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Sachem Capital Corp. (SACH)

Q2 2025 Earnings Call· Tue, Aug 5, 2025

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Transcript

Operator

Operator

Good day, and welcome to the Sachem Capital Corp. Second Quarter 2025 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] Please note this event is being recorded. I would like now to turn the conference over to Stephen Swett, Investor Relations. Please go ahead.

Stephen C. Swett

Analyst

Good morning, and thank you for joining Sachem Capital Corp.'s Second Quarter 2025 Earnings Conference Call. On the call from Sachem Capital today is Chief Executive Officer, John Villano, CPA, and Interim Chief Financial Officer, Jeff Walraven. This morning, the company announced its operating and financial results for the quarter ended June 30, 2025. The press release is posted on the company's website www.sachemcapitalcorp.com. In addition, the company filed its Form 10-Q today, which can be accessed on the company's website as well as the SEC's website at www.sec.gov. As a reminder, remarks made on today's conference call may include forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from those discussed today. These include the risks detailed in our annual Form 10-K and this Form 10-Q, such as those related to nonperforming loans, credit losses and market conditions. We do not undertake any obligation to update our forward-looking statements in light of new information or future events. For more -- a more detailed discussion of the factors that may affect the company's results, please refer to our earnings release for this quarter and to our most recent SEC filings. During this call, the company will be discussing certain non-GAAP financial measures. More information about these non-GAAP financial measures and reconciliations to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures are contained in our SEC filings. With that, I'll now turn the call over to John.

John L. Villano

Analyst

Thank you, and thanks to everyone for joining us today. We will begin by reviewing our operating and financial results for the second quarter and provide an update on our strategic progress. During the quarter, we continued working towards growing our lending platform and taking decisive steps to strengthen our financial position. The efforts we made in late 2024 and early this year to protect our balance sheet from non-accretive financing positioned us well for continued stabilization in the second quarter. Building on the momentum from the first quarter, we remained focused on sourcing accretive capital to support our growth. We are pleased with the closing of our new $100 million senior secured notes due June 2030. This new financing provides significant financial flexibility for Sachem, allowing us to repay existing obligations and accelerate the origination of new accretive loans resulting in asset growth for the first time in 5 quarters. Moving forward, we will continue to evaluate additional capital sources to further strengthen our liquidity position and grow our earning asset base. During the first half of the year, our portfolio continued to perform in line with expectations. While we still have approximately $119.6 million gross unpaid principal balance of nonperforming loans in loans held for investment were $107 million net compared to $107.6 million gross and $94.3 million net as of March 31, 2025. We continue to make meaningful progress working through these legacy assets, which we believe is critical to unlocking value and supporting future dividend growth. As of June 30, 2025, our book value was $2.54 per share, representing just a 1.2% decrease from March 31, 2025. Additionally, I'd like to provide a brief update on our significant exposure to a single borrower in the South Florida region. Specifically, 2 cross- collateralized loans in Naples totaling…

Jeffery C. Walraven

Analyst

Thank you, John. I'll walk through Sachem Capital's financial highlights for the second quarter ended June 30, 2025. Let's get started with revenues. Total revenue was $10.8 million compared to $15.1 million in the second quarter of 2024. The change in revenue was primarily due to the cumulative effect on interest income from loans from materially lower net new loan origination over the last 12 months resulted in a year-over-year reduction in the unpaid principal balance of loans held for investment of $121.2 million, in addition to a currently elevated amount of nonperforming loans, loans held for sale and real estate owned. As a result, interest income from loans was $7.5 million, down from $11.8 million, partially offset by fee income of $1.8 million and LLC income of $1 million. On the other hand, other income increased significantly, increasing by $0.5 million. This was driven by the recognition of rental income from 1 project in 2025 which contributed the $0.5 million during this quarter. No such rental income was recorded in the prior quarter or year. Turning to operating expenses. Total operating costs and expenses for the second quarter of 2025 were $9.7 million compared to $18.3 million in the same quarter last year. The primary contributor to this decrease was the reduction in the provision for credit losses related to loans held for investment, which declined by $7.6 million or 89.1% -- this change was driven by a decrease in direct allowances related to foreclosures and nonperforming loans. Additionally, the change was due to reductions in interest and amortization expense of $0.8 million, compensation and employee benefits, provision for credit losses related to loans held for sale and other expenses totaling $1 million. Overall, this reflects our progress in managing risks and reducing financing costs through debt repayments. So…

John L. Villano

Analyst

Thanks, Jeff. We believe Sachem is positioned to be a leader in small balance real estate finance. We look forward to resolving our remaining NPLs to unlock capital for growth and accessing new sources of accretive capital to refill our loan pipeline. While our recovery is well underway, more time is needed to be fully back on track. We will continue to manage our business, grow book value and our dividend with the goal of producing value for our shareholders. Thank you, and we'll now open the call to questions from our analysts.

Operator

Operator

[Operator Instructions] The first question is from the line of Chris Muller with Citizens Capital Markets.

Christopher Muller

Analyst

And congrats on getting the notes offering done. It's nice to have that behind you guys. So I want to talk about some of the LLC investments. It looks like there was a dip in income there quarter-over-quarter. So I guess the question is, what caused that dip? And what's the outlook for Urbane and Shem Creek in the back half of the year?

John L. Villano

Analyst

Okay. Chris. So Urbane, as we've talked about in our just recent script read, we've got projects going on, 1 in Connecticut, 3 in Florida that are in various stages of progress. Our building in Westport, Connecticut, which is an office -- a significant office building. It is 50% leased. We've talked about a $1.3 million GAAP rental income for the year, which does provide a rate of return to Sachem. And then further, the efforts of Urbane capital have -- they split off a section of the property to really build a residential community as part of the parcel. And that has significant upside to us. It is -- we're moving through the planning stages. So we do have approvals. We are now planning the development of the parcel. We expect that to occur in the next 6 to 9 months. Unfortunately, these things take time. There is also some preliminary discussions of further leasing of the main office building from our significant tenant. Those discussions are ongoing. With respect to the properties in Florida, we have recently inspected those properties and they are moving along famously, we expect a -- I don't want to say a cash-out event, but we expect a sales perhaps in the fourth quarter of 2025 with further sales in the first half of '26 for the remaining 2 units. The buildings are of excellent quality. They are in Coconut Grove, Florida. They fit in with the revitalization and rebuild of the community. And we have a local, well-established builder handling the process with us. With respect to Shem Creek, with our Shem Creek investments, and you do know that we have a 20% ownership interest in the manager. Our cash flows are subject to certain waterfalls with respect to the loans that we participate in. And in many cases, we don't know exactly how those are going to flow to us. But overall, we do maintain a double-digit yield on our investments with Shem. They are excellent in terms of underwriting multifamily and workforce loan opportunities. And it's something that we can't handle here at Sachem because our cost of capital is just a bit too high to be effective in that lending space. So it's a way for us to get portfolio diversification with great sponsors, great underwriters, and we look forward to building our relationship with Shem over the coming years.

Christopher Muller

Analyst

Got it. That helpful. And sorry, go ahead.

Jeffery C. Walraven

Analyst

So the 1 piece I would add on to John's commentary, just give you a couple of numbers behind it. The 1 we've been getting a return of capital on the Shem Creek, right? There's been continuing turnover in those assets. So there's -- when you look from year-end through June 30, we've had about a $7 million return of capital relative to just specifically invested in the funds in Shem Creek setting aside the manager. And as John mentioned, relative to the waterfalls, there was some timing difference that occurred between second, third -- first quarter and second quarter. So on the one aspect, I would not caution just annualizing the 3 months ended June 30 because there was a little bit of a twist. I would continue to focus in on the total Shem Creek investments relative to the funds, which is approximately $41.2 million and our still current earnings on that is in that low double digit, 10% to 12% return on that invested funds.

Christopher Muller

Analyst

Got it. It's very helpful. And then I guess on Urbane more specifically, what does the pipeline look for new projects there? Are they kind of at capacity with the existing book?

John L. Villano

Analyst

Chris, you're going to get me in a lot of trouble here. We are looking to build the Urbane pipeline. You may have heard me speak about this in prior calls, not so recently, but in prior calls, where we want to have Urbane projects rolling off our books every quarter. And that's going to require us to invest further dollars with them going forward. And we've had a bump in the road over the past year or so, '24 was difficult for us. So we've slowed down the pursuit of opportunities with Urbane. However, it is a topic of discussion every day, and we're looking to get back on that horse and begin building our portfolio with them again.

Christopher Muller

Analyst

Got it. That's very helpful. And just one other one, if I could throw it out there. It looks like the REO was pretty stable in the quarter. Can you just give us some insight into that bucket? Were there sales and new additions? Or was REO activity pretty muted in the quarter?

John L. Villano

Analyst

We are making significant progress working through the NPLs and the REO. Unfortunately, the process takes a whole lot of time and a whole lot of effort. Jeff, if you would like to share some of the improvements we've made during the quarter and expected improvements in the third quarter, that would be a good time to talk about that.

Jeffery C. Walraven

Analyst

And Chris, relative to REO specifically, there is a footnote on Page 33 actually in the MD&A section that actually gives you an asset- by-asset breakdown of REO and it indicates when it was actually -- when it was added into the portfolio. So year-to-date, there's been movement while the REO $18 million, $18.5 million rounded and change looks flat. We've added $2.3 million we've taken away. There's also another footnote. I was trying to find it exactly where we reconcile the move in REO that is in the footnotes, and I can find that one specifically for you here in a minute. We'll take the quick opportunity relative to just when you kind of look at NPLs and loans held for investment, the loans held for sale and REO on an aggregate basis, like since June 30, the resolutions, we've been talking about our focus on the resolutions, and they -- the resolutions are continuing to accelerate even though, I'll call it, net, we believe we're at the peak as of June 30. But post June 30, we've had resolutions in that category of approximately $5 million. And before we get through the end of just third quarter, we're expecting an additional resolution, I'll call it, in the category of NPLs, loans held for sale and REO of another $12.5 million. We really do expect the velocity of resolutions to pick up in the second half of the year with all the work and focus we've had on it.

Operator

Operator

The next question is from the line of Christopher Nolan with Ladenburg Thalmann.

Christopher Whitbread Patrick Nolan

Analyst

The Naples loan, what's the amount, please?

John L. Villano

Analyst

The principal balance?

Christopher Whitbread Patrick Nolan

Analyst

Yes, please.

John L. Villano

Analyst

I think it's $44 million.

Christopher Whitbread Patrick Nolan

Analyst

If I understand your comments earlier, John, that you think you potentially could see a court-driven resolution this week.

John L. Villano

Analyst

We have a mediation event scheduled for tomorrow. And we have ongoing discussions with our borrower. And as we talked about in our script reading, we have a second mortgage holder that is being difficult and they are in a terrible position and they're fighting for their life. And this thing should be coming to an end relatively quickly. But again, when your hands are in the judge's hands, it takes time. So we are optimistic, and we are working it towards the exit. It's just taking longer than we would like. And as we discussed, it does cost -- it's hitting earnings, right? It hits earnings of $450,000 a month. It's painful.

Christopher Whitbread Patrick Nolan

Analyst

Okay. So there is the pathway for some sort of resolution where there's a restructuring, which could be a third quarter realized gain or loss, I mean, something along those lines, but something is likely to happen on this.

John L. Villano

Analyst

We are hoping for the best. We are working -- like I said, we're working our way towards the door. It's finding a middle ground with all parties where we can proceed and unlock our capital.

Christopher Whitbread Patrick Nolan

Analyst

Got you. And then if I'm correct, that this accounts for roughly 1/3 of your nonaccrual in the quarter. Is that correct?

John L. Villano

Analyst

That's correct.

Jeffery C. Walraven

Analyst

And then you've got to take Chris, there were 2 loans within the Naples to the same borrower. And so as you'll see disclosed, there's a $50.4 million net book value on there, and that $50.4 million is -- $50.4 million of $119 million. So yes, a little more than...

Christopher Whitbread Patrick Nolan

Analyst

Okay. And then a broader thing. I noticed that your reserve -- your allowance reserves as a percentage of your mortgages has gone down. It looks like your nonaccrual volumes have gone down. I mean it looks like you guys absorbed -- I wouldn't say you stabilized in terms of the asset quality trends, putting aside Naples for a second, just on the second quarter results. Is that a fair read of it?

John L. Villano

Analyst

That is fair. There is a cleansing of the portfolio that's been ongoing. We've talked about this prior. We're not big fans of extend and pretend any loan that's coming up for renewal, you've got to meet our updated underwriting guidelines. If not, it ends up in a [ non- PL ] situation. So we're doing our very best to cleanse the portfolio. Like I've said, it's quite painful, but it's what we want to show our shareholders that we're managing the portfolio the best we can. We're trying to manage the assets and the money we have invested. And we're trying to push some of these weaker loans to the door as quickly as we can.

Christopher Whitbread Patrick Nolan

Analyst

Okay. The final question. The leverage ratio is quite high. Should we start seeing more loan sales and just trying to process -- originate loans and then sell them. Is that going to be more of an activity?

John L. Villano

Analyst

We have no loan sales plan. I mean we do have some -- we have loans for sale on our balance sheet, loans held for sale, but we are not planning a significant sale like you saw in the fourth quarter of '24.

Operator

Operator

The final question is from the line of Gaurav Mehta with Alliance Global Partners.

Gaurav Mehta

Analyst

Thank you. Good morning. I wanted to get some more clarity on the second tranche of the $100 million note offering. So the withdrawal of that tranche between now and, I guess, May of '26 that depends on new loan origination opportunities that you guys see during this time?

John L. Villano

Analyst

Gaurav, that is correct, and I want to add this as well. As you know, we have notes coming due in September -- September 30 of this quarter -- of the third quarter. Funds are available for that through our Churchill facility, cash on hand as well as our Needham credit facility. So that the undrawn $50 million is available for our notes or it could be for growth. But we're going to see how the quarter progresses taking into account loan payoffs and things like that.

Gaurav Mehta

Analyst

Okay. And I guess, during this quarter, I don't know if I missed you in your comments, did you provide a number on new loan origination and loan payoffs?

Jeffery C. Walraven

Analyst

Yes, we do. We have -- that is in, I'll call it, the opening section of the MD&A. For the quarter -- I was just trying to get my specific numbers. For the quarter, we originated or put out new loan disbursements relative to either draws on existing loans or brand-new loans of $39.7 million and loans repaid was $23.7 million.

Gaurav Mehta

Analyst

Okay. And then lastly, maybe on the yields on the new loans that you guys are seeing. Is it still 12% and 2%? Or are you guys seeing a different number in the market?

Jeffery C. Walraven

Analyst

Gaurav, we're doing our best to stay with 12% and 2%. We're not able to compete in multifamily finance with those rates, but we're doing our best to stay with 12% and 2%. And on a rare occasion, we'll go down to 11%. We're not getting into below 10% in any case.

Operator

Operator

This concludes our question-and-answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to management for any closing remarks. Thank you.

John L. Villano

Analyst

Thanks, everyone, for joining us today. We look forward to informing you next quarter.

Operator

Operator

The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.