Today: 13 May 2026
Why Arbor Realty Trust Stock Is Falling: Dividend Cut, Weak Q1 Earnings Put ABR Loan Book in Focus

Why Arbor Realty Trust Stock Is Falling: Dividend Cut, Weak Q1 Earnings Put ABR Loan Book in Focus

New York, May 8, 2026, 14:04 (EDT)

  • Arbor Realty Trust slashed its quarterly common dividend to $0.17 from $0.30 after a steep drop in earnings.
  • ABR shares slipped roughly 11% in afternoon trading, as investors zeroed in on problem loans and property repossessions.
  • Management warned that with rates climbing, efforts to work through non-performing assets might lose momentum.

Shares of Arbor Realty Trust slid roughly 11% Friday, with the commercial mortgage REIT trimming its quarterly common dividend and posting first-quarter results that offered scant cushion for its credit cleanup efforts. The stock last traded at $7.29, after hitting a session low of $7.02.

Uniondale, New York’s Arbor Realty Trust posted net income attributable to common stockholders of just $629,000 for the quarter, translating to $0.00 per diluted share. A year ago, the figure stood at $30.4 million, or $0.16 a share. The board kept its common dividend at $0.17 per share, with a payout scheduled for June 5 to shareholders on record as of May 22.

Arbor’s dividend got cut to $0.30 earlier this year, down from $0.43 slated for early 2025. Now, with the latest reset, attention shifts to the mortgage lender’s ability to convert troubled loans and real estate-owned properties—these are assets reclaimed after foreclosure—into something that generates cash again.

Arbor posted distributable earnings of $14.4 million, or $0.07 per diluted common share. That figure, a non-GAAP metric tweaked from standard profit numbers, is typically a go-to for mortgage REIT investors looking to gauge dividend potential. Stripping out $22.9 million in realized losses from legacy asset resolutions, the company put distributable earnings at $0.18 per share.

Paul Elenio, the Chief Financial Officer, told investors on the earnings call that when it comes to the dividend, the company focuses on distributable earnings minus one-time realized losses that have already been reserved. “We have set the dividend where we think we can earn it for the rest of the year,” he said. The Motley Fool

Signs of stress linger across the loan book. As of March 31, Arbor’s 10-Q listed 19 non-performing loans totaling $481.5 million in unpaid principal, down from 26 loans and $569.1 million at year-end. The filing also disclosed $12.5 million in impairments tied to real estate owned, along with a $3.6 million net provision for loan losses under CECL, the expected credit loss accounting model.

Arbor wrapped up the quarter with close to $500 million in delinquencies and another $500 million in REO assets, CEO Ivan Kaufman said, putting total non-performing assets right around $1 billion. That’s about $100 million lower than last quarter. Kaufman added Arbor expects to resolve an additional $200 million to $300 million in delinquencies during the next two quarters.

There was plenty of activity on the operating side. Arbor reported an agency servicing portfolio of roughly $36.31 billion. Agency loan originations reached $707.6 million. The structured loan book clocked in at about $12.00 billion, with $767.6 million in new originations, offset by $861.0 million in runoff for the quarter.

Arbor wrapped up a $762.6 million collateralized securitization vehicle, bundling real estate assets to back the new debt. That move brought in roughly $35 million in extra liquidity, according to the company. An 8-K filing noted that Arbor has also uploaded a May investor presentation to its website.

The worry here: cleanup could drag on. Kaufman flagged for analysts that with higher rates, unwinding troubled assets gets slower—and less money finds its way back into the sector. One more thing from the 10-Q: concentration risk stands out. As of March 31, five borrowers accounted for 33 loans, making up 8% of total assets.

Arbor finds itself squeezed in the same troubled patch of real estate finance as Blackstone Mortgage Trust, Starwood Property Trust, and KKR Real Estate Finance Trust—names Arbor itself points to as peers. For investors in these companies, the focus has shifted. Book value, credit reserves, and how well dividends are covered are drawing more scrutiny than loan growth these days.

This update follows an extended period under the microscope. Back in July 2024, Reuters reported that Arbor faced an investigation from federal prosecutors and the FBI in New York, triggered by short-seller accusations about its lending activity; Arbor’s response at the time dismissed the reports as both inaccurate and misleading. On the Friday call, Kaufman told listeners Arbor believed investigations sparked by those short reports had wrapped up with no action against the firm, though that claim wasn’t independently backed up in the filings reviewed.

Stock Market Today

  • Global Medical Response Goes Public with $479 Million IPO on NYSE
    May 13, 2026, 9:25 AM EDT. Global Medical Response (NYSE: GMRS) debuted on the New York Stock Exchange after completing a $479 million initial public offering (IPO). CEO Nick Loporcaro discussed the company's next steps during the NYSE Live segment. The IPO marks a significant milestone for GMRS as it enters public markets. Equities showed strength early in the session, boosted by the U.S. April Producer Price Index (PPI) report. Meanwhile, Sea Limited shares surged over 13% following a 38% revenue growth report. Rollins (NYSE: ROL) prepares to showcase its growth strategy at its 2026 Investor and Analyst Conference. Investors are watching IPO activity closely amid broader market resilience.

Latest articles

Crypto ATM Crackdown Spreads as $389 Million Scam Losses Put Kiosks in Crosshairs

Crypto ATM Crackdown Spreads as $389 Million Scam Losses Put Kiosks in Crosshairs

13 May 2026
Spokane Valley has ordered all virtual-currency kiosks removed within 30 days after police linked them to fraud and one suicide. The FBI reported $389 million in losses tied to crypto ATMs in 2025, with older adults suffering most. Minnesota banned the machines statewide this month. Industry groups argue such bans hurt legitimate users and dispute fraud allegations.
Hot PPI Shock Hits Wall Street As Oil Inventory Test Looms

Hot PPI Shock Hits Wall Street As Oil Inventory Test Looms

13 May 2026
U.S. producer prices rose 1.4% in April, the largest monthly gain since March 2022, with the Producer Price Index up 6.0% year-over-year, the Bureau of Labor Statistics said Wednesday. Energy prices surged 7.8%, gasoline 15.6%. S&P 500 futures turned negative after the data. The American Petroleum Institute reported U.S. crude inventories fell by 2.2 million barrels last week.

Popular

QuantumScape Stock Jump: Eagle Line Puts $11 Million Behind Battery Bet

QuantumScape Stock Jump: Eagle Line Puts $11 Million Behind Battery Bet

13 May 2026
QuantumScape shares closed up 4.9% at $8.42 Tuesday and rose further after hours, following news of $11 million in first-quarter customer billings and progress at its Eagle Line pilot facility. The company reported a $100.8 million GAAP net loss for the quarter and continues to operate at a loss while ramping solid-state battery production.
Dell Stock Soars as AI Server Boom, TotalEnergies Deal and Super Micro Trouble Collide
Previous Story

Dell Stock Soars as AI Server Boom, TotalEnergies Deal and Super Micro Trouble Collide

MaxLinear Stock Nears $100 as AI Data-Center Rally Sets Up a Shareholder Test
Next Story

MaxLinear Stock Nears $100 as AI Data-Center Rally Sets Up a Shareholder Test

Go toTop