NexPoint Real Estate (NYSE:NREF) reported first-quarter financial results on Thursday. The transcript from the company's first-quarter earnings call has been provided below.
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Summary
NexPoint Real Estate reported Q1 2026 net income of $0.42 per diluted share, a decrease from $0.70 in Q1 2025 due to mark-to-market declines and changes in net assets related to CMBS VIEs.
The company successfully refinanced $180 million of senior unsecured notes with a $242 million total return swap facility, improving its balance sheet flexibility and providing $45 million of incremental capacity for new investments.
The portfolio consists of 90 investments totaling $1.1 billion, with a heavy focus on multifamily and life sciences sectors, and a geographical concentration in Massachusetts and Texas.
Guidance for Q2 2026 estimates earnings available for distribution at $0.43 per diluted share and cash available for distribution at $0.54 per diluted share at the midpoint.
Strategic initiatives include the deployment of AI for underwriting and portfolio monitoring, aiming to enhance decision-making and risk management.
Management emphasized the strong performance and credit profile of its portfolio, highlighting life sciences investments and the favorable residential market outlook.
Full Transcript
OPERATOR
Good morning ladies and gentlemen and thank you for standing by. My name is Kelvin and I will be your conference operator today. At this time I would like to welcome everyone to the NexPoint Real Estate Finance first quarter 2026 earnings call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker's remarks, there will be a question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question during this time, simply press STAR followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, please press star one again. Thank you. I would now like to turn the call over to Kristen Griffith, Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Kristen Griffith (Investor Relations)
Thank you. Good day everyone and welcome to NextPoint Real Estate Finance Conference call to review the Company's Results for the first quarter ended March 31, 2026. On the call today are Paul Richards, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial officer, and Matt McGregor, executive vice president and Chief Investment Officer. As a reminder, this call is being webcast through the company's website at nrap.nexpoint.com before we begin, I would like to remind everyone that this conference call contains forward looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform act of 1995 that are based on management's current expectations, assumptions and beliefs. Listeners should not place undue reliance on any forward looking statements and are encouraged to review the Company's annual report on Form 10-K and the company's other filings with the SEC for a more complete discussion of risks and other factors that could affect the forward looking statements. The statements made during this conference call speak as only as of today's date and except as required by law, NREF does not undertake any obligation to publicly update or revise any forward looking statements. This conference call also includes an analysis of non-GAAP financial measures. For a more complete discussion of these non-GAAP financial measures, see the Company's presentation that was filed earlier today. I would now like to turn the call over to Paul Richards. Please go ahead Paul.
Paul Richards (Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer)
Thanks, Kristen and good morning everyone. I'll walk through our quarterly results, cover the balance sheet and provide guidance for Q2 before turning it over to Matt for a deeper dive on the portfolio and macro lending environment. For the first quarter, we reported net income of $0.42 per diluted shareholder compared to $0.70 for Q1 2025. The decrease was driven by small mark to mark declines on preferred stock and warrants as well as a decrease in the change in net assets related to consolidated CMBS VIEs. Earnings available for distribution was $0.43 per diluted share in Q1 compared to $0.41 per diluted share in the same time period of 2025. Cash available for distribution was $0.58 per diluted share in Q1 Compared to $0.45 per diluted share in the same period of 2025. We paid a regular dividend of $0.50 per share in the first quarter, which is 1.16x covered by cash available for distribution. On April 28, 2026, the Board declared a dividend of $0.50 per Share payable for the second quarter of 2026. Book value per share decreased slightly by 0.3% from Q4 2025 to $18.96 per diluted share, primarily driven by unrealized losses on our preferred stock investments and stock warrants. Turning to new investments during the quarter, the company funded over $30 million on two loans that both pay a monthly coupon in the mid teens I want to highlight what is in our view the most important development of the quarter and frankly of this week. We have successfully refinanced 180 million of senior unsecured notes that were maturing on May 1st. We replaced those 5.75% fixed rate notes with a new $242 million total return swap facility priced at SOFR plus 375 basis points with a three year term and one year extension option. This transaction does several things. First, it removes the largest near term liability overhang on our balance sheet. Second, the floating rate structure aligns with our floating rate asset base and gives us refi optionality as the curve evolves. Third, the upside gives us approximately $45 million of incremental capacity to deploy into our pipeline at the double digit coupons we are seeing today. And fourth, the facility allows for back lever optionality on eligible positions which expands our origination capacity without requiring additional unsecured note issuances. We engaged more than 20 counterparties across bank and non bank channels to optimize this structure and the SOFR plus 375 pricing came inside comparable mortgage REIT executions in the high yield baby bond and term loan markets. Importantly, we did this without deluding common shareholders at a discount to book. Combined with the 21.0 million dollars we raised in our Series C preferred and the re remic execution I'll discuss in a moment. We head into the back half of 26 with one of the cleanest, most flexible capital structures in the commercial mortgage REIT sector, capital recycling and book value accretion. We executed a re remic of our FRMT 2017 K62B piece during the quarter. We sold the B piece to Mizuho at 92 spot 7, having purchased it at 68 spot 69 in 2021 and reinvested into the HRR tranche of the new structure at an 18.5% yield. That single transaction generated $0.46 per share of book value appreciation, reduced repo financing by 75 million and is expected to drive approximately $0.$0.34 per share of annual cat accretion going forward. This is the kind of execution that does not happen by accident and it speaks to the value we extract from a portfolio of seasoned, well written structured credit positions. Moving to the Portfolio and Balance Sheet Our portfolio is comprised of 90 investments with a total outstanding balance of 1.1 billion. Our investments are allocated across sectors that follows 39.4% multifamily, 35.9% life sciences 17.1 single family rental, 3.9% storage, 1.6% marina and 2.1% industrial. Our fixed income portfolio is allocated across investments as follows 19% CMB bps, 22% Mezz loans, 24.5% Pref equity investments, 15.6 Revolving credit facilities, 10.1% Senior loans, 4.2% IO strips and 4.6 promissory notes. The asset collateralizing our investments are allocated geographically as follows 28.7% Massachusetts, 17.6% Texas, 5.9% Florida, 4.9% Georgia, 5.2% California and 4.7% Maryland with the remainder across states with less than 4% exposure reflecting our heavy preference to some belt markets with Massachusetts and California exposure heavily weighted towards life science. The collateral on our portfolio is 81.2% stabilized with 59.9 loan to value and a weighted average DSCR of one spot 32 times. We have 665.2 million of debt outstanding with a weighted average cost of 5.2% and has a weighted average maturity of 0.8 years. Our secured debt is collateralized by 571.3 million of collateral with a weighted average of 3.8 years and a debt to equity ratio of 0.7x. Moving to our guidance for the second quarter, earnings available for distribution $0.43 per diluted share at the midpoint with a range of $0.38 on the low end and $0.48 on the high end. Cash available for distribution $0.54 per diluted share at the midpoint with a range of 49 cents on the low end and 59 cents on the high end. With that I'd like to turn it over to Matt for a detailed discussion of the portfolio in the current market environment. Matt Appreciate it Paul.
Matt McGregor (Executive Vice President and Chief Investment Officer)
I'm excited to walk through another strong quarter for NexPoint Real Estate Finance and to thank our team and our partners for executing in what continues to be a noisy macro backdrop, including and especially the exciting and accretive financing completed with Mizuho that Paul just mentioned. Now onto the verticals on the residential front and this is where we have our largest exposure at roughly 56% of the portfolio between single-family rental and multifamily, we are now firmly in the supply trough that I've been describing on these calls for several quarters. The thesis is playing out. We're coming off a record national multifamily supply cycle. Net deliveries peaked at approximately 695,000 units in the trailing twelve months ended Q4 2024. For context, that compares to roughly 282,000 units of average annual delivery since 2001. CoStar now forecasts 2026 deliveries to fall approximately 49% from the 2025 levels, with another 20% decline forecast for 2027. 2027 and 2028 forecasts have been revised down meaningfully from prior estimates as well. On the supply side, multifamily construction starts are running approximately 70% below their 2022 peak and that is locking in a multi year supply trough. On the demand side, the structural backstop has not changed. The cost to own a home in our markets remains roughly three times the cost of rent and there's no reasonable mortgage rate scenario that closes that gap quickly. Our on the ground leasing data is consistent with the inflection thesis. Putting it all together, we believe the second half of 2026 and 2027 will be meaningfully better than 2025 for residential operators and by extension for the residential debt collateral on our balance sheet. On the life sciences. I want to spend a minute here because I know it's a sector that has attracted some discussion and I think the conversation deserves a little more nuance than it's been getting. Our exposure is concentrated, intentional and increasingly de risked. Our Alewife project is now 71% leased, anchored by Lyla Sciences, a pioneering backed artificial intelligence (AI) and life science company on a long term lease for 245,000 square feet with options to expand the active pipeline of RFPs. letters of intent (LOIs) and leases on the project today represents approximately 92% of the remaining vacant square footage. This is a high conviction underwrite into a project where the leasing momentum and credit improvement are visible on the data, not aspirational. An additional and increasingly relevant point I want to drive home is the demand funnel of our life science collateral has widened materially because of artificial intelligence (AI), not in spite of it. artificial intelligence (AI) companies need exactly the same purpose built infrastructure that traditional lab tenants need. Power density, cooling capacity, structural floor loads, ventilation and vibration tolerances. They cannot retrofit older converted assets at any rent. They need the bones and they will pay for the bones. Lyfe is exactly that asset in the right sub market adjacent to MIT in the broader Cambridge cluster. Our life science exposure is not a generic bet on the sector, it's a concentrated bet on first to fill infrastructure grade assets in elite educational districts that are now also AI corridors. The credit profile of these assets is improving, not deteriorating as the tenant universe widens. Moreover, our capital was largely placed in the last 12 to 18 months at a reset basis that prime billions of dollars of equity versus loans originated in the go go days of post Covid liquidity craze where capital was much less discerning on the self storage. Storage is in the cyclical bottoming process. Industry wide second quarter earnings for the public Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) were consistent with guidance and largely in line with sell side estimates. Expectation for the full year is roughly flat revenue, flat revenue and 50 to 150 basis point declines in NOI supply remains muted. Also according to Yardi, facility facilities under construction are less than 3% of existing supply. That's the equilibrium benchmark forecast. Forecasted deliveries over the next several years could be as low as 1% of existing stock and combined with the difficulty of bank financing for new development, the cost of land and materials in a higher rate environment than the 2015-2020 development cycle. We expect supply discipline to persist and pricing power to return. Our NSP portfolio continues to outperform the industry meaningfully. Occupancy in the low 90s near the top of the industry with rent growth and NOI performance materially ahead of the sector decline almost 300 to 500 basis points. Moving to our pipeline today, it consists of approximately 190 million of in rev investment across 11 active deals, three closed and eight under executed LOI plus an additional 275 million of structured product opportunities specifically across multifamily senior loans and CMBS pools. These are real deals. At real spreads the pricing power remains very much in our favor of disciplined capital providers like us. The pipeline's blended return profile is well in excess of our cost of capital in the new total return swap (TRS) facility that Paul mentioned, which is already driving modest increases in cash available for distribution (CAD) which we expect to see continuing throughout the back half of 2026. Before I close, I want to take a moment on something that I believe will be a meaningful differentiator for NREF over the next several years. We are deploying artificial intelligence (AI) across our underwriting portfolio, monitoring credit, credit risk and operations functions and we believe we're ahead of the commercial mortgage REIT peer group on this. On the underwriting side we're piloting artificial intelligence (AI) assisted deal screening and diligence across CMBS, mezzanine loans and preferred equity originations. The system ingest rent rolls, comps, market data and our target is a 50% reduction in underwriting cycle time. That means more deals are being evaluated, sharper credit work, faster execution, all without expanding headcount. On the portfolio monitoring side, we're deploying always on surveillance across all 92 plus investments, machine learning driven signals on occupancy, rent growth, debt service coverage ratios and sponsor health flag risk before it shows up in the financials. We believe this will result in earlier identification of watch list assets and meaningfully tighten the feedback loop between credit underwriting and portfolio surveillance. We're also building predictive credit models for borrower default probability, loan-to-value (LTV) stress paths and loss given defaults. This reinforces our existing discipline underwriting with data driven early warnings. It does not replace our investment committee process. And on operations and reporting we're using generative artificial intelligence (AI) to accelerate investor reporting, SEC filings, prep earning, supplemental draft drop drafting and internal research, freeing our team for higher value analytical work. Our roadmap is the sequence foundation in Q2 and Q3 of this year, scale across the full portfolio by Q4 and full optimization throughout 2027. We expect this to translate into faster decisions, sharper risk management and a more scalable platform for growth. A few closing points on Capital on the balance sheet Net debt to equity continues to run below one times, among the lowest in commercial mortgage REIT space. Combined with the reramic execution that Paul just mentioned in the new TRS facility, we do indeed have the capital structure flexibility to be opportunistic on origination and on our own stock. Speaking of which, at current levels we continue to trade at a meaningfully meaningful discounted book value of approximately $19 per share. We've been clear that we view buybacks at this discount discount as an accretive use of capital and you should expect to see us continue to buy back stock opportunistically alongside the funding pipeline. Funding the pipeline I just walked through and given our liquidity position and having successfully refinanced near term maturities, the two are not mutually exclusive. Our Series C preferred programs continue to provide flexible non dilutive capital. Our book value is stable, our dividend coverage is sound, leverage is low and the portfolio's credit profile is improving. That is a setup we feel very good about heading into the second half of 2026. To summarize, a strong quarter on earnings and credit, a transformative refinancing on the liability side, a continuing supply driven tailwind in the residential space, a de risking and broadening demand picture in life science, a robust pipeline of accretive deployment and an AI platform initiative that we believe will set NREP apart over the coming years. As always, want to thank the team here for their hard work. And now we'd like to turn the
OPERATOR
call over to the operator to take your questions. Thank you ladies and gentlemen. We will now begin the question and answer session. As a reminder to ask a question, please press the star button followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, please press star one again. One moment please for your first question. Your first question comes from the line of Jade Romani of kbw. Please go ahead.
Jade Romani (Analyst)
Thank you very much. Rates are trending higher year to date and was wondering what you think the impact to the recovery outlook will be particularly around multifamily as bridge loans taken out during the COVID years are up for maturity.
Matt McGregor (Executive Vice President and Chief Investment Officer)
Yeah, it's a good question. What I can say is in terms of like the last, I'd say four to six weeks with rates going up as a result of geopolitical tensions. The processes that we've seen that started, you know, prior to that time in terms of the capital markets transactions both on loan sales and investment sales, they've all continued without I would say material disruption. There have been, I'd say some slight walkbacks in terms of buyers underwriting, a five and a half percent all in rate on a Freddie or Fannie agency And then the 10 year moves against them and so they'll seek a little retrace. So there's I would say a little disruption in the capital markets but nothing
Jade Romani (Analyst)
that would halt it. Or I would say liquidity is still very, very plentiful on the multifamily side. And I think what's even more important than that is we and I think the broader public REIT universe in the reporting yesterday and today are really starting to see the fundamentals in multifamily sector turn and firm up. You know, concessions are getting weaker. In our own portfolio, for example, concessions are down 100 by 50% from Q4.
Matt McGregor (Executive Vice President and Chief Investment Officer)
So all that is kind of offsetting, I think any near term interest rate rise as it relates to multifamily.
Gabriel Taghi (Analyst)
our project in Alewife is again it's brand new, it's purpose built with incredible infrastructure and the land that the assets built on was assembled over years, three to five years. It wasn't just a spec build, it was very intentional. And in a cluster built, you know, submarket. I think that for one is unique. Our own investment in terms of the loan to cost, it's roughly 30%. That is our unique sponsor relationship there and the ability for us to provide capital at a time, like I said, in the last 12 to 18 months where there's literally no capital available in the life science sector. So I think the loans, you know, that, that I've seen as well that you're referring to were again, I think, you know, originated in a more speculative environment, you know, with more hope to, you know, to lease on the outskirts of the cluster markets that we have exposure. So again the Cambridges and the, the Longwood and Fenway districts, these, these assets are, excuse me, these locations are going to be the first to fill locations. And, and we're seeing real depth in, in the project leasing in terms of, in terms of the marketing, you know, coming out of big Pharma and in the venture space, you know, I think the, the green shoots you can point to or the biotech index is, you know, nearing cyclical highs. Venture capital is I think at a high since 2021. And then again the AI spend and the assets that AI needs just widens. The demand funnel for our assets in particular. We're in the right locations where they want to be and they have the critical infrastructure that, that's demanded by their, you know, their compute and other and other, you know, real estate needs.
Matt McGregor (Executive Vice President and Chief Investment Officer)
So I do think we are different, I do think our exposure is different and I think it's again, more recent at a reset basis versus, you know, loans that were originated perhaps in 2020, 2021 and 2022.
Gabriel Taghi (Analyst)
Thanks very much.
Matt McGregor (Executive Vice President and Chief Investment Officer)
Thanks, Jen.
OPERATOR
Your next question comes from the line of Gabriel Taghi of Raymond James. Please go ahead.
Matt McGregor (Executive Vice President and Chief Investment Officer)
Hey, guys, thanks for taking the question. I want to actually piggyback on what Dave is just asking. You know, sounds like Alewife is doing great. Some other exposures, you know, Holly Spring, Vacaville, California. You guys have low attachment points, but it looks like the senior mortgages are due maybe kind of by the end of the year. Just any color you can give on expectations for the underlying asset, whether it's a refi or a sale, etc. I think would be helpful as it pertains to life science exposure away from.
OPERATOR
Yeah, great. Great question.
E
And thanks for Gabe. So Holly Springs and Vacaville are both advanced manufacturing assets, which, if anything, is stronger, you know, in the last six months. It's that versus life science. So the Holly Springs underlying collateral, I believe is. Is now topped out, has a tenant, and I think we'll probably likely be refi out of those out of that deal. It's actually the tenant's a battery manufacturer for the Department of Defense, and so they're seeing a ton of growth right now. And I think that I see that that exposure being reduced by a loan
D
payoff at some point this year.
E
Same thing goes to Vacaville. It's got, I think, you know, eight to 10 project names in and around both semiconductor manufacturing manufacturing and advanced manufacturing in the pharmaceutical side. To your point, the detachment's very low there. So I think there's. There's a lot of ways to win, and I would. I would say that we'd probably be taken out of that asset in the next 12 months as well. And then one thing that is on the horizon that could be. Could be good and bad is. Is, you know, why it's being repaid. I think, you know, with the success of leasing there, going from 0 to 71% lease and the tenant quality and then the. The clustering that's happening. Like I said, There's RFPs and LOIs on that asset that almost get it to 100% full, we could see that capital come back to us in the next 12 months as well.
F
Got it. That's really helpful. And then one more kind of just on the accounting side in the other income, right, the 17 million. Can you guys break out kind of the components of that all just for us before we get the queue, or do we need to wait for the queue for that. Yeah.
C
Hey, Gabe, a great question. I think we wait till the queue for that one. It'll give you, you know, a good breakdown of the other income. And, you know, we can provide a breakdown of the supplement as well, too, going forward for, you know, for better ant analysis.
F
Okay, cool. Thanks, guys.
A
There are no further questions at this time. And with that, I will now turn the call back over to the management team for final closing remarks. Please go ahead.
D
Thank you again for everyone's participation this
E
morning and look forward to speaking to you next quarter and providing another good update. Have a great day. Thanks.
A
Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's call. We thank you for participating. You may now disconnect your lines.
Disclaimer: This transcript is provided for informational purposes only. While we strive for accuracy, there may be errors or omissions in this automated transcription. For official company statements and financial information, please refer to the company's SEC filings and official press releases. Corporate participants' and analysts' statements reflect their views as of the date of this call and are subject to change without notice.
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