By Al Yoon 
 

Shares of some real estate investment trusts are on the comeback, reversing this week a steep, two-month tumble--driven largely by the Fed's massive mortgage-backed securities buying and worry over heavier loan refinancing--after MBS and REITs shares dropped to compelling valuations.

The "broad-based selloff has created attractive investment opportunities in this space" of mortgage REITs, Bose George and other analysts at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods said in a research note on Thursday.

The Dow Jones US Mortgage REITs Index added 3.8% to 7086 on Friday, and is up 7.8% from Thursday's lows, rebounding from a drop of more than 18% since the Federal Reserve surprised the markets in mid-September with a larger-than-anticipated MBS purchase program. That demand lowered the yield on securities purchased by REITs that focus on government, or "agency," mortgage bonds.

More recently, investors have speculated that the Obama administration may go beyond its current initiatives to boost refinancing of loans backing those bonds, creating prepayments that could decimate MBS returns if the principal paydowns exceed investor expectations. The prepayment talk hurt REITs, but have also dented demand for MBS by other investors.

The bearish trades may have created opportunity in bonds, reducing the need for REITs to seek assets outside of the traditional agency MBS, or use the money to buy back shares. Price drops on mortgage bonds and REIT stocks have pushed both assets to cheaper levels, and buying of each could reemerge, according to comments by analysts at Nomura Securities, RBS Securities and KBW.

The recent drop in mortgage bonds has increased the return on equity for REITs on some MBS by nearly three percentage points since late September, to 8.1%, said Nomura Securities analysts, based on a hypothetical model. That improvement means REITs may forego stock buybacks and MBS selling "very soon," the Nomura analysts, led by Ohmsatya Ravi, said in a Thursday note.

Most mortgage REIT shares rose on Friday, after companies including Annaly Capital Management (NLY) traded down to lows not seen in years. Annaly shares climbed on Friday by 58 cents to $14.80, and have gained 7% from when they struck a three-and-a-half-year low.

American Capital Agency Corp. (AGNC) rose $1.16 to $31, Two Harbors Investment Corp. (TWO) climbed 35 cents to $11.01, and AG Mortgage Investment Trust (MITT) gained $1.08 to $23.24.

"While it is likely that REITs are not going to find it attractive to issue new stock at current yield levels, they should at least start reinvesting the monthly paydowns back in the MBS market," the Nomura analysts said. Paydowns are interest and principal payments from MBS.

REITs that were selling mortgage bonds earlier in the week have turned into "better buyers" of the securities, Jeana Curro and Ashley Gam, strategists at RBS Securities, said in a Nov. 15 note. While the REITs probably won't buy as aggressively as they had over the past three years, they will likely shift positions within the MBS market rather than sell outright, and also reinvest MBS proceeds, she said.

KBW analysts took a more sanguine view of mortgage REITs, but from an equity angle.

The latest speculation fueling the drop in REIT shares--including concerns over efforts to expand the government's flagship refinancing program and the installment of a more consumer-friendly housing-finance regulator--may still come to pass, but the impact on REIT assets is likely overblown, the KBW analysts said. The industry doesn't have the capacity to increase refinancings much even if those events were to occur, they said.

In recommending the sector, KBW analysts noted that agency REITs are now trading below 90% of book value, while "hybrid" REITs are trading at 90%-95% of book value.

KBW prefers hybrid REITs that can also hold mortgage debt that isn't exposed to the vagaries of the government-supported markets, such as Two Harbors, MFA Financial (MFA) and American Capital Mortgage. Two Harbors and American Capital Mortgage also have "very low" prepayments on their portfolios, they said.

Annaly this week said it planned to diversify its portfolio from agency MBS, through an acquisition of commercial property investor Crexus Investment Corp. (CXS).

Write to Al Yoon at albert.yoon@dowjones.com

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