future, but, kinda getting ahead of it, trading it around, allows us to, at least the BSL market seems to keep the default rates still relatively low. Christopher NolanAnalyst at Ladenburg Thalmann00:22:48You're not really seeing, you know, higher non-accruals or anything like that per se, just necessarily. Dan KoSenior Principal and Portfolio Manager at Eagle Point00:22:53Correct. Christopher NolanAnalyst at Ladenburg Thalmann00:22:54A bank non-performer. Okay. On a follow-up, some of the BDCs I cover, believe it or not, have started seeing increased credit stress in healthcare. Have you guys seen anything like that? Dan KoSenior Principal and Portfolio Manager at Eagle Point00:23:09Not significantly, unless it's, I guess, somehow related to AI. You know, if it's like some sort of software company that's really categorized within healthcare and has the risk of being disrupted by AI, but otherwise, no, we haven't seen that. Christopher NolanAnalyst at Ladenburg Thalmann00:23:25Okay. That's it for me. Thank you. Operator00:23:32Thank you. There are no further questions at this time. I'd like to turn the call back over to Thomas Majewski for closing remarks. Thomas MajewskiChairman and CEO at Eagle Point00:23:42Great. Thank you very much, everyone, for joining today. Lena, Dan, and I appreciate your interest in Eagle Point Income Company. If you have any further questions, we'll be in the office later today and be happy to speak. Thank you very much. Operator00:23:56This concludes today's conference. You may disconnect your lines at this time, and we thank you for your participation.Read moreParticipantsAnalystsChristopher NolanAnalyst at Ladenburg ThalmannDan KoSenior Principal and Portfolio Manager at Eagle PointDarren DaughertyManaging Director at Prosek PartnersErik ZwickAnalyst at Lucid Capital MarketsLena UmnovaChief Accounting Officer at Eagle PointThomas MajewskiChairman and CEO at Eagle PointPowered by Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K) Eagle Point Income Earnings HeadlinesCroíValve Announces Expansion of Series B Financing with $27 Million Additional Capital to Fund DUO Adapt in an Enlarged TANDEM II StudyJune 23, 2026 | businesswire.comEIC Seeking Higher Rates To Support Floating-Rate Debt InvestmentsMay 24, 2026 | seekingalpha.comStranded On The Flood Plains of HistoryThe petrodollar arrangement that Kissinger brokered in 1974 officially expired in June 2024. China has slashed U.S. Treasury holdings by 45% from peak, and central banks are swapping dollars for gold at the fastest pace since the Cold War. Porter Stansberry believes Trump is channeling more than $3 trillion toward securing the minerals, chips, and infrastructure that make AI possible - and companies at those chokepoints like Vertiv (up 500%), GE Vernova (up 700%), and Arista Networks (up 750%) are already moving. Porter's new briefing names one asset to buy today plus five stocks positioned at the narrowest chokepoints of what he calls the Silicon Dollar.July 3 at 1:00 AM | Porter & Company (Ad)Eagle Point Income Company Inc. (NYSE:EIC) Q1 2026 Earnings Call TranscriptMay 20, 2026 | insidermonkey.comEagle Point Income Company Inc. Announces First Quarter 2026 Financial ResultsMay 19, 2026 | finance.yahoo.comEagle Point (EIC) Q1 2026 Earnings TranscriptMay 19, 2026 | fool.comSee More Eagle Point Income Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Eagle Point Income? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Eagle Point Income and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Eagle Point IncomeEagle Point Income (NYSE:EIC) Company (NYSE: EIC) is a closed-end management investment company that primarily invests in the equity and junior debt tranches of collateralized loan obligations (CLOs). Launched in 2019 and domiciled in Maryland, the company seeks to provide shareholders with high current income and the potential for capital appreciation by focusing on structured credit opportunities. Eagle Point Income maintains a diversified portfolio of CLO equity positions, targeting both seasoned and newly issued transactions across multiple risk profiles. The company’s investment strategy centers on identifying mispriced or underfollowed CLO tranches, where it believes its team’s deep industry expertise can add value. Eagle Point Income may employ hedging strategies, including credit default swaps and interest rate hedges, to manage portfolio volatility and downside risk. Its investment horizon generally spans the life of the underlying CLO structures, allowing the portfolio managers to capture income distributions and reinvestment opportunities throughout market cycles. Eagle Point Income is externally managed by Eagle Point Credit Management LLC, a specialized credit manager focused on CLO equity and other structured credit investments. The management team draws on decades of combined experience in credit analysis, structured finance and portfolio management. This partnership structure aligns the interests of the investment adviser with those of common shareholders, as incentive fees are tied to performance benchmarks and net asset value growth. While the company principally invests in U.S. and Western European CLOs, its flexible mandate permits opportunistic allocations to other credit-related structured products. Eagle Point Income pays monthly distributions to common shareholders, reflecting its commitment to delivering consistent cash flow. As a NYSE-listed vehicle, it offers both institutional and retail investors access to a niche segment of the credit markets that has traditionally been accessible only to large, specialized funds.View Eagle Point Income 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 Meta’s AI Compute Push Could Turn Its Massive CapEx Bill Into a Competitive WeaponGeneral Mills Is a 5-Star Turnaround Play for Buy and Hold InvestorsCopper Stocks Are Getting a Bigger Spotlight as Gold’s Rally CracksNike Q4 Beat Masks Core Weakness as Analysts Cut Price TargetsIs the Memory Rally Still Alive After the Semiconductor Sell-Off?Hershey Stock May Be Near a Sweet Spot as Cocoa Pressure Eases3 Charts That Could Change the Course of Summer Trading Upcoming Earnings PepsiCo (7/9/2026)Delta Air Lines (7/9/2026)Bank of America (7/14/2026)The Goldman Sachs Group (7/14/2026)JPMorgan Chase & Co. 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PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. At this time, I will turn the conference over to Mr. Darren Daugherty from Prosek Partners. You may now begin. Darren DaughertyManaging Director at Prosek Partners00:00:12Thank you, operator, and good morning. Welcome to Eagle Point Income Company's earnings conference call for the first quarter of 2026. Speaking on the call today are Thomas Majewski, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of the company, Dan Ko, Senior Principal and Portfolio Manager for the company's advisor, and Lena Umnova, Chief Accounting Officer for the advisor. Before we begin, I would like to remind everyone that the matters discussed on this call include forward-looking statements or projected financial information that involve risks and uncertainties that may cause the company's actual results to differ materially from such projections. For further information on factors that could impact the company and the statements and projections contained herein, please refer to the company's filings with the SEC. Darren DaughertyManaging Director at Prosek Partners00:00:58Each forward-looking statement or projection of financial information made during this call is based on the information available to us as of the date of this call. We disclaim any obligation to update our forward-looking statements unless required by law. Earlier today, we filed our first quarter 2026 financial statements and investor presentation with the Securities and Exchange Commission. These are also available in the investor relations section of the company's website, eaglepointincome.com. A replay of this call will also be made available later today. I will now turn the call over to Thomas Majewski, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Eagle Point Income Company. Tom? Thomas MajewskiChairman and CEO at Eagle Point00:01:40Thank you, Darren. Good morning, everyone. We're glad you're joining us today for Eagle Point Income Company's quarterly earnings call. Despite facing some broader market challenges, EIC had a strong first quarter. During the quarter, we had an increase in our net investment income from the prior quarter. Our recurring cash flows covered our distributions and our total company expenses. The CLO market faced challenging conditions in much of the first quarter of 2026. The company was not immune to these broader dynamics. While CLO fundamentals remained relatively stable, a decline in loan prices, especially in the software sector, and a cautious tone across credit markets due to the ongoing war in Iran weighed on our NAV during the quarter. Thomas MajewskiChairman and CEO at Eagle Point00:02:27The software sector was a particular area of focus during the first quarter, and investors continued to assess the potential impact of artificial intelligence on certain business models and revenue streams. Importantly, however, our exposure is principally through broadly syndicated loans, not middle-market loans that are commonly found in BDCs. The loans in our CLOs are typically larger, more liquid, institutionally syndicated credits with observable market pricing. While this observable pricing can result in more immediate mark-to-market volatility during periods of volatility, it provides clarity to investors as to the valuation of the underlying investments. While that volatility impacted quarterly valuations of many CLOs, we believe it also created opportunities for CLO collateral managers to reinvest proceeds from sales and pay downs into discounted loans with attractive forward return potential. Thomas MajewskiChairman and CEO at Eagle Point00:03:28While these factors led to a decline in CLO valuations during the quarter for many securities, we believe the market typically undervalues the reinvestment option embedded in CLOs during times of volatility. The ability to buy loans at material discounts to par has allowed CLO equity to deliver attractive intermediate and long-term returns many times in the past. In addition, we believe our floating rates CLO junior debt portfolio will benefit from higher income should we see an upward movement in short-term rates. With an increase in inflation more and more the outlook by many market participants, it seems the potential for a rise in short-term rates may be more on the table than we thought even just three months ago. Thomas MajewskiChairman and CEO at Eagle Point00:04:17During the quarter, we deployed $56 million into new investments across multiple credit asset classes with a weighted average effective yield of 16% as we took advantage of compelling relative value opportunities created by a particularly uncertain macro environment. Throughout the quarter, we continued to actively manage our CLO portfolio by completing four resets and two refinancings of our CLO equity positions. This resulted in weighted average CLO debt cost savings of 48 basis points for those CLOs. In addition to lowering debt costs, the reset positions extended their reinvestment periods to five years. While CLO junior debt remains central to EIC's strategy, we opportunistically increase our exposure to other credit classes, including infrastructure credit, regulatory capital relief transactions, portfolio debt securities, and other structured and private credit investments. Thomas MajewskiChairman and CEO at Eagle Point00:05:14Eagle Point's platform has a dedicated team with deep, specialized expertise across all of these asset classes, and this is a meaningful platform advantage enabling EIC to access originated investment opportunities, increase portfolio diversification, and generate excess returns above traditional CLO securities. NAV decreased to $11.99 per share as of March 31st from $13.31 per share at year-end. The decrease primarily reflects negative mark-to-market adjustments on the company's CLO debt portfolio, driven by wider spreads and weaker risk appetite for CLO junior debt during the quarter. Our GAAP return on first equity was -7.2%. That said, we saw a meaningful rebound in April, and indeed, EIC's NAV increased to between $12.48 and $12.58 per share. This is a 4.5% increase at the midpoint of the range. Thomas MajewskiChairman and CEO at Eagle Point00:06:22Despite the decline in NAV during the first quarter, our net investment income increased quarter-over-quarter to $0.36 per share. That's up from $0.35 per share in the fourth quarter of 2025. Both of these measures are in excess of the $0.33 per common share in distributions that we paid. Turning to our capital structure, during the first quarter, we launched our 6% Series AA and Series AB convertible perpetual preferred stock offering. This provides the company with a source of low-cost, long-duration capital and increases our financial flexibility. We are unaware of any other publicly traded entity that invests primarily in CLO debt with perpetual financing and consider this to be a material competitive advantage for our company. Thomas MajewskiChairman and CEO at Eagle Point00:07:16Subsequent to quarter end, we completed the full redemption of our 8% Series C Term Preferred Stock, which had been our highest cost debt financing. These actions reflect our continued focus on lowering our cost of capital, lengthening our maturity profile, all with the goal to enhancing our long-term's earning power. During the quarter, we repurchased almost 390,000 shares of our common stock at an average discount to NAV of 19.3%. This resulted in NAV accretion of $0.04 per share. Since June of 2025, when the board initially announced the share repurchase authorization, through March 31st of this year, we've repurchased a total of $50 million of common stock at an average discount of 13% of NAV, resulting in NAV accretion of $0.26 per share. Thomas MajewskiChairman and CEO at Eagle Point00:08:11We plan to selectively continue our common share buybacks as market opportunities present themselves. We believe the actions we've taken during the quarter, together with our current portfolio positioning, leave us well-situated for the quarters ahead. I'll now turn the call over to Senior Principal and Portfolio Manager Dan Ko for an update on the market. Dan KoSenior Principal and Portfolio Manager at Eagle Point00:08:32Thanks, Tom. I'll provide a brief update on the loan and CLO markets. In the first quarter, the S&P/LSTA Leveraged Loan Index fell by 0.5%, rebounded by 1.2% during the month of April. Despite this mixed performance in loan returns, underlying loan borrower fundamentals have remained stable as corporate revenue and EBITDA growth remain positive, supporting overall credit performance across the broadly syndicated loan market. The trailing 12-month default rate ended the period at 1.4%, modestly higher than year-end levels, well below the long-term average of 2.5%. While lower loan prices have pressured CLO valuations in the near term, they are also creating a more attractive reinvestment environment. Dan KoSenior Principal and Portfolio Manager at Eagle Point00:09:19With many loans trading below par and repricing activity slowing in the first quarter, we saw a greater potential for par build, wider spreads on new investments, and improved forward returns. For junior CLO debt securities, we believe this rate environment is constructive. With intermediate and long-term rates increasing, we expect short-term rates, including SOFR, which CLO debt floats off of, to follow. Indeed, the market is pricing in potential Fed rate hikes in the next year. With the potential for higher short-term rates, junior CLO debt investments continue to offer attractive floating rate income potential, which we would expect to support higher income on the portfolio in the future. In addition, periods of market volatility can create opportunities to purchase CLO debt at discounts, providing the potential for pull to par as markets normalize. Dan KoSenior Principal and Portfolio Manager at Eagle Point00:10:11We believe that the combination of income generation, structural protection, and potential convexity makes junior CLO debt particularly compelling in the current environment. In terms of CLO new issuance, we saw $47 billion of volume during the quarter, down slightly from $55 billion in the fourth quarter of 2025. Reset activity for the first quarter was $32 billion, down from $54 billion last quarter, while refinancing activity was $24 billion, up from $20 billion last quarter. With the broader markets normalizing into the second quarter, we expect CLO volumes to remain robust going forward. With that, I'll hand it over to our advisor's Chief Accounting Officer, Lena Umnova, to walk through our financial results. Lena UmnovaChief Accounting Officer at Eagle Point00:10:56Thank you, Dan. During the first quarter, the company generated net investment income or NII of $0.36 per share and NII less realized losses of $0.34 per share. This compares to NII less realized losses of $0.03 per share last quarter and NII and realized gains of $0.44 per share for the first quarter of 2025. Including unrealized portfolio losses, GAAP net loss was $22 million or $0.95 per share for the first quarter of 2026. This compares to GAAP net loss of $0.60 per share last quarter and a GAAP net loss of $0.46 per share for the first quarter of 2025. Recurring cash flows from the company's investment portfolio totaled $14 million or $0.62 per share during the quarter and exceeded the company's common stock distributions and expenses. Lena UmnovaChief Accounting Officer at Eagle Point00:11:56During the quarter, we paid three monthly common stock distributions of $0.11 per share, and last week we declared three monthly common stock distributions of $0.11 per share for the third quarter of 2026. As of March month end, the company had outstanding preferred equity securities equal to 34% of total assets less current liabilities, which is within our target range of 25%-35%, where we expect to operate the company under normal market conditions. Looking at our portfolio activity during the month of April, the company received recurring cash flows on its investment portfolio of $11 million. Note that some of the company's investments are still expected to make payments later in the quarter. As of April month end, net of pending investment transactions and settlements, the company had $15 million of cash and revolver capacity available for investment and other purposes. Lena UmnovaChief Accounting Officer at Eagle Point00:12:56Management's unaudited estimate of the company's NAV as of April month end was between $12.48 and $12.58 per share. At the midpoint, this was an increase of 4.5% from March month end. I will now turn the call back over to Tom to provide closing remarks before we take your questions. Thomas MajewskiChairman and CEO at Eagle Point00:13:19Thanks, Lena. In our view, the combination of lower loan prices, reduced loan repricing activity, and the potential for higher short-term rates is improving the outlook for our earnings power. Combined with our disciplined capital allocation and access to the full Eagle Point origination platform, we believe we are well-positioned to translate this environment into stronger results for shareholders over time. We appreciate your continued support, and thank you for your time and interest in Eagle Point Income Company. Lena, Dan, and I will now open the call to your questions. Operator? Operator00:13:58Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, if you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad, and a confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star two if you would like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. One moment please while we call for questions. Our first question comes from the line of Erik Zwick with Lucid Capital Markets. Please proceed. Erik ZwickAnalyst at Lucid Capital Markets00:14:34Thank you. Good morning again. Wanted to start with a question on software. You mentioned it in your comments, and it's obviously been very topical of late in the leveraged loan market. Looking at your, I think it's slide 22 maybe, where you know, kind of show the concentration of different industries in the portfolio, technology and software. You know, I guess kind of double at least the next largest one at the 12%, 12.5%. Curious, you know, what the lasting kind of and I guess maybe, Thomas, this is a bigger picture question. Just think if the impact could be, you know, is it likely to result in, you know, changes to volume in the leveraged loan issuance as potentially, you know, fewer IPOs in software? Erik ZwickAnalyst at Lucid Capital Markets00:15:20Do you think it, you know, leads to increased defaults and credit quality issues? Maybe more importantly, how are you thinking about this and, you know, your desired kind of a target for exposure to software in the portfolio? Thomas MajewskiChairman and CEO at Eagle Point00:15:36A lot of questions packed into one there. Erik ZwickAnalyst at Lucid Capital Markets00:15:39Yeah, sorry for that. Thomas MajewskiChairman and CEO at Eagle Point00:15:39Overall, indeed, you know, you can see it's, it is software and services is the largest, you know, category by a factor of more than two compared to the second place. I guess one of the first things we think about broadly is not all software companies are created equally. You know, at a high level, there's statistics that 70% of Fortune 500 companies still use mainframes. Forget about, you know, blades or SaaS or things like that. The risks are more pronounced in some sectors of software than others. A good example, like an airline reservation system would be something so critical not to be SaaS-ed away anytime soon. At Eagle Point, our internal books and records, like the official custodian records, I think it's a long time away before we see that. Thomas MajewskiChairman and CEO at Eagle Point00:16:33At the same time, how we track vacation time and things like that, you know, I'm sure we subscribe for some silly thing that we could probably just make and do it less expensive. Broadly, the criticality of a tool is an important factor in its SaaS vulnerability, first off. Then two, you know, I'll make an analogy back to techno- to e-commerce and amazon.com's IPO, which I think was back in 1997, give or take. One of the things, you know, we talked about then, you could probably find Bloomberg articles and other mass media articles, you know, the end of retail as we know it. Indeed, Amazon has significantly changed retail. We're going on 29 years ago that that IPO happened, and there's still plenty of stores. Thomas MajewskiChairman and CEO at Eagle Point00:17:23One stat I saw recently actually said retail was had the highest occupancy rate of any category in CMBS, in the CMBS markets, the lowest vacancy. While the predictions of doom are always great in the credit market, in my opinion and experience, they are often overstated. That said, there are snakes lurking in the grass and risks are out there. There are, you know, software loans in the syndicated market that are, you know, trading in the 50s, perhaps some even lower at this point. That's the exception. That's not the majority. It is certainly greater than 0. When we look at our portfolios, we're not buying or selling specific loans in any CLOs. Thomas MajewskiChairman and CEO at Eagle Point00:18:13The collateral managers are the ones doing that. That said, the software industry is an area of significant focus for us, both in our monitoring and ongoing diligence of existing investments in the ground, including the decisions potentially to sell investments, as well as an important part of our decision when we're selecting a new security to invest in. We don't sit here and say we have a target software exposure. All else equal, I would seek to lower it. That said, due to activity in the underlying portfolios, it's possible it goes the other way as well. Overall, I suspect that trend is gonna be in the downward direction. But I highlight and I really underscore the pace of transition. Thomas MajewskiChairman and CEO at Eagle Point00:19:01While it's probably faster this time than it was with e-commerce 29 years ago, we're not in an immediate situation. There are a small number of watch names. That said, I think many companies have a fair bit of runway to go. It's something we're actively watching. We're in active dialogue with our collateral managers, and it is impacting our investment decisions, but it's by no means the only factor we consider when we decide to buy, sell, or make the decision to hold a security. Erik ZwickAnalyst at Lucid Capital Markets00:19:35Thanks, Tom. I appreciate the insight on that topic. Last question from me, then I'll step aside. Just given, especially looking at the, you know, update for the April NAV, that the stock continues to trade at a discount to NAV. Is it, you know, fair to say that the share repurchases still remain, you know, attractive from your viewpoint and likely to, you know, continue for the repurchasing for the near term? Thomas MajewskiChairman and CEO at Eagle Point00:20:02We have continued to use the program, although I'll say it's not been as aggressive as we've used it in the past. If you listen to prior calls, I definitively use that word or a similar word. One of the things we balance is the potency of the buybacks in terms of NAV accretion, and I think we've built up about $0.24 of NAV through discounted buybacks. The flip side, we also balance liquidity in the stock and the actual potency of our buying to the stock price. It's something we continue to monitor and tweak. The program remains open and active, and we do have open capacity on it. Thomas MajewskiChairman and CEO at Eagle Point00:20:42I will say I balance We love buying our stock cheap, we love volume in our stock, and we like to use our powder when we can really move the stock price. It's a collage of all of those three that may inform our decision every day. I would no longer say right now we're aggressively buying back stock, but the program is open and active. Erik ZwickAnalyst at Lucid Capital Markets00:21:09Thank you for the update. Operator00:21:14The next question comes from the line of Christopher Nolan with Ladenburg Thalmann. Please proceed. Christopher NolanAnalyst at Ladenburg Thalmann00:21:21Hi, Dan. Actually, for anyone. The 12-month default rate was 1.40, and part of my notes is 1.20 last quarter. Was software the reason for that change? Dan KoSenior Principal and Portfolio Manager at Eagle Point00:21:36Yeah. I mean, we haven't seen really the software names, you know, default significantly. It's more so it was not necessarily in a specific sector yet. I mean, a lot of the software names we're kind of seeing kind of them play out in terms of kind of whether they'll survive or not. You know, we think that there's been a lot of baby thrown out with the bath water for software names and that about 75% of them still trade above 90. There's actually pretty decent kind of par building opportunities there. I mean, a lot of the CLO collateral managers were selling software last year in 2025 'cause they were kinda getting ahead of this AI disruption risk. This is not anything that's new to the CLO market. Dan KoSenior Principal and Portfolio Manager at Eagle Point00:22:20And with kind of the lower concentrations than kind of private credit and the ability to trade loans, there is an ability to kinda make those relative value swaps. You know, maybe, there certainly will be defaults kind of in some of the software names that could lead to kind of higher defaults in the future, but, kinda getting ahead of it, trading it around, allows us to, at least the BSL market seems to keep the default rates still relatively low. Christopher NolanAnalyst at Ladenburg Thalmann00:22:48You're not really seeing, you know, higher non-accruals or anything like that per se, just necessarily. Dan KoSenior Principal and Portfolio Manager at Eagle Point00:22:53Correct. Christopher NolanAnalyst at Ladenburg Thalmann00:22:54A bank non-performer. Okay. On a follow-up, some of the BDCs I cover, believe it or not, have started seeing increased credit stress in healthcare. Have you guys seen anything like that? Dan KoSenior Principal and Portfolio Manager at Eagle Point00:23:09Not significantly, unless it's, I guess, somehow related to AI. You know, if it's like some sort of software company that's really categorized within healthcare and has the risk of being disrupted by AI, but otherwise, no, we haven't seen that. Christopher NolanAnalyst at Ladenburg Thalmann00:23:25Okay. That's it for me. Thank you. Operator00:23:32Thank you. There are no further questions at this time. I'd like to turn the call back over to Thomas Majewski for closing remarks. Thomas MajewskiChairman and CEO at Eagle Point00:23:42Great. Thank you very much, everyone, for joining today. Lena, Dan, and I appreciate your interest in Eagle Point Income Company. If you have any further questions, we'll be in the office later today and be happy to speak. Thank you very much. Operator00:23:56This concludes today's conference. You may disconnect your lines at this time, and we thank you for your participation.Read moreParticipantsAnalystsChristopher NolanAnalyst at Ladenburg ThalmannDan KoSenior Principal and Portfolio Manager at Eagle PointDarren DaughertyManaging Director at Prosek PartnersErik ZwickAnalyst at Lucid Capital MarketsLena UmnovaChief Accounting Officer at Eagle PointThomas MajewskiChairman and CEO at Eagle PointPowered by