Operator: I would like to remind everyone that today’s call and webcast are being recorded. Please note that they are the property of Apollo Commercial Real Estate Finance, Inc. and that any unauthorized broadcast in any form is strictly prohibited. Information about the audio replay of this call is available in our earnings press release. I’d also like to call your attention to the customary Safe Harbor disclosure in our press release regarding forward-looking statements. Today’s conference call and webcast may include forward-looking statements and projections, and we ask that you refer to our most recent filings with the SEC for important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from these statements and projections.
In addition, we will be discussing certain non-GAAP measures on this call, which management believes are relevant to assessing the company’s financial performance. These measures are reconciled to GAAP figures in our earnings presentation, which is available in the Stockholders section of our website. We do not undertake any obligation to update our forward-looking statements or projections, unless required by law. To obtain copies of our latest SEC filings, please visit our website at www.apollocref.com or call us at (212) 515-3200. At this time, I’d like to turn the call over to the company’s Chief Executive Officer, Stuart Rothstein.
Stuart Rothstein: Thank you, operator, and good morning and thank you to those of us joining us on the Apollo Commercial Real Estate Finance second quarter 2023 earnings call. As usual, I am joined today by Chief Investment Officer, Scott Weiner; and Anastasia Mironova, ARI’s Chief Financial Officer. ARI had another consistent quarter of distributable earnings prior to net realized losses on investments comfortably above the common stock dividend, driven by higher base rate tailwinds in ARI of $8.3 billion floating rate loan portfolio. Over the past 12 months, the weighted average yield of company’s loan portfolio has increased approximately 350 basis points. Despite ARI’s solid performance, the real estate market continues to go through a period of recalibration, highlighted by the prevailing negative sentiment around the asset class.
Notwithstanding the sentiment, property level fundamentals across most property types remain stable. However, concerns with respect to refinancing risk and the impact of potential — of the potential economic slowdown persist, creating difference of — differences of opinion on valuations between buyers, sellers, owners and lenders. As a result, transaction volumes continue to be muted amidst ongoing price discovery. Within ARI’s loan portfolio, there were several positive events that occurred during the quarter. The borrower on ARI’s largest office construction loan commitment signed a letter of intent with a global financial institution for a 20-year lease for the entire building significantly de-risking the transaction. As a reminder, only 18% of ARI’s portfolio is comprised of loans secured by office properties with approximately 60% secured by properties in Western Europe.
Beyond the transaction referenced above, which represents 13% of ARI’s office exposure, partial repayments totaling approximately $125 million have been received or are in process across another five office loans, encompassing situations whereby the borrowers are paying down between 15% and 20% of the outstanding loan balance and renewing guarantees for carry costs on future leasing costs in exchange for a short period of extended maturity. Year to date, ARI has received $595 million of full or partial loan repayments and there is an additional $300 million that has or expected to occur during Q3. Elsewhere in the portfolio, the Mayflower Hotel continue to have strong operating performance with net cash flow up significantly since ARI took ownership and now exceeding pre-pandemic levels.
ARI also received $104 million partial paydown on the loan secured by our portfolio of parking garage in connection with the sale and re-lease of certain collateral. And subsequent to quarter end ARI received full repayment from the $20 million mezzanine loan secured by the Las Vegas Renaissance Hotel, which had been a risk rated 4 loan. In general, ARI’s borrowers remain engaged on asset management issues and ongoing dialogue is constructive and focused on borrowers injecting additional equity into transactions in exchange for extension of term. Turning to the Steinway project, this quarter, the decision was made to put all of ARI’s loans secured by the asset on non-accrual status. Year to date, through the end of the second quarter unit sales reduced ARI’s exposure by approximately $64 million with a further reduction of $9 million occurring from a unit sale early in the third quarter.
There is an additional unit under contract that is expected to close in the third quarter, which will further reduce ARI’s exposure by approximately $40 million. While there has been a modest pickup in foot traffic and buyer interest resulting in some active negotiations on a handful of units, the velocity of unit sales remains behind expectations. Shifting to the right side of our balance sheet, ARI continues to maintain robust liquidity and has access to additional capital from the company’s various secured financing facilities. ARI’s lenders remain actively engaged in the sector with ongoing dialogue around in place or potential new financing. ARI continues to diversify the company’s lender base and expand sources of capital having entered into a new secured borrowing facility during the quarter with a new counterparty.
Lastly, in the second quarter, ARI repurchased an additional $37 million of the coming due convertible notes and an additional $10 million post quarter end, reducing the outstanding balance to $176 million. As we look to the remainder of 2023, ARI is well positioned with a portfolio that continues to generate stable distributable earnings while maintaining excess liquidity. We continue to see bright spots across the portfolio and importantly, meaningful borrower engagement. With that, I will turn the call over to Anastasia to review ARI’s financial results for the quarter.
Anastasia Mironova: Thank you, Stuart, and good morning, everyone. ARI produced another consistent quarter of financial results in Q2 with distributable earnings prior to net realized loss on investments and realized gain on extinguishment of debt of $65.8 million or $0.46 per share. We declared a common stock dividend of $0.35 per share, the level consistently maintained over the course of the last 13 quarters. This translates to a dividend coverage ratio of 131% and the dividend yield of 12.5 — I’m sorry, 12.4% as of June 30. GAAP net loss was $86.5 million or $0.62 per diluted share of common stock. ARI’s portfolio ended the quarter with an outstanding principal balance of $8.6 billion with a weighted average unlevered yield of 8.6%.
During the quarter, ARI funded $131 million of add-on fundings from previously closed loans and received $243 million in loan repayments, including a $60 million full repayment from a loan secured by a hotel in Phoenix, Arizona. During the quarter, there was an increase in the general CECL allowance of $2.1 million, bringing it to 46 basis points of the loan portfolio’s amortized cost basis as of June 30. The increase is attributable to a more conservative macroeconomic outlook and changes in remaining expected terms for some of our loans. This increase was partially offset by the impact of portfolio seasoning, as well as loan prepayments. With respect to the Steinway building, during the quarter, we recorded a $126 million Specific CECL Allowance on the junior mezzanine A loan and downgraded the risk rating to 5.
We also increased the previously recorded Specific CECL Allowance on the junior mezzanine B loan by $15.5 million, resulting in the full allowance against disposition. We, therefore, wrote off the junior mezzanine B loan realizing a loss of $82 million, which was beneficial to us from a tax planning perspective. ARI’s book value per share excluding general CECL reserves and depreciation was $14.80, representing a 6% decrease from previous quarter end. With respect to our borrowings, ARI is in compliance with all covenants and continues to maintain strong liquidity. As Stuart mentioned, during the quarter, ARI entered into a new $130 million secured credit facility with a counterparty that is new to us, further expanding our capital sources.
ARI ended the quarter with $407 million of total liquidity, which was a combination of cash and undrawn credit capacity on existing facilities. Our debt-to-equity ratio at quarter end was 2.9x and the company had $857 million of unencumbered real estate assets. And with that, we would like to open the line to questions. Operator, please go ahead.
Q&A Session
Operator: [Operator Instructions] Our next our first question comes from Sarah Barcomb with BTIG. You may proceed.
Sarah Barcomb: Hi, everyone. Just given the reaction that we are seeing in the stock today, I want to touch on the Steinway Tower a bit more. Do you think now that you have ring-fenced all of the loss potential at 111 West 57th and why do you feel that way now versus what you were expecting at Q1 end? Thank you.
Stuart Rothstein: Thanks, Sarah. It’s Stuart. Look, I think at a high level, and as I’ve said multiple times on various earnings calls, we are trying as best we can to sort of assess where deals get done both on a price perspective and on a timing perspective. I think based on dialogue we have had with various potential buyers, we were certainly hopeful that there would be more velocity in terms of the number of units that would be signed. I think, at this point, I think we are still reasonably confident in what we are seeing from a pricing perspective. And I think we have certainly dialed back expectations with respect to timing. I think by turning off the accrual of interest on the senior parts of the capital structure, we have certainly eliminated future basis creep over time, which I think puts us in a position to not create any additional pressure from a pricing perspective.
I think at this point, there is definitely active dialogue going on, on a handful of units. Foot traffic is up. I think as we look at how we forecast out the current reserve, it seems reasonable to us, based on what the dialogue is today and how we forecast out. I think for everybody’s benefit, I think we have said this before in coming up with the reserve from an accounting perspective, there is both a nominal analysis as well as a time value of money analysis. So it does require us to be as accurate as we can from a pricing and timing perspective. But I would say, sitting here today, certainly looking out over coming quarters, based on dialogue and what we have seen, based on the estimate we have done today, we feel confident in the way we have reserved or written off.
Operator: One moment for questions. Our next question comes from Jade Rahmani with KBW. You may proceed.
Jade Rahmani: Thank you very much. I guess the first question on 111 would be, how much of the portion that you haven’t reserved relates to large units that could be very hard to predict such as remaining penthouses? Because if we just look at average sale prices and price per square feet, it would seem to me that there is potentially the risk of further write-downs. So that would be one aspect of this deal to try to understand.
Stuart Rothstein: Yes, no, I appreciate the question, Jade. Obviously, I would say in some respects, there’s better foot traffic and more interest at the penthouse level than in the middle of the building, if you just think about the uniqueness of certain units versus other units. But ultimately, it’s just dollars and timing. And whether it is regardless of where the units occur in the building, it’s just trying to get units sold and chip away at the outstandings. I would say per your question, we certainly took a high level unit by unit perspective of the building. But I would say the analysis does not overemphasize one unit versus the other as we think about timing and pacing.
Jade Rahmani: Are there about 35 units remaining?
Stuart Rothstein: There are a little bit less than that, yes.
Jade Rahmani: And then the second question would just be on, the full position now being on non-accrual making some assumptions for yields, I think we estimated an impact annually around $0.30 to $0.32. And then I also do recall, you have an interest rate cap that expired in the second quarter, which you previously said would be an annual earnings impact of around $20 million. So that’s another $0.10 to $0.15 EPS impact. So how do we think about all of this and where the dividend stands? Is that going to be a year-end decision for next year? Or do we expect something there imminently? And if you could provide any commentary or parameters to assess that, it would be great.
Stuart Rothstein: Yes, my pleasure. Let me answer it this way. We ultimately have three investments that I would say are under [technical difficulty]
Anastasia Mironova: Operator?
Operator: Hello. Please stand by.
Anastasia Mironova: Jade, do you mind repeating the question, please? This is Anastasia. Sorry. Looks like we’re having some difficulty with technology this morning.
Stuart Rothstein: Yes, I got it Anastasia. I think, Jade, to answer your question, the interest rate cap did burn off, and so that was not reflected in this quarter. And then we put Steinway on non-accrual after one month. So, this quarter actually takes into account a lot of the impact that you’re already saying. And I think based on our projections we comfortably cover the dividend through the end of the year. So, to answer your question, I’m not — maybe Anastasia and Hilary, and you can kind of go through your math offline. But the combination of those things, we’re not seeing as much of an impact as I think you’re anticipating.
Operator: Our next question comes from Stephen Laws with Raymond James.
Stephen Laws: Stuart, I know you touched a little bit on the REO assets in your prepared remarks, but kind of wanted to revisit that, specifically the Atlanta Hotel is held for sale, kind of update on timing for that. And then, on the DC hotel, $6 million of 2Q income, no debt on that asset. You do have some debt on the Brooklyn development. Is the DC hotel something you may look to hold or operate mandate or how do you think about moving that into held for sale or looking to exit that asset?
Scott Weiner: Yes, I’m not sure — it’s Scott again. I’m not sure if Stuart was able to rejoin. So addressing that, so with the Atlanta asset, we did take that over. We brought a new management and rebranded it. So it was formally a Sheridan, now it is under the Wyndham flag, been pleased with the transition. We’ve had some approaches unsolicited, which we’re hopeful will translate into a sale, which is why we moved it to the for-sale. Nothing is done till it’s done, but there is some active dialogue happening there. With respect to the Mayflower Hotel, as referenced in the prepared remarks, the performance is actually doing better than pre-COVID. Again, we have brought on management to work with Marriott, the Marriott flagged hotel to doing well there and continue to evaluate the markets.
Obviously, we’re in dialogue with various brokerage firms and kind of continue to get updates in the market. And so, the positive is that cash flow is flowing through. As you mentioned, it is a source of liquidity for us, because we don’t have any debt on it. And we’ll continue to evaluate the markets. And if we think the execution makes sense, yes, later this year, early next year, we’ll certainly take advantage of that. And then, I think the last one was, the multifamily development in Brooklyn continues to move along, pouring the foundation, everything. That deal is fully capitalized with third party debt financing. The New York City multifamily market and the Brooklyn multifamily market continues to be very strong. So that just continues to need to get built.
Stephen Laws : Great, thanks. And then one follow-up to Jade’s question. Anastasia, do you — I think, it was mentioned that Steinway was maybe in Q2 numbers for a month before it went on non-accrual. Do you have the amount in millions that have contributed to 2Q net interest — or interest income?
Anastasia Mironova : Yes. Thank you for this question. So, as you mentioned, we have put Steinway on non-accrual effective May 1st. So, if you translate it into earnings for this quarter, this was about a $0.06 per share net loss in Q2. So on a quarterly basis, it’s about $0.10 per share looking forward. But as Scott has previously mentioned, in response to Jade’s question, based on our projections taken into account that Steinway, the full stack is now on non-accrual basis and as well as taken into account the interest rate cap, which as Jade mentioned, has terminated early in June. We are still projecting that we will be able to comfortably cover the dividend in Q3 and Q4 for the remainder of the year.
Operator: One moment for questions. Our next question comes from Richard Shane with JP Morgan. You may proceed.
Richard Shane: Thanks for taking my questions this morning. First, as we think about the space, one of the things that — from a projection perspective, we are — and I think everybody struggling with is the timing of realized losses. Can you just walk through what the triggers were in the second quarter to actually create the realized loss?
Scott Weiner: Sure. Anastasia, do you want to talk about the tax impact? I mean, I think it’s two-fold. One is, as we look at and update our model, we don’t think there will be a recovery of that junior most mezz, whereas I think Stuart referenced part of the analysis on the other reserve this time. And so there is a discount factor. So we are hopeful that if our estimates of sale prices are correct, our absolute dollar recovery will be higher than the reserve we have taken, just because we had to discount that over a period of time that we think it’ll take to sell the units. Whereas on the junior, we don’t think we recover that. But as Anastasia mentioned, there is also a tax implication. So Anastasia, do you want to talk about that?
Anastasia Mironova: Yes, absolutely. And piggybacking on Stuart’s earlier remarks and Scott’s remarks, definitely based on where we stand today, we previously had the $66.05 million reserve against the bottom, the junior mezzanine position. It’s an $82 million position. So it was us raising the CECL allowance this quarter. That position became fully reserved. It had a 100% Specific CECL Allowance against it. And we deemed it to be unrecoverable as far as the timing that you are highlighting. There was an opportunity for us to take an advantageous tax treatment, which is why we have opted to take the realized loss in the current quarter as opposed to taking it later.
Richard Shane: Got it. And so to continue this a little bit further. So you guys have talked about the expectation of dividend coverage through the year. And really there are two earnings metrics. There is distributable earnings including and excluding realized losses. When we look at it on a realized loss basis, you guys are probably about $0.35 year-to-date versus the dividend. So the payout ratio is actually below a 100%. Is the implication then that the dividend for the year based upon that will be characterized partially as a return of capital?
Anastasia Mironova: Yes, I think we are in the middle of the year now. So we will have to complete the assessment as we near the end of the year. So I think it is still in the early stages. But I think the bottom-line here is that the dividend will be fully covered based on our earnings projections as of today.
Richard Shane: Fully covered on an earnings projection basis for distributable earnings, excluding losses.
Anastasia Mironova: Yes. That’s correct.
Operator: [Operator Instructions] Our next question comes from Doug Harter with Credit Suisse. You may proceed.
Doug Harter: Thanks. Can you just talk about your plans and the amount of liquidity you plan to hold once you kind of settle the convert, the remainder of the year?
Anastasia Mironova: Yes, absolutely. I can take that. This is Anastasia. I think as you can see from the current quarter and the preceding quarter, and definitely as we look forward towards the rest of the year, we’re definitely focused on maintaining excess liquidity for ARI. Based on where our liquidity is as of June 30, it is clear we are comfortably paying down the convertible notes that are coming due in October. And as of June 30, we have already bought back some pieces of that debt. So, it stood at $186 million outstanding principal as of June 30. Other than that, we don’t have any corporate debt maturities coming up this year or next year actually, and so it’s 2026. But overall, we’re definitely focused on maintaining excess liquidity and we’ll continue — you will continue to see us having a significant cash cushion as well as available liquidity — available capacity on our existing facilities.
Doug Harter: And I guess would the unencumbered assets be the kind of the main source to drive extra liquidity or if you needed to create more liquidity or how do you think about the options for creating that extra liquidity?
Anastasia Mironova: I think, you can think about it as a combination. We have available capacity on our facilities. We have our revolving credit facility. We have definitely our unencumbered assets. We’re also projecting a healthy level of repayment activity in our portfolio. So all of these can be potential sources of our liquidity going forward.
Operator: Our next question comes from Steve DeLaney with JMP Securities, a Citizens company.
Steve DeLaney : Look, in the commercial real estate world, obviously, the lenders, finance companies, the top priority has obviously been liquidity and asset management, which you’ve commented on this morning. I’m just curious, your $8 billion portfolio, you’ve seen about $400 million of shrinkage for the first six months of the year. I’m just curious to know what the appetite is for new lending. I would think there’s some pretty attractive terms out there. So, if you are considering new loans, where would you focus and where do you see the best opportunities?
Anastasia Mironova: Scott, do you want to take that?
Scott Weiner: Yes. Sure. Yes, look, I mean, I think as you mentioned, we continue to build up liquidity. We are getting repayments. So there is plenty of liquidity in the market and activity. And look, we are very active across our overall platform. So we’re in the market every day making loans. I think we’ve at this point in time made the decision to keep that liquidity for ARI, whether it be looking at our own capital structure, future fundings that we have, because even if we don’t do new deals, we do have future fundings. On deals we continue to evaluate things. I would say, there are attractive deals in the hotel and other space, conversions things, where we can get attractive spreads. The financing markets are open. We’ve always been really a warehouse bar as opposed to the CRE/CLO market, but that — even that market is showing signs of life.
So, I think, we’re very comfortable that the business model works. But at the same time, we’re comfortably earning the dividend and it’s always good to have liquidity. And at the same time, unlike in the past, we’re actually earning money on our cash. I think we’re getting like 5%. Sure it’s not as much of a drag as it has been, as we continue to look at things. But I think, as we continue to look at repay — to the extent the repayments are higher than we expect and we’re sitting on more cash than we can always look to turn back on the originations. But at this point, not something we’re going to be doing in the near term.
Operator: [Operator Instructions] Our next question comes from Jade Rahmani with KBW.
Jade Rahmani: Yes, so I just wanted to ask a follow up, unrelated to Steinway. But across the portfolio, seems like things actually — performance improved. So if you could comment on perhaps why you haven’t seen any stresses elsewhere? If there’s any specific loans you’d call out? But seems like things have improved and Europe performance remains pretty solid it seems. Any comments on that?
Scott Weiner: I would take that as a compliment, Jade. Thank you very much. I mean, I think, look we’ve always said Steinway is our — the issue that we’re dealing with. We’ve been pleased with the performance. As referenced, one of our 4 rated loans and actually one of our last mezzanine loans got paid off on a hotel in Las Vegas. There’s been other repayments in the portfolio. Yes. So like we dealt with our issues early on, which is always something that we’ve said. So dealt with our two hotel problems early on in the land in Brooklyn, and quite honestly just continue to active manage and work with borrowers. Thankfully, we have good stable borrowers who believe in their deals and think they have equity in them, because we never really did high leverage loans in that sense, and they’ve continued to support them.
Europe has been a bright spot in terms of whether it be hospitality or industrial or return to office. And obviously we had hedged our currency exposure there, so we weren’t at risk there. So look, we’ve been pleased with the rest of the portfolio. Not to say there aren’t — we don’t actively work on it every day, and work with borrowers, but we’ve continued to get pay-downs. The transaction in London is going to be the bank’s new world headquarters is obviously great, that de-risks that transaction dramatically. So when that lease is efficiently signed, I would expect that rating to be upgraded. Right now, it’s a lengthy, lengthy heads of terms and public announcement. But when that lease gets signed in the next few weeks, we’ll have to upgrade that loan.
But yes, overall, and again, and then we just continue to just see repayments. And I think part of our modeling is we’ve got in notices of repayments on various deals. We know that that cash will be coming in.
Jade Rahmani: Thanks. And the table in the portfolio — in the 10-Q is showing loan portfolio overview. I mean, it shows the overall yields on the portfolio being pretty consistent at 8.6%, but the subordinate loan piece, the balance is $463.6 million. The yield is just 2.2%. Is that mainly reflecting Steinway or was there something else modification?
Scott Weiner: Yes, you think of it, I would say by the end of this quarter, pretty much Steinway is going to be the only sub debt that we have, and it’s sub debt for historical accounting reasons. Because we’re in the first mortgage, so the reality is we own the whole stack. But the hotel in Las Vegas was a subordinate debt that got paid off. There is a piece of CMBS, which we anticipate getting paid off in the near-term, that’s in there. And then it’s really, all Steinway. So that — in which, like we said, we put on non-accrual. So that line item will continue to shrink.
Jade Rahmani: So the mezzanine on Steinway is yielding or picking at an interest rate of 2.2%?
Anastasia Mironova: It’s a non-accrual. So you can….
Scott Weiner: We’re not taking any income.
Anastasia Mironova: Zero.
Scott Weiner: Zero.
Jade Rahmani: Okay. So then the yield in this table, what does it actually reflect? What does that mean, 2%? Maybe that’s just the performing mezzanine loans that are on accrual and the total balance is accrual and non-accrual. And so that’s why the yield is tough.
Scott Weiner: Yes. You are taking a majority of it at zero and then you have other stuff at 10%, right? So you had $60 million, $70 million at 10% and you had $400 million-plus at zero. So that’s the way…
Jade Rahmani: All right. That makes sense. Thanks for clarifying that.
Operator: Thank you. I’d now like to turn the call back over to Scott Weiner for any closing remarks.
Scott Weiner: Thank you, operator, and thank you everyone for joining us today. And to the extent anyone has any more follow-up questions, both Stuart, Anastasia and I are available. And enjoy the rest of the summer. Thank you.
Operator: Thank you. This concludes today’s conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.