Jim: We’re primarily lending on a bilateral basis where we’re taking a senior secured position, focused on large-cap companies generating more than $100 million of EBITDA, though our portfolios skew higher.
There are two reasons for that focus. First, larger businesses tend to be more defensible. Over time we’ve found these are better credits, particularly in a downturn, as they are often category leaders.
Second, the opportunity emerged as financing markets evolved around 2018–2019. As bank lending dynamics shifted, institutions like us gained access to opportunities that weren’t previously available.
Alex: Let’s go back to 2022 as a line of demarcation between old and new vintages. Given that, how has the market evolved since then to where we are today?
Jim: In 2022, higher base rates combined with wider spreads made returns more attractive compared to prior periods.
Before 2022, base rates were near zero, so leverage and debt service looked very different. Companies were operating in a fundamentally different environment than the one we’ve had for the past several years.
What made the 2022–2024 vintages compelling wasn’t just return, it was structure—lower leverage and more subordinated capital beneath us.Coming out of that period, strong demand for yield reduced some of those protections.
That’s why in 2025, despite significant deployment, we passed on a large portion of opportunities., What’s exciting now is that cost of capital has reset. We’re seeing the potential to lend at attractive spreads with better structures and tighter documentation. That creates a more compelling forward opportunity.