Alex Chi
Co-Chief Executive Officer at Goldman Sachs BDC Inc.
Thank you, Austin. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us for our second quarter 2024 earnings conference call. I'm here today with David Miller, our Co-Chief Executive Officer, Tucker Greene, our Chief Operating Officer, and Stan Matuszewski, our Chief Financial Officer. I'll begin the call by providing an overview of our second quarter results and then discuss the current market environment. I'll then turn the call over to Tucker to describe our portfolio activity and performance before handing it off to Stan to take us through our financial results. And then finally, we'll open the line for Q&A. With that, let's get to our second quarter results. Our net investment income per share for the quarter was $0.59, up 7.3% from the previous quarter. Net asset value per share was $13.67, a decrease of approximately 6%. Our net investment income again exceeded our quarterly dividend, but the excess was offset by net realized and unrealized losses during the quarter, which led to the decrease in NAV. More than 70% of the unrealized losses in the quarter were related to markdowns in three investments within the portfolio: Lithium Technologies, Pluralsight, and Zipari. Both Lithium and Pluralsight were placed on non-accrual status in the quarter. As it relates to Pluralsight, we're currently working with the other lenders towards an orderly restructuring, which we believe will contribute towards maximizing recovery for our investors. We recognize that Lithium, Pluralsight, and Zipari are recurring revenue software loans. As it relates to how we invest in recurring revenue loans, following the integration of GSBD into the broader Goldman Sachs private credit platform, we remain very selective, focusing on borrowers who we believe are highly profitable, scaled, and display strong growth, with best-in-class technology and software products that are mission critical for their customers, regardless of the economic environment. When evaluating new software investments on the current platform, we leverage both our investment team's experience, where we have professionals dedicated to the software sector, as well as the broader engineering expertise of Goldman Sachs, where we have thousands of software engineers who evaluate and implement best-in-class technology every day. Finally, it is worth noting again that we have seasoned professionals dedicated towards restructurings, with the resources and expertise required to work with our investment teams to handle underperforming names. We believe this assists with maximizing recoveries and contributes to our low annualized loss ratios across the Goldman Sachs private credit platform that's been investing for nearly 3 decades. Moving forward, we aim to continue to recycle capital as we receive repayments and bolster the portfolio with compelling new originations. On that front, we're very pleased with our new originations this quarter, as GSBD originated more investments in the second quarter than in all of 2023. In fact, this quarter marks the highest level of origination activity since the integration of the Goldman Sachs private credit business just over 2 years ago, when GSBD was able to take advantage of being part of the broader Goldman Sachs private credit platform. On a fair value basis, first lien loans ticked higher to 97% of our assets as of June thirtieth, which reflects our bias to maintaining exposure primarily to investments that are higher up in the capital structure. Consistent with prior quarters, substantially all new loan commitments this quarter were to first lien credits. As we announced after market close yesterday, our board declared a third quarter dividend of $0.45 per share, payable to shareholders of record as of September thirtieth, 2024. This marks the company's 38th consecutive quarter of a $0.45 per share dividend, totaling $17.10 per share since our IPO, excluding the special dividends we paid in 2021 following the merger with MMLC. Now, with respect to broader market conditions, the significant growth in our originations in the second quarter reflects both the improving M&A environment and the expansive platform capabilities that we've been discussing for a number of quarters. GSBD also continues to benefit from potential origination opportunities through the broader Goldman Sachs franchise, including the investment bank. As another example of this, within the quarter, our direct lending platform, including GSBD, led and acted as administrative agent on a loan that helped TPG acquire Classic Collision, which is the fourth largest multi-site operator of collision repair centers in the United States. Our investment banking division was engaged by Classic Collision as sell-side advisor, which helped us move quickly to evaluate the opportunity, provide a financing proposal, and ultimately be selected by TPG for the acquisition financing in a highly competitive environment. During the quarter, we leaned into the firm's long-standing expertise in the data center sector to lead the financing of US Signal, a hybrid colocation and cloud services provider operating nine data centers in the upper Midwest. Given our ability to move with speed through diligence and execution, we were able to take lead agent position and were awarded a larger hold size in the transaction. With that, let me turn it over to our Chief Operating Officer, Tucker Greene, to discuss new investments this quarter and our overall credit quality.