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Golub Capital BDC, Inc. (GBDC)

Q3 2019 Earnings Call· Thu, Aug 8, 2019

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Transcript

Operator

Operator

Welcome to Golub Capital BDC, Inc.'s June 30, 2019 Quarterly Earnings Conference Call. Before we begin, I would like to take a moment to remind our listeners that remarks made during this call may contain forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Statements other than the statements of historical facts made during this call may constitute forward-looking statements and are not guarantees of future performance or results and involve a number of risks and uncertainties. Actual results may differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements as a result of a number of factors, including those described from time to time in Golub Capital BDC, Inc.'s filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. For materials the Company intends to refer to on today's earnings conference call, please visit the Investor Resources tab on the homepage of the Company's website, www.golubcapitalbdc.com, and click on the Events/Presentations link. Golub Capital BDC's earnings release is also available on the Company's website in the Investor Resources section. As a reminder, this call is being recorded for replay purposes. I will now turn the call over to David Golub, Chief Executive Officer of Golub Capital BDC.

David Golub

Chief Executive Officer

Thank you. Hello everybody and thanks for joining us today. I'm joined by Ross Teune, our Chief Financial Officer; Greg Robbins and Jon Simmons, both Managing Directors here at Golub Capital. Yesterday afternoon we issued our earnings press release for the quarter ended June 30th and we posted an earnings presentation on our website. We're going to be referring to that presentation throughout the call today. Gregory is going to start with an overview of GBDC's results for the third quarter of 2019. Ross is then going to take you through the results in more detail, and I'm going to come back at the end for an update on the proposed merger with Golub Capital Investment Corporation, or GCIC. Let's start with results for the quarter ended June 30th. And I'll start with some headlines. The main headline is that GBDC had another very solid quarter, driven by consistent net investment income and strong credit results. For those of you who are new to GBDC, our investment strategy is, and since inception has been, to focus on providing first lien senior secured loans to healthy, resilient middle market companies backed by strong, partnership-oriented private equity firms. With that, I'll turn the call over to Gregory.

Gregory Robbins

Management

Thank you, David. Let's look at the details for the quarter. Net increase and net assets resulting from operations, or net income, for the quarter ended June 30th was $19.2 million or $0.32 per share, as compared to $17.8 million or $0.29 per share for the quarter ended March 31st. Net investment income, or as we call it, income before credit losses for the quarter ended June 30th was $19.4 million for $0.32 per share, as compared to $20.1 million for $0.33 per share for the quarter ended March 31, 2019. Excluding an approximately $28,000 accrual for the capital gain incentive fee, net investment income for the quarter ended June 30th remained unchanged at $19.4 million, or $0.32 per share, as compared to $19.4 million, or $0.32 per share, for the prior quarter. Consistent with previous quarters, we have provided net investment income per share excluding the capital gains incentive fee accrual as we think this adjusted NII is a more meaningful measure. Net realized and unrealized loss on investments and foreign currency of $200,000, or less than $0.01 per share, for the quarter ended June 30, 2019 was the result of $700,000 of net realized losses and $0.5 million of net unrealized depreciation. This compares to a net realized and unrealized loss on investments and foreign currency of $2.3 million, or $0.04 per share, for the prior quarter. New middle market investment commitments totalled $157.1 million for the quarter ended June 30. Approximately 84% of the new investment commitments were one-stop loans, 14% were senior secured loans, 1% were second lien loans and approximately 1% were investments in equity securities. Overall, total investments in portfolio companies at fair value decreased by approximately 1.6% or $32.2 million during the quarter. Turning to the column on the right at the top of Slide 4, you can see our net income per share of $0.32, our net investment income per share before the accrual for the capital gain incentive fee of $0.32, and our net asset value per share of $15.95 as of June 30, 2019. As shown on the bottom of the slide, the portfolio remains well diversified with investments in 225 different portfolio companies and average size of less than 0.5% of total portfolio company investments. With that, I will now turn it over to Ross, who will provide some additional portfolio highlights and discuss the financial results in more detail.

Ross Teune

Chief Financial Officer

Great. Thanks, Gregory. Starting on Slide 5, this slide highlights our total originations of $157.1 million, and total exits and sales of investments of $179.5 million. As shown on the bottom table, the weighted average rate of 8.1% on new investments this quarter was down from 8.7% in the previous quarter, primarily due to a declining LIBOR rate and a modest increase in the percentage of lower yielding senior secured originations. The rate on loans that paid off increased slightly to 8.8% from 8.7% the prior quarter, and as a reminder, the weighted average interest rate and new investments is based on the contractual interest rate at the time of funding. For variable rate loans the contractual rate would be calculating using current LIBOR, the spread over LIBOR and the impact of any LIBOR floor. Turning to Slide 6, this slide shows the overall portfolio mix by investment type has remained consistent quarter-over-quarter with one-stop loans continuing to represent our largest investment category at 79%. Turning to Slide 7, this slide illustrates that the portfolio remains well diversified with an average investment size of less than 0.5%. Our debt investment portfolio remains predominantly invested in floating rate loans and there have been no significant changes in the industry classification percentages over the past year. Turning to Slide 8, this graph summarizes portfolio yields and net investment spreads for the quarter, focusing first on the light blue line, this line represents the income yield of the actual amount earned on the investments, including interest and fee income, but excluding the amortization of discounts and upfront origination fees. The income yield decreased by 20 basis points to 8.6% for the quarter ended June 30, primarily due to a decrease in LIBOR over the past two quarters. The investment income yield, or the…

David Golub

Chief Executive Officer

Thanks Ross. To sum up, GBDC had a strong third fiscal quarter of 2019. Net investment income was very consistent, credit was good, borrower diversification increased further, and our balance sheet remained finely tuned. I want to close with a quick update on the proposed merger with GCIC. First, where does the merger stand? The process achieved an important milestone in mid July when the joint proxy statement of GBDC and GCIC was declared effective by the SEC. On July 15, 2019, GBDC and GCIC filed their joint definitive proxy statement. Votes are currently being collected from stockholders of both companies and are due by the special stockholder meetings of each company which are both scheduled for September 4, 2019. Subject to stockholder approvals and satisfaction of all other conditions precedent, our current expectation is that the transaction will close in September. As a reminder, the GBDC Board of Directors, myself included, has unanimously recommended that stockholders vote in favor of the transaction-related proposals. So, a note for stockholders who have not already done so, please vote. Next, I want to highlight why we believe the merger with GCIC is compelling for GBDC shareholders. Seven reasons, I’ll be quick. First, the transaction is expected to be immediately accretive to GBDC's NAV per share. Based on GBDC's NAV per share as of June 30, 2019 and GCIC’s estimated NAV per share of $15.00 as of the June 30, 2019, the accretion to GBDC's NAV would be approximately $0.72 per share, or about 4.5%. So that equates to roughly two quarters of historical net income per share for GBDC. Second, because the transaction will be accretive to GBDC's NAV per share, the transaction offers the potential for some additional value creation assuming GBDC continues to trade at the approximately 16% premium to…

Operator

Operator

Thank you. [Operator Instructions] And our first question is from the line of Finn O'Shea with Wells Fargo Securities. Please go ahead.

Finn O'Shea

Analyst · Finn O'Shea with Wells Fargo Securities. Please go ahead

First question, on the large versus core middle market, you’ve been highlighting the view of a more favorable risk-adjusted return in the core middle recently, and seeing some of the larger unitranche positions, are you shifting here in terms of what’s more available, what’s better and available, or is the recent volatility sort of opening up the larger side?

David Golub

Chief Executive Officer

I don’t actually think about it in terms of two segments in the market. I tend to think about it in terms of three. So, let’s just talk about the three. So, the first would be traditional middle market companies which would range in size from $10 million to $25 million of EBITDA. That market we’ve historically been very active in and we continue to be active in. I would describe it as the most competitive segment of our market right now. It's the portion of the market where new entrant activity has been most significant and that’s driven down what historically were better spreads and better documentation terms. The second segment would be traditional middle market which would range from $25 million of EBITDA up to $50 million of EBITDA, and I would say that’s the segment that we've typically been most active in. And market conditions there are pretty consistent with how they’ve been for the last three or four years. In that market, we are continuing our strategy which is to really focus on transactions where we have competitive advantages that we can bring to bear. The last segment would be upper middle market, so $50 million to $80 million EBITDA companies, where we as direct lenders compete with the syndication market because those borrowers have the ability to choose whether they prefer to go with a buy-and-hold lender or with a syndicated solution. As you point out, in that last category, we tend to see benefits from market volatility. When the syndication market is choppy, borrowers tend to be more receptive to buy-and-hold solutions. And when the syndication market is hot, it tends to be harder to compete with the syndication market. Right now, I’d say we’re neither in the hot nor cold phase. I’d say it’s -- the syndication market is active, but the syndication market is selective. We’ve seen a period where CLO investors have been picky about which kinds of credits they like and which they don’t like. So, as a consequence of all that, our activity has tended to be focused in the recent period in that $25 million to $50 million EBITDA size range company and my expectation would be that’s going to continue.

Finn O'Shea

Analyst · Finn O'Shea with Wells Fargo Securities. Please go ahead

Thank you. And just a follow on, upon origination of the new loan, does the advisor at Golub retain any of the upfront economics prior to allocation?

David Golub

Chief Executive Officer

So, in a typical transaction, there is a number of different upfront fees. There is some OID, or original discount, there is also a structuring fee involved, and as we disclosed in all of our documentation, we treat GBDC in a manner very similar to how we treat our private funds and that means that the advisor does, in some cases, retain a portion of the structuring fee.

Finn O'Shea

Analyst · Finn O'Shea with Wells Fargo Securities. Please go ahead

Sure. Appreciate the color and just generally on the parameters of the fees, is it generally, a third, or a half on the upfront amount of say two points, just some general figures?

David Golub

Chief Executive Officer

Rather than speculate, I'd rather get back to you with specifics. So, let us do some work and come back to you.

Operator

Operator

Thank you. Our next question is from the line of Ray Cheesman with Anfield Capital. Please go ahead.

Ray Cheesman

Analyst · Ray Cheesman with Anfield Capital. Please go ahead

Wondering if you could give us, what you are seeing out in the market on LIBOR floors? I see your charts in your presentation with LIBOR declining. I’m also seeing the floor that protected us in the past as not being included in as many deals as it used to be. What are you seeing?

David Golub

Chief Executive Officer

I think that's accurate. We're pushing for LIBOR floors where we can. I think as LIBOR goes down, we will probably see the reemergence of a reasonably standard 1% LIBOR floor. But in the period when LIBOR rose to meaningfully higher than 1%, that started to fade as the standard. So, I think your observation is right on, that if you looked at the universe today, you'd see a smaller portion of the universe having LIBOR floors, but I think if we have a sustained period of decreasing LIBOR, we'll very likely see the reemergence of the standard 1% LIBOR floor.

Ray Cheesman

Analyst · Ray Cheesman with Anfield Capital. Please go ahead

On a kind of parallel topic with the happy days of the last 122 months of recovery and all of our indentures faded away to nothingness and we all did covenant-lite loans, do you think that the stress that’s returned to some of the markets will lead people to, for lack of a technical term, wise up and request a little bit of protection looking forward into what could be rougher waters in the next set of deals?

David Golub

Chief Executive Officer

Yes and no. So, if you look at the situation in documentation land, I would characterize it as falling into two buckets. There is one bucket that we could call financial covenants and there is a second bucket that we could call leakage-related provisions. We're seeing -- let me describe what I mean by each of those. So, financial covenants, as the name implies, would be tests that if a borrower fails, would enable a lender to come to the table with the borrower and have a discussion, and these test would be debt-to-EBITDA or absolute level of EBITDA or fixed charge coverage. The second category, leakage provisions have to do with restrictions on the Company's ability to take assets out of the box that lenders are lending to. So that might, be for example, restrictions on dividends, so called restricted payments, or it might be restrictions on the Company's ability to repurchase debt, or restrictions on the ability to of the Company to put in place debt that is actually or structurally senior to the existing debt. I think we're seeing a lot of signs that the market is getting smarter about leakage provisions and I’m pleased to see that because I think the documentation terms in the broadly syndicated market in particular around linkage provisions were under very significant pressure earlier this year and were moving in a direction that was bad for the industry. So, I'm pleased to see that in the last 60 to 90 days, we're seeing more and more pressure on arrangers to make sure that documentation terms related to leakage are improved. I don't see the same phenomenon on the financial covenants front, and I don’t anticipate that we’re going to see it for larger size transactions. In the broadly syndicated market, “covy-lite” has become a norm. In the middle market, less so, and we have retained the predominant number of our transactions including one or several financial covenants. The good news is I don't see as much pressure on documentation terms related to financial covenants in middle market transactions. But the flipside is, I don’t anticipate that we're going to see a return to 2011-style documentation terms anytime soon.

Operator

Operator

Our next question is from the line of Bill Weisbrod with Debtwire. Please go ahead.

Bill Weisbrod

Analyst · Bill Weisbrod with Debtwire. Please go ahead

Hey guys, thanks for taking the call. I wanted to -- I saw the -- a change to the mark and addition of a PIK component to Oliver Street Dermatology. So wanted to ask what's going on there?

David Golub

Chief Executive Officer

Thanks for your question, Bill, but I’m going defer discussing a specific situation like Oliver Street. I don’t think it is an appropriate topic for this call.

Operator

Operator

[Operator instructions] There are no further question at this time, sir.

David Golub

Chief Executive Officer

Okay, great. Well, thanks everyone again for your time today. And should you have any questions that come up after today's discussion, please feel free to reach out to any of myself or Ross or Gregory or Jon. And we look forward to talking to you again next quarter.

Operator

Operator

That does conclude the conference call for today. We thank you for your participation and ask that you please disconnect your line.