AGNC Investment Corp delivered a mixed Q4 2024 operating performance, marked by a comprehensive per-share loss on the GAAP basis but positive absolute earnings and a constructive full-year 2024 return driven by a robust monthly dividend. The quarter featured elevated interest costs from hedging and funding activities, a higher share issuance cadence via the ATM program, and a leveraged, hedged portfolio shift toward higher coupon agency MBS in anticipation of a more favorable 2025 funding and volatility backdrop. Management framed the year-end results within a positive longer-run thesis for agency MBS: a well-balanced supply/demand backdrop, a Fed policy path toward neutrality, and spreads expected to remain in an attractive trading range. The company emphasized opportunistic capital deployment and a disciplined leverage profile (7.2x tangible equity) with substantial unencumbered assets (66% of tangible equity), underscoring financial flexibility to pursue accretive growth while aiming to protect book value.
Key takeaways from the call include: (1) a positive 2024 economic return of 13.2% driven by a $1.44 per share of monthly dividends and a modest tangible net book value (TNAV) decline for the year; (2) fourth-quarter net income of $122 million but a comprehensive loss of $0.11 per share, reflecting higher rates and wider spreads versus prior quarters; (3) ongoing equity capital discipline via the ATM program, with $511 million raised in Q4 and ~ $2 billion of accretive equity for the year, contributing to tangible value accretion; (4) a hedge strategy that shifted toward treasury-based hedges given current swap spread dynamics, with an expected rebalancing toward more swap-based hedges as market spreads stabilize; and (5) a cautiously constructive 2025 outlook: agency spreads likely to stay in an attractive trading range, 30-year mortgage rates around the 7% level, and a potentially supportive demand environment from banks and other buyers given a more favorable regulatory backdrop.
Investors should monitor (a) carry and hedging costs as the mix of treasury vs swap hedges evolves, (b) the agency MBS supply/demand technicals (expected mortgage supply near 2024 levels, potential bank demand, and fund flows), and (c) policy developments around GSE conservatorships, which could influence liquidity, spreads, and the overall risk/return profile of agency MBS over 2025.