IC
InPoint Commercial Real Estate Income, Inc. (ICR-PA)·Q2 2022 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q2 2022 showed continued portfolio growth and higher net interest income: total income was $9.45M, net interest income rose to $5.42M, and net income was $3.28M; EPS was $0.16 versus $0.08 in Q1 2022 and $0.28 in Q2 2021 .
- Loan book expanded to $803.27M carrying value (43 loans), with all loans current on contractual interest; originations were three floating-rate loans totaling $88.7M and net borrowings increased $64.3M on repo lines .
- Rate tailwinds materialized as SOFR/LIBOR moved above floors; a 25–50 bps rise would lift net interest by 1.25–3.44%, while equivalent declines modestly reduce net interest given floors .
- Hotel REO metrics improved materially (occupancy 59%, RevPAR $87, ADR $146) aiding REO revenue ($4.03M), but REO operating costs also rose with activity .
- Post-quarter, the Board authorized a Series A Preferred repurchase program (up to 1.0M shares or $15M through year-end 2022) and maintained common monthly distributions of $0.1042 gross per share (class-specific netting applies) .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- “We originated three floating-rate loans totaling $88.7 million… and increased our loan portfolio 10% to $803.3 million during the quarter; all 43 loans were current with no interest deferrals” .
- Rate environment improved net interest dynamics: net interest income increased $0.43M YoY and $0.59M sequentially; sensitivity analysis shows positive convexity to further hikes above floors .
- Hotel REO performance rebounded: occupancy up to 59%, RevPAR $87, ADR $146 versus Q1 2022 and Q2 2021, reflecting easing travel restrictions and seasonal normalization .
What Went Wrong
- Operating expenses increased to $6.17M (from $3.44M YoY) primarily due to higher REO operating costs as hotel activity picked up, which compressed operating margin despite revenue gains .
- Weighted-average levered yield declined YoY (9.1% vs. 11.6%), driven by tighter loan spreads even as leverage rose, modestly reducing net interest spread .
- Common EPS of $0.16 declined YoY from $0.28; REO operations still produced losses before D&A and advisory fees increased with portfolio/NAV growth .
Financial Results
Non-GAAP
Balance Sheet / Portfolio KPIs
Hotel REO Performance
Interest Sensitivity
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Net income attributable to common stockholders was $1.8 million, or $0.16 per share… we paid an annual gross distribution rate of $1.25 per common share” .
- “We originated three floating-rate loans totaling $88.7 million… resulting in a 10% increase in our loan portfolio to $803.3 million… all 43 of our loans were current on their contractual interest payments” .
- “We had net drawings of $64.3 million on our repurchase agreements during the three months ended June 30, 2022” .
- “The hotel’s performance improved during the second quarter of 2022… travel and group events increasing… results show significant improvement in operating metrics” .
Q&A Highlights
- No publicly filed Q2 2022 earnings call transcript was available; analysis is based on the 10‑Q and 8‑K exhibit portfolio materials .
Estimates Context
- Wall Street consensus EPS and revenue estimates via S&P Global were unavailable for Q2 2022 for ICR-PA; attempted retrieval returned an error (daily request limit exceeded). If needed, we can re-query later and add comparisons to consensus. Values would be sourced from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Rate hikes above LIBOR/SOFR floors are accretive to net interest income; sensitivity shows +25–50 bps adds 1.25–3.44% to net interest—supportive near-term earnings as the book is ~98% floating .
- Portfolio growth remains disciplined with all loans current; originations and fundings outpaced repayments, and leverage increased to support growth .
- REO hotel performance is recovering, boosting revenue but also raising variable costs; disposition timing remains a strategic lever given improving metrics and market conditions .
- Common distributions were fully covered by operating cash in H1 2022, indicating healthier cash generation versus prior year; monthly gross $0.1042/share maintained .
- NAV per share slipped modestly (19.82 → 19.63) as operating expenses rose and balance sheet expanded; continued execution on originations and rate tailwinds should support NAV stabilization .
- Preferred shareholder support: new repurchase program up to $15M through year-end could underpin ICR‑PA trading levels and improve capital structure flexibility .
- Watch near-term catalysts: additional SOFR-linked originations, repo facility capacity utilization, and sustained hotel KPI improvement; monitor advisory fee drag and REO operating costs on margins .