Good morning, and welcome to the Annaly Capital Management's fourth quarter 2021 conference call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing the star key followed by zero. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your touchtone phone. To withdraw from the question queue, please press star then two. Please note this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Sean Kensil, Director of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Good morning, and welcome to the fourth quarter 2021 earnings call for Annaly Capital Management. Any forward-looking statements made during today's call are subject to certain risks and uncertainties, including with respect to COVID-19 impacts, which are outlined in the Risk Factors section in our most recent annual and quarterly SEC filings. Actual events and results may differ materially from these forward-looking statements. We encourage you to read the disclaimer in our earnings release in addition to our quarterly and annual filings. Additionally, the content of this conference call may contain time-sensitive information that is only accurate as of the date hereof. We do not undertake and specifically disclaim any obligation to update or revise this information. During this call, we may present both GAAP and non-GAAP financial measures. A reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP measures is included in our earnings release.
As a reminder, Annaly routinely posts important information for investors on the company's website, www.annaly.com. Content referenced in today's call can be found in our fourth quarter 2021 investor presentation and fourth quarter 2021 financial supplement, both found under the Presentation section of our website. Annaly intends to use our webpage as a means of disclosing material non-public information for complying with the company's disclosure obligations under Regulation FD and to post and update investor presentations and similar materials on a regular basis. Participants on this morning's call include David Finkelstein, President and Chief Executive Officer, Serena Wolfe, Chief Financial Officer, Ilker Ertas, Chief Investment Officer, Mike Fania, Head of Residential Credit, and other members of management. With that, I'll turn the call over to David.
Thank you, Sean. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us for our fourth quarter earnings call. Today, I'll provide an overview of the current macro environment, briefly discuss our performance during the quarter and full year 2021, and close with our outlook for the year ahead. Ilker will then provide more detailed commentary on our investment portfolio, while Serena will discuss our financial results. As noted, our other business heads are also here to provide additional color during Q&A. Now, beginning with the macro landscape, we saw increasingly challenging market conditions in the fourth quarter and into 2022 as the robust performance of the U.S. economy has made it evident that a withdrawal of pandemic-era stimulus is imminent. Strong consumption and investment activity helped the U.S. economy grow 5.7% in real terms in 2021, marking the best annual growth in nearly 40 years.
Meanwhile, the labor market has seen a rapid recovery as employers added 6.4 million jobs last year and the unemployment rate fell to 3.9%. Both measures suggest that the labor market has recovered significantly since the onset of the pandemic. Stimulus measures fueled this rapid recovery, which has also spurred inflation to generational highs as seen in December when the Consumer Price Index reached 7% year-over-year. Although much of this increase in prices was initially seen as temporary, ongoing elevated price gains across various categories of goods and services raise the risk that inflation could persist for some time. Accordingly, current macroeconomic conditions have led to a meaningful shift by the Fed, which now views less accommodative monetary policy as the primary way to ensure parts of its mandate, full employment and stable prices are being met.
In addition to an accelerated taper, the Fed has begun to signal a larger number of hikes than previously expected. Front-end rate markets are pricing roughly five 25-basis-point rate hikes this year, beginning in March, up from just two, one quarter ago. Given the uncertainties around the economy, the Fed is likely to direct market pricing and hike in line with it rather than provide forward guidance well ahead of time. The Fed has also begun to discuss shrinking its balance sheet, and we expect the Fed will let assets run off at a pace faster than the prior taper of $50 billion per month. Now, this notable shift in policy expectations and higher volatility have led to a tightening of financial conditions and an underperformance of assets most closely tied to monetary policy, best seen through the spread widening in Agency MBS in recent weeks.
Turning to Annaly's portfolio, Agency MBS underperformed given weaker demand following the initiation of Fed taper and a flattening of the yield curve. In anticipation of wider spreads, we managed the portfolio to decrease leverage and optimize our asset allocation, with total assets decreasing by approximately $5 billion to $89 billion in the quarter. As a result, economic leverage declined slightly from 5.8 to 5.7x . Now, we were certainly not immune to the spread volatility as we experienced an economic return of -2.4%. However, we generated earnings available for distribution of $0.28, unchanged from the prior quarter and exceeding our dividend by $0.06 per share.
With respect to capital allocation, in line with recent quarters, we increased the allocation to our credit businesses by approximately 200 basis points to 32% in the fourth quarter as prospective returns continued to favor credit. Looking back on the full year, our credit allocation increased approximately 10 percentage points from December 2020, even with the successful sale of our commercial real estate business, which underscores the favorable fundamentals and strong execution from our resi credit and middle market lending businesses. Now, I'll touch more on our outlook shortly, but notably both market and business specific tailwinds remain favorable for our credit businesses. Now, 2021 was a transformative year for Annaly, marked by the sale of our CRE business, the launch of our mortgage servicing rights platform, and the expansion of our residential credit business.
The collective impact of these initiatives has increased our presence throughout residential housing finance and allow us to allocate capital effectively where returns are most attractive, a key differentiator for Annaly. Now I'd like to briefly touch on notable milestones in our businesses and how they have better equipped Annaly to be nimble in the midst of volatility. First, our MSR business had a solid year, with assets increasing over $500 million throughout 2021 to $645 million. We successfully established our MSR platform last year through the addition of key hires, procurement of strategic partnerships, and build out of the operations and infrastructure necessary to scale the business efficiently. As a result of these efforts, we have proven to be a key player in the market, ending the year as the fifth-largest bulk buyer of MSR.
Now with over $200 million of MSR commitments already through the end of January, we're continuing to see progress towards fully scaling the platform, and we expect to see increased market activity given diminished originator profitability. Our residential credit platform, which grew nearly 90% last year, remains diversified with the ability to deploy capital efficiently in either whole loans or securitized markets. The generation of assets for Annaly's balance sheet while controlling strategy, diligence, and servicing outcomes remains paramount to our investment approach. Business activity was enhanced by the launch of our whole loan correspondent channel, which expanded our sourcing capabilities through the addition of new strategic partners and product offerings. We've also benefited from new bulk partnerships established outside of our correspondent channel.
Altogether, these efforts helped drive the group's record $4.5 billion in whole loan purchases last year, which exceeded the amount of originations in both the prior two years combined. Further, Onslow Bay remains a programmatic issuer of securitizations, pricing 13 whole loan transactions totaling $5.3 billion since the beginning of 2021, with OBX being the fourth largest non-bank issuer of prime jumbo and expanded prime MBS over the past two years. With housing fundamentals expected to stay strong, Residential Credit should remain a key driver of our overall portfolio growth in the year ahead as we build on our origination and securitization momentum. Now shifting to our 2022 outlook, our portfolio is well prepared for volatility, which we anticipated would materialize as the Fed normalizes monetary policy.
First, we have thoughtfully reduced our economic leverage a turn and a half since the onset of COVID to 5.7x , the lowest it's been since 2014. Our defensive leverage profile is further supported by our low capital structure leverage with 88% of our equity in common stock and minimal asset level structural leverage as highly liquid Agency MBS make up the vast majority of our portfolio. Second, we have substantial liquidity with $9.3 billion of unencumbered assets, up $500 million year-over-year. This liquidity is complemented by our wide array of financing options, including our own broker-dealer. Finally, we are conservatively hedged to mitigate interest rate risk with a year-end hedge ratio of 95%, and we expect to remain close to fully hedged over the near term.
Now with ample liquidity and historically low leverage, we are well positioned to take a more offensive posture if and when the opportunity presents itself. While agency returns are increasingly attractive, as Ilker will elaborate on, we believe there will be better tactical opportunities on the horizon and will be patient given uncertainty around the market and the Fed. Should assets continue to widen past current levels, which we deem close to fair value, we stand ready to add fundamentally desirable assets. Now finally, before handing it off to Ilker to discuss our portfolio in greater detail, I wanted to congratulate him on recently being named our Chief Investment Officer.
I've worked with Ilker at three different institutions for the better part of the past 20 years, and I cannot think of an individual more knowledgeable about mortgages and prepayments or better suited to help us drive success for Annaly into the future.
Thank you for the kind words, David. As you discussed, the fourth quarter was challenging for Agency MBS due to a combination of factors. The Fed initiated and then accelerated the taper, which in conjunction with risk-off sentiment caused by the virus variant and geopolitical risks, led to significant curve flattening and an uptick in interest rate volatility. Mortgage investors, notably banks, turned their attention to 2022 without Fed support and decreased the pace of their purchases. MBS underperformance was broad-based across the coupon stack, with supply weighing on twos and threes, while higher coupons struggled into the curve flattening. Although our portfolio was not immune to these factors, we had been proactively reducing our MBS-based exposure throughout 2021. In fourth quarter, we reduced our agency holdings by roughly $5 billion, primarily through TBA sales, bringing the total 2021 portfolio reduction to $10 billion.
Through this resizing, our portfolio construct remains well-positioned across the coupon stack. In lower coupons, we continue to favor TBAs, which maximize our liquidity profile, and despite the initiation of the taper, dollar roll financing remains special in the context of 30-40 basis points. Meanwhile, our specified portfolio is biased up in coupon, up in quality, and is roughly four years seasoned, which should provide resilient cash flows as we shift out of refinancing environment and into one that favors expansion protection. In terms of our interest rate exposure, we adjusted hedges toward the front end of the yield curve by selling additional short-term treasury futures, which increased our hedge ratio to 95% of our liabilities. We have also added short-term SOFR swaps, which are an efficient hedge to our refi funding levels.
Our conservative hedge portfolio is integral to managing high volatility market environments like the one we experienced recently. At the current rate levels, the convexity profile of the Agency MBS market has improved meaningfully, but we continue to pursue a conservative approach to managing interest rate risk. Since the year-end, we have seen a swift move higher in rates and repricing in MBS as the market digests technical impact of Fed monetary policy tightenings. Following the move wider, MBS spreads are within a few basis points of their average 2018 levels, which was the last time the Fed was reducing balance sheet. When drawing historical comparisons, we believe mortgage cash flows are currently more attractive compared to 2018 for multiple reasons. Other fixed income alternatives are relatively tight from a historical perspective.
More of the mortgage universe is locked away in Fed and bank held to maturity portfolios, and the prepayment outlook is much better for the mortgage universe. In higher coupons, remaining borrowers did not refinance after months with historically low mortgage rates, so we anticipate they would be less reactive to changes in rates going forward. Meanwhile, due to very high realized home price appreciation, cash-out refinancings should alleviate extension risk in lower coupon mortgages. All these factors should materially improve the profile and predictability of mortgage cash flows. Consistent with these trends, our portfolio paid 21.4 CPR in Q4, 7% slower than in Q3, and we expect a further deceleration of approximately 15% in Q1 of 2022.
With respect to our MSR platform, our fourth quarter purchases brought the portfolio to nearly $650 million in market value net of runoff. Additionally, as David mentioned, with over $200 million in bulk MSR commitments in January and the recent price appreciation due to the sell-off in rates, our current MSR portfolio has reached nearly $1 billion in market value. The sector remains very active due to consistent disposition of MSR by the originator community. Coupled with wider spreads, we see this as an attractive growth opportunity for our MSR business, which is complementary to our core agency strategy. Turning to Residential Credit, we continue to execute our primary strategy of acquiring expanded residential whole loans through Onslow Bay.
The economic value of Residential Credit portfolio grew by approximately $330 million quarter-over-quarter, primarily through the addition of $1.7 billion of whole loans, the retention of assets manufactured through our OBX securitization platform, and the deployment of capital into short spread duration securities. Return on our securitization strategy remains in the low double digits with minimal recourse leverage. The Residential Credit portfolio ended Q4 with $4.6 billion of assets, representing $3.1 billion of the firm's capital. Our view on housing fundamental strength remains intact despite mortgage rates increasing, as the shortage of 1-4 unit single-family housing in the U.S. continues to be a long-term structural issue that has no near-term resolution.
The supply-demand imbalance of housing stock combined with the strength of the consumer's balance sheet has continued to play out in outsized home price appreciation, positive resolution out of forbearance agreements, and stable delinquency roll rates, all benefiting our existing portfolio. Lastly, our middle market lending portfolio had an active quarter closing 9 deals totaling over $325 million in commitments while five borrowers repaid. Middle market lending ended the fourth quarter with nearly $2 billion in assets, up 4% from the prior quarter. The portfolio's strong credit profile is demonstrated through a 10% increase in underlying borrowers' average EBITDA since closing and a nearly 30% reduction in CECL reserves throughout the year with no loans on non-accrual.
As discussed last quarter, the close of our private closed-end fund allows for increased capital allocation flexibility and provides recurring fee revenue to the REIT. As David discussed, the current environment is marked by challenging conditions as the Fed begins to remove its accommodative policy that has supported asset prices and financial conditions since the onset of the pandemic nearly two years ago. We remain focused on protecting the portfolio through defensive positioning and proactive hedging. In addition, a key focus will be to opportunistically grow our MSR and Residential Credit businesses, which should provide strong returns and diversification benefit to our broader portfolio.
Although we remain patient in light of recent spread widening in Agency MBS, the improving cash flow fundamentals and increased prospective returns on the sector should provide attractive reinvestment opportunities and even potentially bring leverage back to levels more consistent with our historical average, considerate of our overall capital allocation framework. With this, I will hand it over to Serena to discuss our financials.
Thank you, Ilker, and good morning, everyone. Today, I'll provide brief financial highlights for the quarter and as of December 31, 2021, and discuss select year-to-date metrics. Consistent with prior quarters, while our earnings release discloses GAAP and non-GAAP earnings metrics, my comments will focus on our non-GAAP EAD and related key performance metrics, which exclude PAA. As discussed earlier, the last quarter of the year exhibited challenging market conditions resulting from a risk-off sentiment over the Omicron variant and anticipation around the initiation of the Fed tapering. Notwithstanding this more difficult economic return environment, we have again delivered solid earnings and ample coverage, approximately 125% of our dividend. To set the stage with some summary information, our book value per share was $7.97 for Q4, and we generated earnings available for distribution per share of $0.28.
Book value decreased $0.42 for the quarter, primarily due to lower other comprehensive income of $680 million or $0.47 per share on higher rates and spread widening, and the related declining valuations on our agency positions, as well as the common and preferred dividend declarations of $349 million or $0.24 per share, partially offset by GAAP net income of $418 million or $0.29 per share. Our multifaceted hedging strategy continued to support the book value, albeit in a more muted fashion this quarter due to the aforementioned spread widening, with swaps, futures, and MSR valuations contributing $0.16 per share to the book value during the quarter. Combining our book value performance with our fourth quarter dividend of $0.22, our quarterly and tangible economic returns were -2.4%.
Subsequent to quarter end, as Ilker and David both mentioned earlier, we continued to see significant spread widening impacting the valuation of our assets, which is partially offset by the benefit of our MSR investments and rate hedging strategy through January, with our book value ending the month down 3% compared to December 31, 2021. Diving deeper into the GAAP results, we generated GAAP net income for Q4 of $418 million or $0.27 per common share net of preferred dividends, down from GAAP net income of $522 million or $0.34 per common share in the prior quarter.
The most significant drivers of lower GAAP income for the quarter is the unrealized losses on investments measured at fair value through earnings of $15 million in comparison to unrealized gains of $91 million in Q3, and realized losses on disposal of investments in the quarter of $25 million as compared to gains of $12 million in Q3, along with the previously referenced lower net gains on the swaps portfolio by $42 million. As I mentioned earlier, the portfolio continued to generate strong income with EAD per share of $0.28 consistent with Q3 earnings. We continue to generate strong earnings while prudently managing lower leverage, resulting in an EAD ROE per unit of leverage of 2.3%. We have previously communicated that we anticipate earnings to moderate. Notwithstanding this, we expect earnings to sufficiently cover the dividend for the near term, all things equal.
Average yields remained flat at 2.63% compared to the prior quarter. However, dollar roll income contributed to EAD in Q4, reaching another record level at $118.5 million. EAD also benefited from higher MSR net servicing income associated with the growth of the MSR portfolio and lower G&A expenses, which I will cover further later. The portfolio generated 203 basis points of NIM ex PAA, down 1 basis point from Q3, driven by the improved TBA dollar roll income offset by higher swaps expense on a lower average receive rate. Now turning to our financing, as I noted in the prior quarter, we have benefited from our ample liquidity position and the robust financing market during 2021, with the previous quarter marking nine consecutive quarters of reduced economic cost of funds for the company.
Our year-to-date economic cost of funds being 79 basis points, down 55 basis points in comparison to the prior year. During Q4, the market priced in a more aggressive Fed tightening cycle, resulting in repo rates increasing across the curve. This upward trend, along with higher swap rates, impacted our overall cost of funds for the quarter, rising by 9 basis points to 75 basis points in Q4, and our average repo rate for the quarter was 16 basis points compared to 15 basis points in the prior quarter.
Moving now to our operating expenses, efficiency ratios improved by seven basis points in the fourth quarter with OPEX to equity of 1.21%. For the entire year, the OPEX to equity ratio was 1.35% compared to full year 2020 of 1.55%, as we realized the benefits we projected from the reduction in compensation and other expenses following the disposition of our ACRE business and the internalization of our management. As a result of our continued build-out of our MSR and Residential Credit businesses, which are more labor-intensive and additional vesting of stock compensation issued in prior years, we anticipate that the range of OPEX to equity for 2022 and long range will be 1.4%-1.55%.
To wrap things up, Annaly maintained an abundant liquidity profile with $9.3 billion of unencumbered assets, down modestly from the prior quarter at $9.8 billion, including cash and unencumbered Agency MBS of $5.2 billion. Much of the reduction in unencumbered Agency securities was due to pressure on valuations, which is partially offset by increased unencumbered CRT, CMBS, and non-agency securities. That concludes our prepared remarks. Operator, we can now open it up to Q&A.
We will now begin the question- and- answer session. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your touchtone phone. If you are using a speakerphone please pick up your handset before pressing a key to withdraw from the queue please press star then two The first question is from Rick Shane of JPMorgan. Please go ahead.
Hey, good morning, everybody. Ilker, congratulations. Look, I just have one sort of conceptual question. Historically, when we've looked at the space, environments like we're in now, where there is a very clear expectation of rates moving higher, the actual risk to the industry where people really get carried out is when rates unexpectedly trend lower. I realize this is a tail risk in the current environment, but it's also an important consideration. I'm just curious, as you're positioning the portfolio, how do you defend against that tail risk?
Yeah. Hi, Rick. A great question. You know, you are absolutely correct that would be a risk should rates move lower. When we look at the forwards, you know, we do see, you know, over the horizon, five-year, for example, in the range of around 2.10 or thereabouts, and we actually do think it's a little on the low side. Our bias is a little bit towards higher rates, and we've certainly seen them, and you can see it in our hedge ratio and how we're hedged across the curve. Yes, you're right. There is that risk that rates for some reason or another, whether it's geopolitical or something unexpected, do end up rallying.
As a consequence, even though our hedge ratio is 95%, there is some duration in the portfolio that we maintain for that eventuality, which is right now roughly around half a year. Again, it's not our base case that rates rally from here. We think the forwards are priced relatively well with the possibility of slightly higher rates. Should the market rally, I think we'd manage through that just fine. It would probably also suggest that a lot of the expected actions on the part of the Fed may be delayed, which, you know, might create a little bit of a tailwind for us from the standpoint of earnings, as well as even balance sheet runoff out the horizon.
There's a silver lining in that eventuality as well. We do keep a little bit of duration in the portfolio, you know, for that tail risk.
Got it. Look, I realize it is sort of an out of the blue question, but it's literally almost 20 years to the day where we saw some mortgage rates carried out. In that scenario, there was a clear expectation-
Yeah.
of rates heading higher and you got the opposite, and it caused immense destruction in the space.
Yeah, exactly. Thank you for the question, Rick.
Thanks, guys.
The next question is from Doug Harter of Credit Suisse. Please go ahead.
Thanks. Can you talk about how the Agency MBS portfolio paired with MSRs has performed, you know, versus your kind of traditional swap hedges, you know, kind of in the fourth quarter in January, you know, just kind of as that is growing as a percentage of your equity allocation?
Hi. Yes. It benefits, obviously, like agency, like if hedging is constructed carefully, definitely like MSR part hedges the current coupon exposure. As I said, hedges need to be constructed carefully because when you are long MSR hedge with mortgages, you have a really big curve steepening, so that part needs to be hedged. Hedge carefully, that benefited and will benefit.
Doug, I'll just say that the component of the portfolio of MSR paired with TBAs outperformed the equivalent component of the portfolio of swaps hedging TBAs since then. To your point about capital allocation, we're at 5% of capital at the end of the quarter with acquisitions thus far or commitments thus far. In Q1, it brings us up to about 7%. We said a steady state. We'd like to see it around 10%. We could overweight that or underweight that depending on what the environment looks like. Thus far, 2022 is shaping up to be a vibrant environment in terms of MSR transactions.
I think there's been, thus far, we've seen about $1.5 billion in market value transacted or priced thus far this year. We've acquired about 20% of that.
Just on that, you know, can you talk a little bit about who the sellers are and who makes kind of an attractive partner to you know, for kind of the continued subservicing and, you know, and good risk characteristics to those MSRs?
Sure. Most of the sellers are non-bank originators, as we predicted earlier on, and that's materializing. We are seeing some residual, like, portfolios who bought them for negative duration purposes are selling, but bigger chunk of the sale and going forward, we expect the biggest chunk of the sale will come from non-bank originators.
Yeah. Doug Harter, that was the thesis as we, you know, built the operations in-house, is that there would ultimately be a liquidity need from folks like us with deep reservoir of capital to finance MSR on the part of or for non-bank originators. What we expected is playing out or has played out, and we expect it to continue to.
Great. Thank you both.
You bet, Doug.
The next question is from Kenneth Lee of RBC Capital Markets. Please go ahead.
Hi. Good morning. Thanks for taking my question. Just wondering, at a higher level, could you talk about, in terms of, adopting a more offensive approach towards, investment, opportunities, are there any specific market conditions or a macro backdrop, factors that you're looking for before you start, getting a little bit more offensive there? Thanks.
Yeah, sure. Thanks, Ken. Look, what we've talked about in the past and Ilker talks about every day is what we look for to add agency to the portfolio is the quality of earnings. Now, obviously, we're at the lowest leverage point we've been since 2014, and we certainly have the capacity to add mortgages. What's necessary is to make sure that the quality of earnings associated with agency MBS is deemed to be high. That's there are two components to that. First, with respect to the agency market, is the spread on the agency asset as well as the predictability of the cash flows.
Now when we look at the widening that's occurred over the last number of months, spreads are ample in our view, and look reasonably attractive. In terms of the cash flow and predictability of the cash flow, the convexity profile of the Agency market and our portfolio certainly has improved, meaningfully since the beginning of the year. In fact, the negative convexity of the portfolio is down about 30%-35% with the rate move and at current dollar prices. So from both the spread and the cash flow perspective, mortgages look pretty good. The other element that we have to consider when it comes to quality of earnings is expected volatility, and that has to do with the macro environment and how much it will cost to hedge Agency MBS.
That is still yet a little bit uncertain. We gotta get more clarity from the Fed with respect to the pace of rate hikes, as well as at what point we're gonna see balance sheet runoff and what's that really gonna look like. From a quality-of-earnings standpoint, the criteria is nearly met or met from a agency spread cash flow standpoint. We're still waiting for the macro environment to get a little bit more clear. Does that help?
Yep. Very helpful.
Thanks, Ken.
One follow-up, if I may. Wondering if you could just talk about thoughts around how a potential flattening of the yield curve could impact Annaly. Thanks.
Yeah. So always a good question, and I think it's, you know, our concern over a flattening of the yield curve is, I think, exemplified in the hedging that was done in the fourth quarter and even early into the first quarter. We do have a bias now towards a flattening with respect to our hedges. At 95% hedge ratio, you know, we feel like that's just, that's very strong, and we've actually increased it to over 100% since the beginning of the quarter. Part of that is attributable to the fact that we have some swaps rolling off in the second quarter that we wanted to get ahead in, but it's also a little bit defensive.
From the standpoint of the yield curve and protecting that, we feel like we're in good shape from a hedging standpoint. Now, in terms of earnings, those front-end swaps and those front-end hedges will offset higher repo expenses, and that's the design of those hedges. A flat yield curve is never a great environment for mortgages, but we've hedged it as well as you can, I think.
Great. Very helpful. Thanks again.
Thanks, Ken.
The next question is from Bose George of KBW. Please go ahead.
Hey, everyone. Good morning. Can you just discuss current returns both on TBAs and pools, and then just talk about what you're expecting for specialness into the back half of the year?
Current returns improved quite a bit. In pools, you are talking about like a very low double at this point, conservatively hedged. On TBAs with the special rolls, you are expecting like 12% type returns, again, conservatively hedged. In terms of specials of the rolls, it will be highly coupon dependent. For example, with this recent sell-off, market just skipped the 3% origination, so it moved from 2.5% to 3.5%. We think that rolls, depending on the coupon, will continue to be special, not as special as last year, but there will be pockets of specialness, and we have intention to take advantage of those.
Okay, great. Thanks. On the return on the MSR, you know, hedged with Agency MBS. Now how does that differ from the return just on your, you know, the rest of the portfolio?
In terms of the return, absolute return, it's not that much different, marginally higher. But again, it's more stable. Like, as David was mentioning, quality of the cash flows. If you are pairing mortgages with MSR, quality of the cash flows will be better. But in terms of overall return, especially if you are not levering MSR too much, it will not be that different. You know we are against applying too much leverage to the MSR portfolio.
Yeah. Okay, great. Thanks.
Yeah, Bose.
The next question is from Eric Hagen of BTIG. Please go ahead.
Hey, thanks. Good morning. I think a couple from me. Going back to the hedge portfolio and the short duration swaps, I think I can appreciate wanting to manage to a core earnings figure, but with five or six Fed hikes already priced into the yield curve, I think the fair value of those swaps should already reflect that. Just going forward, I mean, are there any rebalancing efforts that you take towards that short duration swap portfolio? Then it's really nice to see you guys so active as issuers of securitization. Would love to hear your view on how you think liquidity conditions develop for securitized assets as the Fed withdraws liquidity. Thanks.
Yeah. I'll start off, and then Ilker and Mike can jump in on the securitization. Look, yes, the market has well-priced Fed expectations. We have as of this morning, there is six hikes priced in for 2022, and we get to do more out the horizon. When you look at what the market's pricing versus what the Fed is pricing, the market's saying we peak at 2% when you look at OIS this morning at the end of next year. The Fed's saying they're going to get to 2.5% in the long run. There still remains somewhat of a debate, even though the market over the very recent past has moved closer to the Fed.
At some point, you know, if we think the front end is too cheap, we will absolutely lift it. I'll bring you back to a point in a similar time. The last time the Fed was entering into a policy normalization period, which was 2014, we had a considerable amount of front-end swaps, and we lifted $27 billion in front-end hedges. We're not there yet, but we will be proactive if we do think the front end is too cheap and, you know, to the extent the market gets too far. Yeah, we'll manage that actively. On the securitization question, Fania can jump in.
Sure. Thanks, Eric. This is Mike. I think in terms of securitization, you've seen some of the numbers that we've put out in terms of how active that we've been, and a lot of that is that the capital markets have been conducive to securitizing. You know, since the beginning of 2021, we've done, you know, 13 deals, $5.3 billion in issuance. We've created about $450 million of OBX, you know, securities through that. But I think most importantly for us, if you look at year-end, about 82% of our whole loan portfolio was financed through securitization. If you fast-forward to today, about 87% was financed. We've locked in, and about 90% of that is fixed rate.
We've locked in a very low 2% cost of funds on our whole loan portfolio. I think we've been able to be, you know, very opportunistic in terms of, you know, accessing the capital markets. I think on a go-forward, we just went through a year in which there was, you know, $210 billion of issuance in the non-agency market. You have to go back to 2019 to have anywhere near that level, and that was about $140 billion. The market, I think, has done a fairly good job of digesting the technicals of increased supply over the past, you know, year and a half, two years. I think on a go-forward, we've built up the, you know, the investor base for AAA non-agency investors.
In a market like this, there will be a lot of, you know, volatility. AAA spreads on non-QM are probably out fifty basis points since the end of Q3. I think for us, we remain committed to term financing our portfolio, and we will be opportunistic in doing so. I think we've done a fairly good job of locking in financing on, you know, close to 90% of that portfolio.
Got you. Thanks so much.
You bet. Thanks, Eric.
The next question is from Brock Vandervliet of UBS. Please go ahead.
Oh, good morning. Thanks for the question. Just following up on that one regarding, you know, non-agency. Clearly, you know, housing, anything housing related has been a great place to be with the freight train of home price appreciation and, you know, up till now, very low rates. There is a school of thought that, you know, once mortgages, you know, tap around 4%, you're finally going to see some real housing pressure in terms of, you know, potentially lowering, you know, reducing the purchase market activity. Do you subscribe to that? How do you know, how are you feeling about, you know, the housing market and especially non-QM in the context of higher rates?
Sure. Thanks, Brock. Appreciate your question. I think in terms of higher rates, you know, we've seen the mortgage rate go from a 3.20 mortgage rate at the end of Q3 to about 4%, you know, walking in here today. If you look at an aggregate $350K loan size
That mortgage payment is up about $150 given that, you know, 75-80 basis point increase in mortgage rates. That's about a 10% increase in terms of the payment. You know, coupled with home price appreciation, you know, being up 18%-19%, you know, one of the tailwinds that we see within the resi market is potential affordability concerns. I think you have to go back to 2010 to kind of where we're at. However, you know, the non-QM market, the expanded prime market, about 65% of that market and of our purchases has come from the purchase market.
I think into the sell-off into mortgage rates, you know what we've seen, we've seen significant interest from non-bank originators that normally would not have interest in terms of moving towards non-QM and expanded prime, given their desire to claim some of that purchase business. You know, that market is not, you know, it's not immune to higher rates. However, given that it is a high percentage of cash out and purchase business, we do feel that it will have strength, you know, going forward in terms of originations.
Okay, got it. Just flipping over to the MSR business also, you know, clearly seeing plenty of pressure among the non-bank originators. You know, the ramp-up in this business was looks very well-timed. Can you give us a sense. You mentioned the $1.5 billion, I believe, in flow. You know, where do you think that, you know, could go the remainder of the year? Kind of a part two, you know, what sort of price dislocation are you seeing in these transactions?
Yeah, Brock. So it's difficult to predict how much volume there could be this year, but we think it'll be elevated relative to years past. You know, the non-bank origination community has taken up an increasingly greater share of overall origination. These are operating companies, not portfolio companies. When you look at, you know, the profitability of origination right now to get to a cash flow positive point, it does require selling the MSR. A lot of it will be determined by origination. Origination will be much lower this year than it was last year, probably half on a gross basis.
But there's also a lot of stock in the hands of non-bank originators, and a lot of it isn't hedged, and they've done quite well with the sell-off. There's some monetization. There's new origination, which will be lower than it was last year, obviously. There'll, in our view, be enough flow to satiate demand. The buyers have, you know, have been reasonably competitive. Multiples are, you know, they're elevated, but the OASs are certainly attractive. The barriers to entry in the sector are quite high, which gives us comfort that we're gonna be able to acquire as much MSR as we need to acquire, and we feel it is advisable given the relative value.
We feel like it'll be a healthy environment for us for this year.
Got it. Okay. Thank you.
Good talking to you, Brock.
The next question is from Kevin Barker of Piper Sandler. Please go ahead.
Morning. Thanks for taking my questions. I appreciate it. You know, most of my questions have been answered, but I wanted to check in, just given, you know, the MSR market. I appreciate all the comments you've already given, but what are the gross yields you're seeing on new MSRs today, just given the amount of liquidity that's, you know, being allocated to MSRs with rates moving higher? Are you seeing an increasing amount of competition for that asset class, even though non-banks are, you know, increasingly putting more MSR in the market?
In terms of yields, let's say, unhedged, unlevered yields are high single, which is pretty attractive. In terms of like competition for buying the assets, yes, we are seeing like, still like residual of the money that has been raised, and they have been like bidding into that. There was also like big buyer base of like buying for the recapture for it, to feed their origination business. We expect that part of the buyer base will be gone. So far, it's very healthy environment. A lot of flow is coming and buyers are taking a little bit wider spread, which be more than welcome. So far, everything is healthy.
Okay. Well, the rest of my questions have been answered. Thank you.
Thanks, Kevin.
The next question is from Kevin Heal of Argus Research. Please go ahead.
Good morning. With regards to the MSR portfolio, can you give indication of the WAC at year-end and also what you estimate the WAC, given the additional purchases of $210 million in early January? Thanks.
Sure. Obviously, like we have been buying very low gross WAC MSR, so our overall gross WAC on this entire thing is like below 3%. As you know, like current mortgage rate is 4% right now. It's well out of the money. The new MSR purchases, obviously if it's coming from the flow side, it will be around 4% gross WAC. There is plenty of old MSR sitting in the originator's books that David mentioned around like low 3s gross WAC that we will be competitive in. Our current gross WAC on the overall book is like less than 3%, which is like very attractive cash flows right now.
Thanks.
Thank you, Kevin.
This concludes our question- and- answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to David Finkelstein for closing remarks.
Thank you. Thank you, everybody, for joining us. Let's talk next quarter after we wind down this pandemic. Everybody stay safe in the meantime.
The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.