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Capital Southwest (CSWC -0.04%)
Q1 2022 Earnings Call
Aug 03, 2021, 11:00 a.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:


Operator

Thank you for joining today's Capital Southwest first-quarter fiscal year 2022 earnings call. Participating on the call today are Bowen Diehl, CEO; Michael Sarner, CFO; and Chris Rehberger, VP finance. I will now turn the call over to Chris Rehberger.

Chris Rehberger -- Vice President of Finance

Thank you. I would like to remind everyone that in the course of this call, we will be making certain forward-looking statements. These statements are based on current conditions, currently available information and management's expectations, assumptions and beliefs. They are not guarantees of future results and are subject to numerous risks, uncertainties and assumptions that could cause actual results to differ materially from such statements.

For information concerning these risks and uncertainties, see Capital Southwest's publicly available filings with the SEC. The company does not undertake any obligation to update or revise any forward-look statements, whether as a result of new information, future events, changing circumstances or any other reason after the date of this press release, except as required by law. I will now hand the call off to our president and chief executive officer, Bowen Diehl.

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Bowen Diehl -- President and Chief Executive Officer and Director

Thanks, Chris and thank you, everyone for joining us for our earnings call for the first -- for the quarter ended June 30, 2021 which is the first quarter of our 2022 fiscal year. We are pleased to be with you this morning and look forward to giving you an update on the performance of our company, our portfolio and our progress on executing our investment strategy as stewards of your capital. Throughout our prepared remarks, we will refer to various slides in the earnings presentation, which can be found on our website at www.capitalsouthwest.com. We'll begin on Slide 6 of the earnings presentation, where we have summarized some of the key performance highlights for the quarter.

During the quarter, we generated pre-tax net investment income of $0.45 per share, which more than earned our regular dividend paid for the quarter of $0.43 per share. Total dividends for the quarter were $0.53 per share, which included a $0.10 per share supplemental dividend. Total dividends paid during the quarter, represented an annualized dividend yield on our stock price as of the last day of the quarter of 9.1% and an annualized yield on net asset value per share of 12.8%. I am pleased to announce that our board of directors has increased our total dividends per share to $0.54 for the coming quarter ending September 30, 2021 consisting of a regular dividend increase from $0.43 per share to $0.44 per share and a quarterly supplemental dividend of $0.10 per share.

Our decision to increase the dividend emanates from our continued confidence in the current earnings power of our portfolio as a result of portfolio growth continued, reductions in our cost of capital and our ability to improve our operating leverage efficiency by actively managing operating costs, while growing the asset base. During the quarter, we grew our investment portfolio on a net basis by 16% to $799 million. Portfolio growth during the quarter was driven primarily by a total of $138.9 million in new commitments to eight new portfolio companies of which $102.6 million was funded at close offset by $1.6 million in proceeds from the exit of one equity co-investment. The portfolio generated net realized and unrealized gains of $6.1 million during the quarter, driven primarily by unrealized appreciation in our equity co-investment portfolio.

On the capitalization front, we successfully raised $28.1 million of equity through our ATM program at an average price of $26.10 per share, representing an average of 163% of the prevailing net asset value per share. In addition during the quarter, our SBIC fund received its initial leverage commitment from the SBA in the amount of $40 million. Turning to Slide 7 and 8. We illustrate our continued track record of producing steady dividend growth consistent dividend coverage and value creation since the launch of our credit strategy.

We believe the solid performance of our portfolio and our company's sustained access to the capital markets has demonstrated the strength of our investment and capitalization management strategies. Maintenance and growth of both NAV per share and shareholder dividends remain as core tenets of our long-term investment objective of creating long-term value for our shareholders. Turning to Slide 9. As a refresher, our investment strategy has remained consistent since its launch in January of 2015.

We continue to focus on our core lower middle market lending strategy, while also maintaining the ability to opportunistically invest in the upper middle market when attractive risk adjusted returns exist. In the lower middle market, we directly originate and lead opportunities consisting primarily of first lien senior secured loans with smaller equity co-investments made alongside our loans. We believe that this combination is powerful for a BDC as it provides strong security for the vast majority of our invested capital, while also providing NAV upside from equity investments in many of these growing businesses. Building out a well-performing and granular portfolio of equity co-investments is important to driving growth in NAV per share, while aiding in the mitigation of any credit losses over time.

As of the end of the quarter, our equity co-investment portfolio consisted of 31 equity investments, totaling $66.1 million representing 8% of our portfolio at fair value. Within our lower middle market portfolio as of the end of the quarter, we held equity ownership in approximately 57% of our portfolio companies. Though the equity portfolio has performed extremely well with $14.3 million and cumulative embedded net unrealized appreciation, some lingering effects of the pandemic aftermath still do persist, leaving us very excited about the potential upside of this equity portfolio moving forward. As illustrated on Slide 10, our on-balance sheet credit portfolio as of the end of the quarter excluding our I-45 senior loan fund, grew 17% to $671 million as compared to $573 million as of the end of the prior quarter.

Our credit portfolio is currently weighted 87% to lower middle market loans consistent with prior quarters. For the quarter, seven out of the eight new debt originations were first lien senior secured and as of the quarter end 90% of the credit portfolio was first lien senior secured. On Slide 11, we lay out the $138.9 million of capital invested in and committed to portfolio companies during the quarter. This included $119.4 million in first lien senior secured debt committed to seven new portfolio companies, $15.8 million in split lien senior secured debt in one new portfolio company, along with $3.8 million invested in equity co-investments alongside three of the new portfolio loans.

A brief description of the split lien structure is explained in the footnote to the table. Turning to Slide 12. We continued our track record of successful exits with one this quarter. We exited our equity investment in Tax Advisors Group, generating a realized gain of $1.1 million and an IRR of 34%.

To date, we have generated a cumulative weighted average IRR of 15.2% on 39 portfolio exits, representing approximately $385.1 million in proceeds. From a macro perspective, the market for acquisition and refinancing capital was robust this quarter and has continued its momentum into the September quarter. Our investment pipeline as we have mentioned on previous calls has also been robust and continues to be in both volume and quality of deals. The deal team continues to do an excellent job broadening the top end of our deal funnel, which maximizes the number of deals in the market, for which we have the opportunity to review and consider.

As we have always said this is a critical component of building and maintaining a quality investment portfolio in a competitive market. This activity has presented Capital Southwest with what we believe to be some very interesting investment opportunities. Based on dialogue with our portfolio companies, we also believe that the active market will result in elevated prepayments for Capital Southwest over the remainder of this year. On Slide 13, we break out our on-balance sheet portfolio as of the end of the quarter between the lower middle market and the upper middle market, again excluding our I-45 senior loan fund.

As of the end of the quarter, the total portfolio including equity co-investments was weighted approximately 87% to the lower middle market and 13% to the upper middle market on a fair value basis. Our portfolio of 49 lower middle market companies had a weighted average EBITDA of $10.6 million and a weighted average leverage ratio measured as debt-to-EBITDA through our security of 4.2 times. Our average hold size in our lower middle market portfolio was approximately $13 million. Our on-balance sheet upper middle market portfolio excluding our I-45 senior loan fund consisted of 12 companies with a weighted average EBITDA of $61.8 million and an average leverage ratio through our security of four times.

Our average hold size in our on-balance sheet upper middle market portfolio, was approximately $8 million. Turning to Slide 14. We have laid out the rating migration within our portfolio. During the quarter, we had three loans upgraded from a two to a one and one loan upgraded from a three to a two.

As a reminder, all loans upon origination are initially assigned an investment rating of two on a 4-point scale with one being the highest rating and four being the lowest rating. As of the end of the quarter, we had 64 loans representing 92.2% of our investment portfolio at fair value, rated in one of the top two categories a one or a two. We had six loans representing 7.8% of the portfolio at fair value, rated a three and no loans rated a four. During the quarter we placed two first lien senior secured loans on nonaccrual with a cumulative fair value of $14.5 million or 1.8% of the total investment portfolio.

Both businesses remain rated at three with one loan being in the upper middle market and one loan being in the lower middle market. With respect to the upper middle market loan, this company has experienced softness in their post-COVID performance and is currently engaged in an active restructuring conversations. We have decided to place this loan on nonaccrual pending more clarity on the loan terms and company performance post restructuring. The lower middle market loan placed on nonaccrual this quarter is a company, which has previously experienced operational challenges resulting in poor performance.

Recently, the company's senior management team has made significant operational and personnel changes to upgrade the organization. While we believe the company's outlook is improving, illustrated by a significant growth in the company's project pipeline, we have decided to put this loan on non-accrual as we monitor their ability to convert this growing pipeline into revenue. Capital Southwest has representation on this company's board of directors and is attending monthly operating meetings with the company's management team giving us enhanced access to real-time company performance dynamics. As illustrated on Slide 15, our total investment portfolio continues to be well diversified across industries with an asset mix, which provides strong security for our shareholders' capital.

The portfolio remains heavily weighted toward first lien senior secured debt with only 7% of the portfolio in second lien senior secured debt and only 1% of the portfolio in one subordinated debt investment. Turning to Slide 16. The I-45 senior loan fund showed solid performance for the quarter with asset growth and unrealized appreciation. Leverage at the I-45 fund level is now 1.4 times debt to equity.

As of the end of the quarter, 96% of the I-45 portfolio was invested in first lien senior secured debt. Weighted average EBITDA and leverage across the companies in the I-45 portfolio was $77.9 million and 4.8 times respectively. The portfolio continues to have diversity among industries and an average hold size of 2.6% of the portfolio. I will now hand the call over to Michael, to review more specifics, of our financial performance for the quarter.

Michael Sarner -- Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Bowen. Specific to our performance for the June quarter, as summarized on Slide 17, we earned pre-tax net investment income of $9.4 million or $0.45 per share. We paid out $0.43 per share in regular dividends for the quarter an increase from the $0.42 regular dividend per share paid out in the March quarter. As mentioned earlier, our board has again this quarter increased the regular dividend declaring a quarterly dividend of $0.44 per share to be paid out during the September quarter, up from $0.43 per share paid out in the June quarter.

Maintaining a consistent track record of meaningfully covering our regular dividend with pre-tax NII is important to our investment strategy. We continue to maintain our strong track record of regular dividend coverage with 110% for the last 12 months ended June 30 2021 and 107% cumulative since the launch of our credit strategy in January 2015. During the quarter, we maintained our supplemental dividend at $0.10 per share. And again our board has declared a further $0.10 per share supplemental dividend to be paid out during the September quarter.

As a reminder, the supplemental dividend program allows our shareholders to meaningfully participate in the successful exits of our investment portfolio through distributions from our UTI balance. As of June 30, 2021, our estimated UTI balance was $0.83 per share. Our investment portfolio produced $18.6 million of investment income this quarter, with a weighted average yield on all investments of 10.1%. Investment income was $1.4 million higher this quarter, due primarily to an increase in average credit investments outstanding, as well as an increase in cash dividends paid from our equity portfolio.

There were two non-accruals, with an aggregate fair value of $14.5 million or 1.8% of the investment portfolio as of the end of the quarter. Our weighted average yield on our credit portfolio was 10.7% for the quarter. As seen on Slide 18, our LTM operating leverage continued to improve, decreasing to 2.3% as of the end of the quarter. For fiscal year 2022, we expect operating leverage to be between 2% and 2.2%.

Turning to Slide 19. The company's NAV per share as of June 30, 2021, was $16.58, as compared to $16.01 at March 31, 2021, representing a quarter-over-quarter increase of 3.6%. The main drivers of the NAV per share increase were $6.1 million of net appreciation in the investment portfolio and the accretion generated by the issuance of equity at a premium to NAV per share during the quarter. On Slide 20, we lay out multiple pockets of capital.

As we have mentioned on prior calls, a strategic priority for our company is to continually evaluate approaches to derisk our liability structure, while ensuring that we have adequate investable capital throughout the economic cycle. Our debt capitalization today includes a $340 million on-balance sheet revolving line of credit with 11 syndicate banks maturing in December 2023, a $125 million institutional bond with 25 institutional investors maturing in 2024, a $140 million institutional bond maturing in 2026, a $150 million revolving line of credit at I-45 also maturing in 2026 and an initial $40 million leverage commitment from the SBA which is yet to be drawn upon. With regard to our revolving line of credit, we are currently in discussions with our bank syndicate on an amendment and extension. While we do not have anything formal to announce today, we can say that we are very pleased with the terms of the amendment and the tremendous support we continue to receive from our bank syndicate.

The closing of the amendment is imminent and we plan to announce the details in the coming days. Finally, as we've discussed on prior calls, we have now begun operations with our SBIC subsidiary, which we'll see going forward denoted as CSWC SBIC I. As a reminder, our initial equity commitment to the fund is $40 million and we have received an initial commitment from the SBA for $40 million of fund leverage, which is also referred to as one tier of leverage. We expect to invest this initial $80 million of capital over the next six to nine months, at which point we will apply for a second tier of leverage.

Over the life of the fund, we plan to draw the full $175 million in SBIC debentures, alongside $87.5 million in capital from Capital Southwest. We are excited to be part of this program and believe it will be a natural fit with our investment strategy. Overall, we are pleased to report that our liquidity continues to be strong with approximately $203 million in cash and undrawn leverage commitments as of the end of the quarter. As of June 30, 2021, approximately 58% of our capital structure liabilities were unsecured.

Our earliest debt maturity is in December 2023, which we would expect to extend upon the closing of the credit facility amendment. Our regulatory leverage, as seen on Slide 21, ended the quarter at a debt-to-equity ratio of 1.23:1. Finally, our board announced a further share repurchase program, authorizing the company to repurchase up to $20 million of stock below NAV. As you recall, we maxed out our prior $10 million program during the extreme market volatility seen in 2020.

While we don't wish for future black swan events, we do endeavor to manage our balance sheet in a manner to provide our shareholders the benefit of repurchasing shares, if such extreme volatility is experienced in the future. I will now hand the call back to Bowen for some final comments.

Bowen Diehl -- President and Chief Executive Officer and Director

Thanks, Michael, and thank you everyone for joining us today. Capital Southwest continues to perform well and consistent with the vision and strategy we communicated to our shareholders six and a half years ago. Our team has done an outstanding job, building a robust asset base, deal origination capability as well as a flexible capital structure that prepares us, for all environments throughout the economic cycle. We believe, that our performance continues to demonstrate the investment acumen of our team at Capital Southwest and the merits of our first lien senior secured debt strategy.

We feel very good about the health of our company and portfolio and we are excited to continue to execute our investment strategy going forward. Everyone here at Capital Southwest is totally dedicated to being good stewards of our shareholders' capital by continuing to deliver performance and creating long-term sustainable value for all our stakeholders. This concludes our prepared remarks. Operator, we are ready to open the lines up for Q&A.

Questions & Answers:


Operator

[Operator instructions] Our first question comes from Devin Ryan with JMP Securities. Your line is open.

Kevin Fultz -- JMP Securities -- Analyst

Hi. Good morning. This is Kevin Fultz on for Devin. First question, dividend income was elevated in the quarter, due to dividends received from portfolio companies of roughly $1.1 million.

Can you provide some color on the source of that dividend? And then also confirm whether that should be considered recurring or nonrecurring?

Michael Sarner -- Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. So a portion of that is recurring or received from our shareholders -- from our portfolio companies held in our blocker. On a quarterly basis, I think the level is around call it $300,000 to $350,000 is what we're receiving. And then some of those tend to be one-time in nature from dividend income coming from portfolio companies of distributions.

Kevin Fultz -- JMP Securities -- Analyst

OK. That's helpful. And then, looking at the expense side, G&A tracked a bit higher this quarter than last quarter. Is that increase driven by one-time expenses, or is that reflective of higher G&A due to increased scale of the business?

Michael Sarner -- Chief Financial Officer

Sure. So some of this is related just to the seasonality, this is our -- our annual meeting is in July. So we incurred some audit costs and 10-K. So that's a few hundred -- that's about $200,000.

And you'll see that on -- every year in the 6/30 quarter. We also noted we had $100,000 one-time costs for a headhunter for a new principle that we hired, which obviously is one-time in nature. And then, we did increase -- we had one new board member and that's increased professional expenses by $100,000. And so that will be recurring going forward.

Kevin Fultz -- JMP Securities -- Analyst

OK, got it. That makes sense. And thanks for taking my questions.

Michael Sarner -- Chief Financial Officer

Well thanks.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Kyle Joseph with Jefferies. Your line is open.

Kyle Joseph -- Jefferies -- Analyst

Hey. Good morning guys. Thanks a lot for taking my question. In terms of other income, it was light in the quarter.

I would guess that has to do with the lower prepayment activity in the quarter. So -- and I think from your comments, it sounds like you expect prepayment activity to pickup, as the year goes on. And therefore should we expect a pickup in other income?

Michael Sarner -- Chief Financial Officer

So I mean, we're looking probably at maybe somewhere in the $30 million to $60 million in potential prepayments between now and the end of the year. Now, some of those have make-wholes so the newer companies that maybe have been with us a year or two, they'll have either 102 or 101. But there's, others that potentially come back and don't have a make-whole. So I'm not sure that it's going to be elevated beyond somewhere in the 500,000 range.

Kyle Joseph -- Jefferies -- Analyst

Yeah. OK, got it. And then, I just want to get your high-level thoughts on credit. Obviously the ratings were positive.

There were some unrealized depreciation, but we did see two investments go on non-accrual. Just broadly, talk about the, -- whether its revenue or EBITDA growth trends you're seeing across your portfolio?

Bowen Diehl -- President and Chief Executive Officer and Director

Yeah, I'd say across the portfolio EBITDA is -- from an LTM perspective is growing slightly. As we move forward, each quarter we're progressively further across the calendar. So we start losing some of those COVID months of last year. So yeah I think generally EBITDA is kind of flat to slightly up across the portfolio.

Kyle Joseph -- Jefferies -- Analyst

OK, got it. And then last one for me, osbviously a good quarter on the origination side. Can you give us a sense for the cadence of originations throughout the quarter whether that was front weighted or back weighted? Just help us figure out modeling yields going forward.

Michael Sarner -- Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. I'd probably say it's in the middle. I think we had some very early and then probably like 40% very early, and 60% very late. So it sounds like, it's a fairly evenly weighted.

Bowen Diehl -- President and Chief Executive Officer and Director

Yeah. I think that's right.

Kyle Joseph -- Jefferies -- Analyst

OK, great. All right thanks so much for answering my questions.

Michael Sarner -- Chief Financial Officer

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Bryce Rowe with Hovde Group. Your line is open.

Bryce Rowe -- Hovde Group -- Analyst

Thank you. Good morning. Good morning Michael.

Michael Sarner -- Chief Financial Officer

Good morning.

Bryce Rowe -- Hovde Group -- Analyst

Wanted to ask you make note of I guess the additional employees their Capital Southwest. So maybe you could speak to the principal that was hired and how that might impact kind of deal flow going forward and the investment funnel?

Bowen Diehl -- President and Chief Executive Officer and Director

Yes, we're very excited about it. You'll see Laura Zengilowski on our website. Very excited. She joined us from AllianceBernstein, obviously, another competing credit shop down in Austin.

We're very excited for her addition and she comes with very robust underwriting track record and she gives us more horsepower to originate deals so to put out in the market. So pretty excited about her joining.

Bryce Rowe -- Hovde Group -- Analyst

Great. OK. And then Bowen you make -- you guys made mention of the impact of appreciation within the equity portfolio on NAV for the quarter. Can you speak to kind of how broad based that was? Was it again driven across multiple investments or really just concentrated in a couple?

Bowen Diehl -- President and Chief Executive Officer and Director

No, it's a pretty -- I mean I'd say if you looked at the list of investments, it's probably almost -- maybe 40% of them had appreciation and -- just thinking of the list I don't have the list in front of me, probably 20% of them had some kind of depreciation with the appreciation being higher than that small -- the 20% of the companies that were depreciated and a bunch of them that were basically flat. So I'd say slightly less than half of the companies had appreciation. And then what you have the--

Michael Sarner -- Chief Financial Officer

Yes, I would just say on the equity side, we had four companies.

Bowen Diehl -- President and Chief Executive Officer and Director

That's pretty material.

Michael Sarner -- Chief Financial Officer

Material appreciation that are just performing tremendously. And on the debt side the $0.5 million of appreciation though it's small, it was very granular and it's these are some--

Bowen Diehl -- President and Chief Executive Officer and Director

On the debt side--

Michael Sarner -- Chief Financial Officer

On the debt. So to some degree, it's just like the companies that were struggling during COVID are starting to come out from that and you're starting to see some granular appreciation on those assets that they reappreciate.

Bryce Rowe -- Hovde Group -- Analyst

OK. OK. And then maybe following up on Kyle's question there around yields and pricing. It looked like spreads have kind of been relatively stable quarter to quarter.

Are you seeing that within the pipeline that you described as robust? And just trying to get a feel for how you think about portfolio yield as we move forward here?

Bowen Diehl -- President and Chief Executive Officer and Director

Yes, I mean the portfolio -- or the deal pipeline has been strong. We're pleased by that. The yields I mean clearly they've retraced the COVID move and the market is obviously very competitive. We just have people out in the market and we're widening that top end of our deal funnel, so we can have a greater percentage of the deals that we're looking at in the market.

We think that's pretty critical to maintaining our track record. But I think over time yields -- our average yield in our portfolio maybe comes down a bit, but not a ton, but a bit. Yields right now in the market seem to be -- as you noted, seem to be pretty stable from what they've been in the last quarter or so.

Michael Sarner -- Chief Financial Officer

Yes. And so obviously this quarter it dropped from due to our non-accruals, but we also saw probably like 20 basis points of reduction through lower-yielding assets. We think that's probably going to come back up a bit in the coming quarters. And then on the hopeful side, I think we think that the two credits that are on non-accrual have a very high likelihood of coming back on accrual and those are higher yielding assets that would bring the yield back up.

Bowen Diehl -- President and Chief Executive Officer and Director

Yes, we have a pretty long dialogue back and forth about -- with one of the questions last quarter about the kind of my analogy of the deep end of the pool and shallow end of the pool. So as we've gotten our cost of capital down and we've increased our operating efficiency meaning that our assets are growing faster than our operating costs are growing. Our cost of doing business is dropping from that perspective, obviously offset by non-accruals. And I'd love to tell you all that this is a non a zero defect business as much as I want it to be it's not.

But as we -- as our cost of delivering the investment strategy to the shareholders comes down, we can compete in a safer end of the lower middle market that tends to price at slightly lower spreads. And whereas like three years ago, two years ago, that was really -- those were deals that we really couldn't compete for we could but we just -- our net interest margin wasn't attractive. And So now you'll see deals that have LIBOR 6.50%, LIBOR 6.25%. Those are -- our net interest margin on those deals are -- as we've gotten -- as our business has evolved, it's very attractive.

And so we can compete for those deals. And So some of the rating -- some of the yield migration is not necessarily the same deal that was higher yield two years ago. It's a different safety lower LTVs type deal flow. And So you'll see that.

And we talked about that for the last couple of quarters being a dynamic in our business, which I think is a very attractive piece of our story going forward.

Michael Sarner -- Chief Financial Officer

I mean -- So I mean Bowen makes a good point, because on the net interest margin perspective, so yields may come down, maybe from the 10.7% down to 10.25% over the next six and 12 months. But our SG&A or operating leverage is going to go to 2% and probably hold around 2%. You didn't ask the question, but we did -- we are in the process of amending our credit facility, which we think is going to have a significant reduction in cost as well. So you couple that with us starting to draw.

We've already drawn $7.5 million on our SBIC and that should be up to $25 million by the end of the quarter. So as those get drawn, so we're borrowing at sub-3% and our SG&A at 2%, I think you'll see an expansion of our NII even with the reduction in the yield.

Bryce Rowe -- Hovde Group -- Analyst

Great. That's a good detail, and really nice to see the dividend increase, and you all continuing to execute. Appreciate.

Bowen Diehl -- President and Chief Executive Officer and Director

Thanks, Bryce. Appreciate it.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Sarkis Sherbetchyan with B. Riley Securities. Your line is open.

Sarkis Sherbetchyan -- B. Riley Financial -- Analyst

Hey. Good morning and thank you for taking my question here. I just wanted to see if I can get some more color on the pipeline share quarter to date as well as the activity that you're seeing. And then, just if you can kind of pair that up with your expectation for the repayments to come in as the balance of the year progresses?

Bowen Diehl -- President and Chief Executive Officer and Director

Yes. So if I look at our pipeline right now and I add up the deals that are either, we've either closed quarter to date or are signed up and working due diligence at $60 million to $70 million in that range. And so -- and six new companies. And So the quarter is far from over.

So candidly we probably expect additional deals to close before September 30. But that gives you an idea. So $138 million in a quarter is obviously a heavy quarter. I'm not sure that replicates in the next quarter or two, but the originations are -- continues to be very strong.

And then, if we think about repayments, looking down our portfolio names and the dialogue we're having with the companies, add up kind of the names -- the capital that we would put a pin on saying, OK, that's something that very likely would prepay before the end of the calendar year and that number is about $50 million. And from a timing perspective, we control that obviously less. But, generally speaking, it wouldn't surprise me as that's pretty evenly distributed between the next two quarters September, December. So if you're modeling you might say $50 million or $25 million a quarter in prepayments.

Sarkis Sherbetchyan -- B. Riley Financial -- Analyst

Understood. Thanks for that. And I think another one is a little bit more, I suppose of a hypothetical question, but just want to kind of understand with your cost of debt capital and just kind of the overall cost of doing business coming down for you. If there is, let's say, a change in interest rates, it seems like maybe the first 125 basis points might be a little bit of an NII headwind.

I guess, how do we think about that? Is there a way to kind of parse through that in the event that happens, or do you think you're kind of insulated from any of the potential changes that may come about there?

Michael Sarner -- Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. I mean I think the way we think about it is, we've looked into hedging but it's -- that's a really difficult concept, because you're spending a lot of dollars to predict the timing for when how quickly you're going to -- that first 100 basis points is going to go up. So we don't think that that's really an option for us. So quite frankly, the way we're looking at it is with our originations and our cost of debt and cost of operating leverage coming down, if and when the rates start rising for the first 75 basis points, you'll see our growth on NII slow, but you -- essentially once you get past that 75% then you're going to see an acceleration.

So you won't see a reduction in NII or a dividend, you'll see slower growth and then an acceleration once it's done. Obviously, on that I mean the cost of debt with the SBIC just to be clear on I think you guys probably have other BDCs you look at cost of debt right now on the pooled debt is 2% -- really about 1.65%. But on the debt that you draw before pooling and pooling happens twice a year, the actual cost is about 60 basis points. So just giving you a sense as rates go up I think that gets offset by extremely cheap capital that we're going to be drawing from.

So that's why we feel pretty confident we'll continue to grow the dividend while interest rates rise.

Bowen Diehl -- President and Chief Executive Officer and Director

OK. You also have to keep in mind that that interest analysis on that last slide is a static analysis. So it seems like nothing else happens like new portfolio originations, portfolio growth and that kind of thing. So the 120 -- the slide illustrates a headwind, but it's not a -- it's not a one-to-one math as we continue to evolve and grow the portfolio.

So...

Sarkis Sherbetchyan -- B. Riley Financial -- Analyst

No, I understood, it's dynamic. Just wanted to get a sense for the changing dynamics there. And obviously you'll be originating and you'd probably get some repayments and what have you back. But I just wanted to get a sense for the NII and dividend, and how insulated the business is.

That's all. Very helpful comments. Thank you, guys.

Bowen Diehl -- President and Chief Executive Officer and Director

Great. Thanks. Good questions.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Matt Tjaden with Raymond James. Your line is open.

Matt Tjaden -- Raymond James -- Analyst

Hi, all. Good morning and appreciate you taking my questions. First one for me following up on the equity book. Can you give us a sense of how much of the appreciation was a function of improved performance or kind of expanded market multiples? And if it was some combination of the two kind of what proportion was which?

Bowen Diehl -- President and Chief Executive Officer and Director

Yes. The vast majority of it is I'm just looking down the names so a vast majority of it is company performance. I mean a pretty robust performance. So...

Matt Tjaden -- Raymond James -- Analyst

Got it. And, I guess, as a follow-up apologies if I missed this. With the receipt of the first SBIC license can you remind us whether or not you have a target leverage range both in an economic sense and on a regulatory level?

Michael Sarner -- Chief Financial Officer

Yes. We've kind of said this before. We're -- our economic leverage is going to be somewhere in the 1.2 to 1.3 range and our regulatory leverage will be around -- between 0.9 and 1.1. We actually think that with the pace of originations and the draws of SBIC we should be near one times in the next six months.

Matt Tjaden -- Raymond James -- Analyst

Got it. That's helpful. Last one for me on PIK income. So looks like over the last four quarters, PIK income both nominally and as a percentage of total investment income has fallen pretty materially.

Any color you can give on how much of that is purposeful? Is that a kind of a concentrated effort to steer away from PIK income? Is that just how the docs are being signed? Any high-level color there?

Michael Sarner -- Chief Financial Officer

Well, I would tell you it's actually kind of concentrated. The company -- one of the lower middle market company we put on non-accrual it had essentially converted from cash to PIK and then we obviously inevitably put it in non-accrual this quarter. So there was sort of a write-up of PIK for that company over the last two quarters and then it was reserved against this quarter. So therefore it's -- what you're seeing now is actually the normal run rate of PIK income.

Matt Tjaden -- Raymond James -- Analyst

Got it. That's it from. I appreciate the time.

Michael Sarner -- Chief Financial Officer

Thank you.

Bowen Diehl -- President and Chief Executive Officer and Director

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. I'm not showing any further questions at this time. I would now like to turn the call back over to Bowen Diehl for closing remarks.

Bowen Diehl -- President and Chief Executive Officer and Director

Great. Thanks, operator and thanks everybody for joining today. We appreciate your time and we certainly love talking about our business and giving you all updates on the business. So appreciate it and have a great week.

We look forward to talking to you next quarter.

Operator

[Operator signoff]

Duration: 40 minutes

Call participants:

Chris Rehberger -- Vice President of Finance

Bowen Diehl -- President and Chief Executive Officer and Director

Michael Sarner -- Chief Financial Officer

Kevin Fultz -- JMP Securities -- Analyst

Kyle Joseph -- Jefferies -- Analyst

Bryce Rowe -- Hovde Group -- Analyst

Sarkis Sherbetchyan -- B. Riley Financial -- Analyst

Matt Tjaden -- Raymond James -- Analyst

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