NYSE:MSDL Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund Q3 2025 Earnings Report $15.20 +0.21 (+1.37%) Closing price 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$15.25 +0.05 (+0.36%) As of 04:25 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Massive. Learn more. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.50Consensus EPS $0.49Beat/MissBeat by +$0.01One Year Ago EPSN/AMorgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$99.72 millionExpected Revenue$98.55 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$1.18 millionYoY Revenue GrowthN/AMorgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund Announcement DetailsQuarterQ3 2025Date11/6/2025TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateFriday, November 7, 2025Conference Call Time10:00AM ETUpcoming EarningsMorgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund's Q2 2026 earnings is estimated for Thursday, August 6, 2026, based on past reporting schedules, with a conference call scheduled on Friday, August 7, 2026 at 10:00 AM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund Q3 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrNovember 7, 2025 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Positive Sentiment: MSDL saw increased deal activity and deployment momentum, committing $183 million in new investments (up 23% q/q) and reporting a growing pipeline that management expects to drive a multi-year M&A recovery. Positive Sentiment: Management reduced funding costs by closing its inaugural CLO (~$401 million at SOFR+1.70%) and repricing its BNP ABL (SOFR+1.95%), which should begin to benefit earnings (management cited roughly a $0.01 per share benefit in 4Q). Neutral Sentiment: Net investment income remained steady at $0.50 per share for the third quarter and the board declared a unchanged $0.50 Q4 distribution, though management warned Fed cuts could reduce NII about 1.5 cents per 25 bps cut with a one-quarter lag. Negative Sentiment: Credit marks weighed on NAV: unrealized losses of $16.2 million drove NAV down to $20.41 from $20.59, and non-accruals rose modestly (two additions, one removal) to ~1.20% of the portfolio at cost. Neutral Sentiment: The portfolio remains first‑lien heavy and diversified (96% first‑lien across 218 companies, 33 industries), with a weighted average yield of ~9.7% and a ~19.5% software exposure, underscoring management’s selective, defensive middle‑market focus. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallMorgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund Q3 202500:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipantsPresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Welcome to Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund's third quarter 2025 earnings call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A question and answer session will follow the prepared remarks. As a reminder, this conference call is being recorded. At this time, I'd like to turn the call over to Sanna Johnson. Please go ahead. Sanna JohnsonHead of Investor Relations at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:00:21Good morning, and welcome to Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund's third quarter 2025 earnings call. I am joined this morning by Michael Occi, Chief Executive Officer, Ashwin Krishnan, Chief Investment Officer, Jeff Day, Co-President, David Pessah, Chief Financial Officer, and Rebecca Shaoul, Head of Portfolio Management. Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund's third quarter 2025 financial results were released yesterday after market close and can be accessed on the investor relations section of our website at www.msdl.com. We have arranged for a replay of today's event that will be accessible from the Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund website. During this call, I want to remind you that we may make forward-looking statements based on current expectations. The statements on this call that are not purely historical are forward-looking statements. Sanna JohnsonHead of Investor Relations at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:01:07These forward-looking statements are not a guarantee of future performance and are subject to uncertainties and other factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed in the forward-looking statements, including and without limitation, market conditions, uncertainty surrounding interest rates, changing economic conditions, and other factors we have identified in our filings with the SEC. Although we believe that the assumptions on which these forward-looking statements are based are reasonable, any of those assumptions can prove to be inaccurate. As a result, the forward-looking statements based on those assumptions can be incorrect. You should not place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements. The forward-looking statements contained on this call are made as of the date hereof, and we assume no obligation to update the forward-looking statements or subsequent events. To obtain copies of SEC related filings, please visit our website. Sanna JohnsonHead of Investor Relations at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:01:55With that, I will now turn the call over to Michael Occi. Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:01:58Thank you, Sanna. Good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us today for Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund's third quarter 2025 conference call. We'll walk through our third quarter results, provide an update on the portfolio, and share our outlook for the remainder of the year. I'll start with a few key highlights before turning it over to Jeff Day to discuss the deal environment. We generated solid performance in the third quarter as the deployment environment gathered momentum. We have witnessed a continued pickup in deal activity as the market has gained more visibility on the trajectory of interest rates and government policy. In terms of operating results, we generated net investment income of $0.50 per share in line with the $0.50 per share that we earned in the second quarter. Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:02:46Our earnings in the third quarter were once again of high quality, characterized by consistently low contributions from payment-in-kind and other income. During the quarter, MSDL committed $183 million to new investments, representing a 23% increase relative to the second quarter. Fundings were largely offset by repayments, with that organic portfolio churn constituting approximately 5% of the portfolio for the third consecutive quarter. The existing book provided a healthy contribution to overall funding activity, and nearly 75% of the non-refinancing volume during the quarter was driven by new platforms, underscoring the strength of our origination engine. Additionally, we continue to lead nearly all of our deal flow, including agency in the LBOs for FMG Suite Holdings, an incumbent borrower, and BCTO Bluebill, a new platform. Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:03:39We believe that the combination of our deep origination team and our ability to leverage the broader Morgan Stanley franchise continues to differentiate our business in the marketplace. Sponsors increasingly look to us as a value add partner, one that is capable of delivering more than just capital. Our breadth and depth of relationships allows us to see a vast range of deal flow, and we can remain selective given that this opportunity set dwarfs the scale of our capital base. We believe that our selective approach enables us to stay true to our mission of principal preservation, as evidenced by our credit results. The board declared a distribution of $0.50 per share for the fourth quarter, unchanged relative to prior quarters. Our dividend policy framework remains rooted in our pursuit to generate attractive and transparent risk-adjusted returns to shareholders. Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:04:28Even with the prospect of additional Fed cuts, we expect that gross asset yields will remain elevated in a historical context, as spreads have shown some evidence of bottoming. Away from interest income drivers, we have made strides in optimizing the right-hand side of the balance sheet, including through the closing of our inaugural CLO and the repricing of our asset-based facility with BNP. We closed both of these in the third quarter, and these steps will see their full earnings benefit in the quarters ahead. We will otherwise continue to evaluate structural opportunities to enhance return on NAV without deviating from our more defensive investment strategy. We believe that our transparent revenue model, efficient and conservative debt profile, relatively low operating expense base, and thoughtful fee structure highlight our strong alignment with shareholders. Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:05:19As emphasized last quarter, our platform benefits from Morgan Stanley's global resources and continued focus on MSDL as our platform's most visible pool of capital. The firm has continued to support the build-out of our team as part of the ongoing scaling of MSIM's credit business. We remain focused on generating long-term value for MSDL shareholders through the optimization of our defensive investment strategy and other return levers. With that, I will turn the call over to Jeff Day. Jeff DayCo-President at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:05:50Thank you, Michael. As Michael noted, activity in the private equity community has continued to ramp, likely encouraged by tariff policy actually taking effect in early August. Jeff DayCo-President at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:06:01The Fed's resumption of interest rate cuts in September. Over the course of the third quarter, and even more recently, we've observed an acceleration in financing volumes as evidenced by our own pipeline build. We believe that we are now in the nascent stages of a multi-year M&A recovery, poised to drive a large volume of opportunities in the direct lending market. While there is significant dry powder sitting on the sidelines today, we estimate that the demand for private financings could ultimately exceed the supply of capital by a factor of more than two times over a two-year period. As we have said previously, the trajectory for market volumes will not take the shape of a straight line. We are encouraged to see the rebound beginning to take hold. Jeff DayCo-President at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:06:47Strong risk appetite in the public markets, as well as competitive dynamics in the private market, have continued to weigh on pricing for direct lending deals. However, the weighted average spread on new capital deployed by MSDL in the third quarter was flat to modestly wider quarter-over-quarter, and we continue to earn an illiquidity premium of approximately 150 basis points over the leveraged loan market. While we are not expecting spreads to widen in the near term, a prolonged rebound in sponsor activity could ultimately help tip the balance in favor of lenders. Beyond pricing, we are generally still seeing reasonable EBITDA definitions, strong protection on collateral leakage, and appropriately sized basket related documentation provisions. Digging a bit deeper into our portfolio construction, we continue to believe that MSDL's portfolio is relatively insulated from direct tariff impacts and potential cycle volatility. Jeff DayCo-President at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:07:44We remain overweight in professional service businesses and underweight in more trade and consumer-oriented verticals relative to other BDCs in the market. Our largest sector exposure continues to be software, which accounted for 19.5% of our portfolio as of the end of the third quarter. This allocation is anchored primarily in ERP-related software businesses that serve as the foundational infrastructure and contains the data for their end customers, which we believe will be more insulated from AI disruption. From a borrower segmentation perspective, we continue to believe that MSDL is positioned in the sweet spot of the middle market with the flexibility to take advantage of attractive credit opportunities across the size spectrum. For the second consecutive quarter, the weighted average borrower EBITDA for new platform deployments exceeded approximately $120 million. Jeff DayCo-President at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:08:37Our target remains in that ±$90 million EBITDA range. However, our wide deal funnel has identified what we believe to be attractive risk-adjusted return opportunities slightly more upmarket over the past six months. Our portfolio has continued to perform well, particularly considering the unprecedented economic backdrop that we have lived through. Where we have seen weakness, it has generally been categorized by idiosyncratic issues rather than indicative of any broader underlying macro trends. Our borrowers have weathered the heightened inflation and initial bouts of tariff with remarkable resilience. Over the last several quarters, we have seen stability in loan-to-value profiles, interest coverage ratios that have ticked modestly higher, and EBITDA margins which have remained relatively healthy. We think that these credit attributes make for a compelling risk-adjusted return proposition for our shareholders. Jeff DayCo-President at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:09:33Stepping back, a unique set of conditions is taking shape that could produce sustained tailwinds for the credit environment. The Fed's increased focus on labor market softness suggests that a continued path of monetary easing may be likely, while fiscal policy and a more accommodative regulatory backdrop are working in tandem to support the broader economic activity. Together, these dynamics are helping to drive renewed momentum and sponsor-backed M&A activity and are likely to be constructive for overall credit performance in the quarters ahead. While we remain cautiously optimistic, we are also well-positioned to take advantage of potential bouts of market volatility should they surface. Our strategy and capital base provide us with the flexibility to lean in when opportunities arise while maintaining discipline through changing market conditions. Jeff DayCo-President at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:10:24Looking ahead, we will remain focused on the same investment strategy that has underpinned our success, making first lien senior secured loans to high-quality middle-market sponsor-backed companies and less cyclical sensitive industries. With our robust sourcing network and disciplined underwriting, we believe MSDL is well-positioned to continue to source compelling investment opportunities that offer strong risk-adjusted returns and in turn create value for our shareholders. I will now hand the call over to David Pessah. David PessahCFO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:10:55Thank you, Jeff. At quarter end, our portfolio totaled $3.8 billion at fair value, maintaining our strong first lien focus comprising of 96% first lien debt, 2% second lien debt, and the remainder in equity and other investments. The portfolio remains well-diversified with 218 portfolio companies across 33 industries with an average borrower exposure of approximately 50 basis points. Regarding credit metrics as of quarter end, the weighted average loan to value for our portfolio companies was approximately 40%. The median EBITDA was approximately $87 million, and our weighted average yield on debt and income-producing investments was 9.7% at cost and 9.9% at fair value, representing a decline of approximately 35 basis points quarter-over-quarter, which was mainly driven by the decline in base rates. David PessahCFO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:11:52Turning to credit quality, we removed one position from non-accrual and placed two new positions on non-accrual. Those being our debt position in Teasdale Foods, where our PIK note was already been on non-accrual, and Atlas Purchaser, which had undergone a prior restructuring in the first quarter of 2024. Our non-accrual rate was 120 basis points of the total portfolio at cost, which remains quite low. For our investment activity in the third quarter, we made new investment commitments of approximately $183 million across nine new portfolio companies and 13 existing portfolio companies. Investment fundings included fundings of existing commitments totaled approximately $198 million, offset by $200 million in repayments. Moving to our financial results for the third quarter. David PessahCFO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:12:42Our total investment income was $99.7 million for the third quarter as compared to $99.5 million in the prior quarter. PIK income continues to remain relatively low, representing approximately 4.1% of total income for the third quarter. Total expenses for the third quarter were $56 million compared to $55.9 million in the prior quarter. Net investment income for the third quarter remained unchanged at $43.7 million or $0.50 per share. For the third quarter, the net change in unrealized losses were $16.2 million, which was driven by the underperformance in a handful of portfolio companies. Turning to our balance sheet. As of September 30th, total assets were $3.9 billion and total net assets were $1.8 billion. David PessahCFO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:13:34Our ending NAV per share for the third quarter was $20.41 as compared to $20.59 in the prior period. Our debt-to-equity ratio increased to 1.17x as compared to 1.15x in the prior quarter, and our unsecured debt comprised of 54% of total funded debt at the end of the quarter. In September, we closed our inaugural CLO, totaling approximately $401 million of aggregate principal at a blended cost of SOFR plus 1.70%. In addition, during the quarter, we repriced our BNP facility, reducing the spread by 30 basis points to SOFR plus 1.95%. We expect the impact of this lower funding cost to be more evident in our fourth quarter results. David PessahCFO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:14:25These transactions, along with our 2030 notes issued last quarter, further strengthen our capital structure by increasing capacity, extending maturities, and reducing our overall cost of capital. We also repurchased approximately $3 million worth of our shares during the quarter at share prices below NAV. Note that our buyback program is formulated through a 10b5-1 program administered by a third party. Focusing now on distributions. In the current quarter, we paid a $0.50 regular distribution. In addition, our board of directors declared a regular distribution for the fourth quarter of $0.50 per share to shareholders of record on December 31st, 2025. Our spillover remains consistent at approximately $0.82. With that, operator, please open the line for questions. Operator00:15:15If you would like to ask a question, please signal by pressing star one on your telephone keypad. If you're using a speakerphone, please make sure your mute function is turned off to allow your signal to reach our equipment. Once again, that is star one if you would like to ask a question. We'll take our first question from Melissa Wedel with JPMorgan. Melissa WedelAnalyst at JPMorgan00:15:38Good morning. Thanks for taking my questions today. I think the quarter was pretty straightforward. I'm curious, though, if you could expand on some of your comments, from the prepared remarks about the M&A outlook. I'm curious if you're seeing more strategic deals coming through or if you're actually seeing more, sort of PE to IPO or PE to PE turnover. Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:16:03Melissa, thanks for the question. It's a mix. I think if we think about the evolution that began in this emerging rebound, call it six months ago. When we look at the pipeline today and the activity in the third quarter, a pretty good diversity in terms of use of proceeds. LBOs, take privates generally, a little bit of dividend activity, incrementals. I think we are optimistic to see the continued emergence of regular way LBO activity. We're kind of seeing that emerge if we look at the pipeline. We're pretty, we're seeing pretty constructive activity across the board, and our expectation is that it won't be a straight line, but it should continue into 2026. Melissa WedelAnalyst at JPMorgan00:16:53I appreciate that. Following up on just the dividend level, obviously that was flat quarter-over-quarter. Realizing that you've been earning NII right at that dividend level now for two quarters, I'm curious how you guys think about the spillover income, and should we see NII pressure from declining base rates? Would you think about using spillover income to maintain the dividend level, or is that something that you'll continue to assess? Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:17:26Yeah. We look at the spillover as one option to help with smoothing over time and the prioritization around consistency, which we do think is important. At the end of the day, though, Melissa, earnings are going to drive the dividend power of the business. The board is also going to remain focused on prioritizing transparency. If you kind of look at net interest income, and Dave commented on this, you know, there's both headwinds and tailwinds as we talked about in prior quarters. From an asset yield point of view, I would highlight the fact that from an NII impact perspective, you see about a penny and a half impact associated with each 25 basis point cut from the Fed. Importantly, there's about a one quarter lag if you think about the impact. Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:18:11On earnings. The 25 basis points cut we saw in September, that's a 4Q impact. The one from October, more or less a 1Q impact. Spreads are obviously a variable too, as we commented on. We're seeing some bottoming. There's maybe diminishing marginal impacts in asset yield compression associated with that until we see spreads widen. In the tailwinds category, we do have near term a pretty good offset with some of what we've accomplished on the liability side through the CLO and the ABL repricing. About a $0.01 of benefit that we should stand to see in 4Q and beyond. Other levers, just on an ongoing basis, would include other ways to optimize ROE. The buyback is included in that mix. Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:18:59Regular way deployment is included in that mix, and potentially other things that we would look to enhance ROE over time. If you see significant cuts kind of going out in the future, it may not be a perfect offset, but we're gonna continue to be laser-focused on optimizing ROE, creating value for investors, and that includes paying a compelling distribution that the core earnings can support over time. Melissa WedelAnalyst at JPMorgan00:19:27Very helpful. Thanks, Michael. Operator00:19:31We'll now take our next question from Robert Dodd with Raymond James. Robert DoddAnalyst at Raymond James00:19:36Hi guys. I'm interested in the other things that you can do. You've mentioned that a couple of times, Michael, in terms of like portfolio optimization, et cetera, but also, you know, other return levers. I mean, what are the sorts of things you are contemplating? I mean, are you talking about something like, you know, a JV loan fund structure or something like that? Obviously, there's a ramp-up time, right? Some of those other non just, you know, direct lending off the balance sheet structures can enhance ROEs, but do take a while to get set up. I mean, just what other kind of things are you contemplating there? Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:20:24Robert, great question. What I would say is not unlike what we succeeded in doing with the inaugural CLO last quarter, we're in constant evaluation mode around various structural options that could optimize for returns in the normal course. Those options would include, but are not limited to a joint venture, which could enhance the return profile of the company, as you alluded to. Our team has experience with this technology. To your last point, we're diligent in the exploration of all of these different options to ensure that that solution doesn't involve us actually taking more risk than we would customarily do on the asset or the liability side. Robert DoddAnalyst at Raymond James00:21:09Got it. Got it. Thank you for that. Then just on the pipeline, right? I mean, in the comments, particularly about I think it was like expect demand for private capital, in the need for borrowing could exceed supply by 2x over the next two years. I'd just like to, you know I mean, if that's your base case, is it your expectation that if that happens, right, if this pendulum swings the other way and there's much more demand for your capital than, and private credit capital than there is supply, do you believe that that is likely to result in spread widening over the next couple of years? I'm not talking about next quarter, right? Robert DoddAnalyst at Raymond James00:22:01You gave kind of two-year timeframe. I mean, is that your kind of base case in how you're thinking about the future for the market and obviously this BDC? Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:22:15Yeah. Robert, great read of the commentary. I think in short it is with the convenient caveat that it's tough to peg the point at which that balance will tip. In broad strokes, we measure the opportunity set vis-a-vis stemming from private equity, middle market, dry powder, maturities. It being order of magnitude something like $500 billion as we measure it over the next couple of years. The offset, to your point, is supply of capital. We think it's ±$200 billion, taking into account kind of ongoing fundraising in evergreen products. We think that supply demand could ultimately tip the balance in favor of lenders vis-a-vis terms, but it's not gonna happen overnight. Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:23:06Those types of metrics, you know, ultimately could support that dynamic, but it's going to take time for us to see the evidence of that. Robert DoddAnalyst at Raymond James00:23:18Got it. Got it. Thank you. Then one more if I can. Obviously on, you know, the pipeline, as you said, is picking up. Activity is picking up. Are you seeing, you know, is the quality of deals in the marketplace? Obviously, you're gonna focus on the high quality. Is the quality of deals keeping up with the rebound or is the median deal in terms of quality of the underlying borrower, is the median deal, so to speak, starting to deteriorate? Obviously, you know, if you're a triple-A company, so to speak, you could refinance at any point in the last few years. It's the weaker end of the spectrum that hasn't been doing so. Any thoughts there? Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:24:08Yeah, it's a great question. We see a pretty good variety. The quality is there, probably at the very upper end of the EBITDA spectrum. What falls out into private credit land is limited to a certain extent by very high quality borrowers that could just as well pursue a financing in the public market. If you take a step back and just consider the breadth of our funnel, and we've belabored this before, but it's core to our DNA and our differentiated offering. We've got a very high quality and growing team that is serving north of 400 private equity firms. Compounding that is other areas within this institution, including a vibrant investment bank that's serving many of the same private equity firms feeding that funnel. Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:25:00I'm merely trying to underscore the point that we have a pretty good vantage point vis-a-vis the flow that we have access to. We benefit from having a little bit of a supply demand imbalance relative to our capital base that allows us to be selective. We're certainly seeing high quality deals. We're seeing low quality deals that we have the luxury generally of passing on, which we think is a unique testament to our business. I think it's a little bit of a mix in terms of quality, not inconsistent with what we've seen in the last couple of years, just the kind of volume is picking up. Robert DoddAnalyst at Raymond James00:25:41Got it. Thank you. Operator00:25:44As a reminder, that is star one if you would like to ask a question. Our next question will come from Kenneth Lee with RBC Capital Markets. Kenneth LeeAnalyst at RBC Capital Markets00:25:54Hey, good morning. Thanks for taking my question. Just one on the prepared remarks. I think you briefly mentioned about building out the team, expansion of the MSIM platform there. Wondering if you could just further expand upon that. Wondering if there's any kind of potential provisions down the line for the originations funnel there. Thanks. Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:26:16Yeah, it's a great question, Ken. What I'd say is that the team has continued to grow. We alluded to that. It's a high quality team. We couldn't be prouder of what we've assembled and continued to curate in this business. Headcount approaching about 80 individuals. The redundancy in the sponsor coverage effort and just the build out in terms of sheer headcount has supported this increasing kind of volume dynamic on the deal side. We continue to leverage Morgan Stanley more broadly in the brand and the relationships, as I just alluded to. Specifically, the firm has continued to support the team expansion. Net headcount has grown by over 10% since the start of the third quarter. Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:27:08That pickup is about a third since the IPO at the beginning of last year. The firm remains committed in terms of the talent build, also committed to supporting this business in terms of ongoing investment in product and distribution capabilities too. Kenneth LeeAnalyst at RBC Capital Markets00:27:25Gotcha. Very helpful there. One follow-up, if I may, on the non-accrual side. I think you mentioned before then there was a further restructuring after a prior restructuring. Wondering if you could provide a little bit more details around that, what drove the latest restructuring and, how you see the potential, recovery path there. Thanks. Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:27:51Yeah. Ken, you appropriately point out that they were both kind of known issues. I don't know, Rebecca, if you wanna address that more specifically. Rebecca ShaoulHead of Portfolio Management at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:28:01Yeah. I think, specific to the deal you're alluding to, there was restructuring that took place, Q1 of 2024. The business has continued to underperform, there's likely to be another event that will take place. We've moved that to non-accrual as a result, and expect that to be resolved in the near term. Kenneth LeeAnalyst at RBC Capital Markets00:28:30Gotcha. Helpful there. Thanks again. Operator00:28:35We'll now take a question from Ethan Kaye with Lucid Capital Markets. Ethan KayeAnalyst at Lucid Capital Markets00:28:41Hi, guys. Thanks for taking my question here. Curious what drove the deceleration in share buybacks. I know, you know, you mentioned it's formulaic, but the stock multiples seem to contract this quarter. Just hoping to kind of get a better understanding of, you know, what are the other inputs into that formula and, you know, specifically what may have caused the decline this quarter. Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:29:06Yeah, Ethan, it's good question. As you alluded to, the plan is formula-based, administered by a third party. It takes into account various inputs such as share price, but also capital structure considerations. We're committed to the program. We acknowledge the accretion benefits associated with it. At the same time, though, we have multiple capital allocation options at our disposal. That includes regular way yield deployment, among other things, and those can be value generative too. We think of these different options together as we measure kind of usage of capital over time. We will continue to optimize that with the goal of generating value for shareholders. Ethan KayeAnalyst at Lucid Capital Markets00:29:57Understood. Thank you. Then I guess one other quick one. There was some migration kind of downward in the internal risk ratings you published. Nothing dramatic really, but just kind of wondering whether this reflects, you know, the name or names that were added to non-accrual or if there are maybe some other positions that experienced some negative trends there. Thank you. Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:30:24Yeah. Ethan, I'll start by just reiterating that the portfolio, we think, continues to perform really well. Borrower health has remained resilient in the wake of the peak inflation early days here on tariffs. We continue to see pretty good growth, top line in the double digits, mid-to-high single digits EBITDA. We've seen what that interest coverage ratio grind a little bit higher over the last series of quarters. Where we've seen issues, including those that you're alluding to, it has been isolated to certain companies with kind of ongoing specific problems which we don't think are indicative of anything systemic. Maybe I'll turn it over to Jeff to kind of comment on the non-accruals and the migration that you asked about. Jeff DayCo-President at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:31:10Yeah. Hey, hey, Ethan. Great to catch up. We, we did have, you know, as we, as we alluded to, two investments that were added to non-accrual status, you know, during the quarter, as well as obviously one that had been removed. You know, for context, that was out of a portfolio of, you know, 218 borrowers, so quite low from that perspective. You know, these are names that were as Michael mentioned, these were idiosyncratic underperformance. They were names that businesses that operated in different industries, different end markets. The portfolio or the issues that they encountered were not signs of weakness in any specific industry, but really just, you know, underperformance that was unique to those individual businesses. Ethan KayeAnalyst at Lucid Capital Markets00:31:58Great. Yeah, obviously, you know, aggregate credit quality continues to look great. Appreciate that color. Thanks, guys. Operator00:32:09That does conclude our question-and-answer session for today. At this time, I'd like to turn the call back to Mr. Michael Occi for closing remarks. Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:32:18Thank you. On behalf of the management team, I greatly appreciate you joining us today, along with your support of Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund. Our team remains focused on executing our defensive investment strategy to drive shareholder value, and I couldn't be more pleased with our continued execution. We're confident with how MSDL is positioned in this environment due to the sourcing advantages of our unique credit platform. We look forward to providing an update on our fourth quarter 2025 earnings call in February of next year. Operator00:32:50Once again, that does conclude today's conference. We thank you all for your participation. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesDavid PessahCFOJeff DayCo-PresidentMichael OcciCEORebecca ShaoulHead of Portfolio ManagementSanna JohnsonHead of Investor RelationsAnalystsEthan KayeAnalyst at Lucid Capital MarketsKenneth LeeAnalyst at RBC Capital MarketsMelissa WedelAnalyst at JPMorganRobert DoddAnalyst at Raymond JamesPowered by Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund Earnings HeadlinesMorgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund 2026 Q1 - Results - Earnings Call PresentationMay 16, 2026 | seekingalpha.comMorgan Stanley Direct Lending Posts Q4 Results, Declares DividendMay 9, 2026 | theglobeandmail.comLouis Navellier: My #1 AI stock for 2026 (name & ticker inside)Louis Navellier's Stock Grader system helped him flag Nvidia before its 82,000% run and has identified the top S&P 500 stock for 12 years running—and today, he's giving away his #1 AI stock pick for 2026, free. This company's sales are up 28% year over year, it holds over 30,000 patents in wireless and video technology, and it just earned an A-rating in his proprietary Stock Grader system that has cost him $9 million to build and maintain.May 21 at 1:00 AM | InvestorPlace (Ad)Morgan Stanley Direct Lending targets Capstone JV scaling to ~$700M in assets over 4 to 6 quartersMay 8, 2026 | msn.comMorgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund (MSDL) Q1 2026 Earnings Call TranscriptMay 8, 2026 | seekingalpha.comMorgan Stanley Direct Lending earnings in focus after Q4 missMay 8, 2026 | investing.comSee More Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Morgan Stanley Direct Lending FundMorgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund (NYSE:MSDL) (NYSE: MSDL) is a closed-end management investment company that seeks to provide investors with attractive current income and the potential for capital appreciation. The fund primarily invests in senior secured loans and other debt instruments issued by middle-market companies. By focusing on floating-rate structures, it aims to offer a measure of protection against rising interest rates while generating regular cash distributions. The fund’s investment strategy centers on building a diversified portfolio of direct lending opportunities across a broad range of industries, including healthcare, business services, and industrials. These direct loans are typically negotiated bilaterally between the fund and the borrower, allowing for tailored covenants and structuring features designed to mitigate credit risk. In addition to senior debt, the fund may selectively allocate to second-lien loans, mezzanine debt, and structured credit instruments to enhance yield potential. Since commencing operations in early 2021, Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund has leveraged the global research and credit analysis capabilities of Morgan Stanley Investment Management. The fund’s portfolio management team draws on decades of experience in direct lending and private credit to identify issuers with stable cash flows and strong collateral coverage. While the bulk of investments are focused on U.S.-based borrowers, the fund may also pursue opportunities in select developed markets where credit fundamentals align with its risk-return objectives. The fund is managed by Morgan Stanley Investment Management’s Credit Investing group, which oversees underwriting, ongoing portfolio monitoring, and risk management. Through a combination of rigorous due diligence and active engagement with portfolio companies, the team seeks to preserve capital and support favorable downside protection. Investors in MSDL gain access to a segment of the credit markets that has traditionally been available only to large institutional lenders.View Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Latest Articles NVIDIA Price Pullback? 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PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Welcome to Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund's third quarter 2025 earnings call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A question and answer session will follow the prepared remarks. As a reminder, this conference call is being recorded. At this time, I'd like to turn the call over to Sanna Johnson. Please go ahead. Sanna JohnsonHead of Investor Relations at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:00:21Good morning, and welcome to Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund's third quarter 2025 earnings call. I am joined this morning by Michael Occi, Chief Executive Officer, Ashwin Krishnan, Chief Investment Officer, Jeff Day, Co-President, David Pessah, Chief Financial Officer, and Rebecca Shaoul, Head of Portfolio Management. Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund's third quarter 2025 financial results were released yesterday after market close and can be accessed on the investor relations section of our website at www.msdl.com. We have arranged for a replay of today's event that will be accessible from the Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund website. During this call, I want to remind you that we may make forward-looking statements based on current expectations. The statements on this call that are not purely historical are forward-looking statements. Sanna JohnsonHead of Investor Relations at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:01:07These forward-looking statements are not a guarantee of future performance and are subject to uncertainties and other factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed in the forward-looking statements, including and without limitation, market conditions, uncertainty surrounding interest rates, changing economic conditions, and other factors we have identified in our filings with the SEC. Although we believe that the assumptions on which these forward-looking statements are based are reasonable, any of those assumptions can prove to be inaccurate. As a result, the forward-looking statements based on those assumptions can be incorrect. You should not place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements. The forward-looking statements contained on this call are made as of the date hereof, and we assume no obligation to update the forward-looking statements or subsequent events. To obtain copies of SEC related filings, please visit our website. Sanna JohnsonHead of Investor Relations at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:01:55With that, I will now turn the call over to Michael Occi. Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:01:58Thank you, Sanna. Good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us today for Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund's third quarter 2025 conference call. We'll walk through our third quarter results, provide an update on the portfolio, and share our outlook for the remainder of the year. I'll start with a few key highlights before turning it over to Jeff Day to discuss the deal environment. We generated solid performance in the third quarter as the deployment environment gathered momentum. We have witnessed a continued pickup in deal activity as the market has gained more visibility on the trajectory of interest rates and government policy. In terms of operating results, we generated net investment income of $0.50 per share in line with the $0.50 per share that we earned in the second quarter. Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:02:46Our earnings in the third quarter were once again of high quality, characterized by consistently low contributions from payment-in-kind and other income. During the quarter, MSDL committed $183 million to new investments, representing a 23% increase relative to the second quarter. Fundings were largely offset by repayments, with that organic portfolio churn constituting approximately 5% of the portfolio for the third consecutive quarter. The existing book provided a healthy contribution to overall funding activity, and nearly 75% of the non-refinancing volume during the quarter was driven by new platforms, underscoring the strength of our origination engine. Additionally, we continue to lead nearly all of our deal flow, including agency in the LBOs for FMG Suite Holdings, an incumbent borrower, and BCTO Bluebill, a new platform. Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:03:39We believe that the combination of our deep origination team and our ability to leverage the broader Morgan Stanley franchise continues to differentiate our business in the marketplace. Sponsors increasingly look to us as a value add partner, one that is capable of delivering more than just capital. Our breadth and depth of relationships allows us to see a vast range of deal flow, and we can remain selective given that this opportunity set dwarfs the scale of our capital base. We believe that our selective approach enables us to stay true to our mission of principal preservation, as evidenced by our credit results. The board declared a distribution of $0.50 per share for the fourth quarter, unchanged relative to prior quarters. Our dividend policy framework remains rooted in our pursuit to generate attractive and transparent risk-adjusted returns to shareholders. Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:04:28Even with the prospect of additional Fed cuts, we expect that gross asset yields will remain elevated in a historical context, as spreads have shown some evidence of bottoming. Away from interest income drivers, we have made strides in optimizing the right-hand side of the balance sheet, including through the closing of our inaugural CLO and the repricing of our asset-based facility with BNP. We closed both of these in the third quarter, and these steps will see their full earnings benefit in the quarters ahead. We will otherwise continue to evaluate structural opportunities to enhance return on NAV without deviating from our more defensive investment strategy. We believe that our transparent revenue model, efficient and conservative debt profile, relatively low operating expense base, and thoughtful fee structure highlight our strong alignment with shareholders. Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:05:19As emphasized last quarter, our platform benefits from Morgan Stanley's global resources and continued focus on MSDL as our platform's most visible pool of capital. The firm has continued to support the build-out of our team as part of the ongoing scaling of MSIM's credit business. We remain focused on generating long-term value for MSDL shareholders through the optimization of our defensive investment strategy and other return levers. With that, I will turn the call over to Jeff Day. Jeff DayCo-President at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:05:50Thank you, Michael. As Michael noted, activity in the private equity community has continued to ramp, likely encouraged by tariff policy actually taking effect in early August. Jeff DayCo-President at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:06:01The Fed's resumption of interest rate cuts in September. Over the course of the third quarter, and even more recently, we've observed an acceleration in financing volumes as evidenced by our own pipeline build. We believe that we are now in the nascent stages of a multi-year M&A recovery, poised to drive a large volume of opportunities in the direct lending market. While there is significant dry powder sitting on the sidelines today, we estimate that the demand for private financings could ultimately exceed the supply of capital by a factor of more than two times over a two-year period. As we have said previously, the trajectory for market volumes will not take the shape of a straight line. We are encouraged to see the rebound beginning to take hold. Jeff DayCo-President at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:06:47Strong risk appetite in the public markets, as well as competitive dynamics in the private market, have continued to weigh on pricing for direct lending deals. However, the weighted average spread on new capital deployed by MSDL in the third quarter was flat to modestly wider quarter-over-quarter, and we continue to earn an illiquidity premium of approximately 150 basis points over the leveraged loan market. While we are not expecting spreads to widen in the near term, a prolonged rebound in sponsor activity could ultimately help tip the balance in favor of lenders. Beyond pricing, we are generally still seeing reasonable EBITDA definitions, strong protection on collateral leakage, and appropriately sized basket related documentation provisions. Digging a bit deeper into our portfolio construction, we continue to believe that MSDL's portfolio is relatively insulated from direct tariff impacts and potential cycle volatility. Jeff DayCo-President at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:07:44We remain overweight in professional service businesses and underweight in more trade and consumer-oriented verticals relative to other BDCs in the market. Our largest sector exposure continues to be software, which accounted for 19.5% of our portfolio as of the end of the third quarter. This allocation is anchored primarily in ERP-related software businesses that serve as the foundational infrastructure and contains the data for their end customers, which we believe will be more insulated from AI disruption. From a borrower segmentation perspective, we continue to believe that MSDL is positioned in the sweet spot of the middle market with the flexibility to take advantage of attractive credit opportunities across the size spectrum. For the second consecutive quarter, the weighted average borrower EBITDA for new platform deployments exceeded approximately $120 million. Jeff DayCo-President at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:08:37Our target remains in that ±$90 million EBITDA range. However, our wide deal funnel has identified what we believe to be attractive risk-adjusted return opportunities slightly more upmarket over the past six months. Our portfolio has continued to perform well, particularly considering the unprecedented economic backdrop that we have lived through. Where we have seen weakness, it has generally been categorized by idiosyncratic issues rather than indicative of any broader underlying macro trends. Our borrowers have weathered the heightened inflation and initial bouts of tariff with remarkable resilience. Over the last several quarters, we have seen stability in loan-to-value profiles, interest coverage ratios that have ticked modestly higher, and EBITDA margins which have remained relatively healthy. We think that these credit attributes make for a compelling risk-adjusted return proposition for our shareholders. Jeff DayCo-President at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:09:33Stepping back, a unique set of conditions is taking shape that could produce sustained tailwinds for the credit environment. The Fed's increased focus on labor market softness suggests that a continued path of monetary easing may be likely, while fiscal policy and a more accommodative regulatory backdrop are working in tandem to support the broader economic activity. Together, these dynamics are helping to drive renewed momentum and sponsor-backed M&A activity and are likely to be constructive for overall credit performance in the quarters ahead. While we remain cautiously optimistic, we are also well-positioned to take advantage of potential bouts of market volatility should they surface. Our strategy and capital base provide us with the flexibility to lean in when opportunities arise while maintaining discipline through changing market conditions. Jeff DayCo-President at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:10:24Looking ahead, we will remain focused on the same investment strategy that has underpinned our success, making first lien senior secured loans to high-quality middle-market sponsor-backed companies and less cyclical sensitive industries. With our robust sourcing network and disciplined underwriting, we believe MSDL is well-positioned to continue to source compelling investment opportunities that offer strong risk-adjusted returns and in turn create value for our shareholders. I will now hand the call over to David Pessah. David PessahCFO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:10:55Thank you, Jeff. At quarter end, our portfolio totaled $3.8 billion at fair value, maintaining our strong first lien focus comprising of 96% first lien debt, 2% second lien debt, and the remainder in equity and other investments. The portfolio remains well-diversified with 218 portfolio companies across 33 industries with an average borrower exposure of approximately 50 basis points. Regarding credit metrics as of quarter end, the weighted average loan to value for our portfolio companies was approximately 40%. The median EBITDA was approximately $87 million, and our weighted average yield on debt and income-producing investments was 9.7% at cost and 9.9% at fair value, representing a decline of approximately 35 basis points quarter-over-quarter, which was mainly driven by the decline in base rates. David PessahCFO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:11:52Turning to credit quality, we removed one position from non-accrual and placed two new positions on non-accrual. Those being our debt position in Teasdale Foods, where our PIK note was already been on non-accrual, and Atlas Purchaser, which had undergone a prior restructuring in the first quarter of 2024. Our non-accrual rate was 120 basis points of the total portfolio at cost, which remains quite low. For our investment activity in the third quarter, we made new investment commitments of approximately $183 million across nine new portfolio companies and 13 existing portfolio companies. Investment fundings included fundings of existing commitments totaled approximately $198 million, offset by $200 million in repayments. Moving to our financial results for the third quarter. David PessahCFO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:12:42Our total investment income was $99.7 million for the third quarter as compared to $99.5 million in the prior quarter. PIK income continues to remain relatively low, representing approximately 4.1% of total income for the third quarter. Total expenses for the third quarter were $56 million compared to $55.9 million in the prior quarter. Net investment income for the third quarter remained unchanged at $43.7 million or $0.50 per share. For the third quarter, the net change in unrealized losses were $16.2 million, which was driven by the underperformance in a handful of portfolio companies. Turning to our balance sheet. As of September 30th, total assets were $3.9 billion and total net assets were $1.8 billion. David PessahCFO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:13:34Our ending NAV per share for the third quarter was $20.41 as compared to $20.59 in the prior period. Our debt-to-equity ratio increased to 1.17x as compared to 1.15x in the prior quarter, and our unsecured debt comprised of 54% of total funded debt at the end of the quarter. In September, we closed our inaugural CLO, totaling approximately $401 million of aggregate principal at a blended cost of SOFR plus 1.70%. In addition, during the quarter, we repriced our BNP facility, reducing the spread by 30 basis points to SOFR plus 1.95%. We expect the impact of this lower funding cost to be more evident in our fourth quarter results. David PessahCFO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:14:25These transactions, along with our 2030 notes issued last quarter, further strengthen our capital structure by increasing capacity, extending maturities, and reducing our overall cost of capital. We also repurchased approximately $3 million worth of our shares during the quarter at share prices below NAV. Note that our buyback program is formulated through a 10b5-1 program administered by a third party. Focusing now on distributions. In the current quarter, we paid a $0.50 regular distribution. In addition, our board of directors declared a regular distribution for the fourth quarter of $0.50 per share to shareholders of record on December 31st, 2025. Our spillover remains consistent at approximately $0.82. With that, operator, please open the line for questions. Operator00:15:15If you would like to ask a question, please signal by pressing star one on your telephone keypad. If you're using a speakerphone, please make sure your mute function is turned off to allow your signal to reach our equipment. Once again, that is star one if you would like to ask a question. We'll take our first question from Melissa Wedel with JPMorgan. Melissa WedelAnalyst at JPMorgan00:15:38Good morning. Thanks for taking my questions today. I think the quarter was pretty straightforward. I'm curious, though, if you could expand on some of your comments, from the prepared remarks about the M&A outlook. I'm curious if you're seeing more strategic deals coming through or if you're actually seeing more, sort of PE to IPO or PE to PE turnover. Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:16:03Melissa, thanks for the question. It's a mix. I think if we think about the evolution that began in this emerging rebound, call it six months ago. When we look at the pipeline today and the activity in the third quarter, a pretty good diversity in terms of use of proceeds. LBOs, take privates generally, a little bit of dividend activity, incrementals. I think we are optimistic to see the continued emergence of regular way LBO activity. We're kind of seeing that emerge if we look at the pipeline. We're pretty, we're seeing pretty constructive activity across the board, and our expectation is that it won't be a straight line, but it should continue into 2026. Melissa WedelAnalyst at JPMorgan00:16:53I appreciate that. Following up on just the dividend level, obviously that was flat quarter-over-quarter. Realizing that you've been earning NII right at that dividend level now for two quarters, I'm curious how you guys think about the spillover income, and should we see NII pressure from declining base rates? Would you think about using spillover income to maintain the dividend level, or is that something that you'll continue to assess? Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:17:26Yeah. We look at the spillover as one option to help with smoothing over time and the prioritization around consistency, which we do think is important. At the end of the day, though, Melissa, earnings are going to drive the dividend power of the business. The board is also going to remain focused on prioritizing transparency. If you kind of look at net interest income, and Dave commented on this, you know, there's both headwinds and tailwinds as we talked about in prior quarters. From an asset yield point of view, I would highlight the fact that from an NII impact perspective, you see about a penny and a half impact associated with each 25 basis point cut from the Fed. Importantly, there's about a one quarter lag if you think about the impact. Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:18:11On earnings. The 25 basis points cut we saw in September, that's a 4Q impact. The one from October, more or less a 1Q impact. Spreads are obviously a variable too, as we commented on. We're seeing some bottoming. There's maybe diminishing marginal impacts in asset yield compression associated with that until we see spreads widen. In the tailwinds category, we do have near term a pretty good offset with some of what we've accomplished on the liability side through the CLO and the ABL repricing. About a $0.01 of benefit that we should stand to see in 4Q and beyond. Other levers, just on an ongoing basis, would include other ways to optimize ROE. The buyback is included in that mix. Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:18:59Regular way deployment is included in that mix, and potentially other things that we would look to enhance ROE over time. If you see significant cuts kind of going out in the future, it may not be a perfect offset, but we're gonna continue to be laser-focused on optimizing ROE, creating value for investors, and that includes paying a compelling distribution that the core earnings can support over time. Melissa WedelAnalyst at JPMorgan00:19:27Very helpful. Thanks, Michael. Operator00:19:31We'll now take our next question from Robert Dodd with Raymond James. Robert DoddAnalyst at Raymond James00:19:36Hi guys. I'm interested in the other things that you can do. You've mentioned that a couple of times, Michael, in terms of like portfolio optimization, et cetera, but also, you know, other return levers. I mean, what are the sorts of things you are contemplating? I mean, are you talking about something like, you know, a JV loan fund structure or something like that? Obviously, there's a ramp-up time, right? Some of those other non just, you know, direct lending off the balance sheet structures can enhance ROEs, but do take a while to get set up. I mean, just what other kind of things are you contemplating there? Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:20:24Robert, great question. What I would say is not unlike what we succeeded in doing with the inaugural CLO last quarter, we're in constant evaluation mode around various structural options that could optimize for returns in the normal course. Those options would include, but are not limited to a joint venture, which could enhance the return profile of the company, as you alluded to. Our team has experience with this technology. To your last point, we're diligent in the exploration of all of these different options to ensure that that solution doesn't involve us actually taking more risk than we would customarily do on the asset or the liability side. Robert DoddAnalyst at Raymond James00:21:09Got it. Got it. Thank you for that. Then just on the pipeline, right? I mean, in the comments, particularly about I think it was like expect demand for private capital, in the need for borrowing could exceed supply by 2x over the next two years. I'd just like to, you know I mean, if that's your base case, is it your expectation that if that happens, right, if this pendulum swings the other way and there's much more demand for your capital than, and private credit capital than there is supply, do you believe that that is likely to result in spread widening over the next couple of years? I'm not talking about next quarter, right? Robert DoddAnalyst at Raymond James00:22:01You gave kind of two-year timeframe. I mean, is that your kind of base case in how you're thinking about the future for the market and obviously this BDC? Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:22:15Yeah. Robert, great read of the commentary. I think in short it is with the convenient caveat that it's tough to peg the point at which that balance will tip. In broad strokes, we measure the opportunity set vis-a-vis stemming from private equity, middle market, dry powder, maturities. It being order of magnitude something like $500 billion as we measure it over the next couple of years. The offset, to your point, is supply of capital. We think it's ±$200 billion, taking into account kind of ongoing fundraising in evergreen products. We think that supply demand could ultimately tip the balance in favor of lenders vis-a-vis terms, but it's not gonna happen overnight. Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:23:06Those types of metrics, you know, ultimately could support that dynamic, but it's going to take time for us to see the evidence of that. Robert DoddAnalyst at Raymond James00:23:18Got it. Got it. Thank you. Then one more if I can. Obviously on, you know, the pipeline, as you said, is picking up. Activity is picking up. Are you seeing, you know, is the quality of deals in the marketplace? Obviously, you're gonna focus on the high quality. Is the quality of deals keeping up with the rebound or is the median deal in terms of quality of the underlying borrower, is the median deal, so to speak, starting to deteriorate? Obviously, you know, if you're a triple-A company, so to speak, you could refinance at any point in the last few years. It's the weaker end of the spectrum that hasn't been doing so. Any thoughts there? Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:24:08Yeah, it's a great question. We see a pretty good variety. The quality is there, probably at the very upper end of the EBITDA spectrum. What falls out into private credit land is limited to a certain extent by very high quality borrowers that could just as well pursue a financing in the public market. If you take a step back and just consider the breadth of our funnel, and we've belabored this before, but it's core to our DNA and our differentiated offering. We've got a very high quality and growing team that is serving north of 400 private equity firms. Compounding that is other areas within this institution, including a vibrant investment bank that's serving many of the same private equity firms feeding that funnel. Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:25:00I'm merely trying to underscore the point that we have a pretty good vantage point vis-a-vis the flow that we have access to. We benefit from having a little bit of a supply demand imbalance relative to our capital base that allows us to be selective. We're certainly seeing high quality deals. We're seeing low quality deals that we have the luxury generally of passing on, which we think is a unique testament to our business. I think it's a little bit of a mix in terms of quality, not inconsistent with what we've seen in the last couple of years, just the kind of volume is picking up. Robert DoddAnalyst at Raymond James00:25:41Got it. Thank you. Operator00:25:44As a reminder, that is star one if you would like to ask a question. Our next question will come from Kenneth Lee with RBC Capital Markets. Kenneth LeeAnalyst at RBC Capital Markets00:25:54Hey, good morning. Thanks for taking my question. Just one on the prepared remarks. I think you briefly mentioned about building out the team, expansion of the MSIM platform there. Wondering if you could just further expand upon that. Wondering if there's any kind of potential provisions down the line for the originations funnel there. Thanks. Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:26:16Yeah, it's a great question, Ken. What I'd say is that the team has continued to grow. We alluded to that. It's a high quality team. We couldn't be prouder of what we've assembled and continued to curate in this business. Headcount approaching about 80 individuals. The redundancy in the sponsor coverage effort and just the build out in terms of sheer headcount has supported this increasing kind of volume dynamic on the deal side. We continue to leverage Morgan Stanley more broadly in the brand and the relationships, as I just alluded to. Specifically, the firm has continued to support the team expansion. Net headcount has grown by over 10% since the start of the third quarter. Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:27:08That pickup is about a third since the IPO at the beginning of last year. The firm remains committed in terms of the talent build, also committed to supporting this business in terms of ongoing investment in product and distribution capabilities too. Kenneth LeeAnalyst at RBC Capital Markets00:27:25Gotcha. Very helpful there. One follow-up, if I may, on the non-accrual side. I think you mentioned before then there was a further restructuring after a prior restructuring. Wondering if you could provide a little bit more details around that, what drove the latest restructuring and, how you see the potential, recovery path there. Thanks. Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:27:51Yeah. Ken, you appropriately point out that they were both kind of known issues. I don't know, Rebecca, if you wanna address that more specifically. Rebecca ShaoulHead of Portfolio Management at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:28:01Yeah. I think, specific to the deal you're alluding to, there was restructuring that took place, Q1 of 2024. The business has continued to underperform, there's likely to be another event that will take place. We've moved that to non-accrual as a result, and expect that to be resolved in the near term. Kenneth LeeAnalyst at RBC Capital Markets00:28:30Gotcha. Helpful there. Thanks again. Operator00:28:35We'll now take a question from Ethan Kaye with Lucid Capital Markets. Ethan KayeAnalyst at Lucid Capital Markets00:28:41Hi, guys. Thanks for taking my question here. Curious what drove the deceleration in share buybacks. I know, you know, you mentioned it's formulaic, but the stock multiples seem to contract this quarter. Just hoping to kind of get a better understanding of, you know, what are the other inputs into that formula and, you know, specifically what may have caused the decline this quarter. Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:29:06Yeah, Ethan, it's good question. As you alluded to, the plan is formula-based, administered by a third party. It takes into account various inputs such as share price, but also capital structure considerations. We're committed to the program. We acknowledge the accretion benefits associated with it. At the same time, though, we have multiple capital allocation options at our disposal. That includes regular way yield deployment, among other things, and those can be value generative too. We think of these different options together as we measure kind of usage of capital over time. We will continue to optimize that with the goal of generating value for shareholders. Ethan KayeAnalyst at Lucid Capital Markets00:29:57Understood. Thank you. Then I guess one other quick one. There was some migration kind of downward in the internal risk ratings you published. Nothing dramatic really, but just kind of wondering whether this reflects, you know, the name or names that were added to non-accrual or if there are maybe some other positions that experienced some negative trends there. Thank you. Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:30:24Yeah. Ethan, I'll start by just reiterating that the portfolio, we think, continues to perform really well. Borrower health has remained resilient in the wake of the peak inflation early days here on tariffs. We continue to see pretty good growth, top line in the double digits, mid-to-high single digits EBITDA. We've seen what that interest coverage ratio grind a little bit higher over the last series of quarters. Where we've seen issues, including those that you're alluding to, it has been isolated to certain companies with kind of ongoing specific problems which we don't think are indicative of anything systemic. Maybe I'll turn it over to Jeff to kind of comment on the non-accruals and the migration that you asked about. Jeff DayCo-President at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:31:10Yeah. Hey, hey, Ethan. Great to catch up. We, we did have, you know, as we, as we alluded to, two investments that were added to non-accrual status, you know, during the quarter, as well as obviously one that had been removed. You know, for context, that was out of a portfolio of, you know, 218 borrowers, so quite low from that perspective. You know, these are names that were as Michael mentioned, these were idiosyncratic underperformance. They were names that businesses that operated in different industries, different end markets. The portfolio or the issues that they encountered were not signs of weakness in any specific industry, but really just, you know, underperformance that was unique to those individual businesses. Ethan KayeAnalyst at Lucid Capital Markets00:31:58Great. Yeah, obviously, you know, aggregate credit quality continues to look great. Appreciate that color. Thanks, guys. Operator00:32:09That does conclude our question-and-answer session for today. At this time, I'd like to turn the call back to Mr. Michael Occi for closing remarks. Michael OcciCEO at Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund00:32:18Thank you. On behalf of the management team, I greatly appreciate you joining us today, along with your support of Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund. Our team remains focused on executing our defensive investment strategy to drive shareholder value, and I couldn't be more pleased with our continued execution. We're confident with how MSDL is positioned in this environment due to the sourcing advantages of our unique credit platform. We look forward to providing an update on our fourth quarter 2025 earnings call in February of next year. Operator00:32:50Once again, that does conclude today's conference. We thank you all for your participation. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesDavid PessahCFOJeff DayCo-PresidentMichael OcciCEORebecca ShaoulHead of Portfolio ManagementSanna JohnsonHead of Investor RelationsAnalystsEthan KayeAnalyst at Lucid Capital MarketsKenneth LeeAnalyst at RBC Capital MarketsMelissa WedelAnalyst at JPMorganRobert DoddAnalyst at Raymond JamesPowered by