Velocity Financial, Inc. (NYSE:VEL) Q1 2023 Earnings Call Transcript May 5, 2023
Operator: Good afternoon and welcome to the Velocity Financial First Quarter 2023 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] Please note this event is being recorded. I’d now like to turn the conference over to Chris Oltmann, Treasurer and Director of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Chris Oltmann: Thanks, [Danielle]. Hello, everyone, and thank you for joining us today for the discussion of Velocity’s first quarter 2023 results. Joining me today are Chris Farrar, Velocity’s President and Chief Executive Officer; and Mark Szczepaniak, Velocity’s Chief Financial Officer. Earlier this afternoon, we released our first quarter 2023 results and our press release and the accompanying presentation are available on our Investor Relations website. I’d like to remind everyone that today’s call may include forward-looking statements, which are uncertain and outside of the company’s control and actual results may differ materially. For a discussion of some of the risks and other factors that could affect results, please see the risk factors and other cautionary statements made in our communications with shareholders, including the risk factors disclosed in our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Please also note that the content of this conference call contains time-sensitive information that is accurate only as of today, and we do not undertake any duty to update forward-looking statements. We may also refer to certain non-GAAP measures on this call. For reconciliations of these non-GAAP measures, you should refer to the earnings materials on our Investor Relations website. Finally, today’s call is being recorded and will be available on the company’s website later today. And with that, I will now turn the call over to Chris Farrar.
Chris Farrar: Thanks, Chris, I would like to welcome everyone to our first quarter earnings call. Earlier today as Chris mentioned, we reported another strong quarter as we continue to grow in a disciplined and profitable way. Our successful matched funding strategy of locking in fixed rate spreads has held up very well considering the rapid rise in rates. As you’re all keenly aware, there’s been a tremendous amount of volatility in the regional banks, many of whom were essentially borrowing short and lending long. Continue to see these competitors tighten credit or step away entirely from the market, which is naturally led to an increase in lending opportunities for us. We believe the same will continue to play out for the remainder of the year and we’re seeing better borrowers and higher quality assets as a result of this banking stress.
In terms of our portfolio, we continue to see expected levels of performance and first quarter resolutions rebounded to a more typical rate, which contributed to a 49 basis point portfolio yield increase from Q4, ’22. Perhaps more importantly, we’ve constructed our portfolio in such a way as to avoid the most problematic commercial real estate assets. Over 15% of our loans are secured by single family rental properties, and 75% of the portfolio has a residential component. On the small commercial segment of our business, the properties backing our loans tend to be small neighborhood serving assets that are usually in very high demand. We do not have exposure to large office buildings where other lenders are starting to see significant realized losses.
As we look forward, we believe we’re well-positioned to succeed in a variety of potential outcomes as we experienced a slowing economy. With respect to growth, we were very conservative with new originations in the first part of the year, but have recently started to increase our volumes, although real estate market transactions have slowed, we can continue to see plenty of borrower demand. As an example, we received over $3 billion in new loan requests in the first quarter of ’23 and originated just over 200 million in new loans. This healthy demand, discipline credit process, and our stable in place portfolio income allows us to be very selective in adding new assets. On the capital market side of our business, we’re pleased to see continued support for our platform as we just priced our second regular way deal of the year with strong investor demand.
In April, we completed our most significant transaction of the year by resecuritizing a portion of our retained bonds at attractive rates on a non-mark-to-market basis. This new structure frees up capital to fuel further growth and provides us a more stable alternative to short term repo financing. Looking forward, we expect continued earnings and portfolio growth, positive asset resolutions and another successful year. Very proud of how well our team has prepared our company to navigate these shifting times. And want to thank all our stakeholders for their continued support. That concludes my remarks, and I’ll pop over to the earnings presentation on Page 3. From an earnings perspective, a very clean, simple, straightforward quarter, nice core earnings slightly below where they were the prior quarter from last year and I think that speaks to the strength of our business model to be able to absorb all the change that we’ve seen in the last 12 months and almost do the same type of number.
In terms of recovery rates, again, another strong quarter of positive earnings from NPL recoveries. So we were very pleased with those results. And as I mentioned, we’re continuing to see our yields increases not only from higher whacks on new originations, but that bounce back in resolutions on NPLs. In terms of the portfolio, things are pretty healthy. They are kind of performing as I said, as expected. We did reduce volumes intentionally. We could have done more production, but really wanted to see how capital markets were going to behave and the rest of the markets in general. And as I said, because we’re getting good demand on the securitization side, we’re going to increase that production going forward. In terms of financing and capital, I did mention that the second securitization that we just priced went off very well.
And as I mentioned, the [indiscernible] was a really important transaction for us generated just under $65 million of new capital that we put into the business, paid off $15 million of repo that was against those bonds and opened up what we think will be a new avenue as we continue to retain assets in the future, we certainly have the ability to remake those as well. So we’re, we’re very pleased with the support that we got in the capital markets there. On Page 4, looking at book value, another strong quarter of book value growth as we executed on our strategy to retain earnings and grow book value, you can see we did well there. And on a core basis there’s a little bit add back here from the some of the equity components. On 5, even though we’ve got healthy book value growth and on Slide 4 we showed you GAAP book value, we think the economic book value is much higher.
We believe the embedded gain in our portfolio is not accurately reflected in GAAP book value and that economic value is still quite healthy and in excess of where we report GAAP book value. So, with those comments, I’ll turn it over to Mark on Slide 6 to take us forward.
Mark Szczepaniak: Thanks, Chris. And hi, everybody. Slide 6 looks on our loan production. As we had mentioned, we have strategically decided to pull back a little bit on loan production towards the end of Q4 and also beginning of first quarter of this year as a result of some of the volatility that we saw in the markets at that time. And we’ve since then, begun to pick up our originations. So we’ll continue to do that going forward this year. We are low production during Q1, $217 million in UPV. I think a key takeaway there is that $217 million in new originations, the weighted average coupon in most new originations was 11.1%. So we had continuously during the second half of last year and as the first quarter this year continued raising our note rates on our loans.
And in response to all the Fed rates last year and recent one this year. So we’ve continued to raise the interest rates on the loans, as Chris mentioned, still have very good strong demand and application pipeline activity from our borrowers. And again, 11% weighted average whack first quarter origination this year. If you compare that to the first quarter of last year, originations, those went off in a whack of 6.3% give you kind of an idea of the strong increase in a coupon that we’ve put out on our portfolio. On page 7, what’s that done for the overall portfolio the overall portfolio at the end of Q1 ended up about $3.6 billion in UPV as a 25% year-over-year growth from the end of Q1 of ’22. And that growth was driven pretty evenly by strong demand and investor one to four and multifamily properties.
The weighted average coupon of the entire portfolio at the end of Q1 was 8.15% as compared to 7.95 as of the end of the year, and compared to 7.50 at the end of first quarter last year. So year-over-year total portfolio weighted average coupon growth of about 65 basis points, and that reflects the strong increases we’ve been doing towards the second half of ’22 and first quarter of ’23 on our note rates. We mentioned last quarter that beginning October 1 of 2022 we had elected fair value option we call FVO. Fair value option accounting for our new loan originations means we put in those originations on our books now at fair value. So our Q4 originations went out fair value, as well as now is our Q1, 2023 originations. So at the end of Q1 we now have about $437 million in UPV of loans in our health investment portfolio that our fair value option loans are on the books of fair value.
On Page 8, our first quarter, non performing loan asset resolution activity was strong. Again, we’ve mentioned during Q4 the NPL resolution activity was down a little not the rate of resolution, we were still at like a 3% gain, but just the total UPV of resolutions were down. And we mentioned that Q4 is just kind of a lower response month and we thought we would see that pick up again in Q1 and we have, we take a look at our first quarter of ’23 NPL resolutions, almost $39 million in NPL resolutions for a $1.3 million gain or 3.5% gain. And again, if you look at Q4 25 million NPL resolutions, but if you look at first quarter, ’22, year-over-year $37 million. So you see first quarter of this year, kind of back to our historical trends in terms of UPV resolved, and the type of gains that we’re used to seeing.
So that’s very good news. What’s all that done to our net interest margin on Page 9, as Chris mentioned, our portfolio yield increased 49 basis points from the end of the year end of the first quarter, the 41 basis point increase is a combination of the increase in the [indiscernible] increasing our note rates, as well as those NPL resolution dollars, those gains coming in stronger in Q1 that all goes into your yield. So that drove up the yield, the cost of funds yield increased 10 bips. So again, our portfolio yield well outpaced the cost of funds. But we see a widening out of that. We saw some compression in Q4 because of the volatility. And now we’re seeing that widen back out again. So we ended the quarter with 3.23% yield NIM. On Page 10, for our investment portfolio performance, we ended Q1 our non-performing rate at 8.7% pretty much equal or consistent with year ended 8.3%, 8.3% to 8.7%.
It’s down a full 100 basis points from where it was at the end of Q1, 2022, which was at 9.8%. So again, we’re seeing that non performing loan rates stay fairly consistent. And as the previous slide showed, we’re still on our historical average of three points or more of gain on those NPL resolutions. Our CECL loan loss reserve for the quarter at $5 million, which is basically flat to where it was at the end of the year for 2022 at $4.9 million. So we’re at 16 basis points. And we’ve kind of been holding constant 15-16 basis points were on that level for the past five, six quarters, we don’t really see that changing too much right now. And on the CECL [indiscernible] keep in mind that the debt is on the portfolio that is at amortized cost. So the newer loans that we put on in Q4 last year, and in Q1 this year, that are the fair value option loans, they are not subject to a CECL losses are because they’re always carried at fair value.
So the fair value is kind of reflect if they need to be written up or down. So this reserved is for the older portfolio this amortized costs. So as we put on more and more loans at fair value and the amortized cost loans pay down, you’d expect to see that CECL reserve in terms of dollars, hopefully start to come down as that portfolio gets smaller and smaller. In terms of charge offs in the bottom right of the page on the section on Page 11. We have [$44 thousand] in charge offs in Q1 as compared to zero in Q2 and charge offs is kind of a it comes and goes and you can look at the last five quarters are average charge offs has been about 29 basis points. So very, very low on charge offs. And the one that I point out on the charge offs is, charge offs is the GAAP terminology for what happens when the loan goes away, and the majority of charge offs and time of the month when you’re converting a loan to an REO you charge off the loan.
Then keep in mind, when we have that REO we usually fix up the property work on the property. And then we sell the REO for a resolution. And if you go back to the resolution table, the NPL resolution table that we previously showed you, many cases, we make gains on the sale of REOs. So a lot of times we’re recovering those charge offs. But in accounting you don’t show is a credit to the charge offs. It’s a whole separate gain on REO which is reflected in the resolution table. And on Page 12, durable funding and liquidity strategy, our cash reserves at the end of the first quarter, and on finance collateral is very strong of a $45 million. But $39 million of that was actual cash and cash equivalents with other $6 million on finance collateral, our total maximum capacity on our warehouse lines $832 million is the maximum.
At the end of Q1 we still had about $533 million of available capacity, so plenty of available capacity for financing, strong cash reserves and available liquidity. Chris already mentioned, we did our first securitization ’23 in January and then saw improved execution on that one we did in Q4 in October showing the markets coming back a little bit. And the Indicative pricing that we’re seeing now for a securitization mountain market right now shows even a little bit better pricing in the main other takeaway, as Chris mentioned, can’t stress enough is that in April of this year, we did that re remix, where we received about $65 million in financing. By taking retain certificates or tranches from older securitizations that we had not issued, we decided to retain them at the time.
And we re-leveraged those in the new security and new mark to market security and generate almost $65 million in financing. We could have repo those at any time this Chris mentioned, you do the repo that’s mark to market that’s subject to margin calls, something happens. This was a non mark to market facility, an older retained tranches. That’s a new financing vehicle for us a non-mark to market financing. And I think that just shows kind of the adaptability that we have an a non-mark to market world. Very proud of that. With that Chris, I’ll turn it back to you to give kind of a an outlook on Velocity’s 2023 key business drivers.
Chris Farrar: Great, thank you Mark, appreciate it. In terms of market, certainly seeing the pressures from higher rates and lower transactions as I mentioned, but still seeing functioning markets. And we’re able to liquidate assets when we do end up with REO. So that seems to be stable there. Obviously, there’s a lot of cross currents in the market and we’ll see how things go. From a credit perspective we’re being more cautious and choosey with our lending. And I think that’s paying off and will continue to monitor on a market-by-market basis. Some of these markets are seeing prices come down other markets are actually still seeing gains. So we’re monitoring geographic location in the portfolio. In terms of capital, I mentioned, the successful transactions that we have and that really put us creates a lot of capital going forward for us to be in a good strong liquidity position.
And then in terms of earnings, we’re just going to continue to stick to our knitting and originate assets with good healthy spreads and that will contribute to earnings growth going forward. So that wraps up our prepared remarks and presentation. We can open it up for questions.
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Q&A Session
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Operator: We will now begin the question and answer session. [Operator Instructions] The first question comes from Steve Delaney from JMP Securities. Please go ahead. Sorry about that. The next question comes from Stephen Laws of Raymond James. Please go ahead.
Operator: [Operator Instructions] The next question comes from Steve Delaney of JMP Securities.
Operator: This concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Chris Farrar for closing remarks
Chris Farrar: No further remarks. Thank you all for joining and we’ll be in touch next quarter. So thank you.
Mark Szczepaniak: Thank you, everybody.
Operator: The conference is now concluded. Thank you for attending today’s presentation. You may now disconnect.