NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--
Annaly Capital Management, Inc. (NYSE: NLY) (“Annaly“ or “the Company“)
released its monthly commentary for May. The commentary set forth below
addresses and updates the company's views on the economy, the
residential mortgage market, commercial real estate finance and the
overall markets. Please visit the commentary
section of our website (www.annaly.com),
to see the complete commentary with charts and graphs, as well as other
research and opinion pieces.
The Economy
The bond market selloff that has been ongoing since the beginning of the
year accelerated in May. The reasons are many: fears of oversupply (to
the point that equity markets are beginning to react to news of how well
Treasury auctions are received), gossip about the U.S. losing its AAA
rating, concern that the Federal Reserve would choose to not defend a
particular interest rate level with their Treasury buying program,
headlines about Asians selling their dollar assets, convexity trading
(more on that below) and, not least, a growing frenzy over inflation
prospects.
We are currently experiencing deflation, with year-over-year CPI down
0.7%, so the real yield on the 10-year Treasury is well north of 4%.
Despite this fact, the burden of proof clearly rests upon the deflation
crowd, of which we have been a member. The reasons that we feel
deflation is the war we are fighting now and for the foreseeable future
are many and varied, but can be quickly summed up by the following
statement: We have a deleveraging consumer and a struggling banking
sector. That we have an overleveraged consumer should be beyond debate,
and we've spoken at length on this in the past. Annaly CEO Michael
Farrell is on
record calling for the national savings rate to hit 15% as part of
the household balance sheet restoration project.
Notwithstanding the stress test results of the Supervisory Capital
Assessment Program--that showed only 10 of the 19 test subjects had to
take capital-raising actions--banks in the US are ailing. Reading the
results of the stress test, it appears that if the situation plays out
how the Fed modeled the “more adverse scenario case,“ most of the 19
banks will have less capital at the end of 2010 than they had at the end
of 2008. For instance, Capital One Financial is estimated to take $13.4
billion in estimated losses in 2009 and 2010, and will have only $9
billion in resources other than capital to absorb these losses. Capital
One was not required to raise capital. Regardless of whether investors
consider this to be well capitalized, one thing remains true: If banks
have shrinking capital, they cannot expand their lending activities.
Just as in the consumer's case, deleveraging and protecting capital are
not inflationary. As for the massive amount of money that has been
thrown at this crisis, much of it has simply gone to fill the hole left
by capital destruction in the financial sector.
We would argue the capital hole is still being dug. In the FDIC's most
recent quarterly report on the banks (the title of which has an upbeat
spin: “FDIC-Insured Institutions Earned $7.6 Billion in the First
Quarter of 2009“), news on the collective balance sheet of the industry
was dour. Noncurrent loans (that is, non-accruing loans and loans past
due 90 days or more) rose 25.5% in the first quarter to $291 billion
from $232 billion just one quarter ago. Those looking for a moderation
in the pace of deterioration will not find it in this data series. The
25.5% increase is accelerating over the past two quarters (23.8% in
Q42008 and 12.8% in Q32008). As a percentage of total loans, the
noncurrent rate rose to 3.8% from 2.9% last quarter, which is as bad as
it got during the early 1990s. Despite these credit trends, the banks
are still behind the curve. The coverage ratio at our nation's banks
(reserve for losses/noncurrent loans) fell to 66% at March 31, 2009 from
75% at December 31, 2008 and 93% at the end of 2007. (The ratio stood at
160% at March 31, 2006.) If reserves had been increased by enough to
maintain a 75% coverage ratio, the banks should have added another $24
billion to reserves. This would have turned the $7.6 billion profit into
a $16.8 billion loss for the quarter.
The day after the FDIC release, the Mortgage Bankers Association
confirmed this trend with their first quarter national mortgage
delinquency survey. There is no second derivative improvement to be
found here either, as the seasonally adjusted delinquency rate of 9.12%
is the highest since the MBA started keeping records in 1972. Also, the
delinquency rate only includes late loans (30-days or more), but not
loans in foreclosure. In the first quarter, the percentage of loans in
foreclosure was 3.85%, an increase of 55 basis points from the prior
quarter and 138 basis points from a year ago. Both the overall
percentage and the quarter-to quarter increase are records. The combined
percentage of loans in foreclosure and at least one payment late is
12.07%, another record.
As bad as the headline numbers are, the underlying trends are just as
disturbing. Delinquencies on subprime mortgage loans rose to 24.95% from
21.88% in the fourth quarter of 2008, which should surprise no one.
However, prime loan delinquencies rose to 6.06% from 5.06% one quarter
ago, a significant and disconcerting increase from a group of borrowers
that had previously been holding up much better. The percentage of loans
in foreclosure increased 61 basis points to 2.49% for prime loans, and
63 basis points to 14.34% for subprime loans. The chief economist for
the MBA, Jay Brinkman, was understandably downbeat. “Looking forward, it
does not appear the level of mortgage defaults will begin to fall until
after the employment situation begins to improve. MBA's forecast, a view
now shared by the Federal Reserve and others, is that the unemployment
rate will not hit its peak until mid-2010. Since changes in mortgage
performance lag changes in the level of employment, it is unlikely we
will see much of an improvement until after that.“
Two other notable data points have been spotted in the field (thanks,
Fred Hickey): The International Air Transport Association reported a
21.7% year-over-year drop in cargo demand, the fifth consecutive month
of 20%-plus year-over-year declines. “We have not yet seen any signs
that recovery is imminent,“ said Giovanni Bisignani, IATA's CEO. The
American Trucking Associations reports that tonnages shipped in April
fell 13.2% from the prior year, the worst year-over-year fall in the
current cycle and the largest drop in thirteen years. (In March,
tonnages fell 12.2% year-over-year.) ATA Chief Economist Bob Costello
said the second derivative (the change in the rate of change) is getting
worse. “While most key economic indicators are decreasing at a slower
rate, the year-over-year contractions in truck tonnage accelerated
because businesses are right-sizing their inventories, which means fewer
truck shipments.“
We believe there is indeed a connection between what is happening in
credit, what is happening at the banks, what is happening in the economy
and what may happen in inflation down the road. For the last word on
inflation, we'll leave it to the Mortgage Bankers Association economic
forecast. For what it's worth, the MBA is calling for consumer price
changes of -0.2%, 0.9% and 0.8% for Q42008 to Q42009, 2010 and 2011,
respectively. Nowadays, the MBA's perspective is worth a lot.
The Residential Mortgage Market
Prepayment speeds for April (May release) remained relatively benign
despite concerns of a modification and rate-induced refinance wave. On
the aggregate, 30-year FNMA collateral prepaid at 22.1 Constant
Prepayment Rate, compared to 22.2 CPR the previous month. Any collateral
that was impaired or challenged in some way, such as credit-impaired,
interest-only or 40-year mortgages, high loan-to-value loans, etc.,
prepaid substantially slower than their conforming cohorts due to their
barriers to refinanceability even under the various government loan
refinancing programs and incentives. Looking ahead, most dealers are
anticipating anywhere from flat to a 20% increase in speeds
month-over-month. The divergence of opinion comes from the questions on
whether capacity constraints have eased on mortgage originators enough
to get new loans processed, and the effect of higher mortgage rates.
As discussed above, there was a dramatic sell-off in Treasuries towards
the end of May and into early June. The yield on the 10-year Treasury
closed below 3% as recently as April 27, hit 3.461% at May 29 and as of
June 8 had risen to the 3.90% range. This despite the fact that new data
points were hardly inflationary. A logical explanation for this would be
convexity-related hedging. In a general bond market sell-off, the
duration (or price sensitivity to changes in interest rates) of a
portfolio that held MBS would extend due to the decreased refinance
incentive brought about by higher rates. In this instance, a portfolio
manager would seek to offset this extension. One way to do so is by
“selling duration,“ or selling Treasuries. MBS related hedging now
appears to be leading Treasuries instead of Treasuries leading MBS. The
markets experienced a similarly dramatic uneconomic sell-off in mid 2003
related to convexity hedging. Fed Funds were equally low; however the
10-year Treasury sold off from 3.11% on June 13, 2003 to 4.56% on August
13, 2003, a huge jump. This time around, the convexity-related hedging
may be even worse than the experience of mid-2003 if the much
anticipated refinance wave fails to materialize. In other words, we are
likely to continue to see a steep yield curve, thanks in large part to
portfolio managers simply doing their jobs.
The Commercial Mortgage Market
While negative credit issues continue to steadily bombard the commercial
real estate sector, other forces--namely the government and the rating
agencies--contributed to significant price volatility in CMBS, both
positive and negative.
The Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility (“TALF“) program was
expanded on May 1 to include CMBS. Initially, price movement was
negligible because legacy assets were not included. Then on May 19, the
Federal Reserve Bank announced the inclusion of legacy CMBS with certain
eligibility requirements, including that the securities “...be rated AAA
by two agencies and have no rating below AAA“ (emphasis ours). This
announcement triggered price rallies in CMBS by as much as 10 points for
super senior bonds. However, many of these gains were reversed on May 26
when Standard & Poor's requested responses by June 2 to a Request for
Comment (“RFC“) on proposed changes to its methodology and assumptions
for rating U.S. CMBS. Within the RFC, S&P indicated that approximately
25%, 60% and 90% of the most senior tranches of the 2005, 2006 and 2007
vintages, respectively, could be downgraded. Consequently, many CMBS
would now carry a rating below AAA and be ineligible for TALF. On May
28, after considerable negative reaction from the market, S&P extended
its deadline of the RFC to June 9. Price declines were reversed slightly
as investors took this as a sign that a more favorable resolution may be
forthcoming. Investors' hopes were dashed as S&P released a report on
June 4, revising upwards that 50%, 85% and 95% of most senior tranches
of the 2005, 2006 and 2007 vintages, respectively, could be downgraded
due to its proposed rating changes. Let's look a little closer at two
areas that S&P is adjusting in its methodology: valuation and rental
revenue.
As we have said in previous commentaries (see November 2008), leverage
extended during 2004-2008 generated excess valuations ranging from 30%
to 40%. As the prices gained momentum, excess valuations and leverage
increased. For example, the now infamous Stuyvesant Town transaction,
securitized in early 2007 with a 2% cap rate, is projected to default
during the second half of 2009. Revaluing this property using 2008 cash
flow and cap rates ranging from 6% to 6.5% (and that is generous)
results in a loss of $700 million to $900 million of senior debt.
However, if the property were to be financed by a new third party
lender, that lender would commit funds to no more than 65% of the new
value. The total loss to the senior debt holders would be $1.5 billion
to $1.6 billion. Given the fact that total subordination through the
'AAA' rated AJ class totals $1.6 billion, it seems a good bet that the
super seniors will be downgraded.
A second area where S&P has drawn criticism revolves around how the
agency intends to stress the rental income of a property. S&P wants to
start with the lower of current or market rents, and then decrease rents
a further 6% to 30% depending upon property type. Analysts feel this is
draconian. However, Blockbuster Inc., Zale Corp, Pier 1 Imports and
Starbucks Corp. are requesting rent reductions and concessions on
existing space. Starbucks is reportedly requesting rent reductions of up
to 25%. Again, it sounds like S&P may not be too far out of the base
path.
Unquestionably, a resolution of the legacy CMBS assets is imperative to
jump starting the lending effort. The inclusion by TALF was a step in
the right direction. But some market participants were outraged that S&P
chose now to consider changing their ratings methodology to a more
conservative, yet more realistic, posture. While the initial ratings for
these transactions were moronic and the agencies were maligned for not
reacting quickly to the subprime disaster, we think there is merit in
their revised methodology. Thus far the Federal Reserve has given no
indication of how or whether the TALF program will be adjusted if the
downgrades are enacted.
June 9, 2009
Jeremy Diamond
Managing Director
Kevin Riordan
Director
Ryan O'Hagan
Vice President
Robert Calhoun
Vice President
This commentary is neither an offer to sell, nor a solicitation of an
offer to buy, any securities of Annaly Capital Management, Inc.
(“Annaly“), FIDAC or any other company. Such an offer can only be made
by a properly authorized offering document, which enumerates the fees,
expenses, and risks associated with investing in this strategy,
including the loss of some or all principal. All information contained
herein is obtained from sources believed to be accurate and reliable.
However, such information is presented “as is“ without warranty of any
kind, and we make no representation or warranty, express or implied, as
to the accuracy, timeliness, or completeness of any such information or
with regard to the results to be obtained from its use. While we have
attempted to make the information current at the time of its release, it
may well be or become outdated, stale or otherwise subject to a variety
of legal qualifications by the time you actually read it. No
representation is made that we will or are likely to achieve results
comparable to those shown if results are shown. Results for the fund, if
shown, include dividends (when appropriate) and are net of fees. (C)2009
by Annaly Capital Management, Inc./FIDAC. All rights reserved. No
part of this commentary may be reproduced in any form and/or any medium,
without our express written permission.
Source: Annaly Capital Management, Inc.
Contact: Annaly Capital Management, Inc.
Investor Relations
1-(888) 8Annaly
www.annaly.com