Claros Mortgage Trust Q4 2025 Earnings Call - Cleansed Portfolio After $2.5B Resolutions; New HPS Loan Extends Debt
Summary
Management’s message was simple and surgical, clean the book first, ask questions later. Claros says it exceeded its 2025 resolution goal, closing $2.5 billion of loan UPB resolutions, materially shrank its held-for-investment portfolio, and used proceeds to delever and retire near-term corporate debt. The company replaced a maturing Term Loan B with a new $500 million senior secured facility from HPS, relaxed covenants across financings, and issued detachable warrants tied to the new loan.
That progress did not translate into profit. Q4 produced a GAAP loss and distributable loss, CECL reserves were increased markedly, and net interest income is set to remain choppy as the portfolio continues to run off. Management frames 2026 as more asset work, accelerating dispositions and foreclosures, with an ultimate goal of returning to originations once the book is demonstrably clean and capital markets stay constructive.
Key Takeaways
- Claros exceeded its 2025 resolution target, resolving $2.5 billion of loan UPB during the year, including 11 watch list loans totaling $1.3 billion.
- Held-for-investment loan portfolio fell to $3.7 billion at 12/31/25, down from $4.3 billion at 9/30/25 and $6.1 billion at 12/31/24, reflecting active portfolio turnover.
- Q4 2025 GAAP net loss was $1.56 per share, distributable loss was $0.71 per share, and distributable earnings prior to realized gains/losses were $0.02 per share.
- CECL reserves increased to $443 million, representing 10.9% of UPB at year-end 2025, up from $308 million or 6.8% at 9/30/25; general CECL reserve fell to $78 million (2.9% of UPB) from $140 million.
- Q4 CECL provision totaled $212 million, driven by a $283 million specific CECL provision tied to downgrades, collateral value changes, and prior charge-offs; $75 million of that related to loans resolved in Q4 or early 2026.
- Management retired the Term Loan B and replaced it with a new $500 million senior secured term loan from HPS, maturing January 2030 and priced at SOFR plus 675 basis points.
- In connection with the HPS loan, Claros issued 10-year detachable warrants to buy ~7.5 million shares at $4.00 per share, a 46% premium to the 1/30/26 close.
- Liquidity stood at $153 million following the new loan, up $51 million year-over-year, and net debt-to-equity improved from 2.4x at 12/31/24 to 1.9x at 12/31/25.
- Q4 loan resolutions and subsequent 2026 activity included a $67 million NYC land loan payoff, $174 million Salt Lake City multifamily payoff (net cash ~ $52 million), a $77 million Dallas multifamily foreclosure, and a $71 million Seattle office transfer to a financing counterparty.
- Notable workout outcomes: a Connecticut office discounted payoff at roughly 70% of par caused a $46 million principal charge-off; a NYC land loan foreclosed and was assigned a $94 million carrying value, about $6 million above UPB.
- REO activity: mixed-use NYC office floors and signage sold for gross proceeds of $67 million, generally in line with carrying value; fully leased retail component remains for sale; hotel REO portfolio posted ~14% YoY NOI growth and is accretive to earnings.
- Management expects continued compression of net interest income as performing loans repay and portfolio UPB declines, though deleveraging should trim interest expense over time.
- Company removed standalone life science exposure; office UPB reduced to $589 million and land to $187 million as part of sector reweighting.
- Management’s priority remains portfolio cleanup and balance sheet strength before pursuing shareholder-return alternatives or new originations, but it signals readiness to accelerate dispositions given improving capital markets and more regular repayments.
Full Transcript
Becky, Conference Facilitator: Hello, and welcome to the Claros Mortgage Trust fourth quarter 2025 earnings conference call. My name is Becky, and I will be your conference facilitator today. All participants will be in a listen-only mode. After the speaker’s remarks, there will be a question and answer period. If you wish to ask a question in this time, please press Star followed by one on your telephone keypads. I would now like to hand the call over to Anh Huynh, Vice President of Investor Relations for Claros Mortgage Trust. Please proceed.
Anh Huynh, Vice President of Investor Relations, Claros Mortgage Trust: Thank you. I’m joined by Richard Mack, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of Claros Mortgage Trust, and Mike McGillis, President, Chief Financial Officer, and Director of Claros Mortgage Trust. We also have Priyanka Garg, Executive Vice President, who leads credit strategies for Mack Real Estate Group. Prior to this call, we distributed CMTG’s earnings release and supplement. We encourage you to reference these documents in conjunction with the information presented on today’s call. If you have any questions, please contact me. I’d like to remind everyone that today’s call may include forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Actual results may differ materially from those indicated by these forward-looking statements as a result of various important factors, including those disclosed in our other filings with the SEC.
Any forward-looking statements made on this call represent our views only as of today, and we undertake no obligation to update them. We will also be referring to certain non-GAAP financial measures on today’s call, such as distributable earnings, which we believe may be important to investors to assess our operating performance. For reconciliations of non-GAAP measures to the nearest GAAP equivalent, please refer to the earnings supplement. I would now like to turn the call over to Richard.
Richard Mack, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman, Claros Mortgage Trust: Thank you, Anh, and thank you all for joining us this morning for CMTG’s fourth quarter earnings call. CMTG made a meaningful amount of progress last year, executing on several critical path items. In 2025, we accomplished the priorities we established at the start of the year, including resolving watch list loans, enhancing liquidity, and further deleveraging the portfolio. One year ago, we established a $2 billion total resolution target for 2025, and I’m pleased to report that we meaningfully exceeded this target, closing the year with $2.5 billion of total resolutions. This included the resolution of 11 watch list loans, representing an aggregate UPB of $1.3 billion. This activity reflects our commitment to repositioning the portfolio by transitioning out of watch list loans through thoughtful and decisive action.
We also generated significant liquidity over the course of the year, which we used to meaningfully de-lever the portfolio and to reduce corporate debt. This momentum has carried into the new year, with $389 million of full loan repayments happening, including a New York City land loan that was a watch list loan that had been on non-accrual since 2021. More importantly, subsequent to year-end, we retired the Term Loan B that was scheduled to mature in August of 2026. The term loan had a balance of $718 million in the first quarter of 2025 and was replaced with a new $500 million senior secured loan from HPS. This facility has 4 years of duration. Mike will provide additional color on this financing later in the call.
We view this financing agreement with HPS as a positive for CMTG, as it extends the maturity of our corporate debt to 2030 and provides the necessary flexibility to continue executing our business plan of resolving Watch List Loans, de-levering our balance sheet, and reducing our capital costs over time. Looking ahead to the coming year, we remain optimistic but mindful of the macroeconomic backdrop and the uncertainty that has been a defining theme across the broader financial markets. With regard to real estate, we do not believe there will be a single catalyst that will drive an overnight recovery. Rather, we anticipate a period of gradual and steady improvement that will support transaction volume and investor confidence over time, especially if the bond market rally holds and rate cuts continue as expected.
As it relates to property market fundamentals, we continue to observe encouraging indicators, including a reduction in new supply, tightening credit spreads, and improving financing costs for new originations. We also see increased demand for industrial space and significant investments in areas such as artificial intelligence and domestic manufacturing. We believe that investments in domestic manufacturing will support job growth and incremental demand for real estate over time. While AI investments are likely to support future productivity gains, the impact on commercial real estate, excluding data centers, is still quite uncertain. Overall, we see a constructive backdrop for commercial real estate and CMTG in the years ahead. But in 2026, our focus will remain on asset management and decisive execution as we continue to resolve watch list loans and work through our REO assets.
Our goal is to position the company to begin to evaluate new lending opportunities towards the end of 2026 and lay the groundwork for portfolio growth in subsequent years. Before turning the call over to Mike, I want to acknowledge that the last 24 months have been the most challenging business period of my career and for many others in the real estate industry.... And so I want to thank Mike, Priyanka, and our entire team for their dedication and hard work during this difficult time, and their commitment to overcoming the remaining challenges that are still ahead. I look forward to providing an update on our continuing progress in the coming quarters. And now I would like to turn the call over to Mike.
Mike McGillis, President, Chief Financial Officer, and Director, Claros Mortgage Trust: Thank you, Richard. For the fourth quarter of 2025, CMTG reported a GAAP net loss of $1.56 per share and a distributable loss of $0.71 per share. Distributable earnings prior to realized gains and losses were $0.02 per share. CMTG’s held for investment loan portfolio continued to decline in the fourth quarter, decreasing to $3.7 billion at December 31, compared to $4.3 billion at September 30 and $6.1 billion at year-end 2024. Over the course of 2025, we reduced our exposure to select asset types that have generally been experienced secular headwinds. As of the end of 2025, the portfolio no longer includes standalone life science.
Office exposure decreased from $859 million to $589 million, and land exposure decreased from $489 million to $187 million. It’s worth noting, however, that the decline in portfolio UPB over the past year was an inherent result of our strategy to turn over the portfolio and prepare for an eventual return to originations. Specific to the fourth quarter, the quarter-over-quarter decrease in UPB was primarily the result of four loan resolutions, consisting of two regular way loan repayments, one on a multifamily asset and the other on a life science asset, both in Pennsylvania. The other two were resolved by way of a discounted payoff and a foreclosure. In addition, as previously reported, we executed a sale of a $30 million Boston land loan.
This transaction did not impact fourth quarter portfolio UPB because it was previously classified as held for sale at the end of the third quarter. The discounted payoff related to a $150 million previously four-rated office loan in Connecticut. Given the valuation of the collateral, we agreed to repayment at approximately 70% of par, which we view as a good outcome, given current market values in a challenging sub-market and tenancy. The borrower was motivated to arrive at a resolution due to additional credit support that had been provided. This transaction enabled us to resolve a watchlist loan, reduce CMTG’s office exposure, and generate approximately $35 million in net liquidity for CMTG, which was then used to reduce outstanding debt. The discounted payoff resulted in a $46 million principal charge-off.
However, it’s worth noting that the impact to fourth quarter book value was marginal, as the potential loss had been previously contemplated within our general CECL reserve. Additionally, we resolved an $88 million New York City watchlist and non-accrual land loan through a foreclosure process. The underlying collateral is a well-located, undeveloped land parcel adjacent to Hudson Yards that allows for a mixed-use development. After reviewing the facts and circumstances of this loan’s history, we concluded that foreclosing and ultimately marketing the land for sale was the best path to resolving the loan. Upon foreclosure, we assigned a carrying value of $94 million based on a third-party appraisal, approximately $6 million greater than our UPB, which further supported our decision to foreclose as a means to optimize recovery. We do not anticipate being long-term holders of this land and expect to seek an exit sometime in 2026.
As Richard mentioned, last year, we exceeded our $2 billion loan UPB resolution target, achieving $2.5 billion of UPB in resolutions for the year. This progress has continued into the new year, with CMTG reporting an additional $389 million in UPB of resolutions across four loans, which include two regular way repayments. The first repayment was on a $67 million New York City land loan that was previously a four-rated loan that had been on non-accrual since 2021. The other was a $174 million loan collateralized by a newly built multifamily property in Salt Lake City, which generated net cash proceeds of approximately $52 million. This asset delivered last fall, which allowed the borrower to secure refinancing to lower its cost of capital.
In addition, in line with our previously mentioned plans, we foreclosed on a multifamily property in Dallas with $77 million of UPB that was previously five-rated. Previously, the loan had a carrying value of $49 million and was written down to $37 million upon foreclosure. And last, we resolved a $71 million loan collateralized by a newly completed but vacant office property located in Seattle. Given the collateral value relative to our equity position, net of non-recourse note-on-note financing, we determined the most prudent path was to transfer our rights and interests in our loan and the underlying collateral to the financing counterparty. Turning to portfolio credit. During the fourth quarter, the portfolio experienced a mix of ratings, upgrades, and downgrades. We downgraded a $220 million loan collateralized by a luxury hotel property located in Northern California to a four risk rating.
We continue to have conviction in the asset, given the exceptional asset quality and highly desirable location and meaningful year-over-year improvement in operating performance. That said, the loan matured in August 2025, and we have not reached terms in a modification with the borrower, which resulted in the downgrade to the loan’s risk rating. We have also commenced foreclosure proceedings to provide additional optionality of outcomes. We also downgraded three loans to a five risk rating. In each case, the downgrades primarily reflect our decision to take a more aggressive approach in turning over the portfolio. I’d like to provide some color on these loans. The first loan is a $170 million loan collateralized by a multifamily property located in Denver. We’re actively pursuing a near-term resolution for this loan and are currently in the process of executing our plans related to the asset.
While we are limited in what we can share at this time, we have adjusted the carrying value of the loan as of December 31, 2025, to appropriately reflect our expectations for the anticipated resolution. We look forward to providing an update on this loan in the near future. The second loan is a $225 million loan collateralized by an office property located in Atlanta, Georgia, which matures in March. This asset, similar to other office assets in the area, continues to experience the challenges that have generally weighed on the office sector. We’re currently evaluating our options for this loan. The last loan was the Seattle office loan that I just spoke to, that we resolved subsequent to the quarter.
During the fourth quarter, we recorded a provision for current expected credit losses of $212 million, which primarily consisted of $283 million provision to our specific CECL reserve, prior principal charge-offs, and $62 million decrease in our general CECL reserve. The $283 million specific CECL reserve provision was primarily attributable to the three loans that were downgraded to a 5 risk rating during the quarter, changes to collateral values of previously 5-rated loans, and the previously mentioned $46 million principal charge-off relating to the Connecticut office loan. It’s important to note that of the $283 million specific CECL provision, $75 million was related to loans that were resolved during the fourth quarter or in 2026 year to date.
The decrease in general CECL reserve was primarily attributable to a reduction in the UPB of loans subject to general CECL reserves. As a result, our total CECL reserve on loans receivable held for investment increased from $308 million, or 6.8% of UPB at September 30, to $443 million, or 10.9% of UPB at year-end. Our general CECL reserve decreased from $140 million, or 3.9% of loans subject to our general CECL reserve, to $78 million, or 2.9% of UPB of loans subject to our general CECL reserve. Turning to our REO assets. We made significant progress with our mixed-use New York City REO asset during the quarter.
As a reminder, we completed the commercial condominiumization of the building in May, and as of year-end, we’ve sold all of the office floors as well as the signage component, generating total gross proceeds of $67 million, which was generally in line with our carrying value. We now intend to conduct a sale process for the fully leased retail component of the property. We believe this asset has served as an example of how we can leverage our sponsor’s real estate expertise to creatively execute asset-level strategies and optimize outcomes. The New York REO Hotel portfolio continues to perform well, with operating results exceeding expectations and annual NOI growth of approximately 14%. This asset has been accretive to earnings, and given the refinancing we executed last year, we will continue monitoring the market for an opportune time to pursue an asset sale.
Over the course of 2025, we strengthened the balance sheet by focusing on generating liquidity and reducing leverage by $1.7 billion. We continued this focus into the new year by reducing leverage by an additional $300 million, of which $90 million was applied to asset-level deleveraging payments and towards the repayment of the Term Loan B. As Richard mentioned, at the beginning of 2025, the Term Loan B had a balance of $718 million and was scheduled to mature in August of 2026. In January 2026, we subsequently retired the Term Loan B and replaced it with a $500 million senior secured term loan from HPS, which matures in January 2030... This new senior secured term loan is priced at SOFR plus 675 basis points.
In connection with this financing, CMTG issued 10-year detachable warrants to purchase approximately 7.5 million shares of its common stock at an exercise price of $4 per share, which represents a 46% premium to the closing price for CMTG’s common stock on January 30th, 2026. In conjunction with the closing of the new term loan, we aligned and relaxed financial covenants across all of our financing facilities, which provides additional flexibility to execute our business plan going forward. Over the course of 2025, we decreased our net debt-to-equity ratio from 2.4x at December 31, 2024, to 1.9x at December 31, 2025.
Following the closing of the senior secured term loan, we now have $153 million in liquidity, representing a $51 million increase compared to the prior year-end, despite the significant deleveraging that occurred in 2025. We accomplished a great deal in 2025, and we recognize there is more work ahead. By resolving Watch List Loans, generating liquidity, reducing leverage, and subsequently addressing the Term Loan B maturity, we have strengthened the balance sheet and positioned the company well for the coming year. We look forward to building on this progress as we continue to execute across the portfolio. I would now like to open the call up to Q&A. Operator?
Becky, Conference Facilitator: Thank you. If you wish to ask a question, please press star followed by one on your telephone keypad now. If you feel your question has been answered or for any reason you would like to remove yourself from the queue, please press star followed by two. When preparing to ask your question, please ensure your device is unmuted locally. Our first question comes from Rick Shane from JPMorgan. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.
Rick Shane, Analyst, JPMorgan: Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my questions this morning. Look, I realize there’s a lot of progress, both in terms of repayments and loan sales and foreclosures. Obviously, the significant reserves allow you guys or put you in a position to be able to negotiate resolutions for the loans. But obviously, you know, the stock is trading at an enormous discount to book. It’s a very, very long path to earning, you know, generating a return that’s anywhere near your hurdle rate. I think you guys know where I’m headed, which is we’ve seen at least one transaction in the space where a re- who was much further along the path in terms of recovery, decided to sell their assets near NAV.
Are there opportunities here outside of resolving this portfolio to extract shareholder value or to create—not extract, but to create shareholder value?
Richard Mack, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman, Claros Mortgage Trust: Rick, thank you for that, for that question. We are clearly always open to, to everything, but our goal right now has to be cleaning the book up so that it is a much more transparent and easier to understand business. And I think we have to wait until we’re able to, to deliver that before we can really understand if the market, can evaluate our business properly. And so I think that’s where we’re headed, at the moment.
Rick Shane, Analyst, JPMorgan: Okay. Thank you. And then to follow that up, you know, NII has fallen, has been cut in half, throughout the year, over the course of the year. I am curious, as we head into Q1 2026, and you think about the non-accruals and the movement in the portfolio, NII, just pure net interest income was about $12.5 million in the fourth quarter. Is it likely that it will be again lower in the first and second quarter of the year, given how the portfolio is marked at this point?
Mike McGillis, President, Chief Financial Officer, and Director, Claros Mortgage Trust: Yeah, Rick, I think that’s... This is Mike. I think that’s a fair assumption because what’s—as we resolve loans and delever the book, and get regular weight payoffs, that top-line interest income level is gonna continue to compress. Deleveraging will offset that to a degree on the interest expense side, and then, further resolutions of the non-accrual loans or sub-earning assets should give us some capital to delever, which should help further reduce interest expense. I think it’s a—I think that’s a reasonable assessment. You know, we are in a portfol—in a tr—in a process of transitioning the portfolio, so that net interest income line is gonna be choppy until we sort of turn the corner on the book and can get back to originations.
Rick Shane, Analyst, JPMorgan: Got it. And then just one last question. I apologize for asking, going first and then asking so many questions, but you know, obviously, you’ve indicated that the reserve levels position you to aggressively start to resolve or continue to resolve loans during 2026. When we look at the reserve levels, and it’s over $400 million, and I apologize, I won’t look up the specific number. Realistically, what percentage of that reserve do you think could be translated into losses over the next 12 months? Is it 25%, 50%, 75%? Just so that we can start to get some sense, without knowing specifically what you guys are going to resolve, how quickly you think you’re going to start resolving things.
Priyanka Garg, Executive Vice President, Credit Strategies, Mack Real Estate Group: Hey, Rick, it’s Priyanka. I’ll take that one, or I’ll start. We look, we’re reserving based on what we think is appropriate at this time. We’ve re-resolved a tremendous number of loans in 2025. Half of them are on our watch list, and year to date, we’ve already resolved three additional loans on our watch list. So we think we have a good sense of the reserves that we need to take in order to accelerate resolutions and turn over the book. And so, you know, we think we’re appropriately reserved for that. Now, there can be new information, and we might have changes in this really dynamic environment, depending on where negotiations with borrowers or financing counterparties or anything may go.
But we think we’re appropriately reserved today, and we have a lot of data points in a lot of different ways in terms of, you know, loan sales, which have really tapered off throughout 2025, more doing DPOs and other transactions, foreclosures. We think we have a really good sense of where the reserve levels should be.
Rick Shane, Analyst, JPMorgan: Okay, but I appreciate that. The question’s more about the timing of those resolutions as opposed to the level of the reserve.
Mike McGillis, President, Chief Financial Officer, and Director, Claros Mortgage Trust: Yeah.
Priyanka Garg, Executive Vice President, Credit Strategies, Mack Real Estate Group: Yeah, the timing... Look, I think we pr-
Mike McGillis, President, Chief Financial Officer, and Director, Claros Mortgage Trust: Go ahead, Priyanka.
Priyanka Garg, Executive Vice President, Credit Strategies, Mack Real Estate Group: Go ahead, Mike.
Mike McGillis, President, Chief Financial Officer, and Director, Claros Mortgage Trust: No-
Priyanka Garg, Executive Vice President, Credit Strategies, Mack Real Estate Group: I was just going to say, I think we’ve...
Mike McGillis, President, Chief Financial Officer, and Director, Claros Mortgage Trust: Go ahead, Priyanka, go ahead.
Rick Shane, Analyst, JPMorgan: Should I call on somebody?
Priyanka Garg, Executive Vice President, Credit Strategies, Mack Real Estate Group: Okay, I’m going to start. So I think that, the pace—I mean, we’re really, really focused on accelerating the pace of dispositions. I mean, both within the loan book as well as in the REO book. We’re—we realize the value, exactly what Richard said earlier, we need to turn over this portfolio, and we need to make, very clear where, you know, to demonstrate our book value. So I can’t—I don’t want to give you specific time frames, but I would hope that 2025 and our progress in 2025 suggests that we’re moving very quickly, and we hope, you know, we’re continuing to accelerate that. And furthermore, the stability of our balance sheet after the transaction that we just closed in January really helps us do that with even more, more strength and speed.
Rick Shane, Analyst, JPMorgan: Got it. I appreciate the answer. Thank you, guys.
Becky, Conference Facilitator: Thank you. Our next question comes from John Nicodemus from BTIG. The line is now open. Please go ahead.
John Nicodemus, Analyst, BTIG: Morning, everyone. Thanks for the time. With the term loan B refinancing completed, several more resolutions completed as well since we last spoke, how are you thinking about liquidity levels here in 2026? I know you’re looking to improve them, and it is up year-over-year, but we did see it come down significantly since November, which is to be expected. Just trying to get a better handle on how we should think about the trajectory there for this year. Thanks.
Mike McGillis, President, Chief Financial Officer, and Director, Claros Mortgage Trust: Sure. Thanks for the question. Well, I think a lot of the liquidity that was generated over the course of the year was used to deleverage the balance sheet, which we expect to continue to do as we continue resolving loans and our REO assets over the course of 2026. We, given the deleveraging that we’ve done, we now have a pretty significant level of liquidity cushion over our minimum liquidity requirements. And faced with that and a very de minimis amount of future funding that we expect to occur on our existing loan portfolio, we feel that our liquidity is in a very good position right now. And to the extent we generate incremental liquidity above those levels, we’ll continue to look to deleverage the balance sheet.
You know, success for this year, by the end of the year, we’re evaluating, you know, a variety of capital allocation options for available liquidity, whether that’s originating new loans, further deleveraging the balance sheet, or other kinds of capital allocation alternatives.
John Nicodemus, Analyst, BTIG: Great. Thanks, Mike. That’s really helpful. And then for my second question, this kind of goes into what Priyanka was mentioning in response to Rick’s last question. But we’ve heard a lot about improvements for, you know, the greater commercial real estate sort of transaction, activity, liquidity, and also, I’ve seen some of your peers talk about being more aggressive about resolving challenged loans or REO assets during this round of earnings. Given that backdrop, has that changed your expectations for sort of the pace or timing of sales out of both the REO portfolio as well as, resolutions from the watchlist? Thanks.
Richard Mack, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman, Claros Mortgage Trust: So John, thanks for that. This is Richard. I think we’re in a much more constructive environment, such that things that we had held off resolving, we’re gonna have much better performance out of. However, I wanna say that the market is not fully back. Transaction volume is still lower than we had anticipated we’d be by this time. So I think we are trying to both react to the market and make the best execution that we can, while being mindful that we need to quickly clean up our book. So it’s a balance.
I think on the whole, we are more focused on execution and delivering a clean book than we are waiting for the market to recover, but we’re getting a little bit of the benefit of having waited on some of the assets that we’re going to be able to resolve this year. And just, I think- I’m sure Priyanka would like to add something to this.
Priyanka Garg, Executive Vice President, Credit Strategies, Mack Real Estate Group: Yeah, yeah. Thanks, Richard. The only thing I would add, I agree with everything Richard said. I would add, though, that because of the healthier capital markets, both CMBS banks coming back into the mix, we’re seeing more regular way repayments on larger loans. So I think that the theme we’re gonna see in this coming year are fewer extensions and modifications and more repayments, which, you know, on performing loans, which will then have an impact on NII, as we talked about during Rick’s question, but it will still help turn over the book, getting that excess cash, and then having, you know, the decision on how to allocate that capital.
John Nicodemus, Analyst, BTIG: Great. Really appreciate it, Richard and Priyanka, and thanks for the answers.
Richard Mack, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman, Claros Mortgage Trust: Thank you.
Becky, Conference Facilitator: Thank you. Just as a reminder, if you did want to ask a question, please press star followed by one on your telephone keypads now. Our next question comes from Chris Muller, from Citizens Capital Markets. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.
Chris Muller, Analyst, Citizens Capital Markets: Hey, guys. Thanks for taking the questions. I guess looking at your REO portfolio, most of the properties have some financing against them. And I see your comment that the hotel portfolio is the most profitable than the aggregate contribution to DE. But can you guys talk about some of the individual NOIs within that REO portfolio?
Priyanka Garg, Executive Vice President, Credit Strategies, Mack Real Estate Group: Yeah. Hi, Chris. I’ll take that one. It’s Priyanka. The NOI, so in we have the mixed-use asset, which we’re now the only thing we’re retaining is the fully leased retail, and so that’s 100% leased, tenants paying rent, so there’s, you know, NOI coming off of that. That happens to be one that we’re holding unlevered. In the multifamily assets that we have, REO, it is a mixed bag. There are some that are generating real NOI, others that are a little bit more challenged from an NOI standpoint, but that is all part of the plan to foreclose. The ones that are now generating NOI weren’t generating NOI when we foreclosed.
So the point is to come in there and make sure that we’re spending capital in smart ways, creatively to, you know, market the asset appropriately to potential renters, and also be a present owner who’s holding the property managers accountable. So I think that to the extent that assets don’t have positive NOI or meaningful NOI, it’s all part of the plan and certainly was expected. And the last thing I would say is that capital that we’re putting in there, you know, you mentioned that these are financed. The financing facilities have structure in them where there is capital being held back for us to spend at the properties, and that’s, you know, not cash coming off the balance sheet.
Chris Muller, Analyst, Citizens Capital Markets: Got it. And that, that’s a good segue into my follow-up here. Do you guys expect a lot, or can you give a ballpark dollar amount of what you’re expecting on CapEx for these REO properties?
Priyanka Garg, Executive Vice President, Credit Strategies, Mack Real Estate Group: I think it’s not gonna be a meaningful amount. I mean, I hesitate to give you a specific number because a lot of that is going to depend on our hold periods. So again, we’re, you know, accelerating dispositions. You can see that in our earnings supplement. On page eight, we sort of call out where we’re accelerating dispositions, and so I think to the extent these are shorter term holds, we’re gonna spend less capital, but we wanna be prepared to spend more if the hold is longer.
Chris Muller, Analyst, Citizens Capital Markets: Got it. That makes a lot of sense. Just one last quick one, if I could. Does the new term loan allow financing of watchlist loans?
Richard Mack, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman, Claros Mortgage Trust: We already have a facility that allows us to finance those loans. The new term loan is more of a corporate debt facility. So those aren’t, even though it’s senior secured, it’s more of a corporate mezzanine loan kind of structure as opposed to an asset-specific financing structure, which is what we use at the direct asset level.
Chris Muller, Analyst, Citizens Capital Markets: Got it. Makes a lot of sense. Thanks again for taking the questions.
Richard Mack, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman, Claros Mortgage Trust: Okay.
Becky, Conference Facilitator: Thank you. We currently have no further questions, so I’ll hand back over to Richard for closing remarks.
Richard Mack, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman, Claros Mortgage Trust: Well, I want to thank everyone for joining and for the questions, and maybe summarize some of the things that we’ve mentioned today. 2025 and beginning of 2026 have been about resolving watchlist loans, enhancing liquidity, deleveraging the book by $2 billion. In 2025, there was $2.5 billion of resolutions. 2026, almost $400 million so far. We got the TLB retired. We now have a relationship with HPS, who’s part of BlackRock, the largest asset manager in the world. All this amidst a constructive and improving real estate credit market and real estate capital markets in general. And so while we’re not here to declare victory, we are seeing light at the end of the tunnel, and we are getting closer to a clean book that we expect will allow the street to more appropriately value our stock.
That’s really our goal, every day when we come to the office. It’s been hard, it’s been a long road, but we are really excited to be feeling like we can see the light at the end of the tunnel and that the capital markets are cooperating with us. We thank you for joining us and for monitoring our progress and for the questions, and we’ll look forward to speaking again at the next quarterly call. Thank you all.
Becky, Conference Facilitator: This concludes today’s call. Thank you for joining us. You may now disconnect.