Granite Point Mortgage Trust Q4 2025 Earnings Call - Shrinking Portfolio, Elevated CECL Reserves, Originations Pushed to H2 2026
Summary
Granite Point spent 2025 cleaning up legacy paper while the market swung from pause to liquidity. Management reported active repayments and resolutions, a meaningful CECL reserve build, and steps to cut expensive financing, but warned origination activity will be on hold until the back half of 2026. Book value and GAAP results felt the pain of credit provisioning and an REO impairment, even as market liquidity for CRE and securitizations improved.
The firm ended the year with $1.8 billion of commitments and a $1.7 billion outstanding portfolio, but expects the portfolio to shrink into mid-2026 as it prioritizes loan and REO resolutions and reducing high cost debt. Management highlighted progress on several workouts, one new severely rated loan, and two post-quarter full repayments totaling $174 million, while reserving that remaining office-heavy problem loans will take longer to resolve and weigh on near-term results.
Key Takeaways
- Market backdrop: 2025 ended with improved CRE liquidity, stronger CMBS and CLO issuance, and banks returning to warehouse financing, but there remains a shortfall of actionable deals driving spread compression.
- Portfolio size and composition: $1.8 billion in total loan commitments, $1.7 billion outstanding principal, 43 investments, average UPB about $39 million, and weighted average stabilized LTV at origination about 65%.
- Risk profile and yield: Weighted average risk rating ticked up to 2.9 from 2.8 sequentially. Realized loan portfolio yield for Q4 was 6.7%, and excluding nonaccrual loans would have been 8.0%.
- 2025 asset activity: The company completed five loan resolutions, seven full loan repayments, and one REO sale during the year, and funded about $51 million of follow-on commitments.
- Q4 flow and post-quarter: Q4 saw $45 million of repayments and paydowns and a net portfolio reduction of about $30 million. Post-quarter the company received two full loan repayments totaling $174 million.
- Problem loans and downgrades: At 12/31 there were four collateral-dependent loans with total UPB of roughly $249 million. A $53 million multifamily loan in the Atlanta MSA was downgraded from a 4 to a 5 during Q4. Other challenged loans include a $76 million Chicago loan now collateralized primarily by retail, a $27 million Tempe hotel and retail loan under review, and a $93 million Minneapolis office loan expected to take longer to resolve.
- REO positions: Two REO assets remain; suburban Boston has positive leasing and active repositioning work, Miami Beach is Class A with ongoing leasing discussions. Management is investing capital to maximize disposals.
- CECL reserve build: Aggregate CECL allowance rose to about $148 million from $134 million sequentially, driven by increased specific reserves on collateral-dependent loans and weaker macro forecasts, including a decline in the CRE price index used in their TREP model.
- Specific reserves concentration: Approximately 70% of the total allowance is allocated to individually assessed loans. Specific CECL reserves on the four collateral-dependent loans are about $105 million, representing roughly 42% of that unpaid principal balance. Management expects resolutions will meaningfully reduce CECL.
- Earnings and book value: GAAP net loss attributable to common shareholders for Q4 was $27.4 million, including a $14.4 million provision for credit losses and a $6.8 million impairment on the Miami Beach REO. Book value per share fell to $7.29 at 12/31, down $0.65 from Q3.
- Liquidity and leverage: Unrestricted cash was about $66 million at quarter end, and roughly $55 million a few days later. Total leverage rose slightly from 1.9x to 2.0x. Funding mix described as diversified and relationships with financing counterparties constructive.
- Cost of debt reduction: Post-quarter the company repaid a substantial amount of higher cost debt, reducing the cost of repurchase facilities by approximately 60 basis points and estimating an annual savings of about $0.10 per share.
- Origination timing and strategy: Management expects to pause new originations until the latter half of 2026, with restart timing tied to loan repayments, REO exits, market conditions, and idiosyncratic factors. Reaching prior origination scale will involve recycling capital, CLOs, and rebuilding leverage toward historical targets.
- Maturity and visibility: Management says about 25% of the book has near-term payoff visibility, roughly 40% has upcoming maturities where an exit process is in play, and about one third has maturities in 2027-2028. Some loans may still be extended via win-win mods but the goal is to turn the portfolio.
- Sector concentration risk: Remaining problem credits are concentrated in office and certain multifamily markets, with Minneapolis office flagged as a longer resolution and Atlanta multifamily singled out for underperforming local fundamentals.
- Investor implications: Near-term pressure on earnings and book value is likely until rated loans resolve and CECL eases. Management is focused on de-risking, cost of debt reduction, and positioning to redeploy capital in H2 2026, but execution and timing remain the main risk factors.
Full Transcript
Paul, Conference Facilitator: Good morning. My name is Paul, and I will be your conference facilitator. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to Granite Point Mortgage Trust fourth quarter and full year 2025 financial results conference call. At this time, all participants will be in a listen-only mode. After the speaker’s remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. Please note today’s call is being recorded. I would now like to turn the call over to Chris Petta with Investor Relations for Granite Point. Please go ahead.
Chris Petta, Investor Relations, Granite Point Mortgage Trust: Thank you, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining our call to discuss Granite Point’s fourth quarter and full year 2025 financial results. With me on the call this morning are Jack Taylor, our President and Chief Executive Officer, Steve Alpart, our Chief Investment Officer and Co-Head of Originations, Blake Johnson, our Chief Financial Officer, Peter Morral, our Chief Development Officer and Co-Head of Originations, and Ethan Lebowitz, our Chief Operating Officer. After my introductory comments, Jack will provide a brief recap of market conditions and review our current business activities. Steve will discuss our portfolio, and Blake will highlight key items from our financial results. Press release, financial tables, and earnings supplemental associated with today’s call were filed yesterday with the SEC and are available in the Investor Relations section of our website. We expect to file our Form 10-K in the coming weeks.
I would like to remind you that remarks made by management during this call and the supporting slides may include forward-looking statements which are uncertain and outside of the company’s control. Forward-looking statements reflect our views regarding future events and are subject to uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from expectations. Please see our filings with the SEC for a discussion of some of the risks that could affect results. We do not undertake any obligation to update any forward-looking statements. We also refer to certain non-GAAP measures on this call. This information is not intended to be considered in isolation or a substitute for the financial information presented in accordance with GAAP. A reconciliation of these non-GAAP financial measures to the most comparable GAAP measures can be found in our earnings release and slides, which are available on our website.
I will now turn the call over to Jack.
Jack Taylor, President and Chief Executive Officer, Granite Point Mortgage Trust: Thank you, Chris, and good morning, everyone. We would like to welcome you and thank you for joining us for Granite Point’s fourth quarter and full year 2025 earnings call. 2025 was a constructive year for the commercial real estate industry. The year began with strong momentum, which, after pausing briefly in the spring due to macro uncertainty, quickly resumed with heightened deal activity and spread compression throughout the balance of the year. During the fourth quarter, we saw greater capital availability for a broader array of properties, including certain office properties, as well as improving fundamentals across many markets and most property types. Lending volume has expanded and also extended to a wider range of property types and markets. This greater liquidity in the market has benefited the CMBS market and strengthened CLO issuance.
Larger commercial banks have become more active, notably for warehouse financing, and regional banks are beginning to return to the market as well. Against this backdrop of available capital in the market, there continues to be a shortfall of actionable deals, which is one of the key factors contributing to the spread tightening we have been seeing over the last several quarters. For Granite Point, with the long-awaited market improvement, 2025 was an impactful year as we achieved some of our key objectives. These included five loan resolutions, seven full loan repayments, and one REO property sale, as well as a reduction in our cost of debt.
The market momentum experienced in 2025 has continued into early 2026 and sets the stage for this year to be potentially a stronger year for the industry, with forecasted growth in transaction activity across property types, increased liquidity from traditional lenders, a robust securitization market, and an increasingly constructive backdrop for asset resolution activity. In 2026, we continue to make progress reducing our higher cost debt and moving along our asset resolutions, which will continue to help reduce the risk within our portfolio and improve our net interest spread. This month, we repaid a substantial amount of additional higher cost debt, resulting in a reduction in the cost of our repurchase facilities by roughly 60 basis points and an estimated annual savings of $0.10 per share.
With respect to our two REO assets, we’re investing capital where we believe it will maximize our outcome and then we’ll seek to exit and extract capital. Post-quarter end, we also have received two full loan repayments of $174 million combined. Turning to originations, as we said last quarter, we expect to begin to regrow our portfolio this year and to start that process in the latter half of 2026. The exact timing and volume of originations will be driven by the pace of loan repayments and asset resolutions, as well as market conditions and idiosyncratic factors. While the timing and volume is uncertain, reallocating capital in our portfolio and recycling into new originations remains one of our highest priorities. I would now like to turn the call over to Steve to discuss our portfolio activities in more detail.
Steve Alpart, Chief Investment Officer and Co-Head of Originations, Granite Point Mortgage Trust: Thank you, Jack, and thank you all for joining our fourth quarter and full year earnings call. We ended the year with $1.8 billion in total loan portfolio commitments, inclusive of $1.7 billion in outstanding principal balance and about $77 million of future fundings, which accounts for only about 4% of total commitments. Our loan portfolio remains diversified across regions and property types and includes 43 investments with an average UPB of about $39 million and a weighted average stabilized LTV of 65% at origination. As of December 31st, our portfolio weighted average risk rating increased slightly to 2.9 from 2.8 at September 30th. The realized loan portfolio yield for the fourth quarter was 6.7%, which excluding nonaccrual loans, would have been 8% or 1.3% higher.
We had an active year of loan repayments and resolutions totaling about $469 million during 2025. During the year, we funded about $51 million on existing loan commitments and other investments. During the fourth quarter, we had $45 million of loan repayments and partial pay downs, including a full repayment of a $33 million loan secured by a multifamily asset located in North Carolina. We had about $15 million of future fundings and other investments, resulting in a net loan portfolio reduction of about $30 million for the fourth quarter. Post quarter end, we have received two full loan repayments of $174 million. We’ll now provide some color on the risk-rated five loans. At December 31st, we had four such loans with a total UPB of about $249 million.
At quarter end, we downgraded a $53 million loan collateralized by a 284-unit multifamily property in the Atlanta MSA from a risk rating of 4 to a rating of 5. While we’ve seen a pickup in occupancy at the property, the local market remains soft and we are not seeing the return of the pricing power we had expected. We are reviewing resolution alternatives, which may include a property sale. We’re monitoring the situation closely and expect to have more to share over the coming quarters. We discussed last quarter that we had a partial resolution on the Chicago loan, with the sale of the upper floor office space to a developer for a residential conversion. After the sale, the remaining collateral securing the $76 million loan is the retail space.
The story is now cleaner and simpler, and we are continuing to work cooperatively with the borrower towards the ultimate resolution, which we expect will occur via a property sale in the nearer term. For the $27 million Tempe hotel and retail loan, we are reviewing resolution alternatives there as well, which could involve a sale of the property. Regarding the $93 million Minneapolis office loan, as previously disclosed, we anticipate a longer resolution timeline given the persistent local market challenges. Resolving these remaining five rated loans remain a top priority. Turning to the REO assets, we continue to have positive leasing successes at the suburban Boston property and remain actively engaged with our partner and the local jurisdiction and other third parties on several value-enhancing repositioning opportunities. We continue to invest capital into this property to maximize the outcome.
The Miami Beach office property is a Class A asset located in a strong market. We are having positive leasing discussions with a variety of existing and new tenants. We’ll prudently invest in the property and continue to review resolution alternatives, which includes a potential sale. As we shared in prior quarters, our plan for the first half of 2026 is to remain focused on loan and REO resolutions. We expect our portfolio balance will trend lower in the near term until we start our origination efforts in the latter half of 2026 to take advantage of attractive investment opportunities and begin to regrow our portfolio. I will now turn the call over to Blake to discuss our financial results.
Blake Johnson, Chief Financial Officer, Granite Point Mortgage Trust: Thank you, Steve. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. Turning to our financial results. For the fourth quarter, we reported a GAAP net loss attributable to common stockholders of $27.4 million, or -$0.58 per basic common share, which includes a provision for credit losses of $14.4 million, or -$0.30 per basic common share, and an impairment loss in the Miami Beach REO asset of $6.8 million, or -$0.14 per basic common share. Attributable loss for the quarter was $2.7 million or -$0.06 per basic common share. Our book value at December 31st was $7.29 per common share, a decline of $0.65 per share from Q3, largely from the provision for credit losses and impairment loss on REO.
Our aggregate CECL reserve at December 31st was about $148 million, as compared to $134 million last quarter. The roughly $15 million increase in our CECL reserve was mainly due to an increase in our specific reserve on our collateral-dependent loans and worsening macroeconomic forecasts in our CECL model relative to the prior quarter. Approximately 70% of our total allowance was allocated to individually assessed loans. As of quarter end, we had about $249 million of principal balance on four loans, with specific CECL reserves of around $105 million, representing 42% of the unpaid principal balance. We believe we are appropriately reserved and further resolutions should meaningfully reduce our total CECL reserve balance.
Turning to liquidity and capitalization, we ended the quarter with about $66 million of unrestricted cash, and our total leverage increased slightly relative to the prior quarter from 1.9 times to 2.0 times. As of a few days ago, we carried about $55 million in cash. Our funding mix remains well diversified and stable, and we continue to have very constructive relationships with our financing counterparties. We expect to expand our financing capacity once we return to originating new loans. I will now ask the operator to open the line for questions.
Paul, Conference Facilitator: Thank you. We’ll now be conducting a question-and-answer session. If you’d like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate that your line is in the question queue. You may press star two to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up the handset before pressing the star keys. One moment please, while we poll for questions. Thank you. Our first question is from Doug Harter with UBS.
Marissa Lobo, Analyst, UBS: Good morning. It’s actually Marissa Lobo on for Doug today. Thanks for taking my questions. On origination, how are you thinking about the economics of new origination versus returning capital to shareholders, given the large discount to book value, that you trade at?
Blake Johnson, Chief Financial Officer, Granite Point Mortgage Trust: Good morning, Marissa. This is Blake. Thank you for the question today. Yes, when we look at our portfolio and the discount to book, one of our main objectives over the years is to continue resolving our loans and actually working on decreasing our leverage until we start originating again. We do plan on returning to originations later in the year, and that is our focus for 2026.
Marissa Lobo, Analyst, UBS: Okay. And on the CECL reserve build, how are you viewing the current reserve position and the likelihood for further reserve build? How are current macro economic assumptions factoring into that?
Blake Johnson, Chief Financial Officer, Granite Point Mortgage Trust: Oh, that’s a very good question. Thank you. Yeah, so as of year-end, we go through our CECL process as of as in every quarter end. When we went through the process, we update the general reserve for the latest and greatest economic forecast in our TREP model. That includes the change in assumptions, and the biggest driver for this quarter was a decrease in the CRE price index. These forecasts can change going forward, so the general reserve could change. As of right now, that is the most recent assumption as far as what our general reserve should be. Moving to the actual specific reserve, that is based on our collateral-dependent loans. As of quarter end, we had four collateral-dependent loans. In each quarter end, we assess what the fair value of the underlying collateral is.
Absent any changes in the collateral itself, we do believe we are appropriately reserved for on those loans.
Marissa Lobo, Analyst, UBS: Okay, thank you. Appreciate the answers.
Paul, Conference Facilitator: Our next question is from Jade Rahmani with KBW.
Jade Rahmani, Analyst, KBW: Thank you very much. Do you have any views as to where book value per share may trough in this cycle? It’s down quite sharply year-over-year and quarter-over-quarter, which clearly, based on today’s stock performance, is a surprise. So can you just comment as to, you know, what your expectations are for the risk of future losses going forward?
Jack Taylor, President and Chief Executive Officer, Granite Point Mortgage Trust: Well, I’ll address that first and then turn it over to Steve to talk about credit migration. We believe that there’s a risk that there will be upgrades and downgrades, and future losses may be part of that, right? We don’t, we’ve assessed that risk in our book today, and that’s embedded in the reserves that we have. Specific reserves. With respect to credit migration, maybe Steve, you would speak to that, but I’ve been very clear over the quarters. I don’t believe it’s over in terms of workouts and delinquencies for the whole industry and not for us. And there have been some surprises to us, and we expect to have some upgrades and some downgrades. Steve, is that everything you were going to...?
Steve Alpart, Chief Investment Officer and Co-Head of Originations, Granite Point Mortgage Trust: You know, hey, Jade, good morning. It’s Steve. I think Jack and Blake covered it pretty well. I mean, I would just say that we feel that the majority of the portfolio is performing well. We are working through these remaining loan resolutions, which are not entirely, but heavily in the office sector, and the impact of the rate hike that we went through. We’re pleased with the progress we’ve had to date. We had a lot of resolutions in 2024. We had 5 more in 2025. We’re in process on a couple more right now.
We just talked about the Chicago deal, where we had the partial resolution of the office, and we’re working on the full resolution, which involves the retail, which we think can get done in the near term. We did have two new fives during the quarter. So there’s always a possibility that there could be more of that. But we also hope to have more resolutions, some upgrades, and we are happy to see that we are in a constructive environment as far as capital, certainly debt, also increasingly equity. And we think that’ll be helpful on further repayments and resolutions.
Jade Rahmani, Analyst, KBW: Just overall, when you look at the portfolio, clearly the portfolio has a legacy vintage prior to the Fed rate hikes. So nearly every single loan in the portfolio is going to have probably some cost of capital issue when it’s up for maturity. But then looking beyond that, multifamily was an area of downgrade this quarter, which was somewhat surprising. So can you comment on the vintage and the multifamily property type and what your expectations are there?
Steve Alpart, Chief Investment Officer and Co-Head of Originations, Granite Point Mortgage Trust: Sure. I think there’s 2 related questions in there. We are working through these loans, including these kind of older vintage loans. We have pretty good visibility, I would say, on about a quarter of these loans, in terms of a near-term payoff, where there’s a process underway, and we’re expecting a loan repayment. I would say there’s another, I don’t know, call it 40% or so, if I had to kind of take an estimate where there’s an upcoming maturity. We have communicated to the borrower, that we expect an exit this year by the maturity date. And there may be a refi or a recap or a sale process that’s underway or expected.
And we certainly can’t say that all those will get done, but we have, you know, some visibility on those that we think that there’s a process that there’s an exit out of. And then there’s another, you know, call it about a third or so, where there are a couple of 2027-2028 maturities. And then I would throw in the Minneapolis office deal that are a little bit further out. So we’re-- I would say we’re kind of chipping away at it, and some have near-term visibility, some we’re expecting and pushing on, and then a few will be, you know, kind of 2027 and 2028. Then as far as your question on multifamily, the multifamily in our portfolio, we feel we feel pretty good about.
We did have the credit migration on the Atlanta deal, and we have talked about certain markets that we’re looking at, and we have kind of flagged, in the past, Atlanta. So I would say that one for us has been a bit of an exception. So and that one has some unique factors that we can, we can talk about. But I think the overall trend line that we’re seeing, including in the Sun Belt, is that I think the recovery that we were all expecting has been a little bit more sluggish, and you see that in the read-through on some of the public multifamily reads. The spring leasing season last year was a little slower than expected, but the supply picture overall is improving.
There hasn’t been a lot of pricing power for landlords, but you know, when we sit back and look at macro supply and demand, it feels like you know, over the second half of this year and kind of going forward, we feel like the trend line in multifamily you know, is fairly positive. And there’s obviously a lot of liquidity in the asset class, and the sentiment coming out of the NMHC this year was very positive. So overall, on multifamily, overall and in our book, we feel pretty good about it, medium to longer term.
Paul, Conference Facilitator: Thank you.
Steve Alpart, Chief Investment Officer and Co-Head of Originations, Granite Point Mortgage Trust: Thank you, Jay.
Paul, Conference Facilitator: Our next question is from Chris Mueller with Citizens Capital.
Chris Mueller, Analyst, Citizens Capital: Hey, guys. Thanks for taking the questions. So I guess starting on the portfolio, it’s been shrinking as you guys have been focused on asset management, but sounds like new origination starting up is still the expectation for later this year. So I guess the question is: Do you guys have a ballpark of where the portfolio size could trough? And maybe kind of playing into that a little bit is, what do scheduled maturities look like in the first half of this year, in addition to what you guys already disclosed?
Steve Alpart, Chief Investment Officer and Co-Head of Originations, Granite Point Mortgage Trust: Hey, Chris, it’s Steve. So just high level, on the first part of your question, look, just given the near-term focus on repayments and resolutions, we do expect the portfolio to tick down, through mid-2026, and then begin to restabilize and regrow, in the latter part of the year. Ultimately, that will depend on the timing of repayments and resolutions relative to new originations, but it will get a little lower over the next few quarters and then begin to regrow, regrow.
Chris Mueller, Analyst, Citizens Capital: Got it. And any visibility you guys have on scheduled maturities that may play into that?
Steve Alpart, Chief Investment Officer and Co-Head of Originations, Granite Point Mortgage Trust: Yeah, I mean, part of that’s what I just mentioned to Jay, that we have, we do have visibility on certain loans that are coming up on maturity. As we kind of look out, you know, I’m kind of looking out into 2026 overall. Some of these will just pay off in the normal course. A couple will extend outright, which has happened on some loans recently. And then we have other loans that I mentioned are not up for maturity yet, but they’re up, you know, kind of call it, you know, third, fourth quarter. And, you know, we’re in anticipation of that, we are having conversations with a number of borrowers that we’ve done previous extensions on, where they’ve done everything right, where they put new money in.
We are looking to get the portfolio turned, so we’re having clear communications with borrowers about our expectations, and if they can’t do it via a refi, do it by an equity recap, do it via a sale. That’s been kind of the playbook. Look, case by case, we have extended out loans in win-win mod situations, but we feel like that was the playbook the last couple of years, and we’re trying to move past that and get to just turning the portfolio.
Chris Mueller, Analyst, Citizens Capital: Got it. And then just a quick clarifying one. Did I hear you guys correctly, that there were two new five-rated loans in the quarter? I see the Georgia multifamily in the deck, but what was the other one, if I heard that right?
Steve Alpart, Chief Investment Officer and Co-Head of Originations, Granite Point Mortgage Trust: There’s one new five-rated loan.
Chris Mueller, Analyst, Citizens Capital: Got it. So I just misunderstood. Thanks for taking the question today.
Steve Alpart, Chief Investment Officer and Co-Head of Originations, Granite Point Mortgage Trust: Yeah, it is the Georgia multifamily. Correct.
Chris Mueller, Analyst, Citizens Capital: Got it. Thank you.
Steve Alpart, Chief Investment Officer and Co-Head of Originations, Granite Point Mortgage Trust: Thank you, Chris.
Paul, Conference Facilitator: Our next question is from Gabe Pogy with Raymond James.
Gabe Pogy, Analyst, Raymond James: Hey, good morning, guys. Thanks for taking the question. I may have missed this before, but can you tell us what the two sectors were and any details around the repayments you received year-to-date in Q1 thus far this year in 2026?
Jack Taylor, President and Chief Executive Officer, Granite Point Mortgage Trust: Well, hey, Steve, maybe I can just lead in on that for a moment, and I would say that it’s a retail, a multifamily, and importantly, I want to point out relating to an earlier question. These were vintage loans. COVID period and the higher interest rate period and paid off at par.
Gabe Pogy, Analyst, Raymond James: Thank you.
Paul, Conference Facilitator: Thank you. There are no further questions at this time. I would like to hand the call back over to Jack Taylor for any closing comments.
Jack Taylor, President and Chief Executive Officer, Granite Point Mortgage Trust: Yeah, I just wanted to elaborate on something that was said earlier, which is the portfolio will shrink, as we said, but we have many tools to regrow the portfolio through our loan repayments and resolutions, releasing capital, our REO, which will extract capital. We’ll be repaying our higher cost debt and then rebuilding with an originations team that has been intact from when we were originating at $1.5 billion-$2 billion.
We have a lot of tools to releverage our balance sheet internally through the assets as they move from lower level assets, you know, the vintage loans that are being carried at lower leverage to the new loans that we add and that we also, excuse me, can move into CLOs and the like, and source capital, as we’ve done in the past, successfully, to bring our lower leverage of 1.7 closer back to our target leverage and to start repairing our earnings. Thank you for your time. I just want to welcome and say thank you, everybody, for joining us for the call, and I look forward to speaking to you next- further positive resolution news.
Paul, Conference Facilitator: This concludes today’s conference call. We thank you again for your participation. You may now disconnect your line.