IM
Invesco Mortgage Capital Inc. (IVR)·Q1 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q1 2025 delivered positive economic return of 2.6% on higher EAD and improved net interest margin, despite a modest $0.11 book value decline to $8.81 and a dividend reduction to $0.34 per share .
- EAD per share of $0.64 beat S&P Global consensus EPS of $0.57; GAAP EPS was $0.26. Net interest income rose to $18.8M as average cost of funds fell 67 bps q/q to 4.46% (bolded beat below; S&P Global disclaimer) .
- April volatility tied to U.S. trade policy drove estimated book value down to $7.74–$8.06 and leverage down to ~6.4x as IVR proactively reduced risk and increased hedges; management said book value was up ~1% early May as markets stabilized .
- Portfolio mix remained concentrated in higher-coupon Agency RMBS (83.7% of fair value) with Agency CMBS at 15.0%; debt-to-equity increased to 7.1x at quarter end and then was trimmed in April to ~6.4x .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- “Earnings available for distribution per common share(1) of $0.64 compared to $0.53 in Q4 2024,” supporting coverage of the reduced $0.34 dividend; EAD rose to $40.0M and effective interest rate margin improved to 3.27% .
- Management executed risk reductions in April: “we sought to reduce risk and maintain ample liquidity by selling assets…bring our leverage ratio back down to the mid-6s…we did increase our hedge ratio” .
- CEO tone was constructive long term: “Our long-term outlook for Agency RMBS is favorable…investor demand to strengthen in higher coupons…steeper yield curve,” with Agency CMBS supported by “limited issuance, strong fundamental performance and stable cash flow profiles” .
What Went Wrong
- Book value per share fell $0.11 q/q to $8.81 and management estimated an additional April decline to $7.74–$8.06 due to “significant increase in interest rate volatility” and tighter swap spreads .
- Macro headwinds: “financial markets reacted negatively to proposed U.S. fiscal and trade policies,” and “Agency RMBS sharply underperformed Treasuries in April,” pressuring risk assets and book value .
- Revenue-related metrics and spreads faced pressure amid swap spread tightening; management highlighted cautious near-term stance and narrowed leverage range given policy uncertainty .
Financial Results
Headline Metrics vs Prior Quarters
Segment Mix (Fair Value Composition)
KPIs and Liquidity
Results vs Wall Street Consensus (S&P Global)
Values marked with * retrieved from S&P Global. Note: S&P “Revenue” classification for mortgage REITs may not be directly comparable to company-reported net interest income or interest income.
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- CEO: “This resulted in an economic return for the quarter of 2.6%, consisting of our $0.34 dividend per common share and an $0.11 decline in book value per common share.”
- CEO (April update): “Our book value per common share declined as a result and is estimated to be between $7.74 and $8.06 as of April 30, 2025.”
- CIO: “Levered ROEs are kind of in the low 20s on higher coupons.”
- CIO: “We did increase our hedge ratio…closer to home…20% to 30% range of Treasury futures relative to swaps.”
- CEO: “Our long-term outlook for Agency RMBS is favorable…demand to strengthen in higher coupons…eventual decline in interest rate volatility, and a steeper yield curve.”
Q&A Highlights
- Leverage management: Reduced leverage by ~0.5x in April amid policy uncertainty; allow some drift but act near high end of range .
- Hedge ratio and mix: Raised hedge ratio in April; maintain 20–30% Treasury futures share to mitigate swap spread risk .
- Dividend coverage: After reduction to $0.34, management stated dividend is “comfortably covering” and supported by current ROEs .
- Returns and spreads: Higher coupon Agency RMBS offering low-20s levered ROEs; spreads attractive vs swaps; cautious stance given potential fewer Fed cuts .
- Credit exposure: Exited remaining credit investments; portfolio now 100% agency; not adding commercial credit near term .
Estimates Context
- EPS: Primary EPS consensus for Q1 2025 was $0.573 vs EAD per share of $0.64, a clear beat likely to prompt modest upward revisions to forward EAD expectations (bolded in table above)*.
- Revenue: S&P Global “Revenue” consensus was $45.15M vs reported “actual” $24.30M*, but company-reported total interest income was $73.85M; differences reflect classification nuances for mortgage REITs, so revenue surprises should be interpreted cautiously .
Values marked with * retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Q1 was operationally solid: higher EAD ($0.64) and improved net interest margin backed the dividend cut, yielding a positive 2.6% economic return despite BV pressure .
- April’s macro shock (tariffs, volatility, swap spread tightening) drove a temporary BV drawdown (to $7.74–$8.06) and prompted defensive actions (leverage to ~6.4x, higher hedge ratio); early May stabilization lifted BV ~1% per management .
- Strategic mix remains consistent: 83.7% Agency RMBS / 15.0% Agency CMBS, focused on higher coupons and specified pools with favorable prepayment characteristics .
- Funding and cost improvements continue: average cost of funds fell to 4.46% (from 5.13%), supporting net interest income growth to $18.8M q/q .
- Near-term stance: cautious on policy-driven volatility; medium-term constructive as a steeper curve and moderating volatility should support Agency RMBS demand (banks, overseas, REITs) .
- EPS beat vs consensus may be a catalyst for EAD-driven estimate revisions; revenue “miss” vs SPGI is not directly comparable given mREIT reporting differences (S&P Global disclaimer)* .
- Watch catalysts: tariff policy developments, swap spread normalization, bank demand, and dividend actions; management’s proactive risk controls and hedge adjustments are aimed at dampening BV volatility .