NLY 2023 Annual Report

Carry The amount an asset earns over its hedging and financing costs. A positive carry happens when the rate on the securities being financed is greater than the rate on the funds borrowed. A negative carry is when the rate on the funds borrowed is greater than the rate on the securities that are being financed. CMBX The CMBX index is a synthetic tradable index referencing a basket of 25 CMBS of a particular rating and vintage. The CMBX index allows investors to take a long position (referred to as selling protection) or short position (referred to as purchasing protection) on the respective basket of CMBS securities and is structured as a “pay-as-you-go” contract whereby the protection seller receives and the protection buyer pays a standardized running coupon on the contracted notional amount. Additionally, the protection seller is obligated to pay to the protection buyer the amount of principal losses and/or coupon shortfalls on the underlying CMBS securities as they occur. Collateral Securities, cash or property pledged by a borrower or party to a derivative contract to secure payment of a loan or derivative. If the borrower fails to repay the loan or defaults under the derivative contract, the secured party may take ownership of the collateral. Collateralized Loan Obligation (“CLO”) A securitization collateralized by loans and other debt instruments. Collateralized Mortgage Obligation (“CMO”) A multiclass bond backed by a pool of mortgage passthrough securities or mortgage loans. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (“CFTC”) An independent U.S. federal agency established by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission Act of 1974. The CFTC regulates the swaps, commodity futures and options markets. Its goals include the promotion of competitive and efficient futures markets and the protection of investors against manipulation, abusive trade practices and fraud. Commercial Mortgage-Backed Security (“CMBS” or “Commercial Securities”) Securities collateralized by a pool of mortgages on commercial real estate in which all principal and interest from the mortgages flow to certificate holders in a defined sequence or manner. Constant Prepayment Rate (“CPR”) The percentage of outstanding mortgage loan principal that prepays in one year, based on the annualization of the Single Monthly Mortality, which reflects the outstanding mortgage loan principal that prepays in one month. Convexity A measure of the change in a security’s duration with respect to changes in interest rates. The more convex a security is, the more its duration will change with interest rate changes. Corporate Debt Non-government debt instruments issued by corporations. Long-term corporate debt can be issued as bonds or loans. Counterparty One of two entities in a transaction. For example, in the bond market a counterparty can be a state or local government, a broker-dealer or a corporation. Coupon The interest rate on a bond that is used to compute the amount of interest due on a periodic basis. Credit and Counterparty Risk Risk to earnings, capital or business, resulting from an obligor’s or counterparty’s failure to meet the terms of any contract or otherwise failure to perform as agreed. Credit and counterparty risk is present in lending, investing, funding and hedging activities. Credit Derivatives Derivative instruments that have one or more underlyings related to the credit risk of a specified entity (or group of entities) or an index that exposes the seller to potential loss from specified credit-risk related events. An example is credit derivatives referencing the commercial mortgagebacked securities index. Credit Risk Transfer (“CRT”) Securities Credit Risk Transfer securities are risk sharing transactions issued by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and similarly structured transactions arranged by third party market participants. The securities issued in the CRT sector are designed to synthetically transfer mortgage credit risk from Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and/or third parties to private investors. Current Face The current remaining monthly principal on a mortgage security. Current face is computed by multiplying the original face value of the security by the current principal balance factor. D Dealer Person or organization that underwrites, trades and sells securities, e.g., a principal market-maker in securities. Default Risk Possibility that a bond issuer will fail to pay principal or interest when due. ANNALY CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES Item 7. Management’s Discussion and Analysis 81

RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy NDQ4NTc1