Barry Sloane
President and CEO
Okay, operator, I've got one more analyst, Mickey Schleien from Ladenburg wasn't able to make the call. So I'm just going to read off his questions quickly and try to answer them. Mickey Schleien’s first question. How does the potential for workers to remain working at home beyond the pandemic permanently affect your outlook for credit quality for those borrowers dependent upon their demand, for example, dry clean a restaurant focused on lunch. Those are challenged businesses of the honestly the dry cleaner things, the tough one that I've thought about and examined because the end of the day, people just they're not dressing up. They're wearing sweatpants, t-shirts, jeans, restaurant. On the other hand, as I just discussed with Paul, they're going to have the ability to adapt and do something differently. But those restaurants that lived off of the lunch in crowd in New York City or in a Chicago, they're going to have a challenge because we don't see that size of the commuter base coming back into those offices in the near term. How do you expect to manage credit risk in the gasoline station segment? Very carefully. I think this is a segment I haven't loved for 10 years, because I do believe in the growth of the electronic car, electronic vehicle and we have very little exposure. And we only typically look at these stations to the ones that are the best of breed, best and biggest quality, so very difficult to manage, not a fan of credit to gas stations. How do you expect 7(a), 504 pricing environment to behave once the Fed begins to raise rates? I think that the 7(a) and we talked about this with Robert, could come under pressure if the economy picks up and the speeds pick up, which may reduce the prepayment expectation -- may increase the prepayment expectation and reduce prices. 504 pricing, I think is going to be really strong. That's going to be a great demand for borrowers because you get fixed rate, borrowing rates that are very low. But I think right now the banks have got to put money out. And there's an insatiable appetite from banks or insurance companies. The BB high yield bond spread is like 2.5%. So there's a huge demand for loans and our loans are great risk reward. And we're happy about that. What causes NBL dividend to be higher than the anticipated would sell it for 2021. We did chat about that on the call. Basically, it's called execution, getting the borrower, getting the loan closed working with the SBA to get them to approve it and the CDC, so it was really execution. And we look forward to Tony's Zara's team continuing to execute and bring us these loans. And what underpins the higher dividend 2021 forecast what changed from your previous guidance? I think the biggest issue there obviously is a) firing on all cylinders in the contribution from PPP. At what level do you anticipate the equity be in 2021? Mickey's last question. I think we'll be hovering around the, the 1.3 to 1.35 number. It may blip up in a quarter, and it might be lower. We have -- we did some capital raising in the first quarter that should help and the income coming from PPP in Q1 versus the $0.50 dividend should also help as well. But we're not overly concerned about leverage, we manage it well. I mean, we are a BDC so we always going over here to leverage issues. But if we weren't a BDC, an entity like ours, would probably be levered 2, 3, 4, 5 times that is today with comfortable, comfort and doing so, we can't do it, we're not going to do it. But if we were able to do it, so we're not concerned about, 135 or 15 we're not concerned about it at all. Operator, if there's no more questions, I think we can we can end the call, then.