Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you for standing by. Welcome to Saratoga Investment Corp's Fiscal Second Quarter 2023 Financial Results Conference Call. Please note today's conference is being recorded. During today's presentation, all parties will be in a listen-only mode. Following management's prepared remarks, we will open the line for questions. At this time, I'd like to turn the call over to Saratoga Investment Corp's Chief Financial Officer and Chief Compliance Officer, Mr. Henri Steenkamp. Please go ahead.
Thank you. I would like to welcome everyone to Saratoga Investment Corp's Fiscal Second Quarter 2023 Earnings Conference Call. Today's conference call includes forward-looking statements and projections. We ask you to refer to our most recent filings with the SEC for important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from these forward-looking statements and projections. We do not undertake to update our forward-looking statements unless required to do so by law. Today, we will be referencing a presentation during our call. You can find our fiscal second quarter 2023 shareholder presentation in the Events and Presentation section of our investor relations website. A link to our IR page is in the earnings press release distributed last night. A replay of this conference call will also be available. Please refer to our earnings press release for details.
I would now like to turn the call over to our Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Christian Oberbeck, who will be making a few introductory remarks.
Thank you, Henri, and welcome everyone. While the significant broader market volatility continued this fiscal second quarter, we remain focused on balance sheet and liquidity strength while identifying further opportunities and growing our asset base and high-quality credits. We believe Saratoga continues to be well-positioned for potential future economic opportunities and challenges in this volatile environment. Our existing portfolio companies are generally performing well with our overall fair value at cost and our current business development pipeline robust, with positive metrics and term sheets issued and deals executed. Our AUM grew significantly this quarter to $955 million as we originated $141 million in new platforms or follow-on investments, offset by $75 million of repayments.
We continue to successfully bring new platform investments into the portfolio, with six added this fiscal quarter, and all of our originations were made while maintaining the extremely high credit bar we set for all investments. Our NAV per share this quarter decreased by 1.5% from Q1 to $28.27, primarily reflecting the impact of widening market spreads on the core portfolio and the volatility being experienced in the broadly syndicated loan market. Last week, we also announced the approval of our third SBIC license. This will allow us to continue to expand upon our existing investments in support of the SBA's mission to provide growth capital to small businesses which are so important to our economy.
Our SBA guaranteed debentures are a great benefit to our capital structure, further enabling us to provide innovative and cost-effective solutions to the many smaller and middle-market companies we finance. From an earnings perspective, we began to see the benefit of interest rate increases, with 98% of our interest earning portfolio at floating rate and more than 95% of our borrowings at fixed rates. Our core BDC portfolio yield increased by 140 basis points this quarter, up 16.5% from 8.5% in Q1 compared to 9.9% in Q2, with the full impact of the rising rate environment not yet fully reflected in our earnings. To briefly recap the past quarter on slide two.
First, we continued to strengthen our financial foundation in Q2 by maintaining a high level of investment credit quality, with 96% of our loan investments retaining our highest credit rating at quarter end, generating a return on equity of 4.8% on a trailing twelve-month basis, despite recognizing, first, $5.3 million of net unrealized depreciation, primarily reflecting widening market spreads and broadly syndicated loan market volatility in the CLO and JV. Second, $1.2 million in realized loss on extinguishment of our SAK baby bond and SBA debentures. Registering a gross unlevered IRR of 10.6% on our total unrealized portfolio and a gross unlevered IRR of 6.4% on total realizations of $836 million.
Second, our assets under management increased significantly to $955 million this quarter, a 7% increase from $895 million as of last quarter, a 17% increase from eight hundred and eighteen million dollars since year-end, and a 43% increase from $666 million as of the same time last year. Our new originations included six new portfolio companies and nine follow-on investments, and our current pipeline remains robust. Third, in volatile economic conditions such as we are currently experiencing, the balance sheet strength, liquidity, and NAV preservation remain paramount to us. Our capital structure at quarter end was strong.
$337 million of mark-to-market equity, supporting $376 million of long-term covenant-free non-SBIC debt, $234 million of long-term covenant-free SBIC debentures, and $25 million of long-term revolving borrowings. Our total committed undrawn lending commitments outstanding to existing portfolio companies are $38 million. Our quarter end regulatory leverage of 184% has substantial cushion over 150% requirement. We had $145 million of liquidity at quarter end available to support our portfolio companies, with $9 million of the total dedicated to new and follow-on opportunities in our SBIC II fund, $107 million available to our newly approved SBIC three fund, and $13 million of cash.
Finally, based on our overall performance and liquidity, the board of directors declared our quarterly dividend of $0.54 per share for the quarter ended 30th August 2022, an increase of $0.01 from last quarter, which was paid on29th September 2022. This quarter saw a solid performance within our key performance indicators as compared to the quarters ended 30th August 2021 and 30th May 2022. Our adjusted NII is $7 million this quarter, unchanged from last year and up 9% from last quarter. Our adjusted NII per share is $0.58 this quarter, down from $0.63 last year, but up from $0.53 last quarter. Latest 12 months return on equity is 4.8%, down from 14.4% last year and 6.9% last quarter.
Our NAV per share is $28.27, down 2.4% from $28.97 last year and down 1.5% from $28.69 last quarter. Henry will provide more detail later. As you can see on slide three our assets under management have steadily and consistently risen since we took over the BDC 12 years ago, and the quality of our credits remain high, with only one credit currently on non-accrual. Our management team is working diligently to continue this positive trend as we deploy our available capital into our growing pipeline, while at the same time being appropriately cautious in this volatile and evolving credit environment. With that, I would like to now turn the call back over to Henry to review our financial results, as well as the composition and performance of our portfolio.
Thank you, Chris. Slide four highlights our key performance metrics for the fiscal second quarter ended 30th August 2022. When adjusting for the incentive fee accrual related to net capital gains in the second incentive fee calculation and interest expense on our SAK baby bond during the period that SAK was issued and also outstanding. Adjusted NII of $7.0 million was up 8.8% from last quarter and relatively unchanged from last year's Q2. Adjusted NII per share was $0.58, up $0.05 from $0.53 per share last quarter, and down $0.05 from $0.63 per share last year. Across the three quarters, weighted average common shares outstanding were 12.0 million for this year's Q2, 12.1 million for last quarter, and 11.2 million for last year's Q2.
There was zero accretion or dilution from the share repurchases and DRIP plans this quarter. Adjusted NII was relatively unchanged from last year, with the 18.5% increase in investment income resulting primarily from a 43.3% increase in AUM and the increase in the current coupon on non-CLO BDC investments from 9.5% to 9.9%, offset by increased base management fees and increased interest expense resulting from the various new notes payable and SBA debentures issued during the past year and quarter. The benefit of higher rates on AUM is not yet fully reflected in interest income, while the cost of higher rate debt is already largely absorbed in interest expense without full deployment as yet. Sequential quarter changes reflect the same factors as year-over-year.
However, the increase in current coupon is greater, being an increase from 8.5% to 9.9%. Adjusted NII yield was 8.2%. This yield is up from 7.3% last quarter, but down from 8.7% last year. For the second quarter, we experienced a net loss on investments of $5.5 million or $0.46 per weighted average share, and a net realized loss on the extinguishment of debt of $1.2 million or $0.10, resulting in a total increase in net assets from operations of $0.9 million or $0.08 per share.
The $5.5 million net loss was comprised of $13.3 million in net unrealized appreciation and $0.2 million of deferred tax expense on unrealized appreciation on investments held in our blockers, offset by $7.9 million in net realized gains. The $1.2 million realized loss on the extinguishment of debt was generated by the extinguishment of both the company's $43.1 million SAK baby bond and the $18.4 million SBA debentures during this quarter. The $7.9 million net realized gain on investments represent the realization of the equity of the company's PDDS investment. The $13.3 million net unrealized appreciation primarily reflects, one, $8.0 million reversal of previously recognized depreciation on the company's PDDS investment.
2. $1.2 million unrealized appreciation on the company's CLO and JV equity investments, reflecting the volatility in the broadly syndicated loan market as of quarter end. 3. $1.9 million unrealized appreciation on the company's Pepper Palace investments due to company performance. 4. $1.2 million unrealized appreciation on the company's Zollege investments due to company performance. five. approximately $3.6 million net unrealized appreciation across the portfolio, reflecting the impact of changing market spreads. These were then offset by, 1. $2.0 million unrealized depreciation on the company's Artemis Wax investments, and 2. approximately $0.6 million net unrealized depreciation across the remainder of the portfolio, reflecting company performance. Return on equity remains an important performance indicator for us, which includes both realized and unrealized gains.
Our return on equity was 4.8% for the last 12 months, reflecting the widening of market spreads and loan price reductions. Total expenses, excluding interest and debt financing expenses, base management fees and incentive fees, and income and excise taxes was $1.6 million for this quarter as compared to $1.8 million last year and $2.0 million last quarter. This represented 0.8% of average total assets on an annualized basis, down from 1.1% last year and also down from 0.9% last quarter. Also, we have again added the KPI slides 27 through 30 in the appendix at the end of the presentation that shows our income statement and balance sheet metrics for the past nine quarters and the upward trends we have maintained.
Of particular note is slide 30, highlighting how our net interest margin run rate has continued to increase and has almost quadrupled since Saratoga took over management of the BDC, and has also increased by 5% the last twelve months, while still not yet receiving the full period benefit of putting to work the significant amount of Q1 cash, nor the full impact of the current rising rate environment. Moving on to slide five. NAV was $337.2 million as of this quarter end, an $8.0 million decrease from last quarter and a $13.1 million increase from the same quarter last year.
This quarter, $3.6 million of the decrease is unrealized appreciation resulting from changing market spreads, while $3.7 million of the decrease also reflects the impact of accretive share repurchases below NAV. During Q2, the company repurchased 153,350 shares at an average price of $24.04. NAV per share was $28.27 as of quarter end, down from $28.97 twelve months ago and $28.69 last quarter. This chart also includes our historical NAV per share, which highlights how NAV per share has increased 17 of the past 21 quarters. Over the long term, our net asset value has steadily increased since 2011, and this growth has been accretive as demonstrated by the consistent increase in NAV per share.
We continue to benefit from our history of consistent realized and unrealized gains. On slide six, you will see a simple reconciliation of the major changes in NII and NAV per share on a sequential quarterly basis. Starting at the top, adjusted NII per share increased to $0.58 per share. A $0.15 increase in non-CLO net interest income from the partial impact of higher AUM at higher rates, $0.05 increase in other income, and $0.03 decrease in operating expenses was offset by a $0.01 decrease in CLO net interest income and a $0.17 increase in base management and incentive fees, reflecting the stronger performance this quarter. Moving on to the lower half of the slide. This reconciles the $0.42 NAV per share decrease for the quarter.
The $0.64 of GAAP NII and $0.03 net accretion from share repurchases and DRIP was more than offset by $0.44 of net realized gains and unrealized appreciation, $0.10 of realized loss on the extinguishment of debt, and the $0.53 dividend paid in Q2. Slide seven outlines the dry powder available to us as of quarter end, which totaled $144.6 million. This was spread between our available cash, undrawn SBA debentures, and undrawn secured credit facility. This quarter end level of available liquidity allows us to grow our assets by an additional 15%, with $30 million of cash available and thus fully accretive to NII when deployed, and $116 million of available SBA debentures with its low cost pricing, also very accretive.
$107 million of that is available as a result of our third SBIC license approved last week. We remain pleased with our available liquidity and leverage position, including our access to diverse sources of both public and private liquidity, and especially taking into account the overall conservative nature of our balance sheet. The fact that almost all our debt is long term in nature with no non-SBIC debt maturing within the next three years, and importantly, that almost all our debt is fixed rate in this rising rate environment. We will talk more about this later. Also, our debt is structured in such a way that we have no BDC covenants that can be stressed, important during such volatile times. Now I would like to move on to slides eight through 12 and review the composition and yield of our investment portfolio.
Slide eight highlights that we now have $955 million of AUM at fair value or $956 million at cost invested in 52 portfolio companies, one CLO fund and one joint venture. Our first lien percentage is 83% of our total investments, of which 15% is in first lien, last out positions. On slide nine, you can see how the yield on our core BDC assets, excluding our CLO, has changed over time, especially the past quarter. After an extended period of low rates and tightening spreads, we are seeing both these trends reverse. We have already seen some benefit in Q2 with our core BDC portfolio yield increasing from 8.5% last quarter to 9.9% this quarter, and total yield increasing from 7.7% to 9.0%.
The full impact of the rising rate environment through today is still not yet reflected in our earnings. In addition, we have started seeing spreads widening as well. With 98% of our interest earning portfolio being variable rate, all of our investments being above their floors and rates continuing to rise significantly, we expect to benefit going forward from the earnings impact of rising rates to our NII, as you can see on the next slide. The CLO yield increased from 8.0% to 8.9% quarter-over-quarter, reflecting current market performance. The CLO is currently performing and current.
Now, slide 10 is a new illustrative slide showing how at the end of Q2, the average three-month LIBOR base rate used in our portfolio and reflected in Q2 earnings was 207 basis points, versus at quarter end, when three-month LIBOR closed at 310 basis points, and versus where it is today at approximately 363 basis points. With 98% of our interest-earning assets using variable rates, earnings will benefit from this increase in Q3 and Q4 as base rates reset, while all but $25 million of our debt is fixed rate and will not be impacted by these increases in base rates. The increases in SOFR-based rates are similar as well, and all indications are that rates will be rising even further than this. As a result, we stand to gain significantly as rates rise.
That said, there will be a lag in the effect this dynamic has on our earnings due to timing of rate resets and invoicing terms. Slide 11 shows how our investments are diversified through the U.S. On slide 12, you can see the industry breadth and diversity that our portfolio represents. Our investments are spread over 42 distinct industries with a large focus on healthcare and education software, HVAC services and sales, and IT, real estate, education, consumer and healthcare services, in addition to our investments in the CLO and JV, which are included as structured finance securities in this chart. Of our total investment portfolio, 9.3% consists of equity interests, which remain an important part of our overall investment strategy.
For the past 10 fiscal years, we had a combined $81.1 million of net realized gains from the sale of equity interests or sale or early redemption of other investments. Two-thirds of these historical total gains were fully accretive to NAV due to the unused capital loss carryforwards that were carried over from when Saratoga took over management of the BDC. This consistent realized gain performance highlights our portfolio credit quality has helped grow our NAV and is reflected in our healthy long-term ROE. That concludes my financial and portfolio review. I will now turn the call over to Michael Grisius, our Chief Investment Officer, for an overview of the investment market.
Thank you, Henry. I'll take a few minutes to describe our perspective on the current state of the market and then comment on our current portfolio performance and investment strategy. Since our last update in July, we saw market conditions continuing to be very aggressive, exceeding where they were pre-COVID-19 and still more of a borrower's market. Liquidity remains abundant after the large-scale fundraising of last year, but lenders are being more risk sensitive, backing off historically volatile sectors and taking a harder stance on the use of capital. Leverage remains elevated. In the first half of calendar year 2022, we saw high transaction volumes in M&A activity, albeit slightly lower than 2021, but continuing to be quite healthy. We currently have an actionable and robust deal pipeline.
In a competitive market, investors continue to differentiate themselves in other ways, such as accelerated timing to close and looser covenant restrictions. Now that said, lenders in our market remain wary of thinly capitalized deals, and for the most part, are staying disciplined in terms of minimum aggregate base levels of equity and requiring reasonable covenants. Where we are seeing more noticeable change is on the rate side. Absolute yields are growing significantly as LIBOR and SOFR increased more than 150 basis points this past fiscal quarter and have continued to rise in September, as Henry demonstrated. In addition, spreads are starting to widen in the lower middle market, where up to recently, it had mainly been happening in the broader syndicated loan and capital markets.
The Saratoga management team has successfully managed through a number of Credit C ycles, and that experience has made us particularly aware of the importance of, first, being disciplined when making investment decisions, and second, being proactive in managing our portfolio. We're keeping a very watchful eye on how continued inflationary pressures and labor costs, supply chain issues, rising rates, and slowing growth could affect both prospective and existing portfolio companies. We have confidence in our strong position entering a possibly different credit and rate environment. Our underwriting bar remains high as usual, yet we continue to find opportunities to deploy capital, as we will discuss shortly. Calendar year 2022 so far has been a very strong deployment environment for us, with a strong pace of originations.
Follow-on investments in existing borrowers with strong business models and balance sheets continue to be an important avenue of capital deployment, as demonstrated with 52 follow-ons in the last 12 months ending September and 15 in the last calendar quarter alone, including delayed draws. In addition, we've invested in five new platform investments in this past calendar quarter, and we have multiple new platform companies expected to close in the next couple of months. Portfolio management continues to be critically important, and we remain actively engaged with our portfolio companies and in close contact with our management teams, especially in this volatile market environment. All of our loans in our portfolio are paying according to their payment terms, except for Nolan investment that we put on non-accrual this quarter as we work with the company on an agreement that will likely have us PIK our interest for a period of time.
Nolan is our only non-accrual investment across our portfolio. After recognizing the unrealized appreciation from spread widening and performance on our overall portfolio this quarter, Saratoga's overall assets are now just 0.1% below cost basis. We believe this strong performance reflects certain attributes of our portfolio that bolster its overall durability. 83% of our portfolio, up from 80% last quarter, is in first lien debt and generally supported by strong enterprise values in industries that have historically performed well in stress situations. We have no direct energy or commodities exposure. In addition, the majority of our portfolio is comprised of businesses that produce high degree of recurring revenue and have historically demonstrated strong revenue retention. Now, our approach has always been to stay focused on the quality of our underwriting.
As you can see on slide 14, this approach has resulted in our portfolio performance being at the top of the BDC space with respect to net realized gains as a percentage of portfolio at cost. We're at the top of a list of only 13 BDCs that have had a positive number over the past three years. This strong underwriting culture remains paramount at Saratoga. We approach each investment working directly with management and ownership to thoroughly assess the long-term strength of the company and its business model. We endeavor to peer as deeply as possible into a business in order to understand accurately its underlying strengths and characteristics. We always have sought durable businesses, invested capital with the objective of producing the best risk-adjusted and accretive returns for our shareholders over the long term.
Our internal credit quality rating reflects the impact of current market volatility and shows 96% of our portfolio at our highest credit rating as of quarter ends. Part of our investment strategy is to selectively co-invest in the equity of our portfolio companies when we're given that opportunity and when we believe the equity upside potential exists. This equity co-investment strategy has not only served as yield protection for our portfolio, but also meaningfully augmented our overall portfolio returns, as demonstrated on the slide and the previous one. We intend to continue this strategy. Now looking at leverage on slide 15, you can see that industry debt multiples increased from calendar Q1 to Q2 and are at historically high levels. Total leverage for our overall portfolio was 3.97x, excluding Nolan and Pepper Palace, while the industry now is well above 5x leverage.
Through past volatility, we have been able to maintain a relatively modest risk profile throughout. Although we never consider leverage in isolation, rather focusing on investing in credits with attractive risk-return profiles and exceptionally strong business models where we are confident the enterprise value of the business will sustainably exceed the last dollar of our investment. In addition, this slide illustrates the strength of our deal flow and our consistent ability to generate new investments over the long term, despite ever-changing and increasingly competitive market dynamics. During the third calendar quarter, we added five new portfolio companies and made 15 follow-on investments, increasing our nine-month production to 47 total new investments versus 47 for the whole year last year. Despite the success we're having investing in highly attractive businesses and growing our portfolio, it is important to emphasize that, as always, we're not aiming to grow simply for growth's sake.
In the face of this uncertain macroeconomic environment, we're keenly focused on investing in durable businesses with limited exposure to inflationary and cyclical pressures. Our capital deployment bar is always high and is conditioned upon healthy confidence that each incremental investment will be accretive to our shareholders. Moving on to slide 16. Our team's skill set, experience, and relationships continue to mature, and our significant focus on business development has led to multiple new strategic relationships that have become sources of new deals. Our top-line number of deals sourced remains robust but has dropped in the past two years, initially due to COVID, but more recently reflecting our efforts to focus on attracting a high percentage of quality opportunities. Most notably, the number of deals executed during the last 12 months is markedly up from last year's pace, demonstrating that this more focused sourcing strategy is yielding results.
What is especially pleasing to us is that 10 of our 13 new portfolio companies over the past 12 months are from newly formed relationships, reflecting notable progress as we expand our business development efforts. As you can see on slide 17, our overall portfolio credit quality remains solid. The gross unleveraged IRR on realized investments made by the Saratoga Investment management team is 16.4% on $836 million of realizations. On the chart on the right, you can see the total gross unlevered IRR on our $902 million of combined weighted SBIC and BDC unrealized investments is 10.6% since Saratoga took over management. As of this quarter, we have two yellow-rated investments, being our Nolan Group and Pepper Palace investments.
Nolan has been on yellow for a while now since COVID, being more dependent on in-person business interaction, and was also added to non-accrual status last quarter. The current unrealized depreciation reflects the current performance of the company, but does not change our view of the fundamental long-term prospects of the business. The other yellow investment is Pepper Palace, and this quarter, we recognized another $1.9 million of unrealized depreciation on this investment, increasing the total depreciation to $7.4 million since investment on our first lien term loan and preferred equity investments. This markdown reflects the current performance of the company, but they continue to pay interest. We are working closely with the company and the sponsor as they work to improve performance.
During this quarter, approximately $3.6 million of the total $5.3 million of unrealized depreciation was related to wider market spreads and market performance, bringing fair value of our portfolio basically in line with cost. Our overall investment approach has yielded exceptional realized returns and recovery of our invested capital. Moving on to slide 18, you can see our first SBIC license is fully funded. Our second SBIC license has already been fully funded with $87.5 million of equity, of which $264 million of equity and SBA debentures have been deployed. As of quarter end, there was still $6 million of cash and $9 million of debentures currently available against that equity.
We are also pleased to have received approval for our third SBIC license last week, which means we practically have access to another $107 million of low-cost SBA debt debentures currently, allowing us to continue to support U.S. small businesses. To summarize the quarter, the way the portfolio has proven itself to be both durable and resilient against the impact of COVID-19 and the subsequent market adjustment and volatility really underscores the strength of our team, platform, and portfolio, and our overall underwriting and due diligence procedures. Credit quality remains our primary focus, especially at times with such high activity levels as we are seeing now. While the world is in continuous flux, we remain intensely focused on preserving asset value and remain confident in our team and the future for Saratoga.
This concludes my review of the market, and I'd like to turn the call over to our CEO. Chris?
Thank you, Mike. As outlined on slide 19, our latest dividend of $0.54 per share for the quarter ended 31st August 2022, was paid on 29th September 2022. The board of directors will continue to evaluate the dividend level on at least a quarterly basis, considering both company and general economic factors, including the impact of rising base rates and spread on our earnings. Moving to slide 20, our total return for the last 12 months, which includes both capital appreciation and dividends, has generated total returns of -0.4% in line with the BDC index. This performance reflects the current market volatility impacting both us and the industry. Our longer-term performance is outlined on our next slide. Our three and fiveyear returns place us in the top half of all BDCs for both time horizons.
Over the past three years, our 26% return exceeded the average index return of 21%. Over the past five years, our 77% return greatly exceeded the index's average of 40%. Since Saratoga took over management of the BDC in 2010, our total return has been 588% versus the industry's 177%. On slide 22, you can further see our performance placed in the context of the broader industry and specific to certain key performance metrics. We continue to focus on our long-term metrics, such as return on equity, net asset value per share, performance, NII yield, and dividend growth, which reflects the growing value our shareholders are receiving. Despite this quarter's results being impacted by market spreads and volatility, we continue to be one of the few BDCs to have grown NAV long term.
We have done it accretively by also growing NAV per share 17 of the last 21 quarters. Moving on to slide 23. All of our initiatives discussed in this call are designed to make Saratoga Investment a highly competitive BDC that is attractive to the capital markets community. We believe that our differentiated performance characteristics outlined on this slide will help drive the size and quality of our investor base, including adding more institutions.
Our differentiating characteristics include maintaining one of the highest levels of management ownership in the industry at 14%. Access to low cost and long-term liquidity with which to support our portfolio and make accretive investments recently increased with our SBIC III license approval last week. A BBB+ investment grade rating. And active public and private bond issuances. Solid historic earnings per share and NII yield. Beneficiary of rising rate environment with 98% of our AUM floating rate and 96% of our debt fixed rate. Strong and industry-leading historic and long-term return on equity, accompanied by growing NAV and NAV per share, putting us at the top of the industry for both long-term, high quality expansion of AUM and an attractive risk profile. In addition, our historically high credit quality portfolio contains minimal exposure to conventionally cyclical industries, including the oil and gas industry.
In closing, I'd like to refer back to slide 10 that Henry walked you through earlier in the presentation. In this rising rate environment, Saratoga is a beneficiary of increased base rates. In Q2, Saratoga's average three-month LIBOR used for interest income purposes was 2.07%. At August quarter end, the closing LIBOR rate was 103 basis points higher at 3.1%. As of today, the spot rate is 3.63%, another 53 basis points higher from quarter end close. We wanted to ensure that we focus investors on this favorable dynamic for Saratoga.
We remain confident that our experienced management team, historically strong underwriting standards and time and market tested investment strategy will serve us well in battling through the challenges in the current and future environment, and that our balance sheets, capital structure and liquidity will benefit Saratoga shareholders in the near and long term. In closing, I would again like to thank all of our shareholders for their ongoing support, and I would like to now open the call for questions.
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, if you have a question at this time, please press star one one on your touchtone telephone. One moment for questions, please. Our first question comes from the line of Robert Dodd with Raymond James. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Hi, guys, and congratulations on a good quarter. Couple of questions, if I can, both about rates. First on the credit quality side. I mean, to your point, you know, rising rates will benefit your earnings. It does that obviously by charging borrowers more and with the shape of the curve, it's only really now, I think, that the borrowers are really starting to see their rates move meaningfully higher pretty quickly.
Can you give us any color on has there been any, I don't wanna say pushback, but have you been starting to see any calls or anything like that from borrowers who are looking at these increases and are just starting to feel more stress or is any metrics on interest coverage or anything like that? The rising rates obviously potentially could have a negative impact on credit quality, but any color you can give us there given how steep the curve is right now?
Well, certainly we're benefiting from rising rates and our borrowers are paying more interest. Robert, one of the things I'd tell you is that when we look at and underwrite our each of our investments, we sensitize the investments from the front end to different scenarios, which would include a higher rate environment. One of the things that's fundamental to our underwriting as well is we look for businesses that generate a high degree of free cash flow. We're not generally investing in businesses that have massive capital needs where there's limited, you know, free cash flow with which to service debt such that interest coverage is tight going into a deal. Typically, there's very healthy interest coverage.
While it's, you know, getting a bit tighter in this market with rising rates, there's a very comfortable cushion across our portfolio for that as well as for further growth. We tend to underwrite our businesses a bit more with a focus on the enterprise value of the business and where we're situated on the balance sheet vis-a-vis that enterprise value. As well, of course, focused on whether they're producing enough, you know, recurring cash flow that we can get comfortable with, even in a rising rate environment to cover our debt. We're seeing that, you know, hold up nicely. Now, that doesn't mean that the borrowers are happy with rates increasing, but you know, that's across the market, so they don't really have much of an alternative.
One of the things that's been nice for us, because I think you've probably heard from us in prior quarters, we were seeing the larger market have not only rate expansion from, you know, index expansion, but they were actually seeing their spreads widen. Yet, in the lower end of the middle market, we weren't seeing spreads widen much at all. More recently, we're starting to see signs of that. And so we're starting to benefit from the indexes rising and then a bit more room to increase the spread on our underwriting as well.
Because of that.
I appreciate that. Oh, go ahead.
A little, one little comment too. Also, I think that if you look at the character of our portfolio, you know, we have, you know, we're not really reflective of the general economy. You know, the rates are one thing and then, you know, revenues at the company level is another. You know, our portfolio by and large is not that sort of sensitive to changes in the economy, which we're starting to see in many places, you know, with a lot of our SaaS business being, you know, you know, subscription revenues and things like that. On the sort of income side of our credits, you know, things are holding up, you know, quite well. You know, I think we have a couple of places, but it's not really economic driven, at this point.
Got it. I appreciate that. Thank you. Yeah, you don't have a lot of deep cyclical exposure, put it that way. The flip side going to the earnings exposure. I mean, I appreciate the chart and that in this last quarter, the average LIBOR was effectively two. If I look at the forward curve, that's projected to go to, you know, call it 4.5, and then be stable there. To your point, there's a lag and it needs to be stable for it really to flow into earnings. Based on the disclosures in the Q2, an extra 250 basis points on LIBOR. It's something in the range of potentially $0.30-$0.40 incremental per quarter. Is that correct?
Well, Robert, I think as you can understand, and not to be too light about it, but I think this is one of those questions where one says you do the math.
Fair enough.
Yeah.
Fair enough.
I would just add, Robert, you know, part of why we included that new slide was obviously to highlight, you know, just how there is this lag in the reset of LIBOR. Obviously the Q disclosure is based on the SEC requirements and is calculated accordingly. I would just add to that is the impact to interest income, right? There's obviously an incentive fee as well that you should just factor in that is not in that disclosure from just a standard SEC disclosure. That's the impact to interest income.
Okay. Thank you on that. Yeah. There isn't a footnote there saying whether that's before or after.
Yeah. Yeah
The incentive fee. The incentive fee is not included in that. Got it. Thank you. Last one, if I can, on the same kind of thing. The dividend increased again at this quarter, and ignoring what I just said about how high earnings could go, Can you give us any comment on kind of the policy of where I mean, I do think you've got significant positive exposure. Whatever the number may be is a different thing. But would you feel comfortable, or the board, there's multiple board members on the call, taking up the dividend based on earnings driven by rates? Or would you rather keep the dividend to a level where it would be sustainable even if rates came back down again? That the curve obviously rolls over in future as well.
Can you give us any thoughts about that in terms of what's the real framework? Does it need to be a sustainable dividend long term? If you over earn that because of rates, that's not a reason to take up the base rate, or how do you think about that?
Well, I think that's a you know very thoughtful question of yours. You know, clearly we have a curve you know that the market is defining right now. As you can see from you know last week, yes, the last two days and then today, the market's not sure exactly what's gonna happen you know at the Fed or really anywhere else. There's a lot of uncertainty out there. You know, I think you are you know very thoughtful in terms of we do need to be careful not raising our dividend to an unsustainable level.
We have to figure out what that is because, you know, if the economy goes into recession and rates come back down again, you know, you're right, that there will have an impact. Those are all things we're gonna have to manage. I wouldn't say we have enough information today to make a hard decision. I think also, as a BDC, you know, we're subject to, you know, regulatory requirements that require us to pay out, you know, a certain percentage of our taxable income. There are, you know, some flexibilities in terms of spillover and the like that put some, you know, some degree of freedom in that. In general, in any given sort of tax year, we have to pay out a certain amount.
Our dividends ultimately need to be driven by what our actual, you know, taxable earnings are. I'm not giving you a hard answer because we don't have one at this moment. You know, suffice it to say, you know, we're experiencing a good uplift in earnings and, you know, the implications of that, as you say, and as regulations require, would be those increased earnings do need to be paid out in dividends.
I appreciate that response. It's a tough question. Congratulations on the quarter again and the outlook and thanks a lot.
Thank you.
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Casey Alexander with Compass Point. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Good morning. Mike, I think you may have touched on this a little bit. How in this environment do origination yields in terms of a net yield compare to the reset yield on similar loans? Are you bringing those on board, you know, kind of at that level or at a little bit of a discount to the reset yield of similar loans, giving them a little bit more room to move? How are you handling that dynamic in the marketplace, especially given the speed at which rates are moving?
That's a good question because it is a pretty dynamic equation. As it relates to competing on new deals, we're pricing those based on SOFR. What we've seen is that we've got a little bit more room to price those at a bit wider spreads than we could even a quarter ago. I'm not gonna say that that's massive movement, but we are seeing an ability to price new deals at that level. Perhaps addressing your question, I wanna make sure that I do that right. The deals that are in portfolio have a bit of a lag because the borrowers will have an option, for instance, to price their deals. I'll use an example on a 90-day LIBOR.
It might take.
You know, 90 days for them to reset their pricing, for example, and therefore, the increase in rate won't materialize for, you know, a few months. That's why that average LIBOR that we referenced is a bit lower than the current market. New deals are getting priced without a holiday, but really based on current indexes and spreads that are all else equal, a bit wider we're experiencing than where we could price deals even a quarter ago.
Okay. Thank you. Secondly, I know that Nolan and Pepper Palace are yellow, but you did also take down Zollege, apparently materially. Can you give us an update on what's happening there and, you know, and also what industry classification does that fit into?
Yeah, let me give you a little bit. Obviously, I'll preface it by saying there's only so much we can get into. These are private companies and, you know, there's a certain amount of information we can relay, but some of it, we, you know, don't get into the details too much. I'll tell you, it's a really, we think a really solid business. It has a differentiated platform where they're providing education and training primarily for dental assistants. They do that in a really unique way that produces stronger outcomes. Every education deal we look at, we very much, you know, get to the outcomes. The outcomes for the students are very strong here in terms of their placement.
The outcomes for the people that are hiring them are very good as well because the students are, we think, better equipped than kind of people that are going through other training methods. It's a business that is fundamentally really solid. They very recently encountered some performance difficulties related to an enrollment interruption that was due to a partnership arrangement that they had that they since moved away from. Since moving away from that partnership arrangement, enrollment is back on track to historical levels. As a result, we're optimistic that and expect that their financial performance will come back and follow suit as well. That valuation write-down is largely reflective of that enrollment interruption, which we expect to be, you know, temporary.
Okay, great. Thank you. I think that's it for me. Thanks.
Appreciate it.
Thanks, Chris. Thank you, Casey.
Thank you. Just a moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Mickey Schleien with Hovde Group. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Yes, good morning, everyone. Chris, your total balance sheet leverage is running higher than you've historically been, and some of your debt is redeemable. I'd like to ask you how you feel about, you know, potentially reducing the balance sheet leverage, as, you know, it seems that the economy is gonna slow down pretty meaningfully to help reduce risk.
I think that, Mickey, that's a, you know, obviously a question that is, you know, kind of profound about how one organizes and capitalizes a BDC such as ours. I think, you know, one of the things we've been careful about, you know, since inception is the structure of our debt. When one looks at leverage and one thinks of risk, you know, the structure of the debt is a major component of what is risk. We believe that our debt is a very low risk debt structure. It's all a fixed rate of interest and quite low.
I mean, we have interest rates that are, you know, 2% on some of our SBIC funds and 4% on some of our other funds, you know, recently, you know, six handle. All of our rates on our debt that we have right now are substantially below, you know, market rates today, in the environment that we're in. Our debt, I mean, if you did a mark-to-market of our liabilities, right? Our liabilities would probably be discounted substantially. The face value of the debt would look a lot less, you know, if you actually marked all this stuff to market.
The value of our liabilities is really, you know, good from the point of view as being a borrower. The structure is very favorable. You know, all debt is not the same, and we'd have no covenants in any of these debt instruments. All we have to do is to maintain these debt instruments is to pay our interest. Then the maturities of these are very far out. I think, you know, our earliest maturities, you know, we have some wind down going on in our SBIC I, but that's largely, you know, driven by redemptions rather than maturities. Then our others, you know, we most of our debt.
Henry, can you just, chime in a little bit on our maturity schedule of our existing debt?
Yeah, sure, Chris. Yeah, I mean, we've got a small amount of SBIC debentures that are just over two years still left. Otherwise, all of our non-SBIC debt is three years or longer and actually almost actually most of it, four years or longer. Still very, very long maturities remaining on all of them and sort of staggered sort of 4-6.
If you look at those liabilities and you look at the assets that we have, and I think as Mike you know reviewed, you know, we are, you know, we're, you know, pleased with the performance and the credit quality of our asset base. The spreads are, you know, really breaking out on the wide side here. The spread over what our assets are producing and what our debt costs us is providing a very attractive, you know, gross margin, if you will, you know, on the leverage that we have. We feel very, you know, very favorable. We have a lot of follow-on investments we're doing. We're able. We're getting some more pricing power than we've had before.
On the asset side, you know, it, you know, we're getting, you know, we're happy with the quality, and we're also, you know, getting improved pricing, if you will, as rates go up and as new loans are put on reflecting, you know, the new market environment. Paying down any of this debt at face value, if you would be kind of like losing money, if you will. I mean, just because the value of this debt is not, you know, what it is on the balance sheet given the market.
We feel comfortable with the leverage that we have given the structure it has and in the relationship with the assets that are on our balance sheet. I think as you can see, you know, our earnings this past quarter are, you know, up significantly. I think you look at the yield curves, you know, our spreads are in the process of widening. We don't feel that our liability structure in this environment, given our market positioning, provides a risk. In fact, we believe it provides, you know, tremendous benefit.
Chris, to follow up on that yield curve dynamic. I understand that those charts in the Qs and Ks are, you know, assuming everything remains equal, which it never does. Given how much LIBOR has climbed and taking into account Mike's comments that spreads are actually widening a little bit, do you think we're gonna get to the point when we think about how much private debt capital is out there, where lenders, including folks like yourselves, will start to give some of that back to borrowers in the form of spread compression?
Well, you know, obviously, that's a very good question, and it really has to do with how the market plays out going forward. I think as Mike said earlier, and Mike, please chime in on this one. We're seeing spreads widen right now. We're not seeing spreads compress. You know, we had relatively tight spreads, you know, even just one quarter ago, and most of our lift has been from the base rate increases. As new deals are coming down the pipe, the spreads are also widening. The trend we're seeing is not a trend of compressed spreads.
A lot of this I think is gonna flow back into, you know, equity valuations and maybe not as much, you know, credit issues. I mean, obviously the amount of value one might have below one is gonna decline. But the ability of the company to pay, you know, pay its debts is not gonna decline as much as really the returns on the equity. I think at this point in time, now obviously things could get a lot worse than they are. But, you know, we're not there. We're not seeing that. That's not how we conduct our business.
We kind of look at our credits as they exist and as we see them. We are not predicting you know massive economic destruction at this point in time. We just feel you know as I said earlier we feel comfortable with our leverage our assets who we're lending to and the spreads we're receiving. Then just one further thing to say that I think distinguishes Saratoga from a number of the other BDCs and I'm sure you follow a lot of them so I forgive me if I'm telling you something you already know. A lot of the BDCs' debt is asset-based and floating rate.
I mean, there's a whole lot of BDCs have floating rate liabilities relative to their floating rate assets. You know, which is fine. As spreads, you know, widen, that helps. You know, when the assets go up, the liabilities also go up. Also those are often bank facilities that have covenants. They have, you know, diversity requirements. There's all sorts of things in those loans that make that debt, you know, can be more problematic, you know, in a scenario where, you know, certain credits don't do as well as other credits, rising rates, that type of thing. There's covenants. Also a lot of the banks have the ability to change their advance formulas.
There's formulas and triggers. There's ratios of, you know, floating of first lien secured debt versus unsecured debt at the BDC. I mean, there's lots and lots of these type of covenants that have crept into and have always been in a lot of the credit facilities out there. We have, you know, to date, we've avoided those types of credit facilities. Ours are very clean, very simple, essentially interest only and long-dated maturities and fixed rate, which again, in this environment is, you know, a very favorable place to be.
I think the questions from your question and Robert's question earlier, you know, the wild card is what happens to the economy and what does that do to the credit quality of our assets. That's not a question we can answer, other than to say at this point in time, you know, we feel very, you know, as you can tell from how we're rating our credits, we feel that our credits are performing very well.
Yeah.
Mickey, I'll just add just to emphasize something that Chris mentioned, but just so that you're focused on it. I think, you know, we compete against BDCs for sure. But we also very much compete against other non-bank lenders. It's our experience that the majority of them are funding much of what they're advancing, in part with floating rate facilities. They're not benefiting as much from the rise in the indexes. Their temptation to start to give some of that rate increase back in the form of tighter spreads doesn't really exist for that reason. We're getting the benefit of it because we've got a different balance sheet construction, as Chris mentioned.
Most of those other groups we're seeing, they have got a greater percentage of their balance sheet where, you know, the increase in indexes is just, you know, one for one for them, and it's really a spread game.
That's a good point, Mike. Chris, I wanna congratulate you on pricing the CLO and the JV, you know, considering how difficult the CLO market is right now. That pricing looks pretty good, you know, perhaps 50 basis points wide of a more normal market, but still attractive. I wanna understand why you decided to go ahead with that now, and not perhaps wait, you know, for a point in time in the future where spreads, you know, are a little bit tighter and, you know, maybe the economics work a little bit better.
Sure. Well, first of all, I'll accept the congratulations, but I want to completely hand it over to our team. I think our team here did a tremendous job in getting that done. That is remarkable. I think Tom and his team and Henry in getting all that done in this environment, you know, is really something special. You know, I'm not gonna take any credit for it because you know, personally, I think our team did a really, really good job. As to your question, I think as you may recall, you know, we've had and we have our existing CLO, and this is now a joint venture off-balance-sheet CLO.
We have, you know, we had a warehouse facility with Goldman Sachs. We'd accumulated, you know, a sizable portion. I don't know if we disclosed exactly what that was publicly or not. We had a warehouse that was, you know, engaged in the marketplace. That warehouse expires, you know, next year, you know, mid-next year. So there's an investment period in the warehouse. Then the market has been a, you know, very dismal market. The number of CLOs have been priced is really at very low level. You know, recently, I think there's a lot of outflows in the asset class.
You know, the cumulative value of these loans has gone down a fair amount. You know, some of it's due to credit quality, but a lot of it is really about liquidity and redemptions and, you know, when the mutual fund shareholders redeem, you know, their floating rate funds and things like that, you know, and the value of these things, that moves the markets tremendously. On the asset side, right, the purchasing, you know, what you can acquire broadly syndicated loans for right now, you know, with a good credit selection is very favorable. You know, it's among the more favorable times it's been in many years. You know, these are first lien loans.
Obviously, you know, you have to pick your spots. I mean, you know, if you're buying, you know, sort of, you know, retailers or something like that's probably not the best place to be, but we don't do that. You know, we have a highly selective process. We're seeing tremendous value in a very disrupted broadly syndicated loan marketplace. That's one part of the equation. Secondly, we've worked with Prudential, who was the triple-A. You know, the long pole in the tent, as they say in these types of deals, is your triple-A provider. You know, Prudential is our triple-A provider.
They have been in the past, you know, tremendous partner of ours and supporter of ours, and we're very pleased that they would, you know, step up in this environment, and participate with us. I must say, I think, you know, Goldman Sachs did a tremendous job in pulling all this together. We felt that putting together this CLO now, you know, and taking advantage of what looks like a very favorable, broadly syndicated market purchasing environment. Locking in a 2.5-3-year investment period in a time of tumult, you know, without covenants, right? These are self managing. You know, there's not like a covenant. There's not a maturity in this, in these CLO arrangements.
Was a favorable thing to do from a risk-reward basis. I'd just like to go back in time. I think, you know, and I don't know how much everyone's a student of, CLOs and CLO history. You know, I often ask this question, I say to people, "Which CLOs do you think perform best? The vintage of 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011?" The answer is 2007. Right before the last crisis were the best performing CLOs. Part of the reason they performed well is they were able to take advantage.
They had a fixed rate on their liabilities, and they were able to take advantage of both the investment periods and the reinvestment in the broadly syndicated loan market that had lots and lots of volatility in it. But ultimately, you know, came out the other end, you know, consistent with what it did in the past. You know, we may well be in, you know, not an exact environment, but an analogous environment to that.
A lot of what's going on right now with these loans has more to do with people trying to get liquidity than the actual fundamental credit quality and the ability to get prepaid on these loans. You know, all of that, you know, factored into it. I must say, you know, we had, you know, I forget how many hours our investment sessions went on going forward on this thing. You know, we did debate it quite a bit, as you can imagine. I think our fundamental decision was we thought this was a good idea in the best interest of our shareholders. I think, you know, again, in this environment, tremendous execution.
I mean, that deal could not be done, you know, a week later or a few days later than we did it.
Yeah. I agree with that. I appreciate that explanation. I wanna follow up with a question about the existing CLO. I understand that there are many assumptions in estimated yields projections. But it's currently on the equity, the estimated yield is only 5.5%, which is a lot lower than I see generally in the market. I'm curious, you know, what is the main driver of that? Is it, you know, because in that, in those assumptions you include reinvestment price, which is very attractive, the forward LIBOR curve. But collateral prices are very depressed, and I suspect that's impacting the terminal value assumption. Is that the main reason it's low, or is there something else that I'm missing?
Yeah. There's a couple of things in that at the moment, Mickey. I think, obviously this quarter we increased our discount rate from 16% to 18%, and that obviously plays a big factor in the valuation, and especially the weighted average effective interest rate. There's also the fact that because rates are resetting so quickly, that in the short term, you're seeing obviously the interest expense go up so significantly in the short term because the assets only reset on 90 days versus the liabilities on 30 days. And then there's also around the assumption of, you know, defaulting assets under 80, and how you treat those assets, you know, how you reinvest them, how you realize them. That assumption also plays a big role. So it's obviously valuation assumptions.
You disclose them as they are. They're not, you know, the real world doesn't always play out the way the valuation does. It's sort of a combination of those assumptions in the short term that drive the effective interest rate low. As you know, that effective interest rate moves around quite a lot, right? It's not uncommon for it to go from, you know, 10%-5% and move sort of by 5% or more increments one quarter to the next as it reflects just this point in time economic conditions.
Okay. I understand, Henry. My last question. Flipping back to Pepper Palace. It was funded only about a year ago, and you've discussed, you know, its current mark is relatively low. I'd like to understand how its performance has deviated from your expectations, and what's its outlook in the current economic environment.
Mickey, I think one of the things that I'd emphasize is that we still believe in the fundamentals of the concept and the unit economics for the retail concept work very well, we think, especially when located in the right locations. The business has been affected by a number of things. They face some higher infrastructure costs to run, you know, the overall business. They're certainly facing higher input cost for their product as well as higher labor. That's happening in a marketplace where their consumers that are buying the product have a little less discretionary income than they did when we underwrote the deal. Those things are affecting their performance.
Fundamentally, we still are believers and continue to be believers in the concept. It's a sponsored transaction. The sponsor's continuing to be highly supportive of the business, and we're working with them to continue to grow the platform, and you know, hopefully get it back on track.
Mike, that sounds like, you know, their margins are under pressure. Do you think it's at the point where, you know, that balance sheet needs to be restructured to take into account everything you just talked about?
No, I wouldn't say that necessarily. I think we're, you know, we're working to try to continue to grow the business and improve its performance that way. You know, we'll continue to evaluate it. It's something that we're definitely focused on for sure. I think what you see in this business, and it's not uncommon if you look at the broader marketplace for retail or restaurant or people that are out selling to consumers in a lot of those models right now, you see revenue growth, but you see costs rising faster than that. You're seeing their revenue increase but, you know, spread compression, and that's one of the things that they're facing. We don't think that's permanent, but it's certainly something they're facing now.
I understand. That's it for me. I appreciate your patience with all my questions and congratulations on another solid quarter. Thank you.
Thanks, Mickey.
Thank you.
Thank you. We have another question. Just a moment, please. Our next question comes from the line of Erik Zwick with Hovde Group. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Thank you. Good morning, guys.
Hi.
Morning.
First, I just wanted to start on, you know, earlier, you made some comments that the origination pipeline is actionable and robust at this point. I guess, you know, the harder thing to predict or have insight to is the repayments that may be coming in future quarters. I guess just for the remaining two quarters in this fiscal year, curious if your expectations for AUM growth is similar to what you experienced in the first part of the year.
Maybe I'll start with that, Mike.
Well, let me
Why don't you start, Mike, and I'll add to you.
Go ahead.
Just on a very high level, I think M&A activity generally is down like 40%+ sort of across the board. The market volatility right now is disrupting, you know, financing markets. Most companies, the financing that they have is more attractive than the financing they could get if they were to try and do it again right now or refinance. A lot of uncertainty in the marketplace, which affects M&A. On a macro level, this is not, you know, necessarily a time where you would expect to see a lot of sales of, you know, businesses being sold and a lot of, you know, financial structures being refinanced at more favorable rates. That, that's just like a general overview.
Historically, Mike, correct me on this one, but I think, you know, close to 70-plus% of our repayments have come from the sale of companies. So that's a general comment. Obviously, every company's got its own, you know, individual destiny that may vary from that overall. Mike?
Yeah, that's right, Chris. I mean, what drives most of our redemption activity is a change of control where the owners decide to sell the business, or they look at the capital markets and there's an opportunity for them to refinance at more favorable rates. In this environment, there's less of that. Not that that doesn't exist, for sure. You know, you saw the exit on PDDS and, you know, there's still very healthy market. Certainly in the lower end of the middle market, we're still seeing healthy activity just in general, but less than what you'd see in a more robust environment.
Certainly on the refinancing front, we've got a lot less exposure to somebody looking at their capital structure and saying, "Boy, in this market, I can refinance at much more favorable rates." They're kind of generally holding pat where they are in that respect. A rule of thumb that we use, and it's just directional, is we kind of think about, you know, on average, the portfolio, you know, at our end of the market should kind of, you know, have a duration of a few years. In robust markets, some deals will refinance faster than that for all the reasons we just talked about. In markets of greater uncertainty like we have now, that redemption activity tends to go down and that three-year horizon tends to extend out a little bit.
Overall, we would expect, although, you know, nothing certain, we would expect that our redemption activity would be lower than what it typically is.
Thanks. I appreciate the commentary there. Moving to slide 12 in the deck, curious about the real estate versus the 5.6% of the portfolio. Certainly the residential real estate market has slowed and even started to pull back in some geographies. I think there's concern nationwide, certainly more urban markets about the health and outlook for commercial real estate office activity. Curious, one, if you could maybe provide a little color in terms of your portfolio companies that are classified as real versus what they are doing and then how exposed might be to a turn or pullback in real estate markets.
No, it's a good question. We certainly have a little bit of exposure to that. If you look at what comes to mind is an investment we have in a company called Buildout, which is a business that you know continues to perform very well. It's offering a product that is a productivity tool that actually allows commercial real estate participants to operate more efficiently with less labor cost. It's benefiting from you know positive secular trends in that respect. Just you know the technology that they're offering is helpful to that degree.
We found that regardless of you know what's going on in the general you know general market activity in real estate for those participants that are you know in the market, it's a you know a product that's continuing to work well for them and that's reflected in their performance. But outside of that, it's a real good question. You know, we don't have significant exposure to that space.
Thanks. I appreciate that. Just curious, you've mentioned the importance of the team throughout the call, and then as I look at slide 24, that again bullet point, increased capacity to source, to analyze close and manage. Just curious about if you have any kind of current initiatives underway or any near-term expectations for new hires and what the market is like for adding new talent today given the inflationary environment.
It's a really good question. I mean, it all starts with team, right? There's a lot of BDCs out there. We believe in our team, and we think that ultimately is the big differentiator. At the senior level, we've got people that are very experienced, very disciplined, have a lot of capital invested in the business. We believe this is to do it right, it's an apprenticeship business. You bring people in mostly at the junior levels, and you teach them about credit, and you teach them how to analyze credit, invest capital like it's their own money, and you know, make decisions for the long term. We're very focused on adding people that have a really strong skill set and you know, teaching them along the way.
We've hired, I think, just since COVID, we've hired seven investment professionals during that time. Most recently, one just started a couple weeks ago. We're still actively looking for people. It remains a competitive environment to attract talent. I think, we've been successful in bringing people onto the platform. They see the success that we've had growing our enterprise. We've developed a culture that we're very proud of in terms of how we treat people fairly and give them an opportunity to grow in their careers. That's all worked well for us.
On a broader comment, you know, I think last year was like a record year in many places, and particularly on Wall Street. I think, you know, I mean, unbelievable year. There's a lot of pressure on compensation on the up, you know, pushing compensation up. You know, hiring was you know, extremely difficult and very tight. I think, you know, Wall Street's performance right now, you know, you can tell by the stock performance of a lot of the leading, you know, investment banks, you know, buying way down. There's layoffs coming and, you know, The word layoff wasn't in the lexicon last year.
Now there's lots of layoffs, you know, coming in the financial industry. I think there's, you know, a lot more constraints on growth and then compensation and things like that. We are, you know, as Mike said, we're in the market. You know, if you know of anyone, great people, let us know. You know, we are, you know, very interested in adding to our team. You know, we think we present a very attractive environment, you know, to do business and do well in this, you know, in this challenging environment.
Then just one last question for me today. If I understand it correctly, the unrealized depreciation on the CLO and JV investments was driven by price movements in the broadly syndicated loan market. I think, you know, there's still a backlog there, and they're moving through things that were underwritten months ago, and so that's having a big impact on prices. Just curious from your perspective, you know, how long does it take to clear that backlog? Once that market starts up more normal, could that potentially mean for that unrealized depreciation that you've recorded now, if that would reverse or if that's likely to, you know, take several quarters?
Well, again, I think that's a very, you know, I think that's the right question. The challenge is how to answer, you know, 'cause there's so much going on there. I think at the heart of the matter is a supply and a demand issue. Right now there's a lot more people looking to get out of this asset class than to get in it. You know, with regards to marks, there's you know probably gonna be somewhat challenging to get a whole lot of improvement from here.
That doesn't necessarily speak to the fundamental underlying credit quality and the prospects back to par, you know, on these loans that might be trading in the 90, you know, in the lower 90s rather than the higher 90s. Obviously, there's some, you know, outlying, you know, credit events. But you know, as in the broad, you know, the bell curve of it all, you know, sort of like gone from the high 90s to low 90s. That doesn't mean it's not gonna go back to, you know, everything paying out at, you know, most things paying out at par, you know, which we believe. Mark, you know, improvement from here is hard to say given the environment we have.
As we mentioned earlier with our newly priced CLO, you know, well more than half of that CLO has not yet been purchased. We are, you know, we hope that, you know, as we move into this marketplace, that we can take advantage of these discounts, based on what we believe is more supply and demand rather than fundamental, you know, credit quality, you know, how it's selected, accrual. So we think we're gonna gain some ground, you know, from this market dislocation with our newly priced CLO.
We have, you know, we have time to do that and liquidity and so I think we're on the right side of the market at that point in time. Obviously, the biggest wildcard of all that none of us can predict is, you know, do we have a hard landing? How hard is the landing? You know, what does that mean for, you know, generally and what does that specifically for the specific credits in our portfolio? You know, obviously, those are answers that, you know, that we don't have at, you know, at this time. We wish we did, but we don't. But again, I think industry selection, credit selection, you know, quality of company, fundamentality of this is, you know, what we focus on, strength of balance sheet, et cetera.
We think that, you know, there may be some, you know, rougher times ahead, but we think we're gonna come out the other end, you know, in very good shape.
Yeah. Yeah. Erik, 'cause I would just add, just a reminder again, you know, when you think of value, the valuation of our BDC loans, if you will, our lower middle market loans versus the valuation of our CLO and joint venture, which now second CLO loans, they're done very differently, right? The lower middle market is obviously fair value at the end of the quarter, but incorporating company performance and market spreads and market performance into a, you know, a level three type valuation, right? The joint venture and the CLO is actually traded, you know, loans, securities that have a specific price at the end of the quarter, a trading price, if you will, or a broker quote, and that's the quote you use, even if it is, you know, just a point.
It's really just a point in time, obviously unrealized at the moment, but a very specific point in time.
Great. I appreciate all the color and commentary. Thanks for taking my questions today.
Thank you.
Thanks, Erik.
Thank you. I'm showing no further questions at this time, and I'd like to turn the conference back over to Chris Oberbeck for any further remarks.
Well, we'd like to thank all of you on this call and all of our investors for your continued support, and we look forward to speaking with you next quarter. Thank you.
This concludes today's teleconference. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect. Everyone, have a great day.