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6 Mortgage REITs Yielding Over 13%

Many investors and trustees are looking for higher yielding equities to include

in or supplement a fixed income portfolio. Agency mortgage REITs are a popular

option. Most REITs are equity REITs that own and/or manage properties. Mortgage

REITs, to the contrary, own mortgages on real estate assets rather than the

assets themselves. Some mortgage REITs concentrate on commercial mortgages,

while others concentrate on residential property mortgages.

Within the world of residential mortgage REITs, there are two primary

subdivisions: those that own mortgages insured by federal agencies and those

that own mortgages without agency insurance (non-agency REITs). Agency mortgage

REITs are supposed to have portfolios made up principally of mortgages insured

by the federal agencies Fannie Mae (FNMA.OB), Freddie Mac (FMCC.OB) and/or

Ginnie Mae.

These government agencies make mortgages and then issue a mortgage backed

security (MBS). An agency MBS, as opposed to a MBS issued by a non-agency

lender, comes with an agency guarantee and an implied U.S. government

guarantee. These federal agencies' implied or quasi-government guarantees have,

so far, been proven virtually as solid as any paper issued directly by the

Treasury.

Agency mortgage REITs must also react to changing interest rates. These REITs

obtain their lofty yields through high leverage. These companies all have far

more debt than their market value, as indicated above, and make money off the

spread between their borrowing costs and the MBS interest payment. Each company

has a proprietary allocation of fixed and adjustable rate securities. Changes

in rates will affect the value of these securities and the spreads these REITs

can make off of them. In short, rising interest rates will largely reduce

spreads and values.

I have identified several companies that primarily invest in agency paper using

the above-described agency REIT model, and which currently have double digit

annual yields.

Annaly Capital Management, Inc. (NLY)

Current Yield: 14.1%

Market Value: $14.2 Billion

Price to Book Value: 1.1

Short Interest: 4.3%

American Capital Agency Corp. (AGNC)

Current Yield: 18.8%

Market Value: $3.7 Billion

Price to Book Value: 1.1

Short Interest: 6.6%

Anworth Mortgage Asset Corporation (ANH)

Current Yield: 13.6%

Market Value: $839 Million

Price to Book Value: 1.06

Short Interest: 5.2%

Capstead Mortgage Corp (CMO)

Current Yield: 13.8%

Market Value: $1.07 Billion

Price to Book Value: 1.14

Short Interest: 4.3%

Cypress Sharpridge Investments (CYS)

Current Yield: 19.2%

Market Value: $1.05 Billion

Price to Book Value: 1.07

Short Interest: 9.2%

Hatteras Financial Corp (HTS)

Current Yield: 14%

Market Value: $2.17 Billion

Price to Book Value: 1.11

Short Interest: 7.6%

Please note the reasonably high short positions on these REITs (between 4.3%

and 9.2%). Those with the highest present yields and leverage are also the most

heavily shorted. These REITs are also well-known for their secondary offerings,

and some individuals may now be speculating on coming offerings in addition to

possible interest rate changes potentially affecting their spread-margins.

REITs must distribute at least 90% of their taxable income in order to

eliminate the need to pay income tax at the corporate level. Under the current

tax laws, REIT dividends are taxed as ordinary income, and not at the lower

corporate dividend rate. Because these REITs are taxed as ordinary income, many

investors appreciate holding them in tax-sheltered accounts, such as an IRA.

Disclaimer: This article should not be construed as personalized investment

advice as it does not take into account your specific situation or objectives.

Disclosure: I am long NLY.