NASDAQ:RWAY Runway Growth Finance Q1 2024 Earnings Report $9.25 -0.03 (-0.32%) Closing price 04/25/2025 04:00 PM EasternExtended Trading$9.24 -0.01 (-0.05%) As of 04/25/2025 04:06 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 Polygon.io. Learn more. Earnings HistoryForecast Runway Growth Finance EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.46Consensus EPS $0.46Beat/MissMet ExpectationsOne Year Ago EPSN/ARunway Growth Finance Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$40.01 millionExpected Revenue$39.35 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$660.00 thousandYoY Revenue GrowthN/ARunway Growth Finance Announcement DetailsQuarterQ1 2024Date5/7/2024TimeN/AConference Call DateTuesday, May 7, 2024Conference Call Time5:00PM ETUpcoming EarningsRunway Growth Finance's Q1 2025 earnings is scheduled for Tuesday, May 13, 2025, with a conference call scheduled at 5:00 PM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Q1 2025 Earnings ReportConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Runway Growth Finance Q1 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrMay 7, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 10 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by, and welcome to the Runway Growth Finance First Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. Please be advised that today's conference is being I would now like to hand the conference over to Quinlan Abel, Assistant Vice President, Investor Relations. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:23Thank you, operator. Good evening, everyone, and welcome to the Runway Growth Finance conference call for the 1st quarter ended March 31, 2024. Joining us on the call today from Runway Growth Finance are David Sprang, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer Greg Greifeld, Managing Director, Deputy Chief Investment Officer and Head of Credit of Runway Growth Capital and Tom Ratterman, Chief Financial Officer and Chief Operating Officer. Runway Growth Finance's Q1 2024 results were released just after today's market close and can be accessed from Runway Growth Finance's Investor Relations website at investors. Runwaygrowth.com. Speaker 100:01:05We have arranged for a replay of the call at the Runway Growth Finance webpage. 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. These 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 caused by uncertainties surrounding rising interest rates, changing economic conditions and other factors we 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. Speaker 100:01:54And 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 Runway Growth Finance assumes no obligation to update the forward looking statements or subsequent events. To obtain copies of SEC related filings, please visit our website. Before we begin, on behalf of the company, we are thrilled to welcome back David Spring as he assumes full responsibility as Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer of Runway Growth Finance. Speaker 100:02:31And with that, I will turn the call over to David. Speaker 200:02:35Thank you, Quinlan, and thanks everyone for joining us this evening to discuss our Q1 results. I want to thank all of those who reached out for their support during my recovery process. Further, I'd like to thank Greg, Tom and the entire Runway team for their collaboration in navigating the dynamic macro environment over the last several months. To start, I'll provide some Q1 portfolio highlights, then an overview of our financial results, and finally discuss the current market trends that we're observing. During the Q1, Runway saw heightened pipeline activity and completed 2 investments in new and existing portfolio companies representing $25,000,000 in funded loans. Speaker 200:03:21Runway delivered total investment income of $40,000,000 and net investment income of $18,700,000 in the quarter. These figures both represent an increase of approximately 2% from the prior year period. Our weighted average portfolio risk rating increased slightly in Q1, which Tom will provide more details on shortly. We're very focused on credit quality and believe in working closely with all of our portfolio companies throughout the entire lifetime of our loans. This belief drives our monitoring philosophy and is the foundation for preserving credit quality. Speaker 200:04:03Consistent communication with our borrowers enables us to accurately mark investments and mitigate potential risk while maintaining consistent yield. Turning now to the market. In our view, companies are increasingly exploring the use of debt as a minimally dilutive alternative debt refinancing, which bodes well for us as a preferred partner known for sophisticated financing solutions that meet borrowers' diverse needs. As the economy proves resilient with expectations for a soft landing, we believe our low leverage ratio and ample dry powder position us well to take advantage of opportunities that meet our high credit bar. Our role as a lender is to support the best companies with high conviction to reach their full growth potential. Speaker 200:04:57We are not a lender of last resort to provide funding during a crisis or a troubled situation. In fact, we are often the last capital brought in before a company executes a strategic exit like an M and A transaction or IPO. And that point remains critical for us. As an investor, I've spent nearly 3 decades sourcing, evaluating and deal making in the venture ecosystem. Prior to founding Runway nearly 9 years ago, I was a venture capitalist for over 20 years. Speaker 200:05:31My experience across economic cycles and rate environments underscores the importance of underwriting rigor. In the current market, we are seeing more venture backed companies seeking capital than ever before. Further, these companies have a difficult fundraising backdrop as they mull over the possibility of down rounds and seek non dilutive capital. We know this may sound counterintuitive given the quantum of VC dry powder, but it's important to remember that many of these companies last raised money record valuations and now want to preserve a functioning cap table for their investors and employees. That is precisely why our focus on selectivity and underwriting standards remain so high. Speaker 200:06:21We know that we're not going to bat $1,000 on every loan. But when we have a credit that is pressured, our underwriting analysis strives to ensure that future challenges are limited to unforeseen external factors. These may include changes in market conditions or shifts in an operating environment as opposed to loosened underwriting standards. A poorly structured loan is far more than just a challenge for that one borrower in a portfolio. It requires more time from a lender's team, put stress on the ability to monitor other names in the portfolio and ultimately impacts a portfolio's earnings power. Speaker 200:07:08I want to be clear, we currently have 2 names on non accrual and we're working towards favorable outcomes for our shareholders there. That said, we're not going to adjust our underwriting standards to accelerate portfolio growth that minimizes the impact of these credits in the near term. Instead, we aim to preserve our ability to serve the broader portfolio and deliver value for our shareholders through disciplined underwriting. We've been investors and operators for a long time and we have a strong idea of what is ahead of us. We are confident in our ability to source, originate and underwrite deals that are up to our standards in the coming year. Speaker 200:07:50Further, we have a line of sight on our ability to preserve earnings power and ensure our shareholders can expect consistent distributions for the foreseeable future. Our selectivity is what will fund our future dividends in the years to come. And we're optimistic about the opportunities we're evaluating that we expect to manifest in the latter half of the year. We remain committed to delivering value to our shareholders, which is a direct result of the strength of our portfolio. With that, I'll turn it over to Greg. Speaker 300:08:30Thanks, David. I want to further expand on our view of the current operating environment and Runway's strategic positioning in the market. In our view, U. S. Economic resilience is by far the most important macro story of recent quarters. Speaker 300:08:45In large part, we have seen that resilience firsthand through our portfolio companies. U. S. Late stage venture equity represented 52% of total deal value and 31% of total deal count, marking the strongest quarterly figures we've seen to date. While overall venture activity remains suppressed, years of strong fundraising have resulted in well over $300,000,000,000 in dry powder waiting to be deployed. Speaker 300:09:11We believe Runway's value proposition amid the current market backdrop remains clear. Companies will continue to seek minimally dilutive capital to extend runway and supplement equity. This is bearing out in the opportunities we're seeing. As David mentioned, we have seen more pipeline activity in the Q1 than historical levels. Our business model remains compelling to borrowers seeking growth capital in this current market. Speaker 300:09:36We are focused on the fastest growing sectors of the economy we know best, which include life sciences, technology and select consumer service and product industries. While few deals of our target check size met our consistent high standards in the Q1, we are confident in our ability to selectively deploy capital at favorable terms when the market becomes more lender friendly in the second half of this year. We remain committed to upholding our credit first philosophy as an organization and we are proud of the team's diligence in evaluating these opportunities while actively managing our portfolio in parallel. Further, we are increasing the avenues we have to evaluate and see more deals. As discussed on our last call, we are pleased to announce our newly formed joint venture with CADMA Capital Partners, a credit financing platform for the venture ecosystem that was established in 2023 by Apollo. Speaker 300:10:30Runway CADMA 1 LLC is an equal partnership between Runway and CADMA that will focus on financing private and sponsored late and growth stage companies. We look forward to the incremental deal flow we expect to result from this partnership and have already been encouraged by the discussions that are taking place. While selectivity remains at the forefront, we are actively pursuing more opportunities to source attractive investments and evaluate attractive deals in the industries we know best. With that, I will now turn it over to Tom. Speaker 400:11:02Thank you, Greg, and good evening, everyone. During the Q1 of 2024, we saw heightening pipeline activity and executed on investments that demonstrate our disciplined lending strategy. We completed 2 investments in the first quarter, representing $25,000,000 in funded loans. Our weighted average portfolio risk rating increased to 2.44 in the Q1 from 2.39 in the Q4 of 2023. Our rating system is based on a scale of 1 to 5, where one represents the most favorable rating. Speaker 400:11:38The quarter over quarter change in our internal portfolio risk rating resulted from 3 investments, which each declined 1 category from their Q4 2023 ratings of category 2, 3 and 4 to ratings of category 3, 4 and 5 respectively. The category 5 investment is Mingle Healthcare, which continues to be on non accrual. In line with previous quarters, we calculated the loan to value for loans that were in our portfolio at the end of the 4th quarter and at the end of the current quarter. In comparing this consistent grouping of loans on a like to like basis, we found that our dollar weighted loan to value ratio improved slightly from 27.6% to 26% sequentially. Our total investment portfolio had a fair value of approximately $1,020,000,000 excluding treasury bills, a decrease of 1% from $1,030,000,000 in the Q4 of 2023 and a decrease of 10% from $1,130,000,000 for the comparable prior year period. Speaker 400:12:48Our portfolio continues to be concentrated in 1st lien senior secured loans. As of March 31, 2024, Runway had net assets of $529,500,000 decreasing from $547,100,000 at the end of the Q4 of 2023. NAV per share was 13 point dollars at the end of the Q1 compared to $13.50 at the end of the Q4 of 2023. Our Q1 2024 investor presentation includes a detailed NAV bridge for the quarter. Approximately $0.045 of the decline in NAV per share arose from our equity investments, including warrants, where the largest equity investment impact was the write down of our equity holdings in Coginity, which was received in conjunction with the sale of our former portfolio company, Aginity. Speaker 400:13:45Approximately $0.125 of the unrealized loss was attributable to changes in the value of certain debt investments, the most significant of which was the markdown of our debt investments in Snagajob amounting to approximately $2,900,000 or $0.07 per share. As a reminder, our loan portfolio is comprised of 100% floating rate assets. All loans are currently earning interest atoraboveagreeduponinterestratefloors, which generally reflect the base rate plus the credit spread set at the time of closing or signing the term sheet. In the Q1, we received $34,500,000 in principal repayments, a decrease from $63,400,000 in the Q4 of 2023. This is a result of our credit first approach to investing that prioritizes the highest quality sponsored and non sponsored companies, which are often ideal candidates for refinancing or acquisition in most markets. Speaker 400:14:46This level of repayments indicates that our portfolio is performing as we expected and fits within our stated investment criteria. On April 26, 2024, our loan to TurningTech Intermediate, also known as Echo360, was repaid in full. As discussed during our Q4 earnings call earlier this year, we expect additional prepayment activity throughout the year with activity building significantly in the second half of twenty twenty four. We believe prepayment activity provides runway with liquidity to deploy in a manner that is fully accretive. Increased prepayments and an uptick in M and A activity enable us to reinvest in attractive opportunities in the market. Speaker 400:15:33We generated total investment income of $40,000,000 and net investment income of $18,700,000 in the Q1 of 2024 compared to $39,200,000 18 point $3,000,000 in the Q4 of 2023. Our debt portfolio generated a dollar weighted average annualized yield of 17.4% for the Q4 of 2024 as compared to 16.9% for the Q4 of 2023 15.2% for the comparable period last year. Moving to our expenses. For the Q1, total operating expenses were 21 point $3,000,000 up 2 percent from $20,900,000 for the Q4 of 2023. Runway recorded a net unrealized loss on investments of $6,600,000 in the Q1 compared to a net unrealized loss of $5,900,000 in the Q4 of 2023. Speaker 400:16:32We had no realized loss in the Q1 compared to a net realized loss of $17,200,000 in the prior quarter. We remain confident that our highly selective investment process and diligent monitoring of portfolio companies support our track record of maintaining low levels of non accruals coupled with generally healthy credit performance. As of March 31, 2024, we had 2 loans on non accrual status. Our loan to Mingle Healthcare represents outstanding of $4,300,000 and a fair market value of $3,200,000 and our loans to Snagajob represent outstanding principal of $42,300,000 and a fair market value of $35,500,000 These loans represent 3.8% of the total investment portfolio at fair value. In the Q1 of 2024, our leverage ratio and asset coverage were 0.91 and 2.09 times respectively compared to 0.95 and 2.05 times at the end of the 4th quarter. Speaker 400:17:39Turning to our liquidity. At March 31, 2024, our total available liquidity was $319,900,000 including unrestricted cash and cash equivalents. We had borrowing capacity of $313,000,000 reflecting an increase from $281,000,000 $278,000,000 respectively on December 31, 2023. At quarter end, we have unfunded loan commitments to portfolio companies of $235,800,000 the majority of which were subject to specific performance milestones. $42,000,000 of these commitments are currently eligible to be funded. Speaker 400:18:21During the quarter, we experienced 2 prepayments totaling $34,500,000 and scheduled amortization of $400,000 The prepayments included a partial principal repayment of our senior secured term loan to fiscal note were $27,400,000 and a partial principal repayment of our senior secured term loan to Marley Spoon for $7,100,000 As mentioned on our previous earnings call, in 2023, our Board of Directors approved a stock repurchase program, giving us the ability to acquire up to $25,000,000 of Runway's common stock. In the Q1, the company repurchased 887,000 shares under the program, which expires on November 2, 2024. Finally, on April 30, 2024, our Board declared a regular distribution for the Q1 of $0.40 per share, as well as a supplemental dividend of $0.07 per share payable with the regular dividend. We're confident that through our prepayment fees and spillover income, we will have no difficulty covering our dividend in the foreseeable future. With that, operator, please open the line for questions. Operator00:19:35Thank you. At this time, we will conduct the question and answer session. Our first question comes from Melissa Weddle from JPMorgan. Melissa, your line is open. Speaker 500:20:23Good afternoon. Thanks for taking my questions today. First, David, it's great to hear you again. Welcome back. I wasn't sure if I missed this. Speaker 500:20:34I know that you talked about seeing an increasing pipeline during the Q1. I think part of that was related to the CADMA JV. Did you give a specific amount of activity that you've seen in Q2 to date? Speaker 200:20:54Hi, Melissa. Thanks very much. And it is great to be back. I think the words that we knew were heightened pipeline activity. And I know that sounds pretty nebulous in a way it is because to be a little more concrete, our actual number of deals is pretty flat to what it was last year. Speaker 200:21:25The volume of opportunities is pretty flat, but we think that it's a higher quality. Over the last 12 months, there's been such a high level of disarray in the venture community and so many companies struggling to figure out how they're going to continue to operate that we've seen a lot of opportunities that really just don't meet our standards. So we've been pretty harsh in cutting things off early. We are pretty far along on several deals that I think will close quite soon. And the visibility that we have on other stuff just looks really encouraging. Speaker 200:22:22So I can say with a really high level of confidence that you're going to see us starting to do more deals. I don't know how far we'll get caught up relative to the goal for the entire year, but it's going to accelerate quite a bit. Speaker 500:22:45Okay. I appreciate that additional context. I was hoping you could also walk us through Snagajob and we understand that when something goes on, not a pool, there can be a lot of avenues and different pathways to resolution. Could you help us understand sort of the nature of this one and share any details, any timeline, any thoughts that you're able to? Appreciate it. Speaker 200:23:15Yes, of course. I'll turn it over to Greg for that. Speaker 300:23:18Yes. Hi Melissa. So Snagajob is a company that is undergoing a number of headwinds that you're seeing with a number of their peers both public and private. It's a fluid situation where we're very actively involved with the management team, with the equity sponsors. And additionally, we have engaged we have a bench of operating partners, where we have called one of them in to help us deal with the situation. Speaker 300:23:49So it is something that we are intimately involved with on a weekly if not daily basis and are working to have the best outcome in the right timeframe for all constituents, but definitely our investors 1st and foremost. Speaker 500:24:07Understood. And is there because of the fluid nature of the situation, I take it to mean that that's one where it's harder to have a sense on timeline and ultimate pathway? Speaker 300:24:23I think that's definitely fair. We're continuing to evaluate in concert with the management and sponsors all different avenues available to us, which are changing. In order to accurately reflect that uncertainty, we have put it on non accrual, but it is one we do believe that there are a number of paths and different outcomes ahead of us that can still have a favorable outcome. Speaker 500:24:53Okay. Thank you. Operator00:24:56Thank you, Melissa. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Casey Alexander from Compass Point Research and Trading. Casey, your line is open. Speaker 400:25:22Yes. Hi. Good afternoon and thanks for taking my questions. Runway and David, welcome back. It is nice to have you back. Speaker 400:25:32My question is, can you kind of explain the rationale for even having a JV when the company has been public for about 2.5 years now and only in 1 quarter has the leverage ratio exceeded one time and that was at 1.02 times. I mean the company has been consistently under leverage. So what's the rationale for having a JV? Speaker 200:26:01Yes. Thanks, Casey. And it's good to hear your voice as well. I'll turn it over to Tom for that one. Speaker 400:26:10Thanks, David. Thanks, Casey, for the question. So as you look at our remaining capacity, it's about to get up to that 1.2x, we're about $175,000,000 to $200,000,000 which is just a handful of deals, it's 5 to 6 deals. Our target hold for the BDC is in that $35,000,000 to $40,000,000 range. Yet as we think about where we're positioning and want to position the portfolio and our deal target, our target market, it's that later stage, which tends to be a slightly larger deal, which would be in that $50,000,000 to $75,000,000 range. Speaker 400:26:55So it allows us to continue to participate in that risk sector that we want, while at the same time, not overextending our desired hold and maintaining diversification in the portfolio. Thank you. That's my only question. Operator00:27:17Thank you. Our next question comes from Bryce Roe from B. Riley. Your line is open. Speaker 600:27:31Thanks a bunch. David, good to have you back. Good to hear your voice. Thank you. Yes, you're welcome. Speaker 600:27:41Let's see, wanted to maybe just try to help us calibrate the prepayment or the visibility of the kind of the prepayment activity that you see coming here in the balance of the year? And then maybe a related question would be trying to size up the pipeline relative to that prepayment activity and whether you think we'll see kind of net growth for the balance of the year? Speaker 200:28:13Yes, Bryce. Thanks. Great to hear your voice. And I'll turn it over to Tom after just making a few comments. And the first is the common response every time is that it's almost impossible to forecast prepayments. Speaker 200:28:30But we know when they come that we just have to run that much faster on the origination side. And that for companies that we want to keep in the portfolio, we'll do whatever we can. Sometimes that's impossible. When a portfolio company goes public and has 100 of 1,000,000 of dollars of cash on the balance sheet or we've had situations where JPMorgan was the lead underwriter and offered them a line of credit at 500 basis points below our cost. So sometimes you just can't defend against it. Speaker 200:29:10But there are other times where we welcome the repayment so that we can redeploy the capital in today's more attractive environment. So I guess my bottom line answer to your question is we don't exactly know what prepayments will be, but whatever they are, we're going to ensure to the best of our ability that there are net positive new deployments, significant ones for the year. Speaker 400:29:46Just to add a little to that, we know looking forward that we've got some component of scheduled amortization. We have a couple of transactions that mature and then we know that we've got a handful of companies that are in some sort of process. Now as you pace those out and think about when that happens, those will likely come mid to end of Q3 and then be more back end weighted in Q4. At the same time, that's where we see the origination momentum building. I think second quarter will be closer to net originations will be flat, maybe slightly up, but we'll start seeing that flywheel process building into quarters 34 and we'll see a greater net origination so that we can replace the earnings power in the long term from those prepayments. Speaker 400:30:48In the short term, we would anticipate a fair amount of accelerated income as a result of prepayment fees and some OID in quarters 3 and 4. Speaker 600:31:01Okay. Okay. That's helpful. Maybe a couple more for me. Tom, you talked about being comfortable with dividend coverage. Speaker 600:31:12And I assume that to mean kind of the all inclusive dividend with the base and the spillover I'm sorry, the supplemental. Can you kind of help quantify where spillover is at this point? And then my second question would probably also be for you, Tom, just in terms of buyback activity, nice to see it in the quarter. It looks like you continued that subsequent to quarter end. I was curious kind of what the average price was for the 2nd quarter purchases and just where the appetite is from a price in that perspective there? Speaker 600:31:48Thanks. Speaker 400:31:50Well, why don't we answer the first part of that? Well, I'll talk to speak to the dividend first. Certainly, we would like to continue the supplemental dividend. I think as we look at what we know today with the current spillover pool and what we anticipate going forward in prepayments, we ought to be able to maintain that through the year. Obviously, our biggest priority is maintaining the base dividend. Speaker 400:32:22And so we're always going to want to keep adequate spillover should we see a quarter where we get a lot of loan maturities that are close or prepayments that are close to maturity. So you don't have a lot of accelerated OID or prepayment income. So we want to keep certainly spillover Kitty in good shape there. With respect to the buyback, we do have a rubric that we established at the beginning of every quarter. We set that once the window is open and we really look at it as a percent of NAV and the deeper the discount to NAV, the wider open the faucet is. Speaker 400:33:14I think as we start, if we're trading at 100% of NAV, obviously that's an admirable accomplishment and it doesn't make any sense to use the repurchase program. But is the discount, certainly if it's below 90 as we were for a period of time that we're really looking to be aggressive. So we'll have to see where the market takes us and if it's a deep discount to NAV and we can continue to be accretive, we'll use the remaining $10,000,000 $12,000,000 we have in the repurchase program. Speaker 700:33:58Awesome. Speaker 600:33:58That's great color. Thank you. Speaker 400:34:00You're welcome. Operator00:34:04Thank you. Our next question comes from Vilas Abraham from UBS. Your line is open. Speaker 800:34:16Hey, everybody. Welcome back, David, and thanks for the question. Just on Snagajob, appreciate the color there. How much of an impact did that non accrual have on Q1 interest income? Speaker 400:34:29It went on non accrual at the end of the quarter. And so the impact is really going forward. Speaker 800:34:40Okay, got it. And then just maybe you could comment on leverage. You guys have a target range that is pretty wide, 0.8, I think to 1.25. Just how are you thinking about that? Is that really as wide as it is just to capture some of the lumpiness? Speaker 800:35:02And is there maybe more of a kind of a truer ideal level you would like to be at over the next couple of years? And can you talk about that at all? Speaker 400:35:13Sure. I can take that. We established that range really at the IPO window and post IPO we were at 0.26. So we wanted to give a fairly wide range and we want to accommodate a variety of economic circumstances. I think ideally, we want to operate between $1,000,000 $1,200,000,000 and in robust times when deal flow is good and credit conditions are strong, we'll take it up to the upper end of that range. Speaker 400:35:45When you've got more uncertainty, we really want to be at the lower end of that range to leave dry powder to be opportunistic and to have the ability to manage any non accruals without getting into any kind of valuation issues and being squeezed from a leverage standpoint. But Speaker 600:36:09I think Speaker 400:36:11if we operate between 1% and 1.2%, I think we're really happy with that range. Speaker 800:36:19Okay. I appreciate that. And then just maybe one more On the opportunities that you have a line of sight into for later in the year, in terms of verticals between tech, life sciences, you have some consumer services and products as well. Is it weighted towards one of those areas more than the others? Speaker 200:36:43No, it's pretty well spread out. I would say the one category that we're leaning into a little less than the others is the consumer stuff. But we continue to find really interesting consumer products and services that are not really affected as much by a recession and those would be the ones that we would favor and I would mention Madison Reed is a great example there. But on tech and life sciences and we use life sciences to refer to anything healthcare related, We continue to see enormous amount of deal flow. The next deal that we'll close is probably a life sciences deal. Speaker 200:37:38So in between tech and life sciences, it continues to be spread in about the right proportion. We're more weighted towards tech, which we're happy with. We'd like the competitive nature of that market better than the life sciences side, where the returns in tech tend to be a little higher. The competition is a little lower. And I don't know if this is the right word, but it feels like it's a little more disciplined where we're able to get covenants and have more appropriate and lower loan to values. Speaker 800:38:31All right. Appreciate it. Speaker 200:38:33You bet. Thanks, Phyllis. Operator00:38:37Thank you. Our next question comes from Mickey Schleien from Ladenburg. Your line is now open. Speaker 700:39:02Hello, everyone, and David, welcome back. Thank you. Yes, there have been a lot of comments and discussions about the pipeline and activity. I think it would just be helpful if we Speaker 400:39:16if you could step back for Speaker 700:39:17a moment. And just when we're thinking about the backdrop with economic uncertainty, also uncertainty about interest rates is still relatively muted M and A environment, but a lot of private debt capital available. What was your general thesis on the market and its activity levels, notwithstanding the pipeline, which can be very idiosyncratic? Speaker 200:39:44Yes, it can. And that's an excellent question and one that we grapple with every day. And we tend to on the side of conservatism because the loans that we're making today will be paying the dividend next year. So it's really, really important that these be good loans. And as I said earlier, the venture ecosystem is really bumpy right now and we've never seen so many venture backed companies. Speaker 200:40:22According to PitchBook, there's something like 50,000 venture backed companies and we know that most of them raised money if they could during the peak of the market and then move to a path to profitability mode. But so many of them need additional capital and so many of their VCs are being very stingy with that. And one thing that a lot of people don't pay enough attention to is that the folks that are really driving the pace of this market are the limited partners or institutional investors. The university endowments, the foundations, the state pension funds, all that kind of stuff. The folks that give the money to the VCs are telling their venture partners to slow down because they have issues at the pension fund level. Speaker 200:41:30So until that changes, I don't see VCs getting really, really more liberal with their investments and taking any of the tension off of the current market. They will continue to boatload on their best investments, but on the ones that are more marginal, they're pretty harsh and just basically set them free and say, go out in the world and survive if you can. And if you don't, so be it. We've got 40 other portfolio companies that will hopefully make up for it. It. Speaker 200:42:17So it's just really a choppy environment and we've been very conservative. We're really focused on doing the best we can for our investors in terms of earnings, cash flow and ultimately dividends. And of course that requires avoiding losses. And I know we've had a couple of things that have gone on to non accrual, which is very unusual for us and we're in the process of working through those. And I also know that this discussion and the path forward is really about credibility. Speaker 200:43:00And instead of saying words that mean nothing, we're going to deliver and over the course of this year, hopefully avoid additional losses and fix the problems that we have and then move back into a position of portfolio growth. We're certainly not in this for growth at any cost. We think that's the wrong way to go about it and we'd rather build a solid foundation. And so we've been just a little slower than we might normally be and hopefully that will pay off in the long run. Speaker 700:43:45Thanks for that, David. That's really helpful discussion. And just one follow-up sort of a housekeeping question maybe for Tom. The fund has consistently generated a somewhat small dividend, but I don't see it this quarter. Was that due to the exit of a company or what's the outlook for dividend income? Speaker 400:44:11So we declared our dividend last week at the $0.40 base and the $0.07 supplemental. Certainly, we don't anticipate any changes to the base and our objective is to maintain the supplemental dividend, while not compromising the spillover cushion that we have. Speaker 700:44:36Tom, I was referring to dividend income on the income statement. Speaker 400:44:41Okay. So that the dividend income on the income statement came from CareCloud. And in November, that's a public company. We received that equity in the sale of one of our businesses. It was a company called CareCloud and the public company ultimately adopted its name. Speaker 400:44:59They suspended that dividend in November, which certainly created a lot of volatility in the valuation on that level 1 asset. And so the company has indicated that they expect that dividend to resume later this year. So when CareCloud resumes their dividend, we would expect to see the dividend income come in again. Speaker 700:45:21I understand. That's helpful. That's it for me this afternoon. Thank you for your time as always. Speaker 200:45:28Thanks, Vicki. Operator00:45:30Thank you. Our next question comes from Eric Zwick from Hovde Group. Speaker 500:45:41Your line is open. Speaker 900:45:44Good afternoon, everyone. And I just want to echo all the previous comments of David. It's truly great to have you back and hear your voice again. So first question for me, curious, David, both you and Greg mentioned some optimism for a more friendly lender friendly market in the second half of twenty twenty four. And I'm curious if you could maybe provide a little more detail or color around any kind of indicators or kind of activity you're seeing now today because that gives you that optimism? Speaker 200:46:17Well, so I'll make a few comments and then turn it over to Greg. But especially on the tech side, we're seeing terms that make a little more sense. And I think you know that we're really big believers in covenants and in having appropriately structured loans and that is starting to come back and especially in the really late stage larger deals, we feel that that's where then we've always felt that's where the best risk adjusted returns are. And those companies are now coming to grips with the interest rate environment. And for a long time, there was, I think, a little bit of sticker shock about the rate of increase in rates, which it's very fair. Speaker 200:47:15But now companies are understanding that this is an environment that we're going to be in and that they can afford, Maybe there needs to be some adjustments to their budget, but they can afford it. So that's the main basis for those comments. I will say the life sciences side remains a little bit more competitive and a little bit looser. I don't know, Greg, you want to add some additional color? Speaker 300:47:46Yes, I would definitely echo the sentiments in terms of just a level setting of structure and what the different companies and sponsors are willing to accept. And I'd add on to that that their own expectations in terms of not only their value of the businesses, but also just ability to support amounts of debt has come in quite a bit too. So opportunities that maybe 18, 24 months ago might have been looking for a certain amount of capital. We're seeing those same size companies come back to us today looking for maybe 60% to 70% of that kind of amount, which is much more attractive to us from a loan to value standpoint, from other types of attachment points. And we're just seeing a meeting of the minds in terms of what we believe is a reasonable structure as well as what the companies and the sponsors are actually looking for. Speaker 900:48:45Thank you. That's helpful. I appreciate the commentary there. And then just last one for me. I noticed in this quarter's slide deck, you did not include the interest rate sensitivity slide. Speaker 900:48:57So maybe two quick questions there. 1, Speaker 700:49:00I'm Speaker 900:49:00guessing that it hasn't changed a whole lot since last quarter, but I wonder if you could confirm that. And 2, is this absent there just maybe indicative of your belief that we're going to be at these level of interest rates kind of this higher for longer period or just curious around that point? Speaker 400:49:18Yes. We eliminated that slide because it was calculated based on rates going up to 200 basis points from the current level. And we thought the utility of that was limited because I don't think we see any increases in rates and our loans have floors that are at a variety of levels. Typically, it's what the SOFR rate or the prime rate was at the time the loan closed plus the spread. So there's no real change in it. Speaker 400:49:51We think it's going to be pretty stable as we settle into this higher for longer, probably for the better part of this year. Speaker 900:50:01Excellent. Thanks for confirming. That's all for me today. Speaker 400:50:04Thanks, Eric. Operator00:50:07Thank you. This concludes our question and answer session. I would now like to turn it back to David Sprang for closing remarks. Speaker 200:50:16Thank you, operator. We believe our late and gross stage portfolio is well positioned for any economic environment. We're in a strong position to deploy capital at favorable terms and we will continue to maintain our underwriting rigor while evaluating future opportunities. Thank you all for joining us today. We look forward to updating you on our Q2 2024 financial results in August. Speaker 200:50:45Thank you. Operator00:50:49Thank you for your participation in today's conference. This does conclude the program. You may now disconnect.Read morePowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallRunway Growth Finance Q1 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2x Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Runway Growth Finance Earnings HeadlinesRunway Growth Finance: We Finally See Some Positive Momentum (Rating Upgrade)April 23 at 9:10 AM | seekingalpha.comRunway Growth Finance Corp. (NASDAQ:RWAY) Receives $11.80 Average PT from AnalystsApril 22, 2025 | americanbankingnews.comFrom Social Security to Social Prosperity?In less than a decade, Social Security could be out of money. But a surprising plan from Trump’s inner circle may not just save the system — it could unlock a major opportunity for savvy investors. Financial insider Jim Rickards calls it “Social Prosperity,” and says those who act now could see the biggest gains.April 26, 2025 | Paradigm Press (Ad)Runway Growth Finance Corp. (NASDAQ:RWAY) Short Interest UpdateApril 20, 2025 | americanbankingnews.comUBS Group Lowers Runway Growth Finance (NASDAQ:RWAY) Price Target to $11.00April 20, 2025 | americanbankingnews.comRunway Growth Finance price target lowered to $11 from $13 at UBSApril 18, 2025 | markets.businessinsider.comSee More Runway Growth Finance Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Runway Growth Finance? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Runway Growth Finance and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Runway Growth FinanceRunway Growth Finance (NASDAQ:RWAY) is a business development company specializing investments in senior-secured loans to late stage and growth companies. It prefers to make investments in companies engaged in the technology, life sciences, healthcare and information services, business services and select consumer services and products sectors. It prefers to investments in companies engaged in electronic equipment and instruments, systems software, hardware, storage and peripherals and specialized consumer services, application software, healthcare technology, internet software and services, data processing and outsourced services, internet retail, human resources and employment services, biotechnology, healthcare equipment and education services. It invests in senior secured loans between $10 million and $75 million.View Runway Growth Finance 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 Earnings By Country U.S. Earnings Reports Canadian Earnings Reports U.K. Earnings Reports Latest Articles Markets Think Robinhood Earnings Could Send the Stock UpIs the Floor in for Lam Research After Bullish Earnings?Market Anticipation Builds: Joby Stock Climbs Ahead of EarningsIs Intuitive Surgical a Buy After Volatile Reaction to Earnings?Seismic Shift at Intel: Massive Layoffs Precede Crucial EarningsRocket Lab Lands New Contract, Builds Momentum Ahead of EarningsAmazon's Earnings Could Fuel a Rapid Breakout Upcoming Earnings Cadence Design Systems (4/28/2025)Welltower (4/28/2025)Waste Management (4/28/2025)AstraZeneca (4/29/2025)Mondelez International (4/29/2025)PayPal (4/29/2025)Starbucks (4/29/2025)DoorDash (4/29/2025)Honeywell International (4/29/2025)Regeneron Pharmaceuticals (4/29/2025) Get 30 Days of MarketBeat All Access for Free Sign up for MarketBeat All Access to gain access to MarketBeat's full suite of research tools. Start Your 30-Day Trial MarketBeat All Access Features Best-in-Class Portfolio Monitoring Get personalized stock ideas. Compare portfolio to indices. Check stock news, ratings, SEC filings, and more. Stock Ideas and Recommendations See daily stock ideas from top analysts. Receive short-term trading ideas from MarketBeat. Identify trending stocks on social media. Advanced Stock Screeners and Research Tools Use our seven stock screeners to find suitable stocks. Stay informed with MarketBeat's real-time news. Export data to Excel for personal analysis. Sign in to your free account to enjoy these benefits In-depth profiles and analysis for 20,000 public companies. Real-time analyst ratings, insider transactions, earnings data, and more. Our daily ratings and market update email newsletter. Sign in to your free account to enjoy all that MarketBeat has to offer. Sign In Create Account Your Email Address: Email Address Required Your Password: Password Required Log In or Sign in with Facebook Sign in with Google Forgot your password? Your Email Address: Please enter your email address. Please enter a valid email address Choose a Password: Please enter your password. Your password must be at least 8 characters long and contain at least 1 number, 1 letter, and 1 special character. Create My Account (Free) or Sign in with Facebook Sign in with Google By creating a free account, you agree to our terms of service. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
There are 10 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by, and welcome to the Runway Growth Finance First Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. Please be advised that today's conference is being I would now like to hand the conference over to Quinlan Abel, Assistant Vice President, Investor Relations. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:23Thank you, operator. Good evening, everyone, and welcome to the Runway Growth Finance conference call for the 1st quarter ended March 31, 2024. Joining us on the call today from Runway Growth Finance are David Sprang, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer Greg Greifeld, Managing Director, Deputy Chief Investment Officer and Head of Credit of Runway Growth Capital and Tom Ratterman, Chief Financial Officer and Chief Operating Officer. Runway Growth Finance's Q1 2024 results were released just after today's market close and can be accessed from Runway Growth Finance's Investor Relations website at investors. Runwaygrowth.com. Speaker 100:01:05We have arranged for a replay of the call at the Runway Growth Finance webpage. 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. These 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 caused by uncertainties surrounding rising interest rates, changing economic conditions and other factors we 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. Speaker 100:01:54And 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 Runway Growth Finance assumes no obligation to update the forward looking statements or subsequent events. To obtain copies of SEC related filings, please visit our website. Before we begin, on behalf of the company, we are thrilled to welcome back David Spring as he assumes full responsibility as Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer of Runway Growth Finance. Speaker 100:02:31And with that, I will turn the call over to David. Speaker 200:02:35Thank you, Quinlan, and thanks everyone for joining us this evening to discuss our Q1 results. I want to thank all of those who reached out for their support during my recovery process. Further, I'd like to thank Greg, Tom and the entire Runway team for their collaboration in navigating the dynamic macro environment over the last several months. To start, I'll provide some Q1 portfolio highlights, then an overview of our financial results, and finally discuss the current market trends that we're observing. During the Q1, Runway saw heightened pipeline activity and completed 2 investments in new and existing portfolio companies representing $25,000,000 in funded loans. Speaker 200:03:21Runway delivered total investment income of $40,000,000 and net investment income of $18,700,000 in the quarter. These figures both represent an increase of approximately 2% from the prior year period. Our weighted average portfolio risk rating increased slightly in Q1, which Tom will provide more details on shortly. We're very focused on credit quality and believe in working closely with all of our portfolio companies throughout the entire lifetime of our loans. This belief drives our monitoring philosophy and is the foundation for preserving credit quality. Speaker 200:04:03Consistent communication with our borrowers enables us to accurately mark investments and mitigate potential risk while maintaining consistent yield. Turning now to the market. In our view, companies are increasingly exploring the use of debt as a minimally dilutive alternative debt refinancing, which bodes well for us as a preferred partner known for sophisticated financing solutions that meet borrowers' diverse needs. As the economy proves resilient with expectations for a soft landing, we believe our low leverage ratio and ample dry powder position us well to take advantage of opportunities that meet our high credit bar. Our role as a lender is to support the best companies with high conviction to reach their full growth potential. Speaker 200:04:57We are not a lender of last resort to provide funding during a crisis or a troubled situation. In fact, we are often the last capital brought in before a company executes a strategic exit like an M and A transaction or IPO. And that point remains critical for us. As an investor, I've spent nearly 3 decades sourcing, evaluating and deal making in the venture ecosystem. Prior to founding Runway nearly 9 years ago, I was a venture capitalist for over 20 years. Speaker 200:05:31My experience across economic cycles and rate environments underscores the importance of underwriting rigor. In the current market, we are seeing more venture backed companies seeking capital than ever before. Further, these companies have a difficult fundraising backdrop as they mull over the possibility of down rounds and seek non dilutive capital. We know this may sound counterintuitive given the quantum of VC dry powder, but it's important to remember that many of these companies last raised money record valuations and now want to preserve a functioning cap table for their investors and employees. That is precisely why our focus on selectivity and underwriting standards remain so high. Speaker 200:06:21We know that we're not going to bat $1,000 on every loan. But when we have a credit that is pressured, our underwriting analysis strives to ensure that future challenges are limited to unforeseen external factors. These may include changes in market conditions or shifts in an operating environment as opposed to loosened underwriting standards. A poorly structured loan is far more than just a challenge for that one borrower in a portfolio. It requires more time from a lender's team, put stress on the ability to monitor other names in the portfolio and ultimately impacts a portfolio's earnings power. Speaker 200:07:08I want to be clear, we currently have 2 names on non accrual and we're working towards favorable outcomes for our shareholders there. That said, we're not going to adjust our underwriting standards to accelerate portfolio growth that minimizes the impact of these credits in the near term. Instead, we aim to preserve our ability to serve the broader portfolio and deliver value for our shareholders through disciplined underwriting. We've been investors and operators for a long time and we have a strong idea of what is ahead of us. We are confident in our ability to source, originate and underwrite deals that are up to our standards in the coming year. Speaker 200:07:50Further, we have a line of sight on our ability to preserve earnings power and ensure our shareholders can expect consistent distributions for the foreseeable future. Our selectivity is what will fund our future dividends in the years to come. And we're optimistic about the opportunities we're evaluating that we expect to manifest in the latter half of the year. We remain committed to delivering value to our shareholders, which is a direct result of the strength of our portfolio. With that, I'll turn it over to Greg. Speaker 300:08:30Thanks, David. I want to further expand on our view of the current operating environment and Runway's strategic positioning in the market. In our view, U. S. Economic resilience is by far the most important macro story of recent quarters. Speaker 300:08:45In large part, we have seen that resilience firsthand through our portfolio companies. U. S. Late stage venture equity represented 52% of total deal value and 31% of total deal count, marking the strongest quarterly figures we've seen to date. While overall venture activity remains suppressed, years of strong fundraising have resulted in well over $300,000,000,000 in dry powder waiting to be deployed. Speaker 300:09:11We believe Runway's value proposition amid the current market backdrop remains clear. Companies will continue to seek minimally dilutive capital to extend runway and supplement equity. This is bearing out in the opportunities we're seeing. As David mentioned, we have seen more pipeline activity in the Q1 than historical levels. Our business model remains compelling to borrowers seeking growth capital in this current market. Speaker 300:09:36We are focused on the fastest growing sectors of the economy we know best, which include life sciences, technology and select consumer service and product industries. While few deals of our target check size met our consistent high standards in the Q1, we are confident in our ability to selectively deploy capital at favorable terms when the market becomes more lender friendly in the second half of this year. We remain committed to upholding our credit first philosophy as an organization and we are proud of the team's diligence in evaluating these opportunities while actively managing our portfolio in parallel. Further, we are increasing the avenues we have to evaluate and see more deals. As discussed on our last call, we are pleased to announce our newly formed joint venture with CADMA Capital Partners, a credit financing platform for the venture ecosystem that was established in 2023 by Apollo. Speaker 300:10:30Runway CADMA 1 LLC is an equal partnership between Runway and CADMA that will focus on financing private and sponsored late and growth stage companies. We look forward to the incremental deal flow we expect to result from this partnership and have already been encouraged by the discussions that are taking place. While selectivity remains at the forefront, we are actively pursuing more opportunities to source attractive investments and evaluate attractive deals in the industries we know best. With that, I will now turn it over to Tom. Speaker 400:11:02Thank you, Greg, and good evening, everyone. During the Q1 of 2024, we saw heightening pipeline activity and executed on investments that demonstrate our disciplined lending strategy. We completed 2 investments in the first quarter, representing $25,000,000 in funded loans. Our weighted average portfolio risk rating increased to 2.44 in the Q1 from 2.39 in the Q4 of 2023. Our rating system is based on a scale of 1 to 5, where one represents the most favorable rating. Speaker 400:11:38The quarter over quarter change in our internal portfolio risk rating resulted from 3 investments, which each declined 1 category from their Q4 2023 ratings of category 2, 3 and 4 to ratings of category 3, 4 and 5 respectively. The category 5 investment is Mingle Healthcare, which continues to be on non accrual. In line with previous quarters, we calculated the loan to value for loans that were in our portfolio at the end of the 4th quarter and at the end of the current quarter. In comparing this consistent grouping of loans on a like to like basis, we found that our dollar weighted loan to value ratio improved slightly from 27.6% to 26% sequentially. Our total investment portfolio had a fair value of approximately $1,020,000,000 excluding treasury bills, a decrease of 1% from $1,030,000,000 in the Q4 of 2023 and a decrease of 10% from $1,130,000,000 for the comparable prior year period. Speaker 400:12:48Our portfolio continues to be concentrated in 1st lien senior secured loans. As of March 31, 2024, Runway had net assets of $529,500,000 decreasing from $547,100,000 at the end of the Q4 of 2023. NAV per share was 13 point dollars at the end of the Q1 compared to $13.50 at the end of the Q4 of 2023. Our Q1 2024 investor presentation includes a detailed NAV bridge for the quarter. Approximately $0.045 of the decline in NAV per share arose from our equity investments, including warrants, where the largest equity investment impact was the write down of our equity holdings in Coginity, which was received in conjunction with the sale of our former portfolio company, Aginity. Speaker 400:13:45Approximately $0.125 of the unrealized loss was attributable to changes in the value of certain debt investments, the most significant of which was the markdown of our debt investments in Snagajob amounting to approximately $2,900,000 or $0.07 per share. As a reminder, our loan portfolio is comprised of 100% floating rate assets. All loans are currently earning interest atoraboveagreeduponinterestratefloors, which generally reflect the base rate plus the credit spread set at the time of closing or signing the term sheet. In the Q1, we received $34,500,000 in principal repayments, a decrease from $63,400,000 in the Q4 of 2023. This is a result of our credit first approach to investing that prioritizes the highest quality sponsored and non sponsored companies, which are often ideal candidates for refinancing or acquisition in most markets. Speaker 400:14:46This level of repayments indicates that our portfolio is performing as we expected and fits within our stated investment criteria. On April 26, 2024, our loan to TurningTech Intermediate, also known as Echo360, was repaid in full. As discussed during our Q4 earnings call earlier this year, we expect additional prepayment activity throughout the year with activity building significantly in the second half of twenty twenty four. We believe prepayment activity provides runway with liquidity to deploy in a manner that is fully accretive. Increased prepayments and an uptick in M and A activity enable us to reinvest in attractive opportunities in the market. Speaker 400:15:33We generated total investment income of $40,000,000 and net investment income of $18,700,000 in the Q1 of 2024 compared to $39,200,000 18 point $3,000,000 in the Q4 of 2023. Our debt portfolio generated a dollar weighted average annualized yield of 17.4% for the Q4 of 2024 as compared to 16.9% for the Q4 of 2023 15.2% for the comparable period last year. Moving to our expenses. For the Q1, total operating expenses were 21 point $3,000,000 up 2 percent from $20,900,000 for the Q4 of 2023. Runway recorded a net unrealized loss on investments of $6,600,000 in the Q1 compared to a net unrealized loss of $5,900,000 in the Q4 of 2023. Speaker 400:16:32We had no realized loss in the Q1 compared to a net realized loss of $17,200,000 in the prior quarter. We remain confident that our highly selective investment process and diligent monitoring of portfolio companies support our track record of maintaining low levels of non accruals coupled with generally healthy credit performance. As of March 31, 2024, we had 2 loans on non accrual status. Our loan to Mingle Healthcare represents outstanding of $4,300,000 and a fair market value of $3,200,000 and our loans to Snagajob represent outstanding principal of $42,300,000 and a fair market value of $35,500,000 These loans represent 3.8% of the total investment portfolio at fair value. In the Q1 of 2024, our leverage ratio and asset coverage were 0.91 and 2.09 times respectively compared to 0.95 and 2.05 times at the end of the 4th quarter. Speaker 400:17:39Turning to our liquidity. At March 31, 2024, our total available liquidity was $319,900,000 including unrestricted cash and cash equivalents. We had borrowing capacity of $313,000,000 reflecting an increase from $281,000,000 $278,000,000 respectively on December 31, 2023. At quarter end, we have unfunded loan commitments to portfolio companies of $235,800,000 the majority of which were subject to specific performance milestones. $42,000,000 of these commitments are currently eligible to be funded. Speaker 400:18:21During the quarter, we experienced 2 prepayments totaling $34,500,000 and scheduled amortization of $400,000 The prepayments included a partial principal repayment of our senior secured term loan to fiscal note were $27,400,000 and a partial principal repayment of our senior secured term loan to Marley Spoon for $7,100,000 As mentioned on our previous earnings call, in 2023, our Board of Directors approved a stock repurchase program, giving us the ability to acquire up to $25,000,000 of Runway's common stock. In the Q1, the company repurchased 887,000 shares under the program, which expires on November 2, 2024. Finally, on April 30, 2024, our Board declared a regular distribution for the Q1 of $0.40 per share, as well as a supplemental dividend of $0.07 per share payable with the regular dividend. We're confident that through our prepayment fees and spillover income, we will have no difficulty covering our dividend in the foreseeable future. With that, operator, please open the line for questions. Operator00:19:35Thank you. At this time, we will conduct the question and answer session. Our first question comes from Melissa Weddle from JPMorgan. Melissa, your line is open. Speaker 500:20:23Good afternoon. Thanks for taking my questions today. First, David, it's great to hear you again. Welcome back. I wasn't sure if I missed this. Speaker 500:20:34I know that you talked about seeing an increasing pipeline during the Q1. I think part of that was related to the CADMA JV. Did you give a specific amount of activity that you've seen in Q2 to date? Speaker 200:20:54Hi, Melissa. Thanks very much. And it is great to be back. I think the words that we knew were heightened pipeline activity. And I know that sounds pretty nebulous in a way it is because to be a little more concrete, our actual number of deals is pretty flat to what it was last year. Speaker 200:21:25The volume of opportunities is pretty flat, but we think that it's a higher quality. Over the last 12 months, there's been such a high level of disarray in the venture community and so many companies struggling to figure out how they're going to continue to operate that we've seen a lot of opportunities that really just don't meet our standards. So we've been pretty harsh in cutting things off early. We are pretty far along on several deals that I think will close quite soon. And the visibility that we have on other stuff just looks really encouraging. Speaker 200:22:22So I can say with a really high level of confidence that you're going to see us starting to do more deals. I don't know how far we'll get caught up relative to the goal for the entire year, but it's going to accelerate quite a bit. Speaker 500:22:45Okay. I appreciate that additional context. I was hoping you could also walk us through Snagajob and we understand that when something goes on, not a pool, there can be a lot of avenues and different pathways to resolution. Could you help us understand sort of the nature of this one and share any details, any timeline, any thoughts that you're able to? Appreciate it. Speaker 200:23:15Yes, of course. I'll turn it over to Greg for that. Speaker 300:23:18Yes. Hi Melissa. So Snagajob is a company that is undergoing a number of headwinds that you're seeing with a number of their peers both public and private. It's a fluid situation where we're very actively involved with the management team, with the equity sponsors. And additionally, we have engaged we have a bench of operating partners, where we have called one of them in to help us deal with the situation. Speaker 300:23:49So it is something that we are intimately involved with on a weekly if not daily basis and are working to have the best outcome in the right timeframe for all constituents, but definitely our investors 1st and foremost. Speaker 500:24:07Understood. And is there because of the fluid nature of the situation, I take it to mean that that's one where it's harder to have a sense on timeline and ultimate pathway? Speaker 300:24:23I think that's definitely fair. We're continuing to evaluate in concert with the management and sponsors all different avenues available to us, which are changing. In order to accurately reflect that uncertainty, we have put it on non accrual, but it is one we do believe that there are a number of paths and different outcomes ahead of us that can still have a favorable outcome. Speaker 500:24:53Okay. Thank you. Operator00:24:56Thank you, Melissa. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Casey Alexander from Compass Point Research and Trading. Casey, your line is open. Speaker 400:25:22Yes. Hi. Good afternoon and thanks for taking my questions. Runway and David, welcome back. It is nice to have you back. Speaker 400:25:32My question is, can you kind of explain the rationale for even having a JV when the company has been public for about 2.5 years now and only in 1 quarter has the leverage ratio exceeded one time and that was at 1.02 times. I mean the company has been consistently under leverage. So what's the rationale for having a JV? Speaker 200:26:01Yes. Thanks, Casey. And it's good to hear your voice as well. I'll turn it over to Tom for that one. Speaker 400:26:10Thanks, David. Thanks, Casey, for the question. So as you look at our remaining capacity, it's about to get up to that 1.2x, we're about $175,000,000 to $200,000,000 which is just a handful of deals, it's 5 to 6 deals. Our target hold for the BDC is in that $35,000,000 to $40,000,000 range. Yet as we think about where we're positioning and want to position the portfolio and our deal target, our target market, it's that later stage, which tends to be a slightly larger deal, which would be in that $50,000,000 to $75,000,000 range. Speaker 400:26:55So it allows us to continue to participate in that risk sector that we want, while at the same time, not overextending our desired hold and maintaining diversification in the portfolio. Thank you. That's my only question. Operator00:27:17Thank you. Our next question comes from Bryce Roe from B. Riley. Your line is open. Speaker 600:27:31Thanks a bunch. David, good to have you back. Good to hear your voice. Thank you. Yes, you're welcome. Speaker 600:27:41Let's see, wanted to maybe just try to help us calibrate the prepayment or the visibility of the kind of the prepayment activity that you see coming here in the balance of the year? And then maybe a related question would be trying to size up the pipeline relative to that prepayment activity and whether you think we'll see kind of net growth for the balance of the year? Speaker 200:28:13Yes, Bryce. Thanks. Great to hear your voice. And I'll turn it over to Tom after just making a few comments. And the first is the common response every time is that it's almost impossible to forecast prepayments. Speaker 200:28:30But we know when they come that we just have to run that much faster on the origination side. And that for companies that we want to keep in the portfolio, we'll do whatever we can. Sometimes that's impossible. When a portfolio company goes public and has 100 of 1,000,000 of dollars of cash on the balance sheet or we've had situations where JPMorgan was the lead underwriter and offered them a line of credit at 500 basis points below our cost. So sometimes you just can't defend against it. Speaker 200:29:10But there are other times where we welcome the repayment so that we can redeploy the capital in today's more attractive environment. So I guess my bottom line answer to your question is we don't exactly know what prepayments will be, but whatever they are, we're going to ensure to the best of our ability that there are net positive new deployments, significant ones for the year. Speaker 400:29:46Just to add a little to that, we know looking forward that we've got some component of scheduled amortization. We have a couple of transactions that mature and then we know that we've got a handful of companies that are in some sort of process. Now as you pace those out and think about when that happens, those will likely come mid to end of Q3 and then be more back end weighted in Q4. At the same time, that's where we see the origination momentum building. I think second quarter will be closer to net originations will be flat, maybe slightly up, but we'll start seeing that flywheel process building into quarters 34 and we'll see a greater net origination so that we can replace the earnings power in the long term from those prepayments. Speaker 400:30:48In the short term, we would anticipate a fair amount of accelerated income as a result of prepayment fees and some OID in quarters 3 and 4. Speaker 600:31:01Okay. Okay. That's helpful. Maybe a couple more for me. Tom, you talked about being comfortable with dividend coverage. Speaker 600:31:12And I assume that to mean kind of the all inclusive dividend with the base and the spillover I'm sorry, the supplemental. Can you kind of help quantify where spillover is at this point? And then my second question would probably also be for you, Tom, just in terms of buyback activity, nice to see it in the quarter. It looks like you continued that subsequent to quarter end. I was curious kind of what the average price was for the 2nd quarter purchases and just where the appetite is from a price in that perspective there? Speaker 600:31:48Thanks. Speaker 400:31:50Well, why don't we answer the first part of that? Well, I'll talk to speak to the dividend first. Certainly, we would like to continue the supplemental dividend. I think as we look at what we know today with the current spillover pool and what we anticipate going forward in prepayments, we ought to be able to maintain that through the year. Obviously, our biggest priority is maintaining the base dividend. Speaker 400:32:22And so we're always going to want to keep adequate spillover should we see a quarter where we get a lot of loan maturities that are close or prepayments that are close to maturity. So you don't have a lot of accelerated OID or prepayment income. So we want to keep certainly spillover Kitty in good shape there. With respect to the buyback, we do have a rubric that we established at the beginning of every quarter. We set that once the window is open and we really look at it as a percent of NAV and the deeper the discount to NAV, the wider open the faucet is. Speaker 400:33:14I think as we start, if we're trading at 100% of NAV, obviously that's an admirable accomplishment and it doesn't make any sense to use the repurchase program. But is the discount, certainly if it's below 90 as we were for a period of time that we're really looking to be aggressive. So we'll have to see where the market takes us and if it's a deep discount to NAV and we can continue to be accretive, we'll use the remaining $10,000,000 $12,000,000 we have in the repurchase program. Speaker 700:33:58Awesome. Speaker 600:33:58That's great color. Thank you. Speaker 400:34:00You're welcome. Operator00:34:04Thank you. Our next question comes from Vilas Abraham from UBS. Your line is open. Speaker 800:34:16Hey, everybody. Welcome back, David, and thanks for the question. Just on Snagajob, appreciate the color there. How much of an impact did that non accrual have on Q1 interest income? Speaker 400:34:29It went on non accrual at the end of the quarter. And so the impact is really going forward. Speaker 800:34:40Okay, got it. And then just maybe you could comment on leverage. You guys have a target range that is pretty wide, 0.8, I think to 1.25. Just how are you thinking about that? Is that really as wide as it is just to capture some of the lumpiness? Speaker 800:35:02And is there maybe more of a kind of a truer ideal level you would like to be at over the next couple of years? And can you talk about that at all? Speaker 400:35:13Sure. I can take that. We established that range really at the IPO window and post IPO we were at 0.26. So we wanted to give a fairly wide range and we want to accommodate a variety of economic circumstances. I think ideally, we want to operate between $1,000,000 $1,200,000,000 and in robust times when deal flow is good and credit conditions are strong, we'll take it up to the upper end of that range. Speaker 400:35:45When you've got more uncertainty, we really want to be at the lower end of that range to leave dry powder to be opportunistic and to have the ability to manage any non accruals without getting into any kind of valuation issues and being squeezed from a leverage standpoint. But Speaker 600:36:09I think Speaker 400:36:11if we operate between 1% and 1.2%, I think we're really happy with that range. Speaker 800:36:19Okay. I appreciate that. And then just maybe one more On the opportunities that you have a line of sight into for later in the year, in terms of verticals between tech, life sciences, you have some consumer services and products as well. Is it weighted towards one of those areas more than the others? Speaker 200:36:43No, it's pretty well spread out. I would say the one category that we're leaning into a little less than the others is the consumer stuff. But we continue to find really interesting consumer products and services that are not really affected as much by a recession and those would be the ones that we would favor and I would mention Madison Reed is a great example there. But on tech and life sciences and we use life sciences to refer to anything healthcare related, We continue to see enormous amount of deal flow. The next deal that we'll close is probably a life sciences deal. Speaker 200:37:38So in between tech and life sciences, it continues to be spread in about the right proportion. We're more weighted towards tech, which we're happy with. We'd like the competitive nature of that market better than the life sciences side, where the returns in tech tend to be a little higher. The competition is a little lower. And I don't know if this is the right word, but it feels like it's a little more disciplined where we're able to get covenants and have more appropriate and lower loan to values. Speaker 800:38:31All right. Appreciate it. Speaker 200:38:33You bet. Thanks, Phyllis. Operator00:38:37Thank you. Our next question comes from Mickey Schleien from Ladenburg. Your line is now open. Speaker 700:39:02Hello, everyone, and David, welcome back. Thank you. Yes, there have been a lot of comments and discussions about the pipeline and activity. I think it would just be helpful if we Speaker 400:39:16if you could step back for Speaker 700:39:17a moment. And just when we're thinking about the backdrop with economic uncertainty, also uncertainty about interest rates is still relatively muted M and A environment, but a lot of private debt capital available. What was your general thesis on the market and its activity levels, notwithstanding the pipeline, which can be very idiosyncratic? Speaker 200:39:44Yes, it can. And that's an excellent question and one that we grapple with every day. And we tend to on the side of conservatism because the loans that we're making today will be paying the dividend next year. So it's really, really important that these be good loans. And as I said earlier, the venture ecosystem is really bumpy right now and we've never seen so many venture backed companies. Speaker 200:40:22According to PitchBook, there's something like 50,000 venture backed companies and we know that most of them raised money if they could during the peak of the market and then move to a path to profitability mode. But so many of them need additional capital and so many of their VCs are being very stingy with that. And one thing that a lot of people don't pay enough attention to is that the folks that are really driving the pace of this market are the limited partners or institutional investors. The university endowments, the foundations, the state pension funds, all that kind of stuff. The folks that give the money to the VCs are telling their venture partners to slow down because they have issues at the pension fund level. Speaker 200:41:30So until that changes, I don't see VCs getting really, really more liberal with their investments and taking any of the tension off of the current market. They will continue to boatload on their best investments, but on the ones that are more marginal, they're pretty harsh and just basically set them free and say, go out in the world and survive if you can. And if you don't, so be it. We've got 40 other portfolio companies that will hopefully make up for it. It. Speaker 200:42:17So it's just really a choppy environment and we've been very conservative. We're really focused on doing the best we can for our investors in terms of earnings, cash flow and ultimately dividends. And of course that requires avoiding losses. And I know we've had a couple of things that have gone on to non accrual, which is very unusual for us and we're in the process of working through those. And I also know that this discussion and the path forward is really about credibility. Speaker 200:43:00And instead of saying words that mean nothing, we're going to deliver and over the course of this year, hopefully avoid additional losses and fix the problems that we have and then move back into a position of portfolio growth. We're certainly not in this for growth at any cost. We think that's the wrong way to go about it and we'd rather build a solid foundation. And so we've been just a little slower than we might normally be and hopefully that will pay off in the long run. Speaker 700:43:45Thanks for that, David. That's really helpful discussion. And just one follow-up sort of a housekeeping question maybe for Tom. The fund has consistently generated a somewhat small dividend, but I don't see it this quarter. Was that due to the exit of a company or what's the outlook for dividend income? Speaker 400:44:11So we declared our dividend last week at the $0.40 base and the $0.07 supplemental. Certainly, we don't anticipate any changes to the base and our objective is to maintain the supplemental dividend, while not compromising the spillover cushion that we have. Speaker 700:44:36Tom, I was referring to dividend income on the income statement. Speaker 400:44:41Okay. So that the dividend income on the income statement came from CareCloud. And in November, that's a public company. We received that equity in the sale of one of our businesses. It was a company called CareCloud and the public company ultimately adopted its name. Speaker 400:44:59They suspended that dividend in November, which certainly created a lot of volatility in the valuation on that level 1 asset. And so the company has indicated that they expect that dividend to resume later this year. So when CareCloud resumes their dividend, we would expect to see the dividend income come in again. Speaker 700:45:21I understand. That's helpful. That's it for me this afternoon. Thank you for your time as always. Speaker 200:45:28Thanks, Vicki. Operator00:45:30Thank you. Our next question comes from Eric Zwick from Hovde Group. Speaker 500:45:41Your line is open. Speaker 900:45:44Good afternoon, everyone. And I just want to echo all the previous comments of David. It's truly great to have you back and hear your voice again. So first question for me, curious, David, both you and Greg mentioned some optimism for a more friendly lender friendly market in the second half of twenty twenty four. And I'm curious if you could maybe provide a little more detail or color around any kind of indicators or kind of activity you're seeing now today because that gives you that optimism? Speaker 200:46:17Well, so I'll make a few comments and then turn it over to Greg. But especially on the tech side, we're seeing terms that make a little more sense. And I think you know that we're really big believers in covenants and in having appropriately structured loans and that is starting to come back and especially in the really late stage larger deals, we feel that that's where then we've always felt that's where the best risk adjusted returns are. And those companies are now coming to grips with the interest rate environment. And for a long time, there was, I think, a little bit of sticker shock about the rate of increase in rates, which it's very fair. Speaker 200:47:15But now companies are understanding that this is an environment that we're going to be in and that they can afford, Maybe there needs to be some adjustments to their budget, but they can afford it. So that's the main basis for those comments. I will say the life sciences side remains a little bit more competitive and a little bit looser. I don't know, Greg, you want to add some additional color? Speaker 300:47:46Yes, I would definitely echo the sentiments in terms of just a level setting of structure and what the different companies and sponsors are willing to accept. And I'd add on to that that their own expectations in terms of not only their value of the businesses, but also just ability to support amounts of debt has come in quite a bit too. So opportunities that maybe 18, 24 months ago might have been looking for a certain amount of capital. We're seeing those same size companies come back to us today looking for maybe 60% to 70% of that kind of amount, which is much more attractive to us from a loan to value standpoint, from other types of attachment points. And we're just seeing a meeting of the minds in terms of what we believe is a reasonable structure as well as what the companies and the sponsors are actually looking for. Speaker 900:48:45Thank you. That's helpful. I appreciate the commentary there. And then just last one for me. I noticed in this quarter's slide deck, you did not include the interest rate sensitivity slide. Speaker 900:48:57So maybe two quick questions there. 1, Speaker 700:49:00I'm Speaker 900:49:00guessing that it hasn't changed a whole lot since last quarter, but I wonder if you could confirm that. And 2, is this absent there just maybe indicative of your belief that we're going to be at these level of interest rates kind of this higher for longer period or just curious around that point? Speaker 400:49:18Yes. We eliminated that slide because it was calculated based on rates going up to 200 basis points from the current level. And we thought the utility of that was limited because I don't think we see any increases in rates and our loans have floors that are at a variety of levels. Typically, it's what the SOFR rate or the prime rate was at the time the loan closed plus the spread. So there's no real change in it. Speaker 400:49:51We think it's going to be pretty stable as we settle into this higher for longer, probably for the better part of this year. Speaker 900:50:01Excellent. Thanks for confirming. That's all for me today. Speaker 400:50:04Thanks, Eric. Operator00:50:07Thank you. This concludes our question and answer session. I would now like to turn it back to David Sprang for closing remarks. Speaker 200:50:16Thank you, operator. We believe our late and gross stage portfolio is well positioned for any economic environment. We're in a strong position to deploy capital at favorable terms and we will continue to maintain our underwriting rigor while evaluating future opportunities. Thank you all for joining us today. We look forward to updating you on our Q2 2024 financial results in August. Speaker 200:50:45Thank you. Operator00:50:49Thank you for your participation in today's conference. This does conclude the program. You may now disconnect.Read morePowered by