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Logan Ridge Finance - Q3 2022

November 9, 2022

Transcript

Speaker 0

Good morning, and welcome to Logan Ridge Finance Corporation's Third Quarter Ended September 30, 2022 Earnings Conference Call. An earnings press release was distributed yesterday after the close of market. A copy of the release along with supplemental earnings presentation is available on the company's website at www.lochenrichfinance .com in the Investor Resources section and should be reviewed in conjunction with the company's Form 10 Q filed with the SEC. As a reminder, this conference call is being recorded for replay purposes. Please note that today's conference call may contain forward looking statements, which are not guarantees of future performance or results can involve a number of risks and uncertainties.

Actual results may differ materially from those in the forward looking statements as a result of a number of factors, including those described in the company's filings with the SEC. Logan Ridge Finance Corporation assumes no obligation to update any such forward looking statements unless required by law. Speaking on today's call will be Ted Goldthorpe, Chief Executive Officer, President and Director of Logan Ridge Finance Corporation Jason Ruth, Chief Financial Officer and Patrick Schaeffer, Chief Investment Officer. With that, I would now like to turn the call over to Ted Goldthorpe, Chief Executive Officer of Logan Bridge Finance Corporation.

Speaker 1

Thank you. Good morning and welcome to our Q3 2022 earnings call. As mentioned, I am joined today by our Chief Financial Officer, Jason Roos and our Chief Investment Officer, Patrick Schaeffer. Following my opening remarks, Patrick will provide additional detail on our investment activity to date and Jason will walk through the financials. To open, I'd like to remind shareholders that back in August when we reported our Q2 results, we told you that the Q2 of 2022 was transformative for the company and that the fruits of our labor will begin to be evident in the performance of the company during the second half of twenty twenty two.

Fast forward to today, I'm pleased to say that the company has reported its Q1 of positive NII under our stewardship, a significant milestone for the company. While Patrick will provide additional details on the portfolio, I would like to highlight that we believe Logan Ridge's portfolio is strong And substantially derisked, have an increased diversity from 32 portfolio companies when we took managing the portfolio on July 1, 2021 to 54 portfolio companies as of September 30, 2022. Similarly, We've been averaging down our hold size from $7,200,000 when we took over last July to $3,600,000 as of September 30, 2022, Effectively having our average credit exposure to our portfolio companies. Further with our new credit facility and our current credit leverage capacity, we believe we are well positioned to continue growing the portfolio and capitalize on opportunities arising from the current credit environment, which we believe will ultimately produce a very attractive vintage. Accordingly, over the coming quarters, We will remain laser focused on prudently growing the portfolio and increasing leverage such that we achieve our target leverage ratio of 1.3 times to 1.4 times, which will further increase our earnings power and improve our overall financial performance.

As always though, we are carefully monitoring the current economic environment, the impact of rising rates on our portfolio companies and the broader credit market. To wrap up my prepared remarks, I would like to reiterate management's belief that we've successfully righted the ship And our top priority moving forward is increasing the company's profitability. With that in mind, we are cautiously optimistic that the company will be in a position to return to paying a quarterly dividend during the Q1 of 2023. With that, I will turn the call over to Patrick Schaeffer, our Chief Investment Officer.

Speaker 2

Thanks, Ted. As of September 30, 2022, the fair value of our portfolio was approximately $193,100,000 and consisted of 54 portfolio companies. 1st lien debt represented 61.2% 61.9% of our total portfolio on a cost and fair value basis respectively. This compares to 54.4 percent 49.6 percent of the company's total portfolio on a cost and fair value basis respectively as of December 31, 2021. At quarter end, our debt portfolio Our debt investment portfolio represents 79.4 percent of the total portfolio at fair value and had a weighted average annualized yield of approximately 8.9% excluding income from non accruals and collateralized loan obligations, were 9.7% when excluding our debt securities on non accrual from both the numerator and This compares to a debt portfolio, which represents 75% of our total portfolio at fair value, with a weighted average annualized yield of approximately 8.7%, excluding income from non accruals and collateralized loan obligations or 9% when excluding our debt securities on non accrual from both the numerator and denominator at the end of the second quarter.

Going forward, we expect the rising rate environment to continue to benefit Logan Ridge as 76% of our assets are floating rate compared to only 41% of our liabilities. During the quarter, the company continued to judiciously redeploy capital generated from exiting the legacy portfolio. Specifically, the company made approximately $36,700,000 of investments and had approximately $17,100,000 in repayments and sales, resulting in net repayments and sales of approximately $19,600,000 for the quarter. Thus, our investment portfolio as of September 30, 2022, Consistent of investments in 54 portfolio companies with a fair value of approximately 193,100,000 for an average investment size of $3,600,000 Our non yielding equity portfolio as of September 30, 2022 decreased to 17.6% and 17.0% of the portfolio on a cost and fair value basis respectively. This compares to 21.7 percent and 21.4 percent of the portfolio on a cost and fair value basis as of the 2nd quarter And 27.1 percent 32.6 percent of the portfolio on a cost and fair value basis as of December 31, 2021, which marks a substantial improvement.

Additionally, subsequent to the quarter end, we exited Burke American Auto Parts Group LLC At the September 30 fair value, further reducing our non yielding equity portfolio to 15.6% of the portfolio on a fair value basis. During the quarter, we had no new non accruals. Additionally, the company ended the quarter with $11,300,000 in cash as well as $29,200,000 of unused borrowing capacity available for deployment investments originated by the BC Partners Credit Platform. I'll now turn the call over to Jason.

Speaker 3

Thanks, Patrick. Turning to our financial results for the quarter ended September 30, 2022. As Ted mentioned, we recorded net investment income of $200,000 for the quarter ended September 30, 2022. This was a substantial improvement compared to The prior quarter net investment loss of $900,000 which represents a $1,100,000 increase in income this quarter. This was largely driven by a $400,000 increase in total investment income, a $600,000 reduction in interest and financing cost driven by work we did refinancing the legacy capital structure and $100,000 reduction in general and administrative expenses.

During the quarter, we reported a $5,200,000 realized loss on investments, partially offset by unrealized appreciation on the portfolio of 2,000,000 The realized loss was almost entirely due to Logan Ridge's exit of our former portfolio company, Vology Inc, which had no NAV impact during the quarter as our fair value estimate in the prior quarter was consistent with where we were taken out. As of September 30, 2022, our net asset value was $98,200,000 or $36.21 per share as compared to $101,100,000 or $37.31 per share at the end of the Q2 of 2022. Finally, as Patrick mentioned, cash and cash equivalents as of September 30, 2022 have decreased to $11,300,000 compared to $29,500,000 as of the prior quarter, largely attributable to the increased deployment throughout the quarter. With that, I will turn the call back over to Ted.

Speaker 1

Thank you, Jason. We are proud of the significant milestones we've achieved to date and are looking forward to further increasing the company's profitability. Thank you for your support. This concludes our prepared remarks And I'll now turn the call over to the operator for any questions.

Speaker 0

Your first question comes from the line of Christopher Nolan from Ladenburg Thalmann. Your line is open.

Speaker 4

Hey guys. Jason, were there any non recurring items in the quarter?

Speaker 3

Thankfully, I think this Quarter, you'll see a lot of normalization in the numbers from previous quarters. So last quarter, we had about $230,000 of excess Expense related to some of the interest expense coming through on having multiple matured debt That we paid off last quarter. This quarter we don't see we don't have that. The general administrative have come down largely because we've normalized our legal costs. So long winded way of saying no, I think this quarter is a pretty good run rate on the expense side.

And you're starting to see some of the benefit of the deployment that and some of the rate rise that impacted the portfolio during the quarter on the revenue side.

Speaker 4

Great. And also congratulations everyone for getting back to profitability. I mean it's a long road and a lot of credit to all of you. On that note, what's the thoughts about where leverage goes? And given that, what do you think You're going to do with this $75,000,000 credit facility because it seems to be small.

Speaker 2

Yes. So, hey Chris, it's Patrick. So I think Similar to other public deals, I think we think the leverage range is kind of in the 1.3 to 1.4 times. And if you kind of do that math, You get decently close to the top of that facility kind of as is. And so that kind of is sort of our expectation over some period of time and the Speed with which we get there will depend a little bit on kind of some exits and things like that.

Additionally, we have upwards of $100,000,000 accordion on that facility that We theoretically could tap at some point, but for now, at least kind of our kind of stated leverage range, we would get to pretty close to the top Facility and that was kind of how we designed it originally.

Speaker 4

Great. And I guess strategically, now that it seems that You have the back the wind at your back and the earnings, is it fair to assume that we're going to have profitability in future quarters?

Speaker 1

Yes, it's our expectation. I mean it's a good question. I mean with rising rates, increased deployment and obviously refinancing our debt structure and obviously our As Patrick mentioned in his prepared remarks, we have more floating rate assets than we have floating rate debt. So all those factors absent a one off expense to your question, we expect to be we expect to have tailwinds to our profitability.

Speaker 4

Because it seems to me that the $0.07 could be a lease of sort of benchmark run rate going forward or somewhere In that facility, I mean, am I thinking completely off?

Speaker 1

I mean, as per other vehicles, There is a lag to when we get the benefits of LIBOR. So I think that's I think we would hope to achieve more. Let's put it that way.

Speaker 2

Yes. I think the other thing going on with particularly with Logan here is starting kind of in around May when we refinanced out the credit facility and all the Credit facility and all the liabilities, we sort of continuously been increasing assets and investments from that point on. So theoretically, Kind of your ending quarterly balance is a higher terminal velocity than sort of the average over the quarter. So we generally speaking should be benefiting All else be equal from both the rate environment as well as kind of continuing to add be a net adder of assets during the quarters.

Speaker 1

Yes. And I'd just say along all these lines and I know this is not your question, but obviously we would expect to turn on the dividend relatively soon if these earnings continue And a material dividend versus a token dividend. And then number 2 is, as soon as practically possible, it probably it makes sense for us to buy back stock. And so to the extent we're able to, that's something that we're obviously thinking about as well.

Speaker 4

And I would add to that take your management team out to a really nice holiday lunch. All right. Good job, guys. Thanks. Thanks.

Speaker 0

Your next question comes from the line of Stephen Martin from Slater. Your line is open.

Speaker 5

Hi, guys, again.

Speaker 1

Hey, Steve.

Speaker 5

You just made some comments about sort of the terminal velocity versus the quarter and obviously having been on the Portman call, you gave some indication of what the pro form a would have looked like, All else being equal, if rates had reset, can you give us Some sort of comparable color on what that number would have been?

Speaker 2

Yes. I mean,

Speaker 4

It's a little bit it's

Speaker 2

a little more complicated than Portman. But that said, I'd say it's probably in kind of the sort of $0.15 ish range, obviously, depending on And kind of when everything resets, but that would probably be, again, kind of roughly speaking, the potential increase. Okay.

Speaker 5

Can you talk about your mark to markets in terms of Characterizing them rate related, spread related, credit related?

Speaker 2

Yes. I'd say we probably had 2 mark to markets That roughly speaking offset each other that were kind of credit related, both a positive and a negative. And then kind of the rest by and large was Great movement related as opposed to credit related. The first in terms of detractors was LGS Partners launch on Silver's Company is entering in a sale process and we're a minority holder there, but we think that's kind of roughly a good approximation of value for where the Majority holders will be looking to exit the business. And then on the positive side, the Sequoia loan, Not to

Speaker 1

get into too much of

Speaker 2

the detail, but we were we think we have some extra collateral there as part of some transactions That ultimately should lead to a better recovery on a quicker timeline than perhaps we thought about last quarter. Again, those 2 like roughly even each other out. My guess is it's probably maybe $1,000,000 to the negative when you net the 2 and then the rest of anything else It's really all mark to market. Got

Speaker 5

The LJS you were talking about, I had actually had a question. You really there was a big markdown From Q2 to Q3, was that based on company performance or just what you know about the sale process?

Speaker 2

What we know about the sale process and I'd say the incentives in mindset to the majority holders which are kind of Controlling the sale process.

Speaker 5

Got you. In terms of inherited portfolio, what do you see in terms of Sureties and repayments through the end of the year.

Speaker 2

Yes. Again, it's a little bit tough with to have exact visibility. But I think based on kind of conversations we've been having so far with certain portfolio companies, I think you could expect to see or we would expect to see a couple of the bigger positions, legacy positions actually Pay off before year end. Now that said, that is a just kind of what we're hearing right now. And obviously, given where market conditions are, that can move Very quickly from week to week or month to month.

But we're expecting at this point a couple of Bigger, chunkier legacy positions to actually get repaid by quarter by year end rather. Yes, I

Speaker 1

mean we're working really hard to get out of the legacy positions. And the other thing, I mean, we put in the press release, but just to reiterate, we've exited a equity position subsequent to quarter end. So you'll see that and we'll reinvest that money in income generating assets. So again, you'll see Absent markdowns, which we don't foresee, you'll see the debt portfolio grow as a percentage of the overall portfolio. And we continue to cut chop down that equity exposure.

Speaker 5

In the Portman call, you discussed Taking advantage of public liquid securities, or private liquid securities. Can you do the same thing? Or are you doing the same thing here at Logan Ridge?

Speaker 2

The short answer is yes, we can do the same thing. We have a little bit of a different kind of credit facility at Logan than we do at Portman that adds Kind of a wrinkle to exactly how much of those things we can or cannot do based on the facility. But I'd say generally speaking, Yes. We kind of similarly at Logan Ridge can and would look to take advantage of those markets.

Speaker 5

Okay. And I think as the earlier questioner, great job turning this around. People forget How short a period of time you've actually controlled it?

Speaker 2

Yes. Thank you.

Speaker 1

I appreciate you saying that. We would obviously, we'd like progress to happen as fast as possible, but we're obsessed with getting this to the right place.

Speaker 5

Thanks a lot.

Speaker 1

Thanks.

Speaker 0

There are no further questions at this time. Mr. Ted Goldthorpe, I turn the call back over to you.

Speaker 1

Great. Well, thank you everyone for joining us today. We look forward to speaking to you again on our next quarterly call, which will be our full year results. And we'd like to wish everybody a very early, but Happy Thanksgiving.