Blackstone Mortgage Trust, Inc. Class A Aktienkurs
Insights zu Blackstone Mortgage Trust, Inc. Class A
Insights
Mit KI besser investieren
aktien.guide Unlimited – alle Details der KI-Analysen
👉 Detailliertere Insights
👉 Exklusive Einblicke in Chancen & Risiken
👉 Klare Antworten auf deine Fragen
Mit KI besser investieren
aktien.guide Unlimited – alle Details der KI-Analysen
👉 Detailliertere Insights
👉 Exklusive Einblicke in Chancen & Risiken
👉 Klare Antworten auf deine Fragen
Mit KI besser investieren
aktien.guide Unlimited – alle Details der KI-Analysen
👉 Detailliertere Insights
👉 Exklusive Einblicke in Chancen & Risiken
👉 Klare Antworten auf deine Fragen
Mit KI besser investieren
aktien.guide Unlimited – alle Details der KI-Analysen
👉 Detailliertere Insights
👉 Exklusive Einblicke in Chancen & Risiken
👉 Klare Antworten auf deine Fragen
Ist Blackstone Mortgage Trust, Inc. Class A eine Topscorer-Aktie nach der Dividenden-, High-Growth-Investing- oder Levermann-Strategie?
Als kostenloser aktien.guide Basis-Nutzer kannst Du die Scores zu allen 7.607 weltweiten Aktien einsehen.
aktien.guide Premium
aktien.guide Unlimited
Kennzahlen
📘 Marktkapitalisierung
📈 Was ist das?
Die Marktkapitalisierung zeigt, wie viel ein Unternehmen laut Börse aktuell wert ist.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Sie hilft Unternehmen in Größenklassen (Large, Mid, Small Cap) einzuordnen und gibt Hinweise auf Marktmacht und Stabilität.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Große Unternehmen gelten als stabiler, zahlen oft Dividenden, wachsen aber langsamer.
- Kleine Firmen können stärker wachsen, sind aber schwankungsanfälliger.
- Die Marktkapitalisierung ist ein guter Indikator für Unternehmensgröße, aber kein Maß für Unter- oder Überbewertung.
📘 Enterprise Value (Unternehmenswert)
📈 Was ist das?
Der Enterprise Value (EV) zeigt, was ein Unternehmen tatsächlich kostet, wenn man es komplett übernehmen würde – inklusive Schulden und abzüglich Cash.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
(= Marktkapitalisierung + Nettoverschuldung)
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Der EV ist eine realistischere Bewertungsbasis als die Marktkapitalisierung, da er die Kapitalstruktur berücksichtigt. Er ist Grundlage für Kennzahlen wie EV/FCF oder EV/Sales.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Der Enterprise Value zeigt, was ein Unternehmen tatsächlich wert ist – unabhängig davon, wie es finanziert ist.
- Er ist besonders wichtig für professionelle Investoren, da er eine objektivere Grundlage für Bewertungsvergleiche bietet als die Marktkapitalisierung allein.
- Ein Unternehmen mit hoher Verschuldung erscheint im EV teurer, eines mit viel Cash günstiger – auch wenn sie an der Börse gleich viel wert sind.
📘 Nettoverschuldung
📈 Was ist das?
Die Nettoverschuldung zeigt, wie viele Schulden nach Abzug des verfügbaren Cashs tatsächlich verbleiben.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Sie zeigt, wie stark ein Unternehmen von Fremdkapital abhängig ist – und wie gut es in der Lage ist, seine Schulden kurzfristig zu bedienen.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Eine niedrige oder negative Nettoverschuldung bedeutet hohe finanzielle Stabilität.
- Unternehmen mit viel Cash und geringer Verschuldung sind besser gerüstet für Krisen.
- Eine hohe Nettoverschuldung erhöht das Risiko – besonders bei steigenden Zinsen oder konjunkturellen Schwächen.
📘 Cash
📈 Was ist das?
Der Cashbestand zeigt, wie viele liquide Mittel einem Unternehmen sofort zur Verfügung stehen.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Er gibt Auskunft über die finanzielle Flexibilität: Ein hoher Cashbestand ermöglicht Investitionen, Rückkäufe oder Krisenresistenz.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Ein hoher Cashbestand zeigt finanzielle Stärke und Handlungsspielraum.
- Cash kann für Investitionen, Schuldentilgung oder Aktienrückkäufe genutzt werden.
- Allerdings: Zu viel ungenutztes Kapital kann auch auf mangelnde Investitionsideen hinweisen.
📘 Anzahl ausstehender Aktien
📈 Was ist das?
Die Anzahl ausstehender Aktien gibt an, wie viele Aktien eines Unternehmens aktuell im Umlauf sind und von Investoren gehalten werden.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Sie ist die Grundlage für viele Kennzahlen wie Gewinn je Aktie (EPS), Marktkapitalisierung oder KGV.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Je weniger Aktien im Umlauf sind, desto höher fällt z. B. der Gewinn je Aktie aus – wichtig für Bewertung und Dividendenrendite.
- Aktienrückkäufe verringern die Anzahl ausstehender Aktien – und steigern den Wert je Aktie.
- Kapitalerhöhungen haben den gegenteiligen Effekt: mehr Aktien → Verwässerung der bestehenden Anteile.
📘 Kurs-Gewinn-Verhältnis (KGV)
📈 Was ist das?
Das KGV zeigt, wie oft der Gewinn pro Aktie im aktuellen Aktienkurs enthalten ist – also wie „teuer“ eine Aktie im Verhältnis zum Gewinn ist.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Das KGV gehört zu den bekanntesten Bewertungskennzahlen. Es hilft Anlegern einzuschätzen, ob eine Aktie im Vergleich zu ihrem Gewinn eher günstig oder teuer erscheint.
🧮 Berechnung
📊 KGV (TTM) = bezogen auf den Gewinn der letzten 12 Monate (Trailing Twelve Months):🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Ein niedriges KGV kann auf eine günstige Bewertung hindeuten – oder auf Probleme im Geschäftsmodell.
- Ein hohes KGV kann Wachstumserwartungen widerspiegeln – oder eine überbewertete Aktie.
📘 Kurs-Umsatz-Verhältnis (KUV)
📈 Was ist das?
Das KUV zeigt, wie viel Anleger für 1 € Umsatz eines Unternehmens zahlen – unabhängig vom Gewinn.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Das KUV ist besonders bei wachstumsstarken oder noch nicht profitablen Unternehmen hilfreich. Es zeigt, wie hoch der Umsatz an der Börse bewertet wird.
🧮 Berechnung
Marktkapitalisierung = 3,06 Mrd. $ | Umsatz (TTM) = 1,55 Mrd. $
Marktkapitalisierung = 3,06 Mrd. $ | Umsatz erwartet = 437,70 Mio. $
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Ein niedriges KUV kann auf Unterbewertung hindeuten – oder auf schwache Margen.
- Ein hohes KUV kann hohe Erwartungen widerspiegeln – oder übermäßigen Optimismus.
- Besonders sinnvoll bei Wachstumsunternehmen, bei denen der Gewinn oder Free Cashflow (noch) keine Aussagekraft hat.
📘 Unternehmenswert zu Umsatz (EV/Sales)
📈 Was ist das?
EV/Sales zeigt, wie viel Anleger für 1 € Umsatz eines Unternehmens zahlen, wenn man auch Schulden und Cash berücksichtigt – es ist eine kapitalstrukturbereinigte Version des KUV.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Diese Kennzahl eignet sich besonders für den Vergleich von Unternehmen mit unterschiedlicher Verschuldung – sie zeigt, wie teuer ein Unternehmen tatsächlich im Verhältnis zum Umsatz ist.
🧮 Berechnung
Enterprise Value = 18,42 Mrd. $ | Umsatz (TTM) = 1,55 Mrd. $
Enterprise Value = 18,42 Mrd. $ | Umsatz erwartet = 437,70 Mio. $
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- EV/Sales ist neutral gegenüber der Kapitalstruktur und eignet sich gut für Unternehmensvergleiche.
- Ein niedriges Verhältnis kann auf eine günstig bewertete Aktie hindeuten – ein hohes Verhältnis auf hohe Erwartungen oder Überbewertung.
- Besonders nützlich bei wachstumsstarken, noch nicht profitablen Firmen.
📘 Unternehmenswert zu Free Cashflow (EV/FCF)
📈 Was ist das?
EV/FCF zeigt, wie viele Jahre es dauern würde, bis ein Unternehmen seinen Unternehmenswert durch freien Cashflow „zurückverdient”.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Diese Kennzahl hilft, Unternehmen auf Basis ihrer tatsächlichen Cash-Erträge zu bewerten – unabhängig von Bilanzierungsregeln oder buchhalterischem Gewinn.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Ein niedriges EV/FCF deutet auf eine günstige Bewertung bei starker Cashgenerierung hin.
- Ein hohes EV/FCF kann entweder auf Optimismus oder auf temporär schwachen Cashflow hindeuten.
- Besonders hilfreich bei reifen, profitablen Unternehmen mit stabilen Cashflows.
📘 Kurs-Buchwert-Verhältnis (KBV)
📈 Was ist das?
Das KBV zeigt, wie hoch der Marktwert eines Unternehmens im Verhältnis zu seinem bilanziellen Eigenkapital ist.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Das KBV ist besonders bei Substanzwerten (z. B. Banken, Industrie) relevant. Es hilft Anlegern zu erkennen, ob ein Unternehmen unter oder über seinem buchhalterischen Vermögen bewertet ist.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Ein KBV unter 1 kann auf Unterbewertung oder schwache Rentabilität hindeuten.
- Ein KBV über 1 zeigt, dass der Markt dem Unternehmen Mehrwert über den Buchwert hinaus zuschreibt (z. B. Marken, Patente, Wachstum).
- Das KBV eignet sich besonders gut für Unternehmen mit stabilen, materiellen Vermögenswerten.
📘 Dividende je Aktie
📈 Was ist das?
Die Dividende je Aktie zeigt, wie viel Geld ein Unternehmen pro Aktie an seine Aktionäre ausschüttet – typischerweise jährlich oder quartalsweise.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Sie ist die absolute Größe der Auszahlung je Aktie – wichtig für alle, die regelmäßige Erträge suchen oder Dividendenstrategien verfolgen.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Eine stabile oder wachsende Dividende je Aktie ist oft ein Zeichen für ein solides Geschäftsmodell.
- Die Dividende je Aktie allein sagt aber nichts über die Rendite – dafür ist auch der Aktienkurs relevant (→ Dividendenrendite).
- Langfristig steigende Dividenden sind oft ein sehr gutes Merkmal (z. B. Dividenden-Aristokraten).
📘 Dividendenrendite
📈 Was ist das?
Die Dividendenrendite zeigt, wie hoch die Dividende eines Unternehmens im Verhältnis zum Aktienkurs ist.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Sie hilft dabei, Dividendenaktien vergleichbar zu machen – unabhängig vom absoluten Auszahlungsbetrag.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Eine stabile Dividendenrendite kann auf verlässliche Ausschüttungen hinweisen.
- Ein Vergleich der 1J- und 5J-Rendite hilft zu erkennen, ob das Dividendenwachstum mit dem Kurswachstum Schritt hält.
- Eine niedrige Rendite ist nicht zwingend negativ – sie kann auf starkes Kurswachstum hindeuten.
📘 Dividendenwachstum
📈 Was ist das?
Das Dividendenwachstum zeigt, wie stark ein Unternehmen seine Dividende je Aktie über die Zeit gesteigert hat.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
5J: durchschnittliche jährliche Wachstumsrate (CAGR)
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Stetig steigende Dividenden gelten als Zeichen für finanzielle Stärke und Aktionärsorientierung – besonders interessant für langfristige Investoren.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Ein stabiles Dividendenwachstum ist ein Zeichen nachhaltiger Ertragskraft.
- Ein hohes Dividendenwachstum kann ein erheblicher Hebel deiner Rendite sein:
- Wenn ein Unternehmen z. B. 1 € Dividende zahlt und diese über 5 Jahre jährlich um 15 % erhöht, bekommst du im 5. Jahr bereits 2 € je Aktie – doppelt so viel wie zu Beginn!
📘 Ausschüttungsquote (Payout)
📈 Was ist das?
Die Ausschüttungsquote zeigt, wie viel Prozent des Unternehmensgewinns (pro Aktie) als Dividende an die Aktionäre ausgeschüttet wird.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Die Quote hilft einzuschätzen, ob eine Dividende auf Dauer tragfähig ist – besonders im Verhältnis zum erzielten Gewinn.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Eine niedrige Ausschüttungsquote bedeutet: Das Unternehmen behält einen größeren Teil des Gewinns für Investitionen – typisch für Wachstumsunternehmen.
- Eine moderate Quote (z. B. 25–50 %) steht oft für ein gesundes Gleichgewicht zwischen Ausschüttung und Zukunftsinvestitionen.
- Hohe Ausschüttungsquoten können attraktiv wirken, sind aber riskanter, wenn die Gewinne schwanken oder sinken.
📘 Dividendensteigerungen in Folge (Erhöhungen)
📈 Was ist das?
Diese Kennzahl zeigt, wie viele Jahre in Folge ein Unternehmen seine Dividende pro Aktie erhöht hat – ohne Kürzung oder Aussetzung.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Ein langer Track Record kontinuierlicher Erhöhungen spricht für Verlässlichkeit, solide Finanzen und aktionärsfreundliche Unternehmenspolitik.
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Ein langer Zeitraum mit Dividendensteigerungen stärkt das Vertrauen – besonders in Krisenzeiten.
- Solche Unternehmen gelten als verlässlich und planbar für Einkommensinvestoren.
- Je länger die Serie, desto stärker das Commitment gegenüber den Aktionären.
📘 Umsatz
📈 Was ist das?
Der Umsatz zeigt, wie viel ein Unternehmen insgesamt mit seinen Produkten und Dienstleistungen verdient – also den Bruttoerlös vor Abzug von Kosten.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Der Umsatz ist eine der zentralen Kennzahlen zur Einschätzung der Unternehmensgröße, Marktstellung und Wachstumskraft.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Ein wachsender Umsatz zeigt eine steigende Nachfrage und kann ein guter Frühindikator für Gewinnsteigerungen sein.
- Vergleiche von aktuellem und erwartetem Umsatz geben Hinweise auf das Marktumfeld und Analystenerwartungen.
- Wichtig: Starker Umsatz allein genügt nicht – auch Margen und Profitabilität zählen.
📘 EBITDA
📈 Was ist das?
EBITDA steht für „Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation and Amortization“ – also Gewinn vor Zinsen, Steuern und Abschreibungen. Es zeigt das operative Ergebnis eines Unternehmens, bereinigt um bilanztechnische und finanzierungsbedingte Effekte.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
EBITDA ist eine verbreitete Kennzahl zur Beurteilung der operativen Leistungsfähigkeit – insbesondere bei kapitalintensiven Unternehmen oder im internationalen Vergleich.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Ein hohes oder wachsendes EBITDA spricht für starke operative Erträge – unabhängig von Bilanzierung oder Steuerlast.
- EBITDA ist besonders nützlich, um Unternehmen branchenübergreifend zu vergleichen.
- Wichtig: EBITDA ist keine offizielle Gewinnkennzahl – Abschreibungen und Finanzierungskosten werden ausgeklammert.
📘 EBIT
📈 Was ist das?
EBIT steht für „Earnings Before Interest and Taxes“ – also Gewinn vor Zinsen und Steuern. Es zeigt das operative Ergebnis eines Unternehmens nach Abschreibungen, aber vor Finanzierungs- und Steueraufwand.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
EBIT ist eine zentrale Kennzahl zur Beurteilung der Profitabilität aus dem Kerngeschäft – unabhängig von Kapitalstruktur oder Steuersystem.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Ein hohes EBIT deutet auf ein profitables Kerngeschäft hin – vor Zinslasten oder steuerlichen Effekten.
- Es erlaubt objektivere Vergleiche zwischen Unternehmen mit unterschiedlicher Finanzierung.
- Im Vergleich mit EBITDA zeigt EBIT bereits den Einfluss von Abschreibungen auf das operative Ergebnis.
📘 Nettogewinn
📈 Was ist das?
Der Nettogewinn ist der verbleibende Jahresüberschuss (oder -fehlbetrag) eines Unternehmens – nach Abzug aller Kosten, Steuern, Zinsen und Abschreibungen
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Der Nettogewinn ist die zentrale Erfolgskennzahl – er zeigt, wie profitabel ein Unternehmen nach allen Kosten tatsächlich arbeitet.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Ein steigender Nettogewinn zeigt, dass das Unternehmen effizient wirtschaftet – trotz aller Kosten.
- Die Entwicklung des Gewinns beeinflusst z. B. direkt das KGV und weitere Kennzahlen.
- Im Zeitverlauf lässt sich ablesen, wie stabil und profitabel ein Geschäftsmodell wirklich ist.
📘 Free Cashflow (FCF)
📈 Was ist das?
Der Free Cashflow gibt Aufschluss über die echte finanzielle Stärke eines Unternehmens – unabhängig von Bilanzierungsregeln. Er zeigt, wie viel Spielraum für Dividenden, Aktienrückkäufe oder Schuldenabbau besteht.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
FCF reflects a company’s real financial strength – regardless of accounting profits. It shows how much flexibility a company has for dividends, share buybacks, or debt reduction.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Ein hoher Free Cashflow bedeutet, dass ein Unternehmen echte Finanzkraft besitzt – unabhängig vom bilanzierten Gewinn.
- Er ist oft die solideste Grundlage für nachhaltige Dividenden und Aktienrückkäufe.
- Sinkender FCF kann ein Warnsignal sein – auch wenn der Gewinn stabil aussieht.
📘 Umsatzwachstum
📈 Was ist das?
Das Umsatzwachstum zeigt, wie stark sich die Erlöse eines Unternehmens im Vergleich zum Vorjahr verändert haben – tatsächlich (TTM) und auf Prognosebasis (erwartet).
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
Erwartet = (Umsatz erwartet ÷ Umsatz Vorjahr − 1) × 100
Erwartetes Wachstum basiert auf Analystenschätzungen für das laufende Geschäftsjahr.
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Ein wachsender Umsatz ist ein zentrales Signal für steigende Nachfrage, Geschäftsausweitung und Marktanteilsgewinne – besonders bei Wachstumsunternehmen.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Wachstum ist der Motor langfristiger Wertsteigerung – besonders bei Technologie- und Wachstumsaktien.
- Wichtig ist nicht nur das aktuelle Wachstum, sondern auch dessen Nachhaltigkeit.
- Prognosen zeigen, ob Analysten weiteres Potenzial erwarten – oder eine Verlangsamung.
📘 EBITDA-Wachstum
📈 Was ist das?
Das EBITDA-Wachstum zeigt, wie stark das operative Ergebnis eines Unternehmens vor Zinsen, Steuern und Abschreibungen im Vergleich zum Vorjahr gestiegen oder gesunken ist.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
Erwartet = (erwartetes EBITDA ÷ EBITDA Vorjahr − 1) × 100
Erwartetes Wachstum basiert auf Analystenschätzungen für das laufende Geschäftsjahr.
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Ein steigendes EBITDA ist ein Zeichen für verbesserte operative Ertragskraft – unabhängig von Finanzierungsstruktur oder Abschreibungen.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Starkes EBITDA-Wachstum signalisiert operative Effizienz und Skalierung – besonders relevant in Wachstumsphasen.
- EBITDA-Wachstum ist ein Frühindikator für Margen- und Gewinnentwicklung – sollte aber stets im Zusammenhang mit Umsatz und EBIT betrachtet werden.
📘 EBIT Wachstum
📈 Was ist das?
Das EBIT-Wachstum zeigt, wie stark das operative Ergebnis eines Unternehmens (nach Abschreibungen, aber vor Zinsen und Steuern) im Vergleich zum Vorjahr gewachsen ist.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
Erwartet = (erwartetes EBIT ÷ EBIT Vorjahr − 1) × 100
Erwartetes Wachstum basiert auf Analystenschätzungen für das laufende Geschäftsjahr.
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Das EBIT-Wachstum ist ein direkter Indikator für die wirtschaftliche Entwicklung des operativen Geschäfts – unter Berücksichtigung der Kapitalintensität (Abschreibungen).
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Steigendes EBIT signalisiert wachsende operative Rentabilität – auch unter Berücksichtigung von Abschreibungen.
- Das EBIT-Wachstum ist ein wichtiges Maß zur Beurteilung von Geschäftsmodellen mit hohen Investitionskosten.
- Im Zusammenspiel mit Umsatz- und EBITDA-Wachstum ergibt sich ein umfassendes Bild zur operativen Entwicklung.
📘 Nettogewinn-Wachstum
📈 Was ist das?
Das Nettogewinn-Wachstum zeigt, wie stark der Jahresüberschuss eines Unternehmens gegenüber dem Vorjahr gestiegen oder gesunken ist – sowohl tatsächlich (TTM) als auch auf Basis von Prognosen (erwartet).
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
Erwartet = (erwarteter Nettogewinn ÷ Nettogewinn Vorjahr − 1) × 100
Der erwartete Wert basiert auf Analystenschätzungen für das laufende Geschäftsjahr.
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Der Gewinn ist die entscheidende Ergebnisgröße für ein Unternehmen. Ein wachsender Nettogewinn deutet auf steigende Effizienz, stabile Kostenkontrolle und nachhaltige Ertragskraft hin.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Wachsender Nettogewinn stärkt die Bewertung, Dividendenfähigkeit und Kursfantasie.
- Stagnierender oder rückläufiger Gewinn trotz Umsatzwachstum kann auf Margendruck hinweisen.
📘 Free Cashflow-Wachstum
📈 Was ist das?
Das Free-Cashflow-Wachstum zeigt, wie sich der freie Mittelzufluss eines Unternehmens im Vergleich zum Vorjahr verändert hat – also der Betrag, der nach allen operativen Ausgaben und Investitionen übrig bleibt.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Free Cashflow ist der echte, verfügbare Geldzufluss. Wachstum in diesem Bereich ist ein Zeichen für finanzielle Stärke und steigende Flexibilität bei Dividenden, Rückkäufen oder Investitionen.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Sinkender Free Cashflow kann auf steigende Investitionen, höhere Kosten oder stagnierende operative Erträge hindeuten.
- Besonders bei Dividendenwerten ist das FCF-Wachstum wichtig – denn Dividenden werden letztlich aus dem verfügbaren Cash gezahlt.
- Ein negativer Trend sollte genauer analysiert werden – er ist nicht zwangsläufig schlecht, aber potenziell ein Warnsignal.
📘 Bruttomarge
📈 Was ist das?
Die Bruttomarge zeigt, wie viel vom Umsatz nach Abzug der direkten Herstellungskosten (Material, Produktion) als Bruttogewinn übrig bleibt – also der „Rohgewinn“ eines Unternehmens.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
Auch: Bruttomarge = Bruttogewinn ÷ Umsatz × 100
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Die Bruttomarge gibt Aufschluss über die Profitabilität eines Produkts oder Geschäftsmodells vor Fixkosten, Steuern und Zinsen. Sie zeigt, wie effizient ein Unternehmen produzieren oder einkaufen kann.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Eine hohe Bruttomarge deutet auf starke Preissetzungsmacht und effiziente Herstellung hin.
- Sinkende Bruttomargen können auf Kostensteigerungen oder Preisdruck hindeuten.
- Besonders im Vergleich zu Wettbewerbern liefert die Bruttomarge wertvolle Einblicke in die Geschäftsqualität.
📘 EBITDA-Marge
📈 Was ist das?
Die EBITDA-Marge zeigt, wie viel vom Umsatz als operativer Gewinn vor Zinsen, Steuern und Abschreibungen (EBITDA) übrig bleibt. Sie misst die operative Effizienz – ohne Verzerrungen durch Finanzierung oder Buchwerte.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Die EBITDA-Marge hilft zu verstehen, wie viel operativer Gewinn ein Unternehmen aus jedem Euro Umsatz erzielt – unabhängig von Kapitalstruktur oder steuerlichem Umfeld.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Eine hohe EBITDA-Marge zeigt starke operative Ertragskraft – unabhängig von Bilanzierungseffekten.
- Die Marge ermöglicht gute Vergleiche zwischen Unternehmen und Branchen.
- Ein stabiler oder wachsender Wert kann auf effiziente Kostenkontrolle und Skalierbarkeit hindeuten.
📘 EBIT-Marge
📈 Was ist das?
Die EBIT-Marge zeigt, wie viel Prozent des Umsatzes als operativer Gewinn nach Abschreibungen, aber vor Zinsen und Steuern übrig bleiben.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Die EBIT-Marge misst die operative Ertragskraft eines Unternehmens unter Berücksichtigung der Kapitalintensität (z. B. Maschinen, Anlagen). Sie eignet sich gut zum Vergleich von Geschäftsmodellen mit unterschiedlich hohen Abschreibungen.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Eine hohe EBIT-Marge zeigt, dass ein Unternehmen auch nach Abschreibungen effizient arbeitet.
- Sie ist besonders relevant in kapitalintensiven Branchen.
- Langfristig stabile oder steigende Margen sind ein Zeichen wirtschaftlicher Stärke und Preissetzungsmacht.
📘 Nettomarge
📈 Was ist das?
Die Nettomarge zeigt, wie viel vom Umsatz am Ende als „Reingewinn“ übrig bleibt – also nach Abzug aller Kosten, Zinsen, Steuern und Abschreibungen.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Die Nettomarge gibt an, wie effizient ein Unternehmen über alle Stufen hinweg wirtschaftet. Sie zeigt, wie viel Gewinn tatsächlich je Euro Umsatz übrig bleibt.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Eine hohe Nettomarge zeigt, dass ein Unternehmen nicht nur operativ stark ist, sondern auch seine Finanzierung und Steuerbelastung im Griff hat.
- Vergleiche mit Wettbewerbern geben Einblicke in die wirtschaftliche Qualität.
- Sinkende Nettomargen trotz Umsatzwachstum können ein Warnsignal sein – etwa für steigende Kosten oder sinkende Effizienz.
📘 Free Cashflow Marge
📈 Was ist das?
Die Free-Cashflow-Marge zeigt, wie viel vom Umsatz nach Abzug aller operativen Ausgaben und Investitionen tatsächlich als freier Mittelzufluss übrig bleibt.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Diese Marge misst die echte Liquidität, die ein Unternehmen erwirtschaftet – unabhängig von Bilanzierungsregeln oder Abschreibungen. Sie ist besonders relevant für Dividenden, Rückkäufe und Investitionen.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Eine hohe Free-Cashflow-Marge zeigt, dass ein Unternehmen nachhaltig liquide Mittel erwirtschaftet.
- Sie ist ein starkes Signal für finanzielle Stabilität und Ausschüttungspotenzial.
- Wichtig ist der langfristige Trend – sinkende Werte können auf steigende Investitionen oder rückläufige operative Effizienz hindeuten.
📘 Eigenkapitalquote
📈 Was ist das?
Die Eigenkapitalquote zeigt, wie hoch der Anteil des Eigenkapitals an der Bilanzsumme eines Unternehmens ist – also wie stark es sich aus eigenen Mitteln finanziert.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Eine hohe Eigenkapitalquote steht für finanzielle Stabilität, Krisenfestigkeit und gute Bonität. Sie ist besonders relevant bei der Beurteilung der Verschuldung.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Eine hohe Eigenkapitalquote signalisiert finanzielle Stabilität – besonders in Krisenzeiten.
- Ein niedriger Wert kann auf ein höheres Risiko oder eine aggressive Verschuldung hinweisen.
- Wichtig: Die Eigenkapitalquote sollte immer gemeinsam mit der Eigenkapitalrendite betrachtet werden. Nur so lässt sich beurteilen, ob ein Unternehmen nicht nur solide, sondern auch effizient wirtschaftet.
📘 Eigenkapitalrendite (ROE)
📈 Was ist das?
Die Eigenkapitalrendite zeigt, wie effizient ein Unternehmen mit dem Kapital seiner Aktionäre arbeitet – also wie viel Gewinn es pro Euro Eigenkapital erwirtschaftet.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Die Eigenkapitalrendite ist eine zentrale Rentabilitätskennzahl. Sie hilft Anlegern zu erkennen, ob das Unternehmen eine attraktive Verzinsung auf das eingesetzte Eigenkapital erwirtschaftet.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Eine hohe Eigenkapitalrendite spricht für ein starkes, effizientes Geschäftsmodell.
- Besonders interessant ist sie bei kapitalintensiven Firmen oder solchen mit hoher Eigenkapitalquote.
- Wichtig: Ein sehr hoher ROE kann auch auf hohe Schulden hinweisen – daher sollte sie immer im Kontext mit der Eigenkapitalquote betrachtet werden.
📘 Return on Capital Employed (ROCE)
📈 Was ist das?
ROCE misst die Gesamtrentabilität eines Unternehmens – also wie effizient es das eingesetzte Kapital (Eigen- und Fremdkapital) zur Gewinnerzielung nutzt.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
Das eingesetzte Kapital ist das gesamte betriebsnotwendige Kapital, unabhängig von der Finanzierungsquelle.
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
ROCE eignet sich besonders gut für den Vergleich unterschiedlich finanzierter Unternehmen. Es zeigt, wie effektiv ein Unternehmen Kapital investiert – unabhängig von der Kapitalstruktur.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Ein hoher ROCE zeigt, dass ein Unternehmen sein Kapital effizient einsetzt – unabhängig davon, ob es durch Eigen- oder Fremdkapital finanziert ist.
- Je höher der ROCE im Vergleich zu ähnlichen Unternehmen, desto mehr Wert schafft das Unternehmen mit seinem investierten Kapital.
- Besonders wichtig ist der ROCE bei Firmen mit hohen Investitionen – z. B. in Industrie, Energie oder Infrastruktur.
📘 Return on Invested Capital (ROIC)
📈 Was ist das?
ROIC zeigt, wie effizient ein Unternehmen das Kapital investiert, das langfristig im operativen Geschäft gebunden ist – unabhängig davon, ob es aus Eigen- oder Fremdkapital stammt.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
- NOPAT = „Net Operating Profit After Taxes“
- Investiertes Kapital = operatives Vermögen abzüglich nicht-verzinster Schulden
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
ROIC ist eine der präzisesten Kennzahlen zur Bewertung der Kapitalrendite – besonders im Vergleich zur Eigenkapitalrendite, weil es Verzerrungen durch Schulden vermeidet. Er zeigt, ob ein Unternehmen Mehrwert für alle Kapitalgeber schafft.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Ein hoher ROIC zeigt, wie gut ein Unternehmen mit dem tatsächlich investierten (betriebsnotwendigen) Kapital wirtschaftet.
- Im Unterschied zu ROCE wird nur Kapital betrachtet, das wirklich zur Finanzierung operativer Aktivitäten dient – und verzinst werden muss.
- Besonders hilfreich, um die Kapitalrendite von Unternehmen mit viel „überschüssigem“ Kapital oder zinsfreien Verbindlichkeiten realistisch zu vergleichen.
📘 Verschuldungsgrad (Leverage Ratio)
📈 Was ist das?
Der Verschuldungsgrad zeigt, wie stark ein Unternehmen durch verzinsliche Schulden (z. B. Kredite und Anleihen) im Verhältnis zum Eigenkapital finanziert ist.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Die Kennzahl hilft, das finanzielle Risiko und die Abhängigkeit von Fremdkapital zu beurteilen. Ein hoher Verschuldungsgrad kann die Eigenkapitalrendite steigern – birgt aber auch erhöhte Risiken bei Zinsanstiegen oder Liquiditätsengpässen.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Ein niedriger Verschuldungsgrad steht für finanzielle Stabilität und Unabhängigkeit.
- Ein hoher Wert kann auf erhöhte Risiken hinweisen – insbesondere bei schwankenden Zinsen oder konjunkturellen Schwächen.
- Wichtig: Immer im Kontext zur Branche und Kapitalintensität bewerten.
📘 Ergebnis je Aktie (EPS)
📈 Was ist das?
Das Ergebnis je Aktie (EPS) zeigt, wie viel Gewinn auf eine einzelne Aktie entfällt – und ist eine der wichtigsten Kennzahlen zur Bewertung von Unternehmen.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
Die verwässerte Aktienanzahl berücksichtigt auch potenzielle neue Aktien, etwa durch Optionen, Wandelanleihen oder andere Umtauschrechte.
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
EPS bildet die Basis für viele Bewertungskennzahlen wie KGV, PEG oder Payout Ratio. Es macht den Gewinn für Aktionäre vergleichbar – unabhängig von der Unternehmensgröße.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- EPS hilft, die Profitabilität pro Aktie zu erfassen – und ist besonders wichtig im Zeitvergleich oder im Vergleich mit Analystenschätzungen.
- Steigendes EPS kann ein Zeichen für stabiles Wachstum oder Aktienrückkäufe sein.
- Wichtig: Verwende verwässertes EPS für realistische Bewertungen – besonders bei stark aktienbasierten Vergütungssystemen.
📘 Free Cashflow je Aktie (FCF je Aktie)
📈 Was ist das?
Der Free Cashflow je Aktie zeigt, wie viel freier Mittelzufluss einem Unternehmen pro Aktie zur Verfügung steht – nach Investitionen, aber vor Dividenden oder Schuldentilgung.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Der FCF je Aktie zeigt, wie viel liquide Mittel pro Aktie tatsächlich im Unternehmen verbleiben – wichtig für Dividenden, Aktienrückkäufe oder Schuldentilgung. Im Gegensatz zum Gewinn ist er schwerer manipulierbar und daher besonders aussagekräftig.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Ein hoher Free Cashflow je Aktie ist ein Zeichen für hohe finanzielle Flexibilität.
- Er zeigt, wie viel Kapital ein Unternehmen effektiv einsetzen oder ausschütten kann.
- Besonders relevant für dividendenstarke Unternehmen oder solche mit starker Kapitalrendite.
📘 Short Interest
📈 Was ist das?
Short Interest zeigt, wie viele Aktien eines Unternehmens aktuell leerverkauft wurden – also von Investoren geliehen und verkauft, in der Erwartung fallender Kurse.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
Der Wert zeigt den Anteil der Aktien, der aktuell auf fallende Kurse spekuliert wird.
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Short Interest dient als Stimmungsindikator: Ein hoher Wert deutet auf Skepsis oder negative Erwartungen gegenüber dem Unternehmen hin – kann aber auch zu einem „Short Squeeze“ führen, wenn der Kurs plötzlich steigt.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Ein niedriger Short Interest deutet auf Vertrauen in das Unternehmen hin.
- Ein hoher Wert kann ein Warnsignal sein – oder eine Chance, wenn sich die Stimmung dreht.
- Besonders spannend in volatilen Märkten oder vor wichtigen Quartalszahlen.
📘 Employees
📈 Was ist das?
Die Mitarbeiteranzahl zeigt, wie viele Personen ein Unternehmen weltweit beschäftigt – ein Indikator für Größe, Struktur und Geschäftsmodell.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Sie hilft bei der Einschätzung von Skaleneffekten, Effizienz und Personalkosten. Zusammen mit Umsatz und Gewinn lassen sich Kennzahlen wie Produktivität je Mitarbeiter ableiten.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Viele Mitarbeiter bedeuten große operative Komplexität – aber auch hohes Umsatzpotenzial.
- Produktivität je Mitarbeiter ist ein wichtiger Indikator für Effizienz.
- Besonders spannend bei stark wachsenden Tech- oder Industrieunternehmen.
📘 Umsatz je Mitarbeiter
📈 Was ist das?
Der Umsatz je Mitarbeiter zeigt, wie viel Erlös ein Unternehmen durchschnittlich pro Beschäftigtem erwirtschaftet – eine Kennzahl für Effizienz und Produktivität.
🧮 Wie wird es berechnet?
Die Mitarbeiterzahl stammt in der Regel aus dem letzten verfügbaren Jahresbericht.
🏛️ Wofür ist es wichtig?
Diese Kennzahl hilft, Geschäftsmodelle zu vergleichen – insbesondere zwischen arbeitsintensiven und technologiegetriebenen Unternehmen. Ein hoher Wert deutet auf Automatisierung, Effizienz oder hohen Wertschöpfungsanteil hin.
🧮 Berechnung
🎯 Was bedeutet das für Anleger?
- Ein hoher Umsatz je Mitarbeiter spricht für ein skalierbares und margenstarkes Geschäftsmodell.
- Ein niedriger Wert kann auf arbeitsintensive Prozesse oder geringere Wertschöpfung hinweisen.
- Besonders hilfreich beim Vergleich von Tech- vs. Industrieunternehmen.
Blackstone Mortgage Trust, Inc. Class A Aktie Analyse
Analystenmeinungen
15 Analysten haben eine Blackstone Mortgage Trust, Inc. Class A Prognose abgegeben:
Analystenmeinungen
15 Analysten haben eine Blackstone Mortgage Trust, Inc. Class A Prognose abgegeben:
Beta Blackstone Mortgage Trust, Inc. Class A Events
🇩🇪 Neu: Alle Transkripte jetzt auch auf Deutsch verfügbar!
Abonniere Premium, um Transkripte und KI-Zusammenfassungen auf Deutsch zu lesen.
Vergangene Events
|
APR
29
Q1 2026 Earnings Call
vor etwa 2 Monaten
|
|
FEB
11
Q4 2025 Earnings Call
vor 4 Monaten
|
|
OKT
29
Q3 2025 Earnings Call
vor 8 Monaten
|
aktien.guide Basis
Blackstone Mortgage Trust, Inc. Class A — Q1 2026 Earnings Call
1. Management Discussion
Good day, and welcome to the Blackstone Mortgage Trust First Quarter 2026 Investor Call. Today's conference is being recorded. [Operator Instructions].
At this time, I'd like to turn the conference over to Tim Hayes, Vice President, Shareholder Relations. Please go ahead.
Good morning, and welcome, everyone, to Blackstone Mortgage Trust's First Quarter 2026 Earnings Conference Call. I'm joined today by Tim Johnson, Chief Executive Officer; Austin Pena, President; and Marcin Urbaszek, Chief Financial Officer.
This morning, we filed our 10-Q and issued a press release with the presentation of our results, which are available on our website and have been filed with the SEC. I'd like to remind everyone that today's call may include forward-looking statements, which are subject to risks, uncertainties and other factors outside of the company's control. Actual results may differ materially.
For a discussion of some of the risks that could affect results, please see the Risk Factors section of our most recent 10-K. We do not undertake any duty to update forward-looking statements. We will also refer to certain non-GAAP measures on this call. And for reconciliations, you should refer to the press release and 10-Q. This audiocast is copyrighted material of Blackstone Mortgage Trust and may not be duplicated without our consent.
For the first quarter, we reported a GAAP net loss of $0.04 per share, while distributable earnings were $0.21 per share and distributable earnings prior to realized gains and losses were $0.49 per share. A few weeks ago, we paid a dividend of $0.47 per share with respect to the first quarter. With that, I'll now turn the call over to Tim.
Thanks, Tim. BXMT's first quarter results clearly demonstrate the breadth of our platform and our ability to execute on both sides of the balance sheet amidst an ongoing real estate recovery. Our key competitive advantages drove distributable earnings prior to realized gains and losses of $0.49 per share, marking our third consecutive quarter of dividend coverage. We leveraged our scale and proprietary sourcing channels to capture attractive investments across a range of sectors, markets and strategies, with a focus on several of our highest conviction themes such as diversified industrial portfolios and essential use net lease properties.
We also closed our first data center loan this quarter and invested in a diversified portfolio of low leverage loans originated by a leading U.K. bank, investments offering compelling relative value, which Austin will detail further in his remarks.
Real estate fundamentals continue to recover, benefiting from steadily increasing values and the sharp decline in new supply across all major property types. The public equity markets recognize this, with REITs significantly outperforming the S&P 500 year-to-date. And despite recent global volatility driven by the conflict in the Middle East, real estate equity and debt markets have remained resilient. U.S. CMBS issuance is up nearly 15% from this time last year and on pace for yet another post-GFC record and spreads hit 15 basis points tighter compared to the beginning of the year.
In Europe, we've observed a slightly larger impact with a slowdown in CMBS new issue activity and spreads modestly wider. However, real estate lending markets in the region remain open and active. Just a few weeks ago, we were fully repaid on a GBP 177 million U.K. student housing loan that was refinanced by a bank syndicate and we are aware of several other large recently awarded deals in the market. Importantly, we've observed no change in the fundamental performance across our U.K. and Europe portfolio.
Today, BXMT is in an advantageous position. We have a well-invested portfolio generating strong in-place current income, allowing us to maximize return on new capital deployment. Leveraging our scaled platform of over 170 real estate debt professionals, we cast a wide net across the global real estate credit markets, both in terms of sourcing new opportunities and also driving strong capital markets execution, setting up diversified investments to generate highly compelling risk-adjusted returns.
To that end, our investments this quarter generated levered returns of 900 basis points over base rates, in line with our investment activity over the past year. We also accretively refinanced $700 million of corporate debt issued $1.3 billion of securitized debt and added a new non-mark-to-market credit facility to our 16 counterparty complex, all further demonstrating the strength and creativity of our dedicated capital markets team.
Moving to the portfolio. We continue to be pleased with performance. We received over $600 million of repayments with more than half in U.S. office. We resolved on impaired hospitality loan via foreclosure and we executed on the sale of a multifamily property, the first from our owned real estate portfolio to be capitalized on the supportive capital markets backdrop.
While there is more work to do, including the eventual disposition of the remainder of our owned real estate portfolio, the trend in our business is now crystal clear. Resolutions and redeployment are driving earnings that cover our dividend and offer investors an attractive current yield of approximately 9.5%. These initiatives are supported by a compelling real estate credit backdrop with loans secured by hard assets property value is still early in their recovery and spreads still wide relative to other credit alternatives. With this setup, BXMT continues to be exceptionally well positioned with unique insights from our Blackstone real estate platform guiding our strategy and delivering strong results for our investors.
I'll now turn it over to Austin to discuss our investments and portfolio in more detail.
Thanks, Tim. Our investment portfolio ended the quarter at just under $20 billion, consistent with year-end as the funding of new investments largely offset repayments collected in the quarter. Our loan portfolio comprises approximately 87% of our investments with our fixed rate and longer duration strategies like net lease and bank loan portfolios, representing 6% and our owned real estate accounting for the remainder. The broad capabilities of our platform were on full display in the first quarter as we closed $540 million of new investments across various geographies and strategies.
Q1 investments included $275 million of loan originations with a weighted average LTV of 68%. The GBP 50 million investment in the U.K. bank loan portfolio that Tim mentioned earlier, and $197 million of net lease acquisitions at BXMT share, our most active quarter in net lease to date. Our loan originations were largely concentrated in residential and industrial, sectors with strong underlying fundamentals, where we continue to orient our investment strategy. Of note, we financed several of our Q1 originations through the syndication market on a nonrecourse non-mark-to-market basis, reflecting the sold positions, which are not included on our balance sheet, gross loan originations were over $800 million in the quarter. And our forward pipeline remains strong with over $1 billion closed during closing so far in the second quarter.
As Tim mentioned, we closed our first data center loan in BXMT, financing a stabilized asset in Northern Virginia. 100% leased to an investment-grade hyperscale tenant and owned by an experienced sponsor. Leveraging our scale and capital markets capabilities, we originated a fixed rate whole loan and syndicated the senior mortgage, generating a mezzanine loan with a 14% all-in yield and 4.5 years of call protection. With $150 billion of data center assets owned and under development, Blackstone is the largest financial investor in data centers globally. As a result, BXMT sits in an extraordinary position to identify and underwrite investments in this space.
With the AI megatrend driving unprecedented demand for compute and supporting critical infrastructure, we see more opportunities in this sector on the horizon. We also made a GBP 50 million investment in a portfolio of granular high cash flowing U.K. bank loans. The loans are backed by over 3,000 properties, primarily in the residential and industrial sectors with a weighted average LTV below 50%.
Like the portfolios we acquired from U.S. banks last year, this investment adds diversification and duration with an underwritten term of over 5 years. The investment was sourced leveraging Blackstone's strong relationship with the bank, yet another example of our access to differentiated investments across the world.
Our loan portfolio ended the quarter at $16.4 billion across 130 loans with more than 50% in multifamily and industrial and was 98% performing. We upgraded 4 loans this quarter. Additionally, post quarter end, the largest loan in our watch list, our Spanish residential NPL loan was modified, significantly enhancing our credit position. The modification includes a spread reduction and maturity extension in exchange for meaningful additional commitment and credit support from the borrower.
As a reminder, this loan has repaid by more than EUR 550 million since origination, including another EUR 20 million last quarter as the borrower sells the underlying collateral. The loan remains performing, paying interest current, and we expect it to continue to pay down over time.
We also added 2 office loans to our watch list and impaired 2 loans this quarter, booking modest additional reserves. Both were previously on our watch list. One was our only studio loan, a sector that has faced significant headwinds. Of note, this loan represents less than 1% of our portfolio and is secured by a 25-acre campus centrally located in Los Angeles, across the street from one of the most productive retail assets in the country, providing significant optionality and redevelopment potential.
The other loan is secured by a portfolio of 1980s vintage multifamily properties located in Dallas originated in 2022. Older vintage properties in Sunbelt markets like this, have been impacted by a combination of elevated new supply and weaker demand, a different profile than the vast majority of our multifamily portfolio, which continues to attract strong demand and demonstrate steady performance.
Across our 46 multifamily loans, we have just 6 with a similar profile, just 2% of our portfolio. One is on our watch list and the rest are all Risk Rated 3 and carry in-place debt yields north of 6%. We continue to make good progress on our own real estate as we leverage our platform to maximize values over time. As we've said in the past, we are not a forced seller. With our strong balance sheet, liquidity and earnings supporting our dividend, we can be patient. We make hold versus sell decisions like we do across our real estate business, using our data, insights and asset class expertise to underwrite go-forward returns compared to where we can reinvest.
This quarter, we saw several positive developments. We sold 1 multifamily asset in Texas in line with our carrying value. We hit a key milestone on our Mountain View office asset, where we received local approvals to redevelop the site into for-sale residential, bringing us one step closer to unlocking significant value potential. And our fully renovated Hyatt Hotel in San Francisco continued to see improving performance as Q1 EBITDA more than doubled year-over-year.
Finally, turning to net lease. Our portfolio continues to scale, reaching $516 million at share at quarter end, up from $66 million this time last year and with another $120 million in closing. Our dedicated team has assembled a high-quality portfolio, acquiring 260 assets at an average price of $2 million at a discount to replacement cost. The portfolio generates 3x rent coverage with 2% annual rent escalators and lease terms extending over 15 years on average. We believe our net lease strategy continues to provide compelling relative value in today's investment environment, naturally complementing our floating rate lending strategy with long duration, contractually increasing cash flow driving strong current returns.
Overall, BXMT continues to demonstrate positive momentum, capturing diversified investments to drive strong earnings power and dividend coverage, underpinned by an investment strategy designed to deliver strong long-term performance for our investors.
And with that, I will pass it over to Marcin to unpack our financial results.
Thank you, Austin, and good morning, everyone. In the first quarter, BXMT reported GAAP net loss of $0.04 per share and distributable earnings or DE of $0.21 per share. DE included $46 million of realized losses related to the resolution of an impaired San Francisco hotel loan. We foreclosed on the property and now hold it on the balance sheet as owned real estate with our basis representing an approximate 70% discount relative to the prior owner's cost basis.
DE prior to realized gains and losses was $0.49 per share, covering our dividend for the third consecutive quarter. The $0.02 decline in this metric from the prior quarter was largely due to lower net operating income from owned real estate, reflecting the outsized seasonal benefit from hospitality properties recognized in the fourth quarter results which we discussed on our last earnings call. It is worth noting that we slightly amended our DE prior charge-offs metrics this quarter to DE prior to realized gains and losses. This amendment reflects the evolving composition of our portfolio, though the spirit of the metric remains unchanged, which is to provide investors with a measure that we believe represents the ongoing earnings power of our business.
Our owned real estate portfolio generated $14 million of NOI this quarter and included a $3 million tax refund on one of our properties. Excluding this benefit, this represents an annualized asset yield on carrying value of approximately 3.5%, which we estimate is 250 to 300 basis points below yields we are achieving on new originations today. While some asset sales will take longer than others, rotating this capital provides further support to BXMT's earnings power over time.
Book value ended the first quarter at $20.20 per share down modestly by 2.7% from the prior period, primarily due to a $0.33 per share increase in CECL reserves and $0.13 per share of depreciation and amortization or D&A related to our owned real estate assets. In total, book value includes $0.57 per share of accumulated D&A and $1.80 per share of total CECL reserves of which $1.30 per share is attributable to the general reserve.
Turning to BXMT's capitalization. Our balance sheet remains in excellent shape. We ended the quarter with $1 billion of liquidity. Our Q1 debt-to-equity ratio decreased to 3.7x from 3.9x in Q4 and remains squarely within our target range. We were very active in the capital markets this quarter, taking advantage of robust liquidity and investor demand. We started by repricing approximately $700 million of our corporate term loan in early January, reducing our financing spread by 50 basis points. As a result of our proactive approach over the past few quarters, we ended Q1 with 4 years of weighted average remaining term on our corporate debt with no maturities until 2027.
Later in January, we issued our second reinvesting CLO, a $1 billion transaction, largely collateralized by new vintage investments. Reflecting this issuance and the addition of the new lending facility Tim mentioned earlier, total nonmark-to-market borrowings now represent about 86% of total debt. and we continue to have no capital markets mark-to-market provisions throughout our capital structure.
In March, we closed our inaugural asset-backed securitization in our net lease joint venture. The transaction was met with exceptional investor demand and was several times oversubscribed driving an accretive execution and resulting in highly compelling structure and terms.
And lastly, as Austin mentioned earlier, we also executed several senior loan syndications with attractive terms, underscoring our broad access to various sources of capital, which we believe is one of our key competitive advantages in the market. The benefits of our leading global real estate platform are driving results on both sides of our balance sheet and help position BXMT to deliver attractive risk-adjusted returns to our investors over time.
Thank you again for joining us today, and I will now ask the operator to open the call to questions.
[Operator Instructions]. We will take our first question from Tom Catherwood with BTIG.
2. Question Answer
Austin, maybe starting with you, I know loan originations can be lumpy quarter-to-quarter. But was Q1 activity impacted primarily by the timing of closings? Or was it just with more activity pushed into the second quarter? Or was there something else driving the relatively slower pace in the first quarter?
Yes. Thanks, Tom. Yes, I think there is always a little bit, as you said, of changes quarter-to-quarter in terms of origination volatility and a bit of seasonality that can impact those quarter-to-quarter numbers. As I mentioned earlier in my prepared remarks, when you look at our investment activity this quarter, there was a good amount of mezzanine loans or loans that we financed through the syndication market, which is not included in the roughly $0.5 billion that we mentioned in our reporting. And so when you gross up for those syndicated interests, the quarter was a pretty regular quarter in terms of overall lending activity.
And as I also mentioned, we have a very good pipeline, over $1 billion for the second quarter. So I wouldn't read too much into the overall activity this quarter. I think it was a pretty regular quarter in terms of what we typically see and we continue to have a really good opportunity set that we're looking at.
Got it. And very fair point on the syndications, I had not taken that into account. And then maybe turning over to the net lease side of the business, so which has now become a not insignificant part of the portfolio. Kind of 2 questions there, pipeline-wise, you mentioned $125 million in closing. How large -- what's the target that you have internally for that over the near term? And then the second part to it is, this is a competitive sector. It seems like everyone is out chasing net lease deals, be they other alternative asset managers or the REITs. What is it about this platform that's allowed it to do $500 million or I guess that's only your share. So north of probably $700 million of acquisitions in the past year alone.
Yes, thanks. It's a really good question. And as you noted, and as we noted earlier, we had a really active quarter in net lease this quarter, about $200 million of investments at our share and we've assembled what we think is a really great portfolio over the last year or so since we started this business. We do intend to grow this part of our balance sheet and our portfolio to about 3% of the overall portfolio today. And obviously, we look at risk-adjusted returns when we're looking at these investments relative to other things that we can do in terms of allocating our capital, but we would be very happy if this could become at least 10% of our portfolio over time.
In terms of what we see in the marketplace today, as you say, there are a lot of players, but we think we have an excellent team. We have a dedicated team of experienced individuals led by someone who has been in this space for 30 or so years, they are finding, we think, really attractive investments. It is a granular investment profile, as I mentioned, about $2 million per property. So it really takes a lot of experience and relationships to identify investments. And when you look at the portfolio that we've assembled, as I mentioned earlier, over 15 years of duration, 2% rent escalators over 3x coverage. We really like that profile. We think it really complements our floating rate lending business, adding duration, adding an upward sloping set of cash flows that we think really provides a very nice complement to the other side of our business.
We'll take our next question from Rick Shane with JPMorgan.
Look, you have 2 loans on your -- in your top 10 that are maturing this year. New York multiuse in Chicago office. One is rated 3, one is rated 4. Can you just talk a little bit about your strategy on those maturities and what we should expect?
Yes. Thanks, Rick. I can take that. I'd say we take a very active approach across our portfolio. We're obviously in conversations with our borrowers about their plans in terms of capital markets execution, really all the time. We go through every loan, every quarter. In terms of those specific deals without getting into specifics, we have dialogue with our borrowers around what their plans might be and I think we'll take a very proactive approach to the extent that their plans are evolving, we will be quite active on that approach.
Okay. I understand you need to be a little bit circumspect on that -- I get it. Second thing is you work through resolutions within the portfolio, and it sounds like you're going to be pretty aggressive there. What should we think about as the sort of ambient CECL reserve rate, general reserve for new originations, so we can sort of think about over time what the convergence back to general reserves would be.
Rick, it's Marcin. Thanks for joining us. Look, I think our general reserve right now, obviously, there's a lot of factors that go into it. It's somewhere around 100 to 120 basis points. Obviously, that's driven by, like I said, the age of the portfolio, historical loss rates and things like that. So we don't see that changing dramatically. Obviously, as we work through the resolutions and the realized losses become a little bit of a smaller factor over time that might decline. But again, in the near term, we don't see that changing dramatically.
We'll take our next question from Chris Muller with Citizens Capital Markets.
I'm hopping around calls this morning, so I apologize if I missed any of this. But I wanted to ask about the bank loan portfolio acquisitions. I guess what is driving these? Are the banks approaching you guys to reduce their CRE exposure? And do you expect more of this over 2026?
Sure. Thanks, Chris. This is Tim. I'd say it's a bit multi-dimensional. It can depend on the situation, the bank loan portfolio. This quarter was a little bit different in its structure as an SRT structure versus an outright acquisition. So in some cases, it's a capital relief transaction. In some cases, it's driven by M&A activity which we would say is probably the main driver between -- in terms of the portfolio loan sale activity. That's banks in the United States, predominantly going through M&A, a lot of it kind of the fallout from what happened in the regional banking industry in 2023. And that M&A activity tends to accelerate loan sale activity.
So I'd say that's the biggest driver, but it does come from a few different dimensions. And I'd say from a sourcing standpoint, this is one of the main areas we spend our time on, both within our real estate debt business and broadly at the firm is working with financial institutions to help deliver them solutions across not just real estate, but the entirety of their credit portfolio. So it's a very, I'd say, diversified ecosystem of sourcing and really built on the banking relationships we have at the firm over a really long time.
Got it. That's very helpful. And then I guess just a high-level one. The 10-year keeps creeping higher. It's at 4.38% right now. How is that impacting borrower sentiment that you guys are seeing?
Yes, I'd say in terms of borrower sentiment, the good news is that even though the tenure has moved up really as a result of the Mid East conflict and energy prices, the capital markets continue to be very, very active. CMBS issuance this year is up 15% on top of a year last year that was a post-GFC high. So we continue to see borrowers coming to the market. And I think that it might put a little bit of a potential slowdown on sales of real estate. That would be something that you might keep an eye on. But in terms of the credit markets, year-to-date CMBS spreads are actually 15 basis points tighter and so there's good credit availability and good capital availability. So borrowers are able to refinance their debt today and are doing so quite actively.
We'll take our next question from Jade Rahmani with KBW.
Can you give any further color on what drove the $55 million CECL provision perhaps you could parse out how much ballpark related to the studio downgrade and what the outlook is there?
Sure, Jade. It's Marcin. Out of the $55 million, I would say about 20% of that was general -- general reserve and then the rest was on the specific. We don't want to get specific on particular assets. But I think if you look at what was added to the specific pool quarter-over-quarter vis-a-vis the impairments we had. These reserves are obviously a little bit smaller in terms of what we've seen in the past.
Obviously, one of the assets is a multifamily. The other one, like you said, is a studio loan. So again, but I don't want to get into particular loans and specifics, but the reserves this quarter were pretty modest.
Thanks, Marcin. It's Austin here. I would also add, Jade, as we mentioned, obviously, you commented a bit on the nature of the loans in my prepared remarks. I think both of these loans were a little bit idiosyncratic in terms of our portfolio. As I mentioned, it's our only studio loan, the multifamily loan had an older vintage asset in a market that's been a bit more impacted by elevated supply, which is quite different from sort of the rest of the portfolio. So I think that's really what's driving things here. So I just wanted to add that additional commentary.
On the REO portfolio, can you give any updated thoughts as to time line for resolution. Would you expect to resolve 40%, 50% this year? Or should we think about a more extended time line than that?
Yes, thanks, Jade, obviously, that's a moving -- that's something we look at and we're very focused on exiting those REO assets over time. But as I said earlier in my remarks, we are not going to be a fore seller. We're not going to -- we're going to take a patient approach in terms of a long-term goal of maximizing value for investors. As I said earlier, we had a number of positive developments in terms of a few assets that have been making good progress towards getting to that place in terms of our ultimate exit plans. I mentioned the hotel in San Francisco that's seen good performance, positive elements on the Mountain View office asset. That obviously helps with moving towards that goal.
I really wouldn't give a specific time line because I think we're going to be patient, as I said. But obviously, we're focused on exiting that over time because, as Marcin mentioned earlier, we do think that these assets are -- while generating cash flow today, rotating that capital over time will unlock additional earnings power for the business.
We'll take our next question from Harsh Hemnani with Green Street.
I guess, in terms of the SRT transaction, could you provide some details on where the underlying collateral of this loan portfolio is based geography wise?
Yes. Thanks, Harsh. This is Austin. I mentioned a few things in my prepared remarks. As I mentioned, it's a very granular portfolio. It is with a leading U.K. bank. So it's a U.K. focused portfolio, largely diversified across a lot of top markets in that area.
What we really like about all of these bank loan transactions that we've completed, including this one, is the fact that these are low leverage, high cash flowing loans with a lot of diversification. And they're originated by banks and they're priced accordingly and they allow us -- these transactions allow us to invest in real estate credit that is at a lower risk tranche than we would typically see in terms of our direct originations, but still generate really attractive returns. And so if you look at the return that we think we're getting here, we think it represents a very compelling risk-adjusted return and a premium to where similar risk tranches would be available in sort of other credit alternatives.
Got it. That's helpful. And then understanding that you can't touch on any specific deal. But maybe more generally, when you're underwriting stabilized data center assets, is it probably fair to assume that the spread on the whole loan may not be adequate to meet your return hurdles? And if we see more data center deals, it would be more similar to what we've seen this quarter where maybe you're retaining a subordinated position in the loan?
Yes. I would say, obviously, we're very excited and about the first data center loan that we're making. We think the space overall is going to grow. We do see a lot of opportunities and the capital needs across the data center sector, we do think it's going to mean, we're going to see more opportunities over time. I think we're going to be very thoughtful about where the opportunities work for us, both from a credit perspective as well as a return perspective. I think the deal you saw us do this quarter reflects our creativity and how to access that market and generate returns that we believe are really quite compelling and certainly meet our return requirements.
I think as we look forward, because of the capital needs of the space, we think that there's going to be a growing demand for capital from groups like us. To date, a lot of the activity in the market has been done by the bank market or in other forms of the public markets, but the capital needs, we think, are going to mean there's going to be more things that fit our profile.
Got it. That's helpful. Maybe 1 last 1 for me. I might have missed this, but of course, there's about $1 billion that's closed or in closing post quarter end. Could you maybe share how that breaks down between net lease bank loans and internally originated loans?
I would say it's pretty diversified, Harsh. We continue to see good opportunities, as I mentioned, $120 million that's in our net lease pipeline right now, not sure all of that $120 million will close in the second quarter. That's a little bit timing dependent. But we really -- when we look at our pipeline, it's still quite diversified across profile. And look, quarter-to-quarter, the composition of the investments are going to change. I think what our team is really focused on is really finding the best opportunities out there.
We'll take our last question from Don Fandetti with Wells Fargo.
Can you just talk a little bit about what you're seeing in the office market. It looks like you added 2 office loans to the watch list, but also getting repaid as well. So maybe just kind of give us your thoughts.
Yes, I'd say it's relatively consistent with what it's been in prior quarters. As you noted, we had a little bit of movement in our portfolio in terms of risk ratings related to office, but I think relatively small in total. And I'd say that broadly, leasing activity market by market, of course, but broadly, leasing activity is picking up and liquidity in the capital markets, debt capital availability, et cetera, continues to be generally on a positive trend. So I'd say the fundamentals although still quite challenged relative to what they've been historically are improving and the capital markets activity continues to be solid and improving as well.
Thank you. That will conclude our question-and-answer session. At this time, I'd like to turn the call back over to Tim Hayes for any additional or closing remarks.
Yes. Thank you, Katy, and to everyone joining today's call. Please reach out with any questions.
Transkripte auf Deutsch freischalten
- Alle Event Transkripte auf Deutsch
- Sofortige Übersetzung
- KI-Zusammenfassungen für die wichtigsten Insights
Blackstone Mortgage Trust, Inc. Class A — Q1 2026 Earnings Call
Blackstone Mortgage Trust, Inc. Class A — Q1 2026 Earnings Call
Solide Quartalszahlen mit Dividendendeckung, starkem Kapitalmarkt-Zugang und gezieltem Aufbau von Net‑Lease und Data‑Center‑Exposition, bei vereinzelten Kredit-Reserven.
📊 Quartal auf einen Blick
- GAAP-Ergebnis: Verlust $0,04 je Aktie.
- Distributable Earnings: $0,21 je Aktie; vor Realisationen $0,49 je Aktie (dritte Quartal in Folge Dividendendeckung).
- Dividende: $0,47 je Aktie bereits gezahlt; aktueller Renditehinweis ~9,5%.
- Bilanz/Portfolio: Investitionsportfolio ~$20 Mrd.; Kreditportfolio $16,4 Mrd., 98% performant; Liquidität $1 Mrd.; Buchwert $20,20/Aktie (-2,7%).
🎯 Was das Management sagt
- Kapitalallokation: Fokus auf diversifizierte, niedrig‑LTV-Kredite, Net‑Lease und selektive Whole‑Loans (erstes Data‑Center‑Loan abgeschlossen).
- Portfolio‑Rotation: Verkauf/Umwandlung von Owned‑REO zur Stärkung der Ertragskraft; patienter Verkäuferansatz, kein Zwangsverkauf.
- Kapitalmärkte: Aktive Liability‑Management‑Maßnahmen (Repricing, CLO, ABS) und hohe Nachfrage, wodurch Finanzierungskosten gesenkt und Laufzeiten verlängert wurden.
🔭 Ausblick & Guidance
- Pipeline: >$1 Mrd. in oder kurz nach Q1‑Closings; $120–150 Mio. Net‑Lease in Pipeline.
- Earnings‑Erwartung: Management signalisiert Fortsetzung der Dividendendeckung und Ertragserzielung durch Rotations‑ und Neuinvestitionen.
- Risiken: Geopolitische Volatilität, regionale Unterschiede (Europa: CMBS‑Aktivität schwächer) und punktuelle Kreditherausforderungen (watch‑list, CECL‑Reserven).
❓ Fragen der Analysten
- Originations‑Volatilität: Q1 war teils durch Syndizierungen „verkürzt“; Management erwartet normalen Fluss mit größerer Aktivität in Q2.
- Net‑Lease‑Ambition: Ziel, Net‑Lease mittelfristig deutlich zu vergrößern (aktueller interner Zielkorridor ~3% des Portfolios, langfristig Wunschbild ≥10%).
- Reserven & REO: CECL‑Allgemeinreserve ~100–120 Basispunkte; spezifische Zusatzerhöhungen erklärt, Timeline für REO‑Auflösung bleibt flexibel/geduldig.
⚡ Bottom Line
- Implikation: BXMT präsentiert sich als ertragsorientierter Kreditinvestor mit starker Kapitalmarktzugangsposition, dritter Quartalsstreich der Dividendendeckung und klarer Wachstumsagenda (Net‑Lease, Data‑Center, Bank‑Loan‑Portfolios). Aktionäre bekommen attraktive laufende Rendite, müssen aber punktuelle Kreditrisiken (CECL‑Reserven, einzelne Office/Studio‑Fälle) und eine langsame Realisierung von Owned‑REO berücksichtigen.
Blackstone Mortgage Trust, Inc. Class A — Q4 2025 Earnings Call
1. Management Discussion
Good day, and welcome to the Blackstone Mortgage Trust Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2025 Investor Call. Today's call is being recorded. [Operator Instructions]
At this time, I'd like to turn the call over to Tim Hayes, Vice President, Shareholder Relations. Please go ahead.
Good morning. And welcome, everyone, to Blackstone Mortgage Trust's Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2025 Earnings Conference Call. I'm joined today by Tim Johnson, Chief Executive Officer; Tony Marone, Blackstone's Global Head of Real Estate Finance; Austin Pena, President; and Marcin Urbaszek, incoming Chief Financial Officer.
This morning, we filed our 10-K and issued a press release, a presentation of our results, which are available on our website and have been filed with the SEC. I'd like to remind everyone that today's call may include forward-looking statements, which are subject to risks, uncertainties and other factors outside of the company's control. Actual results may differ materially. For discussions some of the risks that could affect results, please see the Risk Factors section of our most recent 10-K. We do not undertake any duty to update forward-looking statements.
We will also refer to certain non-GAAP measures on this call. And for reconciliations, you should refer to the press release and 10-K. Audiocast is copyrighted material of Blackstone Mortgage Trust and may not be duplicated without our consent.
For the fourth quarter, we reported GAAP net income of $0.24 per share, while distributable earnings were negative $2.07 per share and distributable earnings prior to charge-offs were $0.51 per share. A few weeks ago, we paid a dividend of $0.47 per share with respect to the fourth quarter.
With that, I will now turn the call over to Tim.
Thank you, Tim. BXMT reported strong fourth quarter results further building upon the positive momentum in earnings power and credit performance achieved throughout 2025. We reported $0.51 per share of distributable earnings prior to charge-offs in the fourth quarter, an increase of over 20% from Q1 and covering our dividend for the second consecutive quarter.
Our loan portfolio is now 99% performing, reflecting strong progress on loan resolutions in the quarter, and we've actively rotated our portfolio, concentrating new investment in our highest conviction themes. We closed approximately $7 billion of investments in 2025, nearly 85% of which were in multifamily and industrial loans, our growing net lease strategy and 2 bank loan portfolios we acquired at discounts.
We've strategically broadened BXMT's scope to target these complementary investment channels, supporting capital deployment over the past year and reinforcing earnings power with greater diversification and duration.
Turning to markets. The real estate credit market today is highly liquid and underpinned by solid real estate fundamentals with new construction still sharply lower from precycle levels and value steadily increasing.
CMBS issuance accelerated in 2025 to its highest level since the GFC, up 40% year-over-year and demonstrating a significant increase in debt capital availability as performance in the sector has improved. As a result, we've seen the deal dam start to break, with more enthusiasm from investors to transact. We see this in our loan origination business where new loan requests in January were up 50% from the prior year.
Within this backdrop, the breadth and expertise of our global real estate debt platform with over 170 professionals is a differentiator, providing BXMT access to a proprietary pipeline of diverse investments across the U.S., Europe and Australia.
In 2025, our global platform closed over $20 billion of private loan originations and acquisitions and traded more than $15 billion of real estate securities. The robust data and insights gained from our private and publicly traded market activity guides our investment decisions and positions us well to source attractive opportunities across various markets. With such a wide funnel and a well-invested portfolio, we can pick and choose our spots and lean in where we see compelling relative value.
Our activity also informs our balance sheet and capital market strategy, where BXMT has capitalized, executing over $5 billion of corporate and securitized debt transactions in the past 12 months, including $2.8 billion of corporate term loan repricings and extensions which reduced our weighted average borrowing spread by nearly 90 basis points over the -- year-over-year. These transactions extended the duration of our liabilities, drove funding costs lower and further diversified and strengthened our capital structure.
Market tailwinds are also supporting performance within our portfolio, with no new impaired loans or watch list additions in the fourth quarter. And we expect to see opportunities to selectively exit our owned real estate properties, further supporting earnings as we more efficiently redeploy capital into our core investments.
We will remain patient and disciplined with our approach and focused on maximizing long-term shareholder value. While we delivered an attractive 21% total return for shareholders in 2025, we see a strong case for additional upside in the stock. BXMT shares still trade below book value. Our current dividend yield of 9.5% implies a 540 basis point spread to the 10-year treasury. That's approximately 40% above our tightest level, which was achieved when rates were much lower. In contrast, spreads in liquid real estate credit and the broader credit markets have tightened, with BBB CMBS spreads and high-yield bond spreads within 10% to 20% of their all-time types. This valuation gap is wide and emphasizes the highly compelling relative value proposition of BXMT stock today.
We believe the credit trends in our portfolio and earnings power of the business should warrant further retracement to historical levels, a view we've expressed with another $60 million of share repurchases this quarter and approximately $140 million since establishing our program in July of 2024.
Before turning it over to Austin to discuss our fourth quarter investments and portfolio in more detail, I want to thank Tony Marone, who will be stepping down as CFO of BXMT to focus on other responsibilities within Blackstone. Tony has been instrumental in BXMT's growth since inception, joining us through the Capital Trust acquisition in 2012. I'm grateful for his service to the company and our shareholders and wish him all the best. I'd also like to congratulate Marcin Urbaszek, who will be stepping into the role of CFO, completing the transition, started when he joined the company in 2024.
With that, Austin, over to you.
Thanks, Tim. Starting with our investment activity. We closed $1.5 billion of investments in the fourth quarter. including $1.4 billion of new loan originations and approximately $100 million of net lease acquisitions at share.
Consistent with our approach in recent quarters, our 4Q loan originations were 100% secured by multifamily and industrial assets, about 80% of which were diversified portfolios. This included a $419 million loan on a 94% leased 11 asset portfolio of high-quality industrial properties located across the U.S. and owned by a top tier sponsor.
By leveraging the scale and sector expertise of our platform, our team was able to quickly underwrite this loan and provide certainty of execution, capturing an investment, which we believe provides attractive relative value. We like lending on portfolios like this. They diversify BXMT's credit exposure across multiple markets and tenants, limiting the impact of idiosyncratic risks via cross collateralization.
In addition to our new origination activity, we continue to be successful in harvesting opportunities from within our existing portfolio, proactively working with sponsors to retain high-quality investments that were likely candidates to refinance. Given our position as the existing lender, we were able to modify terms and extend duration, while maintaining attractive economics relative to new deals in the market today.
Our investment portfolio stands at $20 billion, up from $19.5 billion last quarter and includes our $18 billion loan portfolio, $1.3 billion of owned real estate and over $900 million of investments at share held in our bank loan portfolio and net lease joint ventures. Today, the net lease assets and acquired bank loans now represent 5% of our portfolio, up from 0 at the beginning of 2025. These strategies, which generate fixed or contractually increasing cash flow streams over time naturally complement our floating rate lending strategy and provide strong relative value in today's investment environment.
Our loan portfolio ended the year at 99% performing. We resolved $575 million of impaired loans during the quarter, reducing our impaired loan balance to just under $90 million, most of which relates to a loan secured by a San Francisco hotel, which we expect to take ownership of in the first quarter.
We upgraded 6 loans in Q4, including one impaired office loan and one watch list office loan, both demonstrating leasing progress and cash flow growth. As Tim mentioned, we did not impair or downgrade any new loans to the watch list this quarter and one of our watch list loans repaid in full. We continue to apply a rigorous approach to managing our remaining watch list loans, of which nearly half have been restructured or modified with significant recent equity commitments with several others in various stages of negotiation.
Our loan portfolio is now 50% multifamily and industrial, while office exposure continues to decline, down approximately 50% since year-end 2021. And so far in Q1, we've collected over $300 million of additional office repayments, further reducing our exposure and driving turnover in the portfolio.
Nearly half of our loans are located in international markets, with almost 40% in Europe, where over the past year, we originated approximately $2 billion of loans backed by industrial portfolios. These investments have a weighted average LTV of 68%, strong in-place cash flows and provide compelling relative value with loan spreads nearly 100 basis points wide of comparable quality U.S. transactions. And similar to the U.S. European industrial markets are benefiting from limited new supply and e-commerce tailwinds driving demand, resulting in positive net absorption and just mid-single-digit vacancy rates in our core markets.
We continue to leverage the extensive resources of the Blackstone real estate platform to manage our owned real estate and execute business plans to best position them for an eventual exit. Importantly, we carry these assets at a 50% discount to values at the time of loan origination, and half are located in New York and the San Francisco Bay Area markets where we see broadly improving fundamentals and investor demand.
We currently have one multifamily property in Texas under contract to sell with several other assets well positioned for potential sale this year. Meanwhile, our net lease portfolio continues to scale, ending the year at over $300 million at share with another $200 million in closing.
Our strategy remains focused on essential used retail with attractive credit characteristics. The portfolio our team has constructed to date generates over 3x rent coverage with 2% built-in annual rent escalators and lease terms extending over 15 years on average. And importantly, we continue to acquire these assets at discounts to replacement cost.
In 2025, we acquired 2 portfolios of granular, low-leverage performing loans from regional banks at discounts to par. Today, these portfolios represent approximately $600 million of principal balance at BXMT share. And our thesis is playing out as expected, with strong credit performance and improving real estate fundamentals and capital markets driving $80 million of repayments since acquisition, enhancing returns for BXMT as loans purchased at discounts repay at par.
We expect a ripe environment for bank consolidation to bring additional opportunities like this to market. Our platform is an established leader in the space, having acquired $23 billion of loan portfolios from banks since December 2023, positioning us well for future transactions as a reliable and trusted counterparty.
Overall, we are pleased with the strong investment in asset management results our company achieved in 2025 and our team is excited about the opportunities we see ahead in the coming year.
And with that, I will pass it over to Tony to unpack our financial results.
Thank you, Austin, and good morning, everyone. Starting with our fourth quarter results. BXMT reported GAAP net income of $0.24 per share and distributable earnings or DE of negative $2.07 per share. DE included $434 million of reserve charge-offs, largely related to the resolution of 5 impaired loans as well as the write-off of 3 subordinated loans, which collectively drove performance of our loan portfolio to its highest level in 3 years. These subordinated loans were previously impaired, effectively carried 0 and as part of our regular quarterly assessment were deemed unrecoverable in the fourth quarter.
Excluding these items, DE prior to charge-offs was $0.51 per share, up $0.03 from the prior quarter and $0.09 from the first quarter of the year. And for the second consecutive quarter, DE prior to charge-offs covered our quarterly dividend of $0.47 per share as we continue to drive earnings power through loan resolutions, capital deployment and accretive corporate debt refinancings and stock buybacks.
Notably, DE benefited from $18 million of NOI from owned real estate in Q4, up from $6 million in the prior quarter as we recognized a full quarter impact from properties taken onto the balance sheet in Q3.
Our hotels represent 1/3 of our owned real estate portfolio, which ended the quarter at $1.3 billion across 12 properties. We anticipate cash flows from owned real estate to decline in 1Q, which typically experiences seasonal softening relative to other calendar quarters. However, we expect the portfolio to consistently generate positive DE and provide further balance to earnings and dividend coverage over time as we eventually exit these assets and repatriate capital into new investments at target returns.
We also recognized $21 million of depreciation and amortization, or D&A, related to our owned real estate in the fourth quarter, which is included in GAAP earnings, but excluded from DE. Accumulated D&A is also reflected in our book value, which ended the year at $20.75 per share. In total, book value includes $0.47 per share of accumulated D&A and $1.76 per share of total CECL reserves, of which $1.24 is attributable to the general reserve and $0.52 to asset-specific reserves.
Our total CECL reserve declined nearly 60% quarter-over-quarter as a result of the reserve charge-offs I mentioned earlier. And importantly, these charge-offs had a de minimis impact on book value, executed largely in line with carrying values. Looking back over the course of 2025, book value benefited from a net $33 million CECL recovery from resolutions executed above carrying values. This, alongside stock buybacks added $0.30 per share to book value this year.
Earnings from our unconsolidated joint ventures also continued to grow, generating $7 million of DE in 4Q versus $3 million in the prior quarter. This was driven by income and repayments in our bank loan portfolios, which accelerate their unamortized purchase discount and the continued growth in our net lease portfolio, Austin mentioned earlier. As a reminder, our balance sheet reflects our $217 million net equity investment in the net lease and bank loan portfolio joint ventures. But as also noted, on a gross basis, our share of the investments in these strategies totaled $940 million and are a growing component of our increasingly diverse investment portfolio.
Turning to BXMT's capitalization. Our balance sheet remains in excellent shape. We ended the year with $1 billion of liquidity, debt to equity within our target range and weighted average corporate debt maturities of 4.3 years with no maturities until 2027. As Tim mentioned, we've been active in securitized debt markets, positioning our balance sheet for further resilience. We priced a $1 billion CLO in January or 6 CLO transaction and completed our non-euro European CMBS issuance in December, which adds yet another tool to our toolkit and demonstrates the constant innovation of our financing strategies by our capital markets team.
We ended the year with 15 bank counterparties, providing $19 billion of total borrowing capacity. We had one new counterparty in 2025 and another just recently in February. And given our strong track record as a borrower and the deep relationships with these lenders across Blackstone, we have successfully added or converted nearly $6 billion of credit facilities to a non-mark-to-market construct, driving total non-mark-to-market borrowings from 67% at the beginning of the year to nearly 85% today.
As my tenure as CFO comes to an end, I can confidently say that all aspects of BXMT's business are in great shape, and the company is on strong footing to capitalize on opportunities as real estate and capital markets continue to recover. I'm thrilled for Marcin to take the CFO role at an exciting time for the company and look forward to watching him and the rest of the team continue delivering strong results for BXMT shareholders.
I will now ask the operator to open the call to questions.
[Operator Instructions] We will take our first question from Doug Harter with UBS.
2. Question Answer
Obviously, you've been kind of showing your support for the stock through share repurchase. And I'm sure you saw what the actions of one of your competitors earlier this month. Just thoughts on other ways you might look to kind of validate or support the value of the loans in the portfolio.
Thanks, Doug. This is Tim. I think that we certainly take a look at all opportunities to maximize shareholder value in the market. And I think we feel really good about the direction of the stock to date given the performance in 2025 and where we stand, we still have a discount to book value to make up, but a relatively modest one. So we'll continue to look at all options during the quarter, as you mentioned, a really good tool and the toolkit was definitely in stock buybacks, and we analyze everything that we have in terms of optionality in the markets, but we feel really good about where we stand today.
We'll take our next question from Jade Rahmani with KBW.
Could you provide your views on the REO portfolio? Do you see upside in key assets? And can you also discuss the New York office REO that took place in December 2025 based on the disclosure? It looks like an attractive basis. So I wanted to get your thoughts there.
Yes, Jade, it's Austin. I would say with respect to REO, I think the way we look at that, as we've discussed before, it's really a go-forward return analysis in terms of our decision-making there. And these are really investment decisions that we think are really well informed due to the really unique data and information that we have access to. I think specifically, we are seeing some improved fundamentals and investor demand in places like New York. With respect to that asset, as you mentioned, it is an asset in New York that we hold at a very low basis, a significant discount to the value when the loan was originated and we are seeing improvement in markets like that.
And so as we think about sort of the potential to exit these assets over time, as I mentioned in my earlier remarks, we do think several assets are well positioned to look to exit over the course of the year. We'll be very thoughtful and strategic about that. We are selling one asset in Texas. We're also seeing positive trends in San Francisco. And so as we go through the rest of the year, I think we'll start to look at those sale opportunities as the market opportunities sort of present themselves.
And just a follow-up on the New York REO, could you give any color as to origination vintage current percent occupancy rate and also dollar amount of CapEx you anticipate spending on the asset?
Yes. This was a loan that we originated for COVID. As I mentioned, we hold it at a very significant discount to the prior value at origination. The asset is pretty well leased today. There's been strong leasing demand. And to the extent further leasing were to appear where to materialize I think we'd look at that and analyze that whether that would be accretive for us to invest the capital to capture those leasing opportunities. That's really how we look at all investment in our REO assets. I'd say to the extent you look at our prior disclosures, this loan was impaired, and we had a significant reserve against it.
And so when we think about the go-forward opportunity in terms of exiting the asset, I think that we do see the opportunity to capture additional upside potentially on that asset and others over time.
We'll take our next question from Chris Muller with Citizens Capital Markets.
Congrats on a really solid progress on loan markouts in the quarter. I see in the 10-K that you guys made a $75 million investment in the Blackstone BREDS fund. Can you just talk about the type of investments that will go into that fund? And if there's any overlap on what you guys are already doing?
Yes. This is Austin. I can take that. As you mentioned, we did make an investment in a new Blackstone-managed real estate credit fund that fund will be focused on high-quality core plus real estate in the U.S. and Canada. We really think it's a great example of -- investors due to our scale of our platform and our affiliation with the Blackstone Real Estate Credit business. I should note that BXMT pays no fees for this fund commitment. The investments will be sourced and underwritten and managed by our team. Ultimately, we do think that adding some exposure to this profile investment to BXMT is a good risk-adjusted return. And so adding investments in a diversified way with this type of profile, we think is quite attractive for BXMT.
Got it. And that's a good segue into my follow-up. So I guess you guys have made some small relative to your size investments over the last year or so, agency multifamily lending JV, the net lease, the BREDS investment and then the bank loan JV. So I guess my question would be is, what do you guys expect BXMT to look like over the coming years? And I guess, how does the bridge business fit into that? Is it going to stay the primary focus? Or will those other businesses kind of grow over time?
Yes. I think, as you noted, I think we -- you have seen an intentional effort for us to diversify the portfolio. I don't think we're going to be -- we're going to always be a large lender in a sort of our core lending strategy that isn't going away. But when you look at the profile of the investments that we've been making adding net lease, adding the granular bank loan portfolios, these other ways to sort of further diversify the earnings composition and profile of the investments that we have within the company that is definitely intentional. And so over time, we would expect to continue to sort of pursue that strategy. In any way -- if there's any way for us to really just diversify our credit exposures and risks and generate the risk-adjusted returns that we believe are compelling for the company, we're going to continue to pursue that.
We'll take our next question from Gabe Poggi with Raymond James.
You guys provided some detail on the new origination front as it pertains to industrial. Can you put any color around what you guys are doing in multifamily?
And then a second question I'll just give it to you now is how are you thinking about total leverage, you're at almost 3.9x right now? How do you think about that going forward?
Yes. It's Austin. Thanks, Gabe. I'll take the first part of that question, and then I'll pass it over to Marcin for the second point. I think in terms of multifamily, we really like the opportunity we see in multifamily today. With respect to the performance that we've seen in our portfolio, our multifamily is 100% performing. And when we think about the opportunity set in that space, we really just like the setup for multifamily and rental housing in general. It's structurally undersupplied. New construction starts are down 60% from peak and it's a really highly liquid and granular asset class. And so that's why you see us lending in that space.
I think that, again, when you look at the performance in our portfolio, I think that's been demonstrated. And so that's the profile, I'd say, and the reason we're active in that area. Maybe, Marcin, if you want to handle the second part of that.
Yes, happy to. Look, I think our leverage -- we think of it -- in terms of where it is within our targets, as Tony mentioned, it is within our target where we are. It's a function also of what type of leverage we have, as Tony mentioned, a lot of our financing is not mark-to-market. We have been active in addressing different maturities within our corporate debt profile as well as reducing costs on both the asset financing and corporate financing. So it's a function of investment opportunities where the balance sheet is, what's available to us from a financing perspective in the market. So we're very thoughtful about it. But again, it's within our targets, and we will maintain where it is.
We'll take our next question from Rick Shane with JPMorgan.
Tony, thank you for all your help over the years, and Marcin congratulations on the new gig. Most of my questions have been asked and answered at this point. But as we sort of look forward to 2026, it feels like the expectation is, given where you are on leverage, and unless there is additional equity capital available, at some point portfolio will be roughly flat in size, maybe modest growth. I'm curious sort of the time line as you resolve loans and redeploy capital potentially from REO resolutions, what you think the path back to normalized ROE might look like?
Yes, Rick, it's Austin. I can take that. As Marcin mentioned, the portfolio is -- we think we're pretty well invested. And I do think that there's -- we have capacity, we have liquidity of $1 billion today, but we think that's actually a good position to be in. We have a very broad pipeline. There's a lot of opportunities. But given the position we're in, we can be pretty selective across that pipeline.
In terms of the REO time line and sort of exiting those assets, as I mentioned earlier, I think some of those assets are pretty well positioned for us to look at exiting over the course of this year. Some others may take longer. But we do think that those loans or those assets are earning -- generating a below-target ROE. And so as we exit those positions and redeploy that capital and our target returns, that should be supportive of earnings over time.
Got it. Okay. That's helpful. And then just one other question. As you continue to -- or as you've substantially exited your non-accruing assets and assets with specific reserves and starting to deploy a little bit more capital, what should we think about as an initial general reserve on new loans, sort of ballpark range so we can start to sort of dial in what our overall reserves will look like?
Yes. I think if you just look at the general reserve today, I think that's a pretty good proxy for where we see the reserve for the vast majority of the portfolio as being appropriate. And so as we grow the portfolio or shrink the portfolio, I think that's a pretty good place to look.
We'll take our next question from John Nikodemus with BTIG.
Obviously, we were encouraged to see the significant headway made on your impaired loan balance during the quarter. Was that more a matter of strategy and timing on your team's end or for the specific assets? Or was there a notable shift in the broader market as a whole that made these resolutions more achievable?
Thanks, John. This is Tim. I'd say it's reflective of a couple of things. One, just the strength of our asset management team and their ability to work through challenges pretty swiftly. We have a large-scale team. It's one of the benefits of our platform. That's certainly part of it. I think market liquidity does help as well. Just there's more transparency in the market in terms of valuations today that makes decision-making a little quicker for both owners and lenders to figure out which direction to go in. And I think that, that just is reflective of a stabilized real estate market where we sit today with valuations steadily stable and increasing, that's just a better backdrop for quicker resolutions in general.
Great. Really helpful. And then the other one for me, your loan portfolio mix now sits at half collateralized by multifamily or industrial properties. Obviously, these are high-conviction sectors for BXMT, but what are you thinking for the target allocation for your portfolio between those 2 asset classes going forward?
Thanks, John. This is Austin. I would say, first and foremost, our top priority in terms of capital allocation is really finding the right investments with the best risk-adjusted returns. That allocation will obviously depend on where we see those opportunities over time. And as we said earlier, we're very focused on diversifying our portfolio across sectors and geographies. You see that in the sector selection. You see it in the geographic concentration of the company. And you've seen us further diversify into things like the net lease and the bank loan portfolios that we've acquired.
You've also seen us allocate capital towards buying back stock. As Tim mentioned, $140 million since inception of that program where we thought that offered a compelling risk-adjusted return. And so ultimately, what really matters to us is performance. So really just trying to set up our company to deliver for investors over the long term.
We'll take our final question from Harsh Hemnani with Green Street.
So you mentioned the transaction market in the U.S. is becoming more transparent, more liquid does that sort of start to pivot some of the deal volume that's been more levered towards Europe over the last years. Does that start to shift a little bit more to the U.S.? And then maybe how do you pay the pros and cons between a more liquid transaction market more visibility into values but also somewhat lower spreads that are available today versus a year ago?
Yes, it's a great question. I think you're right. You are seeing more liquidity in the U.S. You certainly have seen that in 2025 in our CMBS market in early in 2026 with much more liquidity. I think that's overall a positive for the business. It just means there's more velocity to the portfolio, and you see that in the loan repayment activity, and you see that in loan repayments of loans that have been pre-rate hike cycle and pre-COVID repaying. So I think that generally is helpful. We're in, I'd say, a liquid but more normalized market today, which is a good operating environment for us. And as we said, at the beginning, having the scale of our platform, the different styles of investment capabilities we have, the global reach, we can really look across the full set of opportunities and pick and choose what we want to do. Austin referenced it before, we're pretty well invested today. So we have the luxury of looking for the best value out there in the market. So even though spreads have tightened back leverage has tightened as well. So that's offset a bunch of that spread tightening. But the opportunity set today still feels compelling and deal activity is increasing. So that's a pretty good setup for us overall.
Got it. And then maybe on -- you mentioned backlog has tightened as well. And it feels like the CLO market has opened up. Of course, you guys issued a CLO in January. How are you sort of weighing the cost of capital between CLOs and bank facilities today? And how should we expect that financing mix to shift over the course of the year?
Yes. Harsh, it's Austin. I can take that. I think what you saw us really do over the course of 2025 was really a broad approach across all the different capital markets that we're active in, in a very proactive one. As we mentioned earlier, we accessed about $5 billion of transaction across turb loan, CLO markets. And as we think about the CLO market versus where we can finance our assets on facilities, it's obviously price is important. Structure is also important. And really, our goal is to build a well-structured, well-diversified balance sheet and really have a healthy mix across all those markets, so that we can be nimble when the market opportunities present ourselves.
As we mentioned earlier, we reduced our corporate term loan borrowing spread by about 90 basis points over the course of the year. That's very significant. And as we -- and we've been adding more credit facility counterparties, 15 different counterparties today, which really allows us to drive down the cost of that capital. And so when we think about having all these different options available to us, we think that ultimately benefits the company. And so I think you'll continue to see really a mix of activity across all those different channels.
That will conclude our question-and-answer session. At this time, I'd like to turn the call back over to Tim Hayes for any additional or closing remarks.
Thanks, Katie, and to everyone joining today's call. Please reach out with any questions.
Goodbye.
Transkripte auf Deutsch freischalten
- Alle Event Transkripte auf Deutsch
- Sofortige Übersetzung
- KI-Zusammenfassungen für die wichtigsten Insights
Blackstone Mortgage Trust, Inc. Class A — Q4 2025 Earnings Call
Blackstone Mortgage Trust, Inc. Class A — Q4 2025 Earnings Call
📊 Quartal auf einen Blick
- GAAP EPS: $0,24 je Aktie (4Q 2025).
- Distributable Earnings (DE): -$2,07 je Aktie; DE vor Charge‑offs $0,51 je Aktie, Cover für Dividende ($0,47) zum 2. Mal in Folge.
- Charge‑offs: $434 Mio. Reserve‑Charge‑offs trieben das negative DE.
- Portfolio‑Performance: 99% der Kredite performing; impaired balance reduziert auf < $90 Mio.
- Book Value: $20,75 je Aktie; Dividend Yield ~9,5%; Total Return 21% für 2025.
🎯 Was das Management sagt
- Diversifikation: Aktive Rotation in Multifamily, Industrial, Net‑Lease und erworbene Bank‑Loan‑Portfolios zur Stabilisierung Erträge.
- Kapitalmärkte: $5 Mrd. an Unternehmens‑/verbriefungs‑Transaktionen in 12 Monaten; durchschnittlicher Borrowing‑Spread um ~90 bp gesenkt.
- Shareholder‑Support: Rückkaufprogramm: ~$140 Mio. seit Juli 2024, zusätzlich $60 Mio. in diesem Quartal.
🔭 Ausblick & Guidance
- Liquidität & Fälligkeiten: $1 Mrd. Liquidität; gewichtete mittlere Laufzeit der Unternehmensschulden 4,3 Jahre; keine Fälligkeiten bis 2027.
- Portfolio‑Entwicklung: Keine neuen Impairments/Watch‑List‑Zugänge in 4Q; gezielte Verkäufe von REO erwartet, saisonaler NOI‑Rückgang 1Q möglich.
- Kapitalallokation: Geduldige, selektive Deployments; Mischung aus CLOs, Bankfazilitäten und securitizations beibehalten.
❓ Fragen der Analysten
- Aktienunterstützung: Analysten fragten nach weiteren Hebeln neben Buybacks zur Validierung des Portfolios; Management prüft alle Optionen.
- REO / NY‑Office: Nachfrage zu New‑York‑REO: hohes Upside‑Potenzial, niedriges Buchbasis; CapEx‑Entscheidungen fall‑/asset‑getrieben.
- Strategie & Hebel: Fragen zu Zielallokation (Bridge vs. Net‑Lease/Bank‑Loans) und Ziel‑Leverage; Management betont Diversifikation und Leverage innerhalb Zielband.
⚡ Bottom Line
- Fazit: Kreditqualität und Earnings‑Power verbessern sich sichtbar; große, einmalige Charge‑offs bereinigten Reserven, DE vor Charge‑offs deckt Dividende. Gestärkte Kapitalstruktur, geringere Funding‑Kosten und gezielte Diversifikation erhöhen Chancen auf Normalisierung der Bewertung, bleiben aber abhängig von REO‑Exits und Marktliquidität.
Blackstone Mortgage Trust, Inc. Class A — Q3 2025 Earnings Call
1. Management Discussion
Good day, and welcome to the Blackstone Mortgage Trust Third Quarter 2025 Investor Call. Today's call is being recorded. [Operator Instructions]
At this time, I'd like to turn the conference over to Tim Hayes, Vice President, Shareholder Relations. Please go ahead.
Good morning, and welcome, everyone, to Blackstone Mortgage Trust's Third Quarter 2025 Earnings Conference Call.
I'm joined today by Katie Keenan, Chief Executive Officer; Tim Johnson, Chair of BXMT's Board and Global Head of Breads; Tony Marone, Chief Financial Officer; Austin Pena, Executive Vice President of Investments; and Marcin Urbaszek, Deputy Chief Financial Officer. This morning, we filed our 10-Q and issued a press release with a presentation of our results, which are available on our website and have been filed with the SEC.
I'd like to remind everyone that today's call may include forward-looking statements, which are subject to risks, uncertainties and other factors outside of the company's control. Actual results may differ materially. For a discussion of some of the risks that could affect results, please see the Risk Factors section of our most recent 10-K. We do not undertake any duty to update forward-looking statements.
We will also refer to certain non-GAAP measures on this call. And for reconciliations, you should refer to the press release and 10-Q. This audio cast is copyrighted material of Blackstone Mortgage Trust and may not be duplicated without our consent.
For the third quarter, we reported GAAP net income of $0.37 per share and distributable earnings of $0.24 per share. Distributable earnings prior to charge-offs were $0.48 per share. A few weeks ago, we paid a dividend of $0.47 per share with respect to the third quarter. Please let me know if you have any questions following today's call.
With that, I'll now turn it over to Katie.
Thanks, Tim.
BXMT's strong third quarter results underscore the continued forward momentum across all aspects of our business, including earnings power, credit, investment activity and balance sheet optimization. We reported distributable earnings prior to charge-offs of $0.48 per share, covering the $0.47 dividend and continuing this year's positive trajectory. Book value was essentially flat, reflecting a stable credit backdrop with no new impaired loans.
We continued our robust investment activity, looking across channels, originations, portfolio acquisitions and net lease and across geographies to find compelling relative value. And we continue to drive a more attractive cost of capital to enhance our competitiveness, improving terms on both corporate and asset level financing to reflect the strong positioning and track record of our business through this period.
BXMT's 3Q performance also reflects our ability to capitalize on the continuing recovery in market conditions. Real estate fundamentals remain strong with demand stable or improving and new supply constrained. Liquidity and transaction activity are increasing with SASB CMBS on track for a record issuance year. This dynamic continues to generate robust repayment levels in our pre-rate hike portfolio, $1.6 billion this quarter and affords us a strong investment pipeline with $1.7 billion of total originations closed or in closing post quarter end, building on the $1 billion of investment activity in 3Q.
While spreads have normalized as liquidity has returned to the market, the diversity and reach of our platform's vast sourcing engine are crucial differentiating factors. And with a market-leading capital markets team, we've continued to drive down our cost of borrowing. These advantages on both sides of our business allow BXMT to produce compelling returns on both an absolute and relative basis.
I'll turn it over to Austin to speak in more detail about our investments, portfolio and balance sheet. Before I do, I'd like to spend a minute on BXMT's opportune positioning today. Our portfolio is turning over, unlocking earnings from more challenged legacy deals and steadily increasing the proportion of our capital invested in high-quality current vintage assets. Our balance sheet is in fantastic shape, and we remain at the forefront of both structural and cost of capital innovation. And all of this has translated to healthy earnings generation supporting our dividend.
The forward trajectory of our business is embedded in this quarter's results, though BXMT's stock price has yet to catch up. Notwithstanding the tremendous progress we have made in the last several years, our stock today trades within 10% of the lows through this period and continues to provide a highly attractive 10.4% dividend yield. This disconnect has created the opportunity for us to repurchase over $100 million of stock so far this year at a meaningful discount to book value.
As my tenure as CEO comes to a close, I could not be more excited about the momentum of this business and our highly capable leadership team. I'd also like to express my deep gratitude to the analyst and investor community for your support and attention to BXMT over the years. Congratulations to Tim and Austin on their new roles.
And Austin, over to you.
Thanks, Katie.
BXMT's strong third quarter investment activity demonstrates the distinct advantages of our platform's differentiated scale and sourcing capabilities as we closed $1 billion of total investments across loan originations, net lease assets and a performing bank loan portfolio that we acquired at a discount. Our loan originations remain concentrated in our highest conviction sectors with 75% in multifamily and diversified industrial portfolios and over 60% in international markets, where we are capturing excess spread relative to comparable deals in the U.S.
We continue to achieve attractive net interest margins, setting up investments to achieve a levered spread of more than 9% over base rates or low teens all-in returns. And importantly, credit characteristics remain very attractive with strong cash flow profiles, light value-add business plans and an average LTV of 67%. Investments this quarter include a 90% leased diversified U.K. industrial portfolio and a well-amenitized stabilized multifamily property near Miami.
We also steadily grew our net lease portfolio, investing another $90 million across 60 properties in the third quarter, bringing the total portfolio to $222 million at BXMT's share. Importantly, we've maintained a rigorous approach to credit, acquiring assets within durable industries and generating strong EBITDAR coverage, nearly 3x on average and at significant discounts to replacement cost.
With another $100 million in our closing pipeline, we continue to expand our presence in the net lease sector. To that end, this quarter, BXMT acquired a 50% interest in a $600 million portfolio of granular loans secured by fully occupied net lease retail assets with a low weighted average origination LTV of 52% and an in-place debt yield over 12%. We were uniquely positioned to evaluate this portfolio, leveraging our experienced net lease and loan portfolio acquisition teams to underwrite and execute this transaction.
Acquiring high-quality performing loans at discounts from banks remains one of our top investment themes across our platform. These transactions have a high barrier to entry, requiring bespoke sourcing capabilities, the capacity to underwrite granular portfolios quickly and accurately and the operational wherewithal to onboard and manage hundreds of loans seamlessly. But here at Blackstone, we have invested in building market-leading capabilities to execute, leveraging the scale of our team and our data. And the prize is quite compelling, high credit quality loans with convexity and duration in thematic sectors and with outsized risk-adjusted returns.
And with bank M&A accelerating, we see more opportunities like this on the horizon. In total, we expect to close over $7 billion of new investments this year across originations, loan acquisitions and our net lease strategy, diversifying our portfolio and enhancing credit composition through deliberate rotation into the sectors and markets best positioned in the current environment.
Turning to the portfolio. Market tailwinds are driving increasing investor demand for assets, large and small and supporting positive credit outcomes. We collected $1.6 billion of total repayments in the third quarter, including 4 loans greater than $200 million, 2 secured by Texas multifamily assets and 2 abroad, a European hotel portfolio and a London office building. We had no new impaired loans this quarter. We resolved 2 previously impaired loans at a premium to aggregate carrying values, and we upgraded 8 loans, including 6 office loans, removing 2 from our watch list. Our loan portfolio is now 96% performing, and our impaired loan balance continues to decline, now at 71% below last year's peak. We expect to complete additional resolutions next quarter with 1 impaired office asset sold last week and others in advanced stages.
The real estate recovery, while uneven, is extending to some of the most acutely impacted markets and sectors. In San Francisco, fundamentals are improving, driven by the growth of AI. Multifamily rents are up 10%, office demand is growing and convention hotel bookings are up 60%. Investors are taking note with acquisition volumes picking up across sectors. Altogether, 25% of our REO portfolio today is in the Bay Area, including our largest asset, a fully renovated hotel held at nearly 60% below the prior owner's basis and more than 70% below replacement cost. San Francisco has long been amongst the most cyclical markets in the country. And today, we are positioned to capitalize on the upswing.
Amid a strong capital markets backdrop, BXMT has taken advantage, refinancing and extending over $2 billion of corporate debt in the last 12 months. Debt markets have been resilient through recent market volatility with spreads still sitting within 20 basis points of all-time tights. And we continue to see strong demand from our bank lenders, providing opportunities to introduce new facilities, further optimize our financing structures and reduce our marginal secured funding costs. We borrowed over 15 basis points tighter in the third quarter compared to the prior quarter, improving our cost of capital and advancing our overarching goal to generate an attractive, stable stream of current income for our investors.
And with that, I will pass it over to Tony to unpack our financial results.
Thank you, Austin, and good morning, everyone.
In the third quarter, BXMT reported GAAP net income of $0.37 per share and distributable earnings or DE of $0.24 per share. DE prior to charge-offs, which excludes realized losses related to 2 loan resolutions, was $0.48 per share, an increase of $0.03 from the prior quarter and $0.01 above our $0.47 quarterly dividend. DE benefited from BXMT's continued execution on key initiatives with investment activity, loan resolutions and accretive capital markets executions all contributing to this quarter's strong results. We also recognized $0.02 of default interest from a multifamily loan that repaid in full. Looking forward, we expect our earnings will continue to benefit from capital redeployment and resolutions of impaired loans, including the 2 that closed on the last day of the quarter as we unlock the earnings potential of that capital. For reference, we collected $0.06 of interest from impaired loans this quarter, which were excluded from earnings under cost recovery accounting.
We ended the quarter with book value of $20.99 per share, which was largely stable quarter-over-quarter, reflecting strong credit performance, loan resolutions executed above carrying values and accretive share repurchases. When considering the $0.47 dividend, BXMT provided an 8% annualized economic return to stockholders this quarter. BXMT repurchased $16 million of common stock in Q3 at an average share price of $18.69, a significant discount to book value. And so far in Q4, we've accelerated buybacks through recent market volatility, repurchasing another $61 million of stock at even lower levels. In total, we have repurchased nearly $140 million of shares since establishing our program in 2024. And just last week, received Board approval to replenish our $150 million buyback capacity.
Our book value at 9/30 includes $712 million, $0.14 -- excuse me, $4.16 per share of CECL reserves, which declined from $755 million, $4.39 per share in the prior quarter as we crystallized $42 million of specific CECL reserves in connection with 2 impaired loan resolutions. As Katie mentioned earlier, these resolutions were executed at a premium to aggregate carrying values, contributing to an $11 million net reversal in our specific CECL reserve and offsetting the modest $10 million increase in our general reserve.
Turning to our balance sheet. BXMT remains well positioned to address today's attractive investment environment with debt to equity down to 3.5x, strong liquidity of $1.3 billion and over $7 billion of available financing capacity as of quarter end. And in October, we closed a new $250 million non-mark-to-market credit facility with an international bank who recently established their CRE loan warehousing business targeted Blackstone as one of their first and largest relationships. Another example of our strong position in the market and ability to drive differentiated results for stockholders.
We continue to take advantage of the supportive capital markets backdrop to further optimize our cost of capital as we repriced $400 million of corporate term loan during the quarter, reducing spread by 100 basis points and upsizing the deal by $50 million, reflecting strong demand from institutional investors. And just last week, we collapsed BXMT's 2020 FL-3 CLO, which we replaced with balance sheet financing at a lower spread. CLO market remains robust with new issuance nearly tripling last year's total and tracking its strongest year since 2022. We have been a consistent issuer in this market, completing our fifth transaction earlier this year, and we are well positioned to take advantage of the supportive market backdrop.
Before opening the call to Q&A, I will turn it over to BXMT's Chairman and incoming CEO, Tim Johnson, for a few closing remarks.
Thanks, Tony.
First and foremost, I'd like to thank Katie for her dedicated service to BXMT, the Board and our shareholders. Katie leaves BXMT in a tremendous spot with a global portfolio that's delivering for our investors and a team that's poised to capture this exciting investment environment. I've had the pleasure of working alongside Katie throughout her Blackstone tenure, and I'm extremely grateful for all of the hard work, strategic insight and strong execution she's brought with her each and every day. She's been an inspiring partner and leader and will leave a lasting impression on our business. While we'll no doubt miss Katie, we wish her well in her next chapter and are confident the team will step up in her place.
Personally, I'm excited to have been appointed CEO of BXMT and to work closely with Austin to continue to build on the momentum our business has today. Austin and I are fortunate to have the strength of the Blackstone franchise behind us, our dedicated team of over 160 real estate credit professionals and the critically important connectivity with our global real estate team. This has always been the backbone of BXMT's investment process. I'm looking forward to working more with all of you along the way.
And with that, I'll now ask the operator to open the call to questions.
[Operator Instructions] We'll take our first question from Catherwood with BTIG.
2. Question Answer
Katie, just first off, congratulations and best of luck in your new role. It's been an absolute pleasure having you in this position. And then second, just wanted to follow up, Katie, on your prepared remarks, where you mentioned a recovery in transaction activity and return of liquidity to the CRE markets. Kind of 2 items around that. First off, can you provide a little bit more color on exactly where you're seeing that? Is that U.S. and Europe? Or is it just pockets that you're seeing that recovery? And then second, if that recovery in transactions is more here in the U.S., which is what it seems like to us, could we see a larger portion of your origination activity pivot back to U.S. loans instead of more Europe loans, which you've been doing so far this year?
Thanks, Tom. This is Tim. I'll take that. I'd say liquidity certainly has returned to markets, I would say, both in the U.S. and in Europe. As you pointed out, a bit stronger on a relative basis in the U.S. and mainly driven by a more established CMBS market here in the United States, as Katie referenced, tracking toward an all-time high in terms of liquidity. So I would say it's a little bit further ahead, as you'd expect in the U.S. versus Europe, but both places are continuing to see capital markets open up and be pretty strong.
In terms of the U.S. versus Europe on an ongoing basis, what we love is being able to have a platform that can look across all of the regions and establish a view on relative value at any moment in time. So that does shift over time. And I think that the U.S. continues to be the biggest market for us, just a larger transaction market overall. So I think you'll continue to see this be the largest share of our investment activity over a long period of time. But we certainly look at both and play relative value across both.
Appreciate that, Tim. And the second one for me, maybe Austin, in terms of the REO portfolio, can -- first off, can you remind us of the potential earnings uplift as that capital comes back over time? And second, do you need to set aside incremental capital for the New York City hotel that you took on balance sheet during the quarter? Or is that one in pretty good shape already?
Yes. Thanks for the question. I would say, generally, we haven't given specific numbers in terms of the potential earnings uplift. But obviously, the REO assets are not generating our target returns, and we certainly see the opportunity to, as we turn over the portfolio, exit these REO assets over time to drive additional earnings power as we do that.
Specifically with regards to sort of CapEx and conditions, I would say, firstly, we have a tremendous amount of insight into kind of the needs across these assets. And we really don't feel that there's a significant component of CapEx needed. To the extent it is needed, we certainly have the capability to do that with over $1.3 billion of liquidity. But I'd say the condition of these assets across the board is pretty good, and we feel comfortable with our position today.
We'll take our next question from Harsh Hemnani with Green Street.
Maybe one on how you're thinking about originating new loans versus buying back into the capital structure. Is there a particular premium or discount to book at which you're thinking that buybacks are perhaps more accretive than new originations? And it sounds like 4Q is stepping up on the origination front, but also on the buyback front. So I'm just trying to understand the relative value math there.
Yes. I'd say we continue to look at both in terms of every day, just like we do across loans in the U.S. and Europe, we look at opportunities of where to invest capital, including share buybacks, which, of course, we've been quite active in. So that's -- I'd say that's a pretty dynamic analysis. But we've captured the -- we've taken advantage of the opportunity to buy back when the stock has traded at levels that we think are quite attractive and provide a very high return on investment. So I think that's how we look at it. We continue to look at it dynamically over time.
Got it. And then maybe one on the makeup of the investment portfolio this quarter. It seems like roughly 2/3 of originations this quarter were in sort of the traditional floating rate loan portfolio and roughly 1/3 is in net lease and bank loan portfolio acquisitions. Should we be thinking about these fixed rate loans as sort of being a lever for you to be able to reduce your floating rate exposure ahead of what most are expecting to -- they're expecting to see lower floating rates in the future?
Yes, Harsh, this is Austin. I can take that. I think you're correct in that we really are looking across different channels to deploy our capital right now. One of the things we like about net lease in these bank portfolios is that they do add some duration and create a natural hedge to our sort of traditional floating rate business. The bank portfolios, in particular, as we noted earlier, we're buying those at a discount to par. And that provides some upside convexity to the extent those loans repay more quickly than we underwrite. And we like that as well from a risk-adjusted return basis. And so I think you'll continue to see us look across different types of investments across these channels to really think about the best relative value and really sort of diversify the composition of our earnings.
We will take our next question from Jade Rahmani with KBW.
Each earnings season brings its own unique developments, and it seems to me that this earnings season so far has been characterized by AI dominance, but also some pockets of weakness in the economy, whether it be in the consumer and jobs or discrete credit items in the financial space and the C&I lending and also a couple of CRE items. So the commercial mortgage REIT sector also seems to have been caught in this downdraft. And my main question is whether you've seen any spillover effects into the CRE market as yet? And if you're doing anything differently, perhaps more defensively to prepare for any weakness that may unfold.
Thanks, Jade. I'd say we're not seeing it in real estate credit. We are in an environment with real estate credit where we've gone through a pretty significant downturn, and now we're quite clearly in recovery mode in terms of coming out of that downturn. So I would say the real estate credit market has been somewhat uniquely tested already and has experienced its challenges, not to say that there might not be other challenges around the corner, but it definitely is more battle tested, I'd say, overall. And so that translates through to what we see on the new origination side of things in terms of credit quality. Generically, you're going to have a more tighter lending market coming out of a cycle like we've been through where credit standards are higher. And so we're not seeing that type of deterioration that's been referenced elsewhere. We're seeing much like what you're seeing in the BXMT portfolio itself, improved credit overall.
And in terms of the pace of 3Q investments and originations, notwithstanding the bank loan JV, which I believe would have higher ROEs than the traditional business. Was there anything that drove a more muted pace of originations perhaps it was on the liability management side, putting in place the new repo line, the tighter spreads on the term loan as well as calling the CLO? Was that in preparation of stronger originations and maybe weighed on volume in the quarter?
Yes, Jade, this is Austin. We obviously made $1 billion of total investments this quarter, which we think is a good amount. I would say that we have $1.7 billion in closing as well. So our pipeline of opportunities remains really robust. So I'd say we're actively investing in the environment. I would say there might have been a modest impact seasonally with some of the volatility we saw sort of in the spring around some of the tariffs, which may have impacted certain timings of transactions overall. But over -- but really across our channels, we really see a lot of interesting opportunities both in Europe and the United States. So we feel good about the level of the transaction activity going forward.
We'll take our next question from Doug Harter with UBS.
Sort of touching on that last point, how do you see the pace of kind of net deployment in the portfolio in the coming quarters? And how do you think about what is the right level of leverage that you guys are targeting?
I'd say I'll take the first. In terms of deployment, I think it's a pretty good indication of what you saw this past quarter where we're having a healthy amount of repayment activity and then turning that directly into new investment activity. So I think we're at a place where we feel pretty good about being kind of at a run rate in terms of repayments and deployment overall. So I think that would remain consistent.
And on the leverage side, like how are you thinking about what is the right level of leverage to run this business at this part of the cycle?
Yes, Doug, on leverage, obviously, we're at 3.5x today, which is right in the middle of the range that we target. And so I think we've always been sort of in that mid-3s over the last quite period. So we certainly have liquidity and capacity to sort of go up a little bit from there. And again, we're seeing good opportunities. So we feel very comfortable with the balance sheet today and where we are from that perspective.
We'll take our next question from Rick Shane with JPMorgan.
I apologize, like everybody, we're bouncing around between calls. So if this has been covered, I apologize. Look, when we look at the implied dividend yield as a function of book, it's about 9%. You guys aren't clear yet. When you think about the path to covering that dividend, which is obviously not only your goal, but your indication by maintaining that dividend, can you walk us through sort of what the different levers in terms of higher yields, reducing nonaccruals, reducing REO, what you think are sort of rank those opportunities, please, and perhaps give us some sense of what the contribution of each is?
Yes. Thanks, Rick. I'd say, obviously, it was good to cover the dividend this quarter in terms of distributable earnings ex charge-offs at $0.48 relative to $0.47 dividend. As Tony noted, a couple of onetime small items in there, but pretty close to the dividend ex those. And as you said and as we've said for a while, we set the dividend with a long-term view in mind. And where we really still have earnings left to unlock is in the REO and the impaired loan portfolio, where we can turn those assets into higher returning investments. We're not particularly focused on quarter-to-quarter results as there's always a little bit of variability in terms of the ins and outs of fundings and things like that. But we continue to have confidence that we've set the dividend level at a long-term sustainable position.
Got it. Okay. And is there -- when you think about, for example, funding cost rate outlook, obviously, you're modestly asset sensitive, but there's so much opportunity in terms of recycling capital. I'm assuming that you guys are even in a sharply lower short-term rate environment, confident that you can continue to achieve those hurdle rates given the scale.
Yes. I would say that's right. I think the opportunity to redeploy the capital within the REO portfolio and the impaired loan portfolio is a really strong offset to a lower rate environment.
I would also add we only lose [ about 150 basis points ] of rate move. So it's not as drastic as you might be thinking.
We will take our last question from Don Fandetti with Wells Fargo.
Can you talk a bit more about what you're seeing in office market fundamentals? I mean I think you had 6 upgrades. And I guess at this point, is it possible that you'll end up being a bit over reserved in your office book?
Yes. Thanks, Don. This is Austin. I definitely would say we are seeing stability and improvement across office. I think you see that, as you noted, in the movements in terms of our upgrades this quarter, 6 office loans upgraded, 2 of them were removed from our watch list. That's really driven by leasing that we're seeing at these assets. And so I definitely think we're starting to see more broad-based green shoots, liquidity coming back into the market. As I noted earlier, we sold one of our impaired office assets post quarter end. So continue to see more transaction activity, more capital coming off the sidelines for the sector.
I'd say in terms of reserves, we obviously go through those every quarter. We feel like our reserve levels are appropriate. We feel good about where we set those. It's obviously a detailed asset-by-asset analysis that we do. And so we feel good about where those are.
Okay. And then on a follow-up, I mean, you've had another quarter here where there was fairly steady credit migration. How are you thinking about like movement to 4 from 3 in the near term? Do you feel like you're in a steady state?
I'd say the direction of travel for credit is clearly positive in the portfolio with the no new impairments. So I'd say we -- the direction is quite clear. Obviously, we're continuing to work through things. But in terms of credit migration, we feel like we've basically resolving 70% of our impaired loans at this point and a good line of sight to a significant amount more. We feel really good about the overall path here in terms of credit performance.
That will conclude our question-and-answer session. At this time, I'd like to turn the call back over to Tim Hayes for any additional or closing remarks.
Thank you, Katie, and to everyone joining today's call. Please reach out with any questions.
Transkripte auf Deutsch freischalten
- Alle Event Transkripte auf Deutsch
- Sofortige Übersetzung
- KI-Zusammenfassungen für die wichtigsten Insights
Blackstone Mortgage Trust, Inc. Class A — Q3 2025 Earnings Call
Blackstone Mortgage Trust, Inc. Class A — Q3 2025 Earnings Call
📊 Quartal auf einen Blick
- Ergebnis: GAAP-Netto $0,37 je Aktie; Distributable Earnings (DE) $0,24; DE vor Charge‑offs $0,48, damit Deckung der $0,47 Quartalsdividende.
- Buchwert: $20,99 je Aktie, im Quartal im Wesentlichen stabil.
- Invest./Rückflüsse: $1,0 Mrd. Investitionen in Q3; Rückzahlungen $1,6 Mrd.; $1,7 Mrd. in Closing; Ziel >$7 Mrd. neue Investitionen im Jahr.
- Bilanz: Debt‑to‑equity 3,5x; Liquidität $1,3 Mrd.; >$7 Mrd. verfügbare Finanzierungskapazität; Margenfinanzierung um ~15 Basispunkte verbessert.
- Aktionärsorientierung: Rückkäufe ~ $140 Mio. seit Programmstart; Q3: $16 Mio. zu $18,69; Dividendenrendite ~10,4%.
🎯 Was das Management sagt
- Portfolio‑Rotation: Aktive Umwandlung von älteren/restrukturierten Positionen in aktuelle, höherqualitative Vintages, um Erträge freizusetzen.
- Origination & Sourcing: Fokus auf Multifamily und diversifizierte Industrie (75% der Originations); >60% international; gezielte Bank‑Portfolio‑Akquisitionen und Ausbau Net‑Lease.
- Kapitalmarkt‑Strategie: Kosten des Kapitals gesenkt (u.a. Umfinanzierung $2 Mrd., Term‑Loan −100 bps, CLO‑Aktivität); neues $250 Mio. Kreditfacility abgeschlossen.
🔭 Ausblick & Guidance
- Earnings‑Treiber: Management erwartet anhaltenden Ertragsnutzen durch Kapitalumschichtung und weitere Abschlüsse/Resolutions; konkrete Quartalsguidance nicht angegeben.
- Investitionsziel: Erwartung, >$7 Mrd. an Neuinvestitionen in diesem Jahr abzuschließen; Pipeline bleibt robust.
- Risiken: Zins‑ und Liquiditätsentwicklung sowie das Tempo der REO/Impaired‑Auflösungen beeinflussen kurzfristig Erträge.
❓ Fragen der Analysten
- US vs Europa: Nachfrage/ Liquiditätsrückkehr stärker in den USA, aber Plattform bleibt regional flexibel; Management erwartet langfristig US‑Dominanz.
- Buybacks vs Originations: Frage nach Schwellen für Rückkäufe; Management beschreibt dynamische, opportunistische Abwägung, nennt keine festen Schwellenwerte.
- REO & Office: Erwartungen zu Ertragsuplift aus REO unquantifiziert; Office‑Kredite zeigen erste Upgrades, Reserven werden quartalsweise geprüft.
⚡ Bottom Line
- Fazit: Solide Q3‑Performance: Dividende gedeckt ex Charge‑offs, starke Liquidität, aktive Rückkäufe und eine große Investitionspipeline. Hauptwachstumstreiber sind Umschichtung von REO/Impaired‑Beständen und günstige Akquisitionsgelegenheiten; kurzfristige Performance bleibt abhängig von Resolutionstempo und Zinsumfeld.
Finanzdaten von Blackstone Mortgage Trust, Inc. Class A
Umsatz
Der Umsatz stellt die Summe aller Einnahmen eines Unternehmens z. B. für dessen Produkte oder Dienstleistungen dar.
Umsatz (TTM) einfach erklärtDirekte Kosten
Direkte Kosten sind die Kosten, die direkt im Zusammenhang mit der Herstellung des Produkts oder der Dienstleistung entstehen.
Bruttoertrag
Der Bruttoertrag gibt an, wie viel vom Umsatz nach Abzug der direkten Herstellkosten im Unternehmen verbleibt. Berechnet man den prozentualen Anteil vom Umsatz, spricht man von der Bruttomarge (engl. Gross Margin).
Brutto Marge einfach erklärtVertriebs- und Verwaltungskosten
Die Vertriebs- & Verwaltungskosten (engl. Selling, General & Administrative expenses, kurz SG&A) beinhalten alle Aufwände für Marketing und den Verkauf sowie die allgemeine Verwaltung des Unternehmens.
Forschungs- und Entwicklungskosten
Die Forschungs- und Entwicklungskosten (engl. research & development costs, kurz R&D) geben Auskunft darüber, wie viel das Unternehmen in die Forschung und die Entwicklung seiner Produkte investiert. Vor allem prozentual vom Umsatz und im Vergleich zu direkten Wettbewerbern sind die Kosten interessant.
EBITDA
Das EBITDA (Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation and Amortization) ist der Gewinn des Unternehmens vor Zinsen, Steuern und Abschreibungen. Berechnet man den prozentualen Anteil vom Umsatz, spricht man von der EBITDA-Marge.
Abschreibungen
Abschreibungen stellen Wertminderungen von Vermögensgegenständen des Unternehmens dar (z.B. durch Abnutzung von Maschinen).
EBIT (Operatives Ergebnis)
Das EBIT (engl. Earnings Before Interest and Taxes) ist der Gewinn des Unternehmens vor Zinsen und Steuern, das auch als operatives Ergebnis bezeichnet wird. Berechnet man den prozentualen Anteil vom Umsatz, spricht man von
der EBIT-Marge.
Nettogewinn
Der Nettogewinn stellt den Gewinn oder Verlust nach Abzug aller Kosten dar.
Nettogewinn einfach erklärtaktien.guide Premium
| Mär '26 |
+/-
%
|
||
| Umsatz | 1.552 1.552 |
7 %
7 %
100 %
|
|
| - Direkte Kosten | 1.033 1.033 |
18 %
18 %
67 %
|
|
| Bruttoertrag | 520 520 |
29 %
29 %
33 %
|
|
| - Vertriebs- und Verwaltungskosten | 296 296 |
160 %
160 %
19 %
|
|
| - Forschungs- und Entwicklungskosten | - - |
-
-
|
|
| EBITDA | 171 171 |
442 %
442 %
11 %
|
|
| - Abschreibungen | 73 73 |
186 %
186 %
5 %
|
|
| EBIT (Operatives Ergebnis) EBIT | 97 97 |
229 %
229 %
6 %
|
|
| Nettogewinn | 104 104 |
229 %
229 %
7 %
|
|
Angaben in Millionen USD.
Nichts mehr verpassen! Wir senden Dir alle News zur Blackstone Mortgage Trust, Inc. Class A-Aktie direkt und kostenlos in Deine Mailbox.
Auf Wunsch erhältst Du jeden Morgen pünktlich zum Frühstück eine E-Mail, die alle für Dich relevanten Aktien-News enthält.
Blackstone Mortgage Trust, Inc. Class A Aktie News
Firmenprofil
Blackstone Mortgage Trust, Inc. ist eine Immobilienfinanzierungsgesellschaft, die sich mit der Vergabe von vorrangigen Darlehen beschäftigt, die durch gewerbliche Immobilien besichert sind. Ihr Investitionsziel ist die Erhaltung und der Schutz des Aktionärskapitals bei gleichzeitiger Erzielung risikobereinigter Erträge in erster Linie durch Dividenden, die aus den laufenden Erträgen ihres Darlehensportfolios generiert werden. Das Unternehmen wurde im Juli 1997 von Samuel Zell, John R. Klopp und Craig M. Hatkoff gegründet und hat seinen Hauptsitz in New York, NY.
aktien.guide Premium
| Hauptsitz | USA |
| CEO | Ms. Keenan |
| Mitarbeiter | 28 |
| Gegründet | 1997 |
| Webseite | www.blackstonemortgagetrust.com |


