Orchid Island Has A Yield Close To 20%, But Can Retirees Trust It?

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By Austin Smith Published
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Orchid Island Has A Yield Close To 20%, But Can Retirees Trust It?

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Orchid Island Capital (NYSE:ORC) pays a monthly dividend of $0.12 per share, roughly 19.7% annualized at the current share price. For retirees hunting income, that number is magnetic. The history behind it is more complicated.

How Orchid Island Actually Makes Money

Orchid is a mortgage REIT that borrows short-term through repurchase agreements and uses that capital to buy Agency residential mortgage-backed securities guaranteed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Credit risk is minimal. The income comes from the spread between what the RMBS yield and what the borrowing costs. When that spread is wide, the company earns well. When it narrows, earnings collapse.

A large portion of reported earnings also comes from mark-to-market gains on the portfolio and derivatives. In Q4 2025, $70.74 million of the $103.41 million in net income came from realized and unrealized gains rather than interest income — the majority of headline profit was not cash-based, which matters when assessing whether the dividend is truly covered by recurring earnings.

The Spread Is Recovering, But History Shows How Fast It Can Reverse

After sitting at negative 0.51% in Q1 2024, the net interest spread has recovered to 1.43% in Q4 2025. Three Federal Reserve rate cuts between July 2024 and December 2025 drove borrowing costs down. The Fed funds rate sits at 3.75% and has been held there since December 2025.

Management is cautious about what comes next. CFO Hunter Haas said on the Q4 2025 earnings call: “I don’t think the Fed’s gonna cut rates much. I think the economy is quite strong.” CEO Robert Cauley added that “current market pricing for up to two additional Fed rate cuts in 2026 may not materialize if economic data does not support the case for additional easing.” Fewer cuts means borrowing costs stay elevated, squeezing the spread that funds the dividend.

The Dividend Has Been Cut Before, More Than Once

The current $0.12 monthly dividend has been stable since September 2023, but that stability followed a cut from $0.16 that same month — itself a recovery from the August 2022 collapse, when rising rates forced management to slash the payout. The pattern is clear: when borrowing costs spike, the dividend follows. At $0.12, the payout reflects how much the rate environment has permanently reset expectations for this stock.

Full-year 2025 EPS of $1.24 per share fell short of the $1.44 annualized dividend obligation. Management noted the dividend is “very slightly over distributed, less than 5% last year and 5% this year” relative to taxable income, which is more reassuring than the GAAP comparison, but it still means there is no cushion.

Leverage and Volatility Are the Core Risks

Orchid runs at roughly 7.4x leverage, standard for Agency mREITs, but small moves in asset prices create large swings in book value. In Q2 2025, a tariff-driven shock produced a quarterly loss of $0.29 per share while the company continued paying its $0.12 monthly dividend. Book value per share declined $0.55 for the full year 2025, meaning shareholders were quietly losing principal while collecting income.

Over the past five years, shares have declined 36%. An investor collecting 19% annually in dividends while losing 36% in price over five years has not come out ahead. Year to date in 2026, shares have gained ground, and the most recent quarter delivered a total return of 7.8%, a genuine positive. One strong quarter does not override the structural pattern.

A 20% Yield With a Track Record Worth Reading Carefully

The $0.12 monthly dividend is not in immediate danger — the spread is positive and management confirmed the payout aligns with taxable income. But retirees should understand what kind of income stream this actually is. The dividend has been cut twice in recent years, book value eroded in 2025 even as checks arrived monthly, and the spread recovery that made 2025 look better depends on a rate environment that management itself is uncertain will continue. The yield is real, but so is the volatility it compensates for.

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About the Author Austin Smith, PhD, MD, CFA →

Austin Smith is a financial publisher with over two decades of experience as an investor, analyst, and advisor. He covers stocks, ETFs, Artificial intelligence and personal finance for 24/7 Wall St. Previously, he spent over a decade at The Motley Fool as a senior editor for Fool.com, portfolio advisor for Millionacres, and launched The Ascent to help reader take control of their personal finances.

His work has been featured on Fool.com, NPR, CNBC, USA Today, Yahoo Finance, MSN, AOL, Marketwatch, and many other publications. He is as an advisor to private companies, and co-hosts The AI Investor Podcast with Eric Bleeker. 

When not looking for investment opportunities, he can be found skiing, running, or playing soccer with his children. Learn more about Austin's investment approach here.

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