Earnings Labs

New Mountain Finance Corporation 8.250% Notes due 2028 (NMFCZ)

Q3 2017 Earnings Call· Wed, Nov 8, 2017

$25.52

-0.43%

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Transcript

Operator

Operator

Good morning and welcome to the New Mountain Finance Corporation’s Third Quarter 2017 Earnings Conference Call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. [Operator Instructions] After today’s presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. [Operator Instructions] Please note that this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Rob Hamwee, CEO of New Mountain Finance Corporation. Please go ahead.

Rob Hamwee

Analyst

Thank you, and good morning, everyone and welcome to New Mountain Finance Corporation’s third quarter earnings call 2017. On the line with me here today are Steve Klinsky, Chairman of NMFC and CEO of New Mountain Capital; John Kline, President and COO of NMFC; and Shiraz Kajee, CFO of NMFC. Steve Klinsky is going to make some introductory remarks, but before he does, I’d like to ask Shiraz to make some important statements regarding today’s call.

Shiraz Kajee

Analyst

Thanks, Rob. Good morning, everyone. Before we get into the presentation, I would like to advise everyone that today’s call and webcast are being recorded. Please note that they are the property of New Mountain Finance Corporation and that any unauthorized broadcast in any form is strictly prohibited. Information about the audio replay of this call is available in our November 7 earnings press release. I would also like to call your attention to the customary Safe Harbor disclosure in our press release and on Page 2 of the slide presentation regarding forward-looking statements. Today’s conference call and webcast may 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 those statements and projections. We do not undertake to update our forward-looking statements or projections, unless required to by law. To obtain copies of our latest SEC filings and to access the slide presentation that we will be referencing throughout this call, please visit our website at www.newmountainfinance.com. At this time, I’d like to turn the call over to Steve Klinsky, NMFC’s Chairman, who will give some highlights beginning on Pages 4 and 5 of the slide presentation. Steve?

Steve Klinsky

Analyst

Thank you, Shiraz. The team will go through the details in a moment, but let me start by presenting the highlights of another strong quarter for New Mountain Finance. New Mountain Finance’s net investment income for the quarter ended September 30, 2017, was $0.35 per share, at the high end of our guidance of $0.33 to $0.35 per share. And once again covering our quarterly dividend of $0.34 per share. New Mountain Finance’s book value was stable at $13.61 per share, as compared to $13.63 per share last quarter. We were also able to announce our regular dividend, which for the 23rd straight quarter, will again be $0.34 per share, an annualized yield of nearly 10% based on last Friday's close. The company had another productive quarter of deal generation, investing $202 million in gross originations versus repayments of $203 million, which keeps us fully invested. Credit quality remains strong. There were no new non-accruals once again this quarter, and we have no portfolio companies on our credit watch list. I and other members of New Mountain continue to be very large owners of our stock with aggregate ownership of 9.2 million shares or approximately 12% of total shares outstanding. Finally, the broader New Mountain platform that supports NMFC continues to grow, with over $20 billion of assets under management and 130 team members. In summary, we are very pleased with NMFC's continued performance and progress overall. With that, let me turn the call back over to Rob Hamwee, NMFC's CEO.

Rob Hamwee

Analyst

Thank you, Steve. Before diving into the details of the quarter, as always I'd like to give everyone a brief review of NMFC and our strategy. As outlined on page six of our presentation, NMFC is externally managed by New Mountain Capital, a leading private equity firm. Since the inception of our debt investment program in 2008, we have taken a New Mountain’s approach to private equity and applied it to corporate credit, with a consistent focus on defensive growth business models and extensive fundamental research with an industry that are already well known to New Mountain. Or more simply put, we invest in recession resistant businesses that we really know and that we really like. We believe that this approach results in a differentiated and sustainable model that allows us to generate attractive, risk adjusted rates of return across changing cycles and market conditions. To achieve our mandate, we utilize the existing New Mountain investment team as our primary underwriting resource. Turning to page seven, you can see our total return performance from our IPO in May 2011 through November 3, 2017. In the six and a half years since our IPO, we have generated a compound annual return to our initial public investors of 11%, meaningfully higher than our peers and the high yield index and approximately a 1,000 basis points per annum above relevant risk free benchmarks. Page eight goes into a little more detail around relative performance against our peer set, benchmarking against the 10 largest externally managed BDCs that have been public at least as long as we have. Page nine shows return attribution. Total cumulative returns continues to be largely driven by our cash dividend, which in turn has been more than 100% covered by net investment income. As the bar on the far…

John Kline

Analyst

Thanks, Rob. As outlined on page 13, the credit markets continue to show broad based strength. The middle market, which is our primary focus, remains very competitive. The highest quality deals are fully leveraged, with spreads that are 50 to 100 basis points tighter than one year ago. While most of the deals that we finance continue to have very high levels of cash equity, we have observed an increasing trend towards lower sponsor equity contributions on many other transactions in the market. Additionally, there is currently a high level of repricing activity as sponsors are opportunistically using the strong market to improve pricing on their existing deals. On the positive side, since our last call, three months LIBOR has increased by approximately eight basis points to 1.39%, which has provided us with a small but valuable offset to the competitive spread environment. Looking forward, we are optimistic that there will be significant new deal activity in the closing months of the year, and we remain confident in our ability to source great deals in our core defensive growth industries. Turning to page 14, NMFC continues to be well positioned in the event of future rate increases, as 85% of our portfolio is invested in floating rate debt. Meanwhile, we have locked in 53% of our liabilities at fixed rates to ensure attractive borrowing costs over the medium term. Three months LIBOR has increased to 139 basis points, which is roughly 40 basis points above the average LIBOR floor on our floating rate assets. As the chart on the bottom of the page shows, given our investment portfolio and liability mix, NMFC is very strongly positioned in the event of an increase in short term rates. Even a moderate increase in the base rate of 100 basis points at $0.11…

Shiraz Kajee

Analyst

Thanks, John. For more details on our financial results in today's commentary, please refer to the Form 10-Q that was filed last evening with the SEC. Now, I’d like to turn your attention to Slide 21. The portfolio had approximately $1.87 billion in investments at fair value at September 30, 2017, and total assets of $1.95 billion. We had total liabilities of $919 million, of which total statutory debt outstanding was $619 million, excluding $144 million of drawn SBA guaranteed debentures. Net asset value of $1 billion or $13.61 per share, was down $0.02 from the prior quarter. As of September 30, our statutory debt to equity ratio, was 0.67 to one. Pro forma for investments that had not closed at quarter end, as reflected in the $79 million of other liabilities, the ratio would have been 0.74 to one. On Slide 22, we show how historical leverage ratios, which are broadly consistent with our current target statutory leverage, between 0.7 and 0.8 to one. On the slide, we also show the historical NAV adjusted for the cumulative impact of special dividends, which portrays a more accurate reflection of true economic value creation. On Slide 23, we show our quarterly income statement results. We believe that our NII is the most appropriate measure of our quarterly performance. This slide highlights that while realized and unrealized gains and losses can be volatile below the line, we continue to generate stable net investment income above the line. Focusing on the quarter ended September 30, 2017, we earned total investment income of $51.2 million. This represents an increase of $1.2 million from the prior quarter, largely attributable to an increase in prepayment activity. Total net expenses were approximately $24.9 million, a slight increase from the prior quarter. As in prior quarters, the investment…

Rob Hamwee

Analyst

Thanks, Shiraz. It continue to remain our intention to consistently pay the $0.34 per share on a quarterly basis for future quarters so long as the adjusted NII covers the dividend, in line with our current expectation. In closing, I would just like to say that we continue to be pleased with our performance to date. Most importantly, from a credit perspective, our portfolio overall continues to be very healthy. Once again, we'd like to thank you for your support and interest, and at this point turn things back to the operator to begin Q&A. Operator?

Operator

Operator

[Operator Instructions] The first question today comes from Jonathan Bock with Wells Fargo. Please go ahead.

Joseph Mazzoli

Analyst

Good morning. Joe Mazzoli filling in for Jonathan Bock. The first question, so there's no doubt that you do have several opportunities for NOI support several levers I should say through additional leverage of the core balance sheet, which it sounds like there's progress there already in the fourth quarter, but also SBA debentures. And of course, congratulations on receiving the second license. So the question relates to the pipeline for the second. SBIC license, and then also the types of deals that fall into that. Of course there are certain requirements, but if you could provide some color around the structure - not the structure, but the segment of these deals. Do these still sponsor back acyclical deals or would you throw in some non-sponsored deals that might not typically be a focus for New Mountain?

Rob Hamwee

Analyst

Yes. No. I mean just to be very clear, Joe, we will never change our criteria just to select something that happens to fit for the SBA, as much as we'd like to see that get ramped up over time. So we started always with New Mountain style acyclical businesses that we know really well from our PE side. And if those business happen to have the characteristics that allow them to fit in the SBA, then so much is better. And that's how we ramped up the first facility. And we expect, just based on now almost 10 years both PBC and SBC, a certain percentage of our deals just naturally have the scale and the other elements that allow them to fit in the SBA. So we’d expect over time, and we have a few things in the - in various stages of the pipeline that would fit. Whether those make it to the finish line, who knows. But we'd expect to scale up the second license the exact same way we scaled up the first license. But one thing we're never going to do is change our criteria to put something into the SBA facility.

Joseph Mazzoli

Analyst

Thanks for that. That’s helpful, and of course shareholders appreciate that conservative and patient approach. So the second question relates to the New Mountain Net Lease Corp. and it looks like the portfolio was fairly stable quarter over quarter. So is this - does this continue to be an opportunity for growth or are you comfortable with the current portfolio size? Just some thoughts on where we see this going in the coming quarters.

Rob Hamwee

Analyst

Sure. No, we continue to have an active effort there. It has been quiet for a couple of quarters, but we actually have a few things that are going to close - likely to close this quarter. And there’s a deeper pipeline of things behind that. Again, we never do any deal, whether on the Net Lease side or in the main BDC for the sake of doing a deal in any category. So it will continue to be episodic, but we do expect Net Lease activity over time to continue to build. And the one nice thing about the Net Lease side is it doesn't have the churn of course that we see in the regular way sponsor finance businesses or 15 year assets typically that are not pre-payable. So that is sort of a slow and steady build, but it adds upon itself. You don't have to replace old assets at nearly the pace you otherwise would. So yes, we do expect to continue to see growth on the Net Lease side, but it will be lumpy in nature.

Joseph Mazzoli

Analyst

Thank you for that. That’s helpful. And then for a final question, this relates to the substantial fair value increase in your second lien investment in Pinnacle. I think the loan was marked in the high - the second lien loan was marked in the high 70s. Now it's marked into the mid-90s. If you could provide some color around the company and the underlying performance, I'm sure there must be some performance improvement here?

Rob Hamwee

Analyst

Yes, and that actually - Pinnacle is Paradigm, which I touched on in the prepared remarks, was underperforming financially, but was announced that it was being acquired by Emerson in early October. So we're going to be taken out at par within 30 to 60 days. So that mark reflects that announcement. Then we’d expect a further modest right up to par when the takeout occurs, either by the end of this quarter or very early next quarter. We've seen the purchase and sale contract. It’s a very tight contract. So we have very, very high expectations that that deal will close as expected and announced.

Joseph Mazzoli

Analyst

Okay. That makes sense and apologies. That's right, that you already touched on that, but thank you very much …

Rob Hamwee

Analyst

Yes, but the name is a little tricky because - yes, I know it shows up as Pinnacle. That’s the actual technical holdco that we talked on under SOI. But you're right. It’s - Pinnacle and Paradigm are the same entity. So I should have made that clear on the call.

Joseph Mazzoli

Analyst

Okay, great. Well, thank you for taking my questions.

Operator

Operator

[Operator Instructions] The next question comes from Paul Johnson with KBW. Please go ahead.

Paul Johnson

Analyst · KBW. Please go ahead.

Good morning guys. Hey, just a follow up on Joe's question about the SBIC and your outlook for growth there. I'm just wondering, are you guys comfortable I guess sort of over the long term running leverage effectively higher, total leverage higher by utilizing that SBC perhaps into the 90s, mid 90s percent of total leverage?

Rob Hamwee

Analyst · KBW. Please go ahead.

Yes. We are. I mean we manage the business really against the statutory leverage. And obviously we always want to have that cushion given the one to one statutory cap. So we, as you know, run that in the 0.7 typically. But we are comfortable having economic leverage that creeps up modestly higher than that given the attractive nature of the SBA financing.

Paul Johnson

Analyst · KBW. Please go ahead.

Great. And then I guess my next question is just a little bit more technical. Hopefully it’s an easy one, but I'm just kind of trying to get a quick number on the income from the Net Lease Corp. I'm sort of backing into like 642,000 for the quarter. Does that sound about right?

Shiraz Kajee

Analyst · KBW. Please go ahead.

Yes. That’s about right. So we've been running for this year about 700,000 a quarter roughly. So I think on the SOI, you see about 2.1 million in aggregate. That’s about right, which is roughly a 10.3% return rough - net of expenses on the portfolio.

Paul Johnson

Analyst · KBW. Please go ahead.

Okay. That’s great information. And then my last two questions real quick, I guess would just be first, would you describe the fourth quarter of this year so far as more or less competitive in any way than what we've seen for year to date?

Rob Hamwee

Analyst · KBW. Please go ahead.

I would describe it as consistent with the last couple of quarters. I mean, John, do you have a different view there?

John Kline

Analyst · KBW. Please go ahead.

Yes. We tried to get to that in our prepared remarks, but I agree with that 100%. I think we've been at a competitive level in the market for honestly the last six months. And we don't see it getting worse or better. It’s just consistent.

Paul Johnson

Analyst · KBW. Please go ahead.

Okay. And then finally, I was just wondering if you could possibly provide any sort of outlook on your investment in Edmentum Education. I saw that it was marked down 80% this quarter and it’s sub debt investment. I was just wondering if there's any sort of commentary you could make on that company.

Rob Hamwee

Analyst · KBW. Please go ahead.

Yes. Sure. I mean I would say that, as you may recall, we restructured Edmentum a couple of years ago. We've been using - we've been working with us and the three other owners that control the company now, have been working with the management team to really kind of fix some of the issues that have caused the company to have the downdraft in earnings to begin with. The earnings have been relatively stable. The key news at that Edmentum is we've brought in a new CEO as of the summer who we’re really, really excited about and who has already in three or four months, injected a lot of positive energy into the company and really developing a multi-year roadmap to return the company to growth in what is a growthful market. So really it's all about execution and we think we were maybe lacking a little bit in execution with the legacy leadership and now we've got somebody who's got a proven track record in the space. And so we’re - it's going to take time because education, the selling cycles are long and the lag between selling and recognizing revenue is there. But we're excited about the prospects, but we have the market book more based on trailing numbers, as well as projections. And as we get a new strategic plan from the new management team in the coming months, that may be reflected in the BCFs that drive the valuation. So we’re a little bit in between stage right now. But we are long term quite optimistic about the prospects for Edmentum.

Paul Johnson

Analyst · KBW. Please go ahead.

Okay. Thanks guys. Those were all my questions.

Operator

Operator

[Operator Instructions] And so it seems to be no question, this concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Rob Hamwee for any closing remarks

Rob Hamwee

Analyst

Thank you. Well, thanks everyone. We appreciate as always the interest and the support and look forward to speaking again next quarter. Bye-bye now.

Operator

Operator

This conference is now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.