OG
ONITY GROUP INC. (OCN)·Q2 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q2 2024 delivered solid operational performance: adjusted pre-tax income of $32 million and annualized adjusted pre-tax ROE of 28%, while GAAP net income was $11 million and diluted EPS was $1.33 . Revenue was $246.4 million, with servicing and subservicing fees of $210.8 million; the variance between GAAP and adjusted results reflected unfavorable MSR fair value adjustments driven by elevated hedge costs .
- Liquidity and book value improved: total liquidity rose to $231 million and book value per share reached $57 by quarter-end; ending servicing UPB climbed to $304 billion and ending subservicing UPB to $173 billion, up 6% and 10% versus December 31, 2023 .
- Strategic catalyst: Onity entered a letter of intent to acquire reverse mortgage assets from Waterfall Asset Management, intending to issue $51.7 million in new, non-convertible, cumulative preferred stock; management expects immediate accretion to earnings and cash flows upon closing in H2 2024 .
- Estimates context: S&P Global consensus data was unavailable for OCN due to a mapping issue; third-party sources indicated an EPS miss of $0.03 and revenue miss of ~$22 million for the quarter, relative to publicized consensus figures .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Adjusted performance and ROE: Adjusted pre-tax income reached $32 million with 28% annualized adjusted pre-tax ROE, underscoring strong servicing segment execution . CEO quote: “This quarter’s results provide the clearest demonstration yet that our articulated strategy and financial objectives are sound, and our execution is strong” — Glen Messina .
- Balance sheet and capital metrics improved: Total liquidity increased to $231 million; debt-to-equity ratio improved to 3.88:1; book value per share rose to $57 .
- Growth in volumes and UPB: Originations volume rose 51% q/q to $7 billion, demonstrating MSR replenishment capability; total servicing additions were $19 billion (with $12 billion subservicing), and ending servicing UPB reached $304 billion (ending subservicing UPB $173 billion) .
What Went Wrong
- GAAP results impacted by MSR valuation and hedge costs: MSR valuation adjustments were negative $32.7 million vs. negative $11.6 million in Q1, with management citing elevated hedge costs as a driver of the GAAP-adjusted gap .
- Year-over-year revenue pressure: Total revenue declined to $246.4 million from $272.0 million in Q2 2023; servicing and subservicing fees fell to $210.8 million from $237.6 million y/y .
- Net income and EPS lower sequentially: Net income was $10.5–$11.0 million vs. $30.1 million in Q1 and diluted EPS $1.33 vs. $3.74 in Q1, reflecting heavier MSR valuation headwinds and higher interest expenses in Q2 .
Financial Results
Revenue, EPS, and Net Income vs Prior Periods and Estimates
*Values retrieved from S&P Global were unavailable due to mapping constraints.
Revenue Components
Operating Expenses and Other Income (Expense)
Non-GAAP “Notables” and Adjusted Pre-Tax Income
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “I’m thrilled with the performance of the Onity platform… This quarter’s results provide the clearest demonstration yet that our articulated strategy and financial objectives are sound, and our execution is strong.” — Glen Messina, Chair, President & CEO .
- “We expect [the Waterfall/MAM] transaction to be accretive to earnings and cash flows immediately upon closing, while strengthening our position in reverse servicing as a hedge to forward MSRs…” — Glen Messina .
- Q1 snapshot (for trajectory): “Our strategy of capital-light growth has enabled us to steadily grow our subservicing portfolio through new client acquisitions and capital partner relationships.” — Glen Messina .
- Q4 snapshot (context): “We delivered another sequential quarter increase in adjusted pre-tax income, driven by our servicing segment… increased our target MSR hedge coverage ratio throughout the year, currently at 100%.” — Glen Messina .
Q&A Highlights
- Themes discussed on the Q2 call included servicing-driven adjusted performance, hedge costs’ impact on GAAP vs adjusted results, subservicing pipeline growth, and strategic rationale/terms for the Waterfall/MAM reverse assets acquisition .
- Management reiterated expected accretion and capital structure improvements from the Waterfall/MAM transaction; preferred stock terms were detailed: $51.7M par; 7.875% dividend for 5 years, stepping up thereafter; non-convertible, cumulative, callable after four years .
- Liquidity and leverage were highlighted as improving, with debt-to-equity at 3.88:1 and book value per share at $57, supporting confidence in forward execution .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global consensus data was unavailable for OCN due to a CIQ mapping constraint; we were unable to retrieve EPS and revenue consensus values for direct comparisons.*
- External sources reported Q2 diluted EPS of $1.33 missing consensus by $0.03 and revenue of $246.4 million missing consensus by approximately $22.1 million .
*Values retrieved from S&P Global were unavailable due to mapping constraints.
Guidance Changes
KPIs and Balance Sheet Metrics
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Adjusted profitability and ROE outperformed despite GAAP headwinds from MSR valuation and hedge costs; servicing segment remains the earnings engine .
- Balance sheet resilience: rising liquidity and book value per share, plus improved debt-to-equity position, enhance flexibility for H2 execution .
- Strategic transaction (Waterfall/MAM reverse assets) is a potential near-term catalyst with expected immediate accretion and diversification/hedge benefits vs forward MSRs; watch for regulatory approvals and closing timeline .
- Revenue mix shifts and originations recovery support MSR replenishment; continued growth in subservicing UPB underscores enterprise sales momentum .
- Near-term trading: sensitivity to hedge cost dynamics and MSR valuations may keep GAAP results volatile; focus on adjusted pre-tax trend, liquidity trajectory, and closing of the reverse assets transaction .
- Medium-term thesis: growing subservicing scale, disciplined capital structure, and targeted acquisitions could improve earnings durability across rate cycles; monitoring regulatory and financing conditions remains essential .
- Estimates lens: With S&P Global consensus unavailable, external reports indicated small EPS and revenue misses; any shift in adjusted profitability trend or transaction timing could prompt estimate revisions .