Here's Why You Shouldn't Buy AGNC Investment if It's Over This Price

2025.02.02

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AGNC Investment (NASDAQ: AGNC) is a very complicated company, but many investors are still lured in by the astonishingly large 14%-plus dividend yield. Before you buy this mortgage real estate investment trust (REIT), there are a few things you need to consider very carefully. The price you pay is one of those things.

Before getting to the price you pay for AGNC Investment, it is important to tackle the dividend yield. The S&P 500 index is yielding a scant 1.2%, and the average REIT is yielding roughly 3.9%. That will make AGNC's more than 14% yield look mighty enticing to investors trying to maximize the income they generate from their portfolio.

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Image source: Getty Images.

Real estate investment trusts are designed to pass income on to investors via dividends. So high yields are fairly common in the sector. However, 14% is not a common figure, and it highlights the additional risks that investors are taking on when they buy this REIT. From a dividend perspective, that risk is highlighted perfectly in the chart below.

AGNC Chart
AGNC data by YCharts.

Most dividend investors are looking to create a reliable and even growing income stream from their portfolio. AGNC, after a quick rise in the dividend, has seen it fall steadily for years. The stock price has tracked the dividend lower.

This is not what most dividend investors have in mind when they buy a dividend stock. This chart isn't quite as bad as it looks because AGNC has paid out much more in dividends than it has lost in share price since its initial public offering (IPO). That has resulted in an attractive total return (which assumes dividend reinvestment) over time. But if investors spent those dividends along the way, they would have still ended with less income being generated and less capital.

If you are looking to live off of the dividends your portfolio throws off, you need to tread very carefully with AGNC Investment. But what about that $8.41 stock price?

As a mortgage REIT, AGNC Investment owns a portfolio of mortgages that have been rolled up into bond-like securities. The value of that portfolio is what the company is worth.

Management provides that figure quarterly, labeling it tangible net book value per share. At the end of the fourth quarter of 2024, AGNC's tangible book value was $8.41 per share. That number is neither good nor bad; it is simply what the value of the portfolio is on a per-share basis at a specific point in time.

The mortgage securities in AGNC's portfolio trade all day long, so its tangible net book value changes daily. It can be affected by a host of factors, like interest rates, mortgage repayment rates, and housing market dynamics.


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