Thank you. Good day, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the fourth quarter 2025 ACRES Commercial Realty Corp. earnings conference call. Currently, all participants are in a listen-only mode. Later, we will conduct a question and answer session with instructions to follow at that time. If anyone requires assistance during the conference, please press Star, then 0 on your touchtone telephone. As a reminder, this call is being recorded. I would now like to introduce your host for today's conference, Kyle Brengel, Vice President, Operations. You may begin.
Good morning. Thank you for joining our call. I would like to highlight that we have posted the fourth quarter 2025 earnings presentation to our website. This presentation contains summary and detailed information about the quarterly results of the company. Before we begin, I want to remind everyone that certain statements made during this call are not based on historical information and may constitute forward-looking statements. When using this conference call, the words believes, anticipates, expects, and similar expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements. Although the company believes these forward-looking statements are based on reasonable assumptions, such statements are based on management's current expectations and beliefs and are subject to several trends, risks, and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those contained in the forward-looking statements.
These risks and uncertainties are discussed in the company's reports filed with the SEC, including its reports on Form 8K, 10Q, and 10K, and in particular, the Risk Factor section of its Form 10K. Listeners are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date hereof. The company undertakes no obligation to update any of these forward-looking statements. Furthermore, certain non-GAAP financial measures may be discussed on this conference call. Our presentation of this information is not intended to be considered in isolation or as a substitute to the financial information presented in accordance with GAAP. Reconciliations of non-GAAP financial measures to the most comparable measures prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles are contained in the earnings presentation for the past quarter.
With me on the call today are Mark Fogel, President and CEO, Andrew Fentress, Chairman of ACR, and Eldron Blackwell, ACR's CFO. I will now turn the call over to Mark.
Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining our call. Today, I will provide an overview of our loan operations, real estate investments, and the health of the investment portfolio, while Eldron Blackwell , our CFO, will discuss the financial statements, liquidity condition, book value, and operating results for the fourth quarter 2025. Of course, we look forward to your questions at the end of our prepared remarks. The ACRES team remains focused on executing on our business strategy by investing in high-quality CRE loans, actively managing the portfolio, and growing earnings for our shareholders. In the fourth quarter 2025, we closed new commitments of $571 million, offset by loan payoffs and net unfunded commitments totaling $127.2 million, producing a net increase to the loan portfolio of $443.8 million.
The weighted average spread on newly originated loans is 2.83%. New loan production in the fourth quarter of 2025 and in the first quarter of 2026 put us in a position to structure and price a new CRE securitization in January. On February 12th, we closed ACRES 2026-FL4, a $1 billion deal that has a leverage of 86.5% and a weighted average debt spread of 1.68%. The weighted average spread of the floating rate loans in our $1.8 billion commercial real estate loan portfolio is now 3.35% over one-month term SOFR rates. The portfolio generally continues to perform, demonstrating sound and consistent underwriting and proactive asset management.
The company ended the quarter with $1.8 billion of commercial real estate loans across 53 individual investments. At December 31st, our weighted average risk rating was 2.7, a decrease from 3.0 at September 30th, and the number of loans rated four or five was 10, down from 13 at the end of the third quarter. The portion of our CRE loan portfolio rated four or five, based on the company's economic interest, was 17% at December 31st, down from 32% at September 30th. During the quarter, another four-rated loan paid off at par, highlighting again that the vast majority of our four and five-rated loans do not suffer principal losses.
Looking back through our history, when ACRES assumed the management contract of ACR in 2020, the company had 23 loans with a par balance of $411 million, or 24% of the portfolio risk-rated either four or five. As of December 31st, 2025, only 2 of those four or five loans remain unresolved in the portfolio. Our exceptional asset management team created sponsor-specific solutions to successfully resolve 21 of those loans, or $368 million of par value, recognizing a loss of only $4.8 million on those resolutions are just 1.3% of the par balance of those loans. We expect the same or better results on the remaining four or five rated assets in our portfolio as we work actively and strategically with our sponsors to create positive resolutions.
The majority of these assets have manageable stabilized LTVs of 80% or less. To further highlight this point, as a firm since inception 12 years ago, ACRES has incurred minimal realized losses on almost $8 billion of invested capital. We are also excited to announce that we sold one of our REO assets collateralized by an office property in Austin, Texas this quarter, which resulted in an earnings available for distribution or EAD gain of $1.3 million. During the quarter, we charged off a legacy $4.7 million mezzanine loan that was originated prior to ACRES management in 2018, and whose loss was fully reserved for and recognized in both GAAP and book value in 2022. We recognize the EAD impact this quarter in connection with settlement of that loan.
We will now have ACR's CFO, Eldron Blackwell , discuss the financial statements and operating results during the fourth quarter.
Thank you and good morning, everyone. GAAP net loss allocable to common shares in the fourth quarter was $3 million, or $0.43 per share. GAAP net loss for the quarter included $10.7 million in net interest income, which was an increase of $2.3 million over the prior quarter. This increase in net interest income was driven by net loan originations of $443.8 million in corresponding facility draws during the quarter. GAAP net loss for the quarter also included a $3 million net increase in the performance of our net real estate operations to net income of $156,000 and a $1.5 million net loss on the sale of the previously mentioned office property in Austin, Texas.
We saw a decrease in current expected credit losses, or CECL reserves, of $1.3 million, or $0.19 per share, as compared to a decrease in CECL reserves during the third quarter of $4 million, which was primarily driven by loan payoffs and net improvements in the model credit risk of our CRE portfolio, offset by a general decline in projected macroeconomic factors during the quarter. Also, as previously mentioned, ACR recorded a charge-off of $4.7 million on a mezzanine loan that was fully reserved for in 2022. The total allowance for credit losses at December thirty-first was $20.4 million and represented 1.11%, or 111 basis points on our $1.8 billion loan portfolio at par, and was composed entirely of general credit reserves.
Excluding the loss for the mezzanine loan that was fully reserved for in 2022, EAD for Q4 2025 was $0.20 per share. When the mezzanine loan is included, the company reported an EAD loss of $0.48 per share, as compared to earnings of $1.01 per share for Q3. GAAP book value per share was $30.01 on December 31st versus $29.63 on September 30th. During the quarter, we used $10 million to repurchase 493,000 common shares at an approximate 33% discount to book value at December 31st. In December 2025, the authorized amount was fully utilized, and since November 2020, the company has repurchased 5.3 million shares at an average discount to book value of 49%.
Available liquidity at December 31st was $108 million, which comprised $84 million of unrestricted cash and $24 million of projected financing available on unlevered assets. Our GAAP debt-to-equity leverage ratio increased to 2.8 times at December 31st from 2.7 times at September 30th from net originations on our CRE loan portfolio. At the end of the fourth quarter 2025, the company's net operating loss carry forward was $32.1 million or approximately $4.89 per share. With that, I will now turn the call to Andrew Fentress for closing remarks.
Thank you, Eldron. We're pleased with continued execution of our plan to drive shareholder value. In the fourth quarter, we originated $571 million of new loans. We repurchased shares at accretive levels, sold an REO asset, improved the credit quality of the portfolio, and positioned the company to resume paying a dividend to common shareholders. Since assuming the role of manager in July of 2020, ACR book value has increased a total of 66%. All the team here at Acres is energized by the opportunity that we see in front of us, both in the asset class and the competitive landscape. We will continue to deploy capital through careful underwriting and then manage each investment to the optimal outcome for shareholders. We gratefully appreciate your continued support and investment in ACR, and we look forward to your questions.
This concludes our opening remarks. I'll now turn the call back to the operator for questions.
Thank you. If you'd like to ask a question, press star one on your keypad. To leave the queue at any time, press star two. Once again, that is star one to ask a question. We'll pause for just a moment to allow everyone a chance to join the queue. Thank you. Our first question comes from Matthew Erdner with JonesTrading. Please go ahead. Your line is now open.
Hey, good morning, guys. Thanks for taking the question. Could you touch a little bit more on the loans that you guys completed this quarter? It's a really impressive number in terms of net loan growth. I heard you mention the 283 spread there, but could you give any additional kind of color on that? You know, as well, what the current pipeline looks like?
Sure, Matt, this is Mark. The color on that portfolio is it was mostly multi-family type execution. The average loan size was probably about $40 million-$50 million. Spreads range between 250 and 325. It was purposely focused, our origination effort on multi-family this quarter and the next quarter in that, we were in the process of looking to execute a new CLO execution was extremely dependent on significant amount of multi-family. On the bright side, our CLO execution includes reinvestment opportunity to do up to 40% of our assets outside of multi-family.
Got it. Then how long is that reinvestment period? Is it 24 months?
30 months.
Got it. Awesome. You know, with the additional kind of equity investments, you know, page 11 of the deck, you know, what's your plan for that? You know, would we or should we expect an exit from any of those assets as we go through the year?
I think on one of them right now, you can expect an exit. One of the smaller, land deals that we have, we're actually under LOI right now to sell that asset. One of the other assets is out on the market right now. We expect that we'll get some offers during the year, and we'll make a decision based on where those offers come in.
Got it. That's helpful. Last one from me, just, you know, noticed something on the balance sheet. Non-controlling interest jumped up to about $130 million call it from about $1 million. I was just curious what that was.
Sure. This is Andrew. The company sold a position or a portion of its previously issued financing arrangement with JP Morgan. That interest is recorded as an NCI.
Got it. That's helpful. Thank you, guys.
Thank you.
Thank you. We'll now move on to Chris Muller with Citizens Capital Markets. Your line is now open.
Hey, guys. Thanks for taking the questions. Nice to see originations come in really strong. Based on your illustrative earnings slide, it looks like there's some at least capacity to grow the portfolio and push leverage a little bit. Could we see this pace of deployment we saw in the fourth quarter in the near term, or was that mostly due to the CLO execution in January?
No, Chris. We expect that we'll see a decent amount of additional deployment. Significantly, a significant amount of it occurred in the first quarter of 2026. We're projecting net growth in the portfolio of $500 million-$700 million in 2026.
Got it. That's great to hear. I guess turning gears a little bit, I believe the capital loss carryforwards expired at the end of the year. Thinking about potential upside to book value, would any future gains on REO be fully taxed going forward, or are there any other offsets that would apply?
Hey, this is Eldron. Let me start with we still have remaining NOLs, $32.1 million at the quarters. That's available to us. That's an if. That's a when, not an if. As long as we continue to have depreciation, some of our normal operating expenses, I don't expect in the future that any gains on those capital items would be taxable.
Got it. That's helpful.
Yeah, we also have NOLs, in our TRS, so any activity down there is also protected.
Got it. Got it. There's still a little bit that'll flow through. I guess just a quick clarifying one. The $3.4 million of realized losses on core activities, was that just the mezzanine loan write-off that you guys talked about, or is there something else in there?
That was a big chunk of it. We recorded a $4.7 million EAD loss attributable to this mezzanine loan that we inherited as part of our taking control of the REIT, and we recorded a specific reserve for that back in 2022.
The specific or the CECL reserve release in the quarter, that was a specific reserve release related to this asset. Is that right?
Part of it was a specific reserve, the $4.7 million. Pardon me. The other $1.3 million was just improvement in net credit of the portfolio on our general reserves.
Got it. I appreciate you guys taking the questions today. Great to see the capital deployment picking up.
Thanks, Chris.
Once again, if you'd like to ask a question, please press Star and one on your keypad now. Thank you. We'll move on to Gabriel Poggi with Raymond James. Your line is now open.
Hey, good morning, thanks for taking the questions. I've got a couple. For year-to-date originations, has there been any change in spreads? Has there been any mix shift away from multifamily? Just anything you could provide there would be helpful. Pardon me.
In 2026, originations to date have mostly been multifamily. As I said, we were geared towards ramping up for our CLO. Spreads overall in that portfolio are about 2.83%. You know, we're seeing spreads come down on the multifamily side for sure, across the board. As I said, we're looking at other asset classes for reinvestment activity. Going forward, you'll see a different type of mix within our portfolio. You know, we're pretty heavily weighted towards multifamily right now, and I would expect that some of that will sort of start to fall off over the course of 2026.
Got it. Is the goal there to kind of maintain that 280 over spread while mixing out to other asset classes, or Are you content to kind of have asset yields bleed a little bit lower just because of the competitive nature of the market?
No, our intent is to be above and beyond 283. There, there are certainly a lot of opportunities in other asset classes where spreads are better, you know, some more risk-reward opportunity in self-storage and office and retail. You know, historically, our portfolio has been only 60%-65% multifamily, and that's where we expect it to get back to.
Okay, thanks for that. Question on repayments in 2026. You've got about $400 million update there. Obviously, the CECL reserve has come down. Do you expect just a normal cadence of repay activity for 2026? Anything in there that we should be aware of?
No, we expect that the repayments in 2026 will be healthy. We're projecting about $500 million of repayments in 2026, mostly older vintage assets. Importantly, what that does for us, if you mix in new originations in 2026, is it brings down our older vintage, call it 2023 and older, type assets, down to about only 15% of the portfolio.
Thank you for that. One more, and this is kind of a high-level question, but as you guys think about ramping the portfolio, right, in slide 14 in the deck and taking total leverage to 3.5 because of the capital structure and pref versus common, right, you tilt more to a higher leverage ratio at, on the common level. Where's the comfort level as you think about leverage to the common, and where do you want to max out there in that ramp? You know, I see the current state, the mid, and then the full tilt, but just how do you think about that in the bigger macro environment, where the comfort level is leveraged to the common equity? Thank you.
Yeah, Gabe, it's Andrew. I think what we show is, you know, we're inside of our comfort level at that inside of four turns. I don't think you'll see us go above that.
Got it. Inside of four on total, my words, leveragable capital, which then could push-
Yeah.
The leverage on the common higher, but total leveragable capital.
Right.
Inside of four.
Correct.
Okay. That's helpful. Thank you, guys.
Thank you.
Thank you. At this time, there are no further questions in queue. I will now turn the meeting back to our presenters.
Thank you, everyone. We appreciate your support, and we look forward to reconnecting with all of you, in the coming weeks. If you have any questions, please reach out to myself or Eldron. Have a great day.
Thank you. This brings us to the end of today's meeting. We appreciate your time and participation. You may now disconnect.