FOA March 10, 2026

Finance of America Q4 and Full Year 2025 Earnings Call - Adjusted earnings power scales, guiding $4.25-$4.75 for 2026

Summary

Finance of America closed 2025 with a clear message, not a mystery. Adjusted results show the business scaling: full-year adjusted net income rose to $74 million ($3.04 per share), adjusted EBITDA hit $143 million, and funded originations jumped 24% to $2.4 billion. Management says GAAP swings were driven by non-cash fair value moves, but underlying cash generation and operating leverage are real, and they are guiding 2026 adjusted EPS to $4.25-$4.75 with volume growth of 15%-25%.

The company is pairing tech-led distribution gains with balance-sheet cleanup. New AI tooling and digital funnel improvements are lifting conversion and lowering acquisition costs, while capital actions this year aim to retire $150 million of corporate debt, close a PHH servicing acquisition in Q2, and fully exit legacy ownership. Short-term GAAP noise remains possible, but the narrative is disciplined growth plus deliberate deleveraging. That is the investment thesis Finance of America is selling to investors today.

Key Takeaways

  • Full-year 2025 GAAP net income was $110 million, or $5.04 per basic share, a 175% improvement vs. 2024.
  • Full-year 2025 adjusted net income was $74 million, or $3.04 per share, up 429% vs. 2024 and above prior guidance.
  • Adjusted EBITDA for 2025 totaled $143 million, a 138% year-over-year increase, signaling operating leverage as the platform scales.
  • Funded originations in 2025 were $2.4 billion, up 24% from $1.9 billion in 2024; fourth-quarter funded volume was $619 million.
  • Management points to the second half of 2025 as the best normalized earnings run rate: H2 adjusted net income was $47 million, or $2.05 adjusted EPS, an annualized $4.10 per share.
  • 2026 guidance: expected volume growth of 15%–25% to $2.8 billion–$3.1 billion, and adjusted EPS guidance of $4.25–$4.75 per share.
  • Q4 GAAP showed a net loss of $21 million, or $1.30 per share, driven by fair value movements; management expects early-2026 rate moves and spread tightening to produce offsetting fair value adjustments in Q1.
  • The firm generated over $150 million of cash flow from core origination and capital markets activities in 2025, and cash and cash equivalents rose by $42 million year-over-year.
  • Capital actions in 2025 included a $50 million equity investment announced in December, a $40 million 0% coupon convertible note, a $50 million preferred equity raise, and completing the Blackstone ownership exit (second half purchase completed in Feb 2026).
  • Company used proceeds to pay down $117 million of corporate debt and working capital facilities, pay $40 million of interest on non-funding financing, and buy back the first half of Blackstone’s equity stake.
  • Management expects to use 2026 cash flow to fund the agreed PHH reverse mortgage servicing portfolio acquisition (expected to close in Q2) and to retire $150 million of senior secured corporate notes, leaving only convertible and exchangeable instruments convertible to equity.
  • Technology and distribution investments are producing measurable gains: AI ‘‘Joy’’ is delivering more than 5x conversion vs. prior third-party call center, and digital funnel metrics have improved materially (pre-qualification engagement doubled vs. Q4 2025; speed to application +47%; speed to submission +36%; submission rate +77%).
  • Early 2026 demand signals: January inquiry volume rose >75% year-over-year, speed to answer calls improved >60%, and Google Trends shows reverse mortgage search activity ~40% higher year-over-year at seasonal peaks.
  • Warehouse and asset-level financing conditions are described as ample, with renewed facilities delivering improved terms, higher advance rates or lower spreads, and no current liquidity concerns.
  • Management’s primary operating metric is adjusted EPS/Adjusted Net Income; securitization timing can cause quarter-to-quarter GAAP swings, so adjusted measures and H2 run rates are emphasized for underlying performance.

Full Transcript

Colby, Conference Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by. My name is Colby and I’ll be your conference operator today. At this time, I’d like to welcome you to the Finance of America fourth quarter and full year 2025 earnings call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise, and after the speaker’s remarks, there will be a question and answer session. If you’d like to ask a question at that time, please press star then the number one on your telephone keypad to raise your hand and enter the queue. If you’d like to withdraw your question at any time, simply press star one again. I will now turn the call over to Michael Fant, Senior Vice President of Finance. You may begin.

Michael Fant, Senior Vice President of Finance, Finance of America: Thank you. Good afternoon, everyone, and welcome to Finance of America’s fourth quarter and full year 2025 earnings call. With me today are Graham Fleming, Chief Executive Officer, Kristen Sieffert, President, and Matt Engel, Chief Financial Officer. As a reminder, this call is being recorded and you can find the earnings release and related presentation on our investor relations website at ir.financeofamerica.com. I would like to remind everyone that comments on this conference call may be forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 regarding the company’s expected operating and financial performance for future periods. These statements are based on the company’s current expectations and are subject to the safe harbor statement for forward-looking statements that you will find in today’s earnings release.

Actual results for future periods may differ materially from those expressed or implied by these forward-looking statements due to a number of risks or other factors, including those that are described in the Risk Factors section of Finance of America’s amended annual report on Form 10-K for the year ended December thirty-first, two thousand twenty-four, filed with the SEC on May twentieth, two thousand twenty-five. Such risk factors may be amended and updated in our subsequent filings with the SEC. We are not undertaking any commitment to update these statements if conditions change. Please note, today we will be discussing interim period financials for our continuing operations which are unaudited. In addition, we will refer to certain non-GAAP financial measures on this call.

You can find reconciliations of non-GAAP to GAAP financial measures to the extent available without unreasonable efforts in our earnings press release on the investor relations page of our website. Now, I’ll turn the call over to our Chief Executive Officer, Graham Fleming. Graham?

Graham Fleming, Chief Executive Officer, Finance of America: Thank you, Michael, and good afternoon, everyone. As we look back at 2025, it was a year of continued strong execution for Finance of America as we delivered improving operating performance and took deliberate steps to strengthen the balance sheet and improve alignment, all while operating in a dynamic market environment. For the full year, we reported GAAP net income of $110 million, or $5.04 per share, representing a 175% improvement compared to the prior year. On an adjusted basis, which we believe is representative of our recurring earnings power, we generated full year adjusted net income of $74 million or $3.04 per share. Up $60 million from 2024, representing a 429% increase and above our stated guidance range.

Lastly, the company recognized Adjusted EBITDA of $143 million, a 138% increase versus 2024. These results reflect the progress we’ve made improving earnings quality and capitalizing on operating leverage as the platform scales. Because the securitization activity can shift between quarters, we continue to view the second half of 2025 average earnings as the best indicator of recent normalized run rate earnings power. For the second half of the year, the company recognized $47 million in Adjusted Net Income or $2.05 in Adjusted EPS, an annualized run rate of $4.10 per share. From a production standpoint, we funded $2.4 billion of originations in 2025, representing a 24% increase from $1.9 billion in 2024.

Fourth quarter volume totaled $619 million, and importantly, this growth was achieved alongside structural enhancements to our technology and operational processes, which should allow us to continue to see positive momentum in 2026. During the fourth quarter, we continued our momentum with additional capital actions designed to strengthen the business, solidify the balance sheet and support durable growth. In November, we announced an agreement to acquire the reverse mortgage servicing portfolio and related assets from PHH Mortgage, a subsidiary of Onity Group. This transaction, which we expect to close in the second quarter, will expand our servicing platform, add experienced origination talent, and pave the way for a long-term relationship with Onity that accelerates our mission to make responsible home equity access available to more homeowners age 55 and older. Also in December, we announced a $50 million equity investment supporting our continued growth initiatives.

Stepping back, we believe home equity is increasingly becoming an important component of broader family financial planning. For many seniors, it represents not only retirement security, but also flexibility to support evolving family needs across generations. The investments we’ve made in our platform, product suite and capital structure position us to serve that opportunity with discipline, consistency and scale. Overall, 2025 marked an important step forward for Finance of America, not only in what we earned, but in how repeatable and durable those earnings have become. With that, I’ll turn it over to Kristen to discuss the operational drivers behind this performance and positive early signals in 2026. Kristen?

Kristen Sieffert, President, Finance of America: Thanks, Graham, and good afternoon, everyone.

The fourth quarter marked an inflection point for the platform. 2025 was a year of disciplined investment, modernizing our technology stack, embedding AI across the customer journey, and strengthening marketing precision. As we enter 2026, those investments are translating into measurable operating momentum. For the full year, we funded $2.4 billion of originations, a 24% increase compared to 2024. Fourth quarter funded volume totaled $619 million, closing the year with strong sequential performance. In a rate-sensitive environment, this growth reflects improved full-funnel productivity and the durability of our category leadership. As a reverse mortgage market leader, marking the largest marketing investments in the space, we are uniquely positioned to see demand trends develop in real time. In January, inquiry volume increased more than 75% year-over-year, while speed to answer calls improved by over 60%.

These improvements drove opportunities approximately 30% above baseline while reducing costs per opportunity by 12% compared to the second half of 2025, demonstrating early operating leverage within our acquisition engine. A key structural differentiator is the rollout of Joy, our AI-powered customer ambassador. Joy is delivering more than 5x the conversion performance of our prior third-party call center while materially improving responsiveness across peak and off hours. This is not simply a productivity improvement, it represents a permanent shift in our acquisition model, lowering variable costs while increasing scalability and conversion efficiency. Our digital acquisition engine is also accelerating performance. So far in Q1, pre-qualification engagement has doubled compared to Q4 of 2025. Among customers choosing the digital path, we saw a 47% increase in speed to application, a 36% improvement in speed to submission, and a 77% increase in submission rate.

We expect these gains to shorten cycle times, improve pull-through, and lower our cost to produce. We’re also seeing external signals that reflect an increase in consumer interest in reverse mortgages. Google Trends data shows reverse mortgage-related search activity trending approximately 40% higher year-over-year at seasonal peaks, significantly outpacing prior year trends. Given our scale and brand leadership, increased category search activity positions us well to capture incremental demand. Underpinning this progress are our people and culture. We’re a team willing to challenge legacy approaches, embrace innovation, and hold ourselves to a higher standard of execution. Our team is and will remain a critical driver of our performance. As we look to the year ahead, we have clear visibility into the drivers of performance, stronger cross-functional alignment, and a structurally more efficient platform.

The work completed in 2025 has improved funnel productivity, reduced customer acquisition friction, expanded operating leverage, and has positioned us for a breakthrough year. As volumes grow, we expect these dynamics to translate into sustained earnings expansion and margin improvement. With that, I’ll turn it over to Matt to walk through the financials.

Matt Engel, Chief Financial Officer, Finance of America: Thank you, Kristen, and good afternoon, everyone. The fourth quarter was the latest example of solid execution at Finance of America, with full-year results highlighting consistent operating progress and our ability to execute effectively as opportunities arise. For the full year, Finance of America reported GAAP net income of $110 million, or $5.04 per basic share. These results reflect the impact of interest rate and credit spread movements, partially offset by changes in model assumptions on the fair value of our residual assets, which, as we’ve discussed previously, are non-cash in nature. On an adjusted basis for the full year, we generated adjusted net income of $74 million, or $3.04 per share, representing a 429% increase compared to 2024.

We also generated Adjusted EBITDA of $143 million, a 138% increase year-over-year. These results reflect our ability to realize the platform’s operating leverage and continued improvement in earnings quality as the platform has scaled. Total revenue increased 26% year-over-year to $497 million in 2025, compared to $394 million in 2024. This $103 million increase in revenue directly translated into improved profitability as fixed expenses remained largely consistent year-over-year. Excluding non-cash fair value changes to our balance sheet, revenue increased approximately $83 million year-over-year. After tax, that equates to roughly $61 million of incremental earnings, which closely aligns with the $60 million year-over-year increase in Adjusted Net Income. This demonstrates the operating leverage embedded in the platform as volume scales.

Turning to our fourth quarter, we reported a GAAP net loss of $21 million, or $1.30 per basic share. While our Q4 results were impacted by fair value movements, so far in 2026, interest rates have moved lower and spreads have tightened. At current levels, we would expect our first quarter fair value adjustments to more than offset the fourth quarter impact. On an adjusted basis for the fourth quarter, we generated adjusted net income of $14 million or $0.69 per share, representing a 180% increase compared to the fourth quarter of 2024. Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter totaled $28 million, up 56% year-over-year, reflecting continued operating momentum and improved earnings consistency as the platform has scaled.

Despite the volatility in GAAP, adjusted earnings have remained resilient, reflecting the strength of the core economics and the consistency of cash generation across the platform. As mentioned earlier, the company recognized adjusted earnings per share of $3.04 for the full year of 2025, which was above our stated guidance range. As Graham noted earlier, because securitization timing can shift between quarters, we view the second half of 2025 combined as a reasonable reference point for the underlying earnings power of the company. For the second half of 2025, the company reported adjusted net income of $47 million or adjusted earnings per share of $2.05. This would approximate $4.10 per share on an annualized basis.

Looking ahead to 2026, we continue to expect volume growth of 15%-25% year over year for a range of $2.8 billion-$3.1 billion, supporting our previously communicated 2026 adjusted earnings per share guidance of $4.25-$4.75 per share. For the full year, the company’s cash and cash equivalents increased by $42 million. During 2025, Finance of America generated over $150 million in cash flows through our core origination and capital markets activities. This reflects stronger performance driven by higher funded volumes, improved operating leverage and meaningful bottom-line expansion. In addition to the $150 million generated from our core operations, we raised an additional $40 million in the form of a 0% coupon convertible note and a $50 million preferred equity investment.

From these sources of cash, we paid down $117 million of corporate debt and working capital facilities, paid $40 million of interest on our non-funding financing, and used $40 million to acquire the first half of Blackstone’s equity position. Please see our earnings supplement and our investor relations website for further detail. In February, we completed the second half of the Blackstone purchase, fully exiting that legacy ownership position. Looking forward to 2026, we anticipate that cash flows from our core origination and asset-level capital markets financing activities will be sufficient to fund both the acquisition of PHH, as well as the paydown of the $150 million of senior secured notes.

Once the senior secured notes have been paid off, we’ll be left with only $40 million of convertible notes and $150 million of exchangeable corporate bonds, both of which have the ability to convert to equity. Lastly, given the company’s strong performance and investments made by our strategic partners, Finance of America ended 2025 with a tangible equity position 117% greater than December of 2024. With that, I’ll turn it back to Graham for closing remarks.

Graham Fleming, Chief Executive Officer, Finance of America: Yeah, thank you, Matt. As we reflect on 2025, the takeaway is straightforward. The fundamentals of our business are working. Our operating platform is performing consistently. Margins remain disciplined and execution continues to improve. Finance of America’s earnings power is becoming more visible and durable. As the business scales, adjusted results increasingly reflect the underlying economics of the platform and are less influenced by timing-related volatility. We enter 2026 expecting to grow volume by 15%-25%, generate cash flow from originations and capital markets similar to 2025 of $150 million, and use these proceeds to pay down debt and delever our balance sheet. Over the coming years, we expect Finance of America to be free of all corporate debt, leaving our company better capitalized, more resilient, and well-positioned to expand our reach.

We believe demographic trends continue to support long-term demand for responsible home equity solutions. The progress we’ve made across our platform, products, and capital structure enables us to meet those evolving needs with discipline and consistency. As we continue building a more scalable technology-enabled platform, we remain confident that there is a better way with FOA for our customers, our partners, and our shareholders. With that, we’ll open the call for any questions.

Colby, Conference Operator: Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. If you’d like to ask a question, again, please press star then the number one on your telephone keypad to raise your hand and enter the queue. If you’d like to withdraw your question at any time, simply press star one again. We will pause just for a moment to compile the roster. Your first question comes from the line of Ethan Brown with Omega. Your line is open.

Ethan Brown, Analyst, Omega: Hi. Nice job on the quarter. I have a question just trying to clarify what you said about the balance sheet and the uses of cash. I heard you can fund the PHH acquisition and pay down some senior secured notes. When you consider all the free cash that you’ve got coming in and you consider the share repurchase program that you’ve got. Are you going to be able to extend the share repurchases beyond just what you bought from Blackstone? Or is that going to be a 2026 strategy for capital allocation, or should we expect capital share repurchases to be larger in 2027 and going forward?

Matt Engel, Chief Financial Officer, Finance of America: Great. Great question, Ethan. Thank you. I think really we don’t have any announced share repurchase activities beyond the Blackstone repurchase, which we know we did the first half of that in the fourth quarter. We completed that purchase in February of 2026. That’s now behind us. With that in mind, look at the free cash flow from this year. Really our focus is looking at retiring that $150 million of corporate debt. Once that has been extinguished, then I think we’re in the world where you’re talking about potentially doing further share repurchases into 2027. For 2026 right now our goal would be on paying off that $150 million of corporate debt, which again would be a little early.

I think our latest amendments to the facility only require us to pay off $60 million by this November, and we can extend $90. We have drawn up plans. We’d like to see if we can retire that full $150 during 2026.

Ethan Brown, Analyst, Omega: Just a follow-up. When would you see the $90, the full $150 or the $90 in 2027 being paid down? You know, when would the gates be wide open to more aggressive share repurchases?

Matt Engel, Chief Financial Officer, Finance of America: Yeah. Again, there’s a lot of long year with a lot of activity to do. Our goal would be to pay off that $60 and the $90 in 2026. The gates would be open for further share repurchase activity going into 2027.

Graham Fleming, Chief Executive Officer, Finance of America: The outside date for that payment, Ethan, will be November 27th. You know, our expectation is, we’ll pay the $150 in November of 2026.

Ethan Brown, Analyst, Omega: Great. Thank you.

Colby, Conference Operator: Your next question comes on the line of Leon Cooperman with Omega Family Office. Your line is open.

Leon Cooperman, Investor, Omega Family Office: Yeah. I think you’ve answered the question through Ethan. I got a question on Bloomberg from a friend of mine. He says, "Can you ask the following question of Vesta, Leon? Do you have enough cash generation to pay off the first lien this year in its entirety?" The answer is yes. So how much cash do you think it will leave you with, and do you think you’ll be in position to buy back stock this year? You’re saying you don’t think you’ll buy stock back this year?

Matt Engel, Chief Financial Officer, Finance of America: Yeah. I think that sounds like pretty much the question that Ethan asked as well. Again, I think our goal for this year is to pay off the entire $150 million. You know, $60 million we’ve agreed to pay down this year for sure. $90 million we could extend, but based on our plans for the year, we think we can retire the entire $150 million this year. Then next year we would have all free cash flow to do other things with, including repurchasing shares if that was an option.

Leon Cooperman, Investor, Omega Family Office: Right. In terms of, you have so many different measures of earnings. I’ve asked this before. What is the measure that you run the company by that’s most important to you?

Graham Fleming, Chief Executive Officer, Finance of America: We look at the Adjusted EPS, ANI, which was $3.04. If you recall, we gave guidance, repeated guidance of between $2.60 and $3.00 for last year. We finished the year at $3.04. Just over the high end of the range. This year’s guidance is $4.25-$4.75. You know, as we started the year here and we look at the early fundamental metrics, we’re confident, right, that we’ll be in that range again in 2026.

Leon Cooperman, Investor, Omega Family Office: Your stock is less than 4x earnings?

Graham Fleming, Chief Executive Officer, Finance of America: Yes.

Leon Cooperman, Investor, Omega Family Office: Yeah. Why do you wanna wait till 2027 to buy it back? I would recommend you buy it back sooner.

Matt Engel, Chief Financial Officer, Finance of America: It’s a good question, Leon. I think as we think about alternatives for cash, you know, buying back shares and extinguishing debt, there’s certainly arguments on both sides of that equation. I think different stakeholders have different points of view. I think certainly removing the corporate debt overhang is beneficial, helps with the rating agencies overall perception of the company, which benefits the equity holders in long term. At these prices, I think the share repurchase options are also kind of attractive. I mean, we’ll definitely weigh both of those. I think at this point in time, I think our focus is on retiring the corporate debt. You know, that could change either way as the year unfolds.

Leon Cooperman, Investor, Omega Family Office: Good. Well, all the best. Thank you.

Graham Fleming, Chief Executive Officer, Finance of America: Thanks, Lee.

Colby, Conference Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Eric Hagen with BTIG. Your line is open.

Brendan Greeley, Analyst, BTIG: Hi, this is Brendan Greeley on for Eric. Can you discuss the current warehouse financing conditions for both new originations and MSRs? More specifically, given the consolidation we’ve seen in the space over the past few years, do you believe that dynamic has actually improved funding terms and availability for the main remaining players in the space?

Matt Engel, Chief Financial Officer, Finance of America: Yeah. I maybe can’t speak to the other players in the space, but from our own experience, I’d say that warehouse financing is ample. We have increased some of our facilities. We’ve added some new financing partners. You know, credit has been pretty readily available in the space. We’ve talked about in previous calls, we’re you know pursuing financing on our mortgage servicing right asset, our HMBS asset. That’s going pretty well. I think that overall, we view credit positively in the space. As mentioned earlier, we’ve seen spreads generally tighten across the spectrum, so we’re seeing some benefit there as well. I would suspect others are seeing similar things, but I have no firsthand knowledge of what our competitors are seeing.

Graham Fleming, Chief Executive Officer, Finance of America: Yeah, we’re generally seeing as we’re renewing our facilities over the course of the year that we’re gaining improved terms either higher advanced rates or lower spreads. Yeah, we have no concerns about. We have ample warehouse liquidity and, you know, we continue to increase where we can and add new participants as necessary.

Brendan Greeley, Analyst, BTIG: Thank you very much.

Colby, Conference Operator: With no further questions in queue, I’d like to turn the conference back over to Graham Fleming for closing remarks.

Graham Fleming, Chief Executive Officer, Finance of America: You know, I wanna thank everybody for joining the call today. We look forward to updating you on our progress in May with our Q1 results. Have a great afternoon, everybody. Thank you.

Colby, Conference Operator: This concludes today’s conference call. You may now disconnect.