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Earnings Call Analysis
Q3-2024 Analysis
Ladder Capital Corp
In the third quarter of 2024, Ladder Capital delivered $37.7 million in attributable earnings, translating to $0.30 per share of distributable EPS. This resulted in a notable return on average equity of 9.8%. The company's earnings were predominantly driven by net interest income, showcasing the stability of its real estate portfolio amidst a challenging market environment.
As of September 30, 2024, Ladder's balance sheet reflected high liquidity with $1.9 billion total liquidity, including $1.6 billion in cash and cash equivalents—representing approximately 30% of the balance sheet. This solid liquidity allows Ladder to seize new investment opportunities as they arise.
Ladder's adjusted leverage ratio stood at 1.6x, with total gross leverage of 2.3x, reflecting a downward trend over the past year as the company focused on deleveraging its balance sheet and increasing cash reserves. This strategy prepares Ladder for a potential upswing in loan origination and investment activity.
Ladder's loan portfolio reached $2 billion, equaling 38% of its total assets. The portfolio had a healthy weighted average yield of 9.33% and saw significant loan paydowns, totaling $492 million in the third quarter—marking the second-highest payoff in the company's history. With limited future funding commitments of $58 million, the company is well-positioned for further activity.
Ladder has been proactive in managing credit risks, evidenced by a $5 million write-off from a specific loan impairment. The current CECL reserve was adjusted to $52 million, adequate to cover potential loan losses. The company continues to uphold strong credit standards in this evolving marketplace.
In the third quarter, Ladder successfully closed a $500 million unsecured corporate bond offering, leading to improved recognition from ratings agencies. S&P upgraded Ladder’s corporate credit rating by one notch, and both Moody's and Fitch revised their outlook to positive. This paves the way for potentially achieving investment-grade status, which would broaden Ladder's investor base and enable better capital costs.
Moving forward, Ladder plans to redeploy its significant liquidity into attractively priced securities, with intentions to pivot more towards loan origination as security spreads tighten. The goal is to enhance distributable earnings in 2025 while capitalizing on reduced competition from banks in the lending sector.
Ladder is seeing increased market opportunities due to a recovering real estate environment. The capital markets are showing optimism, with a 53% surge in brokerage debt volumes year-on-year. As a result, Ladder is focusing on new acquisitions in multifamily, industrial, and retail sectors, as well as targeting recapitalizations for properties in lease-up.
While the current dividend remains well-covered, there is potential for assessment by the Board in the first quarter of 2025 for a modest increase, contingent upon consistent growth in the loan portfolio. The management team recognizes that balancing capital allocation with shareholder return is a priority.
Overall, Ladder appears well-prepared for the future, with a strong capital structure, significant liquidity, and an optimistic outlook for 2025. Management believes that the current market dynamics provide a favorable backdrop for pursuing strategic investments, indicating confidence in a recovering real estate market.
Good morning, and welcome to Ladder Capital Corp.'s Earnings Call for the Third Quarter of 2024. As a reminder, today's call is being recorded.
This morning, Ladder released its financial results for the quarter ended September 30, 2024.
Before the call begins, I'd like to call your attention to the customary safe harbor disclosure in our earnings release regarding forward-looking statements. Today's call may include forward-looking statements and projections. We refer you to our most recent Form 10-K for important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from these statements and projections. We do not undertake any obligation to update our forward-looking statements or projections unless required by law.
In addition, Ladder will discuss certain non-GAAP financial measures on this call, which management believes are relevant to assessing the company's financial performance. The company's presentation of this information is not intended to be considered in isolation or as a substitute for the financial information presented in accordance with GAAP. These measures are reconciled to GAAP figures in our earnings supplement presentation, which is available in the Investor Relations section of our website. We also refer you to our Form 10-K and earnings supplement presentation for definitions of certain metrics, which we may cite on today's call.
At this time, I'd like to turn the call over to Ladder's President, Pamela McCormack.
Good morning. We're pleased with Ladder's results for the third quarter of 2024. During this period, Ladder generated distributable earnings of $37.7 million or $0.30 per share, resulting in a return on equity of 9.8%, supported by modest adjusted leverage of 1.6x.
Ladder has maintained a steady book value throughout the broader volatile commercial real estate market and our balance sheet remains robust with significant liquidity to pursue new investments. As of September 30, 2024, Ladder had $1.9 billion in liquidity, with $1.6 billion or approximately 30% of our balance sheet comprised of cash and cash equivalents. We successfully closed a $500 million 7-year unsecured corporate bond offering in the third quarter. As of September 30, 57% of our total debt consisted of unsecured corporate bonds, and $3.7 billion or 68% of our total assets were unencumbered.
Both Moody's and Fitch rate Ladder just one notch below investment grade. And in conjunction with our latest bond offering, S&P upgraded our corporate credit rating by a notch, and both Moody's and Fitch revised Ladder's outlook to positive. We're optimistic about achieving investment-grade status, which we believe will enhance our market position and attract a broader range of investors.
Our loan portfolio continued to stay down, and as of quarter end totaled $2 billion or 38% of our total assets, with a weighted average yield of 9.33% and limited future funding commitments of $58 million. We've begun transitioning from CUSIP to loans, a typical approach of the thought of a recovery while remaining selective in our pursuits.
In bridge lending, we're focused on 2 areas. First, new acquisitions with basis resets and attractive dollars per square foot for any asset class across the U.S. And second, on refinances or recapitalizations for [ new vintage ] properties and lease-up.
Acquisition activity has increased significantly, and we are actively issuing term sheets and closing loans. While it will take time to gradually close these transactions and enhance earnings in the coming quarters, we are well capitalized to pursue these new investments and our transition back to making new loans has begun.
Additionally, we are quoting 5- and 10-year CMBS loans and special situation opportunities, including known/unknown financings and triple net acquisitions. Given the increased transaction levels, improved clarity around valuation and underwriting and reduced competition in the middle market, we are optimistic about the investment landscape.
In the third quarter, we received $492 million of paydowns in our loan portfolio, representing the second highest quarterly payoff level in the company's history. After quarter end, we received an additional $64 million in loan repayments, and we originated a $24 million first mortgage loan secured by a multifamily property in Phoenix, Arizona. Year-to-date, we've received $1.1 billion in total loan pay downs, including the full repayment of 50 loans, reflecting the credit enhancement and liquidity provided by our middle market lending strategy.
In the third quarter, we took title to an office property in Oakland, California with a carrying value of $7.5 million or $132 per square foot, representing 37% of the basis of our institutional sponsors. Before assuming titles to the asset, we wrote off $5 million of the loan balance due to a specific loan impairment.
As of September 30, 2024, our remaining general CECL reserve stood at $52 million, which we believe is adequate to cover any potential loan losses. We continue to monetize owned real estate. During the third quarter, we sold a multifamily property in Texas with a carrying value of $11.5 million for a $300,000 gain above our basis. In addition, we placed another $9.7 million multifamily property under contract for sale at a price above our basis that is expected to close in the fourth quarter.
Turning to our Securities and Real Estate segment. We continue to purchase AAA securities in the third quarter, requiring $422 million with a weighted average yield of 7.1%. We ended the quarter with an $853 million securities portfolio. primarily consisting of AAA-rated securities earning an unlevered yield of 6.8%. We further continue to add to this portfolio in the fourth quarter, purchasing an additional $57 million of AAA securities. As of September 30, the portfolio was entirely unlevered.
Our $946 million real estate portfolio generated $14.1 million in net rental income during the third quarter, mainly consisting of net lease properties with long-term leases to investment-grade rated tenants.
In conclusion, with significant liquidity, a strong balance sheet, conservative leverage and a revitalized origination team, we believe we are well positioned to capitalize on the opportunities ahead. With that, I'll turn the call over to Paul.
Thank you, Pamela. In the third quarter of 2024, Ladder generated $37.7 million of attributable earnings or $0.30 per share of distributable EPS or a return on average equity of 9.8%.
Our earnings in the third quarter continued to be driven by net interest income with stable net operating income from our real estate portfolio, generating a strong return on equity while holding a significant cash balance.
As of September 30, 2024, Ladder's balance sheet was comprised of 30% cash and cash equivalents or $1.6 billion, with $1.9 billion of total liquidity, including our $324 million unsecured revolver, which remains fully undrawn. As of September 30, 2024, our adjusted leverage ratio was 1.6x, with total gross leverage of 2.3x, which has trended down over the last 12 months as we delevered our balance sheet and amassed a large liquidity position.
Our loan portfolio totaled $2 billion as of quarter end across 62 balance sheet loans. The portfolio received meaningful paydowns during the quarter totaling $492 million, and included the collection of deferred interest of $7.5 million upon the payoff of a loan collateralized by a mixed-use property.
Separately, distributable earnings in the third quarter included the write-off of an allowance for loan loss of $5 million allocated to a loan on an office property we took title to during the quarter, in Oakland, California, with a carrying value of $7.5 million.
Additionally, in the third quarter, we increased our CECL reserve by $3 million to a CECL general reserve allowance of $52 million or an approximate 256 basis point reserve on our loan portfolio as of September 30, 2024.
The carrying value of our securities portfolio was $853 million at quarter end with net growth of 77% in the third quarter. 98% of the portfolio was investment-grade rated with 91% being AAA rated. The entire portfolio of predominantly AAA securities is unencumbered and readily financeable, providing an additional source of potential liquidity complementing the $1.9 billion of same-day liquidity as of quarter end.
Our $946 million real estate segment continued to generate stable net operating income in the third quarter. The portfolio includes 155 net lease properties, over 70% of which are investment-grade rated tenants, committed to long-term leases, with an average remaining lease term of 8 years.
As Pamela discussed, Ladder issued $500 million of unsecured corporate bonds that closed in the third quarter. And as of September 30, 2024, 57% of our total debt was comprised of unsecured corporate bonds with a weighted average maturity of approximately 4 years at an attractive weighted average fixed coupon rate of 5.2%.
With the closing of this capital raise, both Moody's and Fitch play [indiscernible] on positive outlook. And Moody's upgraded and unnotched the rating on our bonds to Ba1, aligning our bonds with our corporate credit rating, one notch in investment grade. We believe the rating agencies appreciate the prudent capital management latter as exhibited during the post-COVID inflationary period.
With these actions, Ladder is closer to our long-held goal of achieving an investment-grade credit rating, which we believe will open up to broader opportunities, along with the access to the investment-grade bond market. With the goal of achieving a more attractive cost of capital and enhance return on equity to shareholders over time. As of September 30, our unencumbered asset pool stood at $3.7 billion or 68% of total assets, 85% of this unencumbered asset pool was comprised of first margin loans, securities and unrestricted cash and cash equivalents.
Overall, we believe our significant liquidity position, large pool of high-quality unencumbered assets and best-in-class capital structure, one notch in investment grade, provide Ladder with strong financial flexibility, and meaningful access to capital to allow for a focus on deployment of capital within our 3 segments based on the best risk-adjusted returns.
As of September 30, 2024, Ladder's undepreciated book value per share was $13.81, which is net of $0.41 per share if CECL general reserve [indiscernible]. In the third quarter of 2024, we repurchased $1.2 million of our common stock at a weighted average price of $11.91 per share. Year-to-date through September 30, 2024, we have repurchased $2 million of our common stock at a weighted average price of $11.41 per share.
Finally, our dividend remains well covered. And in the third quarter, latter declared a $0.23 per share dividend, which was paid on October 15, 2024. For details on our third quarter 2024 operating results, please refer to our earnings supplement, which is available on our website and Ladder's quarterly report on Form 10-Q, which we expect to file in the coming days. With that, I will turn the call over to Brian.
Thanks, Paul. Ladder delivered another strong quarter with credit holding up nicely and having issued another $500 million corporate unsecured bond, we now head towards year-end with ample liquidity, well positioned for Q4 and 2025.
There has been a noticeable era of optimism in the capital markets, with stocks recently reaching all-time highs and credit spreads tightening in the bond market after the Fed began its rate-cutting cycle. This environment bodes well for our diversified product mix in commercial real estate. Few sectors were hit harder by the one, two punch of a global pandemic and rapidly rising interest rates as the Fed thought to tame inflation. However, the worse seems to be behind us with significant reserves for potential losses already established and a stabilizing real estate values, albeit mostly at lower prices. There were certainly winners and losers as the Fed raised rates and operating costs well, but the future is looking brighter now.
Ladder's plans to press its advantage of being well capitalized by capturing market share previously held by regional banks and highly leveraged nonbank competitors, many of whom are still addressing credit issues and the need to shore up their balance sheets before proactively returning to their lending activities.
As previously indicated, we are beginning to deploy our liquidity by first investing in attractively priced securities, then shifting our focus to loan origination as security spreads tighten.
In the third quarter, we executed this plan by acquiring approximately $431 million of securities. As we enter the fourth quarter, we are seeing an uptick in loan applications while maintaining only a slightly reduced appetite for acquiring additional securities. We expect the pace of new loan originations to increase as we approach year-end.
By reallocating cash out of T-bills and into securities and loans, we believe we can add to our distributable earnings in 2025. We believe the diminished lending capacity of regulated banks, coupled with sideline competitors in the mortgage REIT space positions us well to deliver attractive returns as the real estate market recovers.
While new private capital may enter the lending space, simply having capital does not guarantee success. Staffing up with anything less than the 18 is likely to lead to this disappointment. Loan origination may be relatively straightforward, but financing those loans safely and accretively and getting paid back at par is what will define who the winners are in the end.
I'll reiterate again that in the third quarter, Ladder received the second highest amount of loan payoffs in its history at $492 million despite challenging overall market conditions.
We believe our strong credit culture and disciplined lending approach will continue to help differentiate Ladder. Furthermore, the time and investments we have made over the past decade in the unsecured corporate bond market have created a uniquely strong capital structure, one that takes years, if not decades, to develop in gaining the confidence of discerning investors.
Overall, we believe our fortress-like balance sheet, combined with a favorable competitive landscape positions Ladder well for the future.
Thanks for tuning in today, and we can now take some questions.
[Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Stephen Laws with Raymond James.
I want to start maybe with the originations. Pamela, you gave us a little bit of color on your [ edge ], looking at things, and I think to Brian's point, about some competitors dealing with portfolio issues and banks constraints. Can you talk about where you see the best opportunities in the market, given your target kind of smaller [indiscernible] market loans. Are you looking at anything maybe on the construction side, where banks [indiscernible] loans that are going into the pipeline currently?
Yes, so we are looking at more opportunities. We are still focused on our core products, which does not include construction loans. We are primarily, right now, in our pipeline, we're primarily looking at multifamily, some industrial. We just signed up a retail deal. We're looking mostly at new acquisitions, as I mentioned in the call, with basis reset, attractive [ dollars, ] but we've always been a dollars per foot basis lender. And we're seeing a lot of opportunities for recapitalizing. We'll do refinances on newer vintage stuff where there's a good story and properties are in lease-up. So I think the lesson learned for us is we like our strategy of middle market lending, and we are looking to do more of the same.
Wonderful. Then switching side to the other side on the repayments, Pamela. Pretty high number. Can you talk about what's driving that? Or are they refinancing elsewhere? Are they going into the agency system on some multi? Can you talk about what's causing that pickup and what's enabling these borrowers to refinance these loans?
I'll take that one, Stephen. It's Brian. The smaller ones, especially apartment-related, tend to be getting refinanced, although very few of them actually refinance on time. Meaning they go under application, they're supposed to close 60 days later, and we usually have to give a short extension in order to accommodate. So very -- there's a lot of laborious detail being put into due diligence at this point for new lenders. But the apartment side of things seems to be doing just fine, warehouse also.
The larger loans are the ones that are -- some of these have been getting extended a couple of months here and there for the last 6 months. So there's no real pattern I can give you here. I wouldn't tell you that the refinances are suddenly booming nor would I tell you that loans that have been extended a couple of times are suddenly getting done. It's just a lot of effort. And for the most part basis, we took a $60 million loan last quarter that paid off, and it had very little cash flow. And it was effectively a slow business plan. I wouldn't say a failed business plan, but then it was purchased on land value by somebody who wants to build something else on the site.
So that will throw you off a little bit, but we also took the numbers a little overstated because some of the sizes are a little bit bigger. We did take a $119 million payoff on an industrial deal in Puerto Rico. There was nothing wrong at all with that. They did great with that asset, and that's just -- it was either sold or paid off, I don't remember. So that one probably skewed the payoffs to the higher end. And as the fourth quarter has begun, I believe we've taken another $60 million in payoffs, mostly mixed-use stuff.
Our next question comes from Tom Catherwood with BTIG.
Paul, maybe -- you mentioned shifting to originations as spreads tightened on the securities investments. I guess what has us worried is that the weighted average extended maturity in your loan book is just over 1 year. And as you mentioned, payments are already accelerating.
So kind of what's giving you confidence that lending can come back fast enough to allow you to backfill your loan book without a material hit to distributable earnings?
This is Brian. I'll take the question, although if you want specifics from Paul, you're welcome to ask him there, too. The lending business is definitely picking up. We are just sending out more applications. We're getting more signed up. So what you're going to see in the quarters ahead as loans close is going to look like we threw the lights on, but the reality is it's happening right now. I'm not sure it will look way different in the fourth quarter, although I suspect it will look materially higher than originations closing than the third quarter.
The security side of this, as we've said all along, is really the informing product because if securities are still very widespread, you have to stay wide really on the loan side also if you're planning to securitize those loans. But what we saw were extraordinarily cheap securities, and we bought $430 million of them. I believe we picked up another $20 million to $30 million just this week in securities. And they're still cheap, but they've gotten much less cheap. So that would naturally queue us to slide over to more originations, and that's exactly what we're seeing.
There is nothing at all unusual about this. This is exactly what it looks like, as I said a few times on these calls. It kind of looks like a run of the mill recovery to us. And so while we'll always purchase AAA securities that are rather inexpensive, I believe the $430 million we purchased had an unlevered yield of over 7%. That's pretty unusual over the last 10, 15 years.
So we'll keep buying those. They've gotten a lot tighter, but we're now moving squarely into the lending side of the business and we're happy with it. We're still kissing a lot of frogs, a lot of stuff gets looked at. And ultimately, we find out something that we don't like. If you're dealing with a refinance from 2021 or '22, there's a very good chance that the sponsor is asking you for a loan that's probably too big. And we're a little surprised that how many of them are actually being accommodated with those higher loan requests. They're nearly always accommodated by a lender who's a name we're not familiar with. So I would caution taking too much of a [ cue ] from the prior loan amount because most real estate, let's face it, is worth less than it was worth in 2021 and '22.
So I think long story short, very confident that lending picks up here. It will probably be very light on office, and we think hotel cash flows are quite high also right now, but apartments, industrial and other are doing just fine. So we're very confident we're in the right place now. When you talk about earnings, as payoffs pick up, obviously, these are 9% to 10% loans that are paying off. So you might have a dip in earnings, but if that dip in earnings is accompanied by an increase in cash, that's a temporary stop on the train towards higher earnings.
Got it. Appreciate those thoughts, Brian. But a follow-up to that, how does the origination pipeline, I guess, right now compare to a typical quarterly level that you would have normally seen in a more regular period?
We have Adam here. So Adam runs originations. So if you want to take that, Adam, go right ahead. Make sure you unmute your line.
Yes. It's ramping up. I mean it's -- as Brian and [indiscernible] mentioned, it's going to be a slow build. But I'd tell you the volume of new acquisitions has picked up materially, the volume of term sheets that we are competing on to win those opportunities has picked up materially and it will continue to build very comfortably from here, in my opinion. And with the backdrop that we're always focused again on the opportunities where we're going to get our principal back.
So we're continuing to be discerning, but the pure volume of transactions that fit our credit box has picked up really significantly in the last 60 days.
And I would just add relative to what we call our average run rate, which, I guess, that's somewhere between $250 million and $400 million a quarter. We're going to be below that in the fourth quarter, but we're going to be moving towards it. And I suspect in the first or second quarter of next year, we'll probably be at that run rate, assuming interest rates don't go in an odd direction.
Really appreciate those answers. And last one for me, just shifting to another side of your business with equity investments. We're obviously seeing more transactions in the market values seem to have stabilized, if not kind of somewhat improved. That said, there's still a lot of assets that need recapitalizations. How are you viewing CRE equity investments as a potential use for your capital at this point in the cycle?
We think it's very attractive right now. Having said that, I think our -- when we pencil out a return on an equity investment, it's probably a lot higher return required than what I would call most institutional equity guys.
So we do think they're attractive here and we'll continue to buy them when we see them. But I don't think, given our orientation towards equity, and that we're not trying to make 10% or 11% or 12%, we're trying to double our money. And so that's kind of the guidepost we use. So again, I don't think equity will ever be a giant part of our business. But during any period where banks are cleaning up their balance sheet due to regulators, marking things down, that's something you could easily see us in. Our equity position should be going up, not down in 2025.
Our next question comes from Steve Delaney with Citizens JMP.
Can you hear me clearly?
We can hear you, Steve.
Okay. Great. I was getting static on my end, and I just want to make sure that I was clear. I'm glad to see the buyback, obviously, in 3Q. A little under $12 a share. Now the stock is probably about $0.90 lower now. Would it be safe to assume that you've been -- continue to be active with your buyback here in the fourth quarter? And if you could you remind me what the remaining authorization might be?
The answer is yes. We will probably continue. I think the remaining authorization, and I don't know the exact number. Paul, probably does, but it's over $40 million. So that's probably good enough for my math. And so yes, it has backed off a little bit here, but we're pretty comfortable with all these payoffs and the amount of cash that we're holding.
Keep in mind, we're holding an enormous amount of liquidity, but also our securities book, the AAAs. They're unlevered. So we can easily find additional capital there. So we've got an embarrassment of riches right now as far as liquidity goes, largely augmented by the $500 million issuance we did in the quarter. And so I think we take a cautious approach towards liquidity and that we will -- a lot of people say, "Why would you go borrow another $500 million?" We'd like to have the cash available before we go shopping. So there's always this little low in deployment, but with $500 million coming in, in early July and $430 million going out into securities, we're catching up quickly. But I don't think it will be any gigantic purchases or anything that approaches that authorization. But I do think you can count on us to have a steady eye on the ball there. And if we see openings, we will step into them and continue to acquire our stock and our bonds.
Let me switch over to the dividend for a moment, $0.23. You covered it 130% with distributable EPS in the third quarter. It was last raised in the -- raised in the first quarter of '23. And I realize you've been playing defense, if you will, focusing on liquidity. You're obviously shifting now that the market is sort of healing in a lower rate environment. You definitely sounds like you're shifting to offense certainly with the loan portfolio.
Is it -- with the next logical time frame for the Board to revisit the dividend be in the first quarter of 2025? That's part of the question. And in your mind, I know this may sound like nonsensical. But could you see a scenario where you are repurchasing your shares, but also the Board makes a modest increase to the cash dividend? Could both of those things kind of coexist just in your mind as far as your capital allocation?
Okay. I unfortunately didn't write all that down, but I'll try to take that into 2 parts it was sent in. So I think the first question was the dividend timing, if we were to raise it. I won't get in front of my Board or convey our dividend policy on an earnings call. But I can speak for the CEO. And I suspect, out towards first or second quarter, that could happen or at least I would be more open to it than I've been recently.
But I would also point out that we have to see this -- the loan portfolio start picking up that we believe is going to be consistent. This Fed and this economy has thrown us off the rocks a couple of times with a [ head fake. ] But this one looks a little bit more sincere, and we'll see what happens at the end of the election period. So we no longer say election day, we say election period.
So I think that it will take a little while until we're convinced of that. Keep in mind, we do still have some loans that we're discussing with sponsors as to, are they having difficulty or can they refinance. The probabilities of them being able to get out of the difficulties they've been in have gone up. So for the most part, I think the damage is understood on anything that could be potentially coming our way. But that can all change, too. And especially if something is not terribly high in cash flow, carry costs are huge. So some people would just tap out at some point.
So we may still see a little bit more noise in the portfolio, but nothing that we don't see right now. So we're not overly concerned with it. We are not concerned with it, we'll probably start to look to allocate capital into either additional areas. But if we're able to keep buying securities where we're buying them, the way leverage works, right now, they're 13%, 14% ROEs. And to the extent that our lending portfolio does, in fact, continue as opposed to just have a nascent recovery at this point, I suspect -- we're shareholders, as you know. As a management team here with a lot of stock. And our dividend is in the mid-8s. That's attractive. We like it. But there's a couple of ways to return cash to shareholders. One is through the dividend and the other is through stock purchases. So the second part of your question, could we do both at the same time? Absolutely.
Our next question comes from Jade Rahmani with KBW.
Just wanted to hone in on the quarter's dynamics that played out. CBRE, the largest commercial real estate broker reported this morning. And there brokerage, debt volumes surged 53% year-on-year. KKR, an alternative asset manager, active in commercial real estate, that also noted a surge in their pipeline. And CMBS volumes are really strong so far this year, up over 150%. So when you look out as being active in the space, what do you think were the factors that weighed on Ladder's origination volumes? Just looking to get some color as to how you think about the market.
Well, again. It's a lagging business, originations. So loans go under application and then 60 days later, sometimes 90 days later, they close. So anything that you're going to see and what I view as our origination volume is probably going to show up in the first or second quarter. So I feel pretty good about that. But what's weighing on that decision to make a loan really has to do with valuations. If anyone who comes in with a asset that appears to be properly evaluated in today's terms instead of when they bought it in 2022. Yes, we're -- there's no hold back at all. There's nothing stopping us. We're looking at loans, by the way, of up to $100 million, $150 million, too, there's a few of those. We don't really see individual loans like that unless there's 6 assets in there cross-collateralized.
But for the most part, there's a sobriety taking over the ownership space. People have a general understanding of what's going on and what they can expect to get from a lender versus where they were 6 months ago. And I'll just point to one example. There was a securitization from [ Blackstone ] on some -- I think it was industrial properties that they ultimately widened out 1.5 months ago to 190 over and now it's 100 tighter than that.
So the move in on credit spreads has been rather dramatic and rather quick. That can't really happen again. It's just realistically, you hit a point of diminishing returns. So I would say there's nothing weighing on it other than appropriate leverage levels being requested. Even when we think sometimes we're getting loans signed up, all of a sudden, somebody will step in with an extra $2 million. And we tend to not do that. But we're dealing with cap rates that are reasonably wide and we may be just a bit too wide there.
So we'll keep -- we'll take our cues from the securitization market and see what's getting securitized comfortably. But as much as we can point to a few names that you just mentioned there as to how they're doing well and things are picking up, there's also foreclosures taking place at phenomenally low prices.
And so I don't think it's all good news, but it's not all bad. It was never all bad news. We've said this over and over, that it's not as bad as you think. And I would dare say, it probably won't be as good as you think either when it does straighten itself out. But from a lender standpoint in a niche business like ours, with what's going on in the regional banking sector with regulators and just in New York with New York Community Bank and Signature Bank, that can't help but expand the canvas that we paint on. And so we're very optimistic about that. But we don't have any rules about how much volume we have to do. Almost every investment we make is easily clearing the dividend levels that we pay out along with our expenses.
I would just add, I don't think it should be surprising at all that our loan activity is picking up with the uptick in new acquisitions. We have avoided a lot of the bridge-to-bridge unless there was really a lot of fresh equity coming in. So I think that is a large driver for our volume increasing today.
That seems like it. On other opportunities, are you seeing loan portfolio sales from banks? It sounded like in your comments, you alluded to this. And are you interested in actively pursuing that business?
Going backwards on the question, we are interested in actively pursuing that business. Got a few phone calls in the last month from people I haven't heard from in 5, 6 years. that are working with some banks, so perhaps. But I would tell you, prior to those calls over the last month or so, nobody was contacting us to purchase portfolios of loans. And I think that there's a general optimism out there right now. So that may slow some of those portfolios from going out the door because I think some of them are going to be able to get refinanced. And there's probably less of an urgency around some of those duration books in the banks that are not mark-to-market, but they're underwater. So yes, we're interested, but I'm not going to forecast that next time we talk, we're going to have purchased one. We just don't see too many.
[Operator Instructions] Our next question comes from Matthew Howlett with B. Riley.
My question is on pricing. You did the -- could you tell me sort of where the loan you did this quarter went off. And then just in general, I mean, we're hearing multifamilies come in inside 300 and over. I'd love to hear where you're quoting other property types. And then I mean, I know you don't do CLOs, but does that work? I mean, those sound very tight for you to work on the CLO. I'd just love to hear your thoughts on pricing and where you're quoting things at?
Adam, if you take the first part of that, I'll take the second one. I don't know where the loan we closed was.
Yes, in general, including the loan we closed. We're quoting fresh acquisition on really high-quality real estate in the high 200s to low 300s range on spread.
And when you say, does it work? Yes, it does work, but it's -- there's a point where, as you know, we've been buying a lot of securities because we think the lenders are taking more risk than they should by selling us AAA, the leverage of 14 and 15.
And so I will tell you around [ 275 ] on multifamilies run-of-the-mill stuff in the CLO market. The leverage point to the AAA buyers, around 13, 14, then the leverage to the equity holder, the issuer is probably about 15%. So they're almost around a breakeven push here. And the liquidity still is way more attractive in the in the security side of it. However, the franchise building effort, as people oftentimes tell us, you're not going to get paid a lot of money to buy AAA securities. And okay, I get that.
But we're not dependent upon anyone selling those securities to us. We just happen to think on a relative value basis. Sometimes we'd rather own AAAs than write the loans at [ 275, ] especially if the credit is a little dicey. But when you say inside 300, we're inside 300 Yes, and it does work for us. So we're probably about 275 on multis now.
And keep in mind as we're targeting shorter term, shorter duration with points, typically a 1% origination fee and something on the exit.
So when you say 15% what type of events are you talking over 80% advance rate in the CLO?
Yes, about 85%.
Okay. So that works. It's just -- I didn't realize you're getting the total leverage as a CLO. And are you quoting like -- go ahead.
Yes, I've said a few times that sometimes people say, well, when you lever a AAA, you're using 90% leverage. And my response to them as always, and when I'm writing loans and issuing a CLO, my leverage is 85%. So it's not a discussion about leverage. And I think the liquidity on the AAA side is much more attractive than on the loan side.
However, we're kind of in -- I think as my words in the opening remarks, we're kind of in both businesses now. And this is really the first time I've said, I think we're equally interested in lending as we are in securities. Securities have tightened. Loans have tightened, too, but that's not what got us interested in it. What got us interested in it was this variety of the principal column that people are not asking for quite as much leverage as they were just 6 months ago.
If you like securities, or would you do AA or single A as you got really comfortable with the deal? I mean just sort of moved down a little bit and get -- I'm sure there's a huge pickup.
It's not huge, but yes, we would. I think when we really like credit, we jump right to the BBB. And we don't apply a lot of leverage to that. But they're attractive also. Securities, in general, I think, are relatively good buys. The yield on a AA levered is about the same as on a AAA because you have a lower advance rate. So that's why we tend to stay in the AAA. We don't have any allergies to AAs.
Got you. Okay. And then I'm assuming with the other property types, like it's retail, you're quoting well above 300, right? Is that hotels, retail?
Yes, over 300, well above that objective of 325 million. Once you get north of 350, I think you're in the part of the pool where maybe you got to be careful because maybe you shouldn't be looking at that loan balance, if that's comfortable. But up to 350 is okay. And if the Fed continues cutting Fed funds rates and SOFR falls, you'll see those spreads widen. It isn't like it's going to be 1:1, going to the benefit of the borrower. 275 actually think is relatively tight for 50% leased anything. However, the rate is actually pretty high when you look at it all in with sulfur at around 4.75%. But if SOFR drops to 4%, those spreads will widen out. It will probably get north of $300 million.
That would be very beneficial to your balance sheet per se. It's a great point. Okay. I appreciate the color. And the other question is, I'd love to hear your [indiscernible] brands as always and you've made a lot of comments on the macro. But the Financial Times in an article this morning, about commercial property moment of truth. And are just sort of saying, things are down probably 20%, but no one really knows if people really marked things down under books like the banks yet or things obviously have further to go. What's your sense of the banks and the REITs that they've revalued stuff to where clearing levels are? I'd love to heayour thoughts. So do we have more to go here? .
I think the banks are paying the price with their regulators for the indiscretions of Silicon Valley Bank and a couple of others. I don't think the banks really have a big problem in commercial real estate, except to the extent that they're deep in the office column. But if they've been in the multifamily sector, I don't think they're really in trouble. You just have regulators who've decided to wake up after following sleep on Silicon Valley and a couple of other names.
But that was -- there was really no need for additional regulation in the banks. It was just -- there was a need for normal regulation inside of a couple of banks that just wasn't done. So there's a little bit of an over swing the other way now towards conservatism. But I don't think the banks are in a lot of trouble.
The sectors are all a little different. I would say in 2021, when the CLO investor group decided they wanted nothing but multifamilies. I think I even said that's a recipe for disaster. And so everybody was seeking multifamily properties to put into their CLOs, and people were buying 3 caps and they thought they were going to double their rents, which a lot of them did, but their expenses doubled also. So they didn't really catch up.
So I would argue that when we talk about current levels of valuation in real estate, the real question is, were they ever worse what people paid for them in 2021 and '22. And I would argue that answer is no. They were never worth that. So they're now coming back to a more normalized kind of analysis. Rates, they should follow rates. But as I said, when SOFR falls, spreads will widen because you're just getting too tight on the absolute rate. The multifamily sector didn't do that when LIBOR went to 20 basis points. They just kept chasing it lower and lower. And as a result, they build themselves a difficult situation.
So I don't think the banks are in a lot of trouble. Probably a couple are, but a couple are always in trouble. And so we near the end. I think the REITs have taken a couple of approaches towards kicking the can in one case and that -- I don't mean one case as a name. I mean just one avenue. And those are going to take a while, and I suspect ultimately, they'll bleed out over time at smaller and smaller losses on a regular basis.
The other path is the kitchen sink path, where let's just dump everything that doesn't look good right now, we'll start over at a lower capital base. And I think when you foreclose on a property, for instance, we took back a property in Oakland and the prior owner had a $22 million cost associated with it. We now own it at $7.5 million at $130 a foot. I think Oakland is a difficult place right now as are a few other cities. And I really don't think it's always a great idea unless you need capital. I don't think it's a great idea to dump that into the market at whatever the market will pay you, knowing it's bank-owned and you're getting drilled by it.
So I think it's a different -- I think the experience of Ladder, first of all, being well capitalized. So we never really need money, that's why we would do a kitchen sink transaction. It's not -- I don't love the fact that we own an empty building in Oakland, but not terribly bothered by it either because I do believe we own it relatively cheap.
There are not a lot of new refurbished buildings at $130 a foot in big cities in California. And if they would just get their crime situation straightened out. There's not even a lot of crime in Oakland. It's something that politicians there are talking about. Crime has gone down because everyone left. There's going to be people there. So yes, that's going to take a little while, but I don't think I want to just stop talking about it because we made a mistake there. I think we'll take our time. It's real estate. I think we own it at a good basis. It's an attractive asset. And I don't think the city of Oakland is going to stay in the condition it's in for long. How long will we wait? Easily a year, that's no problem. So yes, I think that, that's the difference. Some of the highly levered REITs are just throwing things out with the kitchen sink. And I just don't know why you would want to sell an office building today unless you had to.
Right. Well, I mean that just sort of brings my last point. Property rates and Mortgage rates. They've seen their book value is decimated. I know not for the Ladder, but for others. And the expenses are still very elevated yet. They're working on much lower book values and maybe there's more room to go. But do you expect a massive consolidation when this is all over? Mortgage-rate? Property rates. And would you get involved?
I would love to get involved in something that we don't think will happen. But the reason we don't think it will happen is a lot of externally managed REITs really do lack transparency. You don't quite know what's in there. And they are also under no obligation in their mind to sell their company to a better steward of capital. So you don't traditionally see a lot of consolidation in the REITs. In fact, some of the famous ones that you've seen have been taken by force in difficult situations.
The opportunity set is attractive right now. So I don't want to get caught up in all kinds of litigation and arguing in newspapers with people. So I would -- somebody calls us up and says, "I'm a certain age and I'd like to get out." Sure. I would love to do that. One of afflictions Ladder, I think our company is a little too small. I wish it was a little bigger, and that's one way to make it bigger. But in our desire to be slightly bigger, so we're more investable for some of the bigger money managers, I don't think we should start buying other people's headaches. And I do believe there are some companies that have gotten to the bottom of their problems, but I think most of them have not.
There are no further questions at this time. I would now like to turn the floor back over to Brian Harris for closing comments.
Just last comment from me today. Thanks for staying with us. Things are going well here. And we won't be talking again for a few months because of the year-end audit and announcement in the fourth quarter. So we look forward to the quarters ahead. We think 2025 is going to be a very bright year, and we're happy with our performance in 2024 so far. But for the most part, as we said, a little bit of defense, a lot of capital acquisition that we wanted to have. And we're getting ready here. We're on offense. We're not talking about it anymore. And I think you'll start seeing those results in the quarters ahead. And thanks again.
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