Dividend Safety Check: MORT and Mortgage REIT Income

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By John Seetoo Published

Quick Read

  • AGNC and Annaly each gained 30% on Fed rate cuts but froze dividends, signaling spreads are adequate but not strong enough to grow payouts.

  • MORT's 12% yield appears intact for now, but the 10Y-2Y Treasury spread sits in the 1st percentile of its 12-month range, threatening future distributions.

  • Don't wait: the analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just revealed his top 10 AI stocks. See the full list FREE now.

Dividend Safety Check: MORT and Mortgage REIT Income

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The VanEck Mortgage REIT Income ETF (NYSEARCA:MORT) exists for one reason: to deliver a fat, double-digit distribution sourced from the dividends of mortgage REITs like AGNC Investment (NASDAQ:AGNC | AGNC Price Prediction) and Annaly Capital (NYSE:NLY). With MORT shares trading around $10 and recent quarterly payouts in the $0.26 to $0.38 range, the trailing yield clears 12%. The question every MORT holder needs to answer is whether that payout reflects durable cash flow from the underlying mREITs, or a yield that exists only because the curve has been kind. Right now, the picture is mixed.

How MORT actually earns its check

MORT is a pass-through. It owns a basket of mortgage REITs, collects their quarterly dividends, and distributes the net amount to shareholders. Those underlying mREITs make money on a spread: they borrow short at rates anchored to the 3.75% federal funds upper bound and invest in agency or commercial mortgage securities yielding closer to the 4.50% 10-year Treasury. Then they lever that spread five to eight times. Translation: a small move in either rate, or in the relationship between them, swings book value and dividend capacity hard.

The spread that pays the dividend is shrinking

This is the most important number in the article. The 10Y-2Y Treasury spread sits at 0.30%, down from a February peak of 0.74%. The curve has flattened materially in four months. For levered mREITs, a compressing curve is a direct hit to net interest margin, because new investments roll on at narrower spreads than the legacy book. The current spread sits in the 1st percentile of its 12-month range. That is not a backdrop that supports dividend growth at the holdings level.

The two names that drive the payout

AGNC and Annaly typically anchor MORT’s portfolio, and their tape tells the bullish side of the story. AGNC is up 30% over the past year, and Annaly has gained 32%. Total returns including their high single-digit dividends are stronger still. That rally reflects the Fed’s 75 basis points of cuts since last fall, which lowered borrowing costs faster than mortgage yields fell. Both AGNC and Annaly have held their dividends flat through this cycle rather than raising them, which suggests management teams view the spread environment as adequate, not abundant.

Why the quarterly check swings

MORT’s payout is not fixed. Recent quarterly distributions have ranged from $0.26 in July 2025 to $0.38 in April 2025, with the latest at $0.36 in April 2026. Step back further and the trend is clearly down: 2013 produced a single Q4 payment of $1.45, and quarterly checks routinely cleared $0.45 through 2017. The structural reset to lower payouts reflects what mortgage REITs have actually been able to earn since spreads normalized, and holders should expect that volatility to continue.

Total return reality check

The income has shown up, but the price action has gone the other way. MORT is down 11% over five years on price alone, and basically flat year to date. Holders earned their yield, but principal eroded. The roughly 10% one-year price gain is a rate-cut reflex, not a fundamental re-rating.

The verdict

MORT’s distribution is sustainable in the sense that no cut is imminent: AGNC and Annaly are covering their dividends, and lower funding costs have eased pressure. It is not safe in the way a dividend-growth ETF is safe. Expect the quarterly payment to flex with the curve, and expect another step-down if the 10Y-2Y spread keeps compressing toward zero. Investors who need stable income should pair MORT with a lower-yield, equity-REIT or dividend-growth vehicle. Those who can tolerate variability and watch the curve get paid handsomely to do so.

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About the Author John Seetoo →

After 15 years on Wall Street with 7 of them as Director of Corporate and Municipal Bond Trading for a NYSE member firm, I started my own project and corporate finance consultancy. Much of the work involves writing business plans, presentations, white papers and marketing materials for companies seeking budgetary allocations for spinoffs and new initiatives or for raising capital for expansion or startup companies and entrepreneurs. On financial topics, I have been published under my own byline at The Motley Fool, 247wallst.com, DealFlow Events’ Healthcare Services Investment Newsletter and The Microcap Newsletter, among others.  Additionally, I have done freelance ghostwriting writing and editing for several financial websites, such as Seeking Alpha and Shmoop Financial. I have also written and been published on a variety of other topics from music, audiophile sound and film to musical instrument history, martial arts, and current events.  Publications include Copper Magazine, Fidelity (Germany), Blasting News, Inside Kung-Fu, and other periodicals.

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