Just caught something interesting about Granite Point's dividend situation. So they've got an ex-dividend date that just passed on April 1st - meaning if you owned the stock by March 31st, you're getting that $0.05 per share payout. Pretty standard stuff on the surface, right? But here's where it gets sketchy.



I was looking at their latest financials and the numbers are honestly rough. They reported a net loss of $63.198 million and an operating loss of $145.103 million. Meanwhile they're paying out dividends? That's the part that caught my attention. The company's interest expenses hit $181.735 million against interest income of $263.735 million, which tells you they're basically relying on non-operating income just to keep the lights on. They also paid $14.451 million in preferred dividends before announcing this common dividend. So the question becomes - how sustainable is this ex-dividend date payout when the company's fundamentals are this weak?

Historically, the stock has shown some interesting patterns around the ex date for dividend payouts. Data from their past 11 dividend events shows an average recovery time of about 6.14 days, with roughly 64% of the time seeing recovery within 15 days after the ex-dividend date passes. That's actually pretty efficient market behavior. Some traders use this to play dividend capture strategies - buy before the ex date, sell after recovery. But honestly? With these loss numbers, I'd be nervous about that approach.

The real issue here is whether they can actually keep paying this dividend. Short-term, yeah, the ex-dividend date will probably trigger some price adjustment and then recovery like we've seen historically. But long-term? Until they fix their operating income situation, this dividend looks vulnerable. If you're thinking about holding this for income, you're betting on a turnaround. If you're looking at short-term dividend capture around the ex date, just be aware of the underlying risk. Diversify and don't overweight this position - the dividend might not be as safe as it looks on paper.
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