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Operator
Good day and welcome to Blackstone Mortgage Trust third quarter 2024 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.
Timothy Hayes - Vice President - Shareholder Relations
Good morning and welcome everyone to Blackstone Mortgage Trustâs third quarter 2024 earnings conference call. I am joined today by Katie Keenan, Chief Executive Officer; Tony Marone, Chief Financial Officer; and Austin Pena, Executive Vice President of Investments.
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. Iâd like to remind everyone that todayâs call may include forward-looking statements which are subject to risks, uncertainties, and other factors outside of the companyâs control. Actual results may differ materially.
For a discussion of some of the risks that can 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 third quarter, we reported a GAAP net loss of $0.32 per share, while distributable earnings and distributable earnings prior to charge-offs were $0.39 and $0.49 per share respectively. Two 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 todayâs call. With that, Iâll now turn things over to Katie.
Katharine Keenan - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Thanks Tim.
Third quarter brought the long anticipated commencement of the rate cut cycle in the US Across major developed markets, short rates are coming down driven by cooling inflation. At the same time, economic indicators remain strong, supporting the prospect of a soft landing.
For real estate, the combination of lower rates and a more benign outlook has created an inflection point in the cycle. Liquidity has returned to the market, normalizing cost of capital, and bringing transaction activity off the sidelines. Real estate valuations have bottomed with three consecutive quarters of increasing values. And with new supply down 40% to 75% across major sectors, longer term tailwinds are in place.
This recovery is driving strong forward momentum in BXMTâs business, accelerating portfolio turnover through repayments, resolutions, and redeployments. With $1.8 billion of pay-offs, 3Q was our fourth highest repayment quarter ever and double the average pace of the first half of this year. Capital coming back can be redeployed into todayâs attractive investment environment with a basis, credit lens, sector view, and spread profile all reset to current levels.
With plenty of liquidity and a fruitful origination environment, we are squarely in new investment mode. Year to date, we have nearly $700 million of new originations closed or in closing across favored sectors, including multi-family, industrial, self-storage, and resort hotels. And the environment today supports lending at a lower basis with stronger cash flow coverage and higher returns. Our largest in-closing deal is a case in point. This is a $450 million senior loan backed by a portfolio of stabilized self-storage assets.
Elsewhere in BREDS, weâve participated in the capital structure of this investment before. Itâs always been a great portfolio, a credit to the solid real estate and skillful sponsorship; but in this vintage, wider market cap rates mean that our 62% LTV loan sets up a debt yield 20% higher and a levered return nearly double the 2021 iteration, a factor of both wider spreads and higher base rates.
This dynamic extends beyond one loan. The weighted average origination LTV of year-to-date loans closed or in closing is 60%. The weighted average debt yield is over 9%, and collectively these deals set up to mid-teens ROIs at todayâs base rates, highly attractive relative value.
These deals also exemplify our competitive edge in sourcing pipeline and driving differentiated investments. All are with repeat borrowers, several many times over. All were sourced directly or in limited competition, and all have generated strong appetite from our financing relationships with marginal pricing moving squarely into the mid- to high-100 spread levels.
We expect more activity from here. US transaction volume is up 20%, the largest sequential increase since the fourth quarter of 2021. More deal activity has spurred greater demand for new loans and our pipeline continues to expand.
Our future deployment outlook is underpinned by the repayment dynamic of our existing loans. We have a relatively short duration portfolio. Our loans are typically five years in term, repaying after two to three. In periods like the last few years, loans stick around longer with borrowers preferring to extend their hold periods and existing financing notwithstanding strong performance from underlying collateral. But when capital markets reopen, there is a catch-up, which is what weâre seeing now. The CMBS market, agencies, insurance companies, and debt funds are all active, and borrowers are refinancing into the next phase of their business plans.
Going forward, we expect an accelerated repayment period for our one to three risk-rated loans, which today account for around $15 billion of the portfolio. As we look out over the next 12 months, we have $2.7 billion of total 1 to 3 risk-rated loans with scheduled final maturities, the largest of which is The Spiral, a new build trophy New York City office building located in Hudson Yards and our top loan commitment.
This asset is squarely a winner in todayâs office market, having leased up from 28% when we made the construction loan to over 90% today, and attracting the premier tenants in the market: Pfizer, Debevoise, AllianceBernstein, HSBC. While we would be delighted to keep this loan in our portfolio, it is definitively refinance-able and we expect it will repay in the coming quarters.
The turning of the credit cycle and increased capital markets liquidity is rippling through our more challenged assets as well. While we completed just one resolution in 3Q, we were busy lining up a number of deals for the fourth quarter. Post quarter end, we have completed or agreed terms to resolve over $600 million of our impaired assets and have clear visibility on the path to resolution of a further $500 million-plus.
Altogether, this means that in the coming quarters, we believe we can resolve over half of the $2.3 billion of impaired loans we carried at the end of Q3. These resolutions will come through a combination of full cash sales, AB note restructuring, and in limited cases REO.
We have two assets under hard contract for sale at prices above our reserve levels, including a $250 million office deal in New York City that drew a highly competitive bidding process and a final sale price equating to a [high-4s in place and high-5s] stabilized cap rate. We closed a recapitalization of an office deal earlier this month, bringing in substantial new equity commitments subordinate to our reset A-note basis and have several other large office restructurings in the queue.
We plan to take two assets REO in 4Q, a hotel in San Francisco and an office in DC, where we will pursue longer term value recovery strategies, and while not included in the numbers I just quoted, we are in the market for sale or negotiating deals on several other resolution candidates which may add to the total as we move into 2025.
And finally, our specific C-flow reserve averaging 28% of impaired loan balances continues to prove appropriate with the resolutions closed or in closing to date expected to shake out at or above our carrying values.
The progress we are making is a crucial step toward repositioning the portfolio for sustained performance and an indication of the broader credit trends we see in our portfolio today. Every single performing loan that reached maturity this quarter repaid, satisfied its performance test, or extended with over $400 million in new equity commitments or additional economics to BXMT, and this includes over $1 billion of office loans. Rate cap renewals are a non-issue. Multi-family is 99.5% performing and lower short rates support stronger debt service coverage ratios going forward.
We collected or agreed pay-downs on three of our four watch-listed multi-loans, with the fourth slated for repayment. We had over $650 million of repayments across large portfolios of hotels in Australia and Europe. And even in office, weâve collected over $675 million in repayments thus far in the second half, bringing the year-to-date total to $1.4 billion through today.
This includes full repayment of our $286 million loan on Colony Square in Atlanta and a EUR150 million pay-down on our Irish office and industrial portfolio loan, the second in two years as we continue to support the build-out of highly accretive industrial collateral within the asset base while improving our credit position.
While credit outcomes can take time to play out, as evidenced by two additional impaired office loans this quarter, we see the balance shifting from here with resolutions outpacing impairments. Therefore, based on what we see today, this quarterâs non-performing loan measure at 12% should be the peak with improvement over time as we move forward.
As resolutions crystallize, we will realize one-time losses through DE, but unlock the earnings potential of this capital. 4Q will be a rebuilding period, but looking forward to 2025, the combination of resolutions and redeployment should provide a tailwind to earnings power and coverage of our reset dividend, and we believe this transition period is more than priced in.
BXMT today trades at 0.84 times post-CECL book value. The market is pricing in another $600 million-plus of credit losses, beyond the $1 billion already reserved for in our book value, a punitive scenario based on what we see today. While a subset of our watch-listed office continues to be a focus for potential credit deterioration, we also see the emerging potential for market value recovery to translate through to our impaired assets.
Embedded optionality that shareholders today own for free, and our stock currently offers a 10% dividend yield, providing an attractive stream of current income that becomes increasingly valuable as global yields climb.
More importantly, no firm is better positioned to capitalize on the current market opportunities than Blackstone. We have 150 real estate debt professionals around the world covering 600-plus borrowers with deep repeat customer relationships. Our scale and global footprint provide differentiated access to attractive investments, allowing us to pursue the best relative value across markets.
Our deep capital markets expertise drives superior cost of capital, allowing us to take less credit risk to achieve attractive returns, and as the largest owner of commercial real estate globally, Blackstoneâs deep knowledge and experience underpins it all. The market has historically valued these advantages at a premium, rational given their translation to generating premium risk-adjusted returns.
Today, we trade at a deep discount, an attractive entry point as we capitalize on the cyclical real estate recovery and re-ignite our core investment business.
Thank you, and with that, Iâll turn the call over to Tony.
Anthony Marone - Chief Financial Officer, Principal Accounting Officer and Assistant Secretary
Thank you Katie, and good morning everyone.
In the third quarter, BXMT reported a GAAP net loss of $0.32 per share and distributable earnings, or DE of $0.39 per share. DE prior to charge-offs, which excludes a $17 million realized loss from the resolution of a non-performing office loan this quarter, was $0.49 per share and above our third quarter dividend of $0.47 per share.
Before expanding on our results for the quarter, I will first spend a moment discussing the earnings trajectory of our business. As Katie outlined, BXMT is well positioned for future growth. We have a strong pipeline of new investment opportunities providing an outlet for accretive deployment of our current excess liquidity, which is expected to further increase with anticipated repayments next quarter.
Equally important, we have a strong pipeline of non-performing loan resolutions with a clear path on more than half of our impaired assets. As a reminder, we do not recognize any income from these investments through DE, given our accounting policy. Despite many of these loans continuing to pay interest, weâre generating positive cash flow at the property level.
While the economic impact of the individual resolutions will vary depending in the size, structure and execution, we expect these near term resolutions will ultimately increase our run rate quarterly DE by an aggregate $0.07 to $0.10 per share once they close. In the near term, we expect these resolutions will crystallize $225 million to $275 million of realized losses, which are already embedded in our book value but will be recognized through DE upon closing. We expect most of these losses to flow through our 4Q results in advance of the subsequent expected earnings uplift following their resolution.
For the remaining NPLs, we continue to pursue strategies to maximize our outcomes. While the strategies and timelines of these resolutions will vary with some taking shape as a medium to long term hold to maximize our ultimate recovery value, we are highly focused on unlocking the earnings potential of this capital over time.
In the meantime, our earnings with respect to these longer term NPL resolutions will remain encumbered by approximately $0.08 per share of interest expense per quarter with no offsetting recognized income. We also expect that 4Q results will reflect the temporary earnings drag from the timing mismatch of when repayments and resolutions complete relative to when such capital is subsequently redeployed, as well as the two incremental loans we impaired this quarter. But importantly, we see this dynamic reversing course in 2025 as we move through more NPL resolutions and benefit from the deployment of capital into new accretive investments.
In establishing our dividend level last quarter, we considered this near term earnings variability as well as our view on ultimate long term earnings power, among other factors. Since that time, we believe the range of potential earnings scenarios has narrowed with capital markets continuing to recover, bolstering demand and values for institutional real estate assets, including office, and supporting loan resolutions at constructive levels. These trends reinforce our view that the current dividend level is sustainable relative to our long term earnings power.
Turning back to the quarterly results, we reported third quarter book value of $22.17 per share, which includes $1 billion or $5.89 per share of CECL reserves, up from $906 million last quarter. The increase in our CECL reserve was largely attributable to two office loans that were downgraded to a risk rating of 5 during the quarter. We also added two new REO assets which were brought onto our balance sheet at levels consistent with prior quarter carrying values and virtually no impact on book value.
Looking ahead, we see support to book value through the execution of near term NPL resolutions at or above current carrying values and the strong credit performance for the majority of our loans. Outside of US office, our portfolio is 95% performing and we had no risk rating downgrades, aside from one mixed use loan with a meaningful office component.
We also upgraded three multi-family loans and recognized stable performance broadly across multi-family, industrial, hospitality, and non-US office sectors. The performance of our multi-family portfolio is further highlighted by strong repayment activity with over $350 million collected across seven full loan repayments this quarter, predominantly through agency take-out.
With rates lower and transaction activity picking up, we see increased activity from the GSCs, a natural next step next step and a source capital for many of the stabilized assets in our portfolio. We also see this dynamic providing a tailwind to our agency lending partnership with M&T that we announced last quarter. And we are pleased to have our first three loans close with M&T subsequent to quarter end, formally launching this new capital-light business for BXMT.
In total, we collected $1.8 billion of repayments this quarter, our fourth highest quarterly repayment volume ever and bringing our 3Q year-to-date total to $3.6 billion. And so far in October, weâve collected nearly $400 million of additional repayments, demonstrating the continued liquidity in our portfolio and increased transaction volume weâre seeing in the market generally.
Reflecting this elevated repayment activity, we maintained strong liquidity of $1.5 billion, or reducing debt to equity to 3.8 times from 3.9 times quarter-over-quarter. We feel comfortable sitting with our target leverage range of 3 to 4 times and expect the continued repayment activity and NPL resolutions as capital markets recover to be supportive of maintaining leverage levels within this range.
Further on that, we repurchased $41 million of corporate debt at discounts in the quarter, which contributed to our leverage reduction and generated a modest book value gain. We also repurchased $11 million of our common stock at a discount to book, reflecting our long term view of BXMTâs equity value. And with our net future funding commitments down nearly 30% since last year to $850 million today with an average term of 2.3 years, we have plenty of capital to allocate to additional new investments in loans or debt and equity buybacks.
In closing, we look forward to the next chapter of BXMT as we push through legacy loan resolutions and deploy capital into new investments supported by improving market fundamentals, our well-structured balance sheet, and the strength of Blackstoneâs real estate platform.
Thank you for joining todayâs call. I will now ask the Operator to open the call to questions.
Operator
Don Fandetti, Wells Fargo.
Don Fandetti - Analyst
Hi, good morning. A couple of questions. First, I just wanted to clarify, I understand that the resolution of non-performing is supportive of book value, but are you saying that you think the kind of quarterly hits to book are behind you, or do you still see migration to 4- and 5-rated that could drive negative book value hits?
Katharine Keenan - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Thanks Don. I think as we look at it, as we mentioned in the script, we see the universe of potential challenges shrinking down. Weâve highlighted in the past, the main focus is really on the non-modified 4-rated office loans. This is about $700 million today, down from $1 billion last quarter, and weâre making progress on a lot of these. We actually had deals on some of them post quarter end. So this is really where the sort of universe of potential challenge going forward could be confined.
As far as the impaired loans resolutions, thatâs obviously a positive for DE as we bring that capital back and either reinvest it or bring it back to earnings power, and we see the reserves we have existing on those impaired loans as appropriate, given the resolutions that have negotiated to date and what weâre seeing in the market.
Don Fandetti - Analyst
Got it, and in terms of whatâs driving the sort of higher level of resolutions, is the market more supportive on the refinancing side? Can you dig in a little bit more on that?
Katharine Keenan - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Yes, absolutely. I think that what we saw this quarter was really a market acceleration of liquidity in the real estate market generally. You can see it in the CMBS market very clearly, where issuance is up 4 times year to date. You can see it in particular in office issuance in the CMBS market, you can see it in transaction activity which is up 20% quarter-over-quarter.
So I think that as people have realized that the range of outcomes for real estate has narrowed, they have then focused in on the fact that relative value for real estate is really attractive versus other alternatives, and therefore -- and the fact that their portfolios are generally underweight real estate, and therefore theyâre kind of flowing back into the real estate market, supported obviously by the rates dynamic and the new supply dynamic.
So the overall balance of increased liquidity in the space has benefited our performing loans, obviously through repayments, but I think also the resolutions through increased value transparency, increased liquidity, increased urgency to get these deals done, and more capital coming into the space that enables them.
Don Fandetti - Analyst
Thank you.
Operator
Tom Catherwood, BTIG.
Tom Catherwood - Analyst
Thanks and good morning everybody. Maybe Katie to start, on the origination side, obviously as you get repayments back in, putting that capital back to work is kind of paramount to maintaining earnings. I know obviously BXMTâs originations have been low but have started to ramp, but has Blackstone parent been originating the kind of transitional loans that would traditionally be in a CM REIT book, kind of in its fund business, and then you just step that into that now? Or is there a ramp process you have to go through as you look to put more money to work?
Katharine Keenan - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
I think the fact that we have over $500 million of loans closed and in closing is sort of a good indication of the fact that we can turn it back on pretty quickly. I mean, we have 150 people around the world actively originating these loans. We cover the waterfront in terms of risk-return for loan originations.
We are talking to all of these borrowers constantly with all of the different pools of capital that we have, so it is a huge advantage in terms of being able to identify what the targeted investment is for BXMT and drive really attractive pipeline quickly in terms of getting our capital invested. Again, I think the fact that weâve really turned it on just in the last couple of months is an indication of that.
Tom Catherwood - Analyst
Got it. Appreciate that, Katie. And then Tony, this is a dividend question, but itâs got a couple parts and pieces here. Coverage was tight in Q3. I got your comments that thereâs something like $0.07 to $0.08 uptick from the near term loan resolutions and putting that capital back to work, but there is that timing mismatch between repayments and new investments, and then thereâs also the drag to distributable earnings as the Fed cuts rate further, and again that all depends on the pace of rate cuts.
But as you put all of these pieces together, do you get to the point where youâre below that $0.47 dividend level for some period in 2025, and when do you think you get back above that? Is that a year-end thing, or can you put enough money to work early on that that becomes more mid-year â25?
Anthony Marone - Chief Financial Officer, Principal Accounting Officer and Assistant Secretary
Thanks for the detailed multi-part question. You hit on a couple points there. Maybe Iâll start high level, and then I want to hit on a couple points that you mentioned.
Firstly when we think about our $0.47 dividend, I think we said last quarter and also mentioned this quarter, we think about that similar to the $0.62 dividend -- itâs a level that we think is appropriate over the long term. Just like when we had $0.62, we had periods where we well out-earned, we had some periods we were below. You should think of $0.47 the same way. So thatâs one just sort of backdrop point.
As it relates to the different push-pulls on earnings, the headwind from rates declining is actually relatively modest at this point, given the fact that we have some of our non-performing loans that are not generating earnings and we have floating rate debt that drag on earnings from rates going down. And to your point, it depends on the pace and magnitude of those rate cuts, is much more modest than it was previously.
More importantly, or more to the point, the benefit of the lower rates is actually more significant over time because that facilitates our resolution of these NPLs and ultimate redeployment of that capital into new loans that are generating earnings. So I think net-net, although you may see a short term decline from rates coming down, itâs net-net a positive thing for us over the medium term.
All of that coming together, to your point, or one of your last points, is you do have a timing element here where we have loans that are going to be resolved in the near term. We think a lot of those will be resolved in the fourth quarter. That will be a downward pressure on earnings. The two loans we impaired will be downward pressure on earnings in the fourth quarter.
We will be redeploying that capital -- Katie mentioned our pipeline, and so we think that the dip, if you will, be relatively short and we look to 2025 as a period where earnings will rebound and start to generate pretty strong performance.
But there will be a short term dip, but we donât think itâs going to be a very long term recovery because weâve got some good tailwinds behind us.
Tom Catherwood - Analyst
Got it. Appreciate those thoughts, Tony. That's it for me. Thanks everyone.
Operator
Harsh Hemnani, Green Street
Harsh Hemnani - Analyst
Thank you. First, maybe repayments have accelerated quite a bit, and so how are you thinking of deploying those? The first avenue, as youâve mentioned, would be deploying it into new loans; the other would be buying back more shares. How do you weigh those today in an environment where it seems like, yes, the risk-adjusted return on commercial real estate loans might be better, but it seems like spreads have been coming in a little bit? I noticed in the presentation that now the target investment moved from SOFR plus 3.25 to SOFR plus 2.75, so how are you weighing new originations versus perhaps returning capital?
Katharine Keenan - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Sure thing, thanks Harsh, and welcome to the call. I think that one of the things we like the best about our business is our ability to be very strategic as we think about how to allocate our capital. And obviously in the last quarter, the answer was all of the above, and I think weâre going to continue to look across the avenues that we have to invest and be very thoughtful about the relative value of what weâre seeing.
I do think on the new origination front, we do today see a very attractive investment opportunity. Most importantly, the credit profile of the new loans weâre doing, 60% LTV, above a 9 debt yield, very strong fundamental asset classes, and obviously investing at a mid-teens levered return is very attractive, and weâre going to try and continue to expand on that. That is something that is core to our business and we think creates long term, durable, strong current income which is a goal of our business and the shareholders.
Obviously weâre also going to look to be strategic in terms of buying back in the capital structure, where we see the opportunity. I do want to comment on the spread dynamic in general, because I think itâs a really important nuance. Our business is obviously a levered spread business, so one of the dynamics thatâs driving the recovery in the real estate market is base rates coming down a bit. Weâve also seen spreads come down a bit, but critically for our business, first of all I think spreads are wider than they were in the tight historical levels, thatâs definitely borne out by the data.
But critically for our business, itâs really about the difference between where we lend and where we borrow. Where we borrow is also coming in very significantly, so the spread between those two levels is as good or, really, better than it has been historically, and as a result we see the opportunity between credit being better and returns being attractive, we see that combined relative to value opportunity as something that we really want to lean into, because on an absolute and relative basis, itâs just a very attractive set-up for investment.
Harsh Hemnani - Analyst
Got it that's helpful. And then maybe as you mentioned in the prepared remarks, we are going -- we have started the process of lower rates. It still remains uncertain, though, where weâll end, the path of these rate cuts, et cetera. In this environment, have you been seeing perhaps higher SOFR flows on newer loans that you are originating? Are you having those conversations with borrowers, and how are those going?
Katharine Keenan - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Itâs a great question. I would say SOFR floors is a huge focus of ours on both the investment side and on the modification side. We can add floors to our portfolio, both in terms of putting on new loans at resets over floors today and in terms of when weâre touching loans sort of along the way, incorporating SOFR floors to todayâs levels. I think that is one of the things that over time will become a more important dynamic relative to rates.
Harsh Hemnani - Analyst
Got it. Thank you.
Operator
Steve Delaney, Citizens JMP.
Steve Delaney - Analyst
Hey, good morning. Thank you everyone. You resolved $500 million of NPLs in the third quarter and indicated another $600 million closing, hopefully in the fourth quarter. So with that $1.1 billion, how much do you expect will be left in either the five-rated loan bucket or in REO as of the end of 2024? Thank you.
Katharine Keenan - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Sure. I think on the numbers, just to clarify, so $500 million we have closed and in closing post quarter end, so we closed a couple deals, or one deal in the last couple weeks. We have hard contracts in place on a couple others, et cetera, and then we have another $600 million that we have very firm visibility on.
So yeah, net-net that adds up to about $1.1 billion relative to the $2.3 billion of impaired loans that we have on the books as we look forward, sort of towards quarter end. Obviously the timing of closings can be a little bit lumpy. We think those are all near term, and weâre going to try very hard to get them all done in the fourth quarter; but could a few slip to the first quarter possibly.
I would say that in terms of whatâs left at the end of that, that is really the math on the impaired loans. The REO assets are really small, and we actually have some good action on a couple of those as well, so I donât think itâs going to meaningfully change the numbers.
Steve Delaney - Analyst
Okay, and Katie, just so we understand the magnitude of--and I know things are fluid quarter to quarter, but I believe five-rated loans at September 30, were $3.2 billion. Is that correct?
Katharine Keenan - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
I think that $3.2 billion youâre mentioning is the gross OPB amount, but weâve obviously taken a very significant amount of reserves against those, so we sort of think about it as how much is in our book value, which is about $2.3 billion.
Steve Delaney - Analyst
Okay, very good. Okay, thank you for the comments.
Operator
Jade Ramani, KBW.
Jade Rahmani - Analyst
Thank you very much. How confident are you that the problem set is squarely focused on the risk 4- to 5-rated bucket, and we wonât see further migration from 3s to 4s? In this quarter, there were a couple of downgrades, I believe 3 -- from 3 to 4.
Katharine Keenan - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Thanks Jade. I think as you know, we go through the portfolio with a fine tooth comb every quarter, and we are -- weâve tried to really get ahead of it. I think thereâs a lot of loans that have been 4-rated for years, and so any time we see something that, like, could be an issue, has a question mark, we try and be very transparent with our investors about where we think thereâs a question mark, and thatâs really what exists in the 4s.
Many of those loans have been modified subsequently, have been very stable, have been performers for years, and so when we think about the universe of whatâs in that bucket, it can be a bit sticky, but there really are a few different sub-categories within that bucket which weâve outlined in the past, and today.
I think as far as the three to four potential downgrades, again we go through the portfolio with a fine tooth comb. I think really the big picture element there is that the momentum has really shifted. What we have -- US office has been primary issue. When we look at whatâs in the three-rated category of US office, itâs like 95% new construction or high cash flow sunbelt.
Weâve got some European office in there, which is a completely different dynamic, and then everything else is sort of non-office category. So when we look at the composition of whatâs in the threes, thereâs really very little left in there of non-high quality, either European or well performing US office. And anything that didnât fit those categories, we downgraded, and thatâs really why you see what happened this quarter as far as 3s to 4s.
So we have 149 loans in the portfolio. Could we have some idiosyncratic thing happen? Itâs possible. But I think that we try and go through with a fine tooth comb, the momentum has really shifted, and that is really the critical dynamic, is that things, I think going forward from here are much more likely to be positive surprises versus having things that weâre not looking out for and deterioration.
Jade Rahmani - Analyst
Thank you very much. Can you give an update on the Spain and Australia deals, just because we havenât heard much about those lately?
Katharine Keenan - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Sure. So the Spain deal, I think youâre commenting on the large portfolio of individual loans from pre-COVID in Spain. That loan really continues to just pay down in small increments over time. I think itâs paid down by about 50% since we originated it, and there continues to be liquidity for those deals. Europe obviously has lower rates and a more clearly lower rate picture even than the US, and so I think thatâs a positive.
As far as Australia, weâve invested a tremendous amount of capital in that portfolio to make it the safest place to play in Australia, and itâs really sort of on a positive trajectory and obviously a very high focus deal that we feel good about for the firm.
Jade Rahmani - Analyst
Thank you.
Operator
Doug Harter, UBS.
Doug Harter - Analyst
Thanks. Katie, you mentioned that youâre seeing attractive spreads on returns net of financing costs today. If you could just kind of quantify how that translates into a return on capital on a new dollar that youâre putting to work today and how you think that compares to the â21 vintage of loans that you wrote?
Katharine Keenan - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Sure, so I would say that today what weâre seeing, as I mentioned, in the 2024 originations, 60% of LTV, over 9 debt yield, and theyâre basically setting up to a thousand over base rates from an ROI perspective. So today that means mid-teens return on our invested equity.
I would say that that is--the credit metrics are obviously more attractive versus the swath of the market in 2021, especially because weâre talking about reset values. Then I think that on a return basis, weâre kind of a little higher than where weâve been for a similar credit quality product.
When we look at our portfolio across the board, in the past weâve done some construction, which has been really good credit profile, but obviously on the face of it has wider spreads. Weâve also done a lot of more stabilized assets on the multi-family side, et cetera, so when we look at the returns on a same store basis, theyâre better today and we think weâre at reset value, so all in risk-adjusted return is better.
Doug Harter - Analyst
Great. Great, thank you Katie.
Operator
Rick Shane, JP Morgan.
Rick Shane - Analyst
Thanks everybody for taking my questions. Look, thereâs a lot going on here, and what I take away, and this has been our thesis for a bit, is that it feels like you guys have greater confidence in dimensionalizing the risk. But weâre now entering a period where resolutions are really going to accelerate.
Katie, you made the point of the difference between the stock price and the fully reserved book value. We always look at that as a burn down value, and realistically thatâs not what you guys are striving for. The discount reflects that the DE is probably on an ROE basis 2 or 3 points above SOFR, which is well below your historical hurdle rate of 7% to 8% above benchmark. Is that still a realistic target as we emerge from this period?
Katharine Keenan - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
I think thereâs a couple ways to approach the question. I think, look, when we look at the dividend yield that weâre paying today, and obviously we thought about the dividend with respect to the long term ROE earnings power of the business, I think itâs pretty attractive, especially when you look at it relative to longer term base rates.
I mean, I think you can look at it relative to SOFR, you can look at it relative to the 5-year or the 10-year. I think people coming into the stock today, one of the attractive things is youâre buying in at a yield that has as much duration to it as you want, so I think for that reason itâs more appropriately compared to longer duration alternatives.
And I think that to your point, the other really critical thing is this isnât a burn down company. This is a company that is backed by the largest owner of real estate in the world, by one of the strongest real estate credit businesses in the world, and our ability to create the next generation of the portfolio here and produce very attractive new investment opportunities, and sort of think through what this is going to look like a year from now, two years from now. Thatâs really not priced in at all today.
So I think that that is something that people really need to think about in terms of getting a very attractive current income yield obviously along the way, continued portfolio turnover, so the overall scope of the existing portfolio thatâs being invested in is obviously shifting and improving, and then what are sort of the prospects going forward.
Rick Shane - Analyst
Totally agree. Look, it dovetails into the second part of my question, but I would disagree slightly in terms of what the benchmark is, because when I think of your earnings model, given the asset sensitivity charge that you guys have shown over the years, Iâm thinking not of return to shareholders from a dividend perspective, but your ROE is a function of short rates, which is kind of the way you guys have always shown it.
But to your second point, and I think this is really the key here, based on Tonyâs comments about the resolution in redeployment, is it realistic to see BXMT returning to those hurdle rates exiting 2025? Is that what the target is, because again to your point, itâs the potential, and the question is how long does it take to realize that potential?
Katharine Keenan - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
I think that is exactly the question, and I think that as we sit here today, we think that the path towards that potential has gotten shorter, or it will happen more quickly, because obviously the acceleration in the capital markets is really the key dynamic there, and weâre focused on getting there as quickly as we can.
Rick Shane - Analyst
Okay, thanks. And clearly one of the things thatâs happened is that as the bid-ask spread has narrowed, that drives transaction volume, and I think that thatâs really contributing to whatâs going on.
Katharine Keenan - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Yeah, I completely agree.
Rick Shane - Analyst
Thanks guys.
Operator
Eric Dray, Bank of America.
Eric Dray - Analyst
Hi Katie. Just one more on credit. Was just curious how you guys think about the rate backdrop and how that can impact, you talked about kind of the shift in the market. Is there any risk to credit deterioration or just -- I donât know, like this pick-up kind of stalls if we donât get the rate cuts that weâre seeing in the forward curve right now, or how do you guys think about that?
Katharine Keenan - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Yeah, I think itâs a good question. I mean, I would start by highlighting the fact that obviously 30% of our portfolio is outside of the US, in Europe where I think the trajectory is even clearer than the US. But I also think when you look at the US, while itâs never quite linear in terms of rates, the direction of travel is pretty clear, especially when we look at our inflation indicators and look at overall whatâs going on in the market, so it might be, certainly the curve has moved a bit between last quarterâs call and this quarterâs call with the drop in the middle, but I think that the direction of travel is pretty clear.
I also think it is really about that narrowing of range of outcomes, so when you think about what impacts credit, where we were sitting a year ago, people did not know where rates were going to peak. People did not know, quote-unquote, how bad it was going to be in terms of the real estate market. I think really, a lot of those questions have been answered at that point.
And you can see it in the capital markets today and the indicators, whether itâs the REIT market, whether itâs whatâs going on in the CMBS market. There is a reset clearly thatâs come as rates have been higher, but the range of outcomes is much, much narrower, and thatâs really whatâs driving the liquidity, the transaction activity, the reinvestment of capital.
I think that if rates kind of are at the current curve or kind of meander a bit around. I donât think thatâs going to meaningfully change the answer.
Eric Dray - Analyst
Then one more on the pipeline. You know, moving into 2025, are there any areas that you guys are really targeting, that you kind of expect to see some outsized growth in, whether thatâs plateau type or geography, just kind of what you guys are seeing in the pipeline?
Katharine Keenan - President, Chief Executive Officer, Director
Sure. I think on where we see really good, interesting investment opportunities, clearly multi-family in the US, I think has very strong long term drivers. We continue to like industrial. Data centers are a huge focus. We see a lot of growth there.
I think geographically, we really like the relative value in Europe. Itâs an area where weâve always had a very strong competitive advantage. We have a very deep, long term presence in the market, and understanding of the different countries and different jurisdictions there. And I think that competitive advantage will continue to hopefully produce good investments there as well.
We do see a lot of opportunity around our markets. US, Europe, Australia as well, I think there could be more to do there, so I think right now, sectors are sort of where weâve seen the tailwinds as they happen, and markets, we see opportunities in various geographies.
Operator
Thank you. With no additional questions in queue, I'd like to turn the call back over to Mr. Hayes for any additional or closing remarks.
Timothy Hayes - Vice President - Shareholder Relations
Thank you, Katie and everyone for joining today's call. Please reach out with any questions.