Rocket Mortgage Surges After Posting 277% Profit Increase
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(Bloomberg) -- Rocket Companies Inc., one of the nation’s largest mortgage lenders, surged on Friday after reporting a 277% increase in quarterly profit.
The results punctuated a record-setting year as the home-loan specialist rode the U.S. housing rally. With a ten-fold increase in net income last year to $9.4 billion, Rocket declared a special dividend of $1.11 per share, according to a statement on Thursday.
The company also posted adjusted revenue that beat estimates. Shares jumped as much as 18% to $23.56, the biggest intraday gain in a month.
“We successfully drove growth in every segment of our business,” Rocket Chief Executive Officer Jay Farner said in the statement.
The pandemic real estate boom gave a major boost to the mortgage industry, which posted record loan volume and profits in 2020 as rates dipped to historic lows. Much of that was thanks to the Federal Reserve, which kept a lid on borrowing costs and bought mortgage bonds as part of its bid to stimulate the economy.
The company’s fourth-quarter results illustrated the power of Rocket’s mortgage machine to churn out more loans than anyone else while still maintaining industry leading profit margins, according to Ben Elliott, an analyst at Bloomberg Intelligence.
The question now is whether profitability has peaked. Rocket reported a 4.41% profit margin on newly originated loans last quarter, well above the company’s November estimate of 3.8% to 4.1%. It told investors on Thursday to expect margins on new loans this quarter to be around 3.6% to 3.9%.
Mortgage lenders have been warning investors in recent weeks that profitability won’t expand this year. UWM Holdings Corp., the parent company of United Wholesale Mortgage, said profits on new loans this quarter could fall by as much as one-third from last year’s fourth quarter.
Mr. Cooper Group Inc., meanwhile, said this week that its gains on mortgage sales -- lenders generally sell the loans they originate -- will be roughly flat this quarter.
Read more: In a Flash, U.S. Yields Hit 1.6%, Wreaking Havoc Across Markets
Mortgage rates in the U.S. rose this week to the highest level in six months, threatening to snuff out the mortgage rally. And with Treasury yields ticking higher, borrowing costs could continue to climb.
That could deter more Americans from seeking to refinance debt, while surging home prices are pushing ownership out of reach for many.
Mortgage applications fell to a nine-month low last week, while pending home sales last month dropped to a six-month low.
(Updates share price and adds analyst quote.)
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