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Q2 2024 PennantPark Floating Rate Capital Ltd Earnings Call

Participants

Arthur Penn; Chairman of the Board, Chief Executive Officer; Pennantpark Investment Corp

Richard Allorto; Chief Financial Officer, Treasurer; Pennantpark Investment Corp

Brian McKenna; Analyst; Citizens JMP Securities, LLC

Mark Hughes; Analyst; Truist Securities

Vilas Abraham; Analyst; UBS Securities LLC

Jill Merchant; Analyst; Knights of Columbus

Presentation

Operator

Morning, and welcome to the PennantPark Floating Rate Capital's Second Fiscal-Quarter 2024 earnings conference call. Today's conference is being recorded. (Operator Instructions)
It is now my pleasure to turn the call over to Mr. Arthur Penn, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of PennantPark Floating Rate Capital. Mr. Penn, you may begin your conference.

ANUNCIO

Arthur Penn

Thank you, and good morning, everyone. I'd like to welcome you to PennantPark Floating Rate Capital's Second Fiscal Quarter 2024 earnings conference call. I'm joined today by Rick Allorto, our Chief Financial Officer. Rick, please start off by disclosing some general conference call information and included discussion about forward-looking statements.

Richard Allorto

Thank you, Arth. I'd like to remind everyone that today's call is being recorded. Please note that this call is the property of PennantPark Floating Rate Capital and that any unauthorized broadcast of this call in any form is strictly prohibited and audio replay of the call will be available on our website. And I'd also like to call your attention to the customary safe harbor disclosure in our press release regarding forward-looking information.
Today's conference call may also include forward-looking statements and projections, and we ask that you refer to our most recent filings with the SEC for important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from these projections.
We do not undertake to update our forward-looking statements unless required by law. To obtain copies of our latest SEC filings, please visit our website at pennantpark.com, our call us at 2129051000. At this time, I'd like to turn the call back to our Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Arth Penn.

Arthur Penn

Thanks, Rick. And we're going to just spend a few minutes discussing current market the current market environment for middle-market lending, how we fared in the quarter ended March 31. How the portfolio is positioned for the upcoming quarters. A detailed review of the financials and then open it up for Q&A.
For the quarter ended March 31, GAAP and core net investment income was $0.31 per share. GAAP and adjusted NAV increased 1.8% to $11.40 per share from $11.20 per share. The increase in NAV for the quarter was due primarily to positive valuation adjustments on both debt and equity investments.
As of March 31, our portfolio grew to $1.5 billion or up 16% from the prior quarter. During the quarter, we continued to originate attractive investment opportunities and invested $338 million in 11 new and 48 existing portfolio companies at a weighted average yield of 11.6%.
For the investments in new portfolio companies the weighted average debt to EBITDA was 4.2 times. The weighted average interest coverage was 2.1 times, and the weighted average loan to value was 42%. On average, we have seen a 50 basis point tightening on first lien spreads over the last six months.
However, we continue to believe that the current vintage of core middle market directly originated loans is excellent. In the core middle market leverages lower spreads and upfront OIDR higher covenants are tighter than in the upper middle market.
Despite covenant erosion in the upper middle market in the core middle market, we are still getting meaningful covenant protections. As of March 31, our debt to equity ratio was 1.2:1 with a target ratio of 1.5:1. We believe that we are well positioned to drive additional growth in net investment income going forward.
Securitization Financing continues to be good match for our lower risk first lien assets. During the quarter, PFLT closed a $351 million term debt securitization transaction with a weighted average spread of 2.79%, a four year reinvestment period and a 12 year final maturity. The AAA portion of the structure priced at a weighted average spread of 2.3%. The ratio of external debt to PFLT junior capital was 4.5:1, which creates plenty of liquidity for the company.
The proceeds were used to repay a portion of our senior secured revolving facility, which will be available to reborrow and invest in new originations as we continue to grow the PFLT portfolio. We expect additional growth in NNI in part driven by our investment in the joint venture. As of March 31, the JV portfolio totaled $870 million.
And together with our JV partner, we continue to execute on the plan to grow the JV portfolio to approximately $1 billion of assets. During the quarter, the JV invested $80 million in six new and four existing portfolio companies had a weighted average yield of 11.6%, including $77 million of assets purchased from PFLT.
We believe that the increase in scale of the JV's balance sheet will continue to drive an attractive mid-teens return on invested capital and enhanced PFLT's earnings momentum. Credit quality of the portfolios remains strong. We added one new investment to nonaccrual status and removed one investment.
Nonaccruals represent only 0.4% of the portfolio at cost and 0.3% and market value. For the quarter ended March 31, [PIK] income remained low at only 1.7% of total investment income, which we believe is among the lowest in the BDC sector.
As of March 31, the portfolio's weighted average leverage ratio through our debt security was 4.4 times, and the portfolio's weighted average interest coverage was 2.2 times. We believe that this is one of the most conservatively structured portfolios in the direct lending industry and is a testament to our focus on the core middle market.
We like being positioned for capital preservation as a senior secured first lien lender focused on the United States. We continue to believe that our focus on the core middle market provides the company with attractive investment opportunities where we provide important strategic capital to our borrowers.
We have a long-term track record of generating value by successfully financing growing middle market companies in five key sectors. These are sectors where we have substantial domain expertise, know the right questions to ask and have an excellent track record.
They are business services, consumer government services and defense, healthcare and software and technology. These sectors have also been resilient and tend to generate strong free cash flow. Approximately 19% of our portfolio is in government services and defense which is a sector with strong tailwinds in this geopolitical environment.
And our software vertical, we don't have any exposure to ARR loans. In the core middle market, which we define as companies with $10 million to $15 million of EBITDA that is below the threshold and does not compete with the broadly syndicated loan market or the high-yield markets, unlike our peers, in the upper middle market.
In the core middle market because we are an important strategic lending partner. The process impact of terms we receive is attractive. We have many weeks to do our diligence with care. We thoughtfully structured transactions with sensible credit statistics, meaningful covenants, substantial equity cushions to protect our capital, attractive spreads, attractive upfront OIDR and equity co-investment.
Additionally, from a monitoring perspective, we receive monthly financial statements to help us stay on top of the companies with regard to covenants. Unlike the erosion in the Upper Middle Market, virtually all of our originated first-lien loans had meaningful covenants, which help protect our capital. This is a significant reason why we believe we are well-positioned in this environment.
Many of our peers have focused on the upper middle market state that those bigger companies are less risky that may make some intuitive sense. But the reality is different. According to S&P loans to companies with less than $50 million of EBITDA, have a lower default rate and a higher recovery rate than loans to companies with higher EBITDA. We believe that the meaningful covenant protections of core middle market loans, more careful diligence and tighter monitoring have been an important part of this differentiated performance.
Our credit quality since inception over 30 years ago has been excellent. PFLT has invested $5.9 billion and 492 companies, and we have experienced only 18 nonaccruals. Since inception, PFLT loss ratio on invested capital is only 12 basis points annually. As a provider of strategic capital that fuels the growth of our portfolio companies, in many cases, we participate in the upside of the company by making an equity co-investment.
Our returns on these equity co-investments have been excellent over time. Overall for our platform from inception through March 31, we've invested over $40 million to $69 million in equity co-investments have generated an IRR of 26% and a multiple on invested capital of 2.1 times.
Our experienced and talented team and our wide origination funnel is producing active deal flow. Our continued focus remains on capital preservation and being patient investors. Our mission and goal are a steady, stable and protected dividend stream, coupled with the preservation of capital everything we do is aligned to that goal.
We seek to find investment opportunities in growing middle market companies that have high free cash flow conversion. We capture that free cash flow primarily in first-lien senior secured instruments, and we pay out those contractual cash flows in the form of dividends to our shareholders.
Let me now turn the call over to Rick, our CFO, to take us through the financial results in more detail.

Richard Allorto

Thank you, Arth. For the quarter ended March 31, GAAP and core net investment income was $0.31 per share. Operating expenses for the quarter were as follows. Interest and expenses on debt were $14.7 million. Base management and performance-based incentive fees were $8.2 million, general and administrative expenses were $1.8 million and provision for taxes, $0.5 million.
For the quarter ended March 31, net realized and unrealized change on investments including provision for taxes was a gain of $12 million or $0.2 per share. As of March 31, our GAAP NAV was $11.40, which is up 1.8% from $11.20 per share last quarter.
Adjusted NAV, excluding the mark-to-market of our liabilities, was $11.40 per share, up 1.8% from $11.20 per share last quarter. As of March 31st, our debt to equity ratio was 1.2 times, and our capital structure is diversified across multiple funding sources, including both secured and unsecured debt.
As of March 31, our key portfolio statistics were as follows. Our portfolio remains highly diversified, with 146 companies across 44 different industries. The weighted average yield on our debt investments was 12.3% and approximately 100% of the debt portfolio is floating rate.
PIK income equaled only 1.7% of total investment income. We had one nonaccrual, which represents 0.4% of the portfolio at cost and 0.3% at market value. The portfolio is comprised of 87% first-lien senior secured debt, less than 1% in second lien and subordinated debt, 6% in equity of PSSL and 7% in other equity. Debt to EBITDA on the portfolio is 4.4 times and interest coverage was 2.2 times.
Now let me turn the call back to Arth.

Arthur Penn

Thanks, Rick. In closing, I'd like to thank our dedicated and talented team of professionals for their continued commitment to PFLT and its shareholders. Thank you all for your time today and for your investment and confidence in us. That concludes our remarks.
At this time, I would like to open up the call to questions.

Question and Answer Session

Operator

Thank you. (Operator Instructions)
Brian McKenna, Citizen's JMP.

Brian McKenna

Thanks. Good morning all. So it's great to see all the growth in the investment portfolio year to date up nearly 40% over the past two quarters. And leverage it, as you mentioned, is still below your 1.5 times target. So how should we think about growth in the portfolio from here? And then how does all this growth ultimately impact the trajectory of NII over the next few quarters?

Arthur Penn

Thanks, Brian. It's a good question. Look, our belief is that the back half of 2024, is going to be active. So we think we're going to be able to be very active, deploy really good capital at this good vintage with these credit statistics. So kind of we're hoping that come the turn of the year turning into 2025 will kind of be in a pretty close at or pretty close to our target our target leverage.

Brian McKenna

Yes. Got it. Okay. Makes sense. And then just a follow up in the quarter, you invested in 11 new portfolio companies -- 48 existing portfolio companies, and that was at an average weighted weighted yield of 11.6%. So a couple of questions here. How much did average yields come in relative to the last couple of quarters for new investments? Can you give any color on quarter-to-date spreads or yields?
I know you mentioned kind of tightening of 50 basis points. Has that trended differently, just kind of over the last several weeks here? And then moving forward, just on deployment, how should we think about the mix of new investments versus kind of existing portfolio company investments?

Arthur Penn

Yes, we spreads over the last six to nine months have come in on average, about 50 so what was a so for plus 600 is kind of more like a so for five 50 right now, we think that's kind of in a meeting. It's low. We do believe there's a shot that spreads will widen again, particularly if there's lot of supply, if there's a big, there's a lot of activity coming into the end of '24 which we believe it will be given supply demand. We think there's a shot that spreads may widen.
We don't underwrite that, shouldn't underwrite that, but that's certainly a possibility. We think at this point, they've kind of reached a kind of reached their minimum. In terms of kind of new platforms versus existing. I mean, that's the nice thing about, about what we have is we have over 100 companies in the portfolio, most of which are companies that are growing, they need additional capital.
Part of the value proposition that we add to those borrowers in this private equity sponsors is that we're a strategic lender there to help them grow and to provide additional capital to fuel that growth. So that's -- so that even in quarters where there's fewer activity in newer platforms for us, we still are very busy with the existing portfolio and financing the existing portfolio.
I guess what you're hearing from me is that between now and year end, we believe there's going to be a greater mixture of new platform names in our portfolio as part of the mix we like the new platform, the new platform names are kind of part of this vintage. As you can see, it's kind of low fours debt to EBITDA, very meaningful covenants very good loan to value. So we're we're optimistic that between now and year end -- calendar year end, we're going to be busy with this newer vintage.

Brian McKenna

All right. I'll leave it there. Thank, Arth.

Operator

Mark Hughes, Truist.

Mark Hughes

Yes, thank you. Good morning. Are your outlook for spreads potentially to widen as you say don't take it to the bank, but it's an idea is that supply and demand is that because you think there will be a lot of opportunities coming to market and that will benefit you all? Or do you think there's some additional risk that may be coming later in the year? How do you see that?

Arthur Penn

Yes, I mean, it's a good question, my comments were much more focused on supply and demand of deal flow. So in a world where our view is that we think there's going be a lot of deal flow in the back half of '24. That's where that comes from. It doesn't come from any any projection about the health of the economy.
As you know, Mark, we underwrite, our scenarios as lenders always assuming there's a soft economic environment early on in the deal and whether there's one or not, we have no idea, no one really does. But we assume that which is why we generally structure these loans is very conservative, low leverage and a high equity cushion in our good covenants, good information rise.
Kind of believing at some point, there may be a bump, it could be sooner and we need to structure these deals as if there's a bump sooner, but we don't have any prognostication about that.

Mark Hughes

Understood. And then the positive valuation marks in the quarter helped drive up now. Any detail you can provide with that equity performance, broader capital market movements influencing that. Would be curious if any or any breakout or detail.

Richard Allorto

Yes, a little bit. It's a little bit about some of the equity co-invest performed well, in particular, a company called [Bybit] as well as a company called marketplace events. Those two were the two kind of larger markups in the value of the equity, and then it is a broad portfolio move on the debt securities.
As we've said, we think spreads have tightened about 50 bps over the last 6 to 9 months. And that's kind of what you see in the in the general increases in the valuations on the debt securities?

Mark Hughes

And then you probably touched on this, but could you kind of your broader general credit outlook from a macro perspective as we think about going through 2024? Any particular views on where things might be heading?

Arthur Penn

No, not really.And we're not macro economists. We are micro credit underwriters on for like for lenders flat is just fine. If you've underwritten credit appropriately, we underwrite assuming there will be some bumps in the road early in the life of the loan. So we think we're well positioned in any environment, but we don't have any period -- for macro calls. I'm sure Truist has some expertise and others do. It's not really our strengths.

Mark Hughes

Okay. Appreciate it. Thank you, Arth.

Richard Allorto

Thank you.

Operator

Vilas Abraham, UBS.

Vilas Abraham

Hey, everybody. Thanks for the question. Can you talk a little bit about the timing of the liability actions PFLT took in Q1 and just how we should think about the average cost of debt from trend into into Q2?

Arthur Penn

Great question. We've been talking about spread tightening and now things are moving in a positive direction. Our securitization happened kind of in early February, so kind of early to mid quarter spreads on CLOs have come down since then, I think we said we said we were about to 30 over on the AAA on the on the PFLT securitization.
We just priced a AAA and we just priced securitization for the JV. PFLT owns 87.5% of the JV with Kemper and we just priced the AAA. So like 193 so we're going to get the benefit of some tightening that happened between, early February and here we are in early May.
So we like the securitization financing. Again, we're never going to be smart enough to pick the optimal time. We just know that's very good matching for our lower risk first lien assets. It's 12-year money. It's matched from a fixed standpoint, the structure of these securitizations are such that we never have to worry about a credit officer in a corner office having a bad hair day.
They're very kind of self-correcting. So we were operating as a middle market CLO through COVID. It worked wonderfully during that that that period. So we really like the securitization structure, it's very matched and helps us sleep at night.
And we also like our revolvers and we also like our bonds, but the securitizations are a very good tool for this kind of portfolio.

Vilas Abraham

Okay. All right. And then just on the amendment activity, can you comment a little bit about what you're seeing there? So other income was a little bit elevated again in Q1. So just thinking about how we should look at that moving forward?

Arthur Penn

Yes, look, amendments are part of our business. They always are some. It's not that material at this point. There's a handful of names that tend to amend every quarter. Some are bigger, some are lower. I think what we've seen, though, and the nice thing about how we land with a loan to value so attractive.
In many cases, as part of an amendment, we'll ask the private equity sponsor to inject additional equity beneath us and in many cases they do on for instance, growing back the tape to COVID and COVID in almost every case, the sponsors put equity in to solve the problem.
And that's what happens when you have well-structured covenants and meaning, and that's what we do versus let's say, what's going on in the upper middle market in the core middle market, we see covenants which get us to the table, which does create that opportunity to have that conversation too ask for more equity or to ask for an additional economics, whether those be fees, as you said, or whether they be increased spread.
So having the monthly financial statements and the quarterly maintenance test, the quarterly covenants has been a good thing for us over time. Most importantly, protecting and preserving capital. Of course, we make mistakes. We all do, but it's kind of we kind of through our structures really tried to minimize them.

Vilas Abraham

Appreciate the color. Thanks.

Arthur Penn

Thank you.

Operator

Jill Merchant, Knights of Columbus.

Jill Merchant

Good morning. If you can, can you just give some background on the new nonaccrual and one nonaccrual that came on.

Richard Allorto

Sure. Thank you. Good question.The nonaccruals came off that came off is a company called now South or M. Spark two different names. It was originally mouse out that might have been listed in our schedule investments associate with the name changed and Spark.
We already marked that down to zero in the prior few quarters. So that was just the company was sold and in fact, we recovered zero. So that moved off our scheduled investments. And one that moved on is a company called Walker Edison.
Walker Edison did a restructuring a while back, it continues to not perform that well, we're optimistic, though, we think we think the sector over time will heal, but it's taking a while. So we proactively put that company on nonaccrual.

Jill Merchant

Thank you. And then a follow-up. Moody's came out yesterday with a report on middle market CLOs say, and the smaller companies were, I guess, more affected with high higher rates. Just wondering if you can comment on that, Arth?

Arthur Penn

Yes, look, it's no shock that higher rates were at a higher rate environment and on and you know that see when when people were doing people that originally did this deal, no one anticipated the risk-free rate going where it is on, on average, our companies are still covering their interest two times, right?
So over two times, so that's really a testament to how we structure the deals upfront more conservatively. When we did most of the deals you know, prior to the interest rate increases, the interest coverage was over three times, but now it's kind of over two times, which makes sense.
Again, we've still seen very light nonaccruals and very light amendment activity. And I think that's really testament to kind of, you know, with the core middle market where leverage is lower. I don't know. You may follow some of our bigger peers who focus on the upper middle market, our sense is debt to EBITDA is higher and then in oh 4.5 times, so which is kind of where we underwrite four times on our sense is interest coverage is tighter.
And that's just frankly, because of the supply demand of capital in the upper middle market. There they've got a lot of money to put to work there, clinical competing with the broadly syndicated loan market and Wall Street. So there's a lot of dollars chasing this upper middle market opportunities.
What's resulted is orphaned and kind of the core middle market companies. So we have a playing field below 50 of EBITDA where there's a few of us who are active, the competition's less our capital is very meaningful to those borrowers. We can still get meaningful covenants. We get the monthly financial statements. So the overall package of risk reward, is very attractive and and we think appropriate for for the size of these companies.

Jill Merchant

Thanks, Arth. And lastly, the fund is doing well and the metrics are very good Have you thought about talking to Moody's or S&P or Fitch together you get another rating?

Arthur Penn

Yes. I mean, just to be, so it's interesting. S&P does rate our CLOs and does give us ratings estimates for all of the loans that go in our CLO. So basically, all of our senior loans get ratings estimates. And when we walk into the securitization side of S&P, they say, gee, the top 65% of the stack, we're going to rate AAA, right?
And we can issue AAA. We just issued AAA at 193, the other day in the JV. And so essentially, when you're getting two to one leverage in that in those CLOs through that portal of S&P, S&P thinks that you can leverage that assets two times and it's a AAA.
Then when you walk into the other door at S&P, which had it in the name on the door says BDC that door at S&P says, well, you can leverage more than one and a quarter times and BBB on an unsecured basis. So there's a bit of an inconsistency going on at S&P.
We tried to highlight it to them. We're happy to talk to them and perhaps you can talk to them but if one portal of entry is giving us a two to one leverage that's securitization at AAA, it would appear to us that that's a very efficient way to do it versus going into something called the BDC, room where they're there.
They're much of they have a much different view of credits which are, by the way the same exact credits, whether we're doing unsecured at the BDC level or securitization either in the BDC or the JV. So happy to talk to you about this at your convineience scale but it's very interesting.

Jill Merchant

Thanks, Arth.

Arthur Penn

Thank you.

Operator

Arth I'd like to turn the conference back to you for any additional or closing remarks.

Arthur Penn

Thank you. Just want to thank everybody for being on the call today and next time we'll be talking will be after our June quarterly earnings, which will be in early early August. In the meantime, wishing everybody a great spring and summer. Have a good day.

Operator

This concludes today's call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.