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AGNC Investment Corp.
AGNC Investment Corp. was founded in 2008 as American Capital Agency Corp., an externally-managed mortgage real estate investment trust incubated by...
AGNC Investment Corp.
AGNC Investment Corp. was founded in 2008 as American Capital Agency Corp., an externally-managed mortgage real estate investment trust incubated by private equity firm American Capital. The timing was precarious—launching an agency MBS portfolio into the teeth of the housing crisis—yet the structure positioned it to acquire deeply discounted assets with federal guarantees. In 2016, the company internalized its management, severing the external contract and converting to a self-directed REIT under CEO Gary Kain, who later handed the reins to long-time deputy Peter Federico in 2022. The firm's investment strategy hinges on a straightforward but capital-intensive trade: borrowing short-term via repurchase agreements to purchase longer-duration agency mortgage-backed securities. The book spans 30-year and 15-year fixed-rate MBS, adjustable-rate securities, and collateralized mortgage obligations, all guaranteed by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, or Ginnie Mae. AGNC also holds non-agency positions and credit-risk-transfer securities as opportunistic complements, though the core portfolio remains overwhelmingly agency. The entire portfolio is marked by explicit interest-rate and prepayment-risk hedging through swaps, swaptions, and Treasury futures. AGNC operates across the US agency mortgage market with no material international exposure. The company has distributed roughly $13 billion in cumulative dividends since its 2008 IPO, according to its own historical record. As a perpetual-issuance vehicle, it regularly taps equity markets through follow-on offerings and at-the-market programs to scale the portfolio when mortgage spreads widen. August 2024: AGNC announced a definitive agreement to acquire all outstanding shares of special-purpose acquisition vehicle AGNC Investment Corp., consolidating its legacy paired-share structure into a single class of common stock (per the firm, August 2024). The Bethesda headquarters houses the entire investment and executive team. AGNC's defining structural feature is its total reliance on agency pass-throughs—a mandate that makes it a vehicle for levered duration exposure rather than credit selection. Unlike hybrid mortgage REITs that mix commercial lending with residential assets, AGNC's returns are almost entirely a function of interest-rate volatility and the shape of the yield curve, not underwriting skill. That makes it less a real estate investor and more a dedicated spread-capture engine, distinct from multi-strategy REITs like Annaly Capital Management or Starwood Property Trust.
General information
Firm type
Asset Manager
Year founded
2008
AUM
Undisclosed
Location
Region
North America
Country
United States
City
Bethesda
Corporate office
Bethesda, Maryland, United States
Principals
Peter J. Federico
President and Chief Executive Officer
Bernice E. Bell
Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Sector focus
Frequently asked questions
Who leads investment decisions at AGNC Investment Corp.?
Peter Federico has served as President and CEO since July 2022, succeeding Gary Kain, who held the role from the firm's internalization in 2016. The investment portfolio is managed by an internal team of fixed-income professionals operating from the Bethesda headquarters. Unlike externally-managed mortgage REITs, AGNC has no outside investment advisor—all asset allocation and hedging decisions are made in-house.
Is AGNC a family office or a mortgage REIT?
AGNC Investment Corp. is a publicly traded, internally-managed mortgage real estate investment trust (mREIT), not a family office. It raises capital from public equity investors and institutional debt markets rather than managing a single family's wealth. The firm's common stock trades on the Nasdaq under the ticker AGNC.
How does AGNC generate its investment returns?
AGNC earns the spread between interest income on its agency MBS portfolio and the cost of funding those assets through repurchase agreements. Because the underlying securities carry federal guarantees against credit loss, the firm's primary risk is not borrower default but rather interest-rate movement and mortgage prepayment behavior. It actively hedges these exposures using swaps, swaptions, and Treasury-based derivatives.
What types of assets does AGNC hold?
The portfolio is overwhelmingly concentrated in agency residential mortgage-backed securities guaranteed by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and Ginnie Mae—typically 30-year and 15-year fixed-rate pass-throughs. AGNC also maintains smaller allocations to agency collateralized mortgage obligations, credit-risk-transfer securities, and legacy non-agency MBS, though the agency book represents the dominant share of invested equity.
Does AGNC invest outside the US mortgage market?
No. AGNC's mandate is entirely domestic, focused on US agency residential mortgage securities. The firm has no material international mortgage exposure, commercial real estate lending, or equity real estate investments. It is a pure-play vehicle for US government-guaranteed housing credit.
How is AGNC different from Annaly or other mortgage REITs?
While Annaly Capital Management also invests primarily in agency MBS, Annaly operates as a diversified capital manager with commercial real estate, middle-market lending, and credit-strategy subsidiaries. AGNC remains a near-pure agency play—its return profile is tied almost exclusively to duration management and spread capture rather than credit underwriting. This makes AGNC a more concentrated proxy for US mortgage basis risk.
What was the significance of AGNC's 2016 internalization?
Until 2016, AGNC was externally managed by a subsidiary of American Capital, Ltd., paying a fee based on gross equity. Shareholders voted to internalize the management team, converting AGNC into a self-directed REIT with its own employees. The shift eliminated the external management fee, aligned executive compensation with total shareholder return, and gave the firm full control over its cost structure and capital allocation.
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