Jason Reese
Analyst · Lucid Capital Markets LLC
Thanks, Adam, and thank you, everyone, for joining us today. In March, I assumed the role of Executive Chairman of GECC at an important inflection point for the company. On May 4, I was appointed CEO. The company was established to create income and protect and grow NAV. In the near term, I am reprioritizing. We will protect and grow NAV first and secondarily create income. We will accomplish this by strengthening oversight, protecting shareholder value and reinforcing accountability across the platform. We are well underway, making progress on these fronts. I noted last quarter that as Chairman and CEO of Great Elm Group, the parent company of GECC's investment manager, I bring deep familiarity with both the team and our investment process. That familiarity enables a seamless transition into my role as both GECC Chairman and CEO, and I'm working closely with management to reinforce disciplined underwriting and thoughtful capital allocation. Before turning to the quarter, I would like to thank Matt Kaplan for his leadership during his tenure as CEO. Matt will continue in his role as Portfolio Manager. Turning to results. Recent quarters have been challenging for the broader BDC sector, and GECC was not immune to the macro environment. Our NAV declined this quarter, driven primarily by unrealized losses in select investments, most notably our CLO JV and one private investment with an idiosyncratic event. Our CLO investments can exhibit volatility given their inherent leverage. Additionally, in the first quarter, the broader CLO equity market declined. Despite the volatility of the quarterly mark, CLO exposure provides additional diversification to GECC's portfolio of secured investments. Our CLO investments continue to generate meaningful cash flow, diversify our income streams and support the sustainability of our net investment income. In light of these unrealized losses, Great Elm Capital Management, GECM, investment adviser, has waived all accrued and unpaid incentive fees through June 30, 2026, marking the third consecutive quarter of fee waivers. As of March 31, 2026, that waiver amounted to approximately $2.8 million or $0.20 per share of direct benefit to our shareholders. This action is immediately accretive to NAV and underscores our alignment with shareholders. We have also taken decisive action to deleverage the balance sheet. Recently, we called and repurchased all $57.5 million of GECCO notes due later this year. Once these notes are fully retired, GECC will have no funded debt maturities until 2029. This eliminates near-term refinancing risk and enables our flexibility to deploy capital strategically. In addition, we continue to improve portfolio credit quality through active investment rotation. During the quarter, we deployed approximately $22 million across 12 investments while exiting investments we viewed as higher risk. As a result, first lien investments now comprise nearly 75% of the corporate portfolio, the highest level in the company's recent history. This reflects a deliberate shift towards senior secured investments with stronger downside protection and is a direct outcome of the underwriting discipline we have instilled across the platform. At the same time, we're expanding our proprietary sourcing efforts. During the quarter, we closed 3 transactions sourced through institutional partnerships, committing approximately $15 million to new private investments. We closed on one additional proprietary private investment in April, and we expect to close additional investments in the near future, building on this momentum as our sourcing network continues to deepen and differentiate our platform. At Great Elm Specialty Finance, or GESF, we continue to execute on the strategic transformation aimed at streamlining the platform for enhanced growth and profitability. Great Elm Commercial Finance is building a robust pipeline of asset-based lending opportunities, while Great Elm Healthcare Finance has successfully repositioned the business and recently closed on another transaction. Prestige, our invoice financing business generates durable returns, but can exhibit quarter-to-quarter variability due to the spot nature of its business. I'm pleased to say all 3 of our core verticals under GESF are profitable and generate cash distributions. Collectively, GESF is poised for continued growth and represents an increasingly important source of diversification across both assets and income. Today, GECC's high-quality portfolio is strong, composed primarily of performing cash-generative investments. We closed the quarter with less than 1% of fair value of all investments on nonaccrual, stark contrast to our peers. In addition, in the last quarter, we opportunistically purchased shares at a discount to NAV under our stock repurchase program. Through May 1, 2026, under our $10 million stock repurchase program authorized in October 2025, we have repurchased approximately 1% of all shares outstanding at an average 36% discount to our March 31 NAV, leaving approximately $9.5 million of remaining capacity under the program for future repurchases. Stepping back, GECC is well capitalized and supported by a strong balance sheet. At quarter end, we held approximately $10 million in cash, $4 million of liquid exchange-traded assets and had full availability under our $50 million revolving credit facility. With no near-term debt maturities, ample liquidity and a higher quality portfolio, we are well positioned to act decisively when compelling opportunities arise. Now I'd like to turn the call over to Keri Davis to walk through the financial details.