Ares Commercial Real Estate Corporation (ACRE) delivered a quarter characterized by disciplined balance sheet optimization and portfolio repositioning aimed at restoring earnings power in a higher-rate, constrained office environment. The company reported a GAAP net loss of approximately $11 million for Q2 2025 and distributable earnings (DE) of about -$28 million, which includes a $33 million realized loss on the exit of a Massachusetts office life sciences loan. Excluding the life sciences exit, DE was approximately $5 million ($0.09 per diluted share), underscoring the near-term earnings drag from nonaccruals and high-risk assets but the potential for improvement as resolutions advance and new loan origination accelerates. Management highlighted a decisive portfolio shift: office loan exposures declined 10% QoQ to $524 million (down 30% YoY), life-science collateral was exited, and the portfolio now has no remaining life-science collateral. As of June 30, 2025, risk-rated 4 and 5 loans remained at 5 loans with two positions comprising about 75% of the outstanding balance, signaling continued concentration risk even as the firm advances resolutions and originations. The balance sheet benefits are evident: net debt-to-equity (excluding CECL) held at 1.2x, borrowings reduced to $889 million (down 6% QoQ, 39% YoY), and unfunded commitments materially lower at $37 million (down 50% QoQ, 58% YoY). Importantly, management signaled a return to growth through higher origination activity, supported by an expanded Ares platform, and a first-post-quarter commitment cycle featuring 4 self-storage loans totaling $43 million. The board affirmed a quarterly cash dividend of $0.15 per share for 3Q25, yielding a double-digit implied return given the prevailing price levels. Looking ahead, management anticipates origination momentum to build in 3Q and beyond, with the portfolio expected to be at or above the current size over the next 12 months, implying a gradual rebuild in earnings and dividend coverage as resolutions progress and new loans fund growth. Overall, the results reflect a deliberate reset toward lower-risk, higher-visibility cash flow while maintaining optionality to deploy capital into attractive opportunities as market conditions stabilize and volumes improve.