Good day, and welcome to the Dynex Capital Q4 and Full Year 2022 Earnings Call. Today's call is being recorded. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker's remarks will be a question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question during this time, please simply press star one on your telephone keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, please press star one again. I would now like to turn the conference over to Alison Griffin, Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Good morning. Thank you for joining us today for the Dynex Capital Q4 and Full Year 2022 Earnings Conference Call. The press release associated with today's call was issued and filed with the SEC this morning, January 30. You may view the press release on the homepage of the Dynex website at dynexcapital.com, as well as on the SEC's website at sec.gov. Before we begin, we wish to remind you that this conference call may contain forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. The words believe, expect, forecast, anticipate, estimate, project, plan, and similar expressions identify forward-looking statements that are inherently subject to risks and uncertainties, some of which cannot be predicted or quantified.
The company's actual results and timing of certain events could differ considerably from those projected and/or contemplated by those forward-looking statements as a result of unforeseen external factors or risks. For additional information on these factors or risks, please refer to our disclosures filed with the SEC, which may be found on the Dynex website under Investor Center, as well as on the SEC's website. This conference call is being broadcast live over the Internet with a streaming slide presentation, which can be found through a webcast link on the homepage of our website. The slide presentation may also be referenced under Quarterly Reports on the Investor Center page. Joining me on the call is Byron Boston, Chief Executive Officer and Co-Chief Investment Officer, Smriti Popenoe, President and Co-Chief Investment Officer, and Rob Colligan, Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer.
With that, it is my pleasure to turn the call over to Byron.
Thank you, Alison. Good morning, and thank you for joining us today. We started this decade at Dynex believing that surprises would be highly probable. Three years into it, the surprises continue to come. I've been active in the financial market since 1981 with a four-decade-long career that began with a deep curiosity for economics. As a trader and banker on Wall Street, I learned disciplined processes for risk management, and my experience since then has laid a tremendous foundation for navigating this current period. I can say with all my years of having been on this planet that we are at a big moment in history. Last year, we saw more volatility than I had witnessed since my early years on Wall Street. Bond markets had the worst year of returns since 1926. Our performance for the year reflected some of this turmoil.
Our total economic return for the year was - 9.45%. We are a big proponent of preserving book value, and we never like being in the position of losing capital. On a standalone basis, this is a disappointing result. Nonetheless, Dynex outperformed major fixed income indices and our peer group, and we continue to deliver industry-leading returns. In the context of the worst performance in almost 100 years for the bond market, we made disciplined and deliberate choices in managing our risk. As you can see on pages four and five, we remain the top performer for three and five -year periods. Against a historically difficult backdrop in markets, I take enormous comfort in this relative result. As a fellow shareholder, I focus on how we're building long-term value. Please turn to page nine.
You can see we started the decade at 1801 in book value, and we have delivered $19.51 as of December 31, including cumulative dividends. Although book value is lower, we did not subject our shareholders to large, unrecoverable realized losses in either 2020 or 2022. As I stand here today, looking at the investment landscape, I see a favorable investment environment that supports a recovery in book value over time without the need to take excessive risk to recover capital while we continue to generate a solid return for you. As I said earlier, we're at a significant moment in history. We are anticipating that this decade will bring new opportunities and unique challenges. Global markets are fragile because of the rapid buildup of debt. We believe central bank balance sheets matter.
The removal of liquidity has the potential to impact a broad section of the investing landscape. Global complexity continues to be amplified by human conflict. As such, we are making decisions with these factors in investing your savings with the long term in mind. As your asset manager, we have demonstrated the ability to shift risk over the past 15 years. I want to emphasize that we do not consider ourselves an agency-only REIT, nor are we invested in Agency RMBS because it is the hot thing to do. We believe that this environment calls for liquidity and flexibility. Agency RMBS are highly liquid, government-guaranteed assets and offer excellent returns. Therefore, they are our current investment of choice. We remain prepared for an evolving macroeconomic environment, which we believe will eventually lead to a wider set of investment opportunities.
As the captain of the Dynex ship, I want you to know that we have the tools to manage through this environment. Inverted yield curves are unique to periods of significant Fed tightening. Smriti and I have shared the experience of managing through an inverted yield curve in 2003 through 2006 in a public company mortgage REIT, where a significant amount of value came through our hedging strategy. As Smriti will describe, hedging is an important part of how we navigated this inverted yield curve environment. As demographics shift globally towards an aging population, the need for income is getting increasingly apparent. Dynex Capital is an expert in delivering income. As such, we are making decisions to invest in people, processes, and technology as we build our company for the long term.
Our business model and strategy are designed to thrive and find opportunities across multiple market scenarios. We believe that this sets us apart, and you are seeing evidence of that differentiation in our results. I am proud of the loyalty, dedication, and efforts of our team, and I'm very proud of the results they have produced both in 2020 and in 2022, and so far this decade as a whole. Our commitment to providing attractive long-term returns for our shareholders is unwavering, and we are excited about the opportunities ahead of us. With that, I'll turn the call over to Rob Colligan to provide more specifics regarding our Q4 performance.
Thank you, Byron, and good morning to everyone joining the call today. For the quarter, the company reported book value of $14.73 per share and comprehensive income of $1.17 per share. The book value performance plus the dividend delivered an economic return of 6.2% for the quarter. The portfolio benefited from spread tightening which occurred in Q4 and drove increases in the value of our Mortgage-Backed Securities and TBA positions. Our thesis of book value recovery based on spread tightening still holds true. We believe that our portfolio should recover a significant amount of value when investor demand for Mortgage-Backed Securities improve or simply as pay downs occur over time. Smriti will cover more granular details as well as our views on recent market activity and our outlook for the future in her comments.
Earnings available for distribution was $0.03 for the quarter. As discussed last quarter, this does not include the benefit of our hedging activities. If the company utilized swap instruments instead of futures, EAD would be dramatically different. Our decision to use futures is based on the depth and liquidity of the futures market as well as lower capital requirements compared to a comparable swap instrument that provides equivalent rate protection. While it's rare for extended periods of interest rate inversion to exist, it's not a completely new market environment. With rate inversions, income needs to be generated from the management of interest rate risk, primarily from appropriate hedging strategies. In Q4, Dynex realized $205 million of hedge gains, bringing our year-end hedge gain to $691 million.
This is a material number that has insulated the company from rising rates and has protected book value from a dramatic rise in short-term rates as The Fed continues to use rate policy in an attempt to tame inflation. As mentioned last quarter, these hedge gains are amortized into REIT taxable income over the hedge period of approximately 10 years. The benefit of interest rate hedge gain amortization was approximately $12 million for Q4 and $22.5 million for the year. The earnings release provides our estimate of hedge gains by quarter for 2023, for the full year 2024, years thereafter. The total amount of the hedge gain to amortize into REIT taxable income can go up and down depending on the company's hedge position and movement in rates in subsequent quarters.
We have experienced some value degradation in our hedge book so far in 2023 as long-term rates have receded. The hedge loss has been outpaced by asset gains, which results in our book value increasing to $15.10-15.20 as of now. If the current shape of the yield curve persists, we do expect to have additional hedge gains in 2023. Since hedge gains are a component of REIT taxable income, they will be part of our distribution requirements along with other ordinary gains and losses. As we discussed last quarter, we expect the hedge gains will be supportive of the dividend in 2023 and beyond, even if net interest income and earnings available for decline due to financing costs. Please see page eight in our earnings presentation that highlights these earnings components and recent trends of net interest income and hedge gains.
In the release, you will see the effective yield on our assets has increased this quarter. This is due to two primary factors. At the end of the Q3, we reduced the balance of our lower coupon 2% and 2.5% securities and added 4.5% and 5% coupons to our portfolio. Given the rise in rates, prepayment speeds continued to slow down, which added a modest increase in yield this quarter. Lastly, we added $92 million of new capital this quarter via our ATM program. We added liquidity to our balance sheet at a time where returns were mid to high teens and exceeded our cost of capital. With that, I'll now turn the call over to Smriti for her comments on the quarter.
Thank you, Rob, and good morning, everyone. Rob has covered a great deal of detail on our financial performance in 2022. My comments today will be focused on our current macroeconomic thinking, our risk, portfolio posture, opportunities, and outlook for 2023.
There are three key elements underlying our macroeconomic thesis. First, and this one has been a consistent theme since 2015, the global environment is increasingly complex, with rising global debt, increasing human conflict, rapid technology changes, and shifting demographics. This leads us to favor more liquid strategies. Second, global central banks have embarked on a monetary tightening cycle against this complex backdrop. How long the tightening cycle lasts, how effective it is, the intended and unintended consequences are yet unclear. This leads us to prepare for multiple scenarios and unforeseen events. Third, quantitative tightening, which is seen currently as running in the background, can have a significant impact on the price of risk going forward. We believe the draining of liquidity has the potential to be a major driver of the repricing of risk in this decade.
We think this can occur even if the Fed is cutting rates as the balance sheet continues shrinking. This leads us to hold assets that can be easily valued and traded at those valuations, saving dry powder for when valuations on all assets, especially less liquid assets, reflect fundamental value with less distortion from central bank balance sheets. In our view, these factors have shifted the yardstick by which to measure what is a fair return for the risk environment. It is easy to be beguiled by a return that seems higher than we have seen in the last eight, 10, even 15 years. We are taking the approach that the last 15 years of market history must be viewed by considering the distortion of quantitative easing on prices. The team and I are focused on evaluating returns in the context of the future.
This is a key foundational element of our thinking. Finally, a characteristic of the investment landscape that we are calling a flat distribution, fat tails, making predicting outcomes very, very difficult because there are more probable outcomes, more equal probability of each outcome, a wider range of outcomes, and the possibility of skewed distributions and exogenous events. Many investors use models with implicit normal or log normal distributions to measure risk and return. We believe the results from such models must be viewed with the lens of a very different reality. Our risk and investment strategy are set in this context. Next, I will discuss the specifics of the investing environment. I'll tackle financing costs and the inverted yield curve first, and then address asset valuations, our spread outlook and expected returns. A key future of the investing landscape today is the inverted yield curve.
Short-term interest rates are higher than long-term interest rates. This has been driven by The Fed tightening to almost 5% and long-term interest rates falling, driven by investor expectations for future The Fed easing either due to recession and/or inflation declining to 2%. Whether you believe what the market has priced in or not, an inverted yield curve has consequences for levered investors like us because it means that in the short term, financing costs will be higher, but they're expected to fall in the intermediate and long term. If we funded all our assets in the repo market and had no hedges, our income would suffer in the short term but improve in the long term, assuming the market's prediction came true. The reality is different.
Dynex shareholders have benefited from our hedging strategy, which locks in financing rates for longer periods of time so that fluctuations in short-term interest rates are mitigated. Our current strategy of hedging with Treasury futures since September 2020 effectively locked in 10-year financing at very low rates on hedges, largely mitigating the impact of the 400+ basis points rise in financing costs. As Rob mentioned, those hedges have generated a gain position of $691 million as of December 31, and they're reflected in book value. Another important point to remember in an inverted yield curve environment is that asset returns must still be viewed on a hedged basis so that you can incorporate the value of locking in lower long-term financing costs by hedging.
When we view returns today in this context, we see the investment environment as continuing to be favorable, offering low to mid-teens returns in Agency RMBS. The key takeaway on inverted curves, they can be managed with hedges, and the Dynex team has significant experience managing through these types of environments. A last point on financing. The availability of financing remains very strong. Repo markets are functioning smoothly and financing remains widely available, especially for the liquid assets that we own. Let's now turn to assets. Credit spreads are broadly tighter year-to-date. We see this as the evidence of the power of the liquidity that still remains in the system and the need for cash to be put to work.
Our book value is higher as a result, as Rob mentioned, between $15.10 and 15.20, up from $14.73 at year-end. Shown on page 14, Agency RMBS spreads to seven-year swaps are settling in about 80 basis points higher from the tight level seen in 2021, a more than doubling of spreads. We see this as a favorable investment environment because it's possible to earn hedge returns using leverage of 7x in the low to mid-teens. We are currently invested at these levels with the option and flexibility because of our liquidity position to add assets when spreads are wider. You can also see on the chart that most times that spreads have gotten this wide or wider, there's been a reversion to the mean, if you will. This is a longer-term tailwind to book value.
We say longer term because there's a major difference between the past spread cycles and the one that we're in. The past spread cycles had the GSEs, Fannie and Freddie, with large portfolios supporting spreads in the 1990s and early 2000s. I know because I was there and probably executed some of those trades, bringing spreads back in line. Post-2008, you have the Fed. In today's environment, we have neither. The Fed is shedding mortgage assets from its balance sheet. We're now seeing the ability for MBS to tighten 10 to 20 basis points as volatility declines. The catalyst for much tighter spreads, the 30 to 50 basis points tightener, is not as apparent. Where could this bid eventually come from? Over time, we think banks may be a powerful bid.
If fixed income funds experience major inflows, money managers could be a strong bid, but new cash will be needed to increase exposure to RMBS. We're not investing today with the hope of an immediate reward of tighter spreads. We've invested capital with the idea that today's returns meet, exceed our all-in cost of capital. If spreads go a lot wider, we can add incremental value by adding assets at wider spreads. For this reason, we feel like we can be more patient in our investing process. For now, we expect spreads to be range-bound, reflecting technical factors of demand and supply. Agency RMBS spreads have been highly correlated with risk assets in general, and we believe that trend continues in 2023. We anticipate that volatility in the macroeconomic environment will translate into chances to deploy capital.
We believe it is essential to maintain lower leverage, higher liquidity, a more neutral duration position, and a patient, disciplined approach to fully capture the value offered when volatility hits. You can see this is reflected in our risk positioning on pages 15 and 16. I want to make another point as we look at the risk position. Our leverage as of December 31 was 6.9x the common, with $6.4 billion in assets. As you can see on page 16, for a 20 basis point tightening in spreads on Agency RMBS and a 50 basis points on CMBS IOs, our book value rises by 9% or $1.35. Conversely, if spreads widen 20 basis points, the opposite happens, and therefore we respect and maintain lower leverage and liquidity so that when we do get to those wider levels, we can potentially invest.
As you can see, at ±9%, this profile does not suggest that we are underinvested, underlevered, taking a defensive or cautious approach. In our view, we have plenty of risk on for this environment. It produces an economic return to support the current level of the dividend. You can expect us to continue to reallocate assets opportunistically and manage the portfolio dynamically because this is what we expect the environment to dictate. I'd like to leave you with the following thoughts. We are focused on preserving capital and generating returns for the long term. Our performance in 2022 positions us to recover book value without the need to take excessive risks to recover capital. We are highly respectful of the evolving macroeconomic environment. We're focused on measuring risk-adjusted returns with an eye to the future and not the past.
As such, we will be patient and deliberate in our decision-making. Our portfolio and liquidity as currently structured support the economic return necessary to pay the current level of the dividend, about 10.5%. We continue to have upside potential from dry powder and the ability to deploy capital at accretive levels. I'm deeply grateful for the trust you place in us as we manage your capital. I'll now turn it back to Byron.
Thank you, Smriti. Let me conclude with some final thoughts. We are in an evolving environment and at a unique transitional period in history. It is important, now more than ever, to be able to rely on a team with a clear strategy and deep experience in navigating complex environments. We are patient, disciplined, focused on execution and on driving long-term shareholder returns. We are investing our money alongside you, so our goals are aligned, and we take the responsibility as managers and stewards of your savings very seriously. We believe that Dynex Capital represents a compelling investment opportunity. Our stock trades at a discount to book. We pay an attractive and consistent monthly dividend that we believe is sustainable, and we have ample dry powder to take advantage of attractive investment opportunities as they develop.
For our existing shareholders and stakeholders, I thank you for your trust in joining us on this journey. For those of you who are not yet our shareholders, I hope we have made a compelling case for you to join us. With that, let's open the call up for questions.
Thank you. As a reminder, everyone, that is star one to ask a question. We'll pause for a moment to assemble the queue. We'll take our first question from Eric Hagen with BTIG.
Hey, thanks. Good morning. I got a few questions. In the higher coupon pools, can you say what the loan age is and the prepayment profile more generally, and maybe just how you plan on toggling between the TBAs and the pools and the higher coupons? The second question is, do you see any risk or potential that mortgage rates could come down into the fives, call it the mid-fives, and what kind of read-through do you see with respect to supply and demand for MBS in that kind of scenario? Thanks.
Hi, Eric. Good morning, thank you for your questions. In the higher coupon pools, they're new issue pools. Mostly, I would say, not excessively high pay-up. Again, we're trying to limit the exposure to high pay-up pools, to be able to cut down on that, the pay-up exposure, right? The idea there is again, you're playing the hedged return game, right? Between TBAs and pools. Over time, we're kind of thoughtful about where we purchase our convexity. Sometimes that convexity is better off in pool form. Sometimes when the securities are trading at a big discount, we like the flexibility of TBA and then eventually being able to swap out.
That's kind of been our mindset with the higher coupons and our pool position at this point is mostly in the 4.5%. Very, very small position in the fives. With regard to your second question, do we think that mortgage rates could drop? I think the answer to that is yes. I think we actually included a slide in our investor presentation this time. It might be in the appendix, that has some of our views on the mortgage market dynamics. It's on page 12, actually.
Yes, I mean, we believe that, just even if interest rates in the broad markets don't change, there is the possibility of primary, secondary spreads coming in, because of competition, the need for mortgage originators to continue producing, you know, profitable returns, for their shareholders. That is a strong impetus for mortgage rates to decline regardless of whether, you know, Treasury yields decline. Could you get that to below 5%, I would say is a stretch. Definitely below 6% is a possibility. You know, how that affects demand and supply. I think that was your last question. Am I right?
Yep. Yep, exactly.
Right now I think there's levels of cash out refinancing that are starting to get limited a little bit by the GSE policy. The bottom line on any kind of decline in mortgage rate from here on out is an increase in supply without necessarily, you know, a corresponding increase in demand. That is a technical factor that we're very focused on.
Hey, hey, Smriti. You want to, let's make one other comment here about the higher coupon sixes and others that have been originated. What I found fascinating was an article in The Wall Street Journal about Rocket Mortgage and their sales pitch at this point. A lot of loans are being made on around debt consolidation. It is as they make these higher coupon mortgages, many originators are assuring to the borrowers that they will be able to refinance these mortgages within two years or so. It's very interesting to see. You wanna understand what's happening between the borrower and the lender to get a real understanding of value.
These higher coupon mortgages are being originated. Especially the really high, like the 6s, six handles, where they're being assured, the borrowers are being assured they'll get an opportunity to refinance within a couple of years. It's an interesting dynamic that you want to really understand that is happening at the front end of the mortgage market.
Yep, absolutely. Thank you guys very much.
Thanks, Eric.
We'll take our next question from Douglas Harter with Credit Suisse.
Thanks. Can you just talk a little bit more about the decision to raise capital through the ATM, and kind of how you view the trade-off of near-term dilution versus future returns from that capital?
Sure. really, I appreciate the question, Doug. I think one of the things that we think about, the main thing we think about is the spread between the return on investment versus our all-in cost of capital. That is the main driver of capital issuance at all times here at Dynex. We think about, you know, what can we invest the capital in? When we adjust the all-in cost of capital for dilution in the near term, are we able to earn that back over time? How quickly can we earn that back?
One of the key points about this particular environment, and when we talk about it as being a sustained return environment that is favorable, is that we feel like the investment opportunity: A, is sustainable, and B, it's the return on investment is higher than our all-in cost of capital. So it is a very accretive investment environment. When we see periods like this, it makes a ton of sense for us to go get the dry powder so that we have it in our pocket to be able to put the money to work at the right time.
I guess when you're...
Yeah, go ahead.
Sorry, if I could just get one clarification item.
Yeah, go ahead
... before you add. you know, just I guess when you're thinking about that, you know, is that kind of assuming kind of static spreads and, you know, in that cost to capital and, you know, I guess if you were to think about the $0.28 of dilution, you know, I guess at what points in the quarter were those shares issued and, you know, would there have been some appreciation on the, on the assets that you bought that would offset that dilution?
Right. I mean, look, book value's up since quarter end, right? We've already gotten appreciation on anything that was issued last quarter. I'll remind you guys, you know, when we talk to you for Q3 results, we were reporting book value in the $12.95 to 13%-ish area, right? We've had a massive increase in book value since the lows of Q4. You know, the existing shares at the time have benefited in all of that. Yeah, we do feel like there's, you know, we're investing capital at levels that are accretive to our shareholders relative to the all-in cost, including what we paid to issue the capital in the Q4.
Hey, Doug, just one.
Doug.
Doug, just one other thing too.
Go ahead.
When you think about what happened in Q4, there were times in Q4 when new investment opportunities had a return of north of 20%. I understand that there's a temporary dilution factor, but the opportunities were there that we could put investments, you know, on the pile of investments that will deliver returns for years to come. That's why it made sense for us to add capital during the Q4.
You should also note we're long-term investors. We're building our company for the long term. Here are some definitive statements. We have no desire to be as large as the largest companies in this industry. Zero. We are gonna continue to grow, build up our technology, our processes, our capital base over time , it'll add resilience, it'll add liquidity for our shareholders. When we think about costs are costs. Whether it's my technology costs, whether it's the issuance costs, can we generate a return above our costs? I'll direct you to some of the, some of the charts that we've shown you. I love the one especially on slide nine, because that's the way we think about it.
If you look at the far bar, Q4 2022, you'll see it says $19.51. Look at where we are today, that number is probably closer to $20. Over time, we'll think about that as like a buoy in the water with a rising tide. Costs are costs. We're building our company for the long term. We have no desire to be as large as some of the largest balance sheets. Our nimbleness is extremely important to us, and it's been extremely valuable, especially this decade so far.
I guess just one follow-up on that. I mean, to the extent that, you know, like Rob said, you saw returns in the 20% range at points during the quarter. You know, how do you weigh kind of temporarily letting leverage increase to take advantage of that versus raising new capital and then, you know, kind of if spreads tighten, just kind of letting leverage naturally come down? You know, just kind of that thought process versus...
Yeah.
You know, kind of raising capital.
I mean, I think a big one, a big one there is, thinking through the risks and the risks of allowing leverage to continue to ride up. Okay? In this particular macroeconomic environment where you do have the possibility of surprises, such as what happened in September and October, you wanna be very, very thoughtful about allowing your leverage to rise into those kinds of events versus taking some action to address, you know, increases in leverage. There is a big difference, actually. When you have surprises like the ones you had in September and October, it wasn't readily apparent, you know, which direction things were gonna go. In those types of environments, we've chosen to not expose our shareholders to going out of business risk. We've chosen not to do that.
We, you know, there will be times when we take up leverage or allow leverage to ride up in that situation. That was not one of those times. You know, we think very long and hard about the risk-reward of making those types of trade-offs. You know, when there's existential risk involved, you know, we're not going there. Other times when there's a reasonable chance that we're going to recover capital from allowing leverage to ride up, it's a different trade-off. Last quarter was not that type of an environment in our opinion.
Okay. Thank you.
Every decision is made from a long-term perspective.
We'll take our next question from Trevor Cranston with JMP Securities.
Hey, thanks. You guys mentioned the sort of near-term outlook for spreads. You expect them to be kind of range bound and to remain correlated with other risk assets. Can you maybe talk a little bit about your outlook for interest rates this year, including kind of how you guys are thinking about volatility trending over the course of the year? Thanks.
Wow, Trevor, you asked me if I have a crystal ball. You know, it is I would say, like, I've been in these markets for a long time, and I think the environment that we're in, is, it is among the most difficult environments that I've sat in in the last 30 years to be able to look forward and say with any degree of confidence, that X, Y, or Z is gonna happen, you know, with respect to interest rates, okay? you know, we do have a name for it here. We're calling this flat distribution, fat tails for a reason, which is that it is really hard to come to a conclusion about inflation, the level of inflation, the level of growth, the exogenous events that could happen.
you know, it's really difficult to say things are gonna go in one direction or another. We've actually got a very neutral predisposition to interest rates. You can see that in our risk position. You know, up or down, curve shocks, we're pretty flat because this isn't an environment where you can... You know, we think you can, you can actually put your shareholders' capital at risk for those types of moves because you're not as certain about that. That we-- you know, leads us to that kind of a risk position. We're in that-- We're in... You know, our view on interest rates right now is, you know, you can't-- you cannot predict. You cannot predict.
I would say the other thing that informs us, and I mentioned this in my comment, is, you know, the last 15 years, we have had a massive distortion from quantitative easing. Whether people necessarily recognize it or not, it's been a massive factor in the price of risk. You're now entering an environment where that is actually being taken away globally by all central banks. The price of risk has to change. It's gonna happen slowly over time, potentially. Shocks like September, October, you know, those are gonna be more normal as the liquidity gets taken out of the system. You don't wanna lean too far in one direction or another in terms of interest rates.
All of these things lead us to say, "Mm, you know, better have a more, you know, neutral kind of positioning with respect to that." Now, the markets have done an incredible thing here by being very confident that interest rates are gonna come down. You know, and we'll see what the Fed has to say about it later this week. But, you know, we're not ready to go in the same direction, per se.
Hey, hey, Smriti. Can you just-
Yeah.
Can you talk about how wrong the market has been? That's an important point that is overlooked because most people don't see the forward curve and see where the market was predicting rates.
Yeah.
-just a year ago, year and a half.
Yeah.
The market has been wrong throughout time, and it's been extremely wrong recently. Can you just discuss that a little bit?
Yeah, sure. I mean, like, the, If you look at the forwards on December, in December of 2021, I mean, the market would have told you that interest rates would be up at, like, 50 basis points or 75 at the most, right? And look, even The Fed didn't really believe that inflation was something real. They had, you know, if you guys remember, they had FAIT. Remember that thing? Flexible Average Inflation Targeting. That was basically saying, We're gonna average inflation out over time, we can stay more dovish. All of that has gotten thrown out the door. The ability to predict here is very hard. Look, in general, predictions are hard. We try not to predict here much.
That's kind of what informs our opinion.
Yeah. Smriti, I was gonna ask then. In throughout time, there are better probability distributions than we have today for-
That's right.
Investing money. It's very important. We will stand firm on this at Dynex Capital. This is an evolving environment, and one of your best ways to understand, look back at the forward curve, look at how wrong the market has been this decade, and then consider the surprises that have happened. We came into this decade, we believed surprises were highly probable. Not only have we had surprises, but almost all have come from overseas. First you had the pandemic, then you had the government response to the pandemic, then you had inflation, you had another government response, then we had a war, and then we had the craziness that came out of Britain in September. When you start to talk about a prediction and anyone wants to forecast, any economist, I wanna ask you, well, what's President Xi gonna do?
What is Russia going to do? I can go down a huge list of other questions for you that will challenge your forecast. Finally, one of the best statements that Jay Powell made this year is when he said you can't trust any forecast today. That's our opinion at Dynex.
Okay.
Some of you, some people will believe us.
Yeah.
Some will disagree.
Oh, I appreciate that. That's a good perspective. Thank you.
Thanks, Trevor.
As a reminder, everyone, that is star one to ask a question. We'll take our next question from Bose George with KBW.
Yeah, good morning.
Hi, Bose
I wanted to ask just ask about current levered ROEs? I mean, you guys noted it is above the dividend, but just any more color on, you know, kind of a range of where current ROEs are would be great.
Right. Yeah. I think the, what I would say, I quoted just seven times leverage 'cause that's the leverage to common that we have on right now. I would say that, you know, we're assuming these spreads of about 125 to 130, 135, thereabout. Those are in the 13-15 ROE, depending on, you know, the coupon that you pick out. This is for like 4.5, fives. That would be.
Okay
... where they are at the moment.
Okay. Great. Thanks. Actually you noted that you didn't sell assets, you know, during the quarter or nothing meaningful in terms of recovering book value. Just on the TBA side, you know, with the TBA positions that were closed, you know, were there sort of losses there to think about?
I mean, yeah. One thing we did disclose, right, at the end of last, or I mean, during our conference call in our earnings presentation, for Q3, was a change in our risk position. If you go back to the Q3 earnings deck, we provided information not only in terms of our interest rate risk, but also our spread risk ex-exposure, which declined, you know, during the early weeks of October. That was in our numbers for the full quarter.
Okay. Actually, just from a P&L standpoint, are those changes, does that flow through that derivatives line, you know, along with the TBA drop income?
It should be in there, yes.
Okay. great. Thanks very much.
Thanks, Bose.
Our next question comes from Christopher Nolan with Ladenburg Thalmann.
Hey, guys. quick follow-up on Bose's question on leverage. Does that 7x include TBA, or is that simply just debt to common?
Yeah. It includes TBAs, Chris.
Okay. I guess my follow-up question would be, given the increased reliance on hedging for income, should we look at EPS, distributable EPS, to be somewhat more divorced from the overall performance of the company?
You know, we've talked a lot about EAD being a limited metric in general. I would say, you know, focus on total economic return. Rob can take you guys through once again just like the A + B + C + D on the hedge gains. Maybe you should do that now, Rob, in terms of just how to think through, you know, EAD plus what is more directionally correct.
Sure.
Hey, Chris. Go ahead, Rob. Nope, you go, Rob.
Sure. Sure. Yeah, thanks for the question. One of the things that we added this quarter, just to highlight rate moves and how we look at the portfolio, we added a chart on page eight of the earnings deck. You see, as you'd expect, repo expenses are up, but those are interest income, and our hedge gains have also ramped up this year. You know, that's how we were feeling that we're insulated from a lot of the rate moves and how we're using our hedge book to supply either a buffer against rising rates or even just simply income. I think it's an interesting market factor that right now if you have a feature on because the rate curve is inverted, so you actually get paid to put a hedge on whether that is a feature or a swap.
There haven't been that many times in my career that that has happened, but it's an interesting market dynamic that will actually add to that hedge benefit in 2023. We'll see how long it lasts. You know, the market dynamics are a little bit different now. We're adjusting to that and, you know, doing a good thing for earnings and book value.
Chris, I'm gonna just finally just chime in on one other piece. As a long-term investor in Dynex Capital, we're very responsible for our shareholder statements. I'm looking at this graph that we've shown you on slide nine. When we talk about performance, what's divorced and not performed, I'm simplifying it for you. On slide nine, I'm gonna be looking at that $19.51, and I'm gonna be looking at it as I continue to add a monthly dividend to that number, and we're looking to regain our book value over time, and I'm gonna be looking at that number to go up. That's what I'm looking to do, and that's the way I'm gonna be thinking about our performance here at Dynex Capital.
The other piece in this would be to really understand, and Smriti made this comment in her statement, we didn't take permanent hits to capital in 2020 or 2022. When you look at that bar, and please, do the same graph for every company that you might consider to analyze or invest in, and then look and compare us all together. Over time, this is we're concerned with our shareholders' savings. We wanna deliver a solid cash income, and then we wanna make that final bar continue to move up over time. When you say performance and, you know, how do we think about our performance, we simplify it in that, in that graph.
We could come up with all kind of funky GAAP terms. At the end of the day, our shareholders are expecting an above average dividend cash income, which we're looking to continue to pay on a monthly basis. We're looking to maintain the book value over time.
Okay. Thanks, guys.
That does conclude the question and answer session. I would like to turn the call back over to Byron Boston for any additional or closing remarks.
Thank you so much for joining us. I wanna emphasize to you that we are long-term investors, skilled risk managers, disciplined capital allocators. Today, we've allocated our capital to the Agency Mortgage-Backed Securities sector. I'll emphasize we're not an agency-only REIT. We're not doing the new hot thing. We're investing for the long term. When we think about our costs, Doug, I appreciate you asking that question. We think about our costs over time and can we generate a higher return. I'll emphasize to you, get familiar with that slide nine. We like that. Shows our accumulated dividends along with where we are on our track record in terms of our book value. When you're a little confused about who's managing your money in this decade, very important that you ask yourself that.
Create that graph for every company that you consider and then compare it. We appreciate you joining us this quarter. We'll look forward to chatting with you again at the end of the first quarter sometime in April. Thank you very much.
Thank you, and that does conclude today's presentation. Thank you for your participation, and you may now disconnect.