bmnm2022proxy
 
 
 
UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
SCHEDULE 14A
(Rule 14a-101)
INFORMATION REQUIRED
 
IN PROXY STATEMENT
SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION
Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
Filed by the Registrant
ý
Filed by a Party other than the Registrant
Check the appropriate box:
 
Preliminary Proxy Statement
Confidential, for Use of the Commission Only (as permitted by Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
ý
 
Definitive Proxy Statement
 
Definitive Additional Materials
 
Soliciting Material under §240.14a-12
BIMINI CAPITAL MANAGEMENT,
 
INC.
(Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)
(Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if other than the Registrant)
Payment of Filing Fee (Check all boxes that apply):
ý
 
No fee required.
 
Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.
 
Fees paid on table in exhibit required by item 25(b) per Exchange Act Rules 14a
 
-6(i)(1) and 0-11.
 
https://cdn.kscope.io/a54bde76034275876fa1a97da79329e5-bmnm2022proxyp2i0.jpg https://cdn.kscope.io/a54bde76034275876fa1a97da79329e5-bmnm2022proxyp2i1.gif
3305 Flamingo Drive
Vero
 
Beach, Florida 32963
NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
 
TO BE HELD ON JUNE 14, 2022
Dear Stockholder:
The 2022 Annual Meeting of Stockholders of Bimini Capital Management,
 
Inc., a Maryland corporation, will
be held at our principal executive office, located at 3305
 
Flamingo Drive, Vero
 
Beach, Florida on June 14, 2022, at
8:00 a.m., Eastern Time, for the following
 
purposes:
1.
 
To elect one Class I director,
 
to serve until the 2025 Annual Meeting of Stockholders and until his
successor is duly elected and qualified;
2.
 
To ratify the appointment
 
of BDO USA, LLP as our independent registered public accounting firm
 
for the
year ending December 31, 2022; and
3.
 
To consider
 
and vote upon such other business as may properly come before the annual meeting
 
or any
adjournments or postponements thereof.
The Board of Directors has fixed the close of business on April 14, 2022 as the
 
record date for the annual
meeting. Only holders of record of our Class A Common Stock and Class B Common
 
Stock, $0.001 par value per
share, as of that date are entitled to notice of, and to vote at, the annual meeting
 
and any adjournment or
postponement thereof. A list of stockholders entitled to vote at the annual meeting
 
will be available at the annual
meeting.
Your
 
vote is very important. If you do not provide voting instructions, your shares
 
will not be voted or
counted on several important matters. We
 
urge you to vote as soon as possible after you receive these proxy
materials, even if you plan on attending the annual meeting. These materials
 
explain how to vote via mail,
phone or Internet.
Admission to the annual meeting will be by admission ticket only.
 
If you are a stockholder of record and plan to
attend, tear off the admission ticket from the top half of your proxy
 
card and bring it and a photo ID with you so that
you may gain admission to the meeting. If your shares are held through a broker,
 
please contact your broker and
request that the broker obtain an admission ticket for you or provide you with evidence
 
of your share ownership,
which will gain you admission to the annual meeting.
By Order of the Board of Directors,
Robert E. Cauley
Chairman of the Board and CEO
Vero
 
Beach, Florida
April 21, 2022
 
 
 
 
 
 
https://cdn.kscope.io/a54bde76034275876fa1a97da79329e5-bmnm2022proxyp4i0.jpg
- 1 -
BIMINI CAPITAL MANAGEMENT,
 
INC.
3305 Flamingo Drive
Vero
 
Beach, Florida 32963
(772) 231-1400
PROXY STATEMENT
ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
TO BE HELD ON JUNE 14, 2022
This proxy statement is furnished in connection with the solicitation of proxies by
 
the Board of Directors (the
“Board of Directors” or the “Board”) of Bimini Capital Management,
 
Inc., a Maryland corporation, for use at our
2022 Annual Meeting of Stockholders (the “Annual Meeting”) to be held on
 
June 14, 2022, at 8:00 a.m. Eastern
Time at the principal executive office
 
of Bimini Capital Management,
 
Inc., 3305 Flamingo Drive, Vero
 
Beach,
Florida 32963, and for the purposes set forth in the accompanying
 
Notice of Annual Meeting of Stockholders, and at
any adjournments or postponements to the meeting. Unless the context requires
 
otherwise, references in this proxy
statement to “BMNM,” “our company,”
 
“we,” “us” and the “Company” refer to Bimini Capital Management
 
,
 
Inc.
This proxy statement, the accompanying proxy card and our annual
 
report to stockholders, which includes our
annual report on Form 10-K with audited financial statements for the
 
year ended December 31, 2021 (our “2021
Annual Report”), are first being sent to our common stockholders on or about
 
April 21, 2022.
IMPORTANT
 
NOTICE REGARDING THE AVAILABILITY
 
OF PROXY MATERIALS
 
FOR THE
ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS TO
 
BE HELD ON JUNE 14, 2022:
This proxy statement and our 2021 Annual Report are available on
 
the Internet at
https://ir.
 
biminicapital.com
.
On this website, you will be able to access this proxy statement, our 2021 Annual
 
Report, and any amendments or
supplements to the foregoing material that is required to be furnished
 
to stockholders.
At the Annual Meeting, action will be taken to:
(i)
 
elect one Class I director, to hold office
 
until the 2025 annual meeting of stockholders and until his or her
successor is elected and qualified; and
(ii)
 
ratify the appointment of BDO USA, LLP (“BDO”) as our independent registered
 
public accounting firm
for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2022.
At the discretion of the proxy holders, proxies may be voted on any other business that
 
may properly come
before the Annual Meeting or any adjournment of the Annual Meeting.
 
 
 
 
 
https://cdn.kscope.io/a54bde76034275876fa1a97da79329e5-bmnm2022proxyp5i2.gif https://cdn.kscope.io/a54bde76034275876fa1a97da79329e5-bmnm2022proxyp5i1.gif https://cdn.kscope.io/a54bde76034275876fa1a97da79329e5-bmnm2022proxyp5i0.jpg
- 2 -
PROXY STATEMENT
 
SUMMARY
This summary highlights certain information contained elsewhere
 
in this proxy statement. This summary
does not contain all of the information you should consider,
 
and you should read the entire proxy statement
carefully before voting.
Our Company
Bimini Capital Management,
 
Inc., a Maryland corporation (“Bimini,” the “Company,” “we” or “us”), is a
specialty finance company that operates in two business segments: investing in
 
mortgage-backed securities (“MBS”)
and Orchid Island Capital, Inc. (“Orchid”) common stock in our own portfolio,
 
and serving as the external manager
of Orchid which also invests in MBS.
 
In both cases, the principal and interest payments of these MBS are
guaranteed by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac or the Government National Mortgage
 
Association and are backed
primarily
 
by single-family residential mortgage loans. We
 
refer to these types of MBS as “Agency MBS.” The
investment strategy focuses on, and the portfolios consist of, two categories
 
of Agency MBS: (i) traditional pass-
through Agency MBS, such as mortgage pass-through certificates and
 
collateralized mortgage obligations and (ii)
structured Agency MBS, such as interest only securities, inverse interest only
 
securities and principal only
securities, among other types of structured Agency MBS. The Company’s
 
operations are classified into two
principal reportable segments: the asset management segment and
 
the investment portfolio segment.
The investment portfolio segment includes the investment activities conducted
 
at Bimini Capital’s wholly
owned subsidiary, Royal
 
Palm Capital, LLC (“Royal Palm”). The investment portfolio segment receives
 
revenue in
the form of interest and dividend income on its investments. References to the general
 
management of the
Company’s portfolio of
 
MBS refer to the operations of Royal Palm.
The Company, through
 
Royal Palm’s wholly owned subsidiary,
 
Bimini Advisors Holdings, LLC (“Bimini
Advisors”), serves as the external manager of Orchid and from this arrangement
 
the Company receives management
fees and expense reimbursements.
 
The asset management segment includes these investment advisory
 
services
provided by Bimini Advisors to Orchid.
ITEMS OF BUSINESS AND VOTING RECOMMENDATIONS
Items for Vote
Board Recommendation
1.  Elect the one Class I director named in this proxy statement..........................................
 
FOR
2.  Ratify the appointment of BDO USA, LLP as the Company’s independent registered
public accounting firm for 2022 ................................................................
 
.....................
 
FOR
Stockholders may be asked to consider any other business properly brought
 
before the meeting or any
adjournment or postponement thereof. The Board is not aware of any other business
 
that might be brought before the
meeting.
VOTING AND ADMISSION TO 2022
 
ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
Voting
. Stockholders as of the record date, April 14, 2022, will be entitled to
 
vote. Each share of Class A
Common Stock and Class B Common Stock outstanding on the record date is entitled
 
to one vote for each share of
our common stock held.
Even if you plan to attend our Annual Meeting in person, please cast your
 
vote as soon as possible by:
Accessing the Internet
Calling toll-free from the
United States, U.S. territories
and Canada
Mailing your signed proxy or
voting instruction form
Check your
proxy or voting instruction form
 
for the web address of our Internet voting site and toll-free
telephone voting number.
Each stockholder’s vote is important. Please submit your vote and
 
proxy via the Internet, by telephone, or
complete, sign, date and return your proxy or voting instruction form.
- 3 -
ENVIRONMENTAL, SOCIAL
 
AND GOVERNANCE (“ESG”) ACHIEVEMENTS AND HIGHLIGHTS
The
 
Company
 
views
 
effective
 
oversight
 
and
 
management of
 
ESG
 
issues and
 
their associated
 
risks
 
by the
 
full
Board as
 
important to
 
the execution of
 
its business strategy
 
and to its
 
long-term success.
 
We
 
seek to
 
drive financial
performance
 
while
 
engaging
 
in
 
environmentally
 
and
 
socially
 
responsible
 
business
 
practices
 
grounded
 
in
 
sound
corporate governance. We believe that disclosure about
 
our ESG practices
 
allows our stockholders to
 
see our company
holistically
 
and understand
 
its trajectory
 
beyond business
 
fundamentals
 
and financial
 
metrics. Although
 
we have
 
a
limited ability to take action on a
 
large scale because we only have one
 
office and few employees, we continue to seek
to
 
manage
 
our
 
business
 
in
 
a
 
way
 
that
 
provides
 
positive
 
financial,
 
environmental
 
and
 
social
 
outcomes
 
for
 
our
stakeholders.
Environmental Initiatives
The Company has undertaken a number of green initiatives that conserve energy and reduce waste in an effort to
minimize the impact of our operations on the environment.
Recycling
.
 
We
 
use
 
an
 
outside
 
vendor
 
to
 
collect
 
all paper
 
products
 
produced
 
by our
 
operations
 
to
 
collect
 
and
recycle the paper
 
on a regular basis.
 
Whenever possible, we
 
recycle electronic equipment
 
and ink cartridges
 
and use
recycled paper products to further reduce our impact on the environment.
Reusable Drinkware
. We
 
provide employees
 
with reusable
 
drinkware to
 
reduce disposable
 
cups and
 
single use
drink products.
Reduced Electricity Usage
. We attempt to minimize
 
our use of electricity in operating our business. The
primary uses of electricity in our business are lighting, temperature
 
control and technology. While we are limited
 
in
our ability to limit the use of electricity for our use of technology,
 
we have made investments into our office to
reduce the amount of electricity used in lighting and temperature control. For example,
 
we have reduced the wattage
of all office lighting to the fullest extent possible and installed shutters
 
on all windows to reduce the effect of
sunlight on the ambient temperature inside our office building.
 
We also installed Icynene
 
insulation to further
reduce our consumption of electricity.
 
These collective actions permit us to maintain a comfortable temperature
 
in
our office with the minimal consumption of electricity.
 
Socially Conscious
Our
 
employees
 
drive
 
our
 
success
 
and
 
we
 
are
 
committed
 
to
 
investing
 
in
 
their
 
professional
 
and
 
personal
development.
 
We
 
strive
 
to
 
create
 
a
 
dynamic
 
environment
 
where
 
all
 
employees
 
can
 
achieve
 
and
 
contribute.
 
Our
employees
 
enjoy
 
what
 
we
 
believe
 
are
 
excellent
 
subsidized
 
health
 
and
 
wellness
 
benefits,
 
reimbursed
 
professional
training and development, on-site food and beverages and telecommuting
 
opportunities.
We value diversity
 
and inclusion in our employees.
 
Among our employees, 28% are women.
The Company
 
plays an
 
integral role
 
in providing
 
permanent financing
 
for residential
 
mortgages originated
 
for
American
 
homeowners
 
across
 
the
 
United
 
States,
 
and
 
thus
 
supports
 
home
 
ownership
 
in
 
the
 
United
 
States.
 
Home
ownership
 
has
 
long
 
been
 
considered
 
to
 
be
 
an
 
important
 
way
 
for
 
individuals
 
to
 
create
 
wealth
 
and
 
develop
 
strong
communities. As of December 31, 2021, the Company
 
owned Agency MBS backed by 26,118 home loans and
 
owned
a partial
 
interest in
 
Agency MBS
 
backed
 
by 635,749
 
more home
 
loans. Of
 
these loans
 
approximately
 
20.4% were
made to first time
 
home buyers. Approximately 99.9% of
 
our assets are backed
 
by loans made to
 
Americans with GSE
conforming loan sizes, homeowners who make up the backbone of the American economy.
Governance Highlights
We
 
are
 
committed
 
to
 
sound
 
corporate
 
governance,
 
which
 
strengthens
 
the
 
accountability
 
of
 
our
 
Board
 
and
promotes the long-term interests of our
 
stockholders. We believe that our corporate governance standards and policies
yield honest, transparent and
 
accountable directors and executive
 
officers. The summary
 
below highlights our Board
and leadership practices and notable stockholder rights, as further discussed
 
below.
- 4 -
Majority of directors are independent (2 out of 3 current directors).
All Board committees are composed of independent directors.
Independent directors conduct executive sessions.
Directors maintain open communication and strong working relationships
 
among themselves and
regular access to management.
Directors conduct robust annual Board and committee self-assessments.
Executives are prohibited from pledging, hedging or engaging in
 
short sales involving our securities.
Majority voting for the uncontested election of directors where directors
 
are elected by a majority of
the votes cast.
Full member of National Association of Corporate Directors that provides
 
our directors with access to
Board education opportunities.
 
Board members and senior management attend seminars conducted by industry
 
experts covering
accounting, corporate governance and legal issues.
Company maintains a Code of Business Conduct and Ethics, Code of
 
Ethics for Senior Financial
Officers and Corporate Governance Guidelines.
Company maintains a Confidential Whistleblower Policy and Related Party
 
Transaction Policy.
In 2021, we began the process of internalizing certain repurchase agreement
 
trading, clearing and
related administrative services, which will provide the Company greater control
 
over these processes
and enhance risk oversight over these functions.
Governance Documents
Governance policies and other governance documents are available on
 
the Company’s website at:
https://ir.
 
biminicapital.com
. The information on our website is not a part of this proxy statement.
 
- 5 -
GENERAL INFORMATION
 
ABOUT VOTING
Solicitation of Proxies
The enclosed proxy is solicited by and on behalf of our Board. We
 
will bear the expense of soliciting proxies
for the Annual Meeting, including the mailing cost. In addition to solicitation
 
by mail, our officers or an agent of our
designation may solicit proxies from stockholders by telephone, e-mail,
 
facsimile or personal interview.
 
Our officers
receive no additional compensation for such services. Upon request, we will reimburse
 
brokers, dealers, banks and
trustees, or their nominees, for reasonable expenses incurred by them
 
in forwarding our proxy materials to beneficial
owners of our common stock.
Voting
 
Securities
The Board of Directors has fixed the close of business on April 14, 2022 as the
 
record date (the “Record Date”)
for determining the holders of our Class A and Class B common stock
 
entitled to receive notice of and to vote at the
Annual Meeting and any adjournments or postponements thereof.
 
On the Record Date, there were 10,507,189 shares
of our Class A Common Stock and 31,938 shares of our Class B Common
 
Stock outstanding, representing the only
classes of voting stock of the Company issued and outstanding as of such date.
 
Each holder of Class A Common
Stock and each holder of Class B Common Stock is entitled to cast one vote per
 
share of Class A Common Stock or
Class B Common Stock held on each matter that properly comes before the Annual
 
Meeting,
 
which may be given in
person or by proxy duly authorized in writing by mail, by telephone or by
 
Internet. Holders of shares of Class A
Common Stock and Class B Common Stock vote together as one class in all matters, except
 
that matters that would
adversely affect the rights and preferences of only one class must be separately
 
approved by the holders of the
adversely affected class.
Voting
If you hold shares of our Class A or Class B common stock in your own name as a holder
 
of record, you may
instruct the proxies to vote your shares through any of the following methods:
By Telephone
 
or the Internet
: Common stockholders can vote their shares via telephone or the Internet as
instructed in the proxy card.
By Mail
: A common stockholder may elect to vote by mail and should complete, sign
 
and date the proxy card
and mail it in the pre-addressed envelope that accompanies the delivery of
 
the proxy card. For common stockholders
of record, proxy cards submitted by mail must be received by the date
 
and time of the Annual Meeting. For common
stockholders that hold their shares through an intermediary,
 
such as a broker, bank or other nominee, the
 
voting
instruction form submitted by mail must be mailed by the deadline imposed by
 
your bank, broker or other agent for
your shares to be voted.
In Person
: Shares of common stock held in your name as the stockholder of record may be voted
 
by you in
person at the Annual Meeting. Shares of common stock held beneficially in
 
street name may be voted by you in
person at the Annual Meeting only if you obtain a “legal” proxy from
 
the broker or other agent that holds your
shares giving you the right to vote the shares and bring that “legal” proxy to
 
the meeting.
Quorum
A quorum will be present at the Annual Meeting if the holders of a majority of the outstanding
 
shares entitled to
vote are present, in person or by proxy.
 
If you have returned valid voting instructions or if you hold your shares in
your own name as a holder of record and attend the Annual Meeting in person with
 
your proxy, your shares will be
counted for the purpose of determining whether there is a quorum. If a quorum
 
is not present, the Annual Meeting
may be postponed or adjourned until a quorum has been obtained. Because
 
there were 10,507,189 shares eligible to
vote at the Annual Meeting as of the Record Date, we will need at least 5,253,596
 
eligible shares present in person
or by proxy at the Annual Meeting for a quorum to exist.
- 6 -
Abstentions and “Broker Non-Votes”
A “broker non-vote” occurs when a broker,
 
bank or other nominee holding shares of common stock on your
behalf votes the shares on some matters but not others because that holder does
 
not have discretionary voting power
for that particular item and has not received instructions from the beneficial
 
owner. Pursuant to Maryland law,
abstentions and broker non-votes are counted as present for purposes of determining
 
the presence of a quorum.
Brokerage firms may have the discretionary authority to vote their customers’
 
shares on certain routine matters
for which they do not receive voting instructions, including the ratification
 
of the independent registered public
accounting firm. The other proposals included in this proxy statement are
 
not considered “routine” matters, and
therefore brokers holding shares beneficially owned by their clients do not
 
have the ability to cast votes, unless the
brokers have received instructions from the beneficial owners of the shares.
 
As a result, it is important that you
provide instructions to your broker so that your shares will be counted in
 
those matters.
Vote
 
Required to Approve an Item of Business
Election of Class I Director (Proposal
 
1)
. The affirmative vote of a majority of all of the votes cast at a meeting
of stockholders duly called and at which a quorum is present is necessary for
 
the election of directors. For purposes
of Proposal 1, abstentions and broker non-votes will not be counted as votes cast and
 
will have no effect on the
result of the vote.
Ratification of Appointment of BDO (Proposal
 
2)
. The affirmative vote of a majority of all of the votes cast at a
meeting of stockholders duly called and at which a quorum is present is required
 
to ratify the appointment of BDO
as our independent registered public accounting firm for the year
 
ending December 31, 2022. For purposes of the
vote on Proposal 2, abstentions will not be counted as votes cast and will have no effect
 
on the result of the vote.
If you sign and return your proxy card without giving specific voting instructions,
 
your shares will be voted as
recommended by our Board.
Right to Revoke Proxy
You
 
have the right to revoke your proxy at any time before the Annual Meeting. If you are a holder of record,
you may contact our corporate secretary and request that another proxy card
 
be sent to you. Alternatively,
 
you may
use the Internet or the telephone to authorize a new proxy and revoke your
 
old proxy, even if you previously
 
mailed
in a proxy card. The latest-dated, properly completed proxy that you
 
submit, whether through the Internet, by
telephone or by mail, will count as your vote. Please note that if you
 
submit a later proxy authorization by mail, your
reauthorization will not be effective unless it is received by our
 
corporate secretary prior to the start of the Annual
Meeting. Attendance at the Annual Meeting will not by itself constitute revocation
 
of a previously submitted,
properly completed proxy.
 
If your shares are held in street name, you must contact your bank, broker or other
nominee and follow their procedures for changing your vote instructions.
 
- 7 -
PROPOSAL 1: ELECTION OF CLASS I DIRECTOR
One director is nominated for election as a Class I director to serve until
 
the 2025 Annual Meeting of
Stockholders and until his successor has been duly elected and qualified,
 
or until his earlier retirement, death or
resignation.
 
It is intended that the shares represented by each proxy for which no voting instructions have
 
been
given will be voted for the nominee for director set forth below who is an
 
incumbent director, or for any substitute
nominee designated by our Board of Directors in the event the nominee becomes
 
unavailable for election.
 
The
principal occupation of, and certain other information regarding,
 
the Class I director nominee and our continuing
directors, as of April 14, 2022, is set forth below.
 
The business address of each nominee is Bimini Capital
Management,
 
Inc., 3305 Flamingo Dr., Vero
 
Beach, Florida 32963.
THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE
 
FOR
THE ELECTION OF CLASS I DIRECTOR NOMINEE.
 
- 8 -
CLASS I DIRECTOR NOMINEE – TERM EXPIRES IN 2025
FRANK E. JAUMOT
Director Since 2009
Age 65
Frank E. Jaumot has been the Director of Accounting and Auditing for the
 
certified public accounting firm of
Ahearn, Jasco & Company,
 
P.A.
 
since 1991, and is a shareholder in that firm.
 
From 1979 to 1991, Mr. Jaumot was
associated with Deloitte & Touche
 
LLP.
 
Mr. Jaumot is a certified public accountant
 
in Florida and Ohio and is a
member of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants and the Florida Institute of
 
Certified Public
Accountants. He served on the Board of Directors of MasTec,
 
Inc. from September 2004 to May 2016.
 
He served
on the Board of Directors of Vapor
 
Corp. from April 2014 to July 2015.
 
Mr. Jaumot is also on the Board of
Directors for Junior Achievement of South Florida, Inc., a not-for-profit
 
entity. Mr.
 
Jaumot previously served on the
Board of Directors of PPOA Holding, Inc.
As an accountant with approximately 40 years of experience, Mr.
 
Jaumot provides our Board with significant
accounting, financial reporting and tax expertise. His experience enhances
 
the Board’s ability to identify
 
and
evaluate accounting and tax issues. Mr.
 
Jaumot also has corporate governance experience from serving on other
boards of publicly held companies.
CONTINUING CLASS II DIRECTOR – TERM EXPIRES IN 2023
ROBERT E. CAULEY,
 
CFA
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Director since August 2003
Age 63
Robert E Cauley has served as Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer
 
of the Company since 2008
and is one of the Company’s founders.
 
He served as Chief Financial Officer and Chief Investment Officer
 
of the
Company from 2003 to 2008. He has also served as Chairman, President
 
and Chief Executive Officer of Orchid
Island Capital, Inc. ("Orchid") since its formation in August 2010.
 
Orchid invests in residential mortgage backed
securities, and it is externally managed and advised by a wholly-owned subsidiary
 
of the Company.
 
Prior to co-
founding the Company,
 
he was Vice President, Portfolio Manager
 
at Federated Investment Management Company
in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, where, from 1996 until September
 
2003, he served as a lead portfolio manager,
 
co-
manager, or assistant portfolio manager
 
of $4.25 billion (base capital, unlevered amount) in mortgage and asset
backed securities funds. From 1994 to 1996, he was an associate at Lehman
 
Brothers in the asset-backed structuring
group. From 1992 to 1994, he was a credit analyst in the highly levered
 
firms group and the aerospace group at
Barclay’s Bank. Mr.
 
Cauley has invested in, researched, or structured almost every type of mortgage
 
-backed
security. Mr.
 
Cauley, who is a CFA
 
and a CPA,
 
received his MSIA in finance and economics from Carnegie
 
Mellon
University and his BA in accounting from California State University,
 
Fullerton. Mr. Cauley served in the United
States Marine Corps for four years.
Mr. Cauley brings to our Board in-depth
 
knowledge of investing in fixed income securities, particularly
mortgage-backed securities. Nineteen years of his fixed
 
income investing experience has been within the context of
a REIT. Mr.
 
Cauley has experience in significant leadership positions within the Company,
 
including as the current
CEO and as the former CFO and CIO, which allows him to provide the Board with
 
strategic insights. Mr. Cauley
also has an in-depth understanding of accounting issues, as well as experience
 
in the mortgage-backed securities
field prior to joining the Company.
 
- 9 -
CONTINUING CLASS III DIRECTOR – TERM EXPIRES IN 202
 
4
ROBERT J. DWYER
Director since August 2007
Age 78
Robert J. Dwyer retired from Morgan Stanley
 
Dean Witter in 1999 as Executive Vice
 
President-National Sales
Director, having served in that role from
 
1990 until his retirement. Prior to that, Mr.
 
Dwyer was Director of Taxable
Fixed Income for Morgan Stanley Dean Witter.
 
He currently serves on the Board of Directors of the Bank of New
York
 
Optima Fund, and he has served as a member of the Board of Directors of MasTec,
 
Inc. since October 2004.
 
Mr. Dwyer has over 30 years of
 
experience in financial markets, capital markets, and mergers
 
and acquisitions.
 
Mr.
Dwyer has numerous charitable and civic interests. He currently serves on
 
the investment committee for the
Vincentian Order.
 
He also is Chairman of the Dwyer Family Foundation, which supports a number of health
 
and
social programs. He has previously served as Chairman of the Board
 
of Trustees for Niagara University.
Mr. Dwyer provides our Board
 
with significant experience in investment banking and corporate finance matters.
Mr. Dwyer’s service
 
on the boards and investment committees of other entities also allows him to provide insight
 
on
corporate governance matters and financing transactions.
 
- 10 -
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
We believe that
 
we have implemented effective corporate governance
 
policies and observe good corporate
governance procedures and practices. We
 
have adopted a number of written policies, including corporate
governance guidelines, a code of business conduct and ethics, a code of ethics for
 
senior financial officers, a
whistleblower policy and charters for our Audit Committee, Compensation
 
Committee and Nominating and
Corporate Governance Committee. These written policies can be found
 
on our website at
https://ir.
 
biminicapital.com
.
Board of Directors Composition
Our business and affairs are managed under the direction of our
 
Board of Directors. Members of our Board of
Directors are kept informed of our business through discussions with our
 
chairman, CEO and other officers, by
reviewing materials provided to them, and participating in regular
 
meetings of our Board of Directors and its
committees. The Board of Directors is currently comprised of three directors
 
divided into three classes, with one
director representing each class. Terms
 
of the classes are staggered, with one class standing for election each year.
 
The Board is elected by our stockholders to oversee management of
 
the Company in the long-term interests of all
stockholders.
Director Independence
Pursuant to Item 407(a)(1)(ii) of Regulation S-K of the Securities and Exchange
 
Commission, the Board is
required to affirmatively determine and disclose the independence
 
of each director, and nominee for election as a
director, based on the director independence
 
standards of a national securities exchange or an inter-dealer
 
quotation
system having certain director independence requirements notwithstanding
 
that the Company is not currently listed
on any such exchange and the Company’s
 
securities are not currently quoted in any such inter-dealer
 
quotation
system.
 
The Board has determined to use the definition of “independent director”
 
as set forth in the Marketplace
Rules of The Nasdaq Stock Market, LLC.
 
Based on such definition, the Board has affirmatively determined that the
following directors are “independent” within the meaning of Rule 5605(a)(2)
 
of the Marketplace Rules and have no
relationship with the Company which, in the opinion of the Board, would
 
interfere with the exercise of independent
judgment in carrying out the responsibilities of a director:
Robert J. Dwyer
Frank E. Jaumot
Notwithstanding the determination described above, the Board has determined
 
that Mr. Jaumot is not
“independent” under the stricter definition of that term that is contained in
 
Rule 5605(c)(2) of the Marketplace Rules
and Rule 10A-3(b)(1) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
 
That stricter definition of “independent” is applied
for purposes of service on the Company’s
 
Audit Committee.
 
Services provided to the Company by Ahearn, Jasco &
Company, P.A.,
 
a CPA firm in which
 
Mr. Jaumot is a shareholder,
 
cause Mr. Jaumot to not be “independent” for
Audit Committee purposes.
 
In addition, the Board has determined that Robert E. Cauley is not “independent” for
purposes of the Marketplace Rules because he is an officer and
 
employee of the Company.
Board Meetings and Committees
The Board of Directors currently has three standing committees: the Audit Committee,
 
the Compensation
Committee and the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee. The
 
charter of each Board committee is
available on the Corporate Governance section of our website at
https://ir.
 
biminicapital.com
 
and will be made
available in print to any stockholder upon written request delivered to our corporate
 
secretary at Bimini Capital
Management,
 
Inc., 3305 Flamingo Drive, Vero
 
Beach, Florida 32963.
The following table reflects the composition of each of the Board of Director’s
 
standing committees as of April
14, 2022 and the number of meetings held during the year ended
 
December 31, 2021.
 
 
 
 
https://cdn.kscope.io/a54bde76034275876fa1a97da79329e5-bmnm2022proxyp14i1.jpg https://cdn.kscope.io/a54bde76034275876fa1a97da79329e5-bmnm2022proxyp14i0.gif https://cdn.kscope.io/a54bde76034275876fa1a97da79329e5-bmnm2022proxyp14i0.gif https://cdn.kscope.io/a54bde76034275876fa1a97da79329e5-bmnm2022proxyp14i3.jpg https://cdn.kscope.io/a54bde76034275876fa1a97da79329e5-bmnm2022proxyp14i2.jpg https://cdn.kscope.io/a54bde76034275876fa1a97da79329e5-bmnm2022proxyp14i1.jpg https://cdn.kscope.io/a54bde76034275876fa1a97da79329e5-bmnm2022proxyp14i2.jpg
- 11 -
Audit
Compensation
Nominating and
 
Corporate Governance
Robert J. Dwyer
 
..................
 
Frank E. Jaumot
 
..................
 
 
_______________
 
 
Chair of Committee
 
Member of Committee
During the year ended December 31, 2021, our Board of Directors held 9 meetings.
 
During 2021, no incumbent
director attended fewer than 75% of the aggregate of the total number of meetings
 
of the Board (held during the
period for which such person was a director) and the total number of meetings held
 
by all committees of the Board
on which such person served (during the periods that such person served).
 
Directors are expected to attend all
meetings of the Board, meetings of committees on which they serve, and
 
annual meetings of stockholders. All of our
directors attended the 2021 annual meeting, and all of our directors are expected
 
to attend the Annual Meeting this
year.
Audit Committee
Mr. Dwyer chairs our Audit Committee.
 
The Board of Directors has determined that Mr.
 
Dwyer qualifies as an
“audit committee financial expert,” as that term is defined by Item 407(d)(5)(ii)
 
of Regulation S-K. In addition, the
Board of Directors has determined that Mr.
 
Dwyer is financially literate and able to read and understand
fundamental financial statements. The Board of Directors has also determined
 
that Mr. Dwyer is independent
 
as
defined in Rule 10A-3 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended
 
(the “Exchange Act”), the Marketplace
Rules of The Nasdaq Stock Market, LLC and our Corporate Governance
 
Guidelines. The Audit Committee assists
our Board of Directors in overseeing:
our accounting and financial reporting processes;
the integrity and audits of our financial statements;
our compliance with legal and regulatory requirements;
the qualifications and independence of our independent registered public
 
accounting firm; and
the performance of our independent registered public accounting
 
firm and any internal auditors.
The Audit Committee is also responsible for engaging our independent
 
registered public accounting firm,
reviewing with the independent registered public accounting firm the plans and
 
results of the audit engagement,
approving professional services provided by the independent registered
 
public accounting firm, reviewing the
independence of the independent registered public accounting firm, considering
 
the range of audit and non-audit
fees and reviewing the adequacy of our internal accounting controls.
 
The Audit Committee’s purpose and
responsibilities are more fully set forth in the Audit Committee charter,
 
which is available in the Corporate
Governance section of our website at
https://ir.
 
biminicapital.com
.
Compensation Committee
Mr. Dwyer chairs our Compensation
 
Committee. The Compensation Committee exercises all powers delegated
to it by the Board of Directors in connection with compensation matters, which include
 
reviewing our overall
executive officer and director compensation structure,
 
policies and programs, making determinations as to
appropriate levels of executive officer compensation, administering
 
the issuance of any equity awards and making
recommendations to the Board of Directors with respect to our incentive
 
compensation plans and equity-based plans
and other compensation-related matters. The Compensation Committee’s
 
purpose and responsibilities are more fully
set forth in the Compensation Committee charter,
 
which is available in the Corporate Governance section of our
website at
https://ir.biminicapital.com
.
- 12 -
Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee
Ms. Dwyer chairs the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee, which
 
is responsible for seeking,
considering and recommending to our full Board of Directors qualified candidates
 
for election as directors and
recommending a slate of nominees for election as directors at the Annual
 
Meeting. It also periodically prepares and
submits the committee’s selection
 
criteria for director nominees to our Board of Directors for adoption. It reviews
and makes recommendations on matters involving the general operation
 
of our Board of Directors and our corporate
governance, and annually recommends to our Board of Directors nominees
 
for each committee of our Board of
Directors. In addition, the committee annually facilitates the assessment of our
 
Board of Directors’ performance as a
whole and of the individual directors and reports thereon to our Board of Directors.
Before each annual meeting of stockholders, the Nominating and
 
Corporate Governance Committee considers
the nomination of all directors whose terms expire at the next annual meeting
 
of stockholders and also will consider
new candidates whenever there is a vacancy on the Board or whenever
 
a vacancy is anticipated due to a change in
the size or composition of the Board, a retirement of a director or for any other
 
reason. The Nominating and
Corporate Governance Committee identifies director candidates based on recommendations
 
from directors,
stockholders, management and others. A stockholder who wishes to recommend
 
a candidate for director of the
Company may write to Chair, Corporate
 
Governance and Nominating Committee of the Board of Directors, in care
of our corporate secretary at Bimini Capital Management, Inc., 3305 Flamingo
 
Drive, Vero
 
Beach, Florida 32963.
In evaluating candidates for members of the Board, the Corporate Governance
 
and Nominating Committee has
not established specific minimum qualification standards, but rather takes
 
into consideration such factors as it deems
appropriate.
 
These factors may include judgment, skill, diversity,
 
experience with businesses and other
organizations of comparable size, the interplay of the candidate’s
 
experience with the experience of other Board
members, and the extent to which the candidate would be a desirable addition
 
to the Board and any committees of
the Board.
 
We do not have a formal
 
policy concerning diversity, but
 
the Corporate Governance and Nominating
Committee does consider certain types of diversity when nominating
 
director candidates to the Board, including
differences of viewpoint, professional experience,
 
education, skill, other personal qualities and attributes, race,
gender and national origin.
 
The nominee for the Board of Directors in this proxy statement was nominated by the
Corporate Governance and Nominating Committee.
The Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee’s
 
purpose and responsibilities are more fully set forth in
the Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee charter,
 
which is available in the Corporate Governance
section of our website at https://ir.
 
biminicapital.com.
Board of Directors Leadership Structure
The Board of Directors believes it should maintain flexibility to select the Chairman
 
of the Board and the CEO
based on criteria and qualifications that the Board deems to be in the best interests of the Company.
 
At this time, the
positions of Chairman of the Board and CEO are combined. Robert E. Cauley holds
 
these positions and leads our
Board of Directors meetings. The Board believes Mr.
 
Cauley’s extensive experience
 
and knowledge regarding the
Company’s business positions him
 
to provide the most effective and competent leadership of the Company
 
and the
Board. As a founding officer of the Company,
 
Mr. Cauley has the familiarity and expertise to best
 
understand
opportunities and risks facing the Company,
 
and the Board believes that he is in the best position to lead both the
Company and the Board.
The Company’s lead independent
 
director is Robert J. Dwyer.
 
Mr. Dwyer is the chair of the Company’s
existing Board Committees, and in that capacity,
 
he is able to call meetings, set agendas and direct the attention of
those Committees on a wide range of corporate matters.
 
Given the nature and scope of the Company’s
 
current
operations, the Company’s small management
 
team and the limited number of Company employees, the Board
believes that the Company’s current
 
leadership structure is appropriate.
Board Role in Risk Oversight
The Board of Directors as a whole has responsibility for risk oversight, with reviews
 
of certain areas being
conducted by the relevant Board committees. The Audit Committee oversees
 
management of financial risks and
risks relating to potential conflicts of interest. The Compensation Committee is responsible
 
for overseeing the
- 13 -
management of risks relating to compensation arrangements. The
 
Nominating and Corporate Governance
Committee manages risks associated with the size, composition and
 
independence of the Board of Directors. These
committees provide reports periodically to the full Board of Directors. The
 
oversight responsibility of the Board of
Directors and its committees is supported by management reporting processes
 
that are designed to provide visibility
to the Board of Directors about the identification, assessment and management
 
of critical risks. These areas of focus
include strategic, operational, financial and reporting, compensation,
 
cybersecurity and information technology,
legal and compliance and other risks. The management reporting process
 
includes regular reports from the CEO,
which are provided with input from the senior management team.
The full Board reviews the Company’s
 
cybersecurity risk. The Board considers the Company's cybersecurity
posture and risk exposure with management taking into consideration
 
our operations and the types of data retained
on our systems as part of its periodic review of the Company’s
 
risk management. Our primary business involves
investments in Agency MBS, which are securities backed primarily by
 
single-family residential mortgage loans.
 
We
do not receive personal information on individual mortgage borrowers.
 
The Board will review the Company’s
cybersecurity program and risk exposure with management on at least an
 
annual basis and will receive reports from
management on these matters from time to time. The Board may also conduct
 
additional cybersecurity reviews or
receive additional updates or reports as it deems necessary.
Policy Prohibiting Pledging and Hedging
The Company has not adopted policies regarding the ability of employees, officers
 
or directors or their
designees to purchase financial instruments or otherwise engage in
 
transactions that hedge or offset any decrease in
the market value of the Company’s
 
securities that may be granted to them as part of their compensation or that are
otherwise held directly or indirectly by them.
Cybersecurity
Our Management and Board of Directors place a high priority on maintaining
 
security over our financial
information that can be accessed via the Internet. Our information technology
 
team attempts to maintain a state-of-
the-art cyber security system and stay up to date on the latest threats and counter
 
measures available. Management
has had the information technology team make formal presentations
 
to our Board of Directors from time to time so
to keep the Board apprised of the level of cyber security that exists to protect our financial
 
information and the latest
threats that have emerged. Our information technology team attends
 
continuing education seminars provided by
leading security and software providers in the industry and receives timely alerts
 
to any new viruses or cyber threats
as they occur. We
 
are not aware of any material security breach to date.
 
Accordingly, we have
 
not incurred any
expenses over the last three years on information security breaches.
COMPENSATION COMMITTEE
 
INTERLOCKS AND INSIDER PARTICIPATION
No member of the Compensation Committee was at any time during 2021 an officer
 
or employee of ours or any
of our affiliates, nor is any member a former officer
 
of ours or any of our affiliates. In addition, no executive officer
of the Company currently serves as a director or member of the Compensation
 
Committee of any entity that has one
or more executive officers serving as one of our directors.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
- 14 -
COMPENSATION OF
 
DIRECTORS
2021 Compensation
Directors who are not also employees of the Company are paid compensation
 
in exchange for their service as a
director.
 
Director compensation is reviewed periodically by the Board to ensure such compensation
 
is reasonable
and appropriate. Directors who are also employees of the Company are not separately
 
compensated for their service
as directors.
Our non-employee director compensation for 2021 consisted of
 
annual cash retainers as set forth in the table
below.
Annual cash retainer
 
$
160,000
Audit
 
Committee Chair
$
5,000
Corporate Governance and Nominating Committee Chair
$
5,000
Compensation Committee Chair
$
5,000
Additionally, each independent
 
director receives reimbursement for travel and hotel expenses associated with
attending such Board and committee meetings, as well as for his or her attendance
 
at other meetings or events
related to the Company.
 
Non-employee directors may also be reimbursed for out-of-pocket expenses incurred
 
in
attending conferences or educational seminars that relate to their Board services.
 
These retainer fees are paid
quarterly.
The following table sets forth the compensation paid to non-employee directors
 
during 2021:
Director Compensation*
Fees Earned or
Name
Paid in Cash
Stock Awards
Total
Robert J. Dwyer
$
175,000
$
-
$
175,000
Frank E. Jaumot
160,000
-
160,000
 
_______________
 
*
 
Columns for “Option Awards,” Non-Equity Incentive Plan Compensation,” “Changes in Pension Value
 
and Nonqualified
Compensation Earnings” and “All Other Compensation” have been omitted because they were not applicable.
 
 
- 15 -
PROPOSAL 2: TO RATIFY
 
THE SELECTION OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC
ACCOUNTING FIRM
Our Audit Committee has selected the accounting firm of BDO USA, LLP to serve
 
as our independent
registered public accounting firm for the year ending December 31, 2022,
 
subject to ratification of this appointment
by our stockholders. Action by stockholders is not required by law in the
 
appointment of an independent registered
public accounting firm, but this appointment is submitted by the Board
 
of Directors in order to give the stockholders
a voice in the designation of auditors. If the appointment is not ratified by
 
the stockholders, the Board of Directors
will reconsider its choice of BDO as our independent registered public accounting
 
firm. BDO has advised us that
neither it nor any member thereof has any financial interest, direct or indirect,
 
in the Company in any capacity. BDO
has served as our independent registered public accounting firm since
 
April 17, 2008 and audited our consolidated
financial statements for the years ended December 31, 2008 through
 
2021.
The Company anticipates that a representative of BDO will be present
 
at the Annual Meeting, will be given the
opportunity to make a statement if he or she so desires and will be available to respond
 
to appropriate questions.
THE BOARD RECOMMENDS A VOTE FOR
THE RATIFICATION
 
OF THE SELECTION OF BDO USA, LLP
AS OUR INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
- 16 -
PRE-APPROVAL
 
POLICIES AND PROCEDURES OF OUR AUDIT COMMITTEE
Our Audit Committee must pre-approve, to the extent required by
 
applicable law, all audit services and
permissible non-audit services provided by our independent registered public
 
accounting firm, except for any de
minimis non-audit services. All of the fees reflected below were approved by
 
our Audit Committee.
FEE DISCLOSURE
The following table lists the fees for services rendered by BDO, our independent
 
registered public accounting
firm for the years ended December 31, 2021 and 2020:
Fee Category
2021
2020
Audit Fees
$
305,000
$
295,000
Audit-Related Fees
-
-
Tax Fees
-
-
All Other Fees
-
-
Total Fees
$
305,000
$
295,000
Audit Fees
“Audit Fees” relate to fees and expenses billed by BDO for the annual audit, including
 
the audit of our financial
statements, review of our quarterly financial statements and for comfort
 
letters and consents related to stock
issuances and other corporate transactions.
Audit-Related Fees
“Audit-Related Fees” consist of fees and expenses for assurance and related
 
services that are reasonably related
to the performance of the audit or review of our financial statements that are not
 
“Audit Fees.”
Tax Fees
“Tax Fees” consist of fees
 
and related expenses billed for professional services for tax compliance, tax
 
advice
and tax planning. These services include assistance regarding federal
 
and state tax compliance and tax planning and
structuring.
All Other Fees
“All Other Fees” consist of fees and expenses for products and services that are not
 
“Audit Fees,” “Audit-
Related Fees” or “Tax Fees.”
 
- 17 -
AUDIT COMMITTEE REPORT
The Audit Committee reports to and acts on behalf of our Board of Directors
 
by providing oversight of our
financial management, independent auditor and financial reporting
 
controls and accounting policies and procedures.
Our management is responsible for preparing our financial statements and
 
systems of internal control, and the
independent auditor is responsible for auditing those financial statements and expressing
 
its opinion as to whether
the financial statements present fairly,
 
in all material respects, our financial position, results of operations and cash
flows in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles and internal
 
controls over financial reporting. The
Audit Committee is responsible for overseeing the conduct of these activities
 
by our management and the
independent auditor.
In this context, the Audit Committee has:
Met and held discussions with management and the independent auditor.
 
Management represented to the
Audit Committee that our financial statements as of and for the year ended
 
December 31, 2021 were
prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles,
 
and the Audit Committee has
reviewed and discussed the quality,
 
not just the acceptability, of
 
the accounting principles, the
reasonableness of significant judgments and the clarity of disclosures included
 
in our financial statements
with management and the independent auditor.
Discussed with the independent auditor matters required to be discussed
 
by the applicable auditing
standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board as periodically
 
amended (including
significant accounting policies, alternative accounting treatments and
 
estimates, judgments and
uncertainties) and the SEC.
Received the written disclosures and the letter from the independent auditor
 
required by the applicable
requirements of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board regarding
 
the independent auditor’s
communications with the Audit Committee concerning independence,
 
and the Audit Committee and the
independent auditor have discussed the auditor’s independence
 
from the Company and our management,
including the matters in those written disclosures.
Discussed with our independent auditors, with and without management present,
 
their evaluations of our
internal accounting
 
controls and the overall quality of our financial reporting.
The members of the Audit Committee are not currently professionally engaged
 
in the practice of auditing or
accounting and as such, cannot be considered experts in the field of auditing or accounting,
 
including with respect to
auditor independence. Members of the Audit Committee rely,
 
without independent verification, on the information
provided to them and on the representations made by management and BDO. Accordingly,
 
the Audit Committee’s
oversight does not provide an independent basis to determine that management
 
has maintained appropriate
accounting and financial reporting principles or appropriate internal
 
controls over financial reporting and procedures
designed to assure compliance with accounting standards and applicable
 
laws and regulations. Furthermore, our
considerations and discussions referred to above do not assure that (i) the
 
audit of our financial statements has been
carried out in accordance with generally accepted auditing standards,
 
(ii) our financial statements are presented in
accordance with generally accepted accounting principles or (iii) BDO is, in fact,
 
“independent.”
Based upon these reviews and discussions, the Audit Committee recommended to
 
the Board of Directors that
our audited financial statements be included in our 2021 Annual Report
 
for filing with the SEC.
By the Audit Committee:
Robert J. Dwyer, Chair
 
 
 
 
- 18 -
EXECUTIVE OFFICERS
Our executive officers are appointed by the Board of Directors
 
and they serve at the Board’s discretion.
 
None
of our executive officers or directors are related. The following
 
sets forth certain information with respect to our
named executive officers:
Name
Age
Position
Robert E. Cauley ..................
 
63
Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board
George H. Haas, IV ..............
 
45
President, Chief Financial Officer and Chief Investment Officer
Biographical information on Mr.
 
Cauley is provided above.
GEORGE H. HAAS, IV
Age 45
George H. Haas, IV has been the President, Chief Investment Officer
 
and Chief Financial Officer of the Company
since April 2008. He has served as a director and as the Chief Financial Officer
 
and Chief Investment Officer of
Orchid Island Capital since August 2010.
 
Prior to assuming his current roles with the Company,
 
Mr. Haas was the
Company’s Senior Vice
 
President and Head of Research and Trading. Mr.
 
Haas joined the Company in May 2004 as
Vice President and Head
 
of Mortgage Research. He has over 21 years of experience in this industry and has
managed trading operations for the portfolio since his arrival in May 2004. Mr.
 
Haas has approximately 14 years of
experience as a member of senior management of a public REIT.
 
Prior to joining the Company,
 
Mr. Haas worked in
the mortgage industry at both National City Mortgage and Homeside Lending,
 
Inc. Prior to December 2001, Mr.
Haas attended Oklahoma State University,
 
where he received his MS in Economics.
 
- 19 -
COMPENSATION DISCUSSION
 
AND ANALYSIS
Our Compensation Discussion and Analysis describes our compensation
 
program, objectives and policies for
the executive officers named in this proxy statement and our executive
 
officers generally.
Overview of Compensation Program and Philosophy
As discussed herein under the caption “Compensation Committee,” the
 
Compensation Committee of the Board
of Directors is responsible for reviewing and establishing or recommending
 
to the Board of Directors the
compensation and benefits of the Company’s
 
executive officers, administering the Company’s
 
incentive
compensation plans and establishing and reviewing general policies relating
 
to compensation and benefits.
 
At the
beginning of each year, the Compensation
 
Committee sets general performance goals and objectives for the named
executive officers.
 
Through-out the year, the Compensation Committee
 
monitors the overall performance of the
Company and the success of the executive officers in achieving
 
the designated goals.
 
At the end of the year, based
on the overall performance of the Company,
 
the extent to which it has achieved the designated goals, and
information and recommendations provided by the executive officers,
 
the Compensation Committee’s evaluation
 
of
executive compensation and benefit information related to companies
 
that are believed to be similar to the
Company, the Compensation
 
Committee makes a determination with respect to the executive officer
 
salaries and
bonuses. The Compensation Committee has not retained compensation
 
consultants in determining the amount or
form of executive officer and director compensation.
2021 Executive Compensation Goals
For 2021, the Compensation Committee set the following general corporate
 
goals to measure executive officer
performance: (i) completion of additional public offerings
 
by Orchid or the Company, (ii) improvement
 
in net
income, (iii) improvement in book value, (iv) improvement in market
 
price per share (which may be measured
against the results of other entities in the Company’s
 
peer group, (v) development of alternative means to increase
assets under management and thereby improve profitability of the
 
Company and Bimini Advisors and (vi) taking
steps to enhance the Company’s utilization
 
of its tax operating losses.
2022 Executive Compensation Goals
For 2022, the Compensation Committee adopted the following performance
 
goals : (i) completion of additional
public offerings by Orchid or the Company,
 
(ii) improvement in net income, (iii) improvement in book value, (iv)
improvement in market price per share (which may be measured against the results of
 
other entities in the
Company’s peer group), (v) development
 
of alternative means to increase assets under management and thereby
improve profitability of the Company and Bimini Advisors, (vi) effective
 
management of expenses in proportion to
revenue growth and expansion of operations that are achieved during
 
the year and (vi) taking steps to enhance the
Company’s utilization
 
of its tax net operating losses.
- 20 -
COMPENSATION COMMITTEE
 
REPORT
The Compensation Committee of the Company has reviewed and discussed
 
the Compensation Discussion and
Analysis required by Item 402(b) of Regulation S-K with management
 
and, based on such review and discussions,
the Compensation Committee recommended to the Board that the Compensation
 
Discussion and Analysis be
included in this proxy statement.
By the Compensation Committee:
Robert J. Dwyer, Chair
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
- 21 -
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION
Summary Compensation Table
The following table sets forth the information required by Item 402 of
 
Regulation S-K promulgated by the SEC.
The amounts shown represent the compensation paid to the named executive
 
officers as consideration for services
rendered to the Company.
 
The table below also includes compensation awarded or paid during the Company’s
 
last
two fiscal years to Mr. Cauley and
 
Mr. Haas by Orchid. Mr.
 
Cauley and Mr. Haas serve
 
as executive officers of
Orchid.
Summary Compensation Table*
Stock
All Other
Name
Year
Salary
Bonus
Awards
(1)
Compensation
(6)
Total
Robert E. Cauley
2021
$
1,062,249
$
 
1,435,000
(2)
$
 
512,074
(4)
$
28,722
$
3,038,045
Chief Executive Officer
2020
1,031,310
 
693,000
(3)
 
737,788
(5)
28,500
2,490,598
George H. Haas, IV
2021
$
809,503
$
 
1,165,000
(2)
$
 
390,234
(4)
$
19,039
$
2,383,776
President and Chief Financial Officer
2020
785,925
 
567,000
(3)
 
562,242
(5)
18,839
1,934,006
 
_______________
 
*
 
Columns for “Option Awards,” “Non-Equity Incentive Plan Compensation” and “Changes in Pension Value
 
and
Nonqualified Compensation Earnings” have been omitted because they were not applicable in either the last two fiscal
years.
(1)
 
Amounts reported in this column for 2021 and 2022 represent the grant date fair value of stock awards granted in 2022 and
2021 for performance obtained as of December 31, 2021 and 2020, computed in accordance with FASB ASC Topic
 
718.
(2)
 
In January 2022, the Compensation Committee awarded bonuses in respect of 2021 service to the Company in the amounts
of $1,435,000 and $1,165,000 to Messrs. Cauley and Haas, respectively. These amounts were paid in January 2022.
(3)
 
In January 2021, the Compensation Committee awarded bonuses in respect of 2020 service to the Company in the amounts
of $693,000 and $567,000 to Messrs. Cauley and Haas, respectively. These amounts were paid in January 2021.
(4)
 
In March 2022, the Compensation Committee of Orchid awarded Messrs. Cauley and Haas performance units and
immediately vested common stock in respect of 2021 service to or for the benefit of Orchid with a grant date fair value of
$512.074 and $390.234, respectively.
(5)
 
In March 2021, the Compensation Committee of Orchid awarded Messrs. Cauley and Haas performance units and
immediately vested common stock in respect of 2020 service to or for the benefit of Orchid with a grant date fair value of
$737,788 and $562,242, respectively.
(6)
 
Amounts in this column consist of payments made with respect to reimbursement of certain life, health, disability, accidental
death and dental insurance premiums (exclusive of any tax gross-up payments) in excess of the percentage of such
premiums paid by the Company for salaried employees generally, and matching contributions under the Company’s 401(k)
savings plan.
Outstanding Equity Awards
 
for Fiscal Year
 
-Ended December 31, 2021
There were no unexercised stock options or unvested equity awards of any kind issued
 
by the Company and
held by executive officers as of December 31, 2021
 
.
Pension Benefits
We do not
 
sponsor any qualified or non-qualified defined benefit pension plans.
Non-qualified Deferred Compensation
We do not
 
have any non-qualified deferred compensation plans.
- 22 -
Potential Payments Upon Termination or Change in Control
 
Mr. Cauley and Mr.
 
Haas entered into severance agreements with the Company on December 18,
 
2008.
 
Those
agreements were replaced by agreements entered into on June 30, 2009.
 
Mr. Cauley’s
 
agreement and Mr. Haas’
agreement contain substantially the same terms and conditions.
 
The current term of each existing agreement expires
June 30, 2024, but is automatically extended by additional twelve month
 
periods each July 1 unless the Company
provides written notice otherwise at least 90 days prior to the renewal date
 
or in the event of a change of control
during the term of the agreement.
 
The qualitative and quantitative information below reflects the amount of
 
compensation payable to Mr. Cauley
and Mr. Haas under their respective agreements
 
with the Company in the event of termination of such executive’s
employment under several different circumstances.
 
Amounts disclosed assume that such termination is effective as
of December 31, 2021, and thus include amounts earned through such time
 
and are estimates of the amounts that
would have been payable to the executives had their employment terminated
 
effective December 31, 2021.
 
The
actual amounts, if any,
 
to be paid out under the executive’s respective agreement
 
can only be determined at the time
of such executive’s separation from
 
the Company.
 
Upon expiration of these agreements, the termination payment
provisions contained in the agreements, as described below,
 
will automatically terminate and will have no further
force or effect.
Potential Payments and Benefits upon Termination
 
without Cause or for Good Reason
Under the agreements, an executive shall be entitled to receive termination
 
benefits if during the term of the
agreement (i) the Company terminates executive’s
 
employment with the Company without Cause, (ii) executive
resigns from the employment of the Company and executive has good reason
 
to resign from the Company,
 
(iii) the
executive dies or becomes disabled, or (iv) because of a change of control of
 
the Company.
 
No amounts will be
payable under this Agreement unless Executive’s
 
employment with the Company is terminated as described in the
preceding sentence.
 
If executive’s employment is terminated in
 
accordance with the above, the executive will be
entitled to receive the following payments and benefits from the Company,
 
subject to the terms and conditions of the
severance agreements:
 
Payment of any accrued but unpaid salary from the Company through
 
the date that employment terminates;
 
Payment of any bonus that has been approved by the Compensation Committee of
 
the Board but which
remains unpaid as of termination of employment;
 
Reimbursement for any expenses that the executive incurred on behalf
 
of the Company prior to termination
of employment to the extent that such expenses are reimbursable under
 
the Company’s standard
reimbursement policies;
 
Payment for the cost of continued health plan coverage for the executive
 
and his qualified beneficiaries
through the term of the agreement;
 
Payment for any benefits or payments that the executive is entitled to receive
 
under any employee benefit
plans or other arrangements or agreements that cover executive;
 
Nonvested phantom shares or restricted stock, stock options and other stock-based
 
awards will become
automatically vested on the date of the executive’s
 
termination of employment;
 
Indemnification if certain liabilities are incurred by the executive pursuant
 
to Internal Revenue Code
Section 4999; and
 
A severance benefit equal to the amount described in either (i) or (ii) below,
 
as applicable:
(i)
 
If the Company terminates the executive’s
 
employment without Cause within six months before or
after a change of control or the executive resigns from the Company within six months after a
 
change
of control with Good Reason, the executive will receive a severance benefit
 
equal to three times his
“current cash compensation,” which shall be equal to one year of the executive’s
 
annual base salary
from the Company as in effect on the date the executive’s
 
employment terminates and the average of
the annual cash bonuses, excluding extraordinary bonuses, paid
 
to the executive for the Company’s
two fiscal years ending before the date the executive’s
 
employment with the Company terminates; or
(ii)
 
If the Company terminates the executive’s
 
employment without cause or the executive resigns from the
Company with Good Reason, in each case not in connection with a change
 
in control, or if the
executive dies or becomes disabled, the severance benefit payable is equal to
 
the executive’s current
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
- 23 -
cash compensation multiplied by the quotient of (a) the number of days
 
remaining in the term of the
agreement and (b) 365.
The following table presents the potential post-employment payments
 
our named executive officers would be
entitled to under their severance agreements and assumes that the triggering
 
event took place on December 31, 2021.
Termination by Company Without
Cause of By Employee
for Good Reason
Not in
In Connection
Connection
Benefits and
with a Change
with a Change
Death or
Name
Payments Upon Termination
in Control
in Control
Disability
Robert E. Cauley
Severance Benefit
$
6,378,748
$
5,312,711
$
5,312,711
Continuation of Health Insurance
89,990
89,990
89,990
Totals
$
6,468,738
$
5,402,701
$
5,402,701
George H. Haas, IV
Severance Benefit
$
5,026,508
$
4,186,462
$
4,186,462
Continuation of Health Insurance
52,591
52,591
52,591
Totals
$
5,079,099
$
4,239,053
$
4,239,053
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
- 24 -
SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF MANAGEMENT AND CERTAIN
 
BENEFICIAL OWNERS
The following table sets forth certain information as of April 14, 2022 relating
 
to the beneficial ownership of
our common stock by (i) all persons that we know beneficially own more than
 
5% of our outstanding common
stock, (ii) each of our named executive officers and directors, and
 
(iii) all of our executive officers and directors as a
group. In accordance with SEC rules, beneficial ownership includes:
all shares the investor actually owns beneficially or of record;
all shares over which the investor has or shares voting or dispositive control (such
 
as in the capacity as a
general partner of an investment fund); and
all shares the investor has the right to acquire within 60 days (such as upon
 
exercise of options that are
currently vested or which are scheduled to vest within 60 days after April
 
14, 2022).
Knowledge of the beneficial ownership of our common stock is drawn solely
 
from statements filed with the
SEC pursuant to Section 13(d) or 13(g) of the Exchange Act. Except as otherwise
 
indicated, to our knowledge, each
stockholder listed below has sole voting and investment power with respect
 
to the shares beneficially owned by the
stockholder.
Unless otherwise indicated, all shares are owned directly and the indicated person
 
has sole voting and
investment power. Except
 
as indicated in the table below, the business address
 
of the stockholders listed below is the
address of our principal executive office, 3305 Flamingo
 
Drive, Vero
 
Beach, Florida 32963.
Amount and
Nature of
Percent
Beneficial
of
Title of Class
Name of Beneficial Owner
Ownership
Class
Class A Common Stock
Directors and Named Executive Officers:
Robert J. Dwyer
1,211,723
11.5%
Robert E. Cauley
1,208,991
11.5%
George H. Haas, IV
1,124,998
10.7%
Frank E. Jaumot
605,290
5.8%
All Directors and Executive Officers as a Group
4,151,002
39.5%
Class B Common Stock
Directors and Named Executive Officers:
Robert E. Cauley
11,178
35.0%
All Directors and Executive Officers as a Group
11,178
35.0%
- 25 -
DELINQUENT SECTION 16(a) REPORTS
Our directors and executive officers are required to file reports of
 
initial ownership and changes in ownership of
our securities with the SEC. To
 
our knowledge, based solely on a review of copies of such reports filed with the
SEC and written representations that no other reports were required,
 
we believe that all such filing requirements
were timely met.
 
- 26 -
CODE OF BUSINESS CONDUCT AND ETHICS
We have adopted
 
a Code of Business Conduct and Ethics that is applicable to all of our officers,
 
directors and
employees, if any.
 
We have also adopted
 
a Code of Ethics for Senior Financial Officers that is applicable to our
principal executive officer,
 
principal financial officer, principal accounting
 
officer or controller, or persons
performing similar functions. Our Code of Business Conduct and Ethics
 
and our Code of Ethics for Senior Financial
Officers may be accessed from the Corporate Governance
 
section of our website at
https://ir.
 
biminicapital.com
 
and
will be made available in print to any stockholder upon written request delivered
 
to our corporate secretary at Bimini
Capital Management, Inc., 3305 Flamingo Drive, Vero
 
Beach, Florida 32963. We
 
intend to disclose any waivers
from, or amendments to, our Code of Business Conduct and Ethics and our
 
Code of Ethics for Senior Financial
Officers required to be disclosed by applicable law or stock exchange
 
listing standards by posting a description of
such waiver or amendment on our website at
https://ir.
 
biminicapital.com
.
- 27 -
CERTAIN
 
RELATIONSHIPS
 
AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS
Management Agreement
Orchid Island Capital, Inc. (“Orchid”) is externally managed and
 
advised by our wholly owned subsidiary,
Bimini Advisors, LLC (“Bimini Advisors”), pursuant to the terms of a management
 
agreement.
 
Bimini Advisors is
responsible for administering Orchid’s
 
business activities and day-to-day operations, subject to the supervision and
oversight of Orchid’s Board of Directors.
 
Orchid pays Bimini Advisors a monthly management fee, payable in
arrears, and began reimbursing Bimini Advisors for certain expenses commencing
 
with the calendar quarter
beginning July 1, 2014. Bimini Advisors earns a management fee regardless of
 
the performance of Orchid’s
investments.
Under the current management agreement, Orchid paid Bimini Advisors
 
aggregate management fees of
$8,156,000 for the year ended December 31, 2021 and $5,280,000 for the
 
year ended December 31, 2020.
 
In
addition, during the years ended December 31, 2021 and 2021, Orchid
 
reimbursed Bimini Advisors $1,632,000 and
$1,514,000, respectively,
 
which represents an allocation of overhead expenses, including $631,000
 
and $613,000,
respectively, for its allocable
 
share of the Chief Financial Officer’s salary.
 
The term of the management agreement
is automatically renewed on February 20 of each year for an additional one-year
 
term unless terminated by either
party. Should Orchid
 
terminate the management agreement without cause, it will be obligated to pay to
 
Bimini
Advisors a termination fee equal to three times the average annual
 
management fee, as defined in the management
agreement, before or on the last day of the existing renewal term.
 
We own shares of
 
Orchid, and Mr. Cauley and Mr.
 
Haas are each a director, executive officer
 
and shareholder
of Orchid.
 
As of the date hereof, Mr. Dwyer and Mr.
 
Jaumot also own shares of Orchid.
Other
Mr. Jaumot is the Director of Accounting
 
and Auditing and a shareholder of the certified public accounting firm
Ahearn, Jasco & Company,
 
P.A.
 
Ahearn, Jasco & Company,
 
P.A.
 
has provided tax, accounting, and SEC consulting
services to the Company since its founding in 2003 and is expected to continue
 
providing such services in the future.
 
Mr. Jaumot has been directly
 
involved with services provided by Ahearn, Jasco & Company,
 
P.A.
 
to the Company.
 
During fiscal years 2021 and 2020,
 
the Company paid Ahearn, Jasco & Company,
 
P.A.
 
approximately $68,000 and
$78,000, respectively,
 
and from January 1, 2022 through April 14, 2022, the Company has been billed
approximately $20,000 for services performed in 2022.
 
The Audit Committee has reviewed the engagement of
Ahearn, Jasco & Company,
 
P.A.
 
and Mr. Jaumot’s
 
position on the Board of Directors, and determined that the
engagement of Ahearn, Jasco & Company,
 
P.A.
 
is in the best interests of the Company.
 
The Audit Committee will
annually review this engagement.
Indemnification Agreements
We have entered
 
into indemnification agreements with each of our directors and executive officers.
 
The
indemnification agreements require, among other things,
 
that we indemnify our directors and certain officers to the
fullest extent permitted by law and advance to our directors and certain officers
 
all related expenses, subject to
reimbursement if it is subsequently determined that indemnification is not
 
permitted.
Related Person Transaction
 
Policies
Pursuant to its committee charter, the Audit
 
Committee of the Board of Directors is responsible for reviewing
and approving related person transactions.
 
Related person transactions include those transactions required to
 
be
disclosed by Item 404 of Regulation S-K under the Securities Exchange
 
Act of 1934, as amended.
 
As the Company
is currently a “smaller reporting company” within the meaning of Regulation
 
S-K, Item 404 requires disclosure of
any transaction, since the beginning of the Company’s
 
fiscal year immediately preceding the Company’s
 
last fiscal
year, or any currently proposed transaction,
 
in which the Company was or is to be a participant and the amount
involved exceeds the lesser of $120,000 or one percent of the average
 
of the Company’s total assets at year-end
 
for
the last two completed fiscal years, and in which a related person had or will have a direct
 
or indirect material
interest.
 
The term “related person” is defined in Item 404 and includes the Company’s
 
directors, nominees for
director, executive officers
 
and each of their respective immediate family members, as well as any person that
- 28 -
beneficially owns more than 5% of any class of the Company’s
 
voting stock and each such person’s
 
immediate
family members, where applicable.
In fulfilling its responsibility,
 
the Audit Committee will review the relevant facts of each related person
transaction or series of related transactions and either approve, ratify or disapprove
 
such transaction or transactions.
 
The Audit Committee will take into account such factors as it deems necessary
 
or appropriate in deciding whether to
approve, ratify or disapprove any related person transaction, including any
 
one or more of the following:
 
The terms of the transaction;
 
The benefits to the Company of the transaction;
 
The availability of other sources for comparable products or services;
 
The terms available to unrelated third parties or to employees generally;
 
and
 
The impact on a director’s independence in the event
 
that such director is a party to the transaction or such
director, an immediate family member
 
of such director, or an entity in which such director is an executive
officer or has a direct or indirect material interest is a party to the transaction.
No director may participate in any consideration or approval of a related person
 
transaction with respect to
which such director or any of such director’s immediate family
 
members is the related person or has a direct or
indirect material interest.
 
Related person transactions will only be approved if they are determined to be in, or not
inconsistent with, the best interests of the Company and its stockholders.
The Company solicits information from each of the Company’s
 
directors and executive officers to identify
related person transactions.
 
If a related person transaction that has not been previously approved or previously
ratified is identified, the Audit Committee will promptly consider all of the relevant
 
facts.
 
If the transaction is
ongoing, the Audit Committee may ratify or request the rescission, amendment
 
or termination of the related person
transaction.
 
If the transaction has been completed, the Audit Committee may seek to rescind the
 
transaction where
appropriate and may recommend that the Board or the Company take appropriate
 
disciplinary action where
warranted.
 
In addition, the Audit Committee will generally review any ongoing
 
related person transactions on an
annual basis to determine whether to continue, modify or terminate such related person
 
transactions.
- 29 -
STOCKHOLDER COMMUNICATIONS
Stockholders and other interested parties may communicate with any director,
 
including the Chairman of the
Board and the chairman of any committee of the Board or with the non-management
 
directors as a group, by
sending a letter to the attention of the appropriate person or persons (which
 
may be marked as confidential)
addressed in care of our corporate secretary at Bimini Capital Management,
 
Inc., 3305 Flamingo Drive, Vero
 
Beach,
Florida 32963. All communications received by our corporate secretary
 
will be forwarded to the intended
recipient(s). Any such communications may be made anonymously.
Concerns relating to accounting, internal controls or auditing matters are
 
immediately brought to the attention of
the Chair of the Audit Committee and handled in accordance with procedures approved
 
by the Board of Directors
with respect to such matters. A copy of such procedures for the submission and handling
 
of complaints or concerns
regarding accounting, internal accounting controls or auditing matters
 
is included in our Code of Business Conduct
and Ethics, which is published in the Corporate Governance section of our
 
website at
https://ir.
 
biminicapital.com
.
PROPOSALS OF STOCKHOLDERS
Any stockholder intending to present a proposal at our 2023 annual
 
meeting of stockholders and have the
proposal included in the proxy statement for such meeting must, in addition
 
to complying with the applicable laws
and regulations governing submissions of such proposals, submit the
 
proposal in writing to us no later than
December 22, 2022. To
 
be included in the proxy statement for the 2023 annual meeting, the proposal must comply
with the requirements as to form and substance established by the SEC and
 
our bylaws, and must be a proper subject
for stockholder action under Maryland law.
Pursuant to our current bylaws, any stockholder intending to nominate
 
a director or present a proposal at an
annual meeting of our stockholders without seeking to have such
 
a nomination or proposal included in the proxy
statement for such annual meeting, must notify us in writing not less than 120 days
 
nor more than 150 days prior to
the first anniversary of the date of the proxy statement for the preceding year’s
 
annual meeting. Accordingly,
 
any
stockholder who intends to submit such a nomination or proposal at our
 
2023 annual meeting of stockholders must
notify us in writing of such proposal by December 22, 2022, but in no event earlier
 
than November 22, 2022.
In addition, for next year’s annual meeting of stockholders, we will be
 
required under new SEC Rule 14a-19 to
include on our proxy card all nominees for director for whom we have
 
received notice under the rule, which must be
received no later than 60 calendar days prior to the anniversary of the previous year’s
 
annual meeting. For any such
director nominee to be included on our proxy card for next year’s annual
 
meeting, our corporate secretary must
receive notice under SEC Rule 14a-19 no later than April 15, 2023. Please note
 
that the notice requirement under
SEC Rule 14a-19 is in addition to the applicable notice requirements under
 
the advance notice provisions of our
bylaws described above.
Any such nomination or proposal should be sent to Bimini Capital Management,
 
Inc., 3305 Flamingo Drive,
Vero
 
Beach, Florida, 32963, Attn: Secretary,
 
and, to the extent applicable, must include the information required by
our bylaws and otherwise comply with the requirements established by our bylaws.
“HOUSEHOLDING” OF PROXY STATEMENT
 
AND ANNUAL REPORT
The SEC rules allow for the delivery of a single copy of the Notice of Annual Meeting
 
of Stockholders or set of
proxy materials to any household at which two or more stockholders reside,
 
if it is believed the stockholders are
members of the same family.
 
This delivery method, known as “householding,” will save us printing and
 
mailing
costs. Duplicate account mailings will be eliminated by allowing stockholders to
 
consent to such elimination, or
through implied consent, if a stockholder does not request continuation of
 
duplicate mailings. Brokers, dealers,
banks or other nominees or fiduciaries that hold shares of our common stock
 
in “street” name for beneficial owners
of our common stock and that distribute proxy materials and the Notice of Annual
 
Meeting of Stockholders they
receive to beneficial owners may be householding. Depending upon
 
the practices of your broker, bank or other
nominee or fiduciary,
 
you may need to contact them directly to discontinue duplicate mailings to your household.
 
If
you wish to revoke your consent to householding, you must contact your
 
broker, bank or other nominee or fiduciary.
- 30 -
If you hold shares of our common stock in your own name as a holder of
 
record, householding will not apply to
your shares. Also, if you own shares of our common stock in more than
 
one account, such as individually and also
jointly with your spouse, you may receive more than one set of our proxy statements and
 
annual reports to
stockholders. To assist us in saving
 
money and to provide you with better stockholder services, we encourage
registered holders of our stock to have all of your accounts registered in the
 
same name and address. You
 
may do
this, or request separate copies in the future, by contacting our transfer
 
agent, Broadridge Corporate Issuer Solutions,
Inc.,
 
by telephone at (877)
 
830-5402 or in writing at P.O.
 
Box 1342, Brentwood, New York
 
11717.
If you wish to request extra copies free of charge of any annual report
 
to stockholders or proxy statement, please
send your request to Bimini Capital Management, Inc., 3305 Flamingo Drive,
 
Vero
 
Beach, Florida 32963, Attn:
Secretary, or contact
 
our Secretary via telephone at (772) 231-1400.
You
 
can also refer to our website at
https://ir.
 
biminicapital.com
. Information at, or connected to, our website is
not and should not be considered part of this proxy statement.
2021 ANNUAL REPORT
Our 2021 Annual Report is being mailed to stockholders concurrently
 
with this proxy statement. The 2021
Annual Report, however, is not part of
 
the proxy solicitation material. A copy of our 2021 Annual Report as filed
with the SEC, which includes our consolidated financial statements for the year
 
ended December 31, 2021, is
available on our website at
https://ir.
 
biminicapital.com
. You
 
may obtain additional copies of our 2021 Annual
Report free of charge by directing your request in writing to our corporate
 
secretary at Bimini Capital Management,
Inc., 3305 Flamingo Drive,
 
Vero
 
Beach, Florida 32963.
OTHER MATTERS
So far as is known, no matters other than those described herein are expected
 
to come before the Annual
Meeting. It is intended, however, that the proxies
 
solicited hereby will be voted on any other matters which may
properly come before the meeting, or any adjournment or postponement
 
thereof, in the discretion of the person or
persons voting such proxies unless the stockholder has indicated on the proxy
 
card that the shares represented
thereby are not to be voted on such other matters.
ADJOURNMENTS
Adjournments may be made for the purpose of, among other things, soliciting
 
additional proxies. Any
adjournment may be made from time to time by approval of the holders of a majority
 
of the shares present in person
or by proxy at the Annual Meeting (whether or not a quorum exists) without further
 
notice other than by an
announcement made at the Annual Meeting. If the Annual Meeting is adjourned
 
or postponed for any reason, all
proxies will be voted at the reconvened Annual Meeting in the same manner
 
as such proxies would have been voted
at the original convening of the Annual Meeting (except for proxies
 
that have, at that time, effectively been revoked
or withdrawn). The Company does not currently intend to seek an adjournment
 
of the Annual Meeting.
Vero
 
Beach, Florida
April 21, 2022
 
https://cdn.kscope.io/a54bde76034275876fa1a97da79329e5-bmnm2022proxyp34i0.jpg
- 31 -
https://cdn.kscope.io/a54bde76034275876fa1a97da79329e5-bmnm2022proxyp35i0.jpg
- 32 -