UNITED STATES

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, D.C. 20549

 

FORM 10-K

 

ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15 (d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

 

For the fiscal year ended December 31, 2024

 

TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15 (d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

 

Commission File Number: 814-01363

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

 

Delaware   83-0531326
(State or Other Jurisdiction of
Incorporation or Organization)
  (I.R.S. Employer
Identification No.)

 

717 Texas Avenue, Suite 2200, Houston, TX   77002
(Address of Principal Executive Offices)   (Zip Code)

 

(713) 493-2020

(Registrant’s telephone number, including area code)

 

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:

 

Title of each class   Trading Symbol(s)   Name of each exchange on which registered
Common Stock, par value $0.001 per share   KBDC   NYSE

 

Indicate by check mark if the registrant is a well-known seasoned issuer, as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act. Yes No

 

Indicate by check mark if the registrant is not required to file reports pursuant to Section 13 or Section 15(d) of the Act. Yes No

 

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the past 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days. Yes No

 

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has submitted electronically every Interactive Data File required to be submitted pursuant to Rule 405 of Regulation S-T (§ 232.405 of this chapter) during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to submit such files). Yes No

 

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, a smaller reporting company or an emerging growth company. See the definitions of “large accelerated filer”, “accelerated filer”, “smaller reporting company” and “emerging growth company” in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act.

 

Large accelerated filer Accelerated filer
Non-accelerated filer Smaller reporting company
Emerging growth company  

 

If an emerging growth company, indicate by check mark if the registrant has elected not to use the extended transition period for complying with any new or revised financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) of the Exchange Act.

 

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has filed a report on and attestation to its management’s assessment of the effectiveness of its internal control over financial reporting under Section 404(b) of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act (15 U.S.C. 7262(b)) by the registered public accounting firm that prepared or issued its audit report.

 

If securities are registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act, indicate by check mark whether the financial statements of the registrant included in the filing reflect the correction of an error to previously issued financial statements. 

 

Indicate by check mark whether any of those error corrections are restatements that required a recovery analysis of incentive-based compensation received by any of the registrant’s executive officers during the relevant recovery period pursuant to §240.10D-1(b). 

 

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act). Yes No

 

As of February 21, 2025, the registrant had 71,059,689 shares of common stock, $0.001 par value per share, issued and outstanding and there was no public market for the registrant’s shares.

 

Documents Incorporated by Reference

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc. will file with the Securities and Exchange Commission, not later than 120 days after the close of its fiscal year ended December 31, 2024, a definitive proxy statement containing the information required to be disclosed under Part III of Form 10-K.

 

 

 

 

 

 

TABLE OF CONTENTS

 

    Page
  PART I 1
     
Item 1. Business 2
Item 1A. Risk Factors 24
Item 1B. Unresolved Staff Comments 56
Item 1C. Cybersecurity 56
Item 2. Properties 57
Item 3. Legal Proceedings 57
Item 4. Mine Safety Disclosures 57
     
  PART II 58
     
Item 5. Market for Registrant’s Common Equity, Related Stockholder Matters and Issuer Purchases of Equity Securities 58
Item 6. [Reserved] 65
Item 7. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations 65
Item 7A. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk 76
Item 8. Consolidated Financial Statements and Supplementary Data F-1
Item 9. Changes in and Disagreements With Accountants on Accounting and Financial Disclosure 77
Item 9A. Controls and Procedures 77
Item 9B. Other Information 77
Item 9C. Disclosure Regarding Foreign Jurisdictions that Prevent Inspections 77
     
  PART III 78
     
Item 10. Directors, Executive Officers and Corporate Governance 78
Item 11. Executive Compensation 78
Item 12. Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management and Related Stockholder Matters 78
Item 13. Certain Relationships and Related Transactions, and Director Independence 78
Item 14. Principal Accounting Fees and Services 78
     
  PART IV 79
     
Item 15. Exhibits, Consolidated Financial Statements, and Schedules 79
Item 16. Form 10-K Summary 81
SIGNATURES 82

 

i

 

 

PART I

 

The following discussion and analysis should be read in conjunction with our financial statements and related notes and other financial information appearing elsewhere in this Annual Report on Form 10-K. Except as otherwise specified, references to “we,” “us,” “our,” or the “Company” refer to Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc., a Delaware corporation. We refer to KA Credit Advisors, LLC, our investment adviser, as our “Advisor.” The Advisor also serves as our administrator (the “Administrator”). We refer generally to Kayne Anderson Capital Advisors, L.P., an affiliate of the Advisor, as “Kayne Anderson.” 

 

Forward Looking Statements

 

This Annual Report on Form 10-K contains forward-looking statements that involve substantial known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors. Undue reliance should not be placed on such statements. These forward-looking statements are not historical facts, but rather are based on current expectations, estimates and projections about the company, current and prospective portfolio investments, the industry, beliefs and assumptions. Words such as “anticipates,” “expects,” “intends,” “plans,” “will,” “may,” “continue,” “believes,” “seeks,” “estimates,” “would,” “could,” “should,” “targets,” “projects,” and variations of these words and similar expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements. These statements are not guarantees of future performance and are subject to risks, uncertainties and other factors, some of which are beyond control of the Company and difficult to predict and could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or forecasted in the forward-looking statements, including:

 

future operating results;

 

  business prospects and the prospects of portfolio companies in which we invest;
     
  the ability of our portfolio companies to achieve their objectives;

 

  changes in political, economic or industry conditions, the interest rate environment or conditions affecting the financial and capital markets;

 

  the ability of our Advisor to locate suitable investments and to monitor and administer investments;

 

  the ability of the Advisor and its affiliates to attract and retain highly talented professionals;

 

  risk associated with possible disruptions in operations or the economy generally;
     
  the adequacy of our cash resources, financing sources and working capital;

 

  the timing of cash flows, interest, distributions and dividends, if any, from the operations of the companies in which the Company invests;

 

  the ability to maintain qualification as a business development company (“BDC”) and as a regulated investment company (“RIC”) under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the “Code”);

 

  the use of borrowings under our credit facilities and issuances of senior unsecured notes to finance a portion of the Company’s investments;

 

  the adequacy, availability and pricing of financing sources and working capital for the Company;

  

  actual or potential conflicts of interest with the Advisor and its affiliates;

 

  contractual arrangements and relationships with third parties;

 

  the risk associated with an economic downturn, increased inflation, political instability, interest rate volatility, loss of key personnel, and the illiquid nature of investments of the Company; and

 

  the risks, uncertainties and other factors the Company identifies under “Part I – Item 1A. Risk Factors” and elsewhere in this Annual Report on Form 10-K.

 

We have based the forward-looking statements included in this report on information available to us on the date of this report. We assume no obligation to update or revise publicly any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise, except as required by law. Although we undertake no obligation to revise or update any forward-looking statements, you are advised to consult any additional disclosures that we may make directly to you or through reports that we have filed or in the future may file with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”), including annual reports on Form 10-K, registration statements on Form N-2, quarterly reports on Form 10-Q and current reports on Form 8-K.

 

1

 

 

Item 1. Business

 

Overview

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc. is a Delaware corporation formed to make investments in middle-market companies and commenced operations on February 5, 2021. We are an externally managed, closed-end, non-diversified management investment company that has elected to be regulated as a BDC under the 1940 Act. In addition, for U.S. federal income tax purposes, we intend to qualify, annually, as a RIC under Subchapter M of the Code.

 

We are a business development company (“BDC”) that invests primarily in first lien senior secured loans, with a secondary focus on unitranche and split-lien loans to private middle market companies. We are managed by our investment advisor KA Credit Advisors, LLC (the “Advisor”), an indirect controlled subsidiary of Kayne Anderson Capital Advisors, L.P. (“Kayne Anderson”), a prominent alternative investment management firm. Our Advisor operates within Kayne Anderson’s middle market private credit platform (“KAPC” or “Kayne Anderson Private Credit”). Our Advisor is registered with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, as amended (the “Advisers Act”).

 

On May 24, 2024, we completed our initial public offering (“IPO”), issuing 6,000,000 shares of common stock at a public offering price of $16.63 per share. Net of underwriting fees and offering expenses, we received net cash proceeds of $92.4 million. The Company’s common stock began trading on the New York Stock Exchange (“NYSE”) under the ticker symbol “KBDC” on May 22, 2024.

 

We generally intend to distribute, out of assets legally available for distribution, 90% to 100% of our available earnings, on a quarterly or annual basis, as determined by our Board of Directors (the “Board”) in its sole discretion. The distributions we pay to our stockholders in a year may exceed our taxable income for that year and, accordingly, a portion of such distributions equal to such excess of distributions over taxable income may constitute a return of invested capital for federal income tax purposes. Such a return of capital (i.e., a distribution that represents a return of an investor’s original investment) would be nontaxable to the stockholder and would reduce its basis in its shares. As a result, income tax related to the portion of such distributions treated as return of capital would be deferred until any subsequent sale of shares of common stock. The specific tax characteristics of our distributions will be reported to stockholders after the end of the calendar year.

 

Investment Objective, Principal Strategy and Investment Structures

 

Our investment objective is to generate current income and, to a lesser extent, capital appreciation. We intend to have nearly all of our debt investments in private middle market companies. We use “private” to refer to companies that are not traded on a securities exchange and define “middle market companies” as companies that, in general, generate between $10 million and $150 million of annual earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, or EBITDA. Further, we refer to companies that generate between $10 million and $50 million of annual EBITDA as “core middle market companies” and companies that generate between $50 million and $150 million of annual EBITDA as “upper middle market companies.” We typically adjust EBITDA for non-recurring and/or normalizing items to assess the financial performance of our borrowers over time.

 

2

 

 

We intend to achieve our investment objective by investing primarily in first lien senior secured loans, with a secondary focus on unitranche and split-lien loans to middle market companies. Under normal market conditions, we expect at least 90% of our portfolio (including investments purchased with proceeds from borrowings under credit facilities and issuances of senior unsecured notes) to be invested in first lien senior secured, unitranche and split-lien loans. Our investment decisions are made on a case-by-case basis. We expect the remainder of our portfolio to be invested in second-lien loans, subordinated debt or equity securities (including those purchased in conjunction with other cred investments). We expect that a majority of these debt investments will be made in core middle market companies and will generally have stated maturities of three to six years. We expect that the loans in which we principally invest will be to companies that are located in the United States. We determine the location of a company as being in the United States by (i) such company being organized under the laws of one of the states in the United States; or (ii) during its most recent fiscal year, such company derived at least 50% of its revenues or profits from goods produced or sold, investments made, or services performed in the United States or has at least 50% of its assets in the United States.

 

The Advisor executes on our investment objective by (1) accessing the established loan sourcing channels developed by KAPC, which includes an extensive network of private equity firms, other middle market lenders, financial advisors, intermediaries and management teams, (2) selecting investments within our middle market company focus, (3) implementing KAPC’s underwriting process and (4) drawing upon its experience and resources and the broader Kayne Anderson network. KAPC was established in 2011 and manages (directly and through affiliates) assets under management (“AUM”) of approximately $7.1 billion related to middle market private credit as of December 31, 2024. See “Risk Factors—Risks Relating to Our Business and Structure—We depend upon our Advisor and Administrator for our success and upon their access to the investment professionals and partners of Kayne Anderson and its affiliates. Any inability of the Advisor or the Administrator to maintain or develop these relationships, or the failure of these relationships to generate investment opportunities, could adversely affect our business,” and — Risks Relating to Our Investments — Limitations of investment due diligence expose us to investment risk.”

 

We intend to principally invest in the following types of debt securities:

 

  First lien debt: Typically senior on a lien basis to the other liabilities in the issuer’s capital structure with a first priority lien against substantially all assets of the borrower and often including a pledge of the capital stock of the business. The security interest ranks above the security interest of second lien lenders on those assets. These securities are typically floating rate investments priced with a spread to the reference rate (typically SOFR);

 

  Split-lien debt: Typically includes (i) a first lien on fixed and intangible assets of the borrower and often including a pledge of the capital stock of the business and (ii) a second lien on working capital assets. Used in conjunction with an asset based lender who has a first lien on the borrower’s working capital assets. These securities are typically floating rate investments priced with a spread to the reference rate (typically SOFR).

 

  Unitranche debt: Combines features of first lien, second lien and subordinated debt, generally in a first lien position. These securities can generally be thought of as first lien investments beyond what may otherwise be considered “typical” first lien leverage levels, effectively representing a greater portion of the overall capitalization of the underlying business. These securities are typically structured as floating rate investments priced with a spread to the reference rate (typically SOFR).

 

Senior secured debt often has restrictive covenants for the purpose of pursuing principal protection and repayment before junior creditors as covenants provide opportunities for lenders to take action following a covenant breach. The loans in which we principally invest have financial maintenance covenants, which require borrowers to maintain certain financial performance criteria and financial ratios on a monthly or quarterly basis. We do not expect to principally invest in “covenant-lite” loans; we use the term “covenant lite” to refer generally to loans that do not have a customary set of financial maintenance covenants.

 

Subject to our Advisor’s discretion, based on its belief about the pace and amount of investment activity in middle market companies, a portion of our portfolio may be comprised of liquid credit investments (i.e., broadly syndicated loans). The percentage of our portfolio allocated to the liquid investment strategy will be at the discretion of our Advisor. See “Risk Factors—Risks Relating to Our Investments—We are subject to risks associated with our investment and trading of liquid credit (i.e., broadly syndicated loans).”

 

We invest in debt that is typically not rated by any rating agency, but we believe that if such investments were rated, they would be below investment grade, which are sometimes referred to as “high yield bonds” or “junk bonds.” See “Risk Factors — Risks Relating to Our Investments — We invest in highly leveraged companies, which could cause us to lose all or a part of our investment in those companies,”  In addition, we have a maturity policy between three to six years for our debt investments. See “Risk Factors — Risks Relating to Our Investments — Our portfolio companies may be unable to repay or refinance outstanding principal on their loans at or prior to maturity.”

3

 

 

Investment Portfolio

 

Our portfolio is currently comprised of a broad mix of loans, with diversity among investment size and industry focus. The Advisor’s team of professionals conducts due diligence on prospective investments during the underwriting process and is involved in structuring the credit terms of our private middle market investments. Once an investment has been made, our Advisor closely monitors each portfolio investment and takes a proactive approach to identify and address sector or company specific risks. The Advisor seeks to maintain a regular dialogue with portfolio company management teams (as well as their owners, the majority of whom are private equity firms, where applicable), reviews detailed operating and financial results on a regular basis (typically monthly or quarterly) and monitors current and projected liquidity needs, in addition to other portfolio management activities. There are no assurances that we will achieve our investment objectives.

 

Listed below are our top ten portfolio companies and industries represented as a percentage of total long-term investments as of December 31, 2024:

 

Portfolio Company  Industry  Fair Value
($ in millions)
   Percentage of
long-term
investments
 
1  Silk Holdings III Corp. (Suave)  Personal care products  $41.0    2.0%
2  Dusk Acquisition II Corporation (Motors & Armatures, Inc. – MARS)  Trading companies & distributors  $39.9    2.0%
3  BR PJK Produce, LLC (Keany)  Food products  $39.5    2.0%
4  M2S Group Intermediate Holdings, Inc.  Containers & packaging  $37.7    1.9%
5  American Equipment Holdings LLC  Commercial services & supplies  $37.3    1.9%
6  Vitesse Systems Parent, LLC  Aerospace & defense  $35.5    1.8%
7  IF&P Foods, LLC (FreshEdge)  Food products  $35.1    1.7%
8  AIDC Intermediate Co 2, LLC (Peak Technologies) 

Trading companies & distributors

  $34.1    1.7%
9  Genuine Cable Group, LLC  Trading companies & distributors  $34.1    1.7%
10  Improving Acquisition LLC  IT services  $33.6    1.7%
         $367.8    18.4%

 

As a BDC, at least 70% of our assets must be the type of “qualifying” assets listed in Section 55(a) of the 1940 Act, as described herein, which are generally privately-offered securities issued by U.S. private or thinly-traded companies. We may also invest up to 30% of our portfolio opportunistically in “non-qualifying” portfolio investments. As of December 31, 2024, 9.0% of the Company’s total assets were in non-qualifying investments.

 

Market Opportunity

 

We believe that our investments represent attractive opportunities as these investments (i) generate what we believe are attractive yields (based on our Advisor’s assessment of the relative risk profile of these investments), (ii) make interest payments to us and (iii) typically rank ahead of other debt instruments in the borrower’s capital structure (98.0% of our portfolio consisted of first lien senior secured loans as of December 31, 2024), as described above in “—Investment Objective, Principal Strategy and Investment Structures”.

 

Long-Term Demand Drivers in the U.S. Middle Market

 

We expect that a number of factors will continue to drive strong demand for middle market senior credit, both by private equity owned and non-private equity owned companies, for the foreseeable future, including: (i) the sheer scale of the U.S. middle market and (ii) a significant amount of un-invested middle market private equity capital.

 

The universe of U.S. middle market companies (as defined by the National Center for the Middle Market and including all businesses with revenues from $10.0 million to $1.0 billion) consists of nearly 200,000 potential borrowers, a substantial portion of which we believe will continue to require access to debt capital to refinance existing debt, support growth and finance acquisitions. Together, these businesses represent approximately one-third of the U.S. private sector gross domestic product (“GDP”) making them equivalent to the size of the third largest economy in the world on a standalone basis. (Source: National Center for The Middle Market’s Mid-Year 2024 Middle Market Indicator).

 

Private equity firms investing in these businesses held more than $1.5 trillion in un-invested capital (“dry powder”) as of February 2025. We expect these private equity firms will continue to pursue acquisitions and will seek to fund a portion of these transactions with debt. (Source: Preqin).

 

4

 

 

Long-Term Shift to Private, Non-Bank Financings in the U.S. Middle Market

 

We believe that the supply of capital to middle market borrowers and private equity firms acquiring these businesses has shifted substantially to private, non-bank lenders such as ourselves due to (i) a long-term regulatory trend that has significantly reduced bank participation in leveraged finance due to stricter federal leveraged lending guidelines, (ii) consolidation of commercial banks over the last two decades and (iii) direct lending increasing share relative to broadly syndicated financings. We believe that some of this shift away from banks and broadly syndicated financings can be attributed to borrowers valuing specific qualities of non-bank lenders including: (i) a focus on ongoing partnership as opposed to transactional arrangements, (ii) more sophisticated underwriting and originations teams and (iii) a lack of reliability exhibited by banks and more liquid market segments during periods of distress.

 

In sum, we believe there is (a) a substantial demand for loans, and (b) a substantial marketplace shift towards private, non-bank lenders. We anticipate that these trends should benefit direct lenders such as ourselves.

 

Middle Market Attractiveness

 

We intend to have nearly all of our debt investments in private middle market companies. We believe that lending to middle market companies (particularly in senior-focused portions of the capital structure) presents a compelling investment opportunity.

 

First, senior debt investments are made at the top of the capital structure and are repaid before unsecured creditors and equity investors. Additionally, the types of investments in which we participate will typically include anywhere from one to five lenders in a given debt financing thereby potentially limiting consensus risk, which is important for swift action and potential recovery to lenders in distressed scenarios.

 

Second, we believe that these markets are underserved by traditional banking sources. We believe that this lack of financing sources leads middle market companies to offer attractive (i) economic terms such as pricing, fees and prepayment premiums and (ii) structural terms such as stricter covenants and more fulsome collateral packages than debt investments in public or much larger private companies.

 

Competitive Strengths

 

Our Advisor utilizes KAPC’s direct lending platform to pursue investment opportunities. The leadership team of KAPC has invested this market across multiple platforms (e.g., not only as part of KAPC) and economic cycles, working directly together as a team for the better part of three decades. This experience over multiple decades allows KAPC to focus on transactions in markets where it has substantial experience and where it can bring its expertise in negotiating and structuring investments. Other specific competitive strengths of KAPC which inure to the benefit of KBDC include:

 

Leading U.S. Core Middle Market Debt Platform. We have benefited and expect to continue to benefit from our relationship with KAPC’s large direct lending platform through our Advisor. Since its inception through December 31, 2024, KAPC has deployed nearly $12.7 billion of capital across 426 investments in 207 portfolio companies. Our Advisor (or an affiliate thereof) has been lead agent or co-agent in approximately 76% of investments since the inception of KAPC.

 

Experienced Credit Investors with Long Track Record. Core middle market direct lending is led by Ken Leonard (Co-CEO of the Company), Doug Goodwillie (Co-CEO of the Company) and Andy Marek (Managing Partner of KAPC), who have a combined 90+ years of lending experience, having collectively completed transactions representing over $17.2 billion in underwritten middle market loan commitments across multiple credit cycles since 2000. These three individuals are primarily responsible for the day-to-day operations of KAPC and have worked together directly since 2002 while Ken Leonard and Andy Marek have worked together since the late 1980’s. Ken Leonard and Doug Goodwillie are primarily responsible for the day-to-day operations of KBDC.

 

The Advisor’s investment committee consists of four members (Terry Quinn, Paul Blank, Doug Goodwillie and Ken Leonard) with average experience in credit investing in excess of 30 years. The Advisor’s investment committee has overall responsibility for evaluating and unanimously approving the Company’s investments and portfolio allocations, subject to the oversight of our Board.

 

5

 

 

Sourcing Advantage and Well-Established Direct Relationship Model. We believe that KAPC’s relationship-based sourcing model provides strong access to proprietary transaction flow, allowing us to be highly selective in the transactions that we pursue. For the period 2021 through December 31, 2024 (and excluding investments in broadly syndicated loans), approximately 63% of opportunities sourced by our Advisor and 88% of opportunities executed by our Advisor were done so without the presence of a financial intermediary, a fact pattern placing specific emphasis on long-term relationships, reputation and certainty of execution with transaction counterparties. Importantly, we believe (based on KAPC’s experience) that our existing portfolio will continue to be an engine of new investment opportunities and will support investment flows even when broader M&A markets may have slowed.

 

We believe that our direct sourcing model creates repeat business and sticky relationships. Under this model, since inception (and excluding investments in broadly syndicated loans), (i) greater than 90% of KAPC’s investments are in companies sponsored by private equity firms (approximately 99% of the Company’s investments as of December 31, 2024), (ii) approximately 58% of KAPC’s investments were made with repeat private equity sponsors and (iii) over 110 private equity sponsors have partnered with KAPC to provide debt financing to their portfolio companies.

 

Focus on Investing in Core Middle Market. With extensive market knowledge and experience, we believe we are well positioned to capitalize on the current market conditions in which many middle market companies and private equity sponsors need trusted sources of financing.

 

Value-Lending Philosophy. We intend to avoid high-growth markets as, in our management’s experience, that growth profile attracts substantial capital formation and, in turn, new competition, leading to the potential for longer-term uncertainty and industry upheaval.

 

Disciplined Diligence Processes, Regimented Portfolio Monitoring and Active Management. Our Advisor completes substantial hands-on diligence throughout its investment process, which is centered around addressing a potential portfolio company’s industry trends, competitive dynamics, customer base, economic drivers, historical financial performance, financial projections, other factors such as legal and environmental assessments as well as the strengths and weaknesses of management and / or the private equity sponsor or ownership. We target a lead or co-lead agent role in a majority of our investments (KAPC has been lead or co-lead agent in approximately 76% of investments since inception), typically enabling us to lead the diligence, documentation and workout processes. Since inception, KAPC has reported realized loss rates of approximately 0.2% of average outstanding investments on an annualized basis.

 

Competition

 

We compete with a number of BDCs and investment funds (both public and private), commercial and investment banks, commercial financing companies and, to the extent they provide an alternative form of financing, private equity and hedge funds. Many of our competitors are substantially larger and have considerably greater financial and marketing resources than we do. We believe we are able to compete with these entities primarily on the basis of the experience and contacts of our management team, our responsive and efficient investment analysis and decision-making processes, the investment terms we offer, and our model of investing in companies participating in industries which we know well.

 

We believe that some of our competitors may make loans with interest rates that will be lower than the rates that we offer. We do not seek to compete solely on the interest rates that we offer to potential portfolio companies. For additional information concerning competitive risks, see “Item 1A – Risk Factors.

 

6

 

 

Corporate Structure

 

We are a Delaware corporation and commenced operations on February 5, 2021. The following chart depicts our ownership structure:

 

 

(1) From time to time we may form wholly-owned subsidiaries to facilitate our normal course of business investing activities.

 

Private Offering

 

Between February 2021 and December 2023, we executed subscription agreements with investors on sixteen occasions as part of one continuous private placement offering obligating those investors to purchase shares of common stock representing total aggregate capital commitments of $1.047 billion. The execution of the subscription agreements were effected as part of one continuous private placement offering exempt from the registration requirements of the Securities Act pursuant to Section 4(a)(2) thereunder. Pursuant to the private placement offering that began on February 5, 2021, we called capital under the terms of those subscription agreements, and we issued shares of common stock to investors on thirteen funding occasions between February 2021 and April 2024 in an aggregate amount of $1.047 billion.

 

On March 22, 2024, we delivered the final capital drawdown notice to our stockholders relating to the sale of shares of common stock in the private placement. Following this capital call, we did not have any remaining undrawn capital commitments and the investors’ obligations to purchase additional shares of common stock were exhausted. This final capital drawdown notice completed our pre-initial public offering capital raise private placement offering exempt from the registration requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “Securities Act”), pursuant to Section 4(a)(2) thereunder.

 

Initial Public Offering

 

On May 24, 2024, we completed our initial public offering (“IPO”), issuing 6,000,000 shares of our common stock at a public offering price of $16.63 per share. Net of underwriting fees and offering expenses, we received net cash proceeds, before offering expenses, of $92.4 million. The Company’s common stock began trading on the New York Stock Exchange (“NYSE”) under the ticker symbol “KBDC” on May 22, 2024.

 

Stock Repurchase Plan

 

On May 21, 2024, the Company entered into a share repurchase plan, or the Company 10b5-1 Plan, to acquire up to $100 million in the aggregate of the Company’s Common Stock at prices below the Company’s net asset value per share over a specified period, in accordance with the guidelines specified in Rule 10b5-1 and Rule 10b-18 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the “Exchange Act”). The Company 10b5-1 Plan was approved by the Board of Directors on March 6, 2024. Our 10b5-1 Plan requires Morgan Stanley Corporation as the Company’s agent, to repurchase Common Stock on its behalf when the market price per share is below the most recently reported net asset value per share (including any updates, corrections or adjustments publicly announced by the Company to any previously announced net asset value per share, including any distributions declared). Under the Company 10b5-1 Plan, the volume of purchases would be expected to increase as the price of the Company’s Common Stock declines, subject to volume restrictions. The timing and amount of any share repurchases will depend on the terms and conditions of the Company 10b5-1 Plan, the market price of the Company’s Common Stock and trading volumes, and no assurance can be given that Common Stock be repurchased in any particular amount or at all. The repurchase of shares pursuant to the Company 10b5-1 Plan is intended to satisfy the conditions of Rule 10b5-1 and Rule 10b-18 under the Exchange Act, and will otherwise be subject to applicable law, including Regulation M, which may prohibit repurchases under certain circumstances. The Company 10b5-1 Plan commenced beginning 60 calendar days following the end of the “restricted period” under Regulation M and will terminate upon the earliest to occur of (i) the close of business on May 24, 2025, (ii) the end of the trading day on which the aggregate purchase price for all shares purchased under the Company 10b5-1 Plan equals $100 million and (iii) the occurrence of certain other events described in the Company 10b5-1 Plan.

 

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The “restricted period” under Regulation M ended upon the closing of the Company’s IPO and, therefore, the Common Stock repurchases described above began on July 23, 2024.

 

During the year ended December 31, 2024, the Company repurchased 94,613 shares under our 10b5-1 Plan for a total of $1.5 million.

 

Kayne Anderson, Kayne Anderson Private Credit and The Advisor

 

Kayne Anderson

 

Founded in 1984, Kayne Anderson is a prominent alternative investment management firm which is registered with the SEC under the Advisers Act, focused on real estate, credit and infrastructure/energy. Kayne Anderson provides corporate and management services (such as information technology, human resources, compliance and legal services) to the Advisor.

 

As of December 31, 2024, investment vehicles managed or advised by Kayne Anderson had over $36 billion in assets under management (“AUM”) for institutional investors, family offices, high net worth and retail clients. Kayne Anderson has approximately 350 professionals located across five offices across the U.S. The firm has approximately 150 investment professionals, approximately 33 of whom are dedicated to credit investing.

 

Kayne Anderson Private Credit

 

KAPC is Kayne Anderson’s line of business focused on private credit that operates various fund vehicles targeting middle market first lien senior secured, unitranche, and split-lien loans. KAPC was established in 2011 and manages (indirectly through affiliates) AUM of approximately $7.1 billion related to middle market private credit as of December 31, 2024.

 

KAPC’s integrated and scaled platform combines direct loan origination, strong fundamental credit analysis and relative-value perspective.

 

The Advisor – KA Credit Advisors, LLC

 

Our investment activities are managed by our Advisor, an indirect controlled subsidiary of Kayne Anderson, and the Advisor operates within KAPC’s line of business. The Advisor is an investment advisor registered with the SEC under the Advisers Act pursuant to the Investment Advisory Agreement. In accordance with the Advisors Act, our Advisor is responsible for originating prospective investments, conducting research and due diligence investigations on potential investments, analyzing investment opportunities, negotiating and structuring investments and monitoring our investments and portfolio companies on an ongoing basis. The Advisor benefits from the scale and resources of Kayne Anderson and specifically KAPC. While we do not have any employees, the Advisor and its affiliates have a team of approximately 33 investment professionals who are primarily focused on credit investments. The investment team is supported by a team of finance, legal, compliance, operations and administrative professionals.

 

The Advisor executes on our investment objective by (1) accessing the established loan sourcing channels developed by KAPC, which includes an extensive network of private equity firms, other middle market lenders, financial advisors, intermediaries and management teams, (2) selecting investments within our middle market company focus, (3) implementing KAPC’s underwriting process and (4) drawing upon its experience and resources and the broader Kayne Anderson network.

 

The Advisor’s investment committee has overall responsibility for evaluating and unanimously approving the Company’s investments, and its portfolio allocations, subject to the oversight of our Board. The Advisor’s investment committee review process is intended to bring the diverse experience and perspectives of the Advisor’s investment committee members to the analysis and consideration of every investment. The Advisor’s investment committee currently consists of Terrence J. Quinn, Vice Chairman of Kayne Anderson and Vice Chair of the Company; Paul S. Blank, President and Chief Operating Officer of Kayne Anderson; Douglas L. Goodwillie, Co-Head of Private Credit at Kayne Anderson and Co-Chief Executive Officer of the Company; and Kenneth B. Leonard, Co-Head of Private Credit at Kayne Anderson and Co-Chief Executive Officer of the Company. The Advisor’s investment committee also determines appropriate investment sizing and mandates ongoing monitoring requirements. Douglas L. Goodwillie and Kenneth B. Leonard, each a Co-Chief Executive Officer of the Company, are jointly and primarily responsible for the day-to-day management of the Company’s portfolio.

 

In addition to reviewing investments, the Advisor’s investment committee meetings serve as a forum to discuss credit views and outlooks. The Advisor’s investment committee also reviews potential transactions and deal flow on a regular basis. Members of the investment team are encouraged to share information and views on credit with the committee early in their analysis. We believe this process improves the quality of the analysis and enables investment team members to work more efficiently.

 

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We make investments alongside certain entities and accounts advised by our Advisor and its affiliates. Under the 1940 Act, we are prohibited from knowingly participating in certain joint transactions with our affiliates without the prior approval of the independent directors and, in some cases, prior approval by the SEC. However, we generally make investments alongside affiliated entities and accounts pursuant to exemptive relief granted by the SEC to us, our Advisor, and certain of our affiliates on August 10, 2023. Pursuant to such exemptive relief, and subject to certain conditions, we are permitted to co-invest in the same security with our affiliates in a manner that is consistent with our investment objective, investment strategy, regulatory consideration and other relevant factors. If opportunities arise that would otherwise be appropriate for us and an affiliate to purchase different securities in the same issuer, our Advisor will need to decide which account will proceed with such investment. Our Advisor’s investment allocation policy incorporates the conditions of exemptive relief to seek to ensure that investment opportunities are allocated in a manner that is fair and equitable. See “Risk Factors — Risks Relating to Our Business and Structure — We generally may make investments that could give rise to a conflict of interest and our ability to enter into transactions with our affiliates will be restricted.”

 

The principal executive offices of our Advisor are located at 717 Texas Avenue, Suite 2200, Houston, Texas, 77002.

 

Investment Advisory Agreement

 

On March 6, 2024, the Company entered into an amended and restated investment advisory agreement with the Advisor (the “Amended Investment Advisory Agreement”), which became effective when we closed our initial public offering (“IPO”). Under the Amended Investment Advisory Agreement, the base management fee calculated at an annual rate of 1.00% and the incentive fee on income is subject to a twelve-quarter lookback quarterly hurdle rate of 1.50% and is subject to an Incentive Fee Cap (as defined below) based on the Company’s Cumulative Pre-Incentive Fee Net Return (as defined below).

 

The cost of both the management fee and the incentive fee under the Amended Investment Advisory Agreement are ultimately borne by common stockholders. The Amended Investment Advisory Agreement was approved by the Board on March 6, 2024. Unless earlier terminated, the Amended Investment Advisory Agreement will renew automatically for successive annual periods, provided that such continuance is specifically approved at least annually by our Board including a majority of Independent Directors or the vote of a majority of our outstanding voting securities.

 

As discussed in more detail below, on March 6, 2024, the Advisor entered into the Amended Investment Advisory Agreement (effective upon the closing of the IPO) to include a three-year total return lookback feature on the income incentive fee. This lookback feature provides that the Advisor’s income incentive fee may be reduced if the Company’s portfolio experiences aggregate write-downs or net capital losses during the applicable Trailing Twelve Quarters (as defined below). On March 6, 2024, the Advisor also entered into a fee waiver agreement (the “Fee Waiver Agreement”) for the waivers of (i) the income incentive fee for three calendar quarters commencing in the calendar quarter the IPO was completed and (ii) a portion of the base management fee for one year following the completion of the IPO. The Fee Waiver Agreement became effective upon the closing of the IPO. Amounts waived by the Advisor pursuant to the Fee Waiver Agreement are not subject to recoupment by the Advisor. The waivers of the base management fee and incentive income fee pursuant to the Fee Waiver Agreement may only be terminated by the Board and may not be terminated by the Advisor. The Fee Waiver Agreement is contractual in nature.

 

Base Management Fee

 

Effective upon the closing of the IPO, the base management fee pursuant to the Amended Investment Advisory Agreement is calculated at an annual rate of 1.00% of the fair market value of the Company’s investments. Since the IPO occurred on a date other than the first day of a calendar quarter, the base management fee was calculated for such calendar quarter at a weighted rate based on the fee rates applicable before and after the closing of the IPO based on the number of days in such calendar quarter before and after the closing of the IPO. Pursuant to the Fee Waiver Agreement, effective upon the closing of the IPO, the Advisor entered into an agreement for the contractual waiver of the base management fee at an annual rate of 0.25% for one year following the completion of the IPO.

 

The base management fee under the Amended Investment Advisory Agreement is payable quarterly in arrears and calculated based on the average of the Company’s fair market value of investments, at the end of the two most recently completed calendar quarters, including, in each case, assets purchased with borrowings under credit facilities and issuances of senior unsecured notes, but excluding cash, U.S. government securities and commercial paper instruments maturing within one year of purchase. Base management fees for any partial quarter will be appropriately pro-rated.

 

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Incentive Fee

 

The Company will also pay the Advisor an incentive fee. The incentive fee will consist of two parts — an incentive fee on income and an incentive fee on capital gains. Described in more detail below, these components of the incentive fee will be largely independent of each other with the result that one component may be payable even if the other is not.

 

Incentive Fee on Income

 

The incentive fee based on income (the “income incentive fee”) under the Amended Investment Advisory Agreement is determined and paid quarterly in arrears in cash (subject to the limitations described in “Payment of Incentive Fees” below).

 

Under the Amended Investment Advisory Agreement, the first part of the income incentive fee is calculated and payable quarterly in arrears based on the Company’s pre-incentive fee net investment income as defined in the Amended Investment Advisory Agreement. Pre-incentive fee net investment income means, as the context requires, either the dollar value of, or percentage rate of return on the value of, the Company’s net assets at the beginning of each applicable calendar quarter from interest income, dividend income and any other income (including any other fees (other than fees for providing managerial assistance), such as commitment, origination, structuring, diligence and consulting fees or other fees that the Company receives from portfolio companies) accrued during the calendar quarter, minus the Company’s operating expenses accrued for the quarter (including the management fee, expenses payable under the Administration Agreement (as defined below), and any interest expense or fees on any credit facilities or senior unsecured notes and dividends paid on any issued and outstanding preferred shares, but excluding the incentive fee). Pre-incentive fee net investment income includes, in the case of investments with a deferred interest feature (such as original issue discount, debt instruments with pay in kind (“PIK”) interest and zero coupon securities), accrued income that the Company has not yet received in cash. Pre-incentive fee net investment income excludes any realized capital gains, realized capital losses or unrealized capital appreciation or depreciation.

 

Following the closing of the IPO, the Company is required to pay an income incentive fee of 15.0%, with a 1.50% quarterly hurdle and 100% catch-up. Pursuant to the Fee Waiver Agreement, the Advisor waived its right to receive an income incentive fee during the three calendar quarters commencing with the calendar quarter in which the IPO was completed and amounts waived by the Advisor pursuant to the Fee Waiver Agreement are not subject to recoupment by the Advisor.

 

Effective upon the closing of the IPO, the Company will pay the Advisor an income incentive fee based on its aggregate pre-incentive fee net investment income (as described above), with respect to (i) the calendar quarter ending June 30, 2024 (the “First Calendar Quarter”) and (ii) each subsequent calendar quarter, with the then, current calendar quarter and the eleven preceding calendar quarters beginning with the calendar quarter after the First Calendar Quarter (or the appropriate portion thereof in the case of any of the Company’s first eleven calendar quarters that commence after the First Calendar Quarter) (those calendar quarters after the First Calendar Quarter, the “Trailing Twelve Quarters”).

 

For the First Calendar Quarter, pre-incentive fee net investment income in respect of the First Calendar Quarter was compared to a hurdle rate of 1.50% (6.00% annualized). The income incentive fee for the First Calendar Quarter was determined as follows:

 

  no income incentive fee is payable to the Advisor if the aggregate pre-incentive fee net investment income for the First Calendar Quarter does not exceed that hurdle rate;
     
  100% of the aggregate pre-incentive fee net investment income with respect to that portion of such pre-incentive fee net investment income, if any, that exceeds that hurdle rate, but is less than a quarterly rate of 1.6667% for the portion of the First Calendar Quarter before the IPO and a quarterly rate of 1.7647% for the portion of the First Calendar Quarter after the IPO, referred to the “catch-up.” The “catch-up” is meant to provide the Advisor with 10.0% of the Company’s pre-incentive fee net investment income for the portion of the First Calendar Quarter before the IPO and 15.0% for the balance of that First Calendar Quarter, as if the hurdle rate did not apply; and
     
  10.0% of the aggregate pre-incentive fee net investment income, if any, that exceeds a quarterly rate of 1.6667% for the portion of the First Calendar Quarter before the IPO and 15.0% of the aggregate pre-incentive fee net investment income, if any, that exceeds a quarterly rate of 1.7647% for the balance of the First Calendar Quarter.

 

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Commencing with the calendar quarter beginning immediately after the First Calendar Quarter, subject to the Incentive Fee Cap (described below), the pre-incentive fee net investment income in respect of the relevant Trailing Twelve Quarters is compared to a “Hurdle Rate” equal to the product of (i) the hurdle rate of 1.50% per quarter (6.00% annualized) and (ii) the sum of our net assets at the beginning of each applicable calendar quarter comprising the relevant Trailing Twelve Quarters. The income incentive fee for each calendar quarter will be determined as follows:

 

no income incentive fee is payable to the Advisor in any calendar quarter in which aggregate pre-incentive fee net investment income in respect of the relevant Trailing Twelve Quarters does not exceed the Hurdle Rate;
   
100% of the aggregate pre-incentive fee net investment income in respect of the Trailing Twelve Quarters with respect to that portion of such pre-incentive fee net investment income, if any, that exceeds the Hurdle Rate, but is less than or equal to an amount, which we refer to as the “Catch-up Amount,” determined on a quarterly basis by multiplying 1.7647% by the Company’s net asset value at the beginning of each applicable calendar quarter comprising the relevant Trailing Twelve Quarters (after making appropriate adjustments to the Company’s net asset value at the beginning of each applicable calendar quarter for all issuances by the Company of shares of its common stock, including issuances pursuant to its dividend reinvestment plan, and distributions during the applicable calendar quarter); and
   
15.0% of the aggregate pre-incentive fee net investment income in respect of the Trailing Twelve Quarters that exceeds the Catch-up Amount.

 

Commencing with the quarter that begins immediately after the First Calendar Quarter, each income incentive fee became subject to an “Incentive Fee Cap” that in respect of any calendar quarter is an amount equal to 15.0% of the Cumulative Pre-Incentive Fee Net Return (as defined herein) during the Trailing Twelve Quarters less the aggregate income incentive fees that were paid to the Advisor in the preceding eleven calendar quarters (or portion thereof) comprising the relevant Trailing Twelve Quarters. In the event the Incentive Fee Cap is zero or a negative value then no income incentive fee shall be payable and if the Incentive Fee Cap is less than the amount of income incentive fee that would otherwise be payable, the amount of income incentive fee shall be reduced to an amount equal to the Incentive Fee Cap.

 

“Cumulative Pre-Incentive Fee Net Return” means (x) with respect to the First Calendar Quarter, the sum of pre-incentive fee net investment income in respect of the First Calendar Quarter, (y) with respect to the relevant Trailing Twelve Quarters, the pre-incentive fee net investment income in respect of the relevant Trailing Twelve Quarters minus any Net Capital Loss (as defined below), if any, in respect of the relevant Trailing Twelve Quarters. If, in any quarter, the Incentive Fee Cap is zero or a negative value, the Company will pay no income incentive fee to the Advisor for such quarter. If, in any quarter, the Incentive Fee Cap for such quarter is a positive value but is less than the income incentive fee that is payable to the Advisor for such quarter (before giving effect to the Incentive Fee Cap) calculated as described above, the Company will pay an income incentive fee to the Advisor equal to the Incentive Fee Cap for such quarter. If, in any quarter, the Incentive Fee Cap for such quarter is equal to or greater than the income incentive fee that is payable to the Advisor for such quarter (before giving effect to the Incentive Fee Cap) calculated as described above, the Company will pay an income incentive fee to the Advisor equal to the incentive fee calculated as described above for such quarter without regard to the Incentive Fee Cap.

 

“Net Capital Loss” in respect of a particular period means the difference, if positive, between (i) aggregate capital losses, whether realized or unrealized, in such period and (ii) aggregate capital gains, whether realized or unrealized, in such period.

 

These calculations are prorated for any period of less than three months and adjusted for any share issuances or repurchases during the relevant quarter. In no event will the amendments to the income incentive fee to include the three year income and total return lookback features allow the Advisor to receive greater cumulative income incentive fees under the Amended Investment Advisory Agreement than it would have under the Investment Advisory Agreement. Amounts waived by the Advisor pursuant to the Fee Waiver Agreement are not subject to recoupment by the Advisor.

 

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The following is a graphical representation of the calculations of the income incentive fee:

 

Quarterly Incentive Fee on

Pre-Incentive Fee Net Investment Income

Prior to the IPO

(expressed as a percentage of the value of net assets)

 

Pre-Incentive Fee Net Investment Income   0%   1.50%   1.6667%
Quarterly Incentive Fee   ← 0% →   ← 100% →   ← 10% →

 

Quarterly Incentive Fee on

Pre-Incentive Fee Net Investment Income

After to the IPO

(expressed as a percentage of the value of net assets)

 

Pre-Incentive Fee Net Investment Income   0%   1.50%   1.7647%
Quarterly Incentive Fee   ← 0% →   ← 100% →   ← 15% →

 

Incentive Fee on Capital Gains

 

The incentive fee on capital gains (the “capital gains incentive fee”) is calculated and payable in arrears in cash as follows:

 

15.0% of the Company’s realized capital gains, if any, on a cumulative basis from formation through the end of a given calendar year or upon termination of the Investment Advisory Agreement, computed net of all realized capital losses and unrealized capital depreciation on a cumulative basis, less the aggregate amount of any previously paid capital gain incentive fees.

 

Payment of Incentive Fees

 

Prior to the IPO, any incentive fees earned by the Advisor accrued as earned but only became payable in cash to the Advisor upon closing of the IPO. The Company incurred incentive fees on income of $16.8 million that became payable upon closing of the IPO.

 

Administration Agreement

 

On February 5, 2021, we entered into an administration agreement (the “Administration Agreement”) with our Advisor, which serves as our administrator (the “Administrator”) and provides or oversees the performance of its required administrative services and professional services rendered by others, which will include (but are not limited to) accounting, payment of our expenses, legal, compliance, operations, technology and investor relations, preparation and filing of its tax returns, and preparation of financial reports provided to our stockholders and filed with the SEC.

 

On February 19, 2025, the Board approved an additional one-year term of the Administration Agreement through March 15, 2026.

 

We reimburse the Administrator for its costs and expenses incurred in performing its obligations under the Administration Agreement, which may include its allocable portion of office facilities, overhead, and compensation paid to or compensatory distributions received by its officers (including our Chief Compliance Officer and Chief Financial Officer) and its respective staff who provide services to the Company. As the Company reimburses the Administrator for its expenses, such costs (including the costs of sub-administrators) will be ultimately borne by common stockholders. The Administrator does not receive compensation from the Company other than reimbursement of its expenses. The Administration Agreement may be terminated by either party with 60 days’ written notice.

 

Since the inception of the Company, the Administrator has engaged sub-administrators to assist the Administrator in performing certain of its administrative duties. During this period, the Administrator has not sought reimbursement of its expenses other than expenses incurred by the sub-administrators. However, the Administrator has a contractual right to seek reimbursement for its costs and expenses incurred in performing its obligations under the Administration Agreement and may do so in the future. On March 28, 2023, the Administrator engaged Ultimus Fund Solutions, LLC under a sub-administration agreement. Under the terms of the sub-administration agreement, Ultimus Fund Solutions, LLC provides fund administration and fund accounting services. Since March 28, 2023, the Company has paid fees to Ultimus Fund Solutions, LLC, which constitute reimbursable expenses under the Administration Agreement. The Administrator may enter into additional sub-administration agreements with third parties to perform other administrative and professional services on behalf of the Administrator.

 

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Risk Management

 

Broad Diversification. We diversify our investments by company, asset type, investment size and industry focus. Furthermore, we must meet certain diversification tests in order to qualify as a RIC for U.S. federal income tax purposes (the “Diversification Tests”). See “Item 1. Business — Material U.S. Federal Income Tax Considerations.”

 

Hedging. We may hedge against interest rate fluctuations by using standard hedging instruments such as futures, options and forward contracts subject to the requirements of the 1940 Act and to applicable CFTC regulations. While hedging activities may insulate us against adverse changes in interest rates, they may also limit our ability to participate in benefits of such changes with respect to our portfolio of investments. The Advisor will claim relief from CFTC registration and regulation as a commodity pool operator with respect to our operations, with the result that we will be limited in our ability to use futures contracts or options on futures contracts or engage in swap transactions. Specifically, we will be subject to strict limitations on using such derivatives other than for hedging purposes, whereby the use of derivatives not used solely for hedging purposes is generally limited to situations where (i) the aggregate initial margin and premiums required to establish such positions do not exceed five percent of the liquidation value of our portfolio, after taking into account unrealized profits and unrealized losses on any such contracts we have entered into; or (ii) the aggregate net notional value of such derivatives does not exceed 100% of the liquidation value of our portfolio.

 

Regulation as a Business Development Company

 

General

 

A BDC is a specialized investment vehicle that elects to be regulated under the 1940 Act as an investment company but is generally subject to less onerous requirements than other registered investment companies under a regime designed to encourage lending to U.S.-based small and mid-sized businesses. Unlike many similar types of investment vehicles that are restricted to being private entities, the stock of a BDC is permitted to trade in the public equity markets. BDCs are also eligible to elect to be treated as a RIC under Subchapter M of the Code. A RIC typically does not incur significant entity-level income taxes, because it is generally entitled to deduct distributions made to its stockholders.

 

Qualifying Assets

 

Under the 1940 Act, a BDC may not acquire any asset other than assets of the type listed in Section 55(a) of the 1940 Act, which are referred to as qualifying assets, unless, at the time the acquisition is made, qualifying assets represent at least 70% of the BDC’s total assets. The principal categories of qualifying assets relevant to our proposed business are the following:

 

  (1) Securities purchased in transactions not involving any public offering from the issuer of such securities, which issuer (subject to certain limited exceptions) is an eligible portfolio company, or from any person who is, or has been during the preceding 13 months, an affiliated person of an eligible portfolio company, or from any other person, subject to such rules as may be prescribed by the SEC. An eligible portfolio company is defined in the 1940 Act as any issuer which:

 

(a)is organized under the laws of, and has its principal place of business in, the United States;

 

(b)is not an investment company (other than a small business investment company wholly owned by the BDC) or a company that would be an investment company but for certain exclusions under the 1940 Act; and

 

(c)satisfies either of the following:

 

(i)does not have any class of securities listed on a national securities exchange or has any class of securities listed on a national securities exchange subject to a $250 million market capitalization maximum; or

 

(ii)is controlled by a BDC or a group of companies including a BDC, the BDC actually exercises a controlling influence over the management or policies of the eligible portfolio company, and, as a result, the BDC has an affiliated person who is a director of the eligible portfolio company.

 

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  (2) Securities of any eligible portfolio company which we control.

 

  (3) Securities purchased in a private transaction from a U.S. issuer that is not an investment company or from an affiliated person of the issuer, or in transactions incident thereto, if the issuer is in bankruptcy and subject to reorganization or if the issuer, immediately prior to the purchase of its securities, was unable to meet its obligations as they came due without material assistance other than conventional lending or financing arrangements.

 

  (4) Securities of an eligible portfolio company purchased from any person in a private transaction if there is no ready market for such securities and we already own 60% of the outstanding equity of the eligible portfolio company.

 

  (5) Securities received in exchange for or distributed on or with respect to securities described in (1) through (4) above, or pursuant to the exercise of warrants or rights relating to such securities.

 

  (6) Cash, cash equivalents, U.S. government securities or high-quality debt securities maturing in one year or less from the time of investment.

 

We may invest up to 30% of our portfolio opportunistically in “non-qualifying assets.”

 

Managerial Assistance to Portfolio Companies

 

In addition, a BDC must be organized and have its principal place of business in the United States and must be operated for the purpose of making investments in the types of securities described in (1), (2), or (3) above under “—Regulation as a Business Development Company—Qualifying Assets.” However, in order to count portfolio securities as qualifying assets for the purpose of the 70% test, the BDC must either control the issuer of the securities or must offer to make available to the issuer of the securities significant managerial assistance. However, when the BDC purchases securities in conjunction with one or more other persons acting together, one of the other persons in the group may make available such managerial assistance. Making available managerial assistance means, among other things, any arrangement whereby the BDC, through its directors, officers or employees, offers to provide, and, if accepted, does so provide, significant guidance and counsel concerning the management, operations or business objectives and policies of a portfolio company.

 

Temporary Investments

 

Pending investment in other types of “qualifying assets,” as described above, our investments may consist of cash, cash equivalents, U.S. government securities or high-quality debt securities maturing in one year or less from the time of investment, which we refer to, collectively, as temporary investments, so that 70% of our assets are qualifying assets.

 

Senior Securities and Indebtedness

 

We partially finance our investments with leverage in the form of borrowings under credit facilities and issuances of senior unsecured notes. We intend to further borrow under credit facilities and/or issue senior unsecured notes in the future in order to finance our investments. As of December 31, 2024, we had $858 million of indebtedness outstanding under our credit facilities and senior unsecured notes. See “Risk Factors — Risks Relating to Our Business and Structure — Provisions in our credit facilities and our senior unsecured notes contain various covenants, which, if not complied with, could accelerate our repayment obligations under such facilities, thereby materially and adversely affecting our liquidity, financial condition, results of operations and ability to pay distributions. 

 

We will be permitted, under specified conditions, to issue multiple classes of indebtedness and one class of stock senior to our shares of common stock if our asset coverage, as defined in the 1940 Act, is at least equal to 150% immediately after each such issuance. We are required to meet an asset coverage ratio of total assets (less total liabilities other than indebtedness) to total borrowings and other senior securities of at least 150%. If this ratio declines below 150%, we cannot incur additional leverage and could be required to sell a portion of our investments to repay some leverage when it is disadvantageous to do so. As defined in the 1940 Act, asset coverage of 150% means that for every $100 of net assets we hold, we may raise $200 from borrowing and issuing senior securities.

 

We currently intend to target asset coverage of 200% to 180% (which equates to a debt-to-equity ratio of 1.0x to 1.25x) but may alter this target based on market conditions. In addition, while any senior securities remain outstanding, we must make provisions to prohibit any distribution to our stockholders or the repurchase of such securities or shares unless we meet the applicable asset coverage ratios at the time of the distribution or repurchase. We may also borrow amounts up to 5% of the value of our total assets for temporary or emergency purposes without regard to asset coverage. Regulations governing our operations as a BDC will affect our ability to raise, and the method of raising, additional capital, which may expose us to risks.

 

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Codes of Ethics

 

We and our Advisor have adopted a code of ethics pursuant to Rule 17j-1 under the 1940 Act that establishes procedures for personal investments and restricts certain personal securities transactions. Personnel subject to the joint code may invest in securities for their personal investment accounts, including securities that may be purchased or held by us, so long as such investments are made in accordance with the code’s requirements. In addition, we have adopted a code of ethics applicable to our Principal Executive Officer, Principal Accounting Officer and senior financial officers pursuant to Section 406 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. You may review or download the codes of ethics from the SEC’s Edgar database as part of our filings under www.sec.gov, or by written request to the following: Chief Compliance Officer, Kayne Anderson, 717 Texas Avenue, Suite 2200, Houston, TX 77002.

 

Compliance Policies and Procedures

 

We make investments alongside certain entities and accounts advised by our Advisor and its affiliates. Under the 1940 Act, we are prohibited from knowingly participating in certain joint transactions with our affiliates without the prior approval of the independent directors and, in some cases, prior approval by the SEC. However, we generally make investments alongside affiliated entities and accounts pursuant to exemptive relief granted by the SEC to us, our Advisor, and certain of our affiliates on August 10, 2023. Pursuant to such exemptive relief, and subject to certain conditions, we are permitted to co-invest in the same security with our affiliates in a manner that is consistent with our investment objective, investment strategy, regulatory consideration and other relevant factors. If opportunities arise that would otherwise be appropriate for us and an affiliate to purchase different securities in the same issuer, our Advisor will need to decide which account will proceed with such investment. Our Advisor’s investment allocation policy incorporates the conditions of exemptive relief to seek to ensure that investment opportunities are allocated in a manner that is fair and equitable.

 

We will be periodically examined by the SEC for compliance with the 1940 Act.

 

We are required to provide and maintain a bond issued by a reputable fidelity insurance company to protect us against larceny and embezzlement. Furthermore, as a BDC, we will be prohibited from protecting any director or officer against any liability to us or our stockholders arising from willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence or reckless disregard of the duties involved in the conduct of such person’s office.

 

We and our Advisor have adopted and implemented written policies and procedures reasonably designed to detect and prevent violation of the federal securities laws and will be required to review these compliance policies and procedures annually for their adequacy and the effectiveness of their implementation and designate a chief compliance officer to be responsible for administering the policies and procedures.

 

Sarbanes-Oxley Act

 

The Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, as amended, or the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, imposes a variety of regulatory requirements on companies with a class of securities registered under the Exchange Act and their insiders. Many of these requirements affect us. For example:

 

  pursuant to Rule 13a-14 under the Exchange Act our principal executive officer and principal financial officer must certify the accuracy of the financial statements contained in our periodic reports;

 

  pursuant to Item 307 under Regulation S-K under the Securities Act our periodic reports must disclose our conclusions about the effectiveness of our disclosure controls and procedures;

 

  pursuant to Rule 13a-15 of the Exchange Act, our management must prepare an annual report regarding its assessment of our internal control over financial reporting and must obtain an audit of the effectiveness of internal control over financial reporting performed by our independent registered public accounting firm; and

 

  pursuant to Item 308 of Regulation S-K under the Securities Act and Rule 13a-15 under the Exchange Act, our periodic reports must disclose whether there were significant changes in our internal controls over financial reporting or in other factors that could significantly affect these controls subsequent to the date of their evaluation, including any corrective actions with regard to significant deficiencies and material weaknesses.

 

The Sarbanes-Oxley Act requires us to review our current policies and procedures to determine whether we comply with the Sarbanes-Oxley Act and the regulations promulgated under such act. We will continue to monitor our compliance with all regulations that are adopted under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act and will take actions necessary to ensure that we comply with that act in the future.

 

Commodities Exchange Act

 

The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (“CFTC”) and the SEC have issued final rules establishing that certain swap transactions are subject to CFTC regulation. Engaging in such swap transactions may cause us to fall within the definition of “commodity pool” under the Commodity Exchange Act and related CFTC regulations. The Advisor will rely on an exclusion from the definition of a CPO under CFTC Rule 4.5 because of our limited trading in commodity interests, and the Advisor will operate us as if we were not registered as a CPO, so that unlike a registered CPO, with respect to us, the Advisor is not required to deliver a Disclosure Document or an Annual Report (as those terms are used in the CFTC’s rules) to shareholders.

 

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Proxy Voting Policies and Procedures

 

We have delegated our proxy voting responsibility to our Advisor. A summary of the Proxy Voting Policies and Procedures of our Advisor are set forth below. These policies and procedures will be reviewed periodically by our Advisor and, subsequent to our election to be regulated as a BDC, our non-interested directors, and, accordingly, are subject to change. For purposes of these Proxy Voting Policies and Procedures described below, “we” “our” and “us” refers to our Advisor.

 

An investment advisor registered under the Advisers Act has a fiduciary duty to act solely in the best interests of its clients. As part of this duty, we recognize that we must vote the Company’s securities in a timely manner free of conflicts of interest and in the best interests of the Company and its stockholders.

 

These policies and procedures for voting proxies for our investment advisory clients are intended to comply with Section 206 of, and Rule 206(4)-6 under, the Advisers Act.

 

We will vote proxies relating to our portfolio securities in what we believe to be the best interest of our stockholders. To ensure that our vote is not the product of a conflict of interest, we will require that: (1) anyone involved in the decision making process disclose to our chief compliance officer any potential conflict that he or she is aware of and any contact that he or she has had with any interested party regarding a proxy vote; and (2) employees involved in the decision making process or vote administration are prohibited from revealing how we intend to vote on a proposal in order to reduce any attempted influence from interested parties.

 

You may obtain information about how we voted proxies by making a written request for proxy voting information to: KA Credit Advisors, LLC, 717 Texas Avenue, Suite 2200, Houston, TX 77002, Attention: Chief Compliance Officer.

 

Employees

 

We do not have any employees. Our day-to-day investment operations are managed by our Advisor and the Administrator. Any compensation paid for services relating to our financial reporting and compliance functions will be paid by our Administrator, subject to reimbursement by us of an allocable portion of office facilities, overhead, and compensation paid to or compensatory distributions received by our officers (including our Chief Compliance Officer and Chief Financial Officer) and their respective staff who provide services to us. As we reimburse the Administrator for its expenses, we will indirectly bear such cost.

 

Our Administrator engaged Ultimus Fund Solutions, LLC under a sub-administration agreement to assist the Administrator in performing certain of its administrative duties. The Administrator may enter into additional sub-administration agreements with third-parties to perform other administrative and professional services on behalf of the Administrator. We will pay the fees associated with such functions on a direct basis without profit to our Administrator.

 

Privacy Principles

 

We are committed to maintaining the privacy of our investors and to safeguarding their non-public personal information. The following information is provided to help you understand what personal information we collect, how we protect that information and why, in certain cases, we may share information with select other parties.

 

We do not disclose any non-public personal information about our stockholders or a former stockholder to anyone, except as permitted by law or as is necessary in order to service stockholder accounts (for example, to a transfer agent or third-party administrator).

 

We restrict access to non-public personal information about our stockholders to employees of our Advisor and its affiliates with a legitimate business need for the information. We will maintain physical, electronic and procedural safeguards designed to protect the non-public personal information of our stockholders.

 

Reporting Obligations

 

As a BDC, we make available on our website (www.kaynebdc.com) our annual reports on Form 10-K, quarterly reports on Form 10-Q and our current reports on Form 8-K. Shareholders and the public may also read and copy any materials we file with the SEC at the SEC’s Public Reference Room, 100 F Street, N.E., Washington, D.C. 20549 and on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. Information on the operation of the SEC’s public reference room may be obtained by calling the SEC at (202) 551-8090 or (800) SEC-0330. The reference to our website and the SEC’s website is an inactive textual reference only, and the information should not be considered a part of this Form 10-K.

 

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Material U.S. Federal Income Tax Considerations

 

The following discussion is a general summary of the material U.S. federal income tax considerations applicable to us and to an investment in our shares of common stock. This summary does not purport to be a complete description of the U.S. federal income tax considerations applicable to such an investment. For example, we have not described certain considerations that may be relevant to certain types of holders subject to special treatment under U.S. federal income tax laws, including persons who hold our common stock as part of a straddle or hedging, integrated or constructive sale transaction, stockholders subject to the alternative minimum tax, tax-exempt organizations, insurance companies, brokers or dealers in securities, traders in securities that elect to mark-to-market their securities holdings, pension plans and trusts, persons that have a functional currency (as defined in Section 985 of the Code) other than the U.S. dollar, U.S. expatriates, regulated investment companies, real estate investment trusts, personal holding companies, persons who acquire an interest in the Company in connection with the performance of services and financial institutions. Such persons should consult with their own tax advisers as to the U.S. federal income tax consequences of an investment in our shares of common stock, which may differ substantially from those described herein. This summary assumes that investors hold our shares of common stock as capital assets (within the meaning of Section 1221 of the Code).

 

The discussion is based upon the Code, Treasury regulations, and administrative and judicial interpretations, each as of the date of the filing of this annual report on Form 10-K and all of which are subject to change, possibly retroactively, which could affect the continuing validity of this discussion. We have not sought and will not seek any ruling from the Internal Revenue Service, or the IRS, regarding any offering of our shares of common stock. This summary does not discuss any aspects of U.S. estate or gift tax or foreign, state or local tax. It does not discuss the special treatment under U.S. federal income tax laws that could result if we invested in tax-exempt securities or certain other investment assets. For purposes of this discussion, references to “dividends” are to dividends within the meaning of the U.S. federal income tax laws and associated regulations and may include amounts subject to treatment as a return of capital under section 19(a) of the 1940 Act. A return of capital distribution is a return to stockholders of a portion of their original investment in the Company and does not represent income or capital gains.

 

A “U.S. stockholder” is a beneficial owner of our shares of common stock that is for U.S. federal income tax purposes:

 

  a citizen or individual resident of the United States;

 

  a corporation, or other entity treated as a corporation for U.S. federal income tax purposes, created or organized in or under the laws of the United States or any state thereof or the District of Columbia;

 

  an estate, the income of which is subject to U.S. federal income taxation regardless of its source; or

 

  a trust if either a U.S. court can exercise primary supervision over its administration and one or more U.S. persons have the authority to control all of its substantial decisions or the trust was in existence on August 20, 1996, was treated as a U.S. person prior to that date, and has made a valid election to be treated as a U.S. person.

 

A “non-U.S. stockholder” is a beneficial owner of our shares of common stock that is neither a U.S. stockholder nor a partnership for U.S. federal income tax purposes.

 

If a partnership (including an entity treated as a partnership for U.S. federal income tax purposes) holds shares of common stock, the tax treatment of a partner in the partnership will generally depend upon the status of the partner and the activities of the partnership. A prospective investor that is a partner in a partnership that will hold shares of common stock should consult its tax advisors with respect to the purchase, ownership and disposition of shares of common stock.

 

Tax matters are very complicated and the tax consequences to an investor of an investment in our shares of common stock will depend on the facts of his, her or its particular situation. We encourage investors to consult their own tax advisors regarding the specific consequences of such an investment, including tax reporting requirements, the applicability of U.S. federal, state, local and foreign tax laws, eligibility for the benefits of any applicable tax treaty, and the effect of any possible changes in the tax laws.

 

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Election to Be Taxed as a RIC

 

We intend to elect to be treated as a RIC under Subchapter M of the Code. As a RIC, we generally will not have to pay corporate-level U.S. federal income taxes on any net ordinary income or capital gains that we timely distribute to our stockholders as dividends. To qualify as a RIC, we must, among other things, meet certain source-of-income and asset diversification requirements (as described below). In addition, to qualify for RIC treatment, we must distribute to our stockholders, for each taxable year, dividends of an amount at least equal to the sum of 90% of our “investment company taxable income,” which is generally our net ordinary income plus the excess of realized net short-term capital gains over realized net long-term capital losses and determined without regard to any deduction for dividends paid, and 90% of our net tax-exempt interest income, if any (the “Annual Distribution Requirement”). Although not required for us to maintain our RIC tax status, in order to preclude the imposition of a 4% nondeductible federal excise tax imposed on RICs, we must distribute to our stockholders in respect of each calendar year dividends of an amount at least equal to the sum of (1) 98% of our net ordinary income (taking into account certain deferrals and elections) for the calendar year, (2) 98.2% of the excess (if any) of our realized capital gains over our realized capital losses, or capital gain net income (adjusted for certain ordinary losses), generally for the one-year period ending on October 31 of the calendar year and (3) the sum of any net ordinary income plus capital gains net income for preceding years that were not distributed during such years and on which we paid no federal income tax (the “Excise Tax Avoidance Requirement”).

 

Taxation as a RIC

 

If we:

 

  qualify as a RIC; and

 

  satisfy the Annual Distribution Requirement;

 

then we will not be subject to U.S. federal income tax on the portion of our investment company taxable income and net capital gain, defined as net long-term capital gains in excess of net short-term capital losses, we distribute to stockholders. As a RIC, we will be subject to U.S. federal income tax at regular corporate rates on any net income or net capital gain not distributed (or deemed distributed) as dividends to our stockholders.

 

In order to qualify as a RIC for U.S. federal income tax purposes, we must, among other things:

 

  have in effect an election to be treated as a BDC under the 1940 Act at all times during each taxable year;

 

  derive in each taxable year at least 90% of our gross income from dividends, interest, payments with respect to certain securities loans, gains from the sale of stock or other securities, or other income derived with respect to our business of investing in such stock or securities, or currencies, other income derived with respect to its business of investing in such stock, securities or currencies and net income derived from interests in “qualified publicly traded partnerships” (partnerships that are traded on an established securities market or tradable on a secondary market, other than partnerships that derive 90% of their income from interest, dividends and other permitted RIC income) (the “90% Income Test”); and

 

  diversify our holdings so that at the end of each quarter of the taxable year:

 

  at least 50% of the value of our assets consists of cash, cash equivalents, U.S. government securities, securities of other RICs, and other securities if such other securities of any one issuer do not represent more than 5% of the value of our assets or more than 10% of the outstanding voting securities of the issuer; and

 

  no more than 25% of the value of our assets is invested in the securities, other than U.S. government securities or securities of other RICs, of one issuer or of two or more issuers that are controlled, as determined under applicable tax rules, by us and that are engaged in the same or similar or related trades or businesses or in the securities of one or more qualified publicly traded partnerships.

 

We may be required to recognize taxable income in circumstances in which we do not receive cash. For example, if we hold debt obligations that are treated under applicable tax rules as having original issue discount (such as debt instruments with PIK interest or, in certain cases, increasing interest rates or issued with warrants), we must include in income each year a portion of the original issue discount that accrues over the life of the obligation, regardless of whether cash representing such income is received by us in the same taxable year. We may also have to include in income other amounts that we have not yet received in cash, such as PIK interest and deferred loan origination fees that are paid after origination of the loan. Because any original issue discount or other amounts accrued will be included in our investment company taxable income for the year of accrual, we may be required to make a distribution to our shareholders in order to satisfy the Annual Distribution Requirement, even though we will not have received the corresponding cash amount.

 

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We may invest in partnerships, including qualified publicly traded partnerships, which may result in our being subject to state, local or foreign income, franchise or other tax liabilities.

 

In addition, as a RIC, we are subject to ordinary income and capital gain distribution requirements under U.S. federal excise tax rules for each calendar year (as discussed above). If we do not meet the required distributions, we will be subject to a 4% nondeductible federal excise tax on the undistributed amount. The failure to meet U.S. federal excise tax distribution requirements will not cause us to lose our RIC status. Although we currently intend to make sufficient distributions each taxable year to satisfy the U.S. federal excise tax requirements, under certain circumstances, we may choose to retain taxable income or capital gains in excess of current year distributions into the next tax year in an amount less than what would trigger payments of federal income tax under Subchapter M of the Code. We may then be required to pay a 4% excise tax on such income or capital gains.

 

A RIC is limited in its ability to deduct expenses in excess of its investment company taxable income. If our deductible expenses in a given taxable year exceed our investment company taxable income, we may incur a net operating loss for that taxable year. However, a RIC is not permitted to carry forward net operating losses to subsequent taxable years and such net operating losses do not pass through to its stockholders. In addition, deductible expenses can be used only to offset investment company taxable income, not net capital gain. A RIC may not use any net capital losses (that is, the excess of realized capital losses over realized capital gains) to offset its investment company taxable income, but may carry forward such net capital losses, and use them to offset future capital gains, indefinitely. Due to these limits on deductibility of expenses and net capital losses, we may for tax purposes have aggregate taxable income for several taxable years that we are required to distribute and that is taxable to our stockholders even if such taxable income is greater than the net income we actually earn during those taxable years.

 

Any underwriting fees paid by us with respect to our own stock are not deductible. We may be required to recognize taxable income in circumstances in which we do not receive cash. For example, if we hold debt obligations that are treated under applicable tax rules as having OID (such as debt instruments with PIK interest or, in certain cases, with increasing interest rates or issued with warrants), we must include in income each year a portion of the OID that accrues over the life of the obligation, regardless of whether cash representing such income is received by us in the same taxable year. Because any OID accrued will be included in our investment company taxable income for the taxable year of accrual, we may be required to make a distribution to our stockholders in order to satisfy the Annual Distribution Requirement, even though we will not have received any corresponding cash amount. Furthermore, a portfolio company in which we hold equity or debt instruments may face financial difficulty that requires us to work out, modify, or otherwise restructure such equity or debt instruments. Any such restructuring could, depending upon the terms of the restructuring, cause us to incur unusable or nondeductible losses or recognize future non-cash taxable income.

 

Certain of our investment practices may be subject to special and complex U.S. federal income tax provisions that may, among other things, (1) treat dividends that would otherwise constitute qualified dividend income as non-qualified dividend income, (2) treat dividends that would otherwise be eligible for the corporate dividends received deduction as ineligible for such treatment, (3) disallow, suspend or otherwise limit the allowance of certain losses or deductions, (4) convert lower-taxed long-term capital gain into higher-taxed short-term capital gain or ordinary income, (5) convert an ordinary loss or a deduction into a capital loss (the deductibility of which is more limited), (6) cause us to recognize income or gain without a corresponding receipt of cash, (7) adversely affect the time as to when a purchase or sale of stock or securities is deemed to occur, (8) adversely alter the characterization of certain complex financial transactions and (9) produce income that will not be qualifying income for purposes of the 90% Income Test. We intend to monitor our transactions and may make certain tax elections to mitigate the effect of these provisions and prevent our ability to be subject to tax as a RIC.

 

Gain or loss realized by us from warrants acquired by us as well as any loss attributable to the lapse of such warrants generally will be treated as capital gain or loss. Such gain or loss generally will be long term or short term, depending on how long we held a particular warrant.

 

Although we do not presently expect to do so, we are authorized to borrow funds and to sell assets in order to satisfy distribution requirements. However, under the 1940 Act, we are not permitted to make distributions to our stockholders while our debt obligations and other senior securities are outstanding unless certain “asset coverage” tests are met. See “Item 1. Business — Regulation as a Business Development Company — Senior Securities and Indebtedness.” Moreover, our ability to dispose of assets to meet our distribution requirements may be limited by (1) the illiquid nature of our portfolio and/or (2) other requirements relating to our qualification as a RIC, including the Diversification Tests. If we dispose of assets in order to meet the Annual Distribution Requirement or the Excise Tax Avoidance Requirement, we may make such dispositions at times that, from an investment standpoint, are not advantageous.

 

Some of the income and fees that we may recognize, such as fees for providing managerial assistance, certain fees earned with respect to our investments, income recognized in a work-out or restructuring of a portfolio investment, or income recognized from an equity investment in an operating partnership, will not satisfy the 90% Income Test. In order to manage the risk that such income and fees might disqualify us as a RIC for a failure to satisfy the 90% Income Test, we may be required to recognize such income and fees indirectly through one or more entities treated as corporations for U.S. federal income tax purposes (therefore, received amounts treated as dividends of such corporations). Such corporations will be required to pay U.S. corporate income tax on their earnings, which ultimately will reduce our return on such income and fees.

 

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Failure to Qualify as a RIC

 

If we were unable to qualify for treatment as a RIC and are unable to cure the failure, for example, by disposing of certain investments quickly or raising additional capital to prevent the loss of RIC status, we would be subject to tax on all of our taxable income at regular corporate rates. The Code provides some relief from RIC disqualification due to failures to comply with the 90% Income Test and the Diversification Tests, although there may be additional taxes due in such cases. We cannot assure you that we would qualify for any such relief should we fail the 90% Income Test or the Diversification Tests.

 

Should failure occur, not only would all our taxable income be subject to tax at regular corporate rates, we would not be able to deduct dividend distributions to stockholders, nor would they be required to be made. Distributions, including distributions of net long-term capital gain, would generally be taxable to our stockholders as ordinary dividend income to the extent of our current and accumulated earnings and profits. Subject to certain limitations under the Code, certain corporate stockholders would be eligible to claim a dividends received deduction with respect to such dividends and non-corporate stockholders would generally be able to treat such dividends as “qualified dividend income,” which is subject to reduced rates of U.S. federal income tax. Distributions in excess of our current and accumulated earnings and profits would be treated first as a return of capital to the extent of the stockholder’s tax basis, and any remaining distributions would be treated as a capital gain. If we fail to qualify as a RIC, we may be subject to regular corporate tax on any net built-in gains with respect to certain of our assets (i.e., the excess of the aggregate gains, including items of income, over aggregate losses that would have been realized with respect to such assets if we had been liquidated) that we elect to recognize on requalification or when recognized over the next five taxable years.

 

The remainder of this discussion assumes that we qualify as a RIC and have satisfied the Annual Distribution Requirement for each taxable year.

 

Taxation of U.S. Stockholders

 

Distributions by us generally are taxable to U.S. stockholders as ordinary income or capital gains. Distributions of our “investment company taxable income” (which is, generally, our net ordinary income plus net short-term capital gains in excess of net long-term capital losses) will be taxable as ordinary income to U.S. stockholders to the extent of our current or accumulated earnings and profits, whether paid in cash or reinvested in additional shares of common stock. To the extent such distributions paid by us to non-corporate stockholders (including individuals) are attributable to dividends from U.S. corporations and certain qualified foreign corporations and if certain holding period requirements are met, such distributions generally will be treated as qualified dividend income and generally eligible for a maximum U.S. federal tax rate of either 15% or 20%, depending on whether the individual stockholder’s income exceeds certain threshold amounts, and if other applicable requirements are met, such distributions generally will be eligible for the corporate dividends received deduction to the extent such dividends have been paid by a U.S. corporation. In this regard, it is anticipated that distributions paid by us will generally not be attributable to dividends and, therefore, generally will not qualify for the preferential maximum U.S. federal tax rate applicable to non-corporate stockholders as well as will not be eligible for the corporate dividends received deduction.

 

Distributions of our net capital gains (which is generally our realized net long-term capital gains in excess of realized net short-term capital losses) properly reported by us as “capital gain dividends” will be taxable to a U.S. stockholder as long-term capital gains (currently generally at a maximum rate of either 15% or 20%, depending on whether the individual stockholder’s income exceeds certain threshold amounts) in the case of individuals, trusts or estates, regardless of the U.S. stockholder’s holding period for his, her or its shares of common stock and regardless of whether paid in cash or reinvested in additional shares of common stock. Distributions in excess of our earnings and profits first will reduce a U.S. stockholder’s adjusted tax basis in such stockholder’s shares of common stock and, after the adjusted basis is reduced to zero, will constitute capital gains to such U.S. stockholder. Stockholders receiving dividends or distributions in the form of additional shares of common stock purchased in the market should be treated for U.S. federal income tax purposes as receiving a distribution in an amount equal to the amount of money that the stockholders receiving cash dividends or distributions will receive, and should have a cost basis in the shares received equal to such amount. Stockholders receiving dividends in newly issued shares of common stock will be treated as receiving a distribution equal to the value of the shares received and should have a cost basis of such amount.

 

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Although we currently intend to distribute any net capital gains at least annually, we may in the future decide to retain some or all of our net capital gains but designate the retained amount as a “deemed distribution.” In that case, among other consequences, we will pay tax on the retained amount, each U.S. stockholder will be required to include their share of the deemed distribution in income as if it had been distributed to the U.S. stockholder, and the U.S. stockholder will be entitled to claim a credit or refund equal to their allocable share of the tax paid on the deemed distribution by us. The amount of the deemed distribution net of such tax will be added to the U.S. stockholder’s tax basis for their shares of common stock. Since we expect to pay tax on any retained net capital gains at our regular corporate tax rate, and since that rate is in excess of the maximum rate currently payable by individuals on long-term capital gains, the amount of tax that individual stockholders will be treated as having paid and for which they will receive a credit or refund will exceed the tax they owe on the retained net capital gain. Such excess generally may be claimed as a credit against the U.S. stockholder’s other U.S. federal income tax obligations or may be refunded to the extent it exceeds a stockholder’s liability for U.S. federal income tax. A stockholder that is not subject to U.S. federal income tax or otherwise required to file a U.S. federal income tax return would be required to file a U.S. federal income tax return on the appropriate form in order to claim a refund for the taxes we paid. In order to utilize the deemed distribution approach, we must provide written notice to our stockholders prior to the expiration of 60 days after the close of the relevant taxable year. We cannot treat any of our investment company taxable income as a “deemed distribution.”

 

For purposes of determining (1) whether the Annual Distribution Requirement is satisfied for any tax year and (2) the amount of capital gain dividends paid for that tax year, we may, under certain circumstances, elect to treat a dividend that is paid during the following tax year as if it had been paid during the tax year in question. If we make such an election, the U.S. stockholder will still be treated as receiving the dividend in the tax year in which the distribution is made. However, any dividend declared by us in October, November or December of any calendar year, payable to stockholders of record on a specified date in such a month and actually paid during January of the following calendar year, will be treated as if it had been received by our U.S. stockholders on December 31 of the calendar year in which the dividend was declared.

 

With respect to the reinvestment of dividends, if a U.S. Shareholder owns shares of common stock registered in its own name, the U.S. Shareholder will have all cash distributions automatically reinvested in additional shares of common stock unless the U.S. Shareholder opts out of the reinvestment of dividends by delivering a written notice to our dividend paying agent prior to the record date of the next dividend or distribution. Any distributions reinvested will nevertheless remain taxable to the U.S. Shareholder. The U.S. Shareholder will have an adjusted basis in the additional shares of common stock purchased through the reinvestment equal to the amount of the reinvested distribution. The additional shares of common stock will have a new holding period commencing on the day following the day on which the shares are credited to the U.S. Shareholder’s account.

 

If an investor purchases shares of common stock shortly before the record date of a distribution, the price of the shares of common stock will include the value of the distribution and the investor will be subject to tax on the distribution even though it represents a return of their investment.

 

A stockholder generally will recognize taxable gain or loss if the stockholder sells or otherwise disposes of their shares of common stock. Any gain arising from such sale or disposition generally will be treated as long-term capital gain or loss if the stockholder has held their shares of common stock for more than one year. Otherwise, it would be classified as short-term capital gain or loss. However, any capital loss arising from the sale or disposition of shares of common stock held for six months or less will be treated as long-term capital loss to the extent of the amount of capital gain dividends received, or undistributed capital gain deemed received, with respect to such shares of common stock. In addition, all or a portion of any loss recognized upon a disposition of shares of common stock may be disallowed if other shares of common stock are purchased (whether through reinvestment of distributions or otherwise) within 30 days before or after the disposition. In such a case, the basis of shares of common stock acquired will be increased to reflect the disallowed loss.

 

In general, individual U.S. stockholders are subject to a maximum U.S. federal income tax rate of either 15% or 20% (depending on whether the individual U.S. stockholder’s income exceeds certain threshold amounts) on their net capital gain, i.e., the excess of realized net long-term capital gain over realized net short-term capital loss for a taxable year, including a long-term capital gain derived from an investment in our shares of common stock. Such rate is lower than the maximum federal income tax rate on ordinary taxable income currently payable by individuals. Corporate U.S. stockholders currently are subject to U.S. federal income tax on net capital gain at the maximum 21% rate also applied to ordinary income. Non-corporate stockholders incurring net capital losses for a tax year (i.e., net capital losses in excess of net capital gains) generally may deduct up to $3,000 of such losses against their ordinary income each tax year; any net capital losses of a non-corporate stockholder in excess of $3,000 generally may be carried forward and used in subsequent tax years as provided in the Code. Corporate stockholders generally may not deduct any net capital losses for a tax year, but may carry back such losses for three tax years or carry forward such losses for five tax years.

 

We will send to each of our U.S. stockholders, as promptly as possible after the end of each calendar year, a notice detailing, on a per share and per distribution basis, the amounts includible in such U.S. stockholder’s taxable income for such year as ordinary income and as long-term capital gain. In addition, the U.S. federal tax status of each calendar year’s distributions generally will be reported to the IRS. Distributions may also be subject to additional state, local and foreign taxes depending on a U.S. stockholder’s particular situation. Dividends distributed by us generally will not be eligible for the dividends-received deduction or the lower tax rates applicable to certain qualified dividends.

 

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Backup withholding, currently at a rate of 24%, may be applicable to all taxable distributions to any non-corporate U.S. stockholder (1) who fails to furnish us with a correct taxpayer identification number or a certificate that such stockholder is exempt from backup withholding or (2) with respect to whom the IRS notifies us that such stockholder has failed to properly report certain interest and dividend income to the IRS and to respond to notices to that effect. An individual’s taxpayer identification number is his or her social security number. Any amount withheld under backup withholding is allowed as a credit against the U.S. stockholder’s U.S. federal income tax liability and may entitle such stockholder to a refund, provided that proper information is timely provided to the IRS.

 

If a U.S. stockholder recognizes a loss with respect to shares of common stock of $2 million or more for an individual stockholder or $10 million or more for a corporate stockholder, the stockholder must file with the IRS a disclosure statement on Form 8886. Direct stockholders of portfolio securities are in many cases exempted from this reporting requirement, but under current guidance, stockholders of a RIC are not exempted. The fact that a loss is reportable under these regulations does not affect the legal determination of whether the taxpayer’s treatment of the loss is proper. U.S. stockholders should consult their tax advisors to determine the applicability of these regulations in light of their specific circumstances.

 

A U.S. Shareholder that is a tax-exempt organization for U.S. federal income tax purposes and therefore generally exempt from U.S. federal income taxation may nevertheless be subject to taxation to the extent that it is considered to derive unrelated business taxable income (“UBTI”). The direct conduct by a tax-exempt U.S. Shareholder of the activities we propose to conduct could give rise to UBTI. However, a BDC (and RIC) is a corporation for U.S. federal income tax purposes and its business activities generally will not be attributed to its shareholders for purposes of determining their treatment under current law. Therefore, a tax-exempt U.S. Shareholder generally should not be subject to U.S. taxation solely as a result of the shareholder’s ownership of our shares of common stock and receipt of dividends with respect to such common stock. Moreover, under current law, if we incur indebtedness, such indebtedness will not be attributed to a tax-exempt U.S. Shareholder. Therefore, a tax-exempt U.S. Shareholder should not be treated as earning income from “debt-financed property” and dividends we pay should not be treated as “unrelated debt-financed income” solely as a result of indebtedness that we incur. Legislation has been introduced in Congress in the past, and may be introduced again in the future, which would change the treatment of “blocker” investment vehicles interposed between tax-exempt investors and non-qualifying investments if enacted. In the event that any such proposals were to be adopted and applied to BDCs (and RICs), the treatment of dividends payable to tax-exempt investors could be adversely affected. In addition, special rules would apply if we were to invest in certain real estate mortgage investment conduits, which we do not currently plan to do, that could result in a tax-exempt U.S. Shareholder recognizing income that would be treated as UBTI.

 

An additional 3.8% federal tax is imposed on certain net investment income (including ordinary dividends and capital gain distributions received from us and net gains from redemptions or other taxable dispositions of our shares) of U.S. individuals, estates and trusts to the extent that such person’s “modified adjusted gross income” (in the case of an individual) or “adjusted gross income” (in the case of an estate or trust) exceed certain threshold amounts.

 

Taxation of Non-U.S. Stockholders

 

The following discussion only applies to certain non-U.S. stockholders. Whether an investment in the shares of common stock is appropriate for a non-U.S. stockholder will depend upon that person’s particular circumstances. An investment in the shares of common stock by a non-U.S. stockholder may have adverse tax consequences. Non-U.S. stockholders should consult their tax advisors before investing in our shares of common stock.

 

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Subject to the discussion below, distributions of our “investment company taxable income” to non-U.S. stockholders (including interest income, net short-term capital gain or foreign-source dividend and interest income, which generally would be free of withholding if paid to non-U.S. stockholders directly) will be subject to withholding of U.S. federal tax at a 30% rate (or lower rate provided by an applicable treaty) to the extent of our current and accumulated earnings and profits unless the distributions are effectively connected with a U.S. trade or business of the non-U.S. stockholder (and, if treaty applies, are attributable to a U.S. permanent establishment of the non-U.S. stockholder), in which case the distributions will generally be subject to U.S. federal income tax at the rates applicable to U.S. persons. In that case, we will not be required to withhold U.S. federal tax if the non-U.S. stockholder complies with applicable certification and disclosure requirements such as providing IRS Form W-8ECI). Special certification requirements apply to a non-U.S. stockholder that is a foreign partnership or a foreign trust, and such entities are urged to consult their own tax advisors.

 

Certain properly reported dividends received by a non-U.S. stockholder generally are exempt from U.S. federal withholding tax when they (1) are paid in respect of our “qualified net interest income” (generally, our U.S. source interest income, other than certain contingent interest and interest from obligations of a corporation or partnership in which we are at least a 10% stockholder, reduced by expenses that are allocable to such income), or (2) are paid in connection with our “qualified short-term capital gains” (generally, the excess of our net short-term capital gain over our long-term capital loss for a tax year) as well as if certain other requirements are satisfied. Nevertheless, it should be noted that in the case of shares of our stock held through an intermediary, the intermediary may have withheld U.S. federal income tax even if we reported the payment as an interest-related dividend or short-term capital gain dividend. Moreover, depending on the circumstances, we may report all, some or none of our potentially eligible dividends as derived from such qualified net interest income or as qualified short-term capital gains, or treat such dividends, in whole or in part, as ineligible for this exemption from withholding.

 

Actual or deemed distributions of our net capital gains to a non-U.S. stockholder, and gains realized by a non-U.S. stockholder upon the sale of our shares of common stock, will not be subject to U.S. federal withholding tax and generally will not be subject to U.S. federal income tax unless the distributions or gains, as the case may be, are effectively connected with a U.S. trade or business of the non-U.S. stockholder and, if an income tax treaty applies, are attributable to a permanent establishment maintained by the non-U.S. stockholder in the United States or, in the case of an individual non-U.S. stockholder, the stockholder is present in the United States for 183 days or more during the year of the sale or capital gain dividend and certain other conditions are met.

 

If we distribute our net capital gains in the form of deemed rather than actual distributions (which we may do in the future), a non-U.S. stockholder will be entitled to a U.S. federal income tax credit or tax refund equal to the stockholder’s allocable share of the tax we pay on the capital gains deemed to have been distributed. In order to obtain the refund, the non-U.S. stockholder must obtain a U.S. taxpayer identification number and file a U.S. federal income tax return even if the non-U.S. stockholder would not otherwise be required to obtain a U.S. taxpayer identification number or file a U.S. federal income tax return. For a corporate non-U.S. stockholder, distributions (both actual and deemed), and gains realized upon the sale of our shares of common stock that are effectively connected with a U.S. trade or business may, under certain circumstances, be subject to an additional “branch profits tax” at a 30% rate (or at a lower rate if provided for by an applicable treaty).

 

A non-U.S. stockholder who is a non-resident alien individual, and who is otherwise subject to withholding of U.S. federal income tax, may be subject to information reporting and backup withholding of U.S. federal income tax on dividends unless the non-U.S. stockholder provides us or the dividend paying agent with a U.S. nonresident withholding tax certification (e.g., an IRS Form W-8BEN, IRS Form W-8BEN-E, or an acceptable substitute form) or otherwise meets documentary evidence requirements for establishing that it is a non-U.S. stockholder or otherwise establishes an exemption from backup withholding.

 

Withholding of U.S. tax (at a 30% rate) is required by the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act, or FATCA, provisions of the Code with respect to payments of dividends made to certain non-U.S. entities that fail to comply (or be deemed compliant) with extensive new reporting and withholding requirements designed to inform the U.S. Department of the Treasury of U.S.-owned foreign investment accounts. Under proposed U.S. Treasury regulations, which may be relied upon until final U.S. Treasury regulations are published, there is no FATCA withholding on gross proceeds from the sale of disposition of shares of common stock or on certain capital gain distributions. Stockholders may be requested to provide additional information to enable the applicable withholding agent to determine whether withholding is required.

 

An investment in shares by a non-U.S. person may also be subject to U.S. federal estate tax. Non-U.S. persons should consult their own tax advisors with respect to the U.S. federal income tax, U.S. federal estate tax, withholding tax, and state, local and foreign tax consequences of acquiring, owning or disposing of our shares of common stock.

 

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Item 1A. Risk Factors

 

Investing in our shares of common stock involves a number of significant risks. Before you invest in our shares of common stock, you should be aware of various risks, including those described below. The risks set out below are not the only risks we face. Additional risks and uncertainties not presently known to us or not presently deemed material by us may also impair our business, operations and performance. If any of the following events occur, our business, financial condition, results of operations and cash flows could be materially and adversely affected. In such case, our NAV and the trading price of our securities could decline, and you may lose all or part of your investment. The risk factors described below are the principal risk factors associated with an investment in us as well as those factors generally associated with an investment company with investment objectives, investment policies, capital structure or trading markets similar to ours.

 

Summary of Principal Risk Factors

 

Investing in our shares of common stock involves a number of significant risks. You should carefully consider information found in the section entitled “Risk Factors” and elsewhere in this annual report on Form 10-K. Some of the risks involved in investing in our shares of common stock include:

 

Principal Risks Relating to Our Business and Structure

 

We have a limited operating history and our Advisor and its affiliates have limited experience advising BDCs and may not replicate the historical results achieved by other entities managed by members of the Advisor’s investment committee, the Advisor or its affiliates.

 

We use leverage pursuant to borrowings under credit facilities and issuances of senior unsecured notes to finance our investments and changes in interest rates will affect our cost of capital and net investment income.

 

We depend upon our Advisor and Administrator for our success and upon their access to the investment professionals and partners of Kayne Anderson and its affiliates. Any inability of the Advisor or the Administrator to maintain or develop these relationships, or the failure of these relationships to generate investment opportunities, could adversely affect our business.

 

Our financial condition, results of operations and cash flows depend on our ability to manage our business and future growth effectively.

 

There are significant potential conflicts of interest that could affect our investment returns, including conflicts related to obligations the Advisor’s investment committee, the Advisor or its affiliates have to other clients and conflicts related to fees and expenses of such other clients.

 

We generally may make investments that could give rise to a conflict of interest and our ability to enter into transactions with our affiliates will be restricted.

 

We operate in a highly competitive market for investment opportunities, which could reduce returns and result in losses.

 

We will be subject to corporate-level income tax if we are unable to continue to qualify as a RIC.

 

We finance our investments with borrowings under credit facilities and issuances of senior unsecured notes, which will magnify the potential for gain or loss on amounts invested and may increase the risk of investing in us.

 

Adverse developments in the credit markets may impair our ability to enter into new credit facilities or our ability to issue senior unsecured notes.

 

The majority of our portfolio investments are recorded at fair value as determined in good faith by our Advisor and, as a result, there may be uncertainty as to the value of our portfolio investments.

 

Our Board may change our investment objective, operating policies and strategies without prior notice or stockholder approval, and we may temporarily deviate from our regular investment strategy.

 

Efforts to comply with the Exchange Act and the Sarbanes-Oxley Act will involve significant expenditures, and non-compliance would adversely affect us and the value of our shares of common stock.

 

We are highly dependent on information systems, and cybersecurity risks and cyber incidents may adversely affect our business or the business of our portfolio companies, which may, in turn, negatively affect the value of our shares of common stock and our ability to pay distributions.

 

Purchases of shares of our common stock by us under our open market repurchase program, including the Company Rule 10b5-1 Plan, may result in the price of shares of our common stock being higher than the price that otherwise might exist in the open market and are subject to our ability to finance such repurchases.

 

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Principal Risks Relating to Our Investments

 

We are subject to risks associated with the current interest rate environment, and rising interest rates could affect the value of our investments and make it more difficult for portfolio companies to make periodic payments on their loans.

 

Our business is dependent on bank relationships and recent strain on the banking system may adversely impact us.

 

We invest in highly leveraged companies, which could cause us to lose all or a part of our investment in those companies.

 

We are subject to risks associated with our investments in unitranche secured loans and securities, including the potential loss of all or part of such investments.

 

Our investments in securities that are rated below investment grade (i.e. “junk bonds”) may be risky and we could lose all or part of our investments.

 

  Defaults by our portfolio companies, including defaults relating to collateral, will harm our operating results.
     
  The lack of liquidity in our investments may adversely affect our business.

 

Our portfolio companies may prepay loans, which may reduce our yields if capital returned cannot be invested in transactions with equal or greater expected yields.

 

Our portfolio companies may be unable to repay or refinance outstanding principal on their loans at or prior to maturity.

 

Our portfolio may be concentrated in a limited number of portfolio companies and industries, which will subject us to a risk of significant loss if any of these companies defaults on its obligations under any of its debt instruments or if there is a downturn in a particular industry.

 

There is no assurance that portfolio company management will be able to operate their companies in accordance with our expectations.

 

Our investments in the Trading Companies & Distributors industry face considerable uncertainties including significant regulatory challenges.

  

Risks Relating to Our Common Stock

 

Prior to the IPO, there has been no public market for our shares of common stock, and we cannot assure you that a market for our shares of common stock will develop or remain active, or that the market price of our shares of common stock will not decline at some point following the IPO. Our share of common stock price may be volatile and may fluctuate substantially.

 

Sales of substantial amounts of our shares of common stock in the public market may have an adverse effect on the market price of our shares of common stock.

 

Trading and liquidity in our shares may be limited and our shares may trade below their NAV.

 

During extended periods of capital market disruption and instability, there is a risk that you may not receive distributions or that our distributions may not grow over time and a portion of our distributions may be a return of capital.

 

Our stockholders may experience dilution in their ownership percentage.

 

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Risks Relating to Our Business and Structure

 

We have a limited operating history and may not replicate the historical results achieved by other entities managed by members of the Advisor’s investment committee, the Advisor or its affiliates.

 

We commenced operations in February 2021 with private investors as shareholders, and then we completed our IPO in 2024. We are subject to all of the business risks and uncertainties associated with any new business, including the risk that we will not achieve our investment objective, that we will not qualify or maintain our qualification to be treated as a RIC, and that the value of your investment could decline substantially.

 

The 1940 Act and the Code impose numerous constraints on the operations of BDCs and RICs that do not apply to certain other investment vehicles managed by our Advisor and its affiliates. BDCs are required, for example, to invest at least 70% of their total assets primarily in securities of U.S. private or thinly traded public companies, cash, cash equivalents, U.S. government securities and other high-quality debt instruments that mature in one year or less from the date of investment. Moreover, qualification for taxation as a RIC requires satisfaction of source-of-income, asset diversification and distribution requirements. Our Advisor has a limited operating history under these constraints, which may hinder our ability to take advantage of attractive investment opportunities and to achieve our investment objective.

 

Furthermore, our investments may differ from those of existing accounts that are or have been managed by members of the Advisor’s investment committee, the Advisor or affiliates of the Advisor. We cannot assure you that we will replicate the historical results achieved for other KAPC funds managed by members of the Advisor’s investment committee, and we caution you that our investment returns could be substantially lower than the returns achieved by them in prior periods. Additionally, all or a portion of the prior results may have been achieved in particular market conditions, which may never be repeated. Moreover, current or future market volatility and regulatory uncertainty may have an adverse impact on our future performance.

 

We use leverage pursuant to borrowings under credit facilities and issuances of senior unsecured notes to finance our investments and changes in interest rates will affect our cost of capital and net investment income.

 

We use leverage pursuant to borrowings under credit facilities and issuances of senior unsecured notes and intend to further borrow under credit facilities and/or issue senior unsecured notes in the future in order to finance our investments. As a result, our net investment income will depend, in part, upon the difference between the rate at which we borrow under credit facilities and senior unsecured notes and the rate at which we invest these funds. In addition, we anticipate that many of our debt investments and borrowings under credit facilities will have floating interest rates that reset on a periodic basis, and many of our investments will be subject to interest rate floors. As a result, a significant change in market interest rates could have a material adverse effect on our net investment income.  See “Risks Relating to Our Investments—We are subject to risks associated with the current interest rate environment, and rising interest rates could affect the value of our investments and make it more difficult for portfolio companies to make periodic payments on their loans.”

 

In periods of rising interest rates, our cost of funds will increase because we expect that the interest rates on the majority of amounts we borrow will be floating, which could reduce our net investment income to the extent any of our debt investments have fixed interest rates. We may use interest rate risk management techniques in an effort to limit our exposure to interest rate fluctuations.  Such techniques may include various interest rate hedging activities to the extent permitted by the 1940 Act and applicable commodities laws.  These activities may limit our ability to benefit from lower interest rates with respect to hedged borrowings. Adverse developments resulting from changes in interest rates or hedging transactions could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition and results of operations. See “Risks Relating to Our Investments—We are subject to risks under hedging transactions and our ability to enter into transactions involving derivatives and financial commitment transactions may be limited.

 

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Downgrades of the U.S. credit rating, impending automatic spending cuts or government shutdowns could negatively impact our liquidity, financial condition and earnings.

 

The U.S. debt ceiling and budget deficit concerns have increased the possibility of credit-rating downgrades or a recession in the United States. Although U.S. lawmakers passed legislation to raise the federal debt ceiling on multiple occasions, including, most recently, in June 2023, ratings agencies have lowered, and threatened to lower the long-term sovereign credit rating on the United States. The legislation suspends the debt ceiling through early 2025 unless Congress takes legislative action to further extend or defer it.

 

The impact of the increased debt ceiling and/or downgrades to the U.S. government’s sovereign credit rating or its perceived creditworthiness could adversely affect the U.S. and global financial markets and economic conditions. Absent further quantitative easing by the U.S. Federal Reserve, these developments could cause interest rates and borrowing costs to rise, which may negatively impact our ability to access the debt markets on favorable terms. In addition, disagreement over the federal budget has caused the U.S. federal government to shut down for periods of time. Continued adverse political and economic conditions could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition and results of operations.

 

We depend upon our Advisor and Administrator for our success and upon their access to the investment professionals and partners of Kayne Anderson and its affiliates. Any inability of the Advisor or the Administrator to maintain or develop these relationships, or the failure of these relationships to generate investment opportunities, could adversely affect our business.

 

Our portfolio is subject to management risk because it is actively managed. Our Advisor applies investment techniques and risk analyses in making investment decisions for us, but there can be no guarantee that they will produce the desired results. We depend upon, and intend to rely significantly on, the Advisor’s and its affiliates’ relationships with private equity sponsors, financial intermediaries, direct lending institutions and other counterparties that are active in our markets. 

 

We do not have any internal management capacity or employees. We depend upon Kayne Anderson’s key personnel for our future success and upon their access to certain individuals and investment opportunities to execute on our investment objective. In particular, we depend on the diligence, skill and network of business contacts of our portfolio managers, who evaluate, negotiate, structure, close and monitor our investments. These individuals manage a number of investment vehicles on behalf of Kayne Anderson and, as a result, do not devote all of their time to managing us, which could negatively impact our performance. Furthermore, these individuals do not have long-term employment contracts with Kayne Anderson, although they do have equity interests and other financial incentives to remain with Kayne Anderson. We also depend on the senior management of Kayne Anderson. The departure of any of our portfolio managers or the senior management of Kayne Anderson could have a material adverse effect on our ability to achieve our investment objective. In addition, we can offer no assurance that our Advisor will remain our investment advisor or that we will continue to have access to Kayne Anderson’s industry contacts and deal flow. Furthermore, if the Advisor fails to maintain such relationships, or to develop new relationships with other sources of investment opportunities, we will not be able to grow our investment portfolio. This could have a material adverse effect on our financial condition, results of operations and cash flows.

 

We depend on the diligence, skill and network of business contacts of the professionals available to our Administrator to carry out the administrative functions necessary for us to operate, including the ability to select and engage sub-administrators and third-party service providers. We can offer no assurance, however, that the professionals of the Administrator will continue to provide administrative services to us. This could have a material adverse effect on our financial condition, results of operations and cash flows.

 

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Our financial condition, results of operations and cash flows depend on our ability to manage our business and future growth effectively.

 

Our ability to achieve our investment objective depends on our ability to manage and grow our business, which depends, in turn, on the Advisor’s ability to identify, invest in and monitor companies that meet our investment selection criteria. Accomplishing this result on a cost-effective basis is largely a function of the Advisor’s structuring of the investment process, its ability to provide competent, attentive and efficient services to us and our access to financing on acceptable terms. The management team of the Advisor has substantial responsibilities under our Investment Advisor Agreement. We can offer no assurance that any current or future employees of the Advisor will contribute effectively to the work of, or remain associated with, the Advisor. We caution you that the principals of our Advisor or Administrator may also be called upon to provide and currently do provide managerial assistance to portfolio companies and other investment vehicles, including other BDCs, which are managed by affiliates of the Advisor. Such demands on their time may distract them or slow our rate of investment. Any failure to manage our future growth effectively could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition and results of operations.

 

The Advisor may frequently be required to make investment analyses and decisions on an expedited basis in order to take advantage of investment opportunities, and our Advisor may not have knowledge of all circumstances that could impact an investment by the Company.

 

Investment analyses and decisions by the Advisor may frequently be required to be undertaken on an expedited basis to take advantage of investment opportunities, and the Advisor may not have knowledge of all circumstances that could adversely affect an investment by us. Moreover, there can be no assurance that our due diligence processes will uncover all relevant facts that would be material to an investment decision. Before making an investment, we will assess the strength of the underlying assets and other factors that we believe are material to the performance of the investment. In making the assessment and otherwise conducting customary due diligence, we will rely on the resources available to us and, in some cases, an investigation by third parties. This process is particularly important and highly subjective.

 

We may make investments in, or loans to, companies that are not subject to public company reporting requirements including requirements regarding preparation of financial statements, and our portfolio companies may utilize divergent reporting standards that may make it difficult for the Advisor to accurately assess the prior performance of a portfolio company. We will, therefore, depend upon the compliance by investment companies with their contractual reporting obligations. As a result, the evaluation of potential investments and our ability to perform due diligence on and effectively monitor investments may be impeded, and we may not realize the returns that we expect on any particular investment. In the event of fraud by any company in which we invest or with respect to which we make a loan, we may suffer a partial or total loss of the amounts invested in that company.

 

There are significant potential conflicts of interest that could affect our investment returns, including conflicts related to obligations the Advisor’s investment committee, the Advisor or its affiliates have to other clients and conflicts related to fees and expenses of such other clients, the valuation process for certain portfolio holdings of ours, other arrangements with the Advisor or its affiliates, and the Advisor’s recommendations given to us may differ from those rendered to their other clients.

 

As a result of our arrangements with the Advisor and its affiliates and the Advisor’s investment committee, there may be times when the Advisor or such persons have interests that differ from those of our stockholders, giving rise to a conflict of interest.

 

In particular, the following conflicts of interest may arise, among others:

 

the members of the Advisor’s investment committee serve or may serve as officers, directors or principals of entities that operate in the same or a related line of business as we do or of accounts sponsored or managed by the Advisor or its affiliates;

 

the Advisor, its affiliates and its personnel may have obligations to other clients or investors in entities they manage, the fulfilment of which may not be in the best interests of us or our stockholders;

 

our investment objective may overlap with the investment objectives of such affiliated accounts;

 

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certain of the Advisor’s other accounts may provide for higher management or incentive fees, greater expense reimbursements or overhead allocations, or permit affiliates of the Advisor to receive origination and other transaction fees;

 

members of Kayne Anderson and its affiliates may serve on the boards of directors of and advise companies that may compete with our portfolio investments. Moreover, other funds, separate accounts and other vehicles managed by Kayne Anderson and its affiliates may pursue investment opportunities that may also be suitable for us; and

 

the participation of the Advisor’s investment professionals in our valuation process could result in a conflict of interest as the Advisor’s base management fee is based, in part, on our fair market value of investments including assets purchased with borrowings under credit facilities and issuances of senior unsecured notes, excluding cash, U.S. government securities and commercial paper instruments maturing within one year of purchase, and our incentive fees will be based, in part, on unrealized gains and losses.

 

Additionally, the incentive fee payable by us to the Advisor may create an incentive for the Advisor to cause us to realize capital gains or losses that may not be in the best interests of us or our stockholders. Under the incentive fee structure, the Advisor benefits when we recognize capital gains and, because the Advisor determines when an investment is sold, the Advisor controls the timing of the recognition of such capital gains. Our Board is charged with protecting our stockholders’ interests by monitoring how the Advisor addresses these and other conflicts of interest associated with its management services and compensation.

 

The part of the management and incentive fees payable to Advisor that relates to our net investment income is computed and paid on income that may include interest income that has been accrued but not yet received in cash, such as market discount, debt instruments with paid-in-kind (“PIK”) interest, preferred stock with PIK dividends, zero coupon securities, and other deferred interest instruments and may create an incentive for the Advisor to make investments on our behalf that are riskier or more speculative than would be the case in the absence of such compensation arrangements. This fee structure may be considered to give rise to a conflict of interest for the Advisor to the extent that it may encourage the Advisor to favor debt financings that provide for deferred interest, rather than current cash payments of interest. Under these investments, we will accrue the interest over the life of the investment, but we will not receive the cash income from the investment until the end of the term. Our net investment income used to calculate the income portion of our investment fee, however, includes accrued interest. The Advisor may have an incentive to invest in deferred interest securities in circumstances where it would not have done so but for the opportunity to continue to earn the fees even when the issuers of the deferred interest securities would not be able to make actual cash payments to us on such securities. This risk could be increased because the Advisor is not obligated to reimburse us for any fees received even if we subsequently incur losses or never receive in cash the deferred income that was previously accrued.

 

The Advisor seeks to allocate investment opportunities among eligible accounts in a manner that is fair and equitable over time and consistent with its allocation policy. However, we can offer no assurance that such opportunities will be allocated to us fairly or equitably in the short term, and there can be no assurance that we will be able to participate in all investment opportunities that are suitable to us.

 

The Advisor’s investment committee, the Advisor or its affiliates may, from time to time, possess material non-public information, limiting our investment discretion.

 

Principals of the Advisor and its affiliates and members of the Advisor’s investment committee may serve as directors of, or in a similar capacity with, companies in which we invest, the securities of which are purchased or sold on our behalf. In the event that material nonpublic information is obtained with respect to such companies, or we become subject to trading restrictions under the internal trading policies of those companies or as a result of applicable law or regulations (for example, the antifraud provisions for the federal securities laws), we could be prohibited for a period of time from purchasing or selling the securities of such companies, and this prohibition may have an adverse effect on us.

  

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The Investment Advisory Agreement and the Administration Agreement were not negotiated on an arm’s-length basis and may not be as favorable to us as if they had been negotiated with an unaffiliated third party.

 

The Investment Advisory Agreement and the Administration Agreement were negotiated between related parties. Consequently, their terms, including fees payable to the Advisor, may not be as favorable to us as if they had been negotiated with an unaffiliated third party. For example, certain accounts managed by the Advisor have lower management, incentive or other fees than those charged under the Investment Advisory Agreement and/or a reduced ability to recover expenses and overhead than may be recovered by the Administrator under the Administration Agreement. In addition, we may choose not to enforce, or to enforce less vigorously, our rights and remedies under these agreements because of our desire to maintain our ongoing relationship with the Advisor, the Administrator and their respective affiliates. Any such decision, however, would breach our fiduciary obligations to our stockholders.

 

We generally may make investments that could give rise to a conflict of interest and our ability to enter into transactions with our affiliates will be restricted.

 

We, along with our Advisor and certain of its affiliates, have obtained exemptive relief from the SEC to permit us to invest alongside certain entities and accounts advised by the Advisor and its affiliates subject to certain conditions.

 

Pursuant to such exemptive relief, and subject to certain conditions, we are permitted to co-invest in the same security with our affiliates in a manner that is consistent with our investment objective, investment strategy, regulatory consideration and other relevant factors. If opportunities arise that would otherwise be appropriate for us and an affiliate to purchase different securities in the same issuer, our Advisor will need to decide which account will proceed with such investment. Our Advisor’s investment allocation policy incorporates the conditions of exemptive relief to seek to ensure that investment opportunities are allocated in a manner that is fair and equitable. However, although the Advisor endeavors to fairly allocate investment opportunities in the long run, we can offer no assurance that investment opportunities will be allocated to us fairly or equitably in the short term.

 

We do not expect to invest in, or hold securities of, companies that are controlled by our affiliates’ other clients. If our affiliates’ other client or clients gain control over one of our portfolio companies, this may create conflicts of interest and subject us to certain restrictions under the 1940 Act. As a result of these conflicts and restrictions our Advisor may be unable to implement our investment strategies as effectively as it could have in the absence of such conflicts or restrictions. For example, as a result of a conflict or restriction, our Advisor may be unable to engage in certain transactions that it would otherwise pursue. In order to avoid these conflicts and restrictions, our Advisor may choose to exit these investments prematurely and, as a result, we may forgo positive returns associated with such investments. In addition, to the extent that another client holds a different class of securities than us as a result of such transactions, our interests may not be aligned. Our ability to enter into transactions with our affiliates may be restricted.

 

In situations where co-investment with affiliates’ other clients is not permitted under the 1940 Act and related rules, existing or future staff guidance, or the terms and conditions of exemptive relief that have been granted to our Advisor and its affiliates by the SEC, our Advisor will need to decide which client or clients will proceed with the investment. Generally, we will not have an entitlement to make a co-investment in these circumstances and, to the extent that another client elects to proceed with the investment, we will not be permitted to participate. Moreover, except in certain circumstances, we will be unable to invest in any issuer in which an affiliate’s other client holds a controlling interest. These restrictions may limit the scope of investment opportunities that would otherwise be available to us.

 

We will be prohibited under the 1940 Act from participating in certain transactions with certain affiliates of ours without the prior approval of a majority of our independent directors and, in some cases, the SEC. Any person that owns, directly or indirectly, 5% or more of our outstanding voting securities will be our affiliate for purposes of the 1940 Act, and we will generally be prohibited from buying or selling any securities from or to such affiliate on a principal basis, absent the prior approval of our Board and, in some cases, the SEC. The 1940 Act also prohibits certain “joint” transactions with certain affiliates of ours, which in certain circumstances could include investments in the same portfolio company (whether at the same or different times to the extent the transaction involves a joint investment), without prior approval of our Board and, in some cases, the SEC. If a person acquires more than 25% of our voting securities, we will be prohibited from buying or selling any security from or to such person or certain of that person’s affiliates, or entering into prohibited joint transactions with such persons, absent the prior approval of the SEC. Similar restrictions limit our ability to transact business with our officers or directors or their affiliates.

 

The SEC has interpreted the BDC regulations governing transactions with affiliates to prohibit certain “joint transactions” involving entities that share a common investment advisor. As a result of these restrictions, we may be prohibited from buying or selling any security from or to any portfolio company that is controlled by a fund managed by the Advisor or their respective affiliates except under certain circumstances or without the prior approval of the SEC, which may limit the scope of investment opportunities that would otherwise be available to us.

 

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We operate in a highly competitive market for investment opportunities, which could reduce returns and result in losses.

 

There will be competition for investments from numerous other potential investors, many of which will have significant financial resources. As a result, there can be no guarantee that a sufficient quantity of suitable investment opportunities for us will be found, that investments on favorable terms can be negotiated, or that we will be able to fully realize the value of our investments. Competition for investments may have the effect of increasing our costs and expenses or otherwise decreasing returns generated on underlying investments, thereby reducing our investment returns.

 

A number of entities compete with us to make the types of investments that we plan to make in middle market companies, including BDCs, traditional commercial banks, private investment funds, regional banking institutions, small business investment companies, investment banks and insurance companies. Additionally, with increased competition for investment opportunities, alternative investment vehicles such as hedge funds may seek to invest in areas they have not traditionally invested in or from which they had withdrawn during the economic downturn, including investing in middle market companies. We will compete with public and private funds, commercial and investment banks, commercial financing companies and, to the extent they provide an alternative form of financing, private equity and hedge funds. Many of our competitors are substantially larger and have considerably greater financial, technical and marketing resources than we do. For example, we believe some of our competitors may have access to funding sources that are not available to us. In addition, some of our competitors may have higher risk tolerances or different risk assessments, which could allow them to consider a wider variety of investments and establish more relationships than we do. Furthermore, many of our competitors are not subject to the regulatory restrictions that the 1940 Act imposes on us as a BDC or the source of income, asset diversification and distribution requirements we must satisfy to qualify and maintain our qualification as a RIC. As a result of this competition, we may from time to time not be able to take advantage of attractive investment opportunities, and we may not be able to identify and make investments that are consistent with our investment objective.

 

With respect to the investments we make, we do not seek to compete based primarily on the interest rates we offer, and we believe that some of our competitors may make loans with interest rates that will be lower than the rates we offer. With respect to all investments, we may lose some investment opportunities if we do not match our competitors’ pricing, terms and structure. However, if we match our competitors’ pricing, terms and structure, we may experience decreased net interest income, lower yields and increased risk of credit loss. Although our Advisor allocates opportunities in accordance with its allocation policy, allocations to other accounts managed or sponsored by our Advisor or its affiliates reduce the amount and frequency of opportunities available to us and may not be in the best interests of us and our stockholders.

 

The competitive pressures we face may have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition and results of operations.

 

We will be subject to corporate-level income tax if we are unable to continue to qualify as a RIC.

 

We have elected, and intend to qualify annually thereafter, to be treated for U.S. federal income tax purposes as a RIC under Subchapter M of the Code; however, no assurance can be given that we will be able to qualify for and maintain RIC tax treatment. In order to qualify, and maintain qualification, as a RIC under the Code, we must meet certain source-of-income, asset diversification and distribution requirements. The distribution requirement for a RIC is satisfied if we distribute to our stockholders dividends for U.S. federal income tax purposes of an amount generally at least equal to the sum of 90% of our investment company taxable income, which is generally our net ordinary income plus the excess of our net short-term capital gains in excess of our net long-term capital losses, determined without regard to any deduction for dividends paid, and 90% of our net tax-exempt interest income, if any, to our stockholders on an annual basis. We are subject, to the extent we use debt financing, to certain asset coverage ratio requirements under the 1940 Act and financial covenants under loan and credit agreements that could, under certain circumstances, restrict us from making distributions necessary to continue to qualify as a RIC. If we are unable to obtain cash from other sources, we may fail to be subject to tax as a RIC and, thus, may be subject to corporate-level income tax. To continue to qualify as a RIC, we must also meet certain asset diversification requirements at the end of each quarter of our taxable year. Failure to meet these requirements may result in our having to dispose of certain investments quickly in order to prevent the loss of our qualification as a RIC. Because a significant portion of our investments are in private or thinly traded public companies, any such dispositions could be made at disadvantageous prices and may result in substantial losses. If we fail to qualify as a RIC for any reason and become subject to corporate-level income tax, the resulting corporate taxes could substantially reduce our net assets, the amount of income available for distributions to stockholders and the amount of our distributions and the amount of funds available for new investments. Such a failure would have a material adverse effect on us and our stockholders.

 

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We may be subject to risks that may arise in connection with the rules under ERISA related to investment by ERISA Plans.

 

We intend to operate so that we will be an appropriate investment for employee benefit plans subject to Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as amended (“ERISA”). We will use reasonable efforts to conduct our affairs so that our assets will not be deemed to be “plan assets” for purposes of ERISA. Accordingly, there may be constraints on our ability to make or dispose of investments at optimal times (or to make certain investments at all).

 

We may have difficulty paying our required distributions if we recognize income before, or without, receiving cash representing such income.

 

For U.S. federal income tax purposes, we include in income certain amounts that we have not yet received in cash, such as the accretion of original issue discount (“OID”). This may arise if we receive warrants in connection with the making of a loan and in other circumstances, or through contracted PIK interest, which represents contractual interest added to the loan balance and due at the end of the loan term. Such OID, which could be significant relative to our overall investment activities or increases in loan balances as a result of contracted PIK arrangements, is included in income before we receive any corresponding cash payments. We also may be required to include in income certain other amounts that we do not receive in cash. We may be also subject to the following risks associated with PIK and OID investments:

 

The interest payments deferred on a PIK loan are subject to the risk that the borrower may default when the deferred payments are due in cash at the maturity of the loan;

 

The interest rates on PIK loans are higher to reflect the time-value of money on deferred interest payments and the higher credit risk of borrowers who may need to defer interest payments;

 

Market prices of OID instruments are more volatile because they are affected to a greater extent by interest rate changes than instruments that pay interest periodically in cash;

 

PIK instruments may have unreliable valuations because the accruals require judgments about ultimate collectability of the deferred payments and the value of the associated collateral;

 

Use of PIK and OID securities may provide certain benefits to our Advisor including increasing management fees;

 

We may be required under the tax laws to make distributions of OID income to stockholders without receiving any cash. Such required cash distributions may have to be paid from borrowings, offering proceeds or the sale of our assets; and

 

The required recognition of OID, including PIK, interest for U.S. federal income tax purposes may have a negative impact on liquidity, because it represents a non-cash component of our taxable income that must, nevertheless, be distributed in cash to investors to avoid it being subject to corporate level taxation.

 

Part of the incentive fee payable by us that relates to our net investment income is computed and paid on income that may include interest that has been accrued but not yet received in cash, such as market discount, debt instruments with PIK interest, preferred stock with PIK dividends and zero coupon securities. If a portfolio company defaults on a loan that is structured to provide accrued interest, it is possible that accrued interest previously used in the calculation of the incentive fee will become uncollectible, and the Advisor will have no obligation to refund any fees it received in respect of such accrued income.

 

Since in certain cases we may recognize income before or without receiving cash representing such income, we may have difficulty meeting the requirement in a given taxable year to distribute to our stockholders dividends for U.S. federal income tax purposes an amount at least equal to the sum of 90% of our investment company taxable income, determined without regard to any deduction for dividends paid, and 90% of our net tax-exempt interest income, if any, to our stockholders to qualify and maintain our ability to be subject to tax as a RIC. In such a case, we may have to sell some of our investments at times we would not consider advantageous, raise additional debt or equity capital or reduce new investment originations to meet these distribution requirements. If we are not able to obtain such cash from other sources, we may fail to qualify as a RIC and thus be subject to corporate-level income tax.

 

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Regulations governing our operation as a BDC affect our ability to, and the way in which we, raise additional capital. As a BDC, the necessity of raising additional capital exposes us to risks, including the typical risks associated with leverage.

 

We intend to further borrow under credit facilities and/or issue senior unsecured notes and, may issue preferred stock in the future (although we do not anticipate issuing preferred stock in the next 12 months), which we refer to collectively as “senior securities,” up to the maximum amount permitted by the 1940 Act. Under the provisions of the 1940 Act, we are currently permitted to issue “senior securities,” including borrowing money from banks or other financial institutions, only in amounts such that our asset coverage, as defined in the 1940 Act, equals at least 150% of gross assets less all liabilities and indebtedness not represented by senior securities, after each issuance of senior securities. If we fail to comply with certain disclosure requirements, our asset coverage ratio under the 1940 Act would be 200%, which would decrease the amount of leverage we are able to incur.

 

Nevertheless, if the value of our assets declines, we may be unable to satisfy this ratio. If that happens, we may be required to sell a portion of our investments and, depending on the nature of our leverage, repay a portion of our indebtedness at a time when such sales may be disadvantageous. Also, any amounts that we use to service our indebtedness would not be available for distributions to holders of our shares of common stock. If we issue senior securities, we will be exposed to typical risks associated with leverage, including an increased risk of loss. In addition, if the value of our assets decreases, leverage will cause our net asset value to decline more sharply than it otherwise would have without leverage or with lower leverage. Similarly, any decrease in our revenue would cause its net income to decline more sharply than it would have if we had not borrowed or had borrowed less under the credit facilities.

 

In the absence of an event of default, no person or entity from which we borrow money has a veto right or voting power over our ability to set policy, make investment decisions or adopt investment strategies. If we issue preferred stock, which is another form of leverage, the preferred stock would rank “senior” to common stock in our capital structure, preferred stockholders would have separate voting rights on certain matters and might have other rights, preferences or privileges more favorable than those of our common stockholders, and the issuance of preferred stock could have the effect of delaying, deferring or preventing a transaction or a change of control that might involve a premium price for holders of our common stock or otherwise be in the best interest of our common stockholders. Holders of our common stock will directly or indirectly bear all of the costs associated with offering and servicing any preferred stock that we issue. In addition, any interests of preferred stockholders may not necessarily align with the interests of holders of our shares of common stock, and the rights of holders of shares of preferred stock to receive distributions would be senior to those of holders of shares of common stock. We do not, however, anticipate issuing preferred stock in the next 12 months.

 

We are not generally able to issue and sell our shares of common stock at a price below NAV per share. We may, however, sell our shares of common stock, or warrants, options or rights to acquire our shares of common stock, at a price below the then-current NAV per share of our common stock if our Board determines that such sale is in the best interests of us and our stockholders, and if our stockholders approve such sale. In any such case, the price at which our securities are to be issued and sold may not be less than a price that, in the determination of our Board, closely approximates the market value of such securities (less any distributing commission or discount). If we raise additional funds by issuing common stock or senior securities convertible into, or exchangeable for, our common stock, then the percentage ownership of our stockholders at that time will decrease, and holders of our common stock might experience dilution.

 

We finance our investments with borrowings under credit facilities and issuances of senior unsecured notes, which will magnify the potential for gain or loss on amounts invested and may increase the risk of investing in us.

 

The use of leverage magnifies the potential for gain or loss on amounts invested. The use of leverage is generally considered a speculative investment technique and increases the risks associated with investing in our securities. The amount of leverage that we employ will depend on the Advisor’s and our Board’s assessment of market and other factors at the time of any proposed borrowing. We cannot assure you that we will be able to obtain credit at all or on terms acceptable to us. For example, due to the interplay of the 1940 Act restrictions on principal and joint transactions and the U.S. risk retention rules adopted pursuant to Section 941 of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (“Dodd-Frank”), as a BDC we are currently unable to enter into any securitization transactions. We cannot assure you that the SEC or any other regulatory authority will modify such regulations or provide administrative guidance that would permit us to enter into securitizations, whether on a timely basis or at all. We may issue senior debt securities to banks, insurance companies and other lenders. Lenders of these senior securities will have fixed dollar claims on our assets that are superior to the claims of our common stockholders, and we would expect such lenders to seek recovery against our assets in the event of a default. We may pledge up to 100% of our assets and may grant a security interest in all of our assets under the terms of any debt instruments we may enter into with lenders. In addition, under the terms of our credit facilities or future credit facilities we enter into, we are likely to be required by its terms to use the net proceeds of any investments that we sell to repay a portion of the amount borrowed under such facility or instrument before applying such net proceeds to any other uses. If the value of our assets decreases, leveraging would cause our NAV to decline more sharply than it otherwise would have had we not leveraged, thereby magnifying losses or eliminating our equity stake in a leveraged investment. Similarly, any decrease in our net investment income will cause our net income to decline more sharply than it would have had we not borrowed. Such a decline would also negatively affect our ability to make distributions on our common stock or any outstanding preferred stock. Our ability to service our debt depends largely on our financial performance and is subject to prevailing economic conditions and competitive pressures. Our common stockholders bear the burden of any increase in our expenses as a result of our use of leverage, including interest expenses and any increase in the base management fee payable to the Advisor.

 

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As a BDC, we generally are required to meet a coverage ratio of total assets to total borrowings and other senior securities, which include our borrowings under our credit facilities and issuances of senior unsecured notes and any preferred stock that we may issue in the future (although we do not anticipate issuing preferred stock in the next 12 months). The current asset coverage ratio applicable to the Company is 150%. If this ratio were to decline below the then applicable minimum asset coverage ratio, we would be unable to incur additional debt and could be required to sell a portion of our investments to repay some debt when it is disadvantageous to do so. This could have a material adverse effect on our operations, and we may not be able to make distributions in amounts sufficient to maintain our status as a RIC, or at all.

 

Provisions in our credit facilities and our senior unsecured notes contain various covenants, which, if not complied with, could accelerate our repayment obligations under such facilities, thereby materially and adversely affecting our liquidity, financial condition, results of operations and ability to pay distributions.

 

Our Credit Facilities (as defined herein) are backed by all or a portion of our loans and securities on which the lenders have a security interest. We may pledge up to 100% of our assets and may grant a security interest in all of our assets under the terms of any debt instrument we enter into with the lenders pursuant to our Credit Facilities. We expect that any security interests we grant will be set forth in a pledge and security agreement or other collateral arrangement and evidenced by the filing of financing statements by the agent for the lenders. In addition, we expect that the custodian for our securities serving as collateral for such loan would include in its electronic systems notices indicating the existence of such security interests and, following notice of occurrence of an event of default, if any, and during its continuance, will only accept transfer instructions with respect to any such securities from the lender or its designee. If we default under the terms of our Credit Facilities, the agent for the applicable lenders would be able to assume control of the timing of disposition of any or all of our assets securing such debt, which would have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition, results of operations and cash flows.

 

In addition, any security interests and/or negative covenants contained in our Credit Facilities limit our ability to create liens on assets to secure additional debt and make it difficult for us to restructure or refinance indebtedness at or prior to maturity. If our borrowing base under a credit facility decreases, we may be required to secure additional assets in an amount sufficient to cure any borrowing base deficiency. In the event that all of our assets are secured at the time of such a borrowing base deficiency, we could be required to repay indebtedness under our Credit Facilities or make deposits to a collection account, either of which could have a material adverse impact on our ability to fund future investments and to make distributions. We have made customary representations and warranties and are required to comply with various covenants, reporting requirements (including requirements relating to portfolio performance, required minimum portfolio yield and limitations on delinquencies and charge-offs) and other customary requirements for similar credit facilities.

 

Our 8.65% Series A Notes due June 2027 (the “Series A Notes”) and 8.74% Series B Notes due June 2028 (the “Series B Notes”, and collectively with the Series A Notes, the “Notes”) were issued under a note purchase agreement, dated June 29, 2023 (the “Note Purchase Agreement”). The Note Purchase Agreement contains certain representations and warranties, and various covenants and reporting requirements customary for agreements of this type, including, without limitation, information reporting, maintenance of our status as a BDC within the meaning of the 1940 Act, and certain restrictions with respect to transactions with affiliates, fundamental changes, changes of line of business and permitted liens. In addition, the Note Purchase Agreement contains the following financial covenants, which are measured as of each fiscal quarter-end: (a) maintaining a minimum shareholders’ equity and (b) maintaining a minimum asset coverage ratio.

 

Our continued compliance with the covenants contained under the Credit Facilities and the Note Purchase Agreement depends on many factors, some of which are beyond our control, and there can be no assurances that we will continue to comply with such covenants. Our failure to satisfy the respective covenants could result in foreclosure by the lenders under the applicable credit facility or governing instrument or acceleration by the applicable lenders or noteholders, which would accelerate our repayment obligations under the relevant agreement and thereby have a material adverse effect on our business, liquidity, financial condition, results of operations and ability to pay distributions to our stockholders. Because the Credit Facilities and the Note Purchase Agreement have, and any future credit facilities and documents governing the issuance of senior unsecured notes will likely have, customary cross-default provisions, if the indebtedness under the Credit Facilities or represented by the Series A Notes or the Series B Notes or under any future credit facility or senior unsecured note, is accelerated, we may be unable to repay or finance the amounts due.

 

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Adverse developments in the credit markets may impair our ability to enter into new credit facilities or our ability to issue senior unsecured notes.

 

Following the passage of Dodd-Frank, many commercial banks and other financial institutions stopped lending or significantly curtailed their lending activity. In addition, in an effort to stem losses and reduce their exposure to segments of the economy deemed to be high risk, some financial institutions limited routine refinancing and loan modification transactions and even reviewed the terms of existing facilities to identify bases for accelerating the maturity of existing lending facilities. To the extent these circumstances arise again in the future, it may be difficult for us to finance the growth of our investments on acceptable economic terms, or at all, and one or more of our credit facilities could be accelerated by the lenders.

 

If we do not invest a sufficient portion of our assets in qualifying assets, we could fail to qualify as a BDC or be precluded from investing according to our current business strategy and such failure would decrease our operating flexibility.

 

As a BDC, we may not acquire any assets other than “qualifying assets” unless, at the time of and after giving effect to such acquisition, at least 70% of our total assets are qualifying assets.

 

In the future, we believe that most of our investments will constitute qualifying assets. However, we may be precluded from investing in what we believe are attractive investments if such investments are not qualifying assets for purposes of the 1940 Act. If we do not invest a sufficient portion of our assets in qualifying assets, we could violate the 1940 Act provisions applicable to BDCs. As a result of such violation, specific rules under the 1940 Act would significantly decrease our operating flexibility and could prevent us, for example, from making follow-on investments in existing portfolio companies (which could result in the dilution of our position) or could require us to dispose of investments at inappropriate times in order to come into compliance with the 1940 Act. If we need to dispose of such investments quickly, it could be difficult to dispose of such investments on favorable terms. We may not be able to find a buyer for such investments and, even if we do find a buyer, we may have to sell the investments at a substantial loss. Any such outcomes would have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition, results of operations and cash flows.

 

The majority of our portfolio investments are recorded at fair value as determined in good faith by our Advisor and, as a result, there may be uncertainty as to the value of our portfolio investments.

 

The majority of our portfolio investments take the form of securities for which no market quotations are readily available. The fair value of securities and other investments that are not publicly traded may not be readily determinable, and we value these securities at fair value as determined in good faith by our Advisor, including to reflect significant events affecting the value of our securities. As discussed in more detail under “Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations – Contractual Obligations – Investment Valuation,” most, if not all, of our investments (other than cash and cash equivalents) are classified as Level 3 under ASC Topic 820. This means that our portfolio valuations are based on unobservable inputs and our own assumptions about how market participants would price the asset or liability in question. Inputs into the determination of fair value of our portfolio investments require significant management judgment or estimation. Even if observable market data are available, such information may be the result of consensus pricing information or broker quotes, which may include a disclaimer that the broker would not be held to such a price in an actual transaction. The non-binding nature of consensus pricing and/or quotes accompanied by disclaimers materially reduces the reliability of such information.

 

Our Level 3 investments will typically consist of instruments for which a liquid trading market does not exist. The fair value of these instruments may not be readily determinable. We will value these instruments in accordance with valuation procedures adopted by our Advisor. We intend to use the services of an independent valuation firm to review the fair value of certain instruments prepared by our Advisor. At least once annually, the valuation for each portfolio investment for which a market quote is not readily available will be reviewed by an independent valuation firm. The types of factors that the Advisor may consider in fair value pricing of our investments include, where relevant: the nature and realizable value of any collateral; the company’s ability to make interest payments, amortization payments (if any) and other fixed charges; the company’s historical and projected financial results; the markets in which the company does business; the estimated enterprise value of the company based on comparisons to publicly-traded securities, on discounted cash flows and other valuation methodologies; changes in the interest rate environments and the credit markets generally that may affect the price at which similar investments may be made; and other relevant factors. Because such valuations, and particularly valuations of non-traded instruments and private companies, are inherently uncertain, they may fluctuate over short periods of time and may be based on estimates. The determination of fair value by our Advisor may differ materially from the values that would have been used if a liquid trading market for these instruments existed. Our NAV could be adversely affected if the determinations regarding the fair value of our investments were materially higher than the values that we ultimately realize upon the disposal of such investments.

 

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We adjust quarterly (or as otherwise may be required by the 1940 Act in connection with the issuance of our shares) the valuation of our portfolio to reflect our Advisor’s determination of the fair value of each investment in our portfolio. Any changes in fair value are recorded in our consolidated statement of operations as net change in unrealized appreciation or depreciation.

 

New or modified laws or regulations governing our operations and government intervention in the credit markets generally may adversely affect our business.

 

We and our portfolio companies are subject to regulation by laws at the U.S. federal, state and local levels. These laws and regulations, as well as their interpretation, may change from time to time, including as the result of interpretive guidance or other directives from the U.S. President and others in the executive branch, and new laws, regulations and interpretations may also come into effect. Any such new or changed laws or regulations could have a material adverse effect on our business. In particular, Dodd-Frank has impacted many aspects of the financial services industry, and it requires the development and adoption of many implementing regulations over several years. The SEC has adopted final rules for over 60 mandatory rulemaking provisions under Dodd-Frank, with several additional rules proposed but not yet adopted. While the ultimate impact of Dodd-Frank on us and our portfolio companies may not be known for an extended period of time, Dodd-Frank, including the interpretation of the rules implementing its provisions and any future rules that may be adopted, along with other legislative and regulatory proposals directed at the financial services industry or affecting taxation that may be proposed in the future, may negatively impact the operations, cash flows or financial condition of us or our portfolio companies, impose additional costs on us or our portfolio companies, intensify the regulatory supervision of us or our portfolio companies or otherwise adversely affect our business or the business of our portfolio companies.

  

In addition, the central banks and, in particular, the U.S. Federal Reserve, have taken unprecedented steps since the financial crises of 2008-2009 and the COVID-19 global pandemic and in response to inflationary pressures. On the other hand, recent governmental intervention could mean that the willingness of governmental bodies to take additional extraordinary action is diminished. It is impossible to predict if, how, and to what extent the United States and other governments would further intervene in credit markets. As a result, in the event of near-term major market disruptions, like those caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, there might be only limited additional government intervention, resulting in correspondingly greater market dislocation and materially greater market risk.

 

Additionally, changes to the laws and regulations governing our operations, including those associated with RICs, may cause us to alter our investment strategy in order to avail ourselves of new or different opportunities or result in the imposition of corporate-level taxes on us. Such changes could result in material differences to our strategies and plans and may shift our investment focus from the areas of expertise of the Advisor to other types of investments in which the Advisor may have little or no expertise or experience. Any such changes, if they occur, could have a material adverse effect on our results of operations and the value of your investment. If we invest in commodity interests in the future, the Advisor may determine not to use investment strategies that trigger additional regulation by the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (the “CFTC”), or may determine to operate subject to CFTC regulation, if applicable. If we or the Advisor were to operate subject to CFTC regulation, we may incur additional expenses and would be subject to additional regulation.

 

In addition, certain regulations applicable to debt securitizations implementing credit risk retention requirements that have taken effect in both the U.S. and in Europe may adversely affect or prevent us from entering into any future securitization transaction. The impact of these risk retention rules on the loan securitization market are uncertain, and such rules may cause an increase in our cost of funds under or may prevent us from completing any future securitization transactions. On October 21, 2014, U.S. risk retention rules adopted pursuant to Section 941 of Dodd-Frank, or the U.S. Risk Retention Rules, were issued. The U.S. Risk Retention Rules require the sponsor (directly or through a majority-owned affiliate) of a debt securitization subject to such rules, such as collateralized loan obligations, in the absence of an exemption, to retain an economic interest in the credit risk of the assets being securitized in the form of an eligible horizontal residual interest, an eligible vertical interest, or a combination thereof, in accordance with the requirements of the U.S. Risk Retention Rules. The U.S. Risk Retention Rules became effective December 24, 2016. Given the more attractive financing costs associated with these types of debt securitization as opposed to other types of financing available (such as traditional senior secured facilities), this would, in turn, increase our financing costs. Any associated increase in financing costs would ultimately be borne by our common stockholders.

 

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On May 24, 2018, the Economic Growth, Regulatory Relief, and Consumer Protection Act was enacted, which left the architecture and core features of Dodd-Frank intact but significantly recalibrated applicability thresholds, revised various post-crisis regulatory requirements, and provided targeted regulatory relief to certain financial institutions. Among the most significant of its amendments to Dodd-Frank were a substantial increase in the $50 billion asset threshold to $250 billion for automatic regulation of bank holding companies (“BHCs”) as “systemically important financial institutions,” an exemption from the Volcker Rule for insured depository institutions with less than $10 billion in consolidated assets and lower levels of trading assets and liabilities, and amendments to the liquidity leverage ratio and supplementary leverage ratio requirements. In addition, effective October 1, 2020, the U.S. Federal Reserve, SEC and other federal agencies modified their regulations under the Volcker Rule to loosen the restrictions on financial institutions. The effects of these and any further rules or regulations that may be enacted by the federal government are and could be complex and far-reaching, and the change and any future laws or regulations or changes thereto could negatively impact our operations, cash flows or financial condition, impose additional costs on us, intensify the regulatory supervision of us or otherwise adversely affect our business, financial condition and results of operations.

 

Over the last several years, there also has been an increase in regulatory attention to the extension of credit outside of the traditional banking sector, raising the possibility that some portion of the non-bank financial sector will be subject to new regulation. While it cannot be known at this time whether any regulation will be implemented or what form it will take, increased regulation of non-bank credit extension could negatively impact our operations, cash flows or financial condition, impose additional costs on us, intensify the regulatory supervision of us or otherwise adversely affect our business, financial condition and results of operations.

 

Ongoing implementation of, or changes in, including changes in interpretation or enforcement of, laws and regulations could impose greater costs on us and on financial services companies and impact the value of assets we hold and our business, financial condition and results of operations. In addition, uncertainty regarding legislation and regulations affecting the financial services industry or taxation could also adversely impact our business or the business of our portfolio companies. If we do not comply with applicable laws and regulations, we could lose any licenses that we then hold for the conduct of our business and may be subject to civil fines and criminal penalties.

 

Our Board may change our investment objective, operating policies and strategies without prior notice or stockholder approval, and we may temporarily deviate from our regular investment strategy.

 

Our Board has the authority, except as otherwise provided in the 1940 Act, to modify or waive our investment objective and certain of our operating policies and strategies without prior notice and without stockholder approval. However, absent stockholder approval, we may not change the nature of our business so as to cease to be, or withdraw our election as, a BDC. We cannot predict the effect any changes to our current investment objective, operating policies and strategies would have on our business, operating results and the price value of our common stock. Nevertheless, any such changes could adversely affect our business and impair our ability to make distributions.

 

The Advisor can resign on 60 days’ notice, and we may not be able to find a suitable replacement within that time, resulting in a disruption in our operations that could adversely affect our financial condition, business and results of operations.

 

The Advisor has the right to resign under the Investment Advisory Agreement at any time upon not less than 60 days’ written notice, whether we have found a replacement or not. If the Advisor resigns, we may not be able to find a new investment advisor or hire internal management with similar expertise and ability to provide the same or equivalent services on acceptable terms within 60 days, or at all. If we are unable to do so quickly, our operations are likely to experience a disruption, our business, financial condition, results of operations and cash flows as well as our ability to pay distributions are likely to be adversely affected and the value of our shares may decline. In addition, the coordination of our internal management and investment activities is likely to suffer if we are unable to identify and reach an agreement with a single institution or group of executives having the expertise possessed by the Advisor and its affiliates. Even if we are able to retain comparable management, whether internal or external, the integration of such management and their lack of familiarity with our investment objective may result in additional costs and time delays that may adversely affect our business, financial condition, results of operations and cash flows.

 

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We incur significant costs as a result of being registered under the Exchange Act.

 

We incur legal, accounting and other expenses, including costs associated with the periodic reporting requirements applicable to a company whose securities are registered under the Exchange Act, as well as additional corporate governance requirements, including requirements under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act and other rules implemented by the SEC.

 

Efforts to comply with the Exchange Act and the Sarbanes-Oxley Act will involve significant expenditures, and non-compliance will adversely affect us and the value of our shares of common stock.

 

As a public entity, we are subject to the reporting requirements of the Exchange Act and requirements of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act. These requirements may place a strain on our systems and resources. The Exchange Act requires that we file annual, quarterly and current reports with respect to our business and financial condition. The Sarbanes-Oxley Act requires that we maintain effective disclosure controls and procedures and internal controls over financial reporting, which are discussed below.

 

We have implemented procedures, processes, policies and practices for the purpose of addressing such standards and requirements applicable to public companies. Our management will be required to report on our internal control over financial reporting pursuant to Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act. We will be required to review on an annual basis our internal control over financial reporting, and on a quarterly and annual basis to evaluate and disclose changes in our internal control over financial reporting. As a result, we expect to incur significant additional annual expenses related to these steps and, among other things, directors’ and officers’ liability insurance, director fees, reporting requirements of the SEC, expenses associated with corporate governance requirements, transfer agent fees, additional administrative expenses payable to the Administrator to compensate them for hiring additional accounting, legal and administrative personnel, increased auditing and legal fees and similar expenses. This process will also result in a diversion of management’s time and attention. We do not know when our evaluation, testing and remediation actions will be completed or its impact on our operations. In addition, we may be unable to ensure that the process is effective or that our internal control over financial reporting is or will be effective. In the event that we are unable to come into and maintain compliance with the Sarbanes-Oxley Act and related rules, we and the value of our securities would be adversely affected.

 

Our independent registered public accounting firm will not be required to attest to the effectiveness of our internal control over financial reporting until the date we are no longer an emerging growth company under the JOBS Act. Because we do not currently have comprehensive documentation of our internal control and have not yet tested our internal control in accordance with Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, we cannot conclude, as required by Section 404, that we do not have a material weakness in our internal control or a combination of significant deficiencies that could result in the conclusion that we have a material weakness in our internal control. If we are not able to implement the applicable requirements of Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act in a timely manner or with adequate compliance, our operations, financial reporting or financial results could be adversely affected. Matters impacting our internal controls may cause us to be unable to report our financial information on a timely basis and thereby subject us to adverse regulatory consequences, including sanctions by the SEC, and result in a breach of the covenants under the agreements governing any of our financing arrangements. There could also be a negative reaction in the financial markets due to a loss of investor confidence in us and the reliability of our financial statements. Confidence in the reliability of our financial statements could also suffer if we or our independent registered public accounting firm were to report a material weakness in our internal controls over financial reporting. This could materially adversely affect us.

 

Our internal control over financial reporting may not prevent or detect misstatements because of its inherent limitations, including the possibility of human error, the circumvention or overriding of controls, or fraud. Even effective internal controls can provide only reasonable assurance with respect to the preparation and fair presentation of financial statements. If we fail to maintain the adequacy of our internal controls, including any failure to implement required new or improved controls, or if we experience difficulties in their implementation, our business and operating results could be harmed and we could fail to meet our financial reporting obligations.

 

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We are highly dependent on information systems, and cybersecurity risks and cyber incidents may adversely affect our business or the business of our portfolio companies, which may, in turn, negatively affect the value of our shares of common stock and our ability to pay distributions.

 

Our business depends on the communications and information systems of our Advisor and its affiliates, our portfolio companies and third-party service providers. These systems are subject to potential cybersecurity attacks and incidents, including through adverse events that threaten the confidentiality, integrity or availability of our information resources. Cyber hacking could also cause significant disruption and harm to the companies in which we invest. Additionally, digital and network technologies might be at risk of cyberattacks that could potentially seek unauthorized access to digital systems for purposes such as misappropriating sensitive information, corrupting data or causing operational disruption. Cyberattacks might potentially be carried out by persons using techniques that could range from efforts to electronically circumvent network security or overwhelm websites to intelligence gathering and social engineering functions aimed at obtaining information necessary to gain access. These attacks could involve gaining unauthorized access to our information systems for purposes of misappropriating assets, stealing confidential information, corrupting data or causing operational disruption and result in disrupted operations, misstated or unreliable financial data, liability for stolen assets or information, increased cybersecurity protection and insurance costs, litigation and damage to our business relationships, any of which could, in turn, have a material adverse effect on our operating results and negatively affect the value of our securities and our ability to pay distributions to our stockholders. 

 

As our reliance on technology has increased, so have the risks posed to our information systems, both internal and those provided by the Advisor and third-party service providers. In addition, we and the Advisor currently or in the future are expected to routinely transmit and receive personal, confidential and proprietary information by email and other electronic means. We and the Advisor may not be able to ensure secure capabilities with all of our clients, vendors, service providers, counterparties and other third parties to protect the confidentiality of the information.

 

In addition, we, the Advisor and many of our third-party service providers currently have work from home policies. Such a policy of remote working could strain our technology resources and introduce operational risks, including heightened cybersecurity risks and other risks described above. Remote working environments may be less secure and more susceptible to hacking attacks, including phishing and social engineering attempts. There is no assurance that any efforts to mitigate cybersecurity risks undertaken by us or our Advisor will be effective. Network, system, application and data breaches as a result of cybersecurity risks or cyber incidents could result in operational disruptions or information misappropriation that could have a material adverse effect on our business, results of operations and financial condition of us and of our portfolio companies.

 

Purchases of shares of our common stock by us under our open market repurchase program, including the Company Rule 10b5-1 Plan, may result in the price of shares of our common stock being higher than the price that otherwise might exist in the open market and are subject to our ability to finance such repurchases.

 

Our Board has authorized us to repurchase shares of our common stock through an open-market share repurchase program for up to $100 million in the aggregate of shares of our common stock within one year of the closing of the IPO. Pursuant to such authorization and concurrently with the closing of the IPO, we entered into the Company 10b5-1 Plan to acquire up to $100 million in the aggregate of shares of our Common Stock, in accordance with the guidelines specified in Rule 10b-18 and Rule 10b5-1 of the Exchange Act, and will otherwise be subject to applicable law, including Regulation M, which may prohibit purchases under certain circumstances. These activities may have the effect of maintaining the market price of shares our Common Stock or retarding a decline in the market price of the shares of our Common Stock, and, as a result, the price of our shares of Common Stock may be higher than the price that otherwise might exist in the open market.

 

In addition, we may further borrow under credit facilities and/or issue senior unsecured notes in the future in order to finance repurchases of shares. We can offer no assurance that we will be successful in obtaining suitable debt investments to finance purchases under the Company 10b5-1 Plan. Whether purchases will be made under the Company 10b5-1 Plan and how much will be purchased at any time is uncertain, dependent on prevailing market prices, trading volumes and our ability to finance repurchases, all of which we cannot predict.

 

There may be trademark risk, as we do not own the Kayne Anderson name.

 

We do not own the Kayne Anderson name, but we are permitted to use it as part of our corporate name pursuant to a license agreement with the Advisor. Use of the name by other parties or the termination of the license agreement may harm our business.

 

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Risks Relating to Our Investments

 

We are subject to risks associated with the current interest rate environment, and rising interest rates could affect the value of our investments and make it more difficult for portfolio companies to make periodic payments on their loans.

 

Interest rate risk refers to the risk of market changes in interest rates. Interest rate changes affect the value of debt. In general, rising interest rates will negatively impact the price of fixed rate debt, and falling interest rates will have a positive effect on price. Adjustable-rate debt also reacts to interest rate changes in a similar manner, although generally to a lesser degree. Interest rate sensitivity is generally larger and less predictable in debt with uncertain payment or prepayment schedules. Further, rising interest rates make it more difficult for borrowers to repay debt, which could increase the risk of payment defaults. Any failure of one or more portfolio companies to repay or refinance its debt at or prior to maturity or the inability of one or more portfolio companies to make ongoing payments following an increase in contractual interest rates could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition, results of operations and cash flows.

 

During any period of higher-than-normal levels of inflation, such as the current inflationary environment, interest rates typically increase. Higher interest rates will increase the cost of our borrowings and may reduce returns to stockholders (including resulting in lower dividend payments by us). Further, in response to rising risk-free interest rates, market participants could require higher rates of interest on the types of loans and credit investments that we own, which would decrease the value of those investments.

 

In an effort to control inflation, the U.S. Federal Reserve Board (the “Fed”) has sharply raised interest rates in recent years, and they remain near their highest levels in over twenty years. Other central banks globally have implemented similar rate increases. A wide variety of factors can cause interest rates to rise (e.g., central bank monetary policies, inflation rates, or general economic conditions). Although recently both the Fed and other central banks globally have begun lowering rates, there is no certainty that further reductions will occur. There is no assurance that the actions being taken by the Fed will improve the outlook for long-term inflation or whether they might result in a recession. A recession could lead to declined employment, global demand destruction and/or business failures, which may result in a decline in the value of our portfolio. In addition, increased interest rates could increase our cost of borrowing and reduce the return on leverage to common stockholders.

 

Our business is dependent on bank relationships and recent strain on the banking system may adversely impact us.

 

The financial markets recently have encountered volatility associated with concerns about the balance sheets of banks, especially small and regional banks, which may have significant losses associated with investments that make it difficult to fund demands to withdraw deposits and other liquidity needs. Although the federal government has announced measures to assist these banks and protect depositors, some banks have already been impacted and others may be materially and adversely impacted. Our business is dependent on bank relationships and we are proactively monitoring the financial health of such bank relationships. Continued strain on the banking system may adversely impact our business, financial condition and results of operations. To the extent that our portfolio companies work with banks that are negatively impacted by the foregoing, such portfolio companies’ ability to access their own cash, cash equivalents and investments may be threatened. In addition, such affected portfolio companies may not be able to enter into new banking arrangements or credit facilities or receive the benefits of their existing banking arrangements or facilities. Any such developments could harm our business, financial condition, and operating results, and prevent us from fully implementing our investment plan. Continued strain on the banking system may adversely impact our business, financial condition and results of operations.

 

Limitations of investment due diligence expose us to investment risk.

 

Our due diligence may not reveal all of a portfolio company’s liabilities and may not reveal other weaknesses in its business. We can offer no assurance that our due diligence processes will uncover all relevant facts that would be material to an investment decision. Before making an investment in, or a loan to, a company, the Advisor will assess the strength and skills of a company’s management and other factors that it believes are material to the performance of the investment.

 

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In making the assessment and otherwise conducting customary due diligence, the Advisor will rely on the resources available to it and, in some cases, an investigation by third parties. This process is particularly important and highly subjective with respect to newly organized entities because there may be little or no information publicly available about those entities.

 

We may make investments in, or loans to, companies that are not subject to public company reporting requirements including requirements regarding preparation of financial statements, and our portfolio companies may utilize divergent reporting standards that may make it difficult for the Advisor to accurately assess the prior performance of a portfolio company. We will, therefore, depend upon the compliance by investment companies with their contractual reporting obligations. As a result, the evaluation of potential investments and our ability to perform due diligence on and effectively monitor investments may be impeded, and we may not realize the returns which we expect on any particular investment. In the event of fraud by any company in which we invest or with respect to which we make a loan, we may suffer a partial or total loss of the amounts invested in that company.

 

We invest in highly leveraged companies, which could cause us to lose all or a part of our investment in those companies.

 

Investment in leveraged companies involves a number of significant risks. Leveraged companies in which we invest may have limited financial resources and may be unable to meet their obligations under their debt securities that we hold. Such developments may be accompanied by a deterioration in the value of any collateral and a reduction in the likelihood of our realizing any guarantees that we may have obtained in connection with our investment. In addition, leveraged companies may experience bankruptcy or similar financial distress that may adversely and permanently affect the issuer, in addition to risks associated with the duration and administrative costs of bankruptcy proceedings.

 

Smaller leveraged companies and middle market companies also may have less predictable operating results and may require substantial additional capital to support their operations, finance their expansion or maintain their competitive position. Middle market companies may have limited financial resources, may have difficulty accessing the capital markets to meet future capital needs and may be unable to meet their obligations under their debt securities that we hold, which may be accompanied by a deterioration in the value of any collateral and a reduction in the likelihood of our realizing any guarantees we may have obtained in connection with our investment. In addition, such companies typically have shorter operating histories, narrower product lines and smaller market shares than larger businesses, which tend to render them more vulnerable to competitors’ actions and market conditions, as well as general economic downturns. Middle market companies are also more likely to depend on the management talents and efforts of a small group of persons, and the death, disability, resignation or termination of one or more of these persons could have a material adverse impact on our portfolio company and, in turn, on us.

 

The debt that we invest in is typically not rated by any rating agency, but we believe that if such investments were rated, they would be below investment grade (rated lower than “Baa3” by Moody’s Investors Service, lower than “BBB-” by Fitch Ratings or lower than “BBB-” by Standard & Poor’s Ratings Services), which under the guidelines established by these rating entities is an indication of having predominantly speculative characteristics with respect to the issuer’s capacity to pay interest and repay principal. Bonds that are rated below investment grade are sometimes referred to as “high yield bonds” or “junk bonds.” Therefore, our investments will result in an above average amount of risk and volatility or loss of principal.

 

We are subject to risks associated with our investments in unitranche secured loans and securities, including the potential loss of all or part of such investments.

 

We invest in unitranche secured loans, which are a combination of senior secured and junior secured debt in the same facility. Unitranche secured loans provide all of the debt needed to finance a leveraged buyout or other corporate transaction, both senior and junior, but generally in a first-lien position, while the borrower generally pays a blended, uniform interest rate rather than different rates for different tranches. Unitranche secured debt generally requires payments of both principal and interest throughout the life of the loan. Generally, we expect these securities to carry a blended yield that is between senior secured and junior debt interest rates. Unitranche secured loans provide a number of advantages for borrowers, including the following: simplified documentation, greater certainty of execution and reduced decision-making complexity throughout the life of the loan. In some cases, a portion of the total interest may accrue or be paid in kind. Because unitranche secured loans combine characteristics of senior and junior financing, unitranche secured loans have risks similar to the risks associated with senior secured and second-lien loans and junior debt in varying degrees according to the combination of loan characteristics of the unitranche secured loan.

 

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Our investments in securities that are rated below investment grade (i.e. “junk bonds”) may be risky and we could lose all or part of our investments.

 

We invest in securities that are rated below investment grade by rating agencies or that would be rated below investment grade if they were rated. Below investment grade securities, which are often referred to as “junk,” have predominantly speculative characteristics with respect to the issuer’s capacity to pay interest and repay principal. They may also be difficult to value and illiquid. The major risks of below investment grade securities include:

 

Below investment grade securities may be issued by less creditworthy issuers. Issuers of below investment grade securities may have a larger amount of outstanding debt relative to their assets than issuers of investment grade securities. In the event of an issuer’s bankruptcy, claims of other creditors may have priority over the claims of holders of below investment grade securities, leaving few or no assets available to repay holders of below investment grade securities.

 

Prices of below investment grade securities are subject to extreme price fluctuations. Adverse changes in an issuer’s industry and general economic conditions may have a greater impact on the prices of below investment grade securities than on other higher-rated fixed-income securities.

 

Issuers of below investment grade securities may be unable to meet their interest or principal payment obligations because of an economic downturn, specific issuer developments, or the unavailability of additional financing.

 

Below investment grade securities frequently have redemption features that permit an issuer to repurchase the security from us before it matures. If the issuer redeems below investment grade securities, we may have to invest the proceeds in securities with lower yields and may lose income.

 

Below investment grade securities may be less liquid than higher-rated fixed-income securities, even under normal economic conditions. There are fewer dealers in the below investment grade securities market, and there may be significant differences in the prices quoted by the dealers. Judgment may play a greater role in valuing these securities and we may be unable to sell these securities at an advantageous time or price.

 

We may incur expenses to the extent necessary to seek recovery upon default or to negotiate new terms with a defaulting issuer.

 

Defaults by our portfolio companies, including defaults relating to collateral, will harm our operating results.

 

A portfolio company’s failure to satisfy financial or operating covenants imposed by us or other lenders could lead to defaults and, potentially, termination of its loans and foreclosure on its assets, which could trigger cross-defaults under other agreements and jeopardize such company’s ability to meet its obligations under the debt securities that we hold. We may incur expenses to the extent necessary to seek recovery upon default or to negotiate new terms with a defaulting portfolio company. In addition, lenders in certain cases can be subject to lender liability claims for actions taken by them when they become too involved in the borrower’s business or exercise control over a borrower. It is possible that we could become subject to a lender’s liability claim, including as a result of actions taken if we render managerial assistance to the borrower. Moreover, some of the loans in which we may invest may be “covenant-lite” loans. We use the term “covenant-lite” loans to refer generally to loans that do not have a complete set of financial maintenance covenants. Generally, “covenant-lite” loans provide borrower companies more freedom to negatively impact lenders because their covenants are incurrence-based, which means they are only tested and can only be breached following an affirmative action of the borrower, rather than by a deterioration in the borrower’s financial condition. Accordingly, to the extent we invest in “covenant-lite” loans, we may have fewer rights against a borrower and may have a greater risk of loss on such investments as compared to investments in or exposure to loans with financial maintenance covenants.

 

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Certain debt investments that we make in portfolio companies will be secured on a second priority basis by the same collateral securing senior debt of such companies. The first priority liens on the collateral will secure the portfolio company’s obligations under any outstanding senior debt and may secure certain other future debt that may be permitted to be incurred by the portfolio company under the agreements governing the debt. The holders of obligations secured by the first priority liens on the collateral will generally control the liquidation of and be entitled to receive proceeds from any realization of the collateral to repay their obligations in full before us. In addition, the value of the collateral in the event of liquidation will depend on market and economic conditions, the availability of buyers and other factors. There can be no assurance that the proceeds, if any, from the sale or sales of all of the collateral would be sufficient to satisfy the debt obligations secured by the second priority liens after payment in full of all obligations secured by the first priority liens on the collateral. If such proceeds are not sufficient to repay amounts outstanding under the debt obligations secured by the second priority liens, then we, to the extent not repaid from the proceeds of the sale of the collateral, will only have an unsecured claim against the portfolio company’s remaining assets, if any.

 

We may also make unsecured debt investments in portfolio companies in the form of borrowings under credit facilities or issuances of senior unsecured notes, meaning that such investments will not benefit from any interest in collateral of such companies. Liens on such portfolio companies’ collateral, if any, will secure the portfolio company’s obligations under its outstanding secured debt and may secure certain future debt that is permitted to be incurred by the portfolio company under its secured debt agreements. The holders of obligations secured by such liens will generally control the liquidation of, and be entitled to receive proceeds from, any realization of such collateral to repay their obligations in full before us. In addition, the value of such collateral in the event of liquidation will depend on market and economic conditions, the availability of buyers and other factors. There can be no assurance that the proceeds, if any, from sales of such collateral would be sufficient to satisfy our unsecured debt obligations after payment in full of all secured debt obligations. If such proceeds were not sufficient to repay the outstanding secured debt obligations, then our unsecured claims would rank equally with the unpaid portion of such secured creditors’ claims against the portfolio company’s remaining assets, if any.

 

The rights we may have with respect to the collateral securing any junior priority loans we make in our portfolio companies may also be limited pursuant to the terms of one or more intercreditor agreements that we enter into with the holders of senior debt. Under such an intercreditor agreement, at any time that senior obligations are outstanding, we may forfeit certain rights with respect to the collateral to the holders of these senior obligations. These rights may include the right to commence enforcement proceedings against the collateral, the right to control the conduct of such enforcement proceedings, the right to approve amendments to collateral documents, the right to release liens on the collateral and the right to waive past defaults under collateral documents. We may not have the ability to control or direct such actions, even if as a result our rights as junior lenders are adversely affected.

 

The lack of liquidity and price decline in our investments may adversely affect our business, including by reducing our NAV through increased net unrealized depreciation.

 

We may invest in companies that are experiencing financial difficulties, which difficulties may never be overcome. Our investments will be illiquid in most cases, and there can be no assurance that we will be able to realize on such investments in a timely manner. A substantial portion of our investments in leveraged companies are and will be subject to legal and other restrictions on resale or will otherwise be less liquid than more broadly traded public securities. The illiquidity of these investments may make it difficult for us to sell such investments if the need arises.

 

As a BDC, we are required to carry our investments at market value or, if no market value is ascertainable, at fair value as determined in good faith by our Advisor. As part of the valuation process, we may take into account the following types of factors, if relevant, in determining the fair value of our investments:

 

the enterprise value of the portfolio company;

 

the nature and realizable value of any collateral;

 

the company’s ability to make interest payments, amortization payments (if any) and other fixed charges;

 

call features, put features and other relevant terms of the debt security;

 

the company’s historical and projected financial results;

 

the markets in which the portfolio company does business; and

 

changes in the interest rate environment and the credit markets generally that may affect the price at which similar investments may be made in the future and other relevant factors.

 

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In addition, if we are required to liquidate all or a portion of our portfolio quickly, we may realize significantly less than the value at which we have previously recorded our investments. We may also face other restrictions on our ability to liquidate an investment in a portfolio company to the extent that we, the Advisor or any of its affiliates have material nonpublic information regarding such portfolio company.

 

In addition, we generally expect to invest in securities, instruments and assets that are not, and are not expected to become, publicly traded. We will generally not be able to sell securities publicly unless the sale is registered under applicable securities laws, or unless an exemption from such registration requirements is available.

 

In certain cases, we may also be prohibited by contract from selling an investment for a period of time or otherwise be restricted from disposing of the investment. Furthermore, certain types of investments expected to be made may require a substantial length of time to realize a return or fully liquidate.

 

When an external event such as a purchase transaction, public offering or subsequent equity sale occurs, we use the pricing indicated by the external event to corroborate our valuation. We record decreases in the market values or fair values of our investments as unrealized depreciation. Declines in prices and liquidity in the corporate debt markets may result in significant net unrealized depreciation in our portfolio. The effect of all of these factors on our portfolio may reduce our NAV by increasing net unrealized depreciation in our portfolio. Depending on market conditions, we could incur substantial realized losses and may suffer additional unrealized losses in future periods, which could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition, results of operations and cash flows.

 

Further, in connection with the disposition of an investment in a portfolio company, we may be required to make representations about the business and financial affairs of the portfolio company, or we may be responsible for the contents of disclosure documents under applicable securities laws. We may also be required to indemnify the purchasers of such investment or underwriters to the extent that any such representations or disclosure documents turn out to be incorrect, inaccurate or misleading. These arrangements may result in contingent liabilities, for which we may establish reserves or escrows. However, we can offer no assurance that we will adequately reserve for our contingent liabilities and that such liabilities will not have an adverse effect on us. Such contingent liabilities might ultimately have to be funded by proceeds, including the return of capital, from our other investments.

 

Our portfolio companies may prepay loans, which may reduce our yields if capital returned cannot be invested in transactions with equal or greater expected yields.

 

The loans in our investment portfolio may be prepaid at any time, generally with little advance notice. Whether a loan is prepaid will depend both on the continued positive performance of the portfolio company and the existence of favorable financing market conditions that allow such company the ability to replace existing financing with less expensive capital. As market conditions change, we do not know when, and if, prepayment may be possible for each portfolio company. In some cases, the prepayment of a loan may reduce our achievable yield if the capital returned cannot be invested in transactions with equal or greater expected yields, which could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition and results of operations.

 

Our portfolio companies may be unable to repay or refinance outstanding principal on their loans at or prior to maturity.

 

We have a maturity policy between three to six years for our debt investments. The portfolio companies in which we invest may be unable to repay or refinance outstanding principal on their loans at or prior to maturity. This risk and the risk of default are increased to the extent that the loan documents do not require the portfolio companies to pay down the outstanding principal of such debt prior to maturity. As a result, once our investments mature, we will need to seek new investments for such capital.

 

Any failure of one or more portfolio companies to repay or refinance its debt at or prior to maturity or the inability of one or more portfolio companies to make ongoing payments following an increase in contractual interest rates could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition, results of operations and cash flows.

 

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Our investments in portfolio companies may expose us to environmental risks.

 

We may invest in companies engaged in the ownership (direct or indirect), operation, management or development of real properties that may contain hazardous or toxic substances, and, therefore, may be potentially liable for removal or remediation costs, as well as certain other costs, including governmental fines and liabilities for injuries to persons and property. The existence of any such material environmental liability could have a material adverse effect on the results of operations, cash flow and share price of any such portfolio company. As a result, our investment performance could suffer substantially.

 

There can be no guarantee that all costs and risks regarding compliance with environmental laws and regulations can be identified. New and more stringent environmental and health and safety laws, regulations and permit requirements or stricter interpretations of current laws or regulations could impose substantial additional costs on portfolio investment or potential investments. Compliance with such current or future environmental requirements does not ensure that the operations of the portfolio investments will not cause injury to the environment or to people under all circumstances or that the portfolio investments will not be required to incur additional unforeseen environmental expenditures. Moreover, failure to comply with any such requirements could have a material adverse effect on an investment, and we can offer no assurance that the portfolio investments will at all times comply with all applicable environmental laws, regulations and permit requirements.

 

We are a non-diversified investment company within the meaning of the 1940 Act, and therefore we are not limited with respect to the proportion of our assets that may be invested in securities of a single issuer.

 

We are classified as a non-diversified investment company within the meaning of the 1940 Act, which means that we are not limited by the 1940 Act with respect to the proportion of our assets that we may invest in securities of a single issuer. To the extent that we assume large positions in the securities of a small number of issuers, our NAV may fluctuate to a greater extent than that of a diversified investment company as a result of changes in the financial condition or the market’s assessment of the issuer. We may also be more susceptible to any single economic or regulatory occurrence than a diversified investment company. Beyond our asset diversification requirements as a RIC under the Code, we do not have fixed guidelines for diversification, and our investments could be concentrated in relatively few portfolio companies.

 

Our portfolio may be concentrated in a limited number of portfolio companies and industries, which will subject us to a risk of significant loss if any of these companies defaults on its obligations under any of its debt instruments or if there is a downturn in a particular industry.

 

Our portfolio may be concentrated in a limited number of portfolio companies and industries. As a result, the aggregate returns we realize may be significantly and adversely affected if a small number of investments perform poorly or if we need to write down the value of any one investment. Additionally, while we are not targeting any specific industries, our investments may be concentrated in relatively few industries. For example, although we may classify the industries of our portfolio companies by end-market (such as health market or business services) and not by the products or services (such as software) directed to those end-markets, some of our portfolio companies may principally provide software products or services, which exposes us to downturns in that sector. As a result, a downturn in any particular industry in which we are invested could also significantly impact the aggregate returns we realize.

 

Our failure to make follow-on investments in our portfolio companies could impair the value of our portfolio.

 

Following an initial investment in a portfolio company, we may make additional investments in that portfolio company as “follow-on” investments, in seeking to:

 

increase or maintain in whole or in part our position as a creditor or equity ownership percentage in a portfolio company;

 

exercise warrants, options or convertible securities that were acquired in the original or subsequent financing; or

 

preserve or enhance the value of our investment.

 

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We have discretion to make follow-on investments, subject to the availability of capital resources. Failure on our part to make follow-on investments may, in some circumstances, jeopardize the continued viability of a portfolio company and our initial investment, or may result in a missed opportunity for us to increase our participation in a successful portfolio company. Even if we have sufficient capital to make a desired follow-on investment, we may elect not to make a follow-on investment because we may not want to increase our level of risk, because we prefer other opportunities or because of regulatory or other considerations. Our ability to make follow-on investments may also be limited by the Advisor’s allocation policy.

 

Because we generally do not hold controlling equity interests in our portfolio companies, we may not be able to exercise control over our portfolio companies or to prevent decisions by management of our portfolio companies that could decrease the value of our investments and there is no assurance that portfolio company management will be able to operate their companies in accordance with our expectations.

 

To the extent that we do not hold controlling equity interests in portfolio companies, we will have a limited ability to protect our position in such portfolio companies. We may also co-invest with third parties through partnerships, joint ventures or other entities. Such investments may involve risks in connection with such third-party involvement, including the possibility that a third-party co-investor may have economic or business interests or goals that are inconsistent with ours or may be in a position to take (or block) action in a manner contrary to our investment objective. In those circumstances where such third parties involve a management group, such third parties may receive compensation arrangements relating to such investments, including incentive compensation arrangements.

 

Furthermore, the day-to-day operations of each portfolio company in which we invest will be the responsibility of that portfolio company’s management team. Although we will be responsible for monitoring the performance of each investment and generally intend to invest in portfolio companies operated by strong management, there can be no assurance that the existing management team, or any successor, will be able to operate any such portfolio company in accordance with our expectations. There can be no assurance that a portfolio company will be successful in retaining key members of its management team, the loss of whom could have a material adverse effect on us. Although we generally intend to invest in companies with strong management, there can be no assurance that the existing management of such companies will continue to operate a company successfully.

 

Our portfolio companies may incur debt that ranks equally with, or senior to, our investments in such companies and such portfolio companies may not generate sufficient cash flow to service their debt obligations to us.

 

We may invest a portion of our capital in second lien and subordinated loans issued by our portfolio companies. Our portfolio companies may have, or be permitted to incur, other debt that ranks equally with, or senior to, the debt securities in which we invest. Such subordinated investments are subject to greater risk of default than senior obligations as a result of adverse changes in the financial condition of the obligor or in general economic conditions. If we make a subordinated investment in a portfolio company, the portfolio company may be highly leveraged, and its relatively high debt-to-equity ratio may create increased risks that its operations might not generate sufficient cash flow to service all of its debt obligations. By their terms, such debt instruments may provide that the holders are entitled to receive payment of interest or principal on or before the dates on which we are entitled to receive payments in respect of the securities in which we invest. These debt instruments would usually prohibit the portfolio companies from paying interest on or repaying our investments in the event of and during the continuance of a default under such debt. Also, in the event of insolvency, liquidation, dissolution, reorganization or bankruptcy of a portfolio company, holders of securities ranking senior to our investment in that portfolio company would typically be entitled to receive payment in full before we receive any distribution in respect of our investment. After repaying senior creditors, the portfolio company may not have any remaining assets to use for repaying its obligation to us where we are junior creditor. In the case of debt ranking equally with debt securities in which we invest, we would have to share any distributions on an equal and ratable basis with other creditors holding such debt in the event of an insolvency, liquidation, dissolution, reorganization or bankruptcy of the relevant portfolio company.

 

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Additionally, certain loans that we make to portfolio companies may be secured on a second priority basis by the same collateral securing senior secured debt of such companies. The first priority liens on the collateral will secure the portfolio company’s obligations under any outstanding senior debt and may secure certain other future debt that may be permitted to be incurred by the portfolio company under the agreements governing the loans. The holders of obligations secured by first priority liens on the collateral will generally control the liquidation of, and be entitled to receive proceeds from, any realization of the collateral to repay their obligations in full before us. In addition, the value of the collateral in the event of liquidation will depend on market and economic conditions, the availability of buyers and other factors. There can be no assurance that the proceeds, if any, from sales of all of the collateral would be sufficient to satisfy the loan obligations secured by the second priority liens after payment in full of all obligations secured by the first priority liens on the collateral. If such proceeds were not sufficient to repay amounts outstanding under the loan obligations secured by the second priority liens, then we, to the extent not repaid from the proceeds of the sale of the collateral, will only have an unsecured claim against the portfolio company’s remaining assets, if any.

 

We may make unsecured loans to portfolio companies, meaning that such loans will not benefit from any interest in collateral of such companies. Liens on a portfolio company’s collateral, if any, will secure the portfolio company’s obligations under its outstanding secured debt and may secure certain future debt that is permitted to be incurred by the portfolio company under its secured loan agreements. The holders of obligations secured by such liens will generally control the liquidation of, and be entitled to receive proceeds from, any realization of such collateral to repay their obligations in full before us. In addition, the value of such collateral in the event of liquidation will depend on market and economic conditions, the availability of buyers and other factors. There can be no assurance that the proceeds, if any, from sales of such collateral would be sufficient to satisfy our unsecured loan obligations after payment in full of all loans secured by collateral. If such proceeds were not sufficient to repay the outstanding secured loan obligations, then our unsecured claims would rank equally with the unpaid portion of such secured creditors’ claims against the portfolio company’s remaining assets, if any.

 

The rights we may have with respect to the collateral securing any junior priority loans we make to our portfolio companies may also be limited pursuant to the terms of one or more intercreditor agreements that we enter into with the holders of senior debt. Under a typical intercreditor agreement, at any time that obligations that have the benefit of the first priority liens are outstanding, any of the following actions that may be taken in respect of the collateral will be at the direction of the holders of the obligations secured by the first priority liens:

 

the ability to cause the commencement of enforcement proceedings against the collateral;

 

the ability to control the conduct of such proceedings;

 

the approval of amendments to collateral documents;

 

releases of liens on the collateral; and

 

waivers of past defaults under collateral documents.

 

We may not have the ability to control or direct such actions, even if our rights as junior lenders are adversely affected.

 

The disposition of our investments may result in contingent liabilities.

 

A significant portion of our investments will involve private securities. In connection with the disposition of an investment in private securities, we may be required to make representations about the business and financial affairs of the portfolio company typical of those made in connection with the sale of a business. We may also be required to indemnify the purchasers of such investment to the extent that any such representations turn out to be inaccurate or with respect to potential liabilities. These arrangements may result in contingent liabilities that ultimately result in funding obligations that we must satisfy through our return of distributions previously made to us.

 

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The Advisor’s and Administrator’s liability is limited, and we have agreed to indemnify each against certain liabilities, which may lead them to act in a riskier manner on our behalf than it would when acting for its own account.

 

Under the Investment Advisory Agreement, the Advisor does not assume any responsibility to us other than to render the services called for under that agreement, and it is not responsible for any action of our Board in following or declining to follow the Advisor’s advice or recommendations. Under the terms of the Investment Advisory Agreement, the Advisor, its officers, members, personnel and any person controlling or controlled by the Advisor are not liable to us, any subsidiary of ours, our directors, our stockholders or any subsidiary’s stockholders or partners for acts or omissions performed in accordance with and pursuant to the Investment Advisory Agreement, except those resulting from acts constituting willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence or reckless disregard of the Advisor’s duties under the Investment Advisory Agreement. In addition, we have agreed to indemnify the Advisor and each of its officers, directors, members, managers and employees from and against any claims or liabilities, including reasonable legal fees and other expenses reasonably incurred, arising out of or in connection with our business and operations or any action taken or omitted on our behalf pursuant to authority granted by the Investment Advisory Agreement, except where attributable to willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence or reckless disregard of such person’s duties under the Investment Advisory Agreement. Similarly, the Administrator and certain specified parties providing administrative services pursuant to the relevant agreement are not liable to us or our stockholders for, and we have agreed to indemnify them for, any claims or losses arising out of the good faith performance of their duties or obligations, except where attributable to willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence or reckless disregard of the Administrator’s duties. These protections may lead the Advisor or the Administrator to act in a riskier manner when acting on our behalf than it would when acting for its own account.

 

We are subject to risks under hedging transactions and our ability to enter into transactions involving derivatives and financial commitment transactions may be limited.

 

Although we do not engage in hedging transactions as a principal investment strategy, we may engage in hedging transactions in the form of interest rate swaps, caps, collars and floors, intended to limit our exposure to interest rate fluctuations to the limited extent such transactions are permitted under the 1940 Act and applicable commodities laws. Engaging in hedging transactions would entail additional risks to our stockholders.

 

In addition, we are subject to legislation that may limit our ability to enter into such transactions. For example, in August 2022, Rule 18f-4 under the 1940 Act, regarding the ability of a BDC (or a registered investment company) to use derivatives and other transactions that create future payment or delivery obligations (except reverse repurchase agreements and similar financing transactions), became effective. Under the rule, BDCs that make significant use of derivatives are required to operate subject to a value-at-risk leverage limit, adopt a derivatives risk management program and appoint a derivatives risk manager, and comply with various testing and board reporting requirements. These requirements apply unless the BDC qualifies as a “limited derivatives user,” as defined under the adopted rules. Under the rule, a BDC may enter into an unfunded commitment agreement that is not a derivatives transaction, such as an agreement to provide financing to a portfolio company, if the BDC has, among other things, a reasonable belief, at the time it enters into such an agreement, that it will have sufficient cash and cash equivalents to meet its obligations with respect to all of its unfunded commitment agreements, in each case as it becomes due. We intend to operate under the limited derivatives user exemption of Rule 18f-4 and have adopted written policies and procedures reasonably designed to manage our derivatives risk pursuant to Rule 18f-4. Collectively, these requirements may limit our ability to use derivatives and/or enter into certain other financial contracts. We qualify as a “limited derivatives user,” and as a result the requirements applicable to us under Rule 18f-4 may limit our ability to use derivatives and enter into certain other financial contracts. However, if we fail to qualify as a limited derivatives user and become subject to the additional requirements under Rule 18f-4, compliance with such requirements may increase cost of doing business, which could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition, results of operations, and cash flows. Future legislation or rules may modify how we treat derivatives and other financial arrangements for purposes of our compliance with the leverage limitations of the 1940 Act and, therefore, may increase or decrease the amount of leverage currently available to us under the 1940 Act, which may be materially adverse to us and our stockholders.

 

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In each such case, we generally would seek to hedge against fluctuations of the relative values of our portfolio positions from changes in market interest rates. Hedging against a decline in the values of our portfolio positions would not eliminate the possibility of fluctuations in the values of such positions or prevent losses if the values of the positions declined. However, such hedging could establish other positions designed to gain from those same developments, thereby offsetting the decline in the value of such portfolio positions. Such hedging transactions could also limit the opportunity for gain if the values of the underlying portfolio positions increased. Moreover, it might not be possible to hedge against an exchange rate or interest rate fluctuation that was so generally anticipated that we would not be able to enter into a hedging transaction at an acceptable price. Use of a hedging transaction could involve counterparty credit risk.

 

The success of any hedging transactions we may enter into will depend on our ability to correctly predict movements in interest rates. Therefore, while we may enter into hedging transactions to seek to reduce interest rate risks, unanticipated changes in interest rates could result in poorer overall investment performance than if we had not engaged in any such hedging transactions. In addition, the degree of correlation between price movements of the instruments used in a hedging strategy and price movements in the portfolio positions being hedged could vary. Moreover, for a variety of reasons, we might not seek to (or be able to) establish a perfect correlation between the hedging instruments and the portfolio holdings being hedged. Any such imperfect correlation could prevent us from achieving the intended hedge and expose us to risk of loss. Our ability to engage in hedging transactions may also be adversely affected by rules adopted by the CFTC.

 

We may not realize gains from our equity investments.

 

When we invest in loans, we may acquire warrants or other equity securities of portfolio companies as well. We may also invest in equity securities directly. To the extent we hold equity investments, we will seek to dispose of them and realize gains upon our disposition of them. However, the equity interests we receive may not appreciate in value and may decline in value. As a result, we may not be able to realize gains from our equity interests, and any gains that we do realize on the disposition of any equity interests may not be sufficient to offset any other losses we experience.

 

To the extent that we borrow under credit facilities and issue senior unsecured notes, the potential for gain or loss on amounts invested in us will be magnified and may increase the risk of investing in us. Borrowings under credit facilities and issuances of senior unsecured notes may also adversely affect the return on our assets, reduce cash available to service our debt or for distribution to our stockholders, and result in losses.

 

The use of leverage in the form of borrowings under credit facilities and issuances of senior unsecured notes increases the volatility of investments by magnifying the potential for gain or loss on invested equity capital. Since we use leverage in the form of borrowings under credit facilities and issuances of senior unsecured notes to partially finance our investments, you will experience increased risks of investing in our securities. If the value of our assets decreases, leveraging will cause NAV to decline more sharply than it otherwise would if we had not borrowed under the credit facilities and issued senior unsecured notes. Similarly, any decrease in our income would cause net income to decline more sharply than it would have if we had not borrowed under the credit facilities and issued senior unsecured notes. Such a decline could negatively affect our ability to service our debt or make distributions to our stockholders. In addition, our stockholders will bear the burden of any increase in our expenses as a result of our use of leverage, including interest expenses and any increase in the management or incentive fees payable to our Advisor.

 

The amount of borrowings under credit facilities and issuances of senior unsecured notes depends on our Advisor’s and our Board’s assessment of market and other factors at the time of any proposed borrowing under credit facilities and issuances of senior unsecured notes. We can offer no assurance that leveraged financing will be available to us on favorable terms or at all. However, to the extent that we use leverage to finance our assets, our financing costs will reduce cash available for servicing our debt or distributions to stockholders. Moreover, we may not be able to meet our financing obligations and, to the extent that we cannot, we risk the loss of some or all of our assets to liquidation or sale to satisfy the obligations. In such an event, we may be forced to sell assets at significantly depressed prices due to market conditions or otherwise, which may result in losses.

 

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We are subject to risks associated with our investment and trading of liquid credit (i.e., broadly syndicated loans).

 

From time to time, we may invest in liquid credit (i.e., broadly syndicated loans) that may be traded in public or institutional financial markets for which there is a more active market than some of our other investments. These investments may expose us to various risks, including with respect to liquidity, price volatility, interest rate risk, ability to restructure in the event of distress, credit risks and less protective issuing documentation, than is the case with the loans to middle market companies that comprise nearly all of our debt investments. Certain of these instruments may be fixed rate assets, thereby exposing us to interest rate risk in the valuation of such investments. Additionally, the financial markets in which these assets may be traded are subject to significant volatility (including due to macroeconomic conditions), which may impact the value of such investments and our ability to sell such instruments without incurring losses. The foregoing may result in volatility in the valuation of our liquid credit investments, which would, in turn, impact our NAV. Similarly, a sudden and significant increase in market interest rates may increase the risk of payment defaults and cause a decline in the value of these investments and in our NAV. We may sell our liquid credit investments from time to time in order to generate proceeds for use in our investment program, and we may suffer losses in connection with any such sales, due to the foregoing factors. We may not realize gains from our liquid credit investments and any gains that we realize may not be sufficient to offset any other losses we experience. 

 

Our investments in the Trading Companies & Distributors industry face considerable uncertainties including significant regulatory challenges.

Our investments in portfolio companies that operate in the Trading Companies & Distributors industry represent approximately 15.1% of our total portfolio as of December 31, 2024. Portfolio companies in the Trading Companies & Distributors industry are subject to many risks, including the negative impact of regulation, a competitive marketplace, decreased consumer demand and supply-chain disruptions. In recent years, supply-chain disruptions and global trade policies have had a negative impact on these industries and as Trading Companies & Distributors represent a significant portion of our investments, such adverse business and/or economic conditions have also impacted our portfolio. Adverse economic, business, or regulatory developments affecting the Trading Companies & Distributors industry, including trade policies, treaties and tariffs between the United States and other countries, could have a negative impact on the value of our investments in portfolio companies operating in this industry, and therefore could negatively impact our business and results of operations.

 

Risks Relating to Our Common Stock

 

Prior to the IPO, there was no public market for our shares of common stock, and we cannot assure you that a market for our shares of common stock will develop or continue, or that the market price of our shares of common stock will not decline at some point following the IPO. Our share of common stock price may be volatile and may fluctuate substantially.

Our shares of common stock are listed on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol “KBDC.” We cannot assure you that a trading market will develop for our shares of common stock or, if one develops, that the trading market can be sustained. In addition, we cannot predict the prices at which our shares of common stock will trade. Shares of companies offered in an initial public offering often trade at a discount to the initial offering price due to underwriting discounts and commissions and related offering expenses. Also, shares of closed-end investment companies, including BDCs, frequently trade at a discount from their net asset value and our shares may also be discounted in the market. This characteristic of closed-end investment companies is separate and distinct from the risk that our net asset value per share may decline. We cannot predict whether our shares of common stock will trade at, above or below net asset value. The risk of loss associated with this characteristic of closed-end management investment companies may be greater for investors expecting to sell shares of common stock purchased in this offering soon after the IPO. In addition, if our shares of common stock trade below its net asset value per share, we will generally not be able to sell additional shares of common stock to the public at its market price without first obtaining the approval of a majority of our stockholders (including a majority of our unaffiliated stockholders) and our independent directors for such issuance.

 

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The market price and liquidity of the market for our shares of common stock may be significantly affected by numerous factors, some of which are beyond our control and may not be directly related to our operating performance. These factors include:

 

significant volatility in the market price and trading volume of securities of BDCs or other companies in the sector in which we operate, which are not necessarily related to the operating performance of these companies;

 

changes in regulatory policies or tax guidelines, particularly with respect to RICs or BDCs;

 

loss of RIC status;

 

changes in earnings or variations in operating results;

 

changes in the value of our portfolio of investments;

 

any shortfall in revenue or net income or any increase in losses from levels expected by investors or securities analysts;

 

departure of key personnel from our Advisor;

 

operating performance of companies comparable to us;

 

general economic trends and other external factors; and

 

loss of a major funding source.

 

Sales of substantial amounts of our shares of common stock in the public market may have an adverse effect on the market price of our shares of common stock.

 

Upon completion of the IPO, we had 71,116,459 shares of common stock outstanding. The shares of common stock sold in the IPO are freely tradable without restriction or limitation under the Securities Act.

 

Any shares purchased in the IPO or owned by our affiliates, as defined in the Securities Act, are subject to the public information, manner of sale and volume limitations of Rule 144 under the Securities Act. The remaining shares of common stock outstanding upon the completion of the IPO are “restricted securities” under the meaning of Rule 144 promulgated under the Securities Act and may only be sold if such sale is registered under the Securities Act or exempt from registration, including the exemption under Rule 144.

 

In addition, shares owned by certain of our stockholders are subject to lock-up restrictions.

 

Following the IPO and the expiration of applicable lock-up periods, subject to applicable securities laws, sales of substantial amounts of our shares of common stock, or the perception that such sales could occur, could adversely affect the prevailing market prices for our shares of common stock. If this occurs, it could impair our ability to raise additional capital through the sale of equity securities should we desire to do so. We cannot predict what effect, if any, future sales of securities, or the availability of securities for future sales, will have on the market price of our shares of common stock prevailing from time to time.

 

Trading and liquidity in our shares may be limited and our shares may trade below our NAV.

 

We cannot assure you that a public trading market can be sustained. Shares of companies offered in an initial public offering often trade at a discount to the initial offering price due to underwriting discounts and related offering expenses. Also, shares of closed-end investment companies and BDCs frequently trade at a discount from their NAV. This characteristic of closed-end investment companies is separate and distinct from the risk that our NAV per share may decline. We cannot predict whether our shares of common stock will trade at, above or below NAV.

 

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Certain provisions of the DGCL, our certificate of incorporation, bylaws, and actions of our Board could deter takeover attempts and have an adverse impact on the value of common stock.

 

The General Corporation Law of the State of Delaware, as amended (the “DGCL”), contains provisions that may discourage, delay or make more difficult a change in control of us or the removal of our directors. Our certificate of incorporation and bylaws contain provisions that limit liability and provide for indemnification of our directors and officers. These provisions and others which we may adopt also may have the effect of deterring hostile takeovers or delaying changes in control or management. We are subject to Section 203 of the DGCL, the application of which is subject to any applicable requirements of the 1940 Act. This section generally prohibits us from engaging in mergers and other business combinations with stockholders that beneficially own 15% or more of our voting stock, either individually or together with their affiliates, unless our directors or stockholders approve the business combination in the prescribed manner. Section 203 of the DGCL may discourage third parties from trying to acquire control of us and increase the difficulty of consummating such an offer.

 

We have also adopted measures that may make it difficult for a third party to obtain control of us, including provisions of our certificate of incorporation that classify our Board of Directors in three classes serving staggered three-year terms, and provisions of our certificate of incorporation authorizing our Board of Directors to classify or reclassify shares of our preferred stock in one or more classes or series, and to cause the issuance of additional shares of our stock. These provisions, as well as other provisions in our certificate of incorporation and bylaws, may delay, defer or prevent a transaction or a change in control in circumstances that could give our stockholders the opportunity to realize a premium of the NAV of our shares of common stock.

 

During extended periods of capital market disruption and instability, there is a risk that you may not receive distributions or that our distributions may not grow over time and a portion of our distributions may be a return of capital.

 

We intend to make periodic distributions to our stockholders out of assets legally available for distribution. We cannot assure you that we will achieve investment results that will allow us to make a specified level of cash distributions or year-to-year increases in cash distributions. Our ability to pay distributions might be adversely affected by the impact of one or more of the risk factors described in this Annual Report on Form 10-K. Due to the asset coverage test applicable to us under the 1940 Act as a BDC, we may be limited in our ability to make distributions. If we declare a distribution and if more stockholders opt to receive cash distributions rather than participate in our dividend reinvestment plan (“DRIP”), we may be forced to sell some of our investments in order to make cash distribution payments. To the extent we make distributions to stockholders that include a return of capital, such portion of the distribution essentially constitutes a return of the stockholder’s investment. Although such return of capital may not be taxable, such distributions may increase an investor’s tax liability for capital gains upon the future sale of our Common Stock.

 

A return of capital distribution may cause a stockholder to recognize a capital gain from the sale of our Common Stock even if the stockholder sells its shares for less than the original purchase price.

 

Investing in our Common Stock may involve an above average degree of risk.

 

The investments we make in accordance with our investment objective may result in a higher amount of risk than alternative investment options and a higher risk of volatility or loss of principal. Our investments in portfolio companies involve higher levels of risk, and therefore, an investment in our shares may not be suitable for someone with lower risk tolerance. In addition, our Common Stock is intended for long-term investors who can accept the risks of investing primarily in illiquid loans and other debt or debt-like instruments and should not be treated as a trading vehicle.

 

A stockholder’s interest in us will be diluted if we issue additional shares, which could reduce the overall value of an investment in us.

 

Our stockholders do not have preemptive rights to any shares of common stock we issue in the future. To the extent that we issue additional equity interests at or below NAV your percentage ownership interest in us may be diluted. In addition, depending upon the terms and pricing of any future and the value of our investments, you may also experience dilution in the book value and fair value of your shares of common stock.

 

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Under the 1940 Act, we generally are prohibited from issuing or selling our shares of common stock at a price below NAV per share, which may be a disadvantage as compared with certain public companies. We may, however, sell our shares of common stock, or warrants, options, or rights to acquire our shares of common stock, at a price below the current NAV of our shares of common stock if our Board of Directors determines that such sale is in our best interests and the best interests of our stockholders, and our stockholders, including a majority of those stockholders that are not affiliated with us, approve such sale. In any such case, the price at which our securities are to be issued and sold may not be less than a price that, in the determination of our Board of Directors, closely approximates the fair value of such securities (less any distributing commission or discount). If we raise additional funds by issuing our shares of common stock or senior securities convertible into, or exchangeable for, our shares of common stock, then the percentage ownership of our stockholders at that time will decrease and you will experience dilution.

  

In addition, distributions declared in cash payable to stockholders that are participants in our DRIP will generally be automatically reinvested in our shares of common stock. As a result, stockholders that do not participate in our DRIP may experience dilution over time.

 

We may be subject to risks that arise from newly enacted federal tax legislation and our stockholders may receive our shares of Common Stock as dividends, which could result in adverse tax consequences to them.

 

The Inflation Reduction Act of 2022, among other things, introduced a 15% book minimum tax on larger corporations, a 1% excise tax on stock buybacks and increased investment in the Internal Revenue Service (the “IRS”) to aid in the enforcement of tax laws. The impact of such legislation, as well as federal tax legislation proposed but not yet enacted, on us, our stockholders and entities in which we may invest is uncertain. Prospective investors are urged to consult their tax advisors regarding the effects of the new legislation on an investment in us.

 

In order to satisfy the annual distribution requirement applicable to RICs, we will have the ability to declare a large portion of a dividend in our shares of common stock instead of in cash. As long as a portion of such dividend is paid in cash (which portion may be as low as 20% of such dividend) and certain requirements are met, the entire distribution will be treated as a dividend for U.S. federal income tax purposes. As a result, a stockholder generally would be subject to tax on 100% of the fair market value of the dividend on the date the dividend is received by the stockholder in the same manner as a cash dividend, even though most of the dividend was paid in our shares of common stock. We currently do not intend to pay dividends in our shares of common stock.

 

We may in the future determine to issue preferred stock, which could adversely affect the value of shares of Common Stock.

 

The issuance of preferred stock with dividend or conversion rights, liquidation preferences or other economic terms favorable to the holders of preferred stock could make an investment in shares of Common Stock less attractive. In addition, the dividends on any preferred stock we issue must be cumulative. Payment of dividends and repayment of the liquidation preference of preferred stock must take preference over any distributions or other payments to holders of Common Stock, and holders of preferred stock are not subject to any of our expenses or losses and are not entitled to participate in any income or appreciation in excess of their stated preference (other than convertible preferred stock that converts into shares of Common Stock). In addition, under the 1940 Act, preferred stock would constitute a “senior security” for purposes of the 150% asset coverage test. We do not currently anticipate issuing preferred stock.

 

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General Risk Factors

 

Global economic, political and market conditions, including uncertainty about the financial stability of the United States, could have a significant adverse effect on our business, financial condition and results of operations.

 

The current worldwide financial markets situation, as well as various social and political tensions in the United States and around the world (including wars and other forms of conflict, terrorist acts, security operations and catastrophic events such as fires, floods, earthquakes, tornadoes, hurricanes and global health epidemics), may contribute to increased market volatility, may have long term effects on the United States and worldwide financial markets, and may cause economic uncertainties or deterioration in the United States and worldwide.

  

For example, ongoing armed conflicts between Russia and Ukraine in Europe and among Israel, Hamas and other militant groups in the Middle East, have caused and could continue to cause significant market disruptions and volatility within the markets in Russia, Europe, the Middle East and the United States. In addition, the current political climate has intensified concerns about trade tariffs and a potential trade war between the United States and certain foreign countries, including China, Mexico and Canada, among others. These consequences may trigger a significant reduction in international trade, shortages or oversupply of certain manufactured goods, substantial price increases or decreases of goods, inflationary pressures, and possible failure of individual companies and/or large segments of the foreign export industry with a potentially negative impact on the value of our investments.

 

In addition, the political reunification of China and Taiwan, over which China continues to claim sovereignty, is a highly complex issue that has included threats of invasion by China. Any escalation of hostility between China and/or Taiwan would likely have a significant adverse impact not only on the value of investments in both countries, but also on economies and financial markets globally.

 

We do not currently have portfolio investments with direct exposure to the Middle East, China, Taiwan, Russia or Ukraine, but because of the increasing interconnectedness of global economies and financial markets, events in these regions could negatively affect the value of our investments.

 

Political, social and economic uncertainty creates and exacerbates risks.

 

Social, political, economic and other conditions and events (such as natural disasters, epidemics and pandemics, terrorism, conflicts and social unrest) will occur that create uncertainty and have significant impacts on issuers, industries, governments and other systems, including the financial markets, to which companies and their investments are exposed. As global systems, economies and financial markets are increasingly interconnected, events that once had only local impact are now more likely to have regional or even global effects. Events that occur in one country, region or financial market will, more frequently, adversely impact issuers in other countries, regions or markets, including in established markets such as the U.S. Such risks include the large-scale invasion of Ukraine by Russia that began in February 2022, heightened tensions between China and Taiwan, the recent outbreak of hostilities in the Middle East, or the effect on world leaders and governments of global health pandemics, such as the COVID-19 pandemic. These impacts can be exacerbated by failures of governments and societies to adequately respond to an emerging event or threat. We do not currently have portfolio investments with direct exposure to the Middle East, China, Taiwan, Russia or Ukraine, but because of the increasing interconnectedness of global economies and financial markets, events in these regions could negatively affect the value of our investments.

 

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Uncertainty can result in or coincide with, among other things: increased volatility in the financial markets for securities, derivatives, loans, credit and currency; a decrease in the reliability of market prices and difficulty in valuing assets (including portfolio company assets); greater fluctuations in spreads on debt investments and currency exchange rates; increased risk of default (by both government and private obligors and issuers); further social, economic, and political instability; nationalization of private enterprise; greater governmental involvement in the economy or in social factors that impact the economy; changes to governmental regulation and supervision of the loan, securities, derivatives and currency markets and market participants and decreased or revised monitoring of such markets by governments or self-regulatory organizations and reduced enforcement of regulations; limitations on the activities of investors in such markets; controls or restrictions on foreign investment, capital controls and limitations on repatriation of invested capital; the significant loss of liquidity and the inability to purchase, sell and otherwise fund investments or settle transactions (including, but not limited to, a market freeze); unavailability of currency hedging techniques; substantial, and in some periods extremely high, rates of inflation, which can last many years and have substantial negative effects on credit and securities markets as well as the economy as a whole; recessions; and difficulties in obtaining and/or enforcing legal judgments.

 

For example, the COVID-19 pandemic led to disruptions in local, regional, national and global markets and economies. With respect to the U.S. credit markets (in particular for middle market loans), this outbreak resulted in the following among other things: (i) significant disruption to the businesses of many middle market loan borrowers including supply chains, demand and practical aspects of their operations, as well as lay-offs of employees; (ii) increased draws by borrowers on revolving lines of credit; (iii) increased requests by borrowers for amendments and waivers of their credit agreements to avoid default, increased defaults by such borrowers and/or increased difficulty in obtaining refinancing at the maturity dates of their loans; (iv) volatility and disruption of these markets including greater volatility in pricing and spreads and difficulty in valuing loans during periods of increased volatility, and liquidity issues; and (v) rapidly evolving proposals and/or actions by state and federal governments to address problems experienced by the markets and by businesses and the economy in general which were not necessarily adequate to address the problems faced by the loan market and middle market businesses. Although many of these conditions have resolved, similar consequences could occur in the future as a result of new variants of the virus or other infectious diseases. Any future outbreaks of infectious diseases could have an adverse impact on the markets and the economy in general, which could have a material adverse impact on, among other things, the ability of lenders to originate loans, the volume and type of loans originated, and the volume and type of amendments and waivers granted to borrowers and remedial actions taken in the event of a borrower default, each of which could negatively impact the amount and quality of loans available for investment by us and returns to us, among other things. It is impossible to determine the scope of any future outbreaks, how long any such outbreak, market disruption or uncertainties may last, the effect any governmental actions will have or the full potential impact on us and our portfolio companies in which we invest.

 

Although it is impossible to predict the precise nature and consequences of these events, or of any political or policy decisions and regulatory changes occasioned by emerging events or uncertainty on applicable laws or regulations that impact us and our targeted investments, it is clear that these types of events are impacting and will, for at least some time, continue to impact us and our targeted investments and, in certain instances, the impact will be adverse and profound.

 

If public health uncertainties and market disruptions continue for an extended period of time, loan delinquencies, loan non-accruals, problem assets, and bankruptcies may increase. In addition, collateral for our loans may decline in value, which could cause loan losses to increase and the net worth and liquidity of loan guarantors could decline, impairing their ability to honor commitments to us. An increase in loan delinquencies and non-accruals or a decrease in loan collateral and guarantor net worth could result in increased costs and reduced income which would have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition or results of operations.

 

We will also be negatively affected if the operations and effectiveness of us or a portfolio company (or any of the key personnel or service providers of the foregoing) is compromised or if necessary or beneficial systems and processes are disrupted.

 

We are subject to risks related to corporate responsibility.

 

Our business faces increasing public scrutiny related to environmental, social and governance (“ESG”) activities. We risk damage to our brand and reputation if we fail to act responsibly in a number of areas, such as environmental stewardship, corporate governance and transparency and considering ESG factors in our investment processes. Adverse incidents with respect to ESG activities could impact the value of our brand, the cost of our operations and relationships with investors, all of which could adversely affect our business and results of operations. Additionally, new regulatory initiatives related to ESG could adversely affect our business.

 

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ITEM 1B. UNRESOLVED STAFF COMMENTS

 

None.

 

ITEM 1C. CYBERSECURITY

 

The Company’s Board of Directors (the “Board”) is responsible for overseeing the Company’s risk management program and cybersecurity is a critical element of this program. Management is responsible for the day-to-day administration of the Company’s risk management program and its cybersecurity policies, processes, and practices. The Company’s cybersecurity policies, standards, processes, and practices are based on recognized frameworks established by the National Institute of Standards and Technology, the International Organization for Standardization and other applicable industry standards and are fully integrated into the Company’s overall risk management processes. In general, the Company seeks to address material cybersecurity threats through a company-wide approach that addresses the confidentiality, integrity, and availability of the Company’s information systems or the information that the Company collects and stores, by assessing, identifying and managing cybersecurity issues as they occur.

 

Cybersecurity Risk Management and Strategy

 

The Company’s cybersecurity risk management strategy focuses on several areas:

 

  Identification and Reporting: The Company has implemented a comprehensive, cross-functional approach to assessing, identifying and managing material cybersecurity threats and incidents. The Company’s program includes controls and procedures to properly identify, classify and escalate certain cybersecurity incidents to provide management visibility and obtain direction from management as to the public disclosure and reporting of material incidents in a timely manner.

 

  Technical Safeguards: The Company implements technical safeguards that are designed to protect the Company’s information systems from cybersecurity threats, including firewalls, intrusion prevention and detection systems, anti-malware functionality, and access controls, which are evaluated and improved through vulnerability assessments and cybersecurity threat intelligence, as well as assistance from third party experts where necessary.

 

  Incident Response and Recovery Planning: The Company has established and maintains comprehensive incident response, business continuity, and disaster recovery plans designed to address the Company’s response to a cybersecurity incident. The Company conducts regular tabletop exercises to test these plans and ensure personnel are familiar with their roles in a response scenario.

 

  Third-Party Risk Management: The Company maintains a comprehensive, risk-based approach to identifying and overseeing material cybersecurity threats presented by third parties, including vendors, service providers, and other external users of the Company’s systems, as well as the systems of third parties that could adversely impact our business in the event of a material cybersecurity incident affecting those third-party systems, including any outside consultants who advise on the Company’s cybersecurity systems.

 

  Education and Awareness: The Company provides regular, mandatory training for all levels of employees regarding cybersecurity threats as a means to equip the Company’s employees with effective tools to address cybersecurity threats, and to communicate the Company’s evolving information security policies, standards, processes, and practices.

 

The Company conducts periodic assessment and testing of the Company’s policies, standards, processes, and practices in a manner intended to address cybersecurity threats and events. This includes penetration testing of network infrastructure and phishing tests targeting the Adviser’s employees. The results of such assessments and reviews are evaluated by management and reported to the Board, and the Company adjusts its cybersecurity policies, standards, processes, and practices as necessary based on the information provided by these assessments and reviews.

 

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Governance

 

The Board, in coordination with the Adviser, oversees the Company’s risk management program, including the management of cybersecurity threats. The Board receives regular updates and reports on developments in the cybersecurity space, including risk management practices, recent developments, vulnerability assessments, third-party and independent reviews, the threat environment, and information security issues encountered by the Company’. The Board also receives prompt and timely information regarding any cybersecurity risk that meets pre-established reporting thresholds, as well as ongoing updates regarding any such risk. On an annual basis, the Board and the Adviser discuss the Company’s approach to overseeing cybersecurity threats.

 

The Adviser has established an internal working group that includes relevant representation from senior management including the CCO, CFO, and CISO, and CTO who work collaboratively to implement a program designed to protect the Company’s information systems from cybersecurity threats and to promptly respond to any material cybersecurity incidents in accordance with the Company’s incident response and recovery plans. Through ongoing communication with these teams, the CISO, CTO and senior management are informed about and monitor the prevention, detection, mitigation and remediation of cybersecurity threats and incidents in real time, and report such threats and incidents to the Board when appropriate.

 

Members of the internal working group have multiple decades of experience in information security and risk management, including assessing cybersecurity threats.  Furthermore, the CTO and CISO have educational backgrounds and hold professional experience and certifications relevant to management of cybersecurity.

 

Material Effects of Cybersecurity Incidents

 

Risks from cybersecurity threats, including as a result of any previous cybersecurity incidents, have not materially affected and are not reasonably likely to materially affect the Company, including its business strategy, results of operations, or financial condition.

 

ITEM 2. PROPERTIES

 

The headquarters of KA Credit Advisors, LLC is located at 717 Texas Avenue, Suite 2200, Houston, TX 77002.

 

ITEM 3. LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

 

Neither we nor our Advisor is currently subject to any material legal proceedings, nor, to our knowledge, is any material legal proceeding threatened against us, or against our Advisor.

 

From time to time, we, or our Advisor, may be a party to certain legal proceedings in the ordinary course of business, including proceedings relating to the enforcement of our rights under contracts with our portfolio companies. While the outcome of these legal proceedings cannot be predicted with certainty, we do not expect that these proceedings will have a material effect upon our financial condition or results of operations.

 

From time to time we are involved in various legal proceedings, lawsuits and claims incidental to the conduct of our business. Our businesses are also subject to extensive regulation, which may result in regulatory proceedings against us.

 

ITEM 4. MINE SAFETY DISCLOSURES

 

Not applicable.

 

57

 

 

PART II

 

ITEM 5. MARKET FOR REGISTRANT’S COMMON EQUITY, RELATED STOCKHOLDER MATTERS AND ISSUER PURCHASES OF EQUITY SECURITIES

 

Price Range of Common Stock

 

Our common stock commenced trading on the NYSE under the symbol “KBDC” on May 22, 2024. Prior to our IPO, the shares of our common stock were offered and sold in transactions exempt from registration under the Securities Act. As such there was no public market for shares of our common stock prior to May 22, 2024.

 

The following table sets forth, for each fiscal quarter since our common stock commenced trading on the NYSE, (i) the NAV per share of our common stock as of the applicable period end, (ii) the range of high and low closing sales prices of our common stock as reported on the NYSE during the applicable period, and (iii) the closing high and low sales prices as a premium (discount) to NAV during the relevant period.

 

         Closing Sales Price (2)   Premium
(Discount) of
High Sales
Price to
    Premium
(Discount) of
Low Sales
Price to
 
    NAV(1)    High    Low    NAV(3)    NAV(3) 
Year Ending December 31, 2024  $16.70   $17.00   $15.85    1.8%   (5.1)%
Third Quarter  $16.70   $16.40   $15.70    (1.8)%   (6.0)%
Second Quarter (from May 22, 2024 through June 30, 2024)  $16.57   $16.55   $15.95    (0.1)%   (3.7)%

 

 

(1)NAV per share is determined as of the last day in the relevant quarter and therefore may not reflect the NAV per share on the date of the high and low sales prices. The NAVs shown are based on outstanding shares at the end of each period.

 

(2)Closing sales price as provided by the NYSE.

 

(3)Calculated as of the respective high or low closing sales price divided by the quarter end NAV and subtracting 1.

 

On February 21, 2025, the reported closing sales price of our common stock was $17.40 per share. 

 

Holders

 

Please see “Part III—Item 12. Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management and Related Stockholder Matters” for disclosure regarding the holders.

 

As of February 21, 2025, we had 504 holders of record of our common stock, which did not include stockholders for whom shares are held in “nominee” or “street name”.

 

58

 

 

Distributions

 

The following table reflects the distributions declared and payable for the year ended December 31, 2024 (dollars in thousands, except per share amounts).

 

         Dividend   Total 
Date Declared  Record Date  Payment Date  per Share   Dividend 
March 6, 2024  March 29, 2024  April 17, 2024  $0.40   $19,516 
May 8, 2024  June 28, 2024  July 15, 2024   0.40    28,447 
August 7, 2024  September 30, 2024  October 15, 2024   0.40    28,419 
May 8, 2024  December 5, 2024  December 20, 2024   0.10    7,102 
November 6, 2024  December 31, 2024  January 15, 2025   0.40    28,424 
         $1.70   $111,908 

 

Dividend Reinvestment Plan

 

The following table summarizes the amounts received and shares of common stock issued to shareholders pursuant to our dividend reinvestment plan during the year ended December 31, 2024 (dollars in thousands, except per share amounts).

 

Dividend  Dividend  DRIP     
record  payment  shares   DRIP 
date  date  issued   value 
December 29, 2023  January 16, 2024   95,791   $1,573 
March 29, 2024  April 17, 2024   94,816    1,577 
June 28, 2024  July 15, 2024   -    - 
September 30, 2024  October 15, 2024   -    - 
December 5, 2024  December 20, 2024   37,843    632 
       228,450   $3,782 

 

All of the dividends declared during the year ended December 31, 2024 were derived from ordinary income, determined on a tax basis. 

 

Recent Sales of Unregistered Securities

 

As set forth in the table below (dollars in thousands, except per share amounts), during the year ended December 31, 2024, we issued and sold 23,322,186 shares of common stock at an aggregate offering amount of approximately $388,634. The issuance of the shares of common stock was exempt from the registration requirements of the Securities Act, pursuant to Section 4(a)(2) and Rule 506(b) of Regulation D thereof and previously reported by us on our current reports on Form 8-K. The Company relied, in part, upon representations from the investors in the subscription agreements that each investor was an accredited investor as defined in Regulation D under the Securities Act.

 

59

 

 

Common stock issue date  Offering
price per
share
   Common stock
shares issued
   Aggregate
offering
amount
 
February 14, 2024  $16.74    7,089,771   $118,689 
April 2, 2024  $16.63    16,232,415    269,945 
Total common stock issued        23,322,186   $388,634 

 

Stock Repurchase Plan (dollars in thousands, except share amounts)

 

On May 21, 2024, the Company entered into a share repurchase plan, or the Company 10b5-1 Plan, to acquire up to $100,000 in the aggregate of the Company’s Common Stock at prices below the Company’s net asset value per share over a specified period, in accordance with the guidelines specified in Rule 10b5-1 and Rule 10b-18 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the “Exchange Act”). The Company 10b5-1 Plan was approved by the Board of Directors on March 6, 2024. The Company 10b5-1 Plan requires Morgan Stanley Corporation as the Company’s agent, to repurchase Common Stock on its behalf when the market price per share is below the most recently reported net asset value per share (including any updates, corrections or adjustments publicly announced by the Company to any previously announced net asset value per share, including any distributions declared). Under the Company 10b5-1 Plan, the volume of purchases would be expected to increase as the price of the Company’s Common Stock declines, subject to volume restrictions. The timing and amount of any share repurchases will depend on the terms and conditions of the Company 10b5-1 Plan, the market price of the Company’s Common Stock and trading volumes, and no assurance can be given that Common Stock be repurchased in any particular amount or at all. The repurchase of shares pursuant to the Company 10b5-1 Plan is intended to satisfy the conditions of Rule 10b5-1 and Rule 10b-18 under the Exchange Act, and will otherwise be subject to applicable law, including Regulation M, which may prohibit repurchases under certain circumstances. The Company 10b5-1 Plan commenced beginning 60 calendar days following the end of the “restricted period” under Regulation M and will terminate upon the earliest to occur of (i) the close of business on May 24, 2025, (ii) the end of the trading day on which the aggregate purchase price for all shares purchased under the Company 10b5-1 Plan equals $100,000 and (iii) the occurrence of certain other events described in the Company 10b5-1 Plan.

 

The “restricted period” under Regulation M ended upon the closing of the Company’s IPO and, therefore, the Common Stock repurchases/purchases described above began on July 23, 2024.

 

During the year ended December 31, 2024, the Company repurchase 94,613 shares under the Company’s 10b5-1 Plan for a total of $1,525.

 

Stock Performance Graph

 

This graph compares the stockholder return on our common stock from May 22, 2024 (the first date that our common stock began trading on the NYSE) to December 31, 2024 with that of the Standard & Poor’s 500 Stock Index and the Standard & Poor’s BDC Index. This graph assumes that on May 22, 2024, $100 was invested in our common stock, the Standard & Poor’s 500 Stock Index and the Standard & Poor’s BDC Index. The graph also assumes the reinvestment of all cash distributions prior to any tax effect. The graph and other information furnished under this Part II Item 5 of this annual report on Form 10-K shall not be deemed to be “soliciting material” or to be “filed” with the SEC or subject to Regulation 14A or 14C under, or to the liabilities of Section 18 of, the Exchange Act. The stock price performance included in the below graph is not necessarily indicative of future stock performance.

 

COMPARISON OF CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURN AMONG KAYNE ANDERSON BDC, INC.

S&P 500 INDEX AND S&P BDC INDEX

 

Total Return Performance

 

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Fees and Expenses

 

The following table is being provided to update, as of December 31, 2024, certain information in our registration statement on Form N-2 (File No. 333-283316) that was filed on January 29, 2025. The following table is intended to assist you in understanding the costs and expenses that an investor in shares of our common stock will bear directly or indirectly. We caution you that some of the percentages indicated in the table below are estimates and may vary. The expenses shown in the table under “Annual Expenses” assume a debt-to-equity ratio of 1.00x (which equates to asset coverage of 200%). The following table should not be considered a representation of our future expenses. Actual expenses may be greater or less than shown.

 

Stockholder Transaction Expenses:      
Sales Load (as a percentage of offering price)(1)    
Offering expenses (as a percentage of offering price)(2)    
Dividend Reinvestment Plan Fees(3)   $ 15.00  
Total Stockholder Transaction Expenses (as a percentage of offering price)      

 

Annual Expenses (as a percentage of net assets attributable to common stock)(4)    
Management Fees(5)   2.00%
Incentive Fees(6)   1.73%
Interest Payments and fees paid on Borrowed Funds(7)   7.28%
Other Expenses(8)   0.38%
Total Annual Expenses   11.39%

 

 

(1) In the event that the securities to which any applicable prospectus relates are sold or through underwriters or agents, a corresponding prospectus supplement will disclose the applicable sales load (underwriting discount and commission).

 

(2)Any related prospectus supplement will disclose the estimated amount of offering expenses, the offering price and the estimated amount of offering expenses borne by us as a percentage of the offering price.

 

(3)Participants in the dividend reinvestment plan may withdraw at any time by giving notice to the DRIP administrator. There is no brokerage charge for reinvestment of dividends or distributions in common stock. However, all participants will pay a pro rata share of brokerage commissions incurred by the DRIP administrator when it makes open market purchases. If a DRIP participant elects to have the DRIP Administrator sell its shares in connection with a withdrawal from the DRIP, the DRIP administrator is authorized to deduct a $15 transaction fee plus a $0.10 per share brokerage commission from the proceeds.
  
 The expenses of the dividend reinvestment plan are included in “other expenses” in the table above. Our common stockholders will ultimately bear indirectly the DRIP administrator’s fees. For additional information, see “Dividend Reinvestment Plan.”

 

(4)Net assets employed as the denominator for expense ratio computation is $1,186 million.

 

(5) Includes management fees paid by Kayne Anderson BDC Financing, LLC (“KABDCF”) and Kayne Anderson BDC Financing II, LLC (“KABDCF II”), respectively.
   
  The base management fee is calculated at an annual rate of 1.00% of the fair market value of our investments including, in each case, assets purchased with borrowings under credit facilities and issuances of senior unsecured notes, but excluding cash, U.S. government securities and commercial paper instruments maturing within one year of purchase.

 

61

 

 

(6)The Incentive Fee will consist of two components that are independent of each other, with the result that one component may be payable even if the other is not. A portion of the Incentive Fee is based on our income and a portion is based on our capital gains. The table reflects each incentive fee calculated at a rate of 15.0%.

 

(7)Interest payments on borrowed funds represents an estimate of our annualized interest expense based on borrowings under credit facilities and issuances of senior unsecured notes. The assumed weighted average interest rate outstanding under our credit facilities and senior unsecured notes was 7.28%. We intend to further borrow under credit facilities and/or issue senior unsecured notes in the future in order to finance our investments and may issue preferred stock, subject to our compliance with applicable requirements under the 1940 Act.

 

(8)“Other Expenses” includes estimated general and administrative expenses, professional fees and director fees and is based on amounts estimated for the current fiscal year. Includes expenses paid by KABDCF and KABCF II, respectively.

 

Example

 

The following example demonstrates the projected dollar amount of total cumulative expenses over various periods with respect to a hypothetical investment in our shares of common stock. In calculating the following expense amounts, we have assumed that our annual operating expenses would remain at the levels set forth in the table above. Transaction expenses are excluded from the table below. In the event that the securities to which any applicable prospectus relates are sold to or through underwriters or agents, a corresponding prospectus supplement will disclose any transaction expenses.

 

    1 Year     3 Years     5 Years     10 Years  
You would pay the following expenses on a $1,000 investment, assuming a 5% annual return resulting entirely from net realized capital gains(1)   $ 110     $ 310     $ 485     $ 834  
You would pay the following expenses on a $1,000 investment, assuming a 5% annual return resulting entirely from net investment income(2)   $ 94     $ 270     $ 430     $ 768  

 

 

(1)Assumes no unrealized capital depreciation or realized capital losses and 5% annual return on our portfolio resulting entirely from net realized capital gains (and therefore subject to the capital gains incentive fee). Because our investment strategy involves investments that primarily generate current income, we believe that a 5% annual return resulting from realized capital gains is unlikely.

 

(2)The income based incentive fee is subject to a 6.00% hurdle. Accordingly, no incentive fee would be payable in this example.

 

While the example assumes, as required by the SEC, a 5% annual return, our performance will vary and may result in a return greater or less than 5%. There is no incentive compensation either on income or on capital gains under our Investment Advisory Agreement assuming a 5% annual return and therefore it is not included in the example. If we achieve sufficient returns on our investments, including through the realization of capital gains, to trigger an incentive compensation of a material amount, our distributions to our stockholders and our expenses would likely be higher. In addition, while the example assumes reinvestment of all dividends and distributions at NAV, under certain circumstances, reinvestment of dividends and other distributions under our dividend reinvestment plan may occur at a price per share that differs from NAV. See “Dividend Reinvestment Plan” for additional information regarding our DRIP. 

 

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Senior Securities

 

Information about the Company’s senior securities is shown as of the dates indicated in the below table. The report of our independent registered public accounting firm, PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, as of December 31, 2024, is included within “Item 8. Consolidated Financial Statements and Supplementary Data.”

 

 

Class and Period

  Total Amount
Outstanding
Exclusive of
Treasury
Securities(1)
($ in millions)
   Asset Coverage
per Unit(2)
($ in millions)
   Involuntary
Liquidating
Preference
per Unit(3)
   Average Market
Value
per Unit(4)
Corporate Credit Facility               
December 31, 2024   $ 250     $ 2,380           N/A
September 30, 2024 (unaudited)  $221   $2,510       N/A
June 30, 2024 (unaudited)  $75   $2,890       N/A
March 31, 2024 (unaudited)  $198   $2,230       N/A
December 31, 2023  $234   $1,980       N/A
September 30, 2023 (unaudited)  $192   $2,140       N/A
June 30, 2023 (unaudited)  $237   $2,010       N/A
December 31, 2022  $269   $2,030       N/A
December 31, 2021              N/A
                   
Revolving Funding Facility                  
December 31, 2024   $ 420     $ 2,380           N/A
September 30, 2024 (unaudited)  $409   $2,510       N/A
June 30, 2024 (unaudited)  $389   $2,890       N/A
March 31, 2024 (unaudited)  $319   $2,230       N/A
December 31, 2023  $306   $1,980       N/A
September 30, 2023 (unaudited)  $306   $2,140       N/A
June 30, 2023 (unaudited)  $320   $2,010       N/A
December 31, 2022  $200   $2,030       N/A
December 31, 2021              N/A
                   
Revolving Funding Facility II(5)                  
December 31, 2024   $ 113     $ 2,380           N/A
September 30, 2024 (unaudited)  $83   $2,510       N/A
June 30, 2024 (unaudited)  $83   $2,890       N/A
March 31, 2024 (unaudited)  $67   $2,230       N/A
December 31, 2023  $70   $1,980       N/A
September 30, 2023 (unaudited)              N/A
June 30, 2023 (unaudited)              N/A
December 31, 2022              N/A
December 31, 2021              N/A

 

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Class and Period  Total Amount
Outstanding (1)
($ in millions)
   Asset Coverage
per Unit(2)
($ in millions)
   Involuntary
Liquidating
Preference
per Unit(3)
   Average Market
Value
per Unit(4)
Subscription Credit Agreement(6)                  
December 31, 2024                     N/A
September 30, 2024 (unaudited)              N/A
June 30, 2024 (unaudited)              N/A
March 31, 2024 (unaudited)              N/A
December 31, 2023  $10.8   $1,980       N/A
September 30, 2023 (unaudited)  $25   $2,140       N/A
June 30, 2023 (unaudited)  $9   $2,010       N/A
December 31, 2022  $108   $2,030       N/A
December 31, 2021  $105   $2,170       N/A
                   
Loan and Security Agreement (LSA)(7)                  
December 31, 2024                     N/A
September 30, 2024 (unaudited)              N/A
June 30, 2024 (unaudited)              N/A
March 31, 2024 (unaudited)              N/A
December 31, 2023              N/A
September 30, 2023 (unaudited)              N/A
June 30, 2023 (unaudited)              N/A
December 31, 2022              N/A
December 31, 2021  $162   $2,170       N/A
                   
Notes                  
December 31, 2024   $ 75     $ 2,380           N/A
September 30, 2024 (unaudited)  $75   $2,510       N/A
June 30, 2024 (unaudited)  $75   $2,890       N/A
March 31, 2024 (unaudited)  $75   $2,230       N/A
December 31, 2023  $75   $1,980       N/A
September 30, 2023 (unaudited)  $75   $2,140       N/A
June 30, 2023 (unaudited)  $75   $2,010       N/A
December 31, 2022              N/A
December 31, 2021              N/A

 

 

(1)Total amount of senior securities outstanding at the end of the period presented.

 

(2)Asset coverage per unit is the ratio of the carrying value of our total assets, less all liabilities excluding indebtedness represented by senior securities in this table, to the aggregate amount of senior securities representing indebtedness. Asset coverage per unit is expressed in terms of dollar amounts per $1,000 of indebtedness and is calculated on a consolidated basis.

 

(3)The amount to which such class of senior security would be entitled upon our involuntary liquidation in preference to any security junior to it.

 

(4)Not applicable because the senior securities are not registered for public trading.

 

(5)The Revolving Funding Facility II was entered into on December 22, 2023.

 

(6)The Subscription Credit Agreement was terminated on April 1, 2024.

 

(7)The Loan and Security Agreement (“LSA”) was terminated on February 18, 2022.

 

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ITEM 6. [RESERVED]

 

The selected financial data previously required by Item 301 of Regulation S-K has been omitted in reliance on SEC Release No. 33-10890, Management’s Discussion and Analysis, Selected Financial Data, and Supplementary Financial Information.

 

ITEM 7. MANAGEMENT’S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

 

The following discussion and analysis should be read in conjunction with our consolidated financial statements and related notes and other financial information appearing elsewhere in this Annual Report on Form 10-K. Except as otherwise specified, references to “we,” “us,” “our,” or the “Company” refer to Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

 

Investment Objective, Principal Strategy and Investment Structure

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc. is a Delaware corporation that commenced operations on February 5, 2021. We are an externally managed, closed-end, non-diversified management investment company that has elected to be regulated as a BDC under the 1940 Act, as amended. In addition, for U.S. federal income tax purposes, we intend to qualify, annually, as a RIC under Subchapter M of the Code.

 

On May 24, 2024, we completed our initial public offering (“IPO”), issuing 6,000,000 shares of our common stock at a public offering price of $16.63 per share. Net of underwriting fees and offering expenses, we received net cash proceeds, before offering expenses, of $92.4 million. The Company’s common stock began trading on the New York Stock Exchange (“NYSE”) under the ticker symbol “KBDC” on May 22, 2024.

 

Our investment activities are managed by KA Credit Advisors, LLC (the “Advisor”), an indirect controlled subsidiary of Kayne Anderson Capital Advisors, L.P. (“Kayne Anderson”), and the Advisor operates within Kayne Anderson’s middle market private credit platform (“KAPC” or “Kayne Anderson Private Credit”). The Advisor is an investment advisor registered with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, as amended. In accordance with the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, as amended, our Advisor is responsible for originating prospective investments, conducting research and due diligence investigations on potential investments, analyzing investment opportunities, negotiating and structuring investments, and monitoring our investments and portfolio companies on an ongoing basis. The Advisor benefits from the scale and resources of Kayne Anderson and specifically KAPC.

 

Our investment objective is to generate current income and, to a lesser extent, capital appreciation. We intend to have nearly all of our debt investments in private middle market companies. We use “private” to refer to companies that are not traded on a securities exchange and define “middle market companies” as companies that, in general, generate between $10 million and $150 million of annual earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, or EBITDA. Further, we refer to companies that generate between $10 million and $50 million of annual EBITDA as “core middle market companies” and companies that generate between $50 million and $150 million of annual EBITDA as “upper middle market companies.” We typically adjust EBITDA for non-recurring and/or normalizing items to assess the financial performance of our borrowers over time.

 

We intend to achieve our investment objective by investing primarily in first lien senior secured loans, with a secondary focus on unitranche and split-lien loans to middle market companies. Under normal market conditions, we expect at least 90% of our portfolio (including investments purchased with proceeds from borrowings under credit facilities and issuances of senior unsecured notes) to be invested in first lien senior secured, unitranche and split-lien loans. Our investment decisions are made on a case-by-case basis. We expect the remainder of our portfolio to be invested in second-lien loans, subordinated debt or equity securities (including those purchased in conjunction with other credit investments). We expect that a majority of these debt investments will be made in core middle market companies and will generally have stated maturities of three to six years. We expect that the loans in which we principally invest will be to companies that are located in the United States. We determine the location of a company as being in the United States by (i) such company being organized under the laws of one of the states in the United States; or (ii) during its most recent fiscal year, such company derived at least 50% of its revenues or profits from goods produced or sold, investments made, or services performed in the United States or has at least 50% of its assets in the United States.

 

The Advisor executes on our investment objective by (1) accessing the established loan sourcing channels developed by KAPC, which includes an extensive network of private equity firms, other middle market lenders, financial advisors, intermediaries and management teams, (2) selecting investments within our middle market company focus, (3) implementing KAPC’s underwriting process and (4) drawing upon its experience and resources and the broader Kayne Anderson network. KAPC was established in 2011 and manages (directly and through affiliates) assets under management (“AUM”) of approximately $7.1 billion related to middle market private credit as of December 31, 2024.

 

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Recent Developments 

 

On January 15, 2025, we paid a regular dividend of $0.40 per share to each common stockholder of record as of December 31, 2024. The total dividend was $28.4 million and, of this amount, $3.9 million was DRIP.

 

On February 5, 2025, we and KABDCF II entered into an amendment of our Revolving Funding Facility II (as defined below). Under the terms of the amendment, the lender increased its commitment from $150 million to $250 million and decreased the interest rate on borrowings outstanding from 3-month term SOFR plus 2.70% to 3-month term SOFR plus 2.25%. Additionally, the maturity date of the facility was extended one year to December 22, 2029. All other terms of the Revolving Funding Facility II remain substantially the same.

 

On February 13, 2025, we and KABDCF entered into an amendment of our Revolving Funding Facility (as defined below). Under the terms of the amendment, the lenders increased their commitments from $600 million to $675 million and decreased the interest rate on borrowings outstanding from daily SOFR plus 2.375% - 2.50%, depending upon the mix of loans, to daily SOFR plus 2.15%. Additionally, the maturity date of the facility was extended to February 13, 2030. All other terms of the Revolving Funding Facility remain substantially the same.

 

On February 14, 2025, we reduced the size of our Corporate Credit Facility from $475 million to $400 million. This commitment reduction was done in conjunction with the $75 million increase to our Revolving Funding Facility from $600 million to $675 million.

 

On February 19, 2025, our Board of Directors declared a regular dividend to common stockholders in the amount of $0.40 per share. The regular dividend of $0.40 per share will be paid on April 15, 2025 to stockholders of record as of the close of business on March 31, 2025, payable in cash or shares of our common stock pursuant to our Dividend Reinvestment Plan, as amended.

 

Portfolio and Investment Activity

 

Our portfolio is currently comprised of a broad mix of loans, with diversity among investment size and industry focus. The Advisor’s team of professionals conducts due diligence on prospective investments during the underwriting process and is involved in structuring the credit terms of our private middle market investments. Once an investment has been made, our Advisor closely monitors that portfolio investment and takes a proactive approach to identify and address sector or company specific risks. The Advisor seeks to maintain a regular dialogue with portfolio company management teams (as well as their owners, the majority of whom are private equity firms, where applicable), reviews detailed operating and financial results on a regular basis (typically monthly or quarterly) and monitors current and projected liquidity needs, in addition to other portfolio management activities. There are no assurances that we will achieve our investment objectives.

 

As of December 31, 2024, we had investments in 110 portfolio companies with an aggregate fair value of approximately $1,995 million, and unfunded commitments to these portfolio companies of $186 million, and our portfolio consisted of 98.0% first lien senior secured loans, 0.9% subordinated debt and 1.1% equity investments.

 

As of December 31, 2024, we held investments in broadly syndicated loans in 21 portfolio companies with an aggregate principal amount of $253 million. Our investments in broadly syndicated loans were made in anticipation of the receipt of proceeds from our final capital call and our IPO which closed during the second quarter of 2024. Prior to these investments, we had not held broadly syndicated loans since 2022. Consistent with our strategy at that time, we expect to rotate out of these investments over coming quarters to invest in private middle market loans consistent with our principal strategy. We have presented certain portfolio-related information below for our private middle market loans and broadly syndicated loans separately and on a combined basis for ease of reference.

 

As of December 31, 2024, 100% of our debt investments had floating interest rates. Our weighted average yields for debt investments were as follows:

 

 

private middle market loans at fair value and amortized cost weighted average yields were 11.1% and 11.3%, respectively

 

  broadly syndicated loans at fair value and amortized cost weighted average yields were 7.1% and 7.1%, respectively; and

 

  total debt investments at fair value and amortized cost weighted average yields were 10.6% and 10.7%, respectively

 

As of December 31, 2024, our portfolio was invested across 30 different industries (Global Industry Classification “GICS”, Level 3 – Industry). The largest industries in our portfolio as of December 31, 2024 were Trading Companies & Distributors, Commercial Services & Supplies, Food Products and Health Care Providers & Services, which represented, as a percentage of our portfolio of long-term investments, 15.1%, 11.7%, 10.0% and 8.4%, respectively, based on fair value. We are generalist investors and the mix of industries represented by our portfolio companies will vary over time.

 

As of December 31, 2024, our average position size based on commitment of private credit investments (at the portfolio company level) was $20.0 million.

 

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As of December 31, 2024, the weighted average and median last twelve months (“LTM”) EBITDA of our portfolio companies were as follows:

 

  

  private middle market loans were $58.1 million and $34.3 million, respectively, based on fair value1

 

  broadly syndicated loans were $2,138.3 million and $1,306.7 million, respectively, based on fair value; and

 

  total investments were $335.0 million and $39.6 million, respectively, based on fair value1

 

As of December 31, 2024, the weighted average loan-to-enterprise-value (“LTEV”) of our debt investments at the time of our initial investment was as follows:

 

  private middle market loans was 43.0%, based on par1

 

  broadly syndicated loans was 34.0%, based on par

 

  total investments was 41.8%, based on par1 ; and

 

  LTEV represents the total par value of our debt investment relative to our estimate of the enterprise value of the underlying borrower

 

As of December 31, 2024, we had three debt investments on non-accrual status, which represented 1.3% and 1.6% of total debt investments at fair value and cost, respectively.

 

As of December 31, 2024, our portfolio companies’ weighted average leverage ratios and weighted average interest coverage ratios (the calculations of which are based on the most recent quarter end or latest available information from the portfolio companies) were as follows:

 

 

  private middle market loans were 4.3x and 3.0x, respectively, based on fair value1

 

  broadly syndicated loans were 3.2x and 4.2x, respectively, based on fair value; and

 

  total investments were 4.2x and 3.1x, respectively, based on fair value1

 

As of December 31, 2024, the percentage of our debt investments including at least one financial maintenance covenant was as follows:

 

  private middle market loans was 100.0% based on fair value2

 

  broadly syndicated loans was 0%, based on fair value; and

 

  total investments was 86.9%, based on fair value2

 

1 Excludes investments on watch list, which represent 3.5% of the total fair value of debt investments as of December 31, 2024.

 

2 Excludes opportunistic deals, which represent 1.9% of the total fair value of debt investments as of December 31, 2024.

 

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Listed below are our top ten portfolio companies and industries represented as a percentage of total long-term investments as of December 31, 2024:

 

Portfolio Company  Industry  Fair Value
($ in millions)
   Percentage of
long-term
investments
 
1  Silk Holdings III Corp. (Suave)  Personal care products  $41.0    2.0%
2  Dusk Acquisition II Corporation (Motors & Armatures, Inc. – MARS)  Trading companies & distributors  $39.9    2.0%
3  BR PJK Produce, LLC (Keany)  Food products  $39.5    2.0%
4  M2S Group Intermediate Holdings, Inc.  Containers & packaging  $37.7    1.9%
5  American Equipment Holdings LLC  Commercial services & supplies  $37.3    1.9%
6  Vitesse Systems Parent, LLC  Aerospace & defense  $35.5    1.8%
7  IF&P Foods, LLC (FreshEdge)  Food products  $35.1    1.7%
8  AIDC Intermediate Co 2, LLC (Peak Technologies) 

Trading companies & distributors

  $34.1    1.7%
9  Genuine Cable Group, LLC  Trading companies & distributors  $34.1    1.7%
10  Improving Acquisition LLC  IT services  $33.6    1.7%
         $367.8    18.4%

  

Our investment activity for the years ended December 31, 2024 and 2023 is presented below (information presented herein is at par value unless otherwise indicated).

 

   For the years ended
December 31,
 
   2024
($ in millions)
   2023
($ in millions)
 
         
New investments:        
Gross new investments commitments  $1,043.9   $329.2 
Less: investment commitments sold down, exited or repaid(1)   (371.3)   (123.0)
Net investment commitments  $672.6    206.2 
           
Principal amount of investments funded(2):          
Private credit investments  $673.0   $404.2 
Broadly syndicated loans   328.1    - 
Preferred equity investments   -    - 
Common equity investments   3.8    0.6 
Total principal amount of investments funded  $1,004.9   $404.8 
           
Principal amount of investments sold / repaid (2):          
Private credit investments  $(294.8)  $(196.6)
Broadly syndicated loans   (74.7)   - 
Common equity investments   (0.3)   - 
Total principal amount of investments sold or repaid  $(369.8)  $(196.6)
           
Number of new private credit investment commitments   61    43 
Average new private credit investment commitment amount  $11.7   $7.7 
Number of new broadly syndicated loan commitments   26    - 
Average new broadly syndicated loan commitment amount  $12.6   $- 
Weighted average maturity for new investment commitments(3)   4.3 years    3.9 years 
Percentage of new debt investment commitments at floating rates   100.0%   100.0%
Percentage of new debt investment commitments at fixed rates   0.0%   0.0%
Weighted average interest rate of new private credit investment commitments(4)   10.1%   11.7%
Weighted average interest rate of new broadly syndicated loan commitments(4)   7.4%   - 
Weighted average interest rate on investments sold or paid down(5)   10.8%   11.9%

   

(1) Does not include repayments on revolving loans, which may be redrawn.
(2) Does not include restructured activity. For common equity investments, amount represents cost.
(3) For undrawn delayed draw term loans, the maturity date used is that of the associated term loan.
(4) Based on the rate in effect at December 31st of each year per our Consolidated Schedule of Investments for new commitments entered into during the year.
(5) Based on the underlying rate if still held at December 31st of each year. For those investments sold or paid down in full during the year, based on the rate in effect at the time of sale or paid down.

 

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Portfolio Internal Performance Ratings

 

In general, we employ a strategy designed to ensure early detection of potential issues at underlying borrowers, including monthly financial reviews internal tracking memoranda, weekly “watch list” discussions and other like activities. We have designed a risk rating system to aid in our portfolio management efforts where each investment is rated level 1-9, where Level 1 is the “least risky” and Level 9 is the “most risky.” This risk-rating system is quantitative in nature and aggregates criteria such as LTEV, leverage levels and fixed charge coverage ratios (“FCCR”) (each measured at point-in-time and as relates to levels at the close of the investment). 

 

The table below sets forth our fair value of debt investments and number of portfolio companies, including percentage of each total, that are on watch list as of December 31, 2024 and 2023. This table excludes equity investments.

 

As of December 31, 2024   As of December 31, 2023 
Fair Value
($ in millions)
   %   Number of
Companies
   %   Fair Value
($ in millions)
   %   Number of
Companies
   % 
$69.4    3.5%   5    4.5%  $74.0    5.5%   5    6.6%

 

We use Global Industry Classification Standards (GICS), Level 3 – Industry, for classifying the industry groupings of our portfolio companies. The table below describes long-term investments by industry composition based on fair value as of December 31, 2024 and 2023:

 

   December 31,
2024
   December 31,
2023
 
         
Trading companies & distributors   15.1%   15.3%
Commercial services & supplies   11.7%   9.4%
Food products   10.0%   11.5%
Health care providers & services   8.4%   7.4%
Containers & packaging   7.5%   7.2%
Professional services   4.7%   4.5%
Aerospace & defense   4.4%   6.3%
Machinery   3.7%   3.8%
Personal care products   3.7%   3.0%
Automobile components   3.6%   2.0%
Leisure products   3.2%   3.3%
Building products   2.3%   2.0%
Textiles, apparel & luxury goods   2.1%   3.3%
Specialty retail   2.1%   0.7%
Insurance   2.0%   2.2%
Pharmaceuticals   1.8%   0.5%
IT services   1.7%   3.8%
Diversified telecommunication services   1.5%   0.4%
Wireless telecommunication services   1.5%   2.1%
Health care equipment & supplies   1.4%   1.5%
Hotels, restaurants & leisure   1.4%   -%
Chemicals   1.1%   3.1%
Household durables   1.0%   1.5%
Media   0.8%   -%
Household products   0.8%   1.2%
Construction materials   0.7%   -%
Biotechnology   0.6%   0.9%
Semiconductors & semiconductor equipment   0.6%   -%
Electrical equipment   0.5%   -%
Diversified consumer services   0.1%   -%
Software   -%   2.5%
Capital markets   -%   0.6%
    100.0%   100.0%

 

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Results of Operations

 

The comparison for the years ended December 31, 2023 and 2022 can be found in “Item 7: Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations” in our Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2023.

 

For the years ended December 31, 2024 and 2023, our total investment income was derived from our portfolio of investments.

 

The following table represents the operating results for the years ended December 31, 2024 and 2023.

 

   For the years ended
December 31,
 
   2024   2023 
    ($ in millions)    ($ in millions) 
Total investment income  $213.1   $161.0 
Less: Net expenses   (83.8)   (76.2)
Net investment income   129.3    84.8 
Net realized gains (losses) on investments   0.5    (10.7)
Net change in unrealized gains (losses) on investments   2.8    2.9 
Deferred income tax expense   (0.7)   - 
           
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations  $131.9   $77.0 

  

Investment Income

 

Investment income for the years ended December 31, 2024 and 2023 totaled $213.1 million and $161.0 million, respectively, and consisted primarily of interest income on our debt investments. For the years ended December 31, 2024 and 2023, we had $2.7 million and $1.7 million, respectively, of PIK interest included in interest income. As of December 31, 2024, we had three debt investments on non-accrual status. As of December 31, 2023, we had one debt investment on non-accrual status. 

 

Expenses

 

Operating expenses for the years ended December 31, 2024 and 2023, were as follows:

 

   For the years ended
December 31,
 
   2024   2023 
   ($ in millions)   ($ in millions) 
Interest and debt financing expenses  $61.5   $52.3 
Management fees   17.5    11.4 
Incentive fees   17.4    9.4 
Directors fees   0.6    0.6 
Excise taxes   

0.8

    0.1 
Other operating expenses   3.7    2.4 
Total expenses   101.5    76.2 
Management fee waiver (Note 3)   (2.9)   - 
Incentive fee waiver (Note 3)   (14.8)   - 
Net expenses  $83.8   $76.2 

 

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Net Realized Gains (Losses) on Investments

 

During the year ended December 31, 2024, we had realized gains of $0.5 million on our investments. In November 2023, we completed a restructure of our investment in Arborworks Acquisition LLC whereby the existing term loan and revolver were restructured to a new term loan and preferred and common equity.  The Company recognized a $10.7 million realized loss due to the debt restructure.

 

Net Unrealized Gains (Losses) on Investments

 

We fair value our portfolio investments quarterly and any changes in fair value are recorded as unrealized gains or losses. During the years ended December 31, 2024 and 2023, net unrealized gains (losses) on our investment portfolio were comprised of the following:

 

   For the years ended
December 31,
 
   2024   2023 
   ($ in millions)   ($ in millions) 
Unrealized gains on investments  $19.2   $13.4 
Unrealized (losses) on investments   (16.4)   (10.5)
Net change in unrealized gains (losses) on investments  $2.8   $2.9 

 

For these years ended December 31, 2024 and 2023, the top five largest contributors to the change in unrealized gains and change in unrealized losses on investments are presented in the following tables.

 

 

   For the year ended 
   December 31,
2024
 
   ($ in millions) 
Portfolio Company     
Arborworks Acquisition LLC  $1.8 
M2S Group Intermediate Holdings, Inc.   1.3 
American Soccer Company, Incorporated (SCORE)   1.1 
CCFF Buyer, LLC (California Custom Fruits & Flavors, LLC)   1.0 
WAM CR Acquisition, Inc. (Wolverine)   0.9 
Other portfolio companies unrealized gains   13.1 
Other portfolio companies unrealized (losses)   (9.0)
LSL Industries, LLC (LSL Healthcare)   (0.6)
Gulf Pacific Holdings, LLC   (0.7)
Siegel Egg Co., LLC   (1.6)
Trademark Global LLC(1)   (2.0)
Sundance Holdings Group, LLC   (2.5)
Total Change in Unrealized Gain (Loss), net  $2.8 

 

 

(1)Portfolio company is non-controlled affiliated investment.

 

   For the year ended 
   December 31,
2023
 
   ($ in millions) 
Portfolio Company    
Arborworks Acquisition LLC  $       2.5 
BLP Buyer, Inc. (Bishop Lifting Products)   0.9 
Silk Holdings III Corp. (Suave)   0.9 
Engineered Fastener Company, LLC (EFC International)   0.8 
Vitesse Systems Parent, LLC   0.8 
Other portfolio companies unrealized gains   7.5 
Other portfolio companies unrealized (losses)   (4.6)
Trademark Global LLC   (0.4)
LSL Industries, LLC (LSL Healthcare)   (0.5)
Siegel Egg Co., LLC   (1.4)
American Soccer Company, Incorporated (SCORE)   (1.5)
Centerline Communications, LLC   (2.1)
Total Change in Unrealized Gain (Loss), net  $2.9 

 

 

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Financial Condition, Liquidity and Capital Resources

 

Our liquidity and capital resources are generated primarily from the net proceeds of any offering of our shares of common stock, proceeds from borrowing on our credit facilities, proceeds from the issuance of senior unsecured notes and from cash flows from interest and fees earned from our investments and principal repayments and proceeds from sales of our investments. Our primary use of cash will be investments in portfolio companies, payments of our expenses, repayments of borrowings under credit facilities and senior unsecured notes, and payment of cash distributions to our stockholders. 

 

We finance our investments with leverage in the form of borrowings under credit facilities and issuances of senior unsecured notes. We also intend to further borrow under credit facilities and/or issue senior unsecured notes in the future in order to finance our investments. In accordance with the 1940 Act, we are required to meet a coverage ratio of total assets (less total liabilities other than indebtedness) to total borrowings and other senior securities (and any preferred stock that we may issue in the future) of at least 150%. If this ratio declines below 150%, we cannot incur additional leverage and could be required to sell a portion of our investments to repay some leverage when it is disadvantageous to do so. As of December 31, 2024 and December 31, 2023, our asset coverage ratios were 238% and 198%, respectively. We currently intend to target asset coverage of 200% to 180% (which equates to a debt-to-equity ratio of 1.0x to 1.25x) but may alter this target based on market conditions.

 

Over the next twelve months, we expect that cash and cash equivalents, taken together with our available capacity under our credit facilities, will be sufficient to conduct anticipated investment activities. Beyond twelve months, we expect that our cash and liquidity needs will continue to be met by cash generated from our ongoing operations as well as financing activities.

 

As of December 31, 2024, we had $75 million Notes outstanding, $783 million borrowed under our credit facilities and cash and cash equivalents of $71.1 million (including short-term investments). As of that date, we had $442 million of undrawn commitments available on our credit facilities (subject to borrowing base restrictions and other conditions). As of February 21, 2025, we had $75 million Notes outstanding, $882.5 million borrowed under our credit facilities and cash and cash equivalents of $12.3 million (including short-term investments).

 

IPO and Capital Contributions

 

On May 24, 2024, we completed our IPO, issuing 6,000,000 shares of our common stock at a public offering price of $16.63 per share. Net of underwriting fees and offering expenses, we received net cash proceeds, of $92.4 million. The Company’s common stock began trading on the New York Stock Exchange (“NYSE”) under the ticker symbol “KBDC” on May 22, 2024.

 

On April 2, 2024, we issued 16,232,415 shares of our common stock related to capital called at an aggregate purchase price of $269.9 million. Following the final close on April 2, 2024, we had called all of our capital relating to our $1,046.9 million in existing subscription agreements that we had entered into with investors through a private offering, and we do not have any remaining undrawn capital commitments. 

 

Senior Unsecured Notes

 

As of December 31, 2024, we have $75 million of senior unsecured notes outstanding, with $25 million of 8.65% Series A Notes due June 2027 (the “Series A Notes”) and $50 million of 8.74% Series B Notes due June 2028 (the “Series B Notes”, and collectively with the Series A Notes, the “Notes”).

 

Credit Facilities

 

Corporate Credit Facility: We are party to a senior secured revolving credit facility (the “Corporate Credit Facility”), that has a total commitment of $400 million with a maturity date of November 22, 2029. The facility’s commitment termination date and the final maturity date are November 22, 2028 and November 22, 2029, respectively. The Corporate Credit Facility also provided for a feature that allows us, under certain circumstances, to increase the overall size of the Corporate Credit Facility to a maximum of $600 million. The interest rate on the Corporate Credit Facility is equal to Term SOFR (a forward-looking rate based on SOFR futures) plus an applicable spread of 2.10% per annum or an “alternate base rate” (as defined in the agreements governing the Corporate Credit Facility) plus an applicable spread of 1.00%. We are also required to pay a commitment fee of 0.375% per annum on any unused portion of the Corporate Credit Facility.

 

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Revolving Funding Facility: We and our wholly owned, special purpose financing subsidiary, Kayne Anderson BDC Financing, LLC (“KABDCF”), are party to a senior secured revolving funding facility (the “Revolving Funding Facility”). We and KABDCF have a commitment of $675 million. The Revolving Funding Facility is secured by all of the assets held by, and the membership interest in, KABDCF. The end of the reinvestment period is April 2, 2027 and the maturity date is February 13, 2030. The interest rate on the Revolving Funding Facility is daily SOFR plus 2.15% per annum.

KABDCF is also required to pay a commitment fee of between 0.50% and 1.50% per annum depending on the size of the unused portion of the Revolving Funding Facility.

 

Revolving Funding Facility II: We and our wholly owned, special purpose financing subsidiary, Kayne Anderson BDC Financing II, LLC (“KABDCF II”), are party to a senior secured revolving credit facility (the “Revolving Funding Facility II”). The Revolving Funding Facility II has an initial commitment of $250 million which, under certain circumstances, can be increased up to $500 million. The Revolving Funding Facility II is secured by all of the assets held by KABDCF II and we have agreed that it will not grant or allow a lien on the membership interest of KABDCF II. The end of the reinvestment period and the stated maturity date for the Revolving Funding Facility II are December 22, 2026, and December 22, 2029, respectively. The interest rate on the Revolving Funding Facility II is equal to 3-month term SOFR plus 2.25% per annum. KABDCF II is also required to pay a commitment fee of 0.75%.

 

Contractual Obligations

 

A summary of our significant contractual principal payment obligations related to the repayment of our outstanding indebtedness at December 31, 2024 is as follows:

 

   Payments Due by Period ($ in millions) 
   Total   Less than
1 year
   1-3 years   3-5 years   After 5 years 
Senior Unsecured Notes  $75.0   $-   $25.0   $50.0   $- 
Corporate Credit Facility   250.0    -    -    250.0    - 
Revolving Funding Facility   420.0    -    -    420.0    - 
Revolving Funding Facility II   113.0    -    -    113.0    - 
Total contractual obligations  $858.0   $-   $25.0   $833.0   $- 

 

Off-Balance Sheet Arrangements

 

As of December 31, 2024 and 2023, we had an aggregate $186.3 million and $147.9 million, respectively, of unfunded commitments to provide debt financing to our portfolio companies. Such commitments are generally subject to the satisfaction of certain financial and nonfinancial covenants and involve, to varying degrees, elements of credit risk in excess of the amount recognized in our financial statements. Other than contractual commitments and other legal contingencies incurred in the normal course of our business, we do not have any other off-balance sheet financings or liabilities.

 

Critical Accounting Estimates

 

The preparation of our consolidated financial statements requires us to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets, liabilities, revenues, and expenses. Changes in the economic environment, financial markets, and any other parameters used in determining such estimates could cause actual results to differ. Our critical accounting policies, including those relating to the valuation of our investment portfolio, are described below. The critical accounting policies should be read in conjunction with our risk factors in this Annual Report. See Note 2 to our consolidated financial statements for the years ended December 31, 2024 and 2023, for more information on our critical accounting policies.

 

73

 

 

Investment Valuation

 

Traded Investments (Level 1 or Level 2)

 

Investments for which market quotations are readily available will typically be valued at those market quotations. Traded investments such as corporate bonds, preferred stock, bank notes, broadly syndicated loans or loan participations are valued by using the bid price provided by an independent pricing service, by an independent broker, the agent bank, syndicate bank or principal market maker. When price quotes for investments are not available, or such prices are stale or do not represent fair value in the judgment of our Advisor, fair market value will be determined using our Advisor’s valuation process for investments that are privately issued or otherwise restricted as to resale.

 

We may also invest, to a lesser extent, in equity securities purchased in conjunction with debt investments. While we anticipate these equity securities to be issued by privately held companies, we may hold equity securities that are publicly traded. Equity securities listed on any exchange other than the NASDAQ Stock Market, Inc. (“NASDAQ”) are valued, except as indicated below, at the last sale price on the business day as of which such value is being determined. If there has been no sale on such day, the securities are valued at the mean of the most recent bid and ask prices on such day. Securities admitted to trade on the NASDAQ are valued at the NASDAQ official closing price. Equity securities traded on more than one securities exchange are valued at the last sale price on the business day as of which such value is being determined at the close of the exchange representing the principal market for such securities. Equity securities traded in the over-the-counter market, but excluding securities admitted to trading on the NASDAQ, are valued at the closing bid prices.

 

Non-Traded Investments (Level 3)

 

Investments that are privately issued or otherwise restricted as to resale, as well as any security for which (a) reliable market quotations are not available in the judgment of our Advisor, or (b) the independent pricing service or independent broker does not provide prices or provides a price that in the judgment of our Advisor is stale or does not represent fair value, shall each be valued in a manner that most fairly reflects fair value of the security on the valuation date. We expect that a significant majority of our investments will be Level 3 investments. Unless otherwise determined by the Advisor, the following valuation process is used for our Level 3 investments:

 

  Valuation Designee. The applicable investments will be valued no less frequently than quarterly by the Advisor, with new investments valued at the time such investment was made. The value of each Level 3 investment will be initially reviewed by the persons responsible for such portfolio company or investment. The Advisor will use a standardized template designed to approximate fair market value based on observable market inputs, updated credit statistics and unobservable inputs to determine a preliminary value. The Advisor will specify the titles of the persons responsible for determining the fair value of the Company’s investments, including by specifying the particular functions for which they are responsible, and will reasonably segregate fair value determinations from the portfolio management of the Company such that the portfolio manager(s) may not determine, or effectively determine by exerting substantial influence on, the fair values ascribed to portfolio investments.

 

  Valuation Firm. Quarterly, a third-party valuation firm engaged by the Advisor reviews the valuation methodologies and calculations employed for each of the Company’s investments that the Advisor has placed on the “watch list” and approximately 25% of the Company’s remaining investments. The third-party valuation firm will review and independently value all of the Level 3 investments at least once per year, on a rolling twelve-month basis. The quarterly report issued by the third-party valuation firm will provide positive assurance on the fair values of the investments reviewed.

 

  Oversight. The Board has appointed the Advisor as the valuation designee for the Company for purposes of making determinations of fair value as permitted by Rule 2a-5 under the 1940 Act. The Audit Committee shall aid the Board in overseeing the Advisor’s fair valuation of securities that are not publicly traded or for which current market values are not readily available. The Audit Committee shall meet quarterly to review the fair value determinations, processes and written reports of the Advisor as part of the Board’s oversight responsibilities.

 

Refer to Note 5 – Fair Value – for more information on the Company’s valuation process.

 

Revenue Recognition

 

We record interest income on an accrual basis to the extent that we expect to collect such amounts. For loans and debt securities with contractual PIK interest, which represents contractual interest accrued and added to the principal balance, we generally will not accrue PIK interest for accounting purposes if the portfolio company valuation indicates that such PIK interest is not collectible. We do not accrue as a receivable interest on loans and debt securities for accounting purposes if we have reason to doubt our ability to collect such interest. OIDs, market discounts or premiums are accreted or amortized using the effective interest method as interest income. We record prepayment premiums on loans and debt securities as interest income.

 

74

 

 

Related Party Transactions

 

Investment Advisory Agreement. On February 5, 2021, we entered into the Investment Advisory Agreement with our Advisor. In addition, on March 6, 2024, the Board approved an amended and restated investment advisory agreement (the “Amended Investment Advisory Agreement”) and a fee waiver agreement (the “Fee Waiver Agreement”) between the Company and the Advisor, which became effective upon the completion of the initial public offering of shares of common stock on May 24, 2024 (the “IPO Date”). On February 19, 2025, the Board approved an additional one-year term of the Investment Advisory Agreement from March 15, 2025 to March 15, 2026.

 

For services rendered under the Investment Advisory Agreement, we pay a base management fee quarterly in arrears to our Advisor based on the of the fair market value of our investments including, in each case, assets purchased with borrowings under our credit facilities and issuances of senior unsecured notes, but excluding cash, U.S. government securities and commercial paper instruments maturing within one year of purchase. We also pay an incentive fee on income and an incentive fee on capital gains to our Advisor.

 

The Amended Investment Advisory Agreement is materially the same as the Investment Advisory Agreement except, following the IPO Date, the base management fee is calculated at an annual rate of 1.00% and the incentive fee on income is subject to a twelve-quarter lookback quarterly hurdle rate of 1.50% as opposed to a single quarter measurement and is subject to an Incentive Fee Cap based on our Cumulative Pre-Incentive Fee Net Return. This lookback feature provides that the Advisor’s income incentive fee may be reduced if our portfolio experiences aggregate write-downs or net capital losses during the applicable Trailing Twelve Quarters. Pursuant to the Fee Waiver Agreement, commencing on the IPO Date, the Advisor implemented waivers of (i) the income incentive fee for three calendar quarters commencing the quarter the initial public offering was completed and (ii) a portion of the base management fee for one year following the completion of the initial public offering. Amounts waived by the Advisor pursuant to the Fee Waiver Agreement are not subject to recoupment by the Advisor.

 

Administration Agreement. On February 5, 2021, we entered into the Administration Agreement with our Advisor, which serves as our Administrator and provides or oversees the performance of its required administrative services and professional services rendered by others, which include (but are not limited to) accounting, payment of our expenses, legal, compliance, operations, technology and investor relations, preparation and filing of its tax returns, and preparation of financial reports provided to its stockholders and filed with the SEC. On February 19, 2025, the Board approved an additional one-year term of the Administration Agreement through March 15, 2026.

 

We reimburse the Administrator for its costs and expenses incurred in performing its obligations under the Administration Agreement, which may include its allocable portion of office facilities, overhead, and compensation paid to or compensatory distributions received by its officers (including our Chief Compliance Officer and Chief Financial Officer) and its respective staff who provide services to the Company. As the Company reimburses the Administrator for its expenses, such costs (including the costs of sub-administrators) will be ultimately borne by common stockholders. The Administrator does not receive compensation from us other than reimbursement of its expenses. The Administration Agreement may be terminated by either party with 60 days’ written notice.

 

Since the inception of the Company, the Administrator has engaged sub-administrators to assist the Administrator in performing certain of its administrative duties. During this period, the Administrator has not sought reimbursement of its expenses other than expenses incurred by the sub-administrators. The Administrator has engaged Ultimus Fund Solutions, LLC under a sub-administration agreement. Under the terms of the sub-administration agreement, Ultimus Fund Solutions, LLC provides fund administration and fund accounting services. The Company pays fees to Ultimus Fund Solutions, LLC, which constitute reimbursable expenses under the Administration Agreement. The Administrator may enter into additional sub-administration agreements with third parties to perform other administrative and professional services on behalf of the Administrator.

 

Non-Controlled, Affiliated Investment. We hold Trademark Global LLC and TG Parent Newco LLC (Trademark Global LLC), both non-controlled, affiliated investments, as defined in the 1940 Act. See “Item 1. – Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements – Note 3. Agreements and Related Party Transactions” for further details.

 

75

 

 

ITEM 7A. QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES ABOUT MARKET RISK

 

We are subject to financial market risks, including changes in interest rates. Interest rate sensitivity refers to the change in our earnings that may result from changes in the level of interest rates. Because we fund a portion of our investments with borrowings, our net investment income will be affected by the difference between the rate at which we invest and the rate at which we borrow. As a result, there can be no assurance that a significant change in market interest rates will not have a material adverse effect on our net investment income.

 

Assuming that the consolidated statement of assets and liabilities as of December 31, 2024 were to remain constant and that we took no actions to alter our existing interest rate sensitivity, the following table shows the annualized impact ($ in millions) of hypothetical base rate changes in interest rate (considering interest rate floors for floating rate instruments). We do not include our debt investments on non-accrual status and non-incoming producing as of December 31, 2024 in this calculation.

 

Change in Interest Rates  Increase
(Decrease)
in Interest
Income
   Increase
(Decrease)
in Interest
Expense
   Net Increase
(Decrease) in
Net
Investment
Income
 
Down 200 basis points  $(39.1)  $(15.7)  $(23.4)
Down 100 basis points  $(19.5)  $(7.8)  $(11.7)
Up 100 basis points  $19.5   $7.8   $11.7 
Up 200 basis points  $39.1   $15.7   $23.4 

 

The data in the table is based on the Company’s current statement of assets and liabilities.

 

We may hedge against interest rate fluctuations by using standard hedging instruments such as futures, options and forward contracts subject to the requirements of the 1940 Act. While hedging activities may insulate us against adverse changes in interest rates, they may also limit our ability to participate in benefits of lower interest rates with respect to our portfolio of investments with fixed interest rates.

 

76

 

 

ITEM 8. CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND SUPPLEMENTARY DATA

 

Index to Consolidated Financial Statements

 

    Page
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm (PCAOB ID 238)   F-2
Consolidated Statements of Assets and Liabilities as of December 31, 2024 and 2023   F-4
Consolidated Statements of Operations for the years ended December 31, 2024, 2023 and 2022   F-5
Consolidated Statements of Changes in Net Assets for the years ended December 31, 2024, 2023 and 2022   F-6
Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows for the years ended December 31, 2024, 2023 and 2022   F-7
Consolidated Schedules of Investments as of December 31, 2024 and 2023   F-8
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements   F-26

 

F-1

 

 

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

 

To the Board of Directors and Shareholders of Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

 

Opinions on the Financial Statements and Internal Control over Financial Reporting

 

We have audited the accompanying consolidated statements of assets and liabilities, including the consolidated schedule of investments, of Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc. and its subsidiaries (the "Company") as of December 31, 2024 and 2023, and the related consolidated statements of operations, of changes in net assets and of cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2024, including the related notes (collectively referred to as the "consolidated financial statements"). We also have audited the Company's internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2024, based on criteria established in Internal Control - Integrated Framework (2013) issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO).

 

In our opinion, the consolidated financial statements referred to above present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of the Company as of December 31, 2024 and 2023, and the results of its operations, changes in its net assets and its cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2024 in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. Also in our opinion, the Company maintained, in all material respects, effective internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2024, based on criteria established in Internal Control - Integrated Framework (2013) issued by the COSO.

 

We have also previously audited, in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States), the consolidated statements of assets and liabilities, including the consolidated schedules of investments, of the Company as of December 31, 2022 and 2021, and the related consolidated statements of operations, changes in net assets and cash flows for the year ended December 31, 2021 (none of which are presented herein), and we expressed unqualified opinions on those consolidated financial statements. In our opinion, the information set forth in the Senior Securities table of the Company for each of the four years in the period ended December 31, 2024 is fairly stated, in all material respects, in relation to the consolidated financial statements from which it has been derived.

 

Basis for Opinions

 

The Company's management is responsible for these consolidated financial statements, for maintaining effective internal control over financial reporting, and for its assessment of the effectiveness of internal control over financial reporting, included in Management’s Annual Report on Internal Control over Financial Reporting appearing under Item 9A. Our responsibility is to express opinions on the Company’s consolidated financial statements and on the Company's internal control over financial reporting based on our audits. We are a public accounting firm registered with the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States) (PCAOB) and are required to be independent with respect to the Company in accordance with the U.S. federal securities laws and the applicable rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the PCAOB.

 

We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the PCAOB. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audits to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the consolidated financial statements are free of material misstatement, whether due to error or fraud, and whether effective internal control over financial reporting was maintained in all material respects.

 

Our audits of the consolidated financial statements included performing procedures to assess the risks of material misstatement of the consolidated financial statements, whether due to error or fraud, and performing procedures that respond to those risks. Such procedures included examining, on a test basis, evidence regarding the amounts and disclosures in the consolidated financial statements. Our audits also included evaluating the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall presentation of the consolidated financial statements. Our procedures included confirmation of securities owned as of December 31, 2024 and 2023 by correspondence with the custodian and transfer agent. Our audit of internal control over financial reporting included obtaining an understanding of internal control over financial reporting, assessing the risk that a material weakness exists, and testing and evaluating the design and operating effectiveness of internal control based on the assessed risk. Our audits also included performing such other procedures as we considered necessary in the circumstances. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinions.

 

F-2

 

 

Definition and Limitations of Internal Control over Financial Reporting

 

A company’s internal control over financial reporting is a process designed to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. A company’s internal control over financial reporting includes those policies and procedures that (i) pertain to the maintenance of records that, in reasonable detail, accurately and fairly reflect the transactions and dispositions of the assets of the company; (ii) provide reasonable assurance that transactions are recorded as necessary to permit preparation of financial statements in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles, and that receipts and expenditures of the company are being made only in accordance with authorizations of management and directors of the company; and (iii) provide reasonable assurance regarding prevention or timely detection of unauthorized acquisition, use, or disposition of the company’s assets that could have a material effect on the financial statements.

 

Because of its inherent limitations, internal control over financial reporting may not prevent or detect misstatements. Also, projections of any evaluation of effectiveness to future periods are subject to the risk that controls may become inadequate because of changes in conditions, or that the degree of compliance with the policies or procedures may deteriorate.

 

Critical Audit Matters

 

The critical audit matter communicated below is a matter arising from the current period audit of the consolidated financial statements that was communicated or required to be communicated to the audit committee and that (i) relates to accounts or disclosures that are material to the consolidated financial statements and (ii) involved our especially challenging, subjective, or complex judgments. The communication of critical audit matters does not alter in any way our opinion on the consolidated financial statements, taken as a whole, and we are not, by communicating the critical audit matter below, providing a separate opinion on the critical audit matter or on the accounts or disclosures to which it relates.

 

Valuation of Level 3 Debt Investments

 

As described in Note 5 to the consolidated financial statements, the Company held $1.74 billion of total level 3 investments at fair value as of December 31, 2024, with debt investments representing approximately $1.72 billion of this total. The fair values of the level 3 debt investments were determined by management using a discounted cash flow analysis and inputs that are unobservable and reflect management’s judgments about assumptions that market participants would use to determine a current transaction price. The significant unobservable input in the discounted cash flow analysis is the discount rate.

 

The principal considerations for our determination that performing procedures relating to the valuation of level 3 debt investments is a critical audit matter are (i) the significant judgment by management when developing the fair value estimate of the level 3 debt investments; (ii) a high degree of auditor judgment, subjectivity, and effort in performing procedures and evaluating audit evidence related to management’s significant unobservable inputs related to the discount rates; and (iii) the audit effort involved the use of professionals with specialized skill and knowledge.

 

Addressing the matter involved performing procedures and evaluating audit evidence in connection with forming our overall opinion on the consolidated financial statements. These procedures included testing the effectiveness of controls relating to the valuation of level 3 debt investments, including controls over the development of significant unobservable inputs related to discount rates. These procedures also included, among others, testing the completeness, accuracy, and reliability of the underlying data and either (i) testing management’s process for developing the fair value estimate of the level 3 debt investments, as well as the involvement of professionals with specialized skill and knowledge to assist in (a) evaluating the appropriateness of the discounted cash flow analysis and (b) evaluating the reasonableness of the significant unobservable inputs used by management related to the discount rates; or (ii) the involvement of professionals with specialized skill and knowledge to assist in evaluating the external market and industry data used in the discounted cash flow analysis and the reasonableness of management’s estimate by developing an independent fair value estimate range for level 3 debt investments using independently determined significant unobservable inputs for the discount rates and comparing the independent fair value estimate range to management’s estimates.

 

/s/ PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP

 

Los Angeles, California

March 3, 2025

 

We have served as the auditor of one or more investment companies in Kayne Anderson Funds Family since 2004.

  

F-3

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

Consolidated Statements of Assets and Liabilities

(amounts in 000’s, except share and per share amounts)

 

   December 31,
2024
   December 31,
2023
 
Assets:        
Investments, at fair value:        
Non-controlled, non-affiliated Investments (amortized cost of $1,956,617 and $1,343,223)  $1,982,947   $1,363,498 
Non-controlled, affiliated investments (amortized cost of $15,438 and $0, respectively)   12,196    
-
 
Short-term investments (amortized cost of $48,683 and $12,802)   48,683    12,802 
Cash and cash equivalents   22,375    34,069 
Receivable for principal payments on investments   540    104 
Interest receivable   14,965    12,874 
Prepaid expenses and other assets   958    319 
Total Assets  $2,082,664   $1,423,666 
           
Liabilities:          
Corporate Credit Facility (Note 6)  $250,000   $234,000 
Unamortized Corporate Credit Facility issuance costs   (3,235)   (1,715)
Revolving Funding Facility (Note 6)   420,000    306,000 
Unamortized Revolving Funding Facility issuance costs   (4,746)   (2,019)
Revolving Funding Facility II (Note 6)   113,000    70,000 
Unamortized Revolving Funding Facility II issuance costs   (1,251)   (1,805)
Subscription Credit Agreement (Note 6)   
-
    10,750 
Unamortized Subscription Credit Facility issuance costs   
-
    (41)
Notes (Note 6)   75,000    75,000 
Unamortized notes issuance costs   (643)   (851)
Distributions payable   28,424    22,050 
Management fee payable (Note 3)   3,712    2,996 
Incentive fee payable (Note 3)   
-
    14,195 
Accrued expenses and other liabilities   15,236    11,949 
Accrued excise tax expense   825    101 
Total Liabilities  $896,322   $740,610 
           
Commitments and contingencies (Note 8)   
 
    
 
 
           
Net Assets:          
Common Shares, $0.001 par value; 100,000,000 shares authorized; 71,059,689 and 41,603,666 as of December 31, 2024 and December 31, 2023, respectively, issued and outstanding  $71   $42 
Additional paid-in capital   1,152,396    669,990 
Total distributable earnings (deficit)   33,875    13,024 
Total Net Assets  $1,186,342   $683,056 
Total Liabilities and Net Assets  $2,082,664   $1,423,666 
Net Asset Value Per Common Share  $16.70   $16.42 

 

See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.

 

F-4

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

Consolidated Statements of Operations

(amounts in 000’s, except share and per share amounts)

 

   For the years ended December 31, 
   2024   2023   2022 
Income:            
Investment income from investments:            
Interest income from non-controlled, non-affiliated investments  $210,884   $160,433   $74,829 
Interest income from non-controlled, affiliated investments   754    -    - 
Dividend income   1,468    571    - 
Total Investment Income   213,106    161,004    74,829 
                
Expenses:               
Management fees   17,487    11,433    7,147 
Incentive fees   17,449    9,433    4,698 
Interest expense   61,516    52,314    20,292 
Professional fees   1,503    691    645 
Directors fees   621    611    460 
Offering costs   -    -    29 
Excise tax   817    101    - 
Other general and administrative expenses   2,159    1,604    1,379 
Total Expenses   101,552    76,187    34,650 
Less: Management fee waiver (Note 3)   (2,900)   -    - 
Less: Incentive fee waiver (Note 3)   (14,818)   -    - 
Net expenses   83,834    76,187    34,650 
Net Investment Income (Loss)   129,272    84,817    40,179 
                
Realized and unrealized gains (losses) on investments               
Net realized gains (losses):               
Non-controlled, non-affiliated investments   570    (10,686)   84 
Total net realized gains (losses)   570    (10,686)   84 
Net change in unrealized gains (losses):               
Non-controlled, non-affiliated investments   4,783    2,944    5,502 
Non-controlled, affiliated investments   (1,968)   -    - 
Deferred income tax expense   (717)   -    - 
Total net change in unrealized gains (losses)   2,098    2,944    5,502 
Total realized and unrealized gains (losses)   2,668    (7,742)   5,586 
                
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations  $131,940   $77,075   $45,765 
                
Per Common Share Data:               
Basic and diluted net investment income per common share  $2.03   $2.16   $1.48 
Basic and diluted net increase in net assets resulting from operations  $2.07   $1.96   $1.68 
Weighted Average Common Shares Outstanding - Basic and Diluted   63,762,377    39,250,232    27,184,302 

 

See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.

 

F-5

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

Consolidated Statements of Changes in Net Assets

(amounts in 000’s)

 

   For the years ended December 31, 
   2024   2023   2022 
Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations:               
Net investment income (loss)  $129,272   $84,817   $40,179 
Net realized gains (losses) on investments   570    (10,686)   84 
Net change in unrealized gains (losses) on investments, net of tax   2,098    2,944    5,502 
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations   131,940    77,075    45,765 
                
Decrease in Net Assets Resulting from Stockholder Dividends               
Dividends to stockholders   (111,908)   (81,617)   (39,553)
Net Decrease in Net Assets Resulting from Stockholder Dividends   (111,908)   (81,617)   (39,553)
                
Increase in Net Assets Resulting from Capital Share Transactions               
Issuance of common shares, net of underwriting and offering costs   480,997    90,575    268,218 
Common stock purchased under the share repurchase program   (1,525)   -    - 
Reinvestment of dividends   3,782    4,982    5,642 
Net Increase in Net Assets Resulting from Capital Share Transactions   483,254    95,557    273,860 
Total Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets   503,286    91,015    280,072 
Net Assets, Beginning of Period   683,056    592,041    311,969 
Net Assets, End of Period  $1,186,342   $683,056   $592,041 

 

See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.

 

F-6

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows

(amounts in 000’s)

 

   For the years ended December 31, 
   2024   2023   2022 
             
Cash Flows from Operating Activities:            
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations  $131,940   $77,075   $45,765 
Adjustments to reconcile net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from               
operations to net cash used in operating activities:               
Net realized (gains)/losses on investments   (570)   10,686    (84)
Net change in unrealized (gains)/losses on investments   (2,815)   (2,944)   (5,502)
Net accretion of discount on investments   (12,472)   (9,777)   (4,819)
Sales (purchases) of short-term investments, net   (35,881)   (2,955)   (6,173)
Purchases of portfolio investments   (983,505)   (391,341)   (718,236)
Proceeds from sales of investments and principal repayments   370,423    196,649    142,118 
Paid-in-kind interest from portfolio investments   (2,706)   (1,652)   (151)
Amortization of deferred financing cost   3,718    2,694    2,122 
Increase/(decrease) in operating assets and liabilities:               
(Increase)/decrease in interest and dividends receivable   (2,091)   (2,430)   (8,311)
(Increase)/decrease in deferred offering costs   
-
    
-
    29 
(Increase)/decrease in receivable for principal payments on investments   (436)   7    (111)
Increase/(decrease) in excise tax payable   724    101    
-
 
(Increase)/decrease in prepaid expenses and other assets   (639)   28    (199)
Increase/(decrease) in payable for investments purchased   
-
    (956)   956 
Increase/(decrease) in management fees payable   716    581    1,463 
Increase/(decrease) in incentive fee payable   (14,195)   9,433    4,697 
Increase/(decrease) in accrued organizational and offering costs, net   
-
    
-
    (6)
Increase/(decrease) in accrued expenses and other liabilities   3,287    4,748    4,672 
Net cash used in operating activities   (544,502)   (110,053)   (541,770)
Cash Flows from Financing Activities:               
Borrowings/(payments) on Corporate Credit Facility, net   16,000    (35,000)   269,000 
Borrowings on Revolving Funding Facility, net   114,000    106,000    200,000 
Borrowings on Revolving Funding Facility II, net   43,000    70,000    
-
 
(Payments)/Borrowings on Loan and Security Agreement, net   
-
    
-
    (162,000)
Borrowings/(payments) on Subscription Credit Agreement, net   (10,750)   (97,250)   3,000 
Payments of debt issuance costs   (7,162)   (3,716)   (6,859)
Dividends paid in cash   (101,752)   (70,013)   (23,098)
Proceeds from issuance of common shares, net of underwriting & offering costs   480,997    90,575    268,218 
Proceeds from issuance of Notes   
-
    75,000    
-
 
Repurchase of common shares   (1,525)   
-
    
-
 
Net cash provided by financing activities   532,808    135,596    548,261 
Net increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents   (11,694)   25,543    6,491 
Cash and cash equivalents, beginning of period   34,069    8,526    2,035 
Cash and cash equivalents, end of period  $22,375   $34,069   $8,526 
                
Supplemental and Non-Cash Information:               
Interest paid during the period  $55,014   $44,384   $14,211 
Non-cash financing activities not included herein consisted of reinvestment of dividends  $3,782   $4,982   $5,642 

 

See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.

 

F-7

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

Consolidated Schedule of Investments

As of December 31, 2024

(amounts in 000’s, except number of shares, units)

 

Portfolio Company  Footnotes (1)(2)  Investment (3)  Interest Rate   Spread   PIK Rate   Reference(4)  Maturity
Date
  Principal /
Par
   Amortized
Cost(5)
   Fair
Value
   Percentage of
Net Assets
 
Debt and Equity Investments                                        
Debt  Investments                                        
Aerospace & defense                                        
Basel U.S. Acquisition Co., Inc. (IAC)  (6)  First lien senior secured loan   9.94%   5.50%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  12/5/2028  $18,308   $17,978   $18,570    1.6%
      First lien senior secured loan   9.94%   5.50%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  12/5/2028   3,697    3,612    3,750    0.3%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   9.94%   5.50%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  7/8/2026   
-
    
-
    
-
    0.0%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   9.94%   5.50%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  12/5/2028   
-
    
-
    
-
    0.0%
Fastener Distribution Holdings, LLC     First lien senior secured loan   9.31%   4.75%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  11/4/2031   20,067    19,870    20,067    1.7%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   9.31%   4.75%   
-
   SOFR(S)  11/4/2031   
-
    
-
    
-
    0.0%
TransDigm Inc  (8)  First lien senior secured loan   6.83%   2.50%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  2/28/2031   10,010    10,055    10,023    0.8%
Vitesse Systems Parent, LLC     First lien senior secured loan   11.47%   7.00%   
-
   SOFR(M)  12/22/2028   30,896    30,249    30,819    2.6%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   11.56%   7.00%   
-
   SOFR(M)  12/22/2028   4,679    4,578    4,667    0.4%
                               87,657    86,342    87,896    7.4%
Automobile components                                               
Clarios Global LP  (6)(8)  First lien senior secured loan   6.86%   2.50%   
-
   SOFR(M)  5/6/2030   10,060    10,098    10,090    0.8%
Speedstar Holding LLC     First lien senior secured loan   10.59%   6.00%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  7/22/2027   6,100    6,040    6,131    0.5%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   10.59%   6.00%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  7/22/2027   666    650    669    0.1%
Vehicle Accessories, Inc.     First lien senior secured loan   9.72%   5.25%   
-
   SOFR(M)  11/30/2026   26,424    26,179    26,424    2.2%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   9.72%   5.25%   
-
   SOFR(M)  11/30/2026   
-
    
-
    
-
    0.0%
WAM CR Acquisition, Inc. (Wolverine)     First lien senior secured loan   10.58%   6.25%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  7/23/2029   26,830    26,327    27,232    2.3%
                               70,080    69,294    70,546    5.9%
Biotechnology                                               
Alcami Corporation (Alcami)     First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   11.55%   7.00%   
-
   SOFR(M)  12/21/2028   846    846    855    0.1%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   11.44%   7.00%   
-
   SOFR(M)  12/21/2028   117    81    119    0.0%
      First lien senior secured loan   11.66%   7.00%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  12/21/2028   11,501    11,213    11,616    1.0%
                               12,464    12,140    12,590    1.1%
Building products                                               
Eastern Wholesale Fence, LLC     First lien senior secured loan   12.74%   8.00%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  10/30/2025   2,828    2,804    2,828    0.2%
      First lien senior secured loan   12.74%   8.00%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  10/30/2025   15,678    15,468    15,678    1.3%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   12.74%   8.00%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  10/30/2025   1,077    1,074    1,077    0.1%
Ruff Roofers Buyer, LLC     First lien senior secured loan   9.86%   5.50%   
-
   SOFR(M)  11/17/2029   7,115    6,880    7,115    0.6%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   10.11%   5.75%   
-
   SOFR(M)  11/17/2029   
-
    
-
    
-
    0.0%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   10.11%   5.75%   
-
   SOFR(M)  11/17/2029   3,818    3,782    3,818    0.3%
US Anchors Group, Inc. (Mechanical Plastics Corp.)     First lien senior secured loan   9.33%   5.00%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  7/15/2029   14,109    13,800    14,109    1.2%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   9.33%   5.00%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  7/15/2029   
-
    
-
    
-
    0.0%
                               44,625    43,808    44,625    3.7%
Chemicals                                               
Fralock Buyer LLC     First lien senior secured loan   10.75%   6.00%   0.50%  SOFR(Q)  3/31/2025   9,286    9,278    9,263    0.8%
      First lien senior secured loan   10.75%   6.00%   0.50%  SOFR(Q)  3/31/2025   2,388    2,385    2,382    0.2%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   10.83%   6.00%   0.50%  SOFR(Q)  3/31/2025   749    747    747    0.1%
Nouryon USA, LLC (f/k/a AkzoNobel Specialty Chemicals)  (8)  First lien senior secured loan   7.66%   3.25%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  4/3/2028   9,854    9,904    9,913    0.8%
                               22,277    22,314    22,305    1.9%
Commercial services & supplies                                               
Advanced Environmental Monitoring  (7)  First lien senior secured loan   10.41%   5.75%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  1/29/2027   3,651    3,588    3,651    0.3%
      First lien senior secured loan   10.23%   5.75%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  1/29/2026   7,372    7,266    7,372    0.6%
      First lien senior secured loan   10.23%   5.75%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  1/29/2026   2,787    2,787    2,787    0.2%
Alight Solutions (Tempo Acquisition LLC)  (8)  First lien senior secured loan   6.61%   2.25%   
-
   SOFR(M)  8/31/2028   8,185    8,213    8,210    0.7%
Allentown, LLC     First lien senior secured loan   11.66%   6.00%   1.00%  SOFR(Q)  4/22/2027   7,584    7,474    7,318    0.6%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   11.66%   6.00%   1.00%  SOFR(Q)  4/22/2027   1,370    1,346    1,322    0.1%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   12.50%   5.00%   
-
   PRIME  4/22/2027   367    357    354    0.0%

 

See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.

 

F-8

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

Consolidated Schedule of Investments

As of December 31, 2024

(amounts in 000’s, except number of shares, units)

 

Portfolio Company  Footnotes (1)(2)  Investment (3)  Interest Rate   Spread   PIK Rate   Reference(4)  Maturity
Date
  Principal /
Par
   Amortized
Cost(5)
   Fair
Value
   Percentage of
Net Assets
 
American Equipment Holdings LLC     First lien senior secured loan   10.67%   6.00%   
-
   SOFR(M)  11/5/2026   16,057    15,908    16,057    1.4%
      First lien senior secured loan   10.67%   6.00%   
-
   SOFR(M)  11/5/2026   1,720    1,706    1,720    0.2%
      First lien senior secured loan   10.56%   6.00%   
-
   SOFR(M)  11/5/2026   2,064    2,044    2,064    0.2%
      First lien senior secured loan   10.45%   6.00%   
-
   SOFR(M)  11/5/2026   561    558    561    0.1%
      First lien senior secured loan   10.50%   6.00%   
-
   SOFR(M)  11/5/2026   2,626    2,588    2,626    0.2%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   10.67%   6.00%   
-
   SOFR(M)  11/5/2026   6,176    6,110    6,176    0.5%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   10.60%   6.00%   
-
   SOFR(M)  11/5/2026   4,919    4,878    4,919    0.4%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   10.49%   6.00%   
-
   SOFR(M)  11/5/2026   2,557    2,481    2,557    0.2%
Arborworks Acquisition LLC  (9)(10)  First lien senior secured loan   
-
    
-
    
-
   -  11/6/2028   4,688    4,688    4,688    0.4%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   
-
    
-
    
-
   -  11/6/2028   948    948    948    0.1%
Bloomington Holdco, LLC (BW Fusion)     First lien senior secured revolving loan   10.05%   5.50%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  5/1/2030   21,248    20,830    21,248    1.8%
      First lien senior secured loan   10.05%   5.50%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  5/1/2030   3,612    3,417    3,612    0.3%
BLP Buyer, Inc. (Bishop Lifting Products)     First lien senior secured loan   10.34%   6.00%   
-
   SOFR(M)  12/22/2029   25,969    25,538    26,163    2.2%
      First lien senior secured loan   10.34%   6.00%   
-
   SOFR(M)  12/22/2029   1,220    1,198    1,229    0.1%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   10.34%   6.00%   
-
   SOFR(M)  12/22/2029   3,178    3,123    3,202    0.3%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   10.34%   6.00%   
-
   SOFR(M)  12/22/2029   757    692    762    0.1%
Connect America.com, LLC     First lien senior secured loan   9.83%   5.50%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  10/11/2029   25,670    25,298    25,670    2.2%
Diverzify Intermediate LLC     First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   10.53%   5.75%   
-
   SOFR(M)  4/4/2026   
-
    
-
    
-
    0.0%
      First lien senior secured loan   10.53%   5.75%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  5/11/2027   6,033    5,902    5,957    0.5%
Gusmer Enterprises, Inc.     First lien senior secured loan   11.47%   7.00%   
-
   SOFR(M)  5/7/2027   3,688    3,652    3,688    0.3%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   11.47%   7.00%   
-
   SOFR(M)  5/7/2027   4,828    4,784    4,828    0.4%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   11.47%   7.00%   
-
   SOFR(M)  5/7/2027   1,349    1,302    1,349    0.1%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   11.47%   7.00%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  5/7/2027   
-
    
-
    
-
    0.0%
Superior Intermediate LLC (Landmark Structures)     First lien senior secured loan   10.35%   6.00%   
-
   SOFR(M)  12/18/2029   18,257    17,762    18,257    1.5%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   10.35%   6.00%   
-
   SOFR(M)  12/18/2029   
-
    
-
    
-
    0.0%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   10.38%   6.00%   -   SOFR(M)  12/18/2029   -    -    -    0.0%
PMFC Holding, LLC     First lien senior secured loan   12.74%   8.00%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  12/19/2032   5,504    5,435    5,504    0.5%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   12.74%   8.00%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  12/19/2032   2,760    2,746    2,760    0.2%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   12.74%   8.00%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  12/19/2032   445    443    445    0.0%
Regiment Security Partners LLC     First lien senior secured loan   12.50%   8.00%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  9/15/2026   6,360    6,298    6,360    0.5%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   12.50%   8.00%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  9/15/2026   2,602    2,582    2,602    0.2%

 

See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.

 

F-9

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

Consolidated Schedule of Investments

As of December 31, 2024

(amounts in 000’s, except number of shares, units)

 

Portfolio Company  Footnotes (1)(2)  Investment (3)  Interest Rate   Spread   PIK Rate   Reference(4)  Maturity
Date
  Principal /
Par
   Amortized
Cost(5)
   Fair
Value
   Percentage of
Net Assets
 
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   12.50%   8.00%   -   SOFR(Q)  9/15/2026   1,452    1,434    1,452    0.1%
Tapco Buyer LLC     First lien senior secured loan   9.52%   5.00%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  11/15/2030   10,471    10,316    10,471    0.9%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   9.34%   5.00%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  11/15/2030   603    503    603    0.1%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   9.34%   5.00%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  11/15/2030   
-
    
-
    
-
    0.0%
                               219,638    216,195    219,492    18.5%
Construction materials                                               
Quikrete Holdings Inc  (8)  First lien senior secured loan   6.61%   2.25%   
-
   SOFR(M)  3/19/2029   14,888    14,888    14,870    1.3%
                                                
Containers & packaging                                               
Carton Packaging Buyer, Inc. (Century Box)     First lien senior secured loan   10.84%   6.25%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  10/30/2028   24,018    23,477    23,778    2.0%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   10.84%   6.25%   
-
   SOFR(S)  10/30/2028   
-
    
-
    
-
    0.0%
Drew Foam Companies, Inc.  (7)  First lien senior secured loan   10.48%   6.00%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  12/5/2026   6,978    6,835    6,978    0.6%
      First lien senior secured loan   10.78%   6.00%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  12/5/2026   19,835    19,685    19,835    1.7%
FCA, LLC (FCA Packaging)     First lien senior secured loan   10.13%   5.00%   
-
   SOFR(S)  7/18/2028   18,673    18,492    18,673    1.6%
      First lien senior secured loan   10.11%   5.75%   
-
   SOFR(M)  7/18/2028   1,711    1,658    1,745    0.1%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   10.13%   5.00%   
-
   SOFR(S)  7/18/2028   
-
    
-
    
-
    0.0%
Innopak Industries, Inc.     First lien senior secured loan   10.75%   6.25%   
-
   SOFR(M)  3/5/2027   7,241    7,116    7,241    0.6%
      First lien senior secured loan   10.75%   6.25%   
-
   SOFR(M)  3/5/2027   5,925    5,821    5,925    0.5%
      First lien senior secured loan   10.69%   6.25%   
-
   SOFR(M)  3/5/2027   14,775    14,529    14,775    1.2%
M2S Group Intermediate Holdings, Inc.     First lien senior secured loan   9.09%   4.75%   
-
   SOFR(M)  8/22/2031   39,080    36,446    37,713    3.2%
The Robinette Company     First lien senior secured loan   10.52%   6.00%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  5/10/2029   10,226    10,042    10,431    0.9%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   10.52%   6.00%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  5/10/2029   2,414    2,322    2,462    0.2%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   10.52%   6.00%   
-
   SOFR(M)  11/10/2025   
-
    
-
    
-
    0.0%
                               150,876    146,423    149,556    12.6%
Diversified consumer services                                               
Fugue Finance B.V.  (6)(8)  First lien senior secured loan   8.25%   3.75%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  2/26/2031   2,985    2,979    3,001    0.3%
                                                
Diversified telecommunication services                                               
Liberty Global/Vodafone Ziggo  (6)(8)  First lien senior secured loan   7.01%   2.50%   
-
   SOFR(M)  4/30/2028   10,060    9,968    10,006    0.8%
Network Connex (f/k/a NTI Connect, LLC)     First lien senior secured loan   9.48%   5.00%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  1/31/2026   3,552    3,530    3,552    0.3%
Virgin Media Bristor LLC  (8)  First lien senior secured loan   7.01%   2.50%   
-
   SOFR(M)  1/31/2028   17,500    17,343    17,361    1.5%
                               31,112    30,841    30,919    2.6%
Electrical equipment                                               
Westinghouse (Wec US Holdings LTD)  (8)  First lien senior secured loan   6.80%   2.25%   
-
   SOFR(M)  1/27/2031   10,035    10,046    10,033    0.8%

 

See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.

 

F-10

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

Consolidated Schedule of Investments

As of December 31, 2024

(amounts in 000’s, except number of shares, units)

 

Portfolio Company  Footnotes (1)(2)  Investment (3)  Interest Rate   Spread   PIK Rate   Reference(4)  Maturity
Date
  Principal /
Par
   Amortized
Cost(5)
   Fair
Value
   Percentage of
Net Assets
 
Food products                                        
BC CS 2, L.P. (Cuisine Solutions)  (6)(11)  -   12.55%   8.00%   
-
   SOFR(S)  7/8/2028   18,111    17,788    18,111    1.5%
BR PJK Produce, LLC (Keany)     First lien senior secured loan   10.99%   6.25%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  11/14/2027   29,340    28,886    29,340    2.5%
      First lien senior secured loan   10.99%   6.25%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  11/14/2027   4,338    4,249    4,338    0.4%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   10.99%   6.25%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  11/14/2027   4,364    4,263    4,364    0.4%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   10.99%   6.25%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  11/14/2027   1,418    1,395    1,418    0.1%
CCFF Buyer, LLC (California Custom Fruits & Flavors, LLC)     First lien senior secured loan   9.77%   5.25%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  2/26/2030   13,896    13,587    13,896    1.2%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   9.77%   5.25%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  2/26/2030   7,926    7,622    7,926    0.7%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   9.77%   5.00%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  2/26/2030   
-
    
-
    
-
    0.0%
City Line Distributors, LLC     First lien senior secured loan   10.47%   6.00%   
-
   SOFR(M)  8/31/2028   8,806    8,634    8,894    0.7%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   10.51%   6.00%   
-
   SOFR(M)  8/31/2028   3,608    3,550    3,645    0.3%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   10.47%   6.00%   
-
   SOFR(M)  8/31/2028   
-
    
-
    -    0.0%
Gulf Pacific Holdings, LLC     First lien senior secured loan   10.46%   6.00%   
-
   SOFR(M)  9/30/2028   19,976    19,703    19,576    1.7%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   10.55%   6.00%   
-
   SOFR(M)  9/30/2028   1,684    1,684    1,651    0.1%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   10.46%   6.00%   
-
   SOFR(M)  9/30/2028   4,195    4,120    4,111    0.3%
IF&P Foods, LLC (FreshEdge)     First lien senior secured loan   10.05%   5.63%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  7/23/2030   26,970    26,511    26,970    2.3%
      First lien senior secured loan   10.43%   6.00%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  7/23/2030   214    210    214    0.0%
      First lien senior secured loan   10.05%   5.63%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  7/23/2030   712    684    706    0.1%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   10.05%   5.63%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  7/23/2030   4,004    3,941    4,004    0.3%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   10.05%   5.63%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  7/23/2030   2,303    2,248    2,303    0.2%
J&K Ingredients, LLC     First lien senior secured loan   10.83%   6.50%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  11/16/2028   11,465    11,230    11,580    1.0%
ML Buyer, LLC (Mama Lycha Foods, LLC)     First lien senior secured loan   9.68%   5.25%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  9/9/2029   11,555    11,262    11,555    1.0%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   9.68%   5.25%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  9/9/2029   
-
    
-
    
-
    0.0%
Siegel Egg Co., LLC     First lien senior secured loan   13.19%   6.50%   2.00%  SOFR(Q)  12/29/2026   14,651    14,541    12,600    1.1%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   13.19%   6.50%   2.00%  SOFR(Q)  12/29/2026   2,629    2,604    2,261    0.2%
Worldwide Produce Acquisition, LLC     First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   11.00%   6.75%   
-
   SOFR(S)  1/18/2029   555    542    544    0.0%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   11.00%   6.75%   
-
   SOFR(S)  1/18/2029   461    437    452    0.0%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   11.00%   6.75%   -   SOFR(S)  1/18/2029   -    -    -    0.0%
      First lien senior secured loan   11.00%   6.75%   
-
   SOFR(S)  1/18/2029   2,831    2,769    2,775    0.2%
                               196,012    192,460    193,234    16.3%
Health care providers & services                                               
Brightview, LLC     First lien senior secured loan   10.47%   6.00%   
-
   SOFR(M)  12/14/2026   12,738    12,729    12,611    1.1%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   10.47%   6.00%   
-
   SOFR(M)  12/14/2026   1,701    1,699    1,684    0.1%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   10.34%   6.00%   
-
   SOFR(M)  12/14/2026   774    771    767    0.1%

 

See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.

 

F-11

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

Consolidated Schedule of Investments

As of December 31, 2024

(amounts in 000’s, except number of shares, units)

 

Portfolio Company  Footnotes (1)(2)  Investment (3)  Interest Rate   Spread   PIK Rate   Reference(4)  Maturity
Date
  Principal /
Par
   Amortized
Cost(5)
   Fair
Value
   Percentage of
Net Assets
 
Guardian Dentistry Partners     First lien senior secured loan   9.72%   5.25%   
-
   SOFR(M)  8/20/2027   5,914    5,829    5,914    0.5%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   9.72%   5.25%   
-
   SOFR(M)  8/20/2027   11,592    11,433    11,592    1.0%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   9.72%   5.25%   
-
   SOFR(M)  8/20/2027   4,522    4,503    4,522    0.4%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   9.72%   5.25%   
-
   SOFR(M)  8/20/2027   
-
    
-
    
-
    0.0%
Guided Practice Solutions: Dental, LLC (GPS)     First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   10.72%   6.25%   
-
   SOFR(M)  11/24/2026   16,654    16,348    16,654    1.4%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   10.72%   6.25%   
-
   SOFR(M)  11/24/2026   3,980    3,980    3,980    0.3%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   10.72%   6.25%   
-
   SOFR(M)  11/24/2026   9,734    9,634    9,734    0.8%
Light Wave Dental Management LLC     First lien senior secured revolving loan   9.82%   5.50%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  6/30/2029   
-
    
-
    
-
    0.0%
      First lien senior secured loan   9.82%   5.50%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  6/30/2029   22,198    21,583    22,198    1.9%
      First lien senior secured loan   9.82%   5.50%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  6/30/2029   494    480    494    0.0%
      First lien senior secured loan   9.85%   5.50%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  6/30/2029   2,288    2,250    2,288    0.2%
MVP VIP Borrower, LLC     First lien senior secured loan   10.83%   6.50%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  1/3/2029   19,480    19,075    19,675    1.7%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   10.83%   6.50%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  1/3/2029   1,571    1,539    1,587    0.1%
NMA Holdings, LLC (Neuromonitoring Associates)     First lien senior secured loan   9.60%   5.25%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  12/18/2030   16,425    16,046    16,425    1.4%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   9.60%   5.25%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  12/18/2030   
-
    
-
    
-
    0.0%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   9.60%   5.25%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  12/18/2030   
-
    
-
    
-
    0.0%
Redwood MSO, LLC (Smile Partners)     First lien senior secured loan   9.60%   5.25%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  12/20/2029   11,216    10,955    11,216    1.0%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   9.60%   5.25%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  12/20/2029   
-
    
-
    
-
    0.0%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   11.75%   4.25%   
-
   PRIME  12/19/2030   
-
    
-
    
-
    0.0%
Refocus Management Services, LLC     First lien senior secured loan   10.75%   6.00%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  2/14/2029   18,221    17,736    18,221    1.5%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   10.75%   6.00%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  2/14/2029   2,525    2,380    2,525    0.2%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   10.75%   6.00%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  2/14/2029   
-
    
-
    
-
    0.0%
Salt Dental Collective LLC     First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   11.21%   6.75%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  2/15/2028   3,980    3,980    3,980    0.3%
                               166,007    162,950    166,067    14.0%
Health care equipment & supplies                                               
LSL Industries, LLC (LSL Healthcare)     First lien senior secured loan   11.78%   7.00%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  11/3/2027   19,084    18,518    18,655    1.6%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   11.78%   7.00%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  11/3/2027   
-
    
-
    
-
    0.0%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   11.78%   7.00%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  11/3/2027   
-
    
-
    
-
    0.0%
Medline Borrower LP  (8)  First lien senior secured loan   6.82%   2.25%   
-
   SOFR(M)  10/23/2028   9,985    10,024    10,012    0.8%
                               29,069    28,542    28,667    2.4%
Hotels, restaurants & leisure                                               
Inspire Brands  (8)  First lien senior secured loan   6.86%   2.50%   
-
   SOFR(M)  12/15/2027   10,010    10,030    10,012    0.8%
Restaurant Brands (1011778 BC ULC)  (6)(8)  First lien senior secured loan   6.11%   1.75%   
-
   SOFR(M)  9/20/2030   17,369    17,387    17,264    1.5%
                               27,379    27,417    27,276    2.3%

 

See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.

 

F-12

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

Consolidated Schedule of Investments

As of December 31, 2024

(amounts in 000’s, except number of shares, units)

 

Portfolio Company  Footnotes (1)(2)  Investment (3)  Interest Rate   Spread   PIK Rate   Reference(4)  Maturity
Date
  Principal /
Par
   Amortized
Cost(5)
   Fair
Value
   Percentage of
Net Assets
 
Household durables                                        
Curio Brands, LLC     First lien senior secured loan   9.48%   5.00%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  12/21/2027   16,286    16,060    16,286    1.4%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   9.48%   5.00%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  12/21/2027   
-
    
-
    
-
    0.0%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   9.48%   5.00%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  12/21/2027   3,911    3,911    3,911    0.3%
                               20,197    19,971    20,197    1.7%
Household products                                               
Home Brands Group Holdings, Inc. (ReBath)     First lien senior secured loan   9.49%   4.75%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  11/8/2026   15,373    15,238    15,373    1.3%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   9.49%   4.75%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  11/8/2026   
-
    
-
    
-
    0.0%
                               15,373    15,238    15,373    1.3%
Insurance                                               
Allcat Claims Service, LLC     First lien senior secured loan   10.46%   6.00%   
-
   SOFR(M)  7/7/2027   7,639    7,552    7,639    0.6%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   10.46%   6.00%   
-
   SOFR(M)  7/7/2027   21,387    20,960    21,387    1.8%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   10.69%   6.00%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  7/7/2027   
-
    
-
    
-
    0.0%
AmWINS Group Inc  (8)  First lien senior secured loan   6.72%   2.25%   
-
   SOFR(M)  2/22/2028   9,956    9,970    9,982    0.9%
                               38,982    38,482    39,008    3.3%
IT services                                               
Improving Acquisition LLC     First lien senior secured loan   11.00%   6.50%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  7/26/2027   33,616    33,198    33,616    2.8%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   11.00%   6.50%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  7/26/2027   
-
    
-
    
-
    0.0%
                               33,616    33,198    33,616    2.8%
Leisure products                                               
MacNeill Pride Group Corp.     First lien senior secured loan   11.84%   6.75%   0.50%  SOFR(Q)  4/22/2026   8,038    8,003    7,997    0.7%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   11.84%   6.75%   0.50%  SOFR(Q)  4/22/2026   1,505    1,499    1,497    0.1%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   11.84%   6.75%   0.50%  SOFR(Q)  4/22/2026   1,685    1,664    1,677    0.1%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   11.34%   6.75%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  4/22/2026   599    585    596    0.1%
Pixel Intermediate, LLC  (6)  First lien senior secured loan   10.92%   6.50%   
-
   SOFR(S)  2/1/2029   20,723    20,276    20,931    1.8%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   10.83%   6.50%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  2/1/2029   6,989    6,810    7,059    0.6%
Spinrite, Inc.  (6)  First lien senior secured loan   9.83%   5.50%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  6/30/2025   5,118    5,096    5,118    0.4%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   9.83%   5.50%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  6/30/2025   3,399    3,399    3,399    0.3%
TG Parent Newco LLC (Trademark Global LLC)  (9)(10)(12)  First lien senior secured loan   
-
    
-
    
-
   -  7/30/2030   12,623    12,623    9,972    0.8%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   
-
    
-
    
-
   -  7/30/2030   2,815    2,815    2,224    0.2%
VENUplus, Inc. (f/k/a CTM Group, Inc.)     First lien senior secured loan   11.96%   4.75%   2.75%  SOFR(Q)  11/30/2026   4,431    4,359    4,365    0.4%
                               67,925    67,129    64,835    5.5%
Machinery                                               
MRC Keystone Acquisition LLC (Automated Handing Solutions)     First lien senior secured loan   10.85%   6.50%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  12/18/2029   14,016    13,660    14,016    1.2%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   10.85%   6.50%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  12/18/2029   
-
    
-
    
-
    0.0%
Eppinger Technologies, LLC  (6)  First lien senior secured loan   14.48%   8.50%   1.50%  SOFR(Q)  2/4/2026   24,886    24,606    24,886    2.1%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   13.23%   7.25%   1.50%  SOFR(Q)  2/4/2026   1,371    1,332    1,371    0.1%
Luxium Solutions, LLC     First lien senior secured loan   10.58%   6.25%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  12/1/2027   3,815    3,766    3,815    0.3%
      First lien senior secured loan   10.58%   6.25%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  12/1/2027   4,697    4,637    4,697    0.4%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   10.58%   6.25%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  12/1/2027   1,233    1,220    1,233    0.1%

 

See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.

 

F-13

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

Consolidated Schedule of Investments

As of December 31, 2024

(amounts in 000’s, except number of shares, units)

 

Portfolio Company  Footnotes (1)(2)  Investment (3)  Interest Rate   Spread   PIK Rate   Reference(4)  Maturity
Date
  Principal /
Par
   Amortized
Cost(5)
   Fair
Value
   Percentage of
Net Assets
 
PVI Holdings, Inc     First lien senior secured loan   9.68%   4.94%   -   SOFR(Q)  1/18/2028   23,653    23,423    23,653    2.0%
                               73,671    72,644    73,671    6.2%
Media                                               
Directv Financing LLC  (8)  First lien senior secured loan   9.85%   5.00%   -   SOFR(Q)  8/2/2027   16,154    16,244    16,182    1.4%
                                                
Personal care products                                               
DRS Holdings III, Inc. (Dr. Scholl's)     First lien senior secured loan   10.71%   6.25%   -   SOFR(M)  11/1/2025   10,618    10,596    10,618    0.9%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   10.71%   6.25%   -   SOFR(M)  11/1/2025   -    -    -    0.0%
PH Beauty Holdings III, Inc.     First lien senior secured loan   10.17%   5.00%   -   SOFR(S) 

9/28/2025

   10,496    10,422    10,496    0.9%
Phoenix YW Buyer, Inc. (Elida Beauty)     First lien senior secured loan   9.33%   5.00%   -   SOFR(Q)  5/31/2030   11,013    10,747    11,013    0.9%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   9.33%   5.00%   -   SOFR(Q)  5/31/2030   -    -    -    0.0%
Silk Holdings III Corp. (Suave)     First lien senior secured loan   9.83%   5.50%   -   SOFR(Q)  5/1/2029   19,700    18,899    19,700    1.7%
      First lien senior secured loan   9.83%   5.50%   -   SOFR(Q)  5/1/2029   12,908    12,674    12,908    1.1%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   8.33%   4.00%   -   SOFR(Q)  5/1/2029   8,333    8,062    8,333    0.7%
                               73,068    71,400    73,068    6.2%
Pharmaceuticals                                               
Foundation Consumer Brands LLC     First lien senior secured loan   10.89%   6.25%   -   SOFR(Q)  2/12/2027   6,358    6,334    6,358    0.5%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   10.89%   6.25%   -   SOFR(Q)  2/12/2027   -    -    -    0.0%
Jazz Pharmaceuticals Inc.  (6)(8)  First lien senior secured loan   6.61%   2.25%   -   SOFR(M)  5/5/2028   17,301    17,407    17,334    1.5%
Organon & Co  (6)(8)  First lien senior secured loan   6.60%   2.25%   -   SOFR(Q)  5/19/2031   12,440    12,411    12,455    1.0%
                               36,099    36,152    36,147    3.0%
Professional services                                               
4 Over International, LLC     First lien senior secured loan   11.46%   7.00%   -   SOFR(M)  12/7/2026   18,851    18,376    18,662    1.6%
DISA Holdings Corp. (DISA)     First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   9.50%   5.00%   -   SOFR(Q)  9/9/2028   8,320    8,174    8,320    0.7%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   9.40%   5.00%   -   SOFR(Q)  9/9/2028   125    83    125    0.0%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   9.40%   5.00%   -   SOFR(Q)  9/9/2028   -    -    -    0.0%
      First lien senior secured loan   9.50%   5.00%   -   SOFR(Q)  9/9/2028   1,311    1,294    1,311    0.1%
      First lien senior secured loan   9.50%   5.00%   -   SOFR(Q)  9/9/2028   21,953    21,505    21,953    1.9%
Dun & Bradstreet Corp  (8)  First lien senior secured loan   6.59%   2.25%   -   SOFR(M)  1/18/2029   9,985    9,995    9,986    0.8%
Envirotech Services, LLC     First lien senior secured loan   10.34%   6.00%   -   SOFR(Q)  1/18/2029   33,046    32,290    33,046    2.8%
      First lien senior secured loan   10.35%   6.00%   -   SOFR(Q)  1/18/2029   124    122    124    0.0%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   10.34%   6.00%   -   SOFR(Q)  1/18/2029   -    -    -    0.0%
                               93,715    91,839    93,527    7.9%
Semiconductors & semiconductor equipment                                               
MKS Instruments Inc.  (6)(8)  First lien senior secured loan   6.59%   2.25%   -   SOFR(M)  8/17/2029   11,823    11,871    11,846    1.0%
                                                
Specialty retail                                               
Great Outdoors Group, LLC  (8)  First lien senior secured loan   8.22%   3.75%   -   SOFR(M)  3/6/2028   17,321    17,361    17,382    1.5%

 

See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.

 

F-14

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

Consolidated Schedule of Investments

As of December 31, 2024

(amounts in 000’s, except number of shares, units)

 

Portfolio Company  Footnotes (1)(2)  Investment (3)  Interest Rate   Spread   PIK Rate   Reference(4)  Maturity
Date
  Principal /
Par
   Amortized
Cost(5)
   Fair
Value
   Percentage of
Net Assets
 
Harbor Freight Tools USA Inc  (8)  First lien senior secured loan   6.86%   2.75%   -   SOFR(M)  10/19/2027   17,456    17,424    17,198    1.4%
Sundance Holdings Group, LLC  (7)(9)(10)  First lien senior secured loan   -    -    -   -  6/30/2025   9,414    9,412    6,590    0.5%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   -    -    -   -  6/30/2025   444    444    657    0.1%
                               44,635    44,641    41,827    3.5%
Textiles, apparel & luxury goods                                               
American Soccer Company, Incorporated (SCORE)     First lien senior secured loan   14.73%   7.25%   3.00%  SOFR(Q)  7/20/2027   27,799    26,870    27,799    2.3%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   14.73%   7.25%   3.00%  SOFR(Q)  7/20/2027   2,136    1,986    2,136    0.2%
BEL USA, LLC     First lien senior secured loan   11.67%   7.00%   -   SOFR(Q)  6/2/2026   5,503    5,427    5,379    0.5%
      First lien senior secured loan   11.67%   7.00%   -   SOFR(Q)  6/2/2026   90    89    88    0.0%
YS Garments, LLC     First lien senior secured loan   12.25%   7.50%   -   SOFR(Q)  8/9/2026   6,263    6,210    6,075    0.5%
                               41,791    40,582    41,477    3.5%
Trading companies & distributors                                               

AIDC Intermediate Co 2, LLC (Peak Technologies)

     First lien senior secured loan    9.59   5.25%    -    SOFR(M)   7/22/2027    34,300    33,591    34,129    2.9% 
TL Alpine Holding Corp. (Air Distribution Technologies Inc.)     First lien senior secured loan   

10.55

%   6.00%   -   SOFR(M)  8/1/2030   18,253    17,905    18,435    1.5%
BCDI Meteor Acquisition, LLC (Meteor)     First lien senior secured loan   11.43%   7.00%   -   SOFR(Q)  6/29/2028   16,133    15,859    16,133    1.3%
      First lien senior secured loan   11.43%   7.00%   -   SOFR(Q)  6/29/2028   2,223    2,180    2,223    0.2%
CGI Automated Manufacturing, LLC     First lien senior secured loan   11.59%   7.00%   -   SOFR(Q)  12/17/2026   16,979    16,565    16,979    1.4%
      First lien senior secured loan   11.59%   7.00%   -   SOFR(Q)  12/17/2026   3,104    3,041    3,104    0.3%
      First lien senior secured loan   11.59%   7.00%   -   SOFR(Q)  12/17/2026   6,542    6,447    6,542    0.5%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   11.59%   7.00%   -   SOFR(Q)  12/17/2026   3,541    3,467    3,541    0.3%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   11.59%   7.00%   -   SOFR(Q)  12/17/2026   479    421    479    0.0%
Dusk Acquisition II Corporation (Motors & Armatures, Inc. – MARS)     First lien senior secured loan   10.33%   6.00%   -   SOFR(Q)  7/12/2029   26,133    25,663    26,133    2.2%
      First lien senior secured loan   10.33%   6.00%   -   SOFR(Q)  7/12/2029   13,801    13,500    13,801    1.2%
Energy Acquisition LP (Electrical Components International, Inc. - ECI)     First lien senior secured loan   11.28%   6.50%   -   SOFR(Q)  5/10/2029   26,149    25,672    26,541    2.2%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   11.28%   6.50%   -   SOFR(Q)  5/11/2026   -    -    -    0.0%
Engineered Fastener Company, LLC (EFC International)     First lien senior secured loan   10.98%   6.50%   -   SOFR(Q)  11/1/2027   23,366    22,986    23,471    2.0%
Genuine Cable Group, LLC     First lien senior secured loan   10.21%   5.75%   -   SOFR(M)  11/1/2026   28,763    28,285    28,691    2.4%
      First lien senior secured loan   10.21%   5.75%   -   SOFR(M)  11/1/2026   5,450    5,348    5,436    0.5%

 

See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.

 

F-15

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

Consolidated Schedule of Investments

As of December 31, 2024

(amounts in 000’s, except number of shares, units)

 

Portfolio Company  Footnotes (1)(2)  Investment (3)  Interest Rate   Spread   PIK Rate   Reference(4)  Maturity
Date
  Principal /
Par
   Amortized
Cost(5)
   Fair
Value
   Percentage of
Net Assets
 
I.D. Images Acquisition, LLC     First lien senior secured loan   10.11%   5.75%   
-
   SOFR(M)  7/30/2027   5,652    5,572    5,652    0.5%
      First lien senior secured loan   10.11%   5.75%   
-
   SOFR(M)  7/30/2027   7,854    7,792    7,854    0.7%
      First lien senior secured loan   10.11%   5.75%   
-
   SOFR(M)  7/30/2027   4,474    4,423    4,474    0.4%
      First lien senior secured loan   10.11%   5.75%   
-
   SOFR(M)  7/30/2027   1,032    1,024    1,032    0.1%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   10.11%   5.75%   
-
   SOFR(M)  7/30/2027   2,459    2,407    2,459    0.2%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   10.11%   5.75%   
-
   SOFR(M)  7/30/2027   
-
    
-
    
-
    0.0%
Krayden Holdings, Inc.     First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   9.11%   4.75%   
-
   SOFR(M)  3/1/2029   
-
    
-
    
-
    0.0%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   9.11%   4.75%   
-
   SOFR(M)  3/1/2029   
-
    
-
    
-
    0.0%
      First lien senior secured loan   9.11%   4.75%   
-
   SOFR(M)  3/1/2029   9,395    9,110    9,395    0.8%
OAO Acquisitions, Inc. (BearCom)     First lien senior secured loan   9.98%   5.50%   
-
   SOFR(M)  12/27/2029   21,210    20,932    21,210    1.8%
      First lien senior secured loan   9.87%   5.50%   
-
   SOFR(M)  12/27/2029   857    849    857    0.1%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   9.87%   5.50%   
-
   SOFR(M)  12/27/2025   4,498    4,420    4,498    0.4%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   9.87%   5.50%   
-
   SOFR(M)  12/27/2029   
-
    
-
    
-
    0.0%
Univar (Windsor Holdings LLC)  (8)  First lien senior secured loan   7.86%   3.50%   
-
   SOFR(M)  8/1/2030   9,960    10,018    10,065    0.8%
Workholding US Holdings, LLC (Forkardt Hardinge)     First lien senior secured loan   10.13%   5.50%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  10/23/2029   7,377    7,208    7,377    0.6%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   10.09%   5.50%   
-
   SOFR(Q)  10/23/2029   555    484    555    0.1%
                               300,539    295,169    301,066    25.4%
Wireless telecommunication services                                               
Centerline Communications, LLC     First lien senior secured loan   12.12%   6.00%   1.50%  SOFR(Q)  8/10/2027   5,884    5,770    5,413    0.5%
      First lien senior secured loan   12.12%   6.00%   1.50%  SOFR(Q)  8/10/2027   854    835    854    0.1%
      First lien senior secured loan   12.12%   6.00%   1.50%  SOFR(Q)  8/10/2027   9,109    8,984    8,380    0.7%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   12.12%   6.00%   1.50%  SOFR(Q)  8/10/2027   7,066    6,984    6,501    0.5%
      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   12.15%   6.00%   1.50%  SOFR(Q)  8/10/2027   6,220    6,140    5,722    0.5%
      First lien senior secured revolving loan   12.00%   6.00%   1.50%  SOFR(Q)  8/10/2027   1,824    1,796    1,678    0.1%
      First lien senior secured loan   12.16%   6.00%   1.50%  SOFR(Q)  8/10/2027   1,023    1,000    941    0.1%
                               31,980    31,509    29,489    2.5%
Total Debt Investments                              1,984,672    1,952,708    1,972,406    166.3%

 

See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.

 

F-16

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

Consolidated Schedule of Investments

As of December 31, 2024

(amounts in 000’s, except number of shares, units)

 

   Footnotes (1)(2)  Acquisition
Date
  Number of
Shares/Units
   Cost   Fair
Value
   Percentage of
Net Assets
 
Equity Investments(10)(13)                      
Automobile components                      
Vehicle Accessories, Inc. - Class A common  (14)  2/25/2022   128,250    
-
    589    0.1%
Vehicle Accessories, Inc. - preferred  (14)  2/25/2022   250,000    250    318    0.0%
               250    907    0.1%
Building Products                          
US Anchors Investor, LP - preferred  (15)  7/15/2024   500,000    500    500    0.0%
US Anchors Investor, LP - Class A Common  (15)  7/15/2024   500,000    
-
    
-
    0.0%
               500    500    0.0%
Commercial services & supplies                          
American Equipment Holdings LLC  - Class A units  (16)  4/8/2022   426    284    570    0.1%
Arborworks Acquisition LLC - Class A preferred units  (15)  11/6/2023   21,716    9,179    11,114    0.9%
Arborworks Acquisition LLC - Class B preferred units  (15)  11/6/2023   21,716    
-
    
-
    0.0%
Arborworks Acquisition LLC - Class A common units  (15)  11/6/2023   2,604    
-
    
-
    0.0%
Bloomington Holdings, LP (BW Fusion) - Class A1 common units  (15)  11/5/2024   500    500    500    0.0%
BLP Buyer, Inc. (Bishop Lifting Products) - Class A common  (17)  2/1/2022   582,469    652    1,097    0.1%
               10,615    13,281    1.1%
Containers & packaging                          
Robinette Company Acquisition, LLC - Class A common units  (15)  5/10/2024   9    
-
    83    0.0%
Robinette Company Acquisition, LLC - Class A preferred units  (15)  5/10/2024   500    500    515    0.1%
               500    598    0.1%
Food products                          
BC CS 2, L.P. (Cuisine Solutions)  (6)(11)  7/8/2022   2,000,000    2,000    3,062    0.3%
CCFF Parent, LLC (California Custom Fruits & Flavors, LLC) - Class A-1 units  (15)  2/26/2024   750    511    936    0.1%
City Line Distributors, LLC - Class A units  (15)  8/31/2023   669,866    670    518    0.0%
Gulf Pacific Holdings, LLC - Class A common  (16)  9/30/2022   250    250    46    0.0%
Gulf Pacific Holdings, LLC - Class C common  (16)  9/30/2022   250    
-
    
-
    0.0%
IF&P Foods, LLC (FreshEdge) - Class A preferred  (16)  10/3/2022   773    773    908    0.1%
IF&P Foods, LLC (FreshEdge) - Class B common  (16)  10/3/2022   750    
-
    
-
    0.0%
ML Buyer, LLC (Mama Lycha Foods, LLC) - Class A units  (15)  9/9/2024   250    250    250    0.0%
Siegel Parent, LLC - Common  (18)  12/29/2021   250    250    
-
    0.0%
Siegel Egg Co., LLC - Convertible Note  (18)  1/19/2024   28    28    16    0.0%
               4,732    5,736    0.5%
Health care equipment & supplies                          
LSL Industries, LLC (LSL Healthcare) - common  (16)  11/1/2022   7,500    750    274    0.0%
                           
Health care providers & services                          
NMA Super Holdings, LLC (BW Fusion) - Class A membership interests  (15)  12/18/2024   1,000,000    1,000    1,000    0.1%
                           
Leisure products                          
TG Parent Newco LLC (Trademark Global LLC) – common  (10)(12)(15)  9/16/2024   8    
-
    
-
    0.0%
                           
Specialty retail                          
Sundance Direct Holdings, Inc. - common     10/27/2023   21,479    
-
    
-
    0.0%
Textiles, apparel & luxury goods                          
American Soccer Company, Incorporated (SCORE) - common  (18)  7/20/2022   1,000,000    1,000    441    0.0%
Total Equity Investments              19,347    22,737    1.9%
Total Debt and Equity Investments              1,972,055    1,995,143    168.2%
                           
        Number of  Shares   Cost   Fair  Value   Percentage of Net Assets 
Short-Term Investments                      
Morgan Stanley Institutional Liquidity Fund, Institutional Class, 4.24%  (19)     48,683,210    48,683    48,683    4.1%
Total Short-Term Investments         48,683,210    48,683    48,683    4.1%
                           
Total Investments             $2,020,738   $2,043,826    172.3%
                           
Liabilities in Excess of Other Assets                   (857,484)   (72.3)%
Net Assets                  $1,186,342    100.0%

 

(1)As of December 31, 2024, unless otherwise noted, investments are non-controlled, non-affiliated investments. Non-controlled, non-affiliated investments are defined as investments in which the Company owns less than 5% of the portfolio company’s outstanding voting securities and does not have the power to exercise control over the management or policies of such portfolio company. As of December 31, 2024, the total value of the Company’s non-controlled, non-affiliated investments was $1,982,947.

 

See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.

 

F-17

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

Consolidated Schedule of Investments

As of December 31, 2024

(amounts in 000’s, except number of shares, units)

 

(2)Unless otherwise noted, security is a Level 3 holding. As of December 31, 2024, the aggregate value of Level 3 securities held by the Company was $1,741,919. See Note 5 – Fair Value.

 

(3)Debt investments are pledged to the Company’s credit facilities, and a single debt investment may be divided into parts that are individually pledged to separate credit facilities.

 

(4)Unless otherwise noted, all loans contain a variable rate structure, that may be subject to an interest rate floor. Variable rate loans bear interest at a rate that may be determined by reference to either the Secured Overnight Financing Rate (“SOFR”) (which can include one-(M), three-(Q) or six-month (S) SOFR), or an alternate base rate (which can include the Federal Funds Effective Rate or the Prime Rate).

 

(5)The amortized cost represents the original cost adjusted for the amortization of discounts and premiums, as applicable, on debt investments using the effective interest method.

 

(6)Non-qualifying investment as defined by Section 55(a) of the Investment Company Act of 1940.  The Company may not acquire any non-qualifying asset unless, at the time of acquisition, qualifying assets represent at least 70% of the Company’s total assets. As of December 31, 2024, 9.0% of the Company’s total assets were in non-qualifying investments.

 

(7)The Company may be entitled to receive additional interest as a result of an arrangement with other lenders in the syndication. In exchange for the higher interest rate, the “last-out” portion is at a greater risk of loss.  Certain lenders represent a “first out” portion of the investment and have priority to the “last-out” portion with respect to payments of principal and interest.

 

(8)Security is a Level 2 holding. As of December 31, 2024, the aggregate value of Level 2 securities held by the Company was $253,224. See Note 5 – Fair Value.

 

(9)Debt investment on non-accrual status as of December 31, 2024.

 

(10)Non-income producing investment.

 

(11)The Company has a senior secured loan in an investment vehicle (BC CS 2, L.P.) that is collateralized by a preferred stock investment in Cuisine Solutions, Inc. This investment is characterized as subordinated debt.

  

(12)In September 2024, the Company completed a restructure of the investment in Trademark Global LLC whereby the existing term loan and revolver became a restructured term loan and revolver and no debt was converted to equity. The Company did receive new common units in TG Parent Newco LLC for which it owns 6.23% of the overall business (Kayne Anderson entities as a whole own 20.77%). As of December 31, 2024, the amortized cost basis of Trademark Global LLC was $15,438 and was 0.8% of the total amortized cost basis of our debt investments of $1,952,708. The restructure extended the maturity from July 30, 2024 to July 30, 2030; the rate changed from S + 5.75% to S + 8.50%.

 

See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.

 

F-18

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

Consolidated Schedule of Investments

As of December 31, 2024

(amounts in 000’s, except number of shares, units)

 

As defined in the 1940 Act, the Company is deemed to be an “affiliated person” of this portfolio company as the Company owns more than 5% but less than 25% of the portfolio company’s voting securities or has the power to exercise control over management or policies of such portfolio company, including through a management agreement (“non-controlled affiliate”). As of December 31, 2024, the total value of the Company’s non-controlled affiliated investments was $12,196. Transactions related to the Company’s investment in a non-controlled affiliate for the period December 31, 2024 were as follows:

 

Investment(1)  Value at 12/30/2023   Gross Additions(a)   Gross Reductions (b)   Net Change in Unrealized Gains(Losses)   Value at 12/31/2024   Interest and PIK Income   Dividend Income   Other Income 
                                 
Trademark Global, LLC  $13,129   $1,035   $      -   $(1,968)  $12,196   $754   $     -   $       - 
TG Parent Newco LLC (Trademark Global LLC)   -    -    -    -    -    -    -    - 
Total  $13,129   $1,035   $-   $(1,968)  $12,196   $754   $-   $- 

 

(a)Gross additions may include increases in the cost basis of investments resulting from new investments, amounts related to payment-in-kind (“PIK”) interest capitalized and added to the principal balance of the respective loans, the accretion of discounts, the exchange of one or more existing investments for one or more new investments and the movement at fair value of an existing portfolio company into this controlled affiliated category from a different category.

   

(b)Gross reductions may include decreases in the cost basis of investments resulting from principal collections related to investment repayments and sales, return of capital, the amortization of premiums and the exchange of one or more existing securities for one or more new securities.

 

(13)Security is exempt from registration under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “Securities Act”), and may be deemed to be “restricted securities” under the Securities Act.

 

(14)The Company owns 0.19% of the common equity and 0.43% of the preferred equity of Vehicle Accessories, Inc.

 

(15) KABDC Corp, LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of the Company, owns common and/or preferred equity of Arborworks Acquisition LLC, Bloomington Holdings, LP (BW Fusion), City Line Distributors, LLC, CCFF Parent, LLC (California Custom Fruits & Flavors, LLC), ML Buyer, LLC (Mama Lycha Foods, LLC), NMA Super Holdings, LLC (Neuromonitoring Associates), Robinette Company Acquisition, LLC, TG Parent Newco LLC (Trademark Global LLC) and US Anchors, LP (Mechanical Plastics Corp.).

 

(16) The Company owns 33.46% of a pass-through, taxable limited liability company, KSCF IV Equity Aggregator Blocker, LLC (the “Aggregator Blocker”), which holds the Company’s equity investments in American Equipment Holdings LLC, Gulf Pacific Holdings, LLC, IF&P Foods, LLC (FreshEdge) and LSL Industries, LLC (LSL Healthcare). Through the Company’s ownership of the Aggregator Blocker, the Company owns the respective units of each company listed above in the Schedule of Investments.

 

(17)The Company owns 0.53% of the common equity BLP Buyer, Inc. (Bishop Lifting Products).

 

(18) The Company owns 17.15% of a pass-through limited liability company, KSCF IV Equity Aggregator, LLC (the “Aggregator”), which holds the Company’s equity investments in Siegel Parent, LLC and American Soccer Company, Incorporated (SCORE).   Through the Company’s ownership of the Aggregator, the Company owns the respective units of each company listed above in the Schedule of Investments.

 

(19)The indicated rate is the yield as of December 31, 2024.

 

See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.

 

F-19

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

Consolidated Schedule of Investments

As of December 31, 2023

(amounts in 000’s, except number of shares, units)

 

                Maturity     Principal /     Amortized     Fair     Percentage of  
Portfolio Company(1)   Footnotes   Investment (2)   Interest Rate   Date     Par     Cost(3)(4)     Value     Net Assets  
Debt and Equity Investments                                          
Private Credit Investments(5)                                          
Aerospace & defense                                          
Basel U.S. Acquisition Co., Inc. (IAC)   (6)   First lien senior secured revolving loan   11.51% (S + 6.00%)     12/5/2028     $ -     $ -     $ -       0.0 %
        First lien senior secured loan   11.51% (S + 6.00%)     12/5/2028       18,494       18,066       18,679       2.7 %
Fastener Distribution Holdings, LLC       First lien senior secured loan   12.00% (S + 6.50%)     10/1/2025       20,494       20,090       20,494       3.0 %
        First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   12.00% (S + 6.50%)     10/1/2025       9,098       9,009       9,098       1.3 %
Precinmac (US) Holdings, Inc.       First lien senior secured loan   11.46% (S + 6.00%)     8/31/2027       5,352       5,281       5,272       0.8 %
        First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   11.46% (S + 6.00%)     8/31/2027       1,102       1,087       1,086       0.2 %
Vitesse Systems Parent, LLC       First lien senior secured loan   12.63% (S + 7.00%)     12/22/2028       31,208       30,430       31,208       4.6 %
                          85,748       83,963       85,837       12.6 %
Automobile components                                                    
Speedstar Holding LLC       First lien senior secured loan   12.79% (S + 7.25%)     1/22/2027       6,012       5,925       5,982       0.9 %
        First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   12.78% (S + 7.25%)     1/22/2027       271       265       270       0.0 %
Vehicle Accessories, Inc.       First lien senior secured loan   10.72% (S + 5.25%)     11/30/2026       21,011       20,770       21,011       3.1 %
        First lien senior secured revolving loan   10.72% (S + 5.25%)     11/30/2026       -       -       -       0.0 %
                          27,294       26,960       27,263       4.0 %
Biotechnology                                                    
Alcami Corporation (Alcami)       First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   12.46% (S + 7.00%)     6/30/2024       -       -       -       0.0 %
        First lien senior secured revolving loan   12.46% (S + 7.00%)     12/21/2028       -       -       -       0.0 %
        First lien senior secured loan   12.46% (S + 7.00%)     12/21/2028       11,618       11,197       11,850       1.7 %
                          11,618       11,197       11,850       1.7 %
Building products                                                    
Ruff Roofers Buyer, LLC       First lien senior secured loan   11.08% (S + 5.75%)     11/19/2029       7,186       6,910       7,186       1.1 %
        First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   11.08% (S + 5.75%)     11/17/2024       -       -       -       0.0 %
        First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   11.08% (S + 5.75%)     11/17/2025       -       -       -       0.0 %
        First lien senior secured revolving loan   11.08% (S + 5.75%)     11/19/2029       -       -       -       0.0 %
Eastern Wholesale Fence       First lien senior secured loan   13.50% (S + 8.00%)     10/30/2025       20,271       19,875       20,069       2.9 %
        First lien senior secured revolving loan   13.50% (S + 8.00%)     10/30/2025       368       364       365       0.0 %
                          27,825       27,149       27,620       4.0 %
Capital markets                                                    
Atria Wealth Solutions, Inc.       First lien senior secured loan   11.97% (S + 6.50%)     5/31/2024       5,087       5,080       5,087       0.7 %
        First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   11.97% (S + 6.50%)     5/31/2024       3,218       3,211       3,218       0.5 %
                          8,305       8,291       8,305       1.2 %
Chemicals                                                    
FAR Technologies Holdings, Inc.(f/k/a Cyalume Technologies Holdings, Inc.)       First lien senior secured loan   10.61% (S + 5.00%)     8/30/2024       1,274       1,271       1,274       0.2 %
Fralock Buyer LLC       First lien senior secured loan   11.61% (S + 6.00%)     4/17/2024       11,654       11,628       11,567       1.7 %
        First lien senior secured revolving loan   11.61% (S + 6.00%)     4/17/2024       449       449       446       0.1 %
Shrieve Chemical Company, LLC       First lien senior secured loan   11.90% (S + 6.38%)     12/2/2024       8,720       8,628       8,720       1.3 %
USALCO, LLC       First lien senior secured loan   11.61% (S + 6.00%)     10/19/2027       18,989       18,684       18,989       2.8 %
        First lien senior secured revolving loan   11.47% (S + 6.00%)     10/19/2026       1,049       1,021       1,049       0.1 %
                          42,135       41,681       42,045       6.2 %
Commercial services & supplies                                                    
Advanced Environmental Monitoring   (7)   First lien senior secured loan   12.01% (S + 6.50%)     1/29/2026       10,158       9,994       10,158       1.5 %
Allentown, LLC       First lien senior secured loan   11.46% (S + 6.00%)     4/22/2027       7,586       7,535       7,586       1.1 %
        First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   11.46% (S + 6.00%)     4/22/2027       1,370       1,354       1,370       0.2 %
        First lien senior secured revolving loan   13.50% (P + 5.00%)     4/22/2027       235       234       235       0.0 %
American Equipment Holdings LLC       First lien senior secured loan   11.86% (S + 6.00%)     11/5/2026       20,045       19,812       19,945       2.9 %
        First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   11.88% (S + 6.00%)     11/5/2026       6,239       6,167       6,208       0.9 %
        First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   11.81% (S + 6.00%)     11/5/2026       4,969       4,905       4,944       0.7 %
        First lien senior secured revolving loan   11.74% (S + 6.00%)     11/5/2026       2,736       2,672       2,723       0.4 %
Arborworks Acquisition LLC   (8)(9)(10)   First lien senior secured loan         11/6/2028       4,688       4,688       4,688       0.7 %
        First lien senior secured revolving loan         11/6/2028       1,253       1,253       1,253       0.2 %
BLP Buyer, Inc. (Bishop Lifting Products)       First lien senior secured loan   11.11% (S + 5.75%)     12/22/2029       26,099       25,549       26,099       3.8 %
        First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   11.11% (S + 5.75%)     12/22/2025       -       -       -       0.0 %
        First lien senior secured revolving loan   11.11% (S + 5.75%)     12/22/2029       273       196       273       0.0 %
Gusmer Enterprises, Inc.       First lien senior secured loan   12.47% (S + 7.00%)     5/7/2027       4,747       4,682       4,735       0.7 %
        First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   12.47% (S + 7.00%)     5/7/2027       7,951       7,798       7,931       1.2 %
        First lien senior secured revolving loan   12.47% (S + 7.00%)     5/7/2027       -       -       -       0.0 %
PMFC Holding, LLC       First lien senior secured loan   13.02% (S + 7.50%)     7/31/2025       5,561       5,427       5,561       0.8 %
        First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   13.03% (S + 7.50%)     7/31/2025       2,789       2,787       2,789       0.4 %
        First lien senior secured revolving loan   13.03% (S + 7.50%)     7/31/2025       547       547       547       0.1 %
Regiment Security Partners LLC       First lien senior secured loan   13.52% (S + 8.00%)     9/15/2026       6,383       6,309       6,383       1.0 %
        First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   13.52% (S + 8.00%)     9/15/2026       2,609       2,588       2,609       0.4 %
        First lien senior secured revolving loan   13.52% (S + 8.00%)     9/15/2026       1,448       1,427       1,448       0.2 %
                          117,686       115,924       117,485       17.2 %

 

See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.

 

F-20

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

Consolidated Schedule of Investments

As of December 31, 2023

(amounts in 000’s, except number of shares, units)

 

                Maturity     Principal /     Amortized     Fair     Percentage of  
Portfolio Company(1)   Footnotes   Investment (2)   Interest Rate   Date     Par     Cost(3)(4)     Value     Net Assets  
Containers & packaging                                                    
Carton Packaging Buyer, Inc. (Century Box)       First lien senior secured loan   11.39% (S + 6.00%)     10/30/2028       24,261       23,605       24,262       3.6 %
        First lien senior secured revolving loan   11.39% (S + 6.00%)     10/30/2028       -       -       -       0.0 %
Drew Foam Companies, Inc.       First lien senior secured loan   12.75% (S + 7.25%)     11/5/2025       7,052       6,997       6,999       1.0 %
        First lien senior secured loan   12.80% (S + 7.25%)     11/5/2025       20,045       19,789       19,895       2.9 %
FCA, LLC (FCA Packaging)       First lien senior secured loan   11.90% (S + 6.50%)     7/18/2028       18,673       18,419       19,047       2.8 %
        First lien senior secured revolving loan   11.90% (S + 6.50%)     7/18/2028       -       -       -       0.0 %
Innopak Industries, Inc.       First lien senior secured loan   11.71% (S + 6.25%)     3/5/2027       28,224       27,564       28,224       4.1 %
                          98,255       96,374       98,427       14.4 %
Diversified telecommunication services                                                    
Network Connex (f/k/a NTI Connect, LLC)       First lien senior secured loan   11.00% (S + 5.50%)     1/31/2026       5,195       5,140       5,196       0.8 %
                          5,195       5,140       5,196       0.8 %
Food products                                                    
BC CS 2, L.P. (Cuisine Solutions)   (6)(11)       13.55% (S + 8.00%)     7/8/2028       21,555       21,063       21,555       3.2 %
BR PJK Produce, LLC (Keany)       First lien senior secured loan   11.50% (S + 6.00%)     11/14/2027       29,564       28,973       29,564       4.3 %
        First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   11.46% (S + 6.00%)     11/14/2027       2,938       2,812       2,938       0.4 %
City Line Distributors, LLC       First lien senior secured loan   11.47% (S + 6.00%)     8/31/2028       8,895       8,576       8,895       1.3 %
        First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   11.47% (S + 6.00%)     3/3/2025       -       -       -       0.0 %
        First lien senior secured revolving loan   11.47% (S + 6.00%)     8/31/2028       -       -       -       0.0 %
Gulf Pacific Holdings, LLC       First lien senior secured loan   11.25% (S + 5.75%)     9/30/2028       20,180       19,847       20,079       2.9 %
        First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   11.38% (S + 5.75%)     9/30/2028       1,701       1,618       1,693       0.2 %
        First lien senior secured revolving loan   11.29% (S + 5.75%)     9/30/2028       2,697       2,602       2,683       0.4 %
IF&P Foods, LLC (FreshEdge)   First lien senior secured loan   11.07% (S + 5.63%)     10/3/2028       27,245       26,684       26,904       4.0 %
        First lien senior secured loan   11.48% (S + 6.00%)     10/3/2028       216       211       213       0.0 %
        First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   11.07% (S + 5.63%)     10/3/2028       4,045       3,969       3,994       0.6 %
        First lien senior secured revolving loan   10.91% (S + 5.63%)     10/3/2028       1,759       1,690       1,737       0.3 %
J&K Ingredients, LLC       First lien senior secured loan   11.63% (S + 6.25%)     11/16/2028       11,581       11,295       11,581       1.7 %
Siegel Egg Co., LLC       First lien senior secured loan   11.99% (S + 6.50%)     12/29/2026       15,466       15,290       14,616       2.1 %
        First lien senior secured revolving loan   11.99% (S + 6.50%)     12/29/2026       2,594       2,557       2,451       0.4 %
Worldwide Produce Acquisition, LLC       First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   11.60% (S + 6.25%)     1/18/2029       631       587       625       0.1 %
        First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   11.60% (S + 6.25%)     4/18/2024       -       -       -       0.0 %
        First lien senior secured revolving loan   11.60% (S + 6.25%)     1/18/2029       198       190       196       0.0 %
        First lien senior secured loan   11.60% (S + 6.25%)     1/18/2029       2,860       2,786       2,832       0.4 %
                          154,125       150,750       152,556       22.3 %
Health care providers & services                                                    
Brightview, LLC       First lien senior secured loan   11.47% (S + 6.00%)     12/14/2026       12,870       12,855       12,645       1.9 %
        First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   11.47% (S + 6.00%)     12/14/2026       1,719       1,714       1,689       0.3 %
        First lien senior secured revolving loan   11.47% (S + 6.00%)     12/14/2026       774       774       761       0.1 %
Guardian Dentistry Partners       First lien senior secured loan   11.97% (S + 6.50%)     8/20/2026       8,057       7,929       8,057       1.2 %
        First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   11.97% (S + 6.50%)     8/20/2026       15,682       15,464       15,682       2.3 %
        First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   11.97% (S + 6.50%)     8/20/2026       5,808       5,808       5,808       0.9 %
Guided Practice Solutions: Dental, LLC (GPS)       First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   11.72% (S + 6.25%)     12/29/2025       6,475       6,056       6,475       0.9 %
Light Wave Dental Management LLC       First lien senior secured revolving loan   12.35% (S + 7.00%)     6/30/2029       2,181       2,099       2,181       0.3 %
        First lien senior secured loan   12.35% (S + 7.00%)     6/30/2029       22,423       21,834       22,423       3.3 %
SGA Dental Partners Holdings, LLC       First lien senior secured loan   11.67% (S + 6.00%)     12/30/2026       11,828       11,683       11,828       1.7 %
        First lien senior secured loan   11.61% (S + 6.00%)     12/30/2026       1,681       1,563       1,681       0.2 %
        First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   11.67% (S + 6.00%)     12/30/2026       11,024       10,856       11,024       1.6 %
        First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   11.67% (S + 6.00%)     4/19/2024       -       -       -       0.0 %
        First lien senior secured revolving loan   11.67% (S + 6.00%)     12/30/2026       -       -       -       0.0 %
                          100,522       98,635       100,254       14.7 %

 

See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.

 

F-21

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

Consolidated Schedule of Investments

As of December 31, 2023

(amounts in 000’s, except number of shares, units)

 

                Maturity     Principal /     Amortized     Fair     Percentage of  
Portfolio Company(1)   Footnotes   Investment (2)   Interest Rate   Date     Par     Cost(3)(4)     Value      Net Assets  
Health care equipment & supplies                                                    
LSL Industries, LLC (LSL Healthcare)       First lien senior secured loan   12.15% (S + 6.50%)     11/3/2027       19,529       18,911       19,334       2.8 %
        First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   12.15% (S + 6.50%)     11/3/2024       -       -       -       0.0 %
        First lien senior secured revolving loan   12.15% (S + 6.50%)     11/3/2027       -       -       -       0.0 %
                          19,529       18,911       19,334       2.8 %
Household durables                                                    
Curio Brands, LLC       First lien senior secured loan   10.96% (S + 5.50%)     12/21/2027       17,173       16,859       16,830       2.5 %
        First lien senior secured revolving loan   10.96% (S + 5.50%)     12/21/2027       -       -       -       0.0 %
        First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   10.96% (S + 5.50%)     12/21/2027       4,121       4,121       4,039       0.6 %
                          21,294       20,980       20,869       3.1 %
Household products                                                    
Home Brands Group Holdings, Inc. (ReBath)       First lien senior secured loan   10.29% (S + 4.75%)     11/8/2026       17,052       16,826       16,967       2.5 %
        First lien senior secured revolving loan   10.29% (S + 4.75%)     11/8/2026       -       -       -       0.0 %
                          17,052       16,826       16,967       2.5 %
Insurance                                                    
Allcat Claims Service, LLC       First lien senior secured loan   11.53% (S + 6.00%)     7/7/2027       7,717       7,551       7,717       1.1 %
        First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   11.53% (S + 6.00%)     7/7/2027       21,605       21,266       21,605       3.2 %
        First lien senior secured revolving loan   11.53% (S + 6.00%)     7/7/2027       -       -       -       0.0 %
                          29,322       28,817       29,322       4.3 %
IT services                                                    
Domain Information Services Inc. (Integris)       First lien senior secured loan   11.29% (S + 5.75%)     9/30/2025       20,444       20,122       20,342       3.0 %
Improving Acquisition LLC       First lien senior secured loan   12.22% (S + 6.50%)     7/26/2027       31,650       31,140       31,492       4.6 %
        First lien senior secured revolving loan   12.22% (S + 6.50%)     7/26/2027       -       -       -       0.0 %
                          52,094       51,262       51,834       7.6 %
Leisure products                                                    
BCI Burke Holding Corp.       First lien senior secured loan   11.11% (S + 5.50%)     12/14/2027       15,373       15,219       15,603       2.3 %
        First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   11.11% (S + 5.50%)     12/14/2027       578       545       586       0.1 %
        First lien senior secured revolving loan   11.11% (S + 5.50%)     6/14/2027       -       -       -       0.0 %
VENUplus, Inc. (f/k/a CTM Group, Inc.)       First lien senior secured loan   12.29% (S + 6.75%)     11/30/2026       4,420       4,325       4,398       0.6 %
MacNeill Pride Group       First lien senior secured loan   11.86% (S + 6.25%)     4/22/2026       8,254       8,198       8,151       1.2 %
        First lien senior secured delayed draw loan   11.86% (S + 6.25%)     4/22/2026       3,277       3,221       3,236       0.5 %
        First lien senior secured revolving loan   11.86% (S + 6.25%)     4/22/2026       -       -       -       0.0 %
Trademark Global LLC       First lien senior secured loan   12.97% (S +7.50%, 1.50% is PIK)     7/30/2024       11,798       11,776       10,736       1.6 %
        First lien senior secured revolving loan   12.97% (S +7.50%, 1.50% is PIK)     7/30/2024       2,630       2,627       2,393       0.3 %
                          46,330       45,911       45,103       6.6 %
Machinery                                                    
Pennsylvania Machine Works, LLC       First lien senior secured loan   11.61% (S + 6.00%)     3/6/2027       1,908       1,896       1,908       0.3 %
PVI Holdings, Inc       First lien senior secured loan   12.16% (S + 6.77%)     1/18/2028       23,895       23,602       24,074       3.5 %
Techniks Holdings, LLC / Eppinger Holdings Germany GMBH   (6)   First lien senior secured loan   12.75% (S + 7.25%)     2/4/2025       24,812       24,468       24,688       3.6 %
        First lien senior secured revolving loan   11.80% (S + 6.25%)     2/4/2025       1,050       1,003       1,045       0.2 %
                          51,665       50,969       51,715       7.6 %
Personal care products                                                    
DRS Holdings III, Inc. (Dr. Scholl’s)       First lien senior secured loan   11.71% (S + 6.25%)     11/1/2025       11,004       10,954       11,004       1.6 %
        First lien senior secured revolving loan   11.71% (S + 6.25%)     11/1/2025       -       -       -       0.0 %
PH Beauty Holdings III, Inc.       First lien senior secured loan   10.65% (S + 5.00%)     9/28/2025       9,442       9,278       9,183       1.3 %
Silk Holdings III Corp. (Suave)       First lien senior secured loan   13.10% (S + 7.75%)     5/1/2029       19,900       19,351       20,298       3.0 %
                          40,346       39,583       40,485       5.9 %
Pharmaceuticals                                                    
Foundation Consumer Brands       First lien senior secured loan   11.79% (S + 6.25%)     2/12/2027       6,781       6,744       6,832       1.0 %
        First lien senior secured revolving loan   11.79% (S + 6.25%)     2/12/2027       -       -       -       0.0 %
                          6,781       6,744       6,832       1.0 %

 

See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.

 

F-22

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

Consolidated Schedule of Investments

As of December 31, 2023

(amounts in 000’s, except number of shares, units)

 

             Maturity   Principal /   Amortized   Fair   Percentage 
Portfolio Company(1)   Footnotes  Investment (2)  Interest Rate  Date   Par   Cost(3)(4)   Value   of Net Assets 
Professional services                              
4 Over International, LLC      First lien senior secured loan  12.46% (S + 7.00%)   12/7/2026    19,438    18,757    19,438    2.8%
DISA Holdings Corp. (DISA)      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan  10.84% (S + 5.50%)   9/9/2028    3,714    3,578    3,714    0.5%
       First lien senior secured revolving loan  10.84% (S + 5.50%)   9/9/2028    392    347    392    0.1%
       First lien senior secured loan  10.84% (S + 5.50%)   9/9/2028    22,177    21,625    22,177    3.2%
Universal Marine Medical Supply International, LLC (Unimed)      First lien senior secured loan  13.01% (S + 7.50%)   12/5/2027    13,527    13,253    13,527    2.0%
       First lien senior secured revolving loan  13.00% (S + 7.50%)   12/5/2027    2,544    2,494    2,544    0.4%
                   61,792    60,054    61,792    9.0%
Software                                   
AIDC Intermediate Co 2, LLC (Peak Technologies)      First lien senior secured loan  11.80% (S + 6.25%)   7/22/2027    34,650    33,736    34,650    5.1%
Specialty retail                                   
Sundance Holdings Group, LLC   (7)  First lien senior secured loan  15.03% (S + 9.50%, 1.50% is PIK)   5/1/2024    9,210    9,022    8,911    1.3%
       First lien senior secured delayed draw loan  15.03% (S + 9.50%, 1.50% is PIK)   5/1/2024    -    -    -    0.0%
                   9,210    9,022    8,911    1.3%
Textiles, apparel & luxury goods                                   
American Soccer Company, Incorporated (SCORE)      First lien senior secured loan  12.75% (S + 7.25%)   7/20/2027    29,816    29,317    29,145    4.3%
       First lien senior secured revolving loan  12.75% (S + 7.25%)   7/20/2027    2,128    2,067    2,080    0.3%
BEL USA, LLC      First lien senior secured loan  12.53% (S + 7.00%)   6/2/2026    5,804    5,774    5,804    0.8%
       First lien senior secured loan  12.53% (S + 7.00%)   6/2/2026    96    95    96    0.0%
YS Garments, LLC      First lien senior secured loan  13.00% (S + 7.50%)   8/9/2026    6,849    6,758    6,729    1.0%
                   44,693    44,011    43,854    6.4%
Trading companies & distributors                                   
BCDI Meteor Acquisition, LLC (Meteor)      First lien senior secured loan  12.45% (S + 7.00%)   6/29/2028    16,297    15,955    16,297    2.4%
Broder Bros., Co.      First lien senior secured loan  11.61% (S+ 6.00%)   12/4/2025    4,640    4,439    4,640    0.7%
CGI Automated Manufacturing, LLC      First lien senior secured loan  12.61% (S + 7.00%)   12/17/2026    20,510    19,849    20,459    3.0%
       First lien senior secured loan  12.61% (S + 7.00%)   12/17/2026    6,681    6,559    6,664    1.0%
       First lien senior secured delayed draw loan  12.61% (S + 7.00%)   12/17/2026    3,616    3,510    3,607    0.5%
       First lien senior secured revolving loan  12.61% (S + 7.00%)   12/17/2026    327    244    327    0.0%
EIS Legacy, LLC      First lien senior secured loan  11.24% (S + 5.75%)   11/1/2027    18,079    17,838    18,079    2.6%
       First lien senior secured loan  11.27% (S + 5.75%)   11/1/2027    9,666    9,356    9,666    1.4%
       First lien senior secured delayed draw loan  11.24% (S + 5.75%)   4/20/2025    -    -    -    0.0%
       First lien senior secured revolving loan  11.24% (S + 5.75%)   11/1/2027    -    -    -    0.0%
Engineered Fastener Company, LLC (EFC International)      First lien senior secured loan  12.00% (S + 6.50%)   11/1/2027    23,604    23,113    23,899    3.5%
Genuine Cable Group, LLC      First lien senior secured loan  10.96% (S + 5.50%)   11/1/2026    29,057    28,336    28,984    4.2%
       First lien senior secured loan  10.96% (S + 5.50%)   11/1/2026    5,506    5,347    5,492    0.8%
I.D. Images Acquisition, LLC      First lien senior secured loan  11.75% (S + 6.25%)   7/30/2026    13,651    13,538    13,651    2.0%
       First lien senior secured delayed draw loan  11.75% (S + 6.25%)   7/30/2026    2,486    2,450    2,486    0.4%
       First lien senior secured loan  11.70% (S + 6.25%)   7/30/2026    4,522    4,457    4,522    0.7%
       First lien senior secured loan  11.75% (S + 6.25%)   7/30/2026    1,043    1,033    1,043    0.2%
       First lien senior secured revolving loan  11.75% (S + 6.25%)   7/30/2026    -    -    -    0.0%
Krayden Holdings, Inc.      First lien senior secured delayed draw loan  11.20% (S + 5.75%)   3/1/2025    -    -    -    0.0%
       First lien senior secured delayed draw loan  11.20% (S + 5.75%)   3/1/2025    -    -    -    0.0%
       First lien senior secured revolving loan  11.20% (S + 5.75%)   3/1/2029    -    -    -    0.0%
       First lien senior secured loan  11.20% (S + 5.75%)   3/1/2029    9,491    9,099    9,491    1.4%
OAO Acquisitions, Inc. (BearCom)      First lien senior secured loan  11.61% (S + 6.25%)   12/27/2029    21,370    20,979    21,370    3.1%
       First lien senior secured delayed draw loan  11.61% (S + 6.25%)   12/27/2025    -    -    -    0.0%
       First lien senior secured revolving loan  11.61% (S + 6.25%)   12/27/2029    -    -    -    0.0%
United Safety & Survivability Corporation (USSC)      First lien senior secured loan  11.79% (S + 6.25%)   9/30/2027    12,436    12,147    12,436    1.8%
       First lien senior secured loan 

11.79% (S + 6.25%)

   

9/28/2027

    

1,607

    

1,490

    

1,607

    

0.3

%
       First lien senior secured delayed draw loan  11.79% (S + 6.25%)   9/30/2027    3,160    3,110    3,160    0.5%
       First lien senior secured revolving loan  11.79% (S + 6.25%)   9/30/2027    870    860    870    0.1%
                   208,619    203,709    208,750    30.6%
Wireless telecommunication services                                   
Centerline Communications, LLC      First lien senior secured loan  11.53% (S + 6.00%)   8/10/2027    14,945    14,751    13,936    2.0%
       First lien senior secured delayed draw loan  11.53% (S + 6.00%)   8/10/2027    7,044    6,954    6,568    1.0%
       First lien senior secured delayed draw loan  11.53% (S + 6.00%)   8/10/2027    6,202    6,112    5,783    0.9%
       First lien senior secured revolving loan  11.53% (S + 6.00%)   8/10/2027    1,800    1,778    1,679    0.2%
       First lien senior secured loan  11.53% (S + 6.00%)   8/10/2027    1,020    996    952    0.1%
                   31,011    30,591    28,918    4.2%
Total Private Credit Debt Investments                  1,353,096    1,327,190    1,346,174    197.1%

 

See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.

 

F-23

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

Consolidated Schedule of Investments

As of December 31, 2023

(amounts in 000’s, except number of shares, units)

 

   Footnotes  Number of
Shares/Units
   Cost   Fair
Value
   Percentage of
Net Assets
 
Equity Investments(9)                   
Automobile components                   
Vehicle Accessories, Inc. - Class A common  (12)   128,250    -    326    0.0%
Vehicle Accessories, Inc. - preferred  (12)   250,000    250    292    0.1%
       378,250    250    618    0.1%
Commercial services & supplies                       
American Equipment Holdings LLC - Class A units  (13)   426    284    508    0.1%
BLP Buyer, Inc. (Bishop Lifting Products) - Class A common  (14)   582,469    652    1,200    0.1%
Arborworks Acquisition LLC – Class A preferred units  (10)   21,716    9,179    9,287    1.4%
Arborworks Acquisition LLC – Class B preferred units  (10)   21,716    -    -    0.0%
Arborworks Acquisition LLC – Class A common units  (10)   2,604    -    -    0.0%
       628,931    10,115    10,995    1.6%
Food products                       
BC CS 2, L.P. (Cuisine Solutions)  (6)(11)   2,000,000    2,000    2,611    0.4%
City Line Distributors, LLC - Class A units  (15)   418,416    418    418    0.1%
Gulf Pacific Holdings, LLC - Class A common  (13)   250    250    189    0.0%
Gulf Pacific Holdings, LLC - Class C common  (13)   250    -    -    0.0%
IF&P Foods, LLC (FreshEdge) - Class A preferred  (13)   750    750    905    0.1%
IF&P Foods, LLC (FreshEdge) - Class B common  (13)   750    -    -    0.0%
Siegel Parent, LLC  (16)   250    250    72    0.0%
       2,420,666    3,668    4,195    0.6%
Healthcare equipment & supplies                       
LSL Industries, LLC (LSL Healthcare)  (13)   7,500    750    552    0.1%
IT services                       
Domain Information Services Inc. (Integris)      250,000    250    344    0.0%
Specialty retail                       
Sundance Direct Holdings, Inc. - common      21,479    -    -    0.0%
Textiles, apparel & luxury goods                       
American Soccer Company, Incorporated (SCORE)  (16)   1,000,000    1,000    620    0.1%
Total Private Equity Investments           16,033    17,324    2.5%
                        
Total Private Investments           1,343,223    1,363,498    199.6%

 

        Number of           Fair     Percentage of  
    Footnotes   Shares     Cost     Value      Net Assets  
Short-Term Investments                            
First American Treasury Obligations Fund - Institutional Class Z, 5.21%   (17)     12,802,362       12,802       12,802       1.9 %
Total Short-Term Investments         12,802,362       12,802       12,802       1.9 %
                                     
Total Investments               $ 1,356,025     $ 1,376,300       201.5 %
Liabilities in Excess of Other Assets                         (693,244 )     (101.5 )%
Net Assets                       $ 683,056       100.0 %

  

(1)As of December 31, 2023, all investments are non-controlled, non-affiliated investments. Non-controlled, non-affiliated investments are defined as investments in which the Company owns less than 5% of the portfolio company’s outstanding voting securities and does not have the power to exercise control over the management or policies of such portfolio company.

 

See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.

 

F-24

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

Consolidated Schedule of Investments

As of December 31, 2023

(amounts in 000’s, except number of shares, units)

 

(2)Debt investments are pledged to the Company’s credit facilities, and a single debt investment may be divided into parts that are individually pledged to separate credit facilities.

 

(3)The amortized cost represents the original cost adjusted for the amortization of discounts and premiums, as applicable, on debt investments using the effective interest method.

 

(4)As of December 31, 2023, the tax cost of the Company’s investments approximates their amortized cost.

 

(5)Loan contains a variable rate structure, that may be subject to an interest rate floor. Variable rate loans bear interest at a rate that may be determined by reference to either the Secured Overnight Funding Rate (“SOFR” or “S”) (which can include one-, three- or six-month SOFR), or an alternate base rate (which can include the Federal Funds Effective Rate or the Prime Rate or “P”).

 

(6)Non-qualifying investment as defined by Section 55(a) of the Investment Company Act of 1940.  The Company may not acquire any non-qualifying asset unless, at the time of acquisition, qualifying assets represent at least 70% of the Company’s total assets. As of December 31, 2023, 4.8% of the Company’s total assets were in non-qualifying investments.

 

(7)The Company may be entitled to receive additional interest as a result of an arrangement with other lenders in the syndication. In exchange for the higher interest rate, the “last-out” portion is at a greater risk of loss.  Certain lenders represent a “first out” portion of the investment and have priority to the “last-out” portion with respect to payments of principal and interest.

 

(8)Debt investment on non-accrual status as of December 31, 2023.

 

(9)Non-income producing investment.

 

(10)In November 2023, the Company completed a restructure of the investment in Arborworks Acquisition LLC whereby the existing term loan and revolver were restructured to a new term loan and preferred and common equity. KABDC Corp II, LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of the Company, holds the preferred and common equity of Arborworks Acquisition LLC that the Company owns following this restructure.

 

(11)The Company has a senior secured loan in an investment vehicle (BC CS 2, L.P.) that is collateralized by a preferred stock investment in Cuisine Solutions, Inc..

 

(12)The Company owns 0.19% of the common equity and 0.43% of the preferred equity of Vehicle Accessories, Inc.

 

(13)The Company owns 27.15% of a pass-through, taxable limited liability company, KSCF IV Equity Aggregator Blocker, LLC (the “Aggregator Blocker”), which holds the Company’s equity investments in American Equipment Holdings LLC, Gulf Pacific Holdings, LLC, IF&P Foods, LLC (FreshEdge) and LSL Industries, LLC (LSL Healthcare). Through the Company’s ownership of the Aggregator Blocker, the Company owns the respective units of each company listed above in the Schedule of Investments.

 

(14)The Company owns 0.53% of the common equity BLP Buyer, Inc. (Bishop Lifting Products).

 

(15)KABDC Corp, LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of the Company, owns 0.62% of the common equity of City Line Distributors, LLC.

 

(16)The Company owns 33.95% of a pass-through limited liability company, KSCF IV Equity Aggregator, LLC (the “Aggregator”), which holds the Company’s equity investments in Siegel Parent, LLC and American Soccer Company, Incorporated (SCORE).  The Aggregator’s ownership of Siegel Parent, LLC is 1.1442%. Through the Company’s ownership of the Aggregator, the Company owns the respective units of each company listed above in the Schedule of Investments.

 

(17)The indicated rate is the yield as of December 31, 2023.

 

See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.

 

F-25

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

(amounts in 000’s, except share and per share amounts)

 

Note 1. Organization

 

Organization

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc. (the “Company”) is an externally managed, closed-end, non-diversified management investment company that has elected to be regulated as a business development company (“BDC”) under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “1940 Act”). In addition, for U.S. federal income tax purposes, the Company intends to qualify as a regulated investment company (“RIC”) under Subchapter M of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the “Code”).

 

The Company is a Delaware corporation formed to make investments in middle-market companies and commenced operations on February 5, 2021.

 

The Company is managed by KA Credit Advisors, LLC (the “Advisor”), an indirect controlled subsidiary of Kayne Anderson Capital Advisors, L.P. (“Kayne Anderson”), a prominent alternative investment management firm. The Advisor operates within Kayne Anderson’s middle market private credit platform (“KAPC” or “Kayne Anderson Private Credit”). The Advisor is registered with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) under the Investment Advisory Act of 1940, as amended. Subject to the overall supervision of the Company’s board of directors (the “Board”), the Advisor is responsible for originating prospective investments, conducting research and due diligence investigations on potential investments, analyzing investment opportunities, negotiating and structuring investments, determining the value of the investments and monitoring its investments and portfolio companies on an ongoing basis. The Board consists of seven directors, four of whom are independent.

 

The Company’s investment objective is to generate current income and, to a lesser extent, capital appreciation primarily through debt investments in middle-market companies.

 

On May 24, 2024, the Company completed its initial public offering (“IPO”), issuing 6,000,000 shares of its common stock at a public offering price of $16.63 per share. Net of underwriting fees and offering expenses, the Company received net cash proceeds of $92,363. The Company’s common stock began trading on the New York Stock Exchange (“NYSE”) under the ticker symbol “KBDC” on May 22, 2024.

 

Prior to its IPO, the Company conducted private offerings of its common stock to investors in reliance on exemptions from the registration requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “Securities Act”). At the closing of any private offering, each investor made a capital commitment to purchase shares of its common stock pursuant to a subscription agreement entered into with the Company. From its initial closing of the private offering (the “Initial Closing”) on February 5, 2021 through its final capital call closing on April 2, 2024, the Company issued shares of its common stock equal to the aggregate capital commitment of $1,046,928. Following the final closing on April 2, 2024, the Company had no remaining undrawn capital commitments.

 

F-26

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements
(amounts in 000’s, except share and per share amounts)

 

Note 2. Significant Accounting Policies

 

A. Basis of Presentation—the accompanying financial statements have been prepared in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America (“GAAP”). The Company is an investment company and follows accounting and reporting guidance of the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) Accounting Standards Codification (ASC) Topic 946 — “Financial Services — Investment Companies.” In the opinion of management, all adjustments, which are of a normal recurring nature, considered necessary for the fair statement of the consolidated financial statements for the periods presented, have been included.

 

B. Consolidation—As provided under Regulation S-X and ASC Topic 946 – “Financial Services – Investment Companies”, the Company will generally not consolidate its investment in a company other than a wholly-owned investment company or controlled operating company whose business consists of providing services to the Company.

 

Accordingly, the Company consolidated the accounts of the Company’s wholly-owned subsidiaries, Kayne Anderson BDC Financing, LLC, (“KABDCF”); Kayne Anderson BDC Financing II, LLC (“KABDCF II”), and KABDC Corp, LLC in its consolidated financial statements. All significant intercompany balances and transactions have been eliminated in consolidation. KABDC Corp, LLC is a Delaware LLC that has elected to be treated as a corporation for U.S. tax purposes and was formed to facilitate compliance with the requirements to be treated as a RIC under the Code by holding (directly or indirectly through subsidiaries) equity or equity related investments in portfolio companies organized as limited liability companies or limited partnerships.

 

C. Use of Estimates—the preparation of financial statements in conformity with GAAP requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amount of assets and liabilities and disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities as of the date of the financial statements and the reported amounts of income and expenses during the period. Actual results could differ materially from those estimates.

 

D. Cash and Cash Equivalents—cash and cash equivalents include short-term, liquid investments with an original maturity of three months or less and include money market fund accounts. Cash equivalents, which are the Company’s investments in money market fund accounts, are presented on the Company’s consolidated schedule of investments, and within investments on the Company’s consolidated statement of assets and liabilities.

 

E. Investment Valuation, Fair Value—the Company conducts the valuation of its investments consistent with GAAP and the 1940 Act. The Company’s investments will be valued no less frequently than quarterly, in accordance with the terms of Topic 820 of the Financial Accounting Standards Board’s Accounting Standards Codification, Fair Value Measurement and Disclosures (“ASC 820”).

 

Pursuant to Rule 2a-5 under the 1940 Act, the Board of Directors has designated the Advisor as the “valuation designee” to perform fair value determinations of the Company’s portfolio holdings, subject to oversight by and periodic reporting to the Board. The valuation designee performs fair valuation of the Company’s portfolio holdings in accordance with the Advisor’s Valuation Program, as approved by the Board.

 

Traded Investments (Level 1 or Level 2)

 

Investments for which market quotations are readily available will typically be valued at those market quotations. Traded investments such as corporate bonds, preferred stock, bank notes, broadly syndicated loans or loan participations are valued by using the bid price provided by an independent pricing service, by an independent broker, the agent bank, syndicate bank or principal market maker. When price quotes for investments are not available, or such prices are stale or do not represent fair value in the judgment of the Company’s Advisor, fair market value will be determined using the Advisor’s valuation process for investments that are privately issued or otherwise restricted as to resale.

 

F-27

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements
(amounts in 000’s, except share and per share amounts)

 

The Company may also invest, to a lesser extent, in equity securities purchased in conjunction with debt investments. While the Company anticipates these equity securities to be issued by privately held companies, the Company may hold equity securities that are publicly traded. Equity securities listed on any exchange other than the NASDAQ Stock Market, Inc. (“NASDAQ”) are valued, except as indicated below, at the last sale price on the business day as of which such value is being determined. If there has been no sale on such day, the securities are valued at the mean of the most recent bid and ask prices on such day. Securities admitted to trade on the NASDAQ are valued at the NASDAQ official closing price. Equity securities traded on more than one securities exchange are valued at the last sale price on the business day as of which such value is being determined at the close of the exchange representing the principal market for such securities. Equity securities traded in the over-the-counter market, but excluding securities admitted to trading on the NASDAQ, are valued at the closing bid prices.

 

Non-Traded Investments (Level 3)

 

Investments that are privately issued or otherwise restricted as to resale, as well as any security for which (a) reliable market quotations are not available in the judgment of the Company’s Advisor, or (b) the independent pricing service or independent broker does not provide prices or provides a price that in the judgment of the Company’s Advisor is stale or does not represent fair value, shall each be valued in a manner that most fairly reflects fair value of the security on the valuation date. The Company expects that a significant majority of its investments will be Level 3 investments. Unless otherwise determined by the Advisor, the following valuation process is used for the Company’s Level 3 investments:

 

  Valuation Designee. The applicable investments will be valued no less frequently than quarterly by the Advisor, with new investments valued at the time such investment was made. The value of each Level 3 investment will be initially reviewed by the persons responsible for such portfolio company or investment. The Advisor will use a standardized template designed to approximate fair market value based on observable market inputs, updated credit statistics and unobservable inputs to determine a preliminary value. The Advisor will specify the titles of the persons responsible for determining the fair value of Company investments, including by specifying the particular functions for which they are responsible, and will reasonably segregate fair value determinations from the portfolio management of the Company such that the portfolio manager(s) may not determine, or effectively determine by exerting substantial influence on, the fair values ascribed to portfolio investments.

 

  Valuation Firm. Quarterly, a third-party valuation firm engaged by the Advisor reviews the valuation methodologies and calculations employed for each of the Company’s investments that the Advisor has placed on the “watch list” and approximately 25% of the Company’s remaining investments. The third-party valuation firm will review and independently value all of the Level 3 investments at least once per year, on a rolling twelve-month basis. The quarterly report issued by the third-party valuation firm will provide positive assurance on the fair values of the investments reviewed.

 

  Oversight. The Board has appointed the Advisor as the valuation designee for the Company for purposes of making determinations of fair value as permitted by Rule 2a-5 under the 1940 Act. The Audit Committee shall aid the Board in overseeing the Advisor’s fair valuation of securities that are not publicly traded or for which current market values are not readily available. The Audit Committee shall meet quarterly to review the fair value determinations, processes and written reports of the Advisor as part of the Board’s oversight responsibilities.

 

Determination of fair value involves subjective judgments and estimates. Accordingly, the notes to the Company’s financial statements express the uncertainty with respect to the possible effect of such valuations, and any change in such valuations, on the Company’s financial statements.

 

F. Interest Income Recognition — Interest income is recorded on an accrual basis and includes the accretion of discounts, amortization of premiums and payment-in-kind (“PIK”) interest. Discounts from and premiums to par value on investments purchased are accreted/amortized into interest income over the life of the respective security using the effective yield method. To the extent loans contain PIK provisions, PIK interest, computed at the contractual rate specified in each applicable agreement, is accrued and recorded as interest income and added to the principal balance of the loan. PIK interest income added to the principal balance is generally collected upon repayment of the outstanding principal. The Company does not accrue PIK interest if, in the opinion of the Advisor, the portfolio company valuation indicates that the PIK interest is not likely to be collectible. If the Company believes PIK is not expected to be realized, the investment generating PIK will be placed on non-accrual status. When a PIK investment is placed on non-accrual status, the accrued, uncapitalized interest is generally reversed through PIK interest income. Previously capitalized PIK interest is not reversed when an investment is placed on non-accrual status. To maintain the Company’s status as a RIC, this non-cash source of income must be paid out to stockholders in the form of dividends for the year the income was earned, even though the Company has not yet collected the cash. The amortized cost of investments represents the original cost adjusted for any accretion of discounts, amortization of premiums and PIK interest. For the years ended December 31, 2024, 2023 and 2022, the Company had $2,706, $1,652 and $151, respectively, of PIK interest income included in interest income, which represents 1.3%, 1.0% and 0.2%, respectively, of aggregate interest income.

 

F-28

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements
(amounts in 000’s, except share and per share amounts)

 

Loans are generally placed on non-accrual status when it has been determined that a significant impairment in the financial condition and ability of the borrower to repay principal and interest has occurred and is expected to continue such that it is probable the collectability of full amount of the loan (principal and interest) is doubtful. Accrued and unpaid interest is generally reversed when a loan is placed on non-accrual status. If cash payments are received subsequent to a loan being placed on non-accrual status, these payments will first be applied to previously accrued but uncollected interest, then to recover the principal. Additionally, any original issue discount and market discount are no longer accreted to interest income as of the date the loan is placed on non-accrual status. Non-accrual loans are restored to accrual status when past due principal and interest are paid or there is no longer a reasonable doubt that such principal or interest will be collected in full and, in the Company’s judgment, principal and interest are likely to remain current. The Company may make exceptions to this policy if the loan has sufficient collateral value (i.e., typically measured as enterprise value of the portfolio company) or is in the process of collection. As of December 31, 2024, the Company had three debt investments on non-accrual status, which compromised 1.6% and 1.3%, respectively, of total debt investments at cost and fair value. As of December 31, 2023, the Company had one debt investment on non-accrual status, which represented 0.4% and 0.4% of total debt investments at cost and fair value, respectively. As of December 31, 2022, the Company did not have any debt investments in portfolio companies on non-accrual status.

 

G. Debt Issuance Costs — Costs incurred by the Company related to the issuance of its debt (credit facilities) are capitalized and amortized over the period the debt is outstanding. The Company has classified the costs incurred to issue its credit facilities as a deduction from the carrying value of the credit facilities on the Statement of Assets and Liabilities. For the purpose of calculating the Company’s asset coverage ratios pursuant to the 1940 Act, deferred issuance costs are not deducted from the carrying value of debt or preferred stock.

 

H. Dividends to Common Stockholders — Dividends to common stockholders are recorded on the record date. The amount to be paid out as a dividend is determined by the Company’s board of directors each quarter and is generally based upon the earnings estimated by management and considers the level of undistributed taxable income carried forward from the prior year for distribution in the current year. Net realized capital gains, if any, are generally distributed, although the Company may decide to retain such capital gains for investment.

 

I. Income Taxes — it is the Company’s intention to continue to be treated as and to qualify each year for special tax treatment afforded a RIC under the Code. As long as the Company meets certain requirements that govern its sources of income, diversification of assets and timely distribution of earnings to stockholders, the Company will not be subject to U.S. federal income tax.

 

The Company must pay distributions equal to 90% of its investment company taxable income (ordinary income and short-term capital gains) to qualify as a RIC and it must distribute all of its taxable income (ordinary income, short-term capital gains and long-term capital gains) to avoid federal income taxes. The Company will be subject to federal income tax on any undistributed portion of income. For purposes of the distribution test, the Company may elect to treat as paid on the last day of its taxable year all or part of any distributions that are declared after the end of its taxable year if such distributions are declared before the due date of its tax return, including any extensions.

 

All RICs are subject to a non-deductible 4% excise tax on income that is not distributed on a timely basis in accordance with the calendar year distribution requirements. To avoid the tax, the Company must distribute during each calendar year an amount at least equal to the sum of (i) 98% of its ordinary income for the calendar year, (ii) 98.2% of its net capital gains for the one-year period ending on December 31, the last day of our taxable year, and (iii) undistributed amounts from previous years on which the Company paid no U.S. federal income tax. A distribution will be treated as paid during the calendar year if it is paid during the calendar year or declared by the Company in October, November or December of such year, payable to stockholders of record on a date during such months and paid by the Company no later than January of the following year. Any such distributions paid during January of the following year will be deemed to be received by stockholders on December 31 of the year the distributions are declared, rather than when the distributions are actually received.

 

F-29

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements
(amounts in 000’s, except share and per share amounts)

 

The Company’s wholly owned subsidiary, KABDC Corp, LLC has elected to be a corporation and is obligated to pay federal and state income tax on its taxable income. KABDC Corp, LLC invests in partnerships and includes its allocable share of the taxable income or loss in computing its own taxable income. Deferred income taxes reflect (i) taxes on unrealized gains (losses), which are attributable to the difference between fair value and tax cost basis, (ii) the net tax effects of temporary differences between the carrying amounts of assets and liabilities for financial reporting purposes and the amounts used for income tax purposes and (iii) the net tax benefit of accumulated net operating and capital losses.

 

To the extent KABDC Corp, LLC has a deferred tax asset, consideration is given as to whether or not a valuation allowance is required. The need to establish a valuation allowance for deferred tax assets is assessed periodically based on the Income Tax Topic of the FASB Accounting Standards Codification (ASC 740), that it is more likely than not that some portion or all of the deferred tax asset will not be realized. In the assessment for a valuation allowance, consideration is given to all positive and negative evidence related to the realization of the deferred tax asset. This assessment considers, among other matters, the nature, frequency and severity of current and cumulative losses, forecasts of future profitability, the duration of statutory carryforward periods and the associated risk that certain loss carryforwards may expire unused.

 

KABDC Corp, LLC may rely to some extent on information provided by portfolio investments, which may not necessarily be timely, to estimate taxable income allocable to the units/shares of such companies held in the portfolio and to estimate the associated current and/or deferred tax liability.

 

The Company evaluates tax positions taken or expected to be taken in the course of preparing its financial statements to determine whether the tax positions are “more-likely-than-not” to be sustained by the applicable tax authority. Tax positions not deemed to meet the “more-likely-than-not” threshold are reserved and recorded as a tax benefit or expense in the current year. All penalties and interest associated with income taxes are included in income tax expense. Conclusions regarding tax positions are subject to review and may be adjusted at a later date based on factors including, but not limited to, on-going analyses of tax laws, regulations and interpretations thereof.

 

J. Commitments and Contingencies — in the normal course of business, the Company may enter into contracts that provide a variety of general indemnifications. Any exposure to the Company under these arrangements could involve future claims that may be made against the Company. Currently, no such claims exist or are expected to arise and, accordingly, the Company has not accrued any liability in connection with such indemnifications. 

 

K. Recent Accounting Pronouncements In November 2023, the FASB issued ASU 2023-07, Segment Reporting (Topic 280): Improvements to Reportable Segment Disclosures (“ASU 2023-07”), which enhances disclosure requirements about significant segment expenses that are regularly provided to the chief operating decision maker (the “CODM”). ASU 2023-07, among other things, (i) requires a single segment public entity to provide all of the disclosures as required by ASC 280, (ii) requires a public entity to disclose the title and position of the CODM and an explanation of how the CODM uses the reported measure(s) of segment profit or loss in assessing segment performance and deciding how to allocate resources and (iii) provides the ability for a public entity to elect more than one performance measure. ASU 2023-07 is effective for the fiscal years beginning after December 15, 2023, and interim periods beginning with the first quarter ended March 31, 2025. Early adoption is permitted and retrospective adoption is required for all prior periods presented. The Company has adopted ASU 2023-07 effective December 31, 2024, and concluded that the application of this guidance did not have any material impact on its consolidated financial statements. See Note 12 – Segment Reporting, for more information on the effects of the adoption of ASU 2023-07.

 

Note 3. Agreements and Related Party Transactions

 

A. Controlled / Affiliated Portfolio Companies — under the 1940 Act, the Company is required to separately identify non-controlled investments where it owns 5% or more of a portfolio company’s outstanding voting securities and/or has the power to exercise control over the management or policies of such portfolio company as investments in “affiliated” companies. In addition, under the 1940 Act, the Company is required to separately identify investments where it owns more than 25% of a portfolio company’s outstanding voting securities and/or has the power to exercise control over the management or policies of such portfolio company as investments in “controlled” companies. Under the 1940 Act, “non-affiliated investments” are defined as investments that are neither controlled investments nor affiliated investments. Detailed information with respect to the Company’s non-controlled, non-affiliated, and non-controlled, affiliated, investments is contained in the accompanying consolidated financial statements, including the consolidated schedule of investments.

 

B. Administration Agreement — on February 5, 2021, the Company entered into an Administration Agreement with its Advisor, which serves as its Administrator and will provide or oversee the performance of its required administrative services and professional services rendered by others, which will include (but are not limited to), accounting, payment of our expenses, legal, compliance, operations, technology and investor relations, preparation and filing of its tax returns, and preparation of financial reports provided to its stockholders and filed with the SEC. On February 19, 2025, the Board approved an additional one-year term of the Administration Agreement through March 15, 2026.

 

The Company will reimburse the Administrator for its costs and expenses incurred in performing its obligations under the Administration Agreement, which may include, after completion of its initial public offering, its allocable portion of office facilities, overhead, and compensation paid to or compensatory distributions received by its officers (including our Chief Compliance Officer and Chief Financial Officer) and its respective staff who provide services to the Company. As the Company reimburses the Administrator for its expenses, the Company will indirectly bear such cost. The Administration Agreement may be terminated by either party with 60 days’ written notice.

 

C. Investment Advisory Agreement — on February 5, 2021, the Company entered into an Investment Advisory Agreement with its Advisor. Pursuant to the Investment Advisory Agreement with its Advisor, the Company will pay its Advisor a fee for investment advisory and management services consisting of two components—a base management fee and an incentive fee. The Advisor may, from time-to-time, grant waivers on the Company’s obligations, including waivers of the base management fee and/or incentive fee, under the Investment Advisory Agreement. The Investment Advisory Agreement may be terminated by either party with 60 days’ written notice. On February 19, 2025, the Board approved an additional one-year term of the Investment Advisory Agreement from March 15, 2025 to March 15, 2026.

 

F-30

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements
(amounts in 000’s, except share and per share amounts)

 

In addition, on March 6, 2024, the Board approved an amended and restated investment advisory agreement (the “Amended Investment Advisory Agreement”) and a fee waiver agreement (the “Fee Waiver Agreement”) between the Company and the Advisor, which became effective upon the completion of the initial public offering of the Company’s shares of common stock on May 24, 2024 (the “IPO Date”).

 

The Amended Investment Advisory Agreement is materially the same as the Investment Advisory Agreement except, following the IPO Date, the base management fee is calculated at an annual rate of 1.00% and the incentive fee on income is subject to a twelve-quarter lookback quarterly hurdle rate of 1.50% as opposed to a single quarter measurement and is subject to an Incentive Fee Cap (as defined below) based on the Company’s Cumulative Pre-Incentive Fee Net Return (as defined below). This lookback feature provides that the Advisor’s income incentive fee may be reduced if the Company’s portfolio experiences aggregate write-downs or net capital losses during the applicable Trailing Twelve Quarters (as defined below). Pursuant to the Fee Waiver Agreement, commencing on the IPO Date, the Advisor implemented waivers of (i) the income incentive fee for three calendar quarters commencing the quarter the initial public offering was completed and (ii) a portion of the base management fee for one year following the completion of the initial public offering. Amounts waived by the Advisor pursuant to the Fee Waiver Agreement are not subject to recoupment by the Advisor.

 

Base Management Fee

 

Prior to the IPO Date, the base management fee was calculated at an annual rate of 0.90% of the fair market value of the Company’s investments including, in each case, assets purchased with borrowings under credit facilities and issuances of senior unsecured notes, but excluding cash, U.S. government securities and commercial paper instruments maturing within one year of purchase.

 

Commencing on the IPO Date, the base management fee is calculated at an annual rate of 1.00% of the fair market value of the Company’s investments. Since the IPO Date was on a date other than the first day of a calendar quarter, the management fee was calculated for the calendar quarter at a weighted rate based on the fee rates applicable before and after the IPO Date based on the number of days in such calendar quarter before and after the IPO Date. Pursuant to the Fee Waiver Agreement, commencing on the IPO Date, the Advisor has contractually agreed to waive the base management fee at an annual rate of 0.25% for one year following the IPO Date.

 

For the year ended December 31, 2024, the Company incurred base management fees of $14,587, net of waiver of $2,900. For the years ended December 31, 2023 and 2022, the Company incurred base management fees of $11,433 and $7,147, respectively.

 

Incentive Fee

 

The Company also pays the Advisor an incentive fee. The incentive fee consists of two parts—an incentive fee on income and an incentive fee on capital gains. Described in more detail below, these components of the incentive fee are largely independent of each other with the result that one component may be payable even if the other is not. 

 

Incentive Fee on Income

 

The incentive fee based on income (the “income incentive fee”) is determined and paid quarterly in arrears in cash. The Company’s quarterly pre-incentive fee net investment income must exceed a preferred return of 1.50% of the Company’s net asset value (“NAV”) at the end of the immediately preceding calendar quarter (6.0% annualized but not compounded) (the “Hurdle Amount”) in order for the Company to receive an income incentive fee. Prior to the IPO Date, the income incentive fee is calculated as 100% of our pre-incentive fee net investment income for the immediately preceding calendar quarter in excess of 1.50% of the Company’s NAV at the end of the immediately preceding calendar quarter until the Advisor has received 10% of the total pre-incentive fee net income for that calendar quarter and, for pre-incentive fee net investment income in excess of 1.6667%, 10% of all remaining pre-incentive fee net investment income for that quarter. Pre-incentive fee net investment income excludes any realized capital gains, realized capital losses or unrealized capital appreciation or depreciation.

 

F-31

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements
(amounts in 000’s, except share and per share amounts)

 

Commencing on the IPO Date, the Company will pay the Advisor an income incentive fee based on its aggregate pre-incentive fee net investment income with respect to (i) the quarter ended June 30, 2024 (the “First Calendar Quarter”) and (ii) each subsequent calendar quarter, with the then-current calendar quarter and the eleven preceding calendar quarters beginning with the calendar quarter after the First Calendar Quarter (or the appropriate portion thereof in the case of any of the Company’s first eleven calendar quarters that commence after the First Calendar Quarter) (those calendar quarters after the First Calendar Quarter, the “Trailing Twelve Quarters”).

 

For the First Calendar Quarter, pre-incentive fee net investment income in respect of the First Calendar Quarter will be compared to a hurdle rate of 1.50% (6.00% annualized). The income incentive fee for the First Calendar Quarter will be determined as follows:

 

  no income incentive fee is payable to the Advisor if the aggregate pre-incentive fee net investment income for the First Calendar Quarter does not exceed that hurdle rate;

 

  100% of the aggregate pre-incentive fee net investment income with respect to that portion of such pre-incentive fee net investment income, if any, that exceeds that hurdle rate, but is less than a quarterly rate of 1.6667% for the portion of the First Calendar Quarter before the initial public offering and a quarterly rate of 1.7647% for the portion of the First Calendar Quarter after the initial public offering, referred to the “catch-up.” The “catch-up” is meant to provide the Advisor with 10.0% of the Company’s pre-incentive fee net investment income for the portion of the First Calendar Quarter before the initial public offering and 15.0% for the balance of that First Calendar Quarter, as if the hurdle rate did not apply; and

 

  10.0% of the aggregate pre-incentive fee net investment income, if any, that exceeds a quarterly rate of 1.6667% for the portion of the First Calendar Quarter before the initial public offering and 15.0% of the aggregate pre-incentive fee net investment income, if any, that exceeds a quarterly rate of 1.7647% for the balance of the First Calendar Quarter.

 

Commencing with the calendar quarter beginning immediately after the First Calendar Quarter, subject to the Incentive Fee Cap (described below), the pre-incentive fee net investment income in respect of the relevant Trailing Twelve Quarters will be compared to a “Hurdle Rate” equal to the product of (i) the hurdle rate of 1.50% per quarter (6.00% annualized) and (ii) the sum of our net assets at the beginning of each applicable calendar quarter comprising the relevant Trailing Twelve Quarters. The Hurdle Rate will be calculated after making appropriate adjustments to the Company’s net asset value at the beginning of each applicable calendar quarter for all issuances by the Company of shares of its common stock, including issuances pursuant to its dividend reinvestment plan, and distributions during the applicable calendar quarter. The income incentive fee for each calendar quarter will be determined as follows:

 

  no income incentive fee is payable to the Advisor in any calendar quarter in which aggregate pre-incentive fee net investment income in respect of the relevant Trailing Twelve Quarters does not exceed the Hurdle Rate;

 

  100% of the aggregate pre-incentive fee net investment income in respect of the Trailing Twelve Quarters with respect to that portion of such pre-incentive fee net investment income, if any, that exceeds the Hurdle Rate, but is less than or equal to an amount, which we refer to as the “Catch-up Amount,” determined on a quarterly basis by multiplying 1.7647% by the Company’s net asset value at the beginning of each applicable calendar quarter comprising the relevant Trailing Twelve Quarters (after making appropriate adjustments to the Company’s net asset value at the beginning of each applicable calendar quarter for all issuances by the Company of shares of its common stock, including issuances pursuant to its dividend reinvestment plan, and distributions during the applicable calendar quarter); and

 

  15.0% of the aggregate pre-incentive fee net investment income in respect of the Trailing Twelve Quarters that exceeds the Catch-up Amount.

 

F-32

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements
(amounts in 000’s, except share and per share amounts)

 

Commencing with the quarter that begins immediately after the First Calendar Quarter, each income incentive fee will be subject to an “Incentive Fee Cap” that in respect of any calendar quarter is an amount equal to 15.0% of the Cumulative Pre-Incentive Fee Net Return (as defined below) during the Trailing Twelve Quarters less the aggregate income incentive fees that were paid to the Advisor in the preceding eleven calendar quarters (or portion thereof) comprising the relevant Trailing Twelve Quarters. In the event the Incentive Fee Cap is zero or a negative value then no income incentive fee shall be payable and if the Incentive Fee Cap is less than the amount of income incentive fee that would otherwise be payable, the amount of income incentive fee shall be reduced to an amount equal to the Incentive Fee Cap.

 

“Cumulative Pre-Incentive Fee Net Return” means (x) with respect to the First Calendar Quarter, the sum of pre-incentive fee net investment income in respect of the First Calendar Quarter, (y) with respect to the relevant Trailing Twelve Quarters, the pre-incentive fee net investment income in respect of the relevant Trailing Twelve Quarters minus any Net Capital Loss (as defined below), if any, in respect of the relevant Trailing Twelve Quarters. If, in any quarter, the Incentive Fee Cap is zero or a negative value, the Company will pay no income incentive fee to the Advisor for such quarter. If, in any quarter, the Incentive Fee Cap for such quarter is a positive value but is less than the income incentive fee that is payable to the Advisor for such quarter (before giving effect to the Incentive Fee Cap) calculated as described above, the Company will pay an income incentive fee to the Advisor equal to the Incentive Fee Cap for such quarter. If, in any quarter, the Incentive Fee Cap for such quarter is equal to or greater than the income incentive fee that is payable to the Advisor for such quarter (before giving effect to the Incentive Fee Cap) calculated as described above, the Company will pay an income incentive fee to the Advisor equal to the incentive fee calculated as described above for such quarter without regard to the Incentive Fee Cap.

 

“Net Capital Loss” in respect of a particular period means the difference, if positive, between (i) aggregate capital losses, whether realized or unrealized, in such period and (ii) aggregate capital gains, whether realized or unrealized, in such period.

 

These calculations are prorated for any period of less than three months and adjusted for any share issuances or repurchases during the relevant quarter. Amounts waived by the Advisor pursuant to the Fee Waiver Agreement are not subject to recoupment by the Advisor.

 

Incentive Fee on Capital Gains

 

Prior to the IPO Date, the incentive fee on capital gains (the “capital gains incentive fee”) was calculated and payable in arrears in cash as 10% of the Company’s realized capital gains, if any, on a cumulative basis from formation through (a) the day before our initial public offering (“IPO”), (b) upon consummation of a Liquidity Event (as defined in the Investment Advisory Agreement) or (c) upon the termination of the Investment Advisory Agreement, computed net of all realized capital losses and unrealized capital depreciation on a cumulative basis, less the aggregate amount of any previously paid capital gain incentive fees. For the purpose of computing the capital gain incentive fee, the calculation methodology looked through derivative financial instruments or swaps as if the Company owned the reference assets directly. 

 

Commencing on the IPO Date, the incentive fee on capital gains is calculated and payable in arrears in cash as 15.0% of the Company’s realized capital gains, if any, on a cumulative basis from formation through the end of a given calendar year or upon termination of the Investment Advisory Agreement, computed net of all realized capital losses and unrealized capital depreciation on a cumulative basis, less the aggregate amount of any previously paid capital gain incentive fees. In the event that the Investment Advisory Agreement terminates as of a date that is not a fiscal year end, the termination date will be treated as though it were a fiscal year end for purposes of calculating and paying a capital gain incentive fee.

 

For the year ended December 31, 2024, the Company incurred incentive fees on income of $2,631, net of waivers of $14,818, and no incentive fees on capital gains. For the years ended December 31, 2023 and 2022, the Company incurred incentive fees on income of $9,433 and $4,698, respectively, and no incentive fees on capital gains in either of these years.  

 

F-33

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements
(amounts in 000’s, except share and per share amounts)

 

Payment of Incentive Fees Prior to the IPO Date

 

Prior to the Company’s IPO, incentive fees earned by the Advisor accrued as earned but only became payable in cash to the Advisor upon consummation the IPO. In June 2024, the Company paid $16,826 to the Advisor for these accrued as earned fees through the quarter ended March 31, 2024.

 

Note 4. Investments

 

The following table presents the composition of the Company’s investment portfolio at amortized cost and fair value as of December 31, 2024 and 2023:

  

   December 31, 2024   December 31, 2023 
   Amortized   Fair   Amortized   Fair 
   Cost   Value   Cost   Value 
First-lien senior secured debt investments(1)  $1,952,708   $1,972,406   $1,327,190   $1,346,174 
Equity investments(2)   19,347    22,737    16,033    17,324 
Short-term investments   48,683    48,683    12,802    12,802 
Total Investments  $2,020,738   $2,043,826   $1,356,025   $1,376,300 

  

(1)Includes debt investment in Trademark Global LLC.

 

(2)Includes equity investment in TG Parent Newco LLC (Trademark Global LLC).

  

F-34

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

(amounts in 000’s, except share and per share amounts)

 

As of December 31, 2024 and 2023, $188,253 and $68,578, respectively, of the Company’s total assets were non-qualifying assets, as defined by Section 55(a) of the 1940 Act.

 

The Company uses Global Industry Classification Standards (GICS), Level 3 – Industry, for classifying the industry groupings of its portfolio companies.

 

The industry composition of long-term investments based on fair value as of December 31, 2024 and 2023 was as follows: 

 

   December 31,
2024
   December 31,
2023
 
         
Trading companies & distributors   15.1%   15.3%
Commercial services & supplies   11.7%   9.4%
Food products   10.0%   11.5%
Health care providers & services   8.4%   7.4%
Containers & packaging   7.5%   7.2%
Professional services   4.7%   4.5%
Aerospace & defense   4.4%   6.3%
Machinery   3.7%   3.8%
Personal care products   3.7%   3.0%
Automobile components   3.6%   2.0%
Leisure products   3.2%   3.3%
Building products   2.3%   2.0%
Textiles, apparel & luxury goods   2.1%   3.3%
Specialty retail   2.1%   0.7%
Insurance   2.0%   2.2%
Pharmaceuticals   1.8%   0.5%
IT services   1.7%   3.8%
Diversified telecommunication services   1.5%   0.4%
Wireless telecommunication services   1.5%   2.1%
Health care equipment & supplies   1.4%   1.5%
Hotels, restaurants & leisure   1.4%   
-
%
Chemicals   1.1%   3.1%
Household durables   1.0%   1.5%
Media   0.8%   
-
%
Household products   0.8%   1.2%
Construction materials   0.7%   
-
%
Biotechnology   0.6%   0.9%
Semiconductors & semiconductor equipment   0.6%   
-
%
Electrical equipment   0.5%   
-
%
Diversified consumer services   0.1%   
-
%
Software   -%   2.5%
Capital markets   
-
%   0.6%
    100.0%   100.0%

  

F-35

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

(amounts in 000’s, except share and per share amounts)

 

Note 5. Fair Value

 

The Fair Value Measurement Topic of the FASB Accounting Standards Codification (ASC 820) defines fair value as the price at which an orderly transaction to sell an asset or to transfer a liability would take place between market participants under current market conditions at the measurement date. As required by ASC 820, the Company has performed an analysis of all investments measured at fair value to determine the significance and character of all inputs to their fair value determination. Inputs are the assumptions, along with considerations of risk, that a market participant would use to value an asset or a liability. In general, observable inputs are based on market data that is readily available, regularly distributed and verifiable that the Company obtains from independent, third-party sources. Unobservable inputs are developed by the Company based on its own assumptions of how market participants would value an asset or a liability.

 

The fair value hierarchy prioritizes the inputs to valuation techniques used to measure fair value into the following three broad categories.

 

  Level 1 — Valuations based on quoted unadjusted prices for identical instruments in active markets traded on a national exchange to which the Company has access at the date of measurement.

 

  Level 2 — Valuations based on quoted prices for similar instruments in active markets; quoted prices for identical or similar instruments in markets that are not active; and model-derived valuations in which all significant inputs and significant value drivers are observable in active markets. Level 2 inputs are those in markets for which there are few transactions, the prices are not current, little public information exists or instances where prices vary substantially over time or among brokered market makers.

 

  Level 3 — Model derived valuations in which one or more significant inputs or significant value drivers are unobservable. Unobservable inputs are those inputs that reflect the Company’s own assumptions that market participants would use to price the asset or liability based on the best available information.

 

In certain cases, the inputs used to measure fair value may fall into different levels of the fair value hierarchy. In such cases, the determination of which category within the fair value hierarchy is appropriate for any given financial instrument is based on the lowest level of input that is significant to the fair value measurement. Assessment of the significance of a particular input to the fair value measurement in its entirety requires judgment and considers factors specific to the financial instrument.

 

F-36

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements
(amounts in 000’s, except share and per share amounts)

 

The following tables present the fair value hierarchy of investments as of December 31, 2024 and December 31, 2023. Note that the valuation levels below are not necessarily an indication of the risk or liquidity associated with the underlying investment.

 

   Fair Value Hierarchy as of December 31, 2024 
Investments:  Level 1   Level 2   Level 3   Total 
First-lien senior secured debt investments(1)  $
-
   $253,224   $1,719,182   $1,972,406 
Equity investments(2)   
-
    
-
    22,737    22,737 
Short-term investments   48,683    
-
    
-
    48,683 
Total Investments  $48,683   $253,224   $1,741,919   $2,043,826 

 

(1)Includes debt investment in Trademark Global LLC.

 

(2)Includes equity investment in TG Parent Newco LLC (Trademark Global LLC).

 

   Fair Value Hierarchy as of December 31, 2023 
Investments:  Level 1   Level 2   Level 3   Total 
First-lien senior secured debt investments  $
-
   $
-
   $1,346,174   $1,346,174 
Equity investments   
-
    
-
    17,324    17,324 
Short-term investments   12,802    
-
    
-
    12,802 
Total Investments  $12,802   $
-
   $1,363,498   $1,376,300 

 

The following tables present changes in the fair value of investments for which Level 3 inputs were used to determine the fair value as of and for the years ended December 31, 2024 and 2023.

 

For the year ended December 31, 2024  First-lien
senior secured
debt investments(1)
   Private
equity
investments(2)
   Total 
Fair value, beginning of period  $1,346,174   $17,324   $1,363,498 
Purchases of investments, including PIK, if any   653,938    3,563    657,501 
Proceeds from sales of investments and principal repayments   (294,804)   (958)   (295,762)
Net change in unrealized gain (loss)   1,127    2,100    3,227 
Net realized gain (loss)   
-
    708    708 
Net accretion of discount on investments   12,747    
-
    12,747 
Transfers into (out of) Level 3   
-
    
-
    
-
 
Fair value, end of period  $1,719,182   $22,737   $1,741,919 

 

(1)Includes debt investment in Trademark Global LLC.

 

(2)Includes equity investment in TG Parent Newco LLC (Trademark Global LLC).

 

F-37

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

(amounts in 000’s, except share and per share amounts)

 

For the year ended December 31, 2023  First-lien
senior secured
debt investments
   Private
equity
investments
   Total 
Fair value, beginning of period  $1,157,971   $7,148   $1,165,119 
Purchases of investments, including PIK, if any   392,388    605    392,993 
Proceeds from sales of investments and principal repayments   (196,649)   
-
    (196,649)
Net change in unrealized gain (loss)   2,552    392    2,944 
Net realized gain (loss)   (10,686)   
-
    (10,686)
Net accretion of discount on investments   9,777    
-
    9,777 
Other(1)   (9,179)   9,179    
-
 
Transfers into (out of) Level 3   
-
    
-
    
-
 
Fair value, end of period  $1,346,174   $17,324   $1,363,498 

 

(1)Reflects non-cash conversions. These transactions represent non-cash investing activities.

 

For the years ended December 31, 2024 and 2023, the Company did not recognize any transfers to or from Level 3. The increase in unrealized gain (loss) relates to investments that were held during the period. The Company includes these unrealized gains and losses on the Statement of Operations – Net Change in Unrealized Gains (Losses).

 

Valuation Techniques and Unobservable Inputs

 

Non-traded debt investments are typically valued using either a market yield analysis or an enterprise value analysis. For debt investments that are not considered to be credit impaired, the Advisor uses a market yield analysis to determine fair value. If the debt investment is considered to be credit impaired (which is determined by performing an enterprise value analysis), the Advisor will use the enterprise value analysis or a liquidation basis analysis to determine fair value.

 

To determine fair value using a market yield analysis, the Advisor discounts the contractual cash flows of each investment at an appropriate discount rate (the market yield). To determine the estimated market yield for its debt investments, the Advisor analyzes changes in the risk/reward (measured by yields and leverage) of middle market indices as compared to changes in risk/reward for the underlying investment and estimates the appropriate discount rate for such debt investment. In this context, the discount rate and the fair market value of the investment is impacted by the structure and pricing of the security relative to current market yields for similar investments in similar businesses as well as the financial performance of such business. In performing this analysis, the Advisor considers data sources including, but not limited to: (i) industry publications, such as S&P Global’s High-End Middle Market Lending Review; Thomson Reuter’s Refinitiv Middle Market Monthly Stats; CapitalIQ; Pitchbook News; The Lead Left, and other data sources; (ii) comparable investments reviewed or completed by affiliates of the Advisor, and (iii) information obtained and provided by the Advisor’s independent valuation managers.

 

To determine if a debt investment is credit impaired, the Advisor estimates the enterprise value of the business and compares such estimate to the outstanding indebtedness of such business. The Advisor utilizes the following valuation methodologies to determine the estimated enterprise value of the company: (i) analysis of valuations of publicly traded companies in a similar line of business (“public company comparable analysis”), (ii) analysis of valuations of M&A transaction valuations for companies in a similar line of business (“precedent transaction analysis”), (iii) discounted cash flows (“DCF analysis”) and (iv) other valuation methodologies.

 

F-38

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

(amounts in 000’s, except share and per share amounts)

 

In determining the non-traded debt investment valuations, the following factors are considered, where relevant: the nature and realizable value of any collateral; the company’s ability to make interest payments, amortization payments (if any) and other fixed charges; call features, put features and other relevant terms of the debt security; the company’s historical and projected financial results; the markets in which the company does business; changes in the interest rate environment and the credit markets generally that may affect the price at which similar investments may be valued; and other relevant factors.

 

Equity investments in private companies are typically valued using one of or a combination of the following valuation techniques: (i) public company comparable analysis, (ii) precedent transaction analysis and (iii) DCF analysis.

 

Under all of these valuation techniques, the Advisor estimates operating results of the companies in which it invests, including earnings before interest expense, income tax expense, depreciation and amortization (“EBITDA”) and free cash flow. These estimates utilize unobservable inputs such as historical operating results, which may be unaudited, and projected operating results, which will be based on operating assumptions for such company. Investment performance data utilized will be the most recently available as of the measurement date which in many cases may reflect up to a one quarter lag in information. These estimates will be sensitive to changes in assumptions specific to such company as well as general assumptions for the industry. Other unobservable inputs utilized in the valuation techniques outlined above include: discounts for lack of marketability, selection of publicly traded companies, selection of similar precedent transactions, selected ranges for valuation multiples and expected required rates of return (discount rates).

 

Quantitative Table for Valuation Techniques

 

The following tables present quantitative information about the significant unobservable inputs of the Company’s Level 3 investments as of December 31, 2024 and December 31, 2023. The tables are not intended to be all-inclusive but instead capture the significant unobservable inputs relevant to the Advisor’s determination of fair value. The Company calculates weighted average, based on the value of the unobservable input of each investment relative to the fair value of the investment compared to the total fair value of all investments. First-lien senior secured debt investments include the Company’s senior secured loan in an investment vehicle (BC CS 2, L.P.), which is considered subordinated debt since it is collateralized by a preferred stock investment in Cuisine Solutions, Inc.

 

    As of December 31, 2024  
    Fair Value     Valuation
Technique
  Unobservable
Input
  Range     Weighted
Average
 
First-lien senior secured debt investments   $ 1,719,182     Discounted cash flow analysis   Discount rate     8.2% - 15.0 %     10.1 %
Preferred equity investment     11,114     Discounted cash flow analysis   Discount rate     15.0 %     15.0 %
Preferred equity investment     500     Precedent Transaction Analysis   Original cost     1.0       1.0  
Common equity investment     1,750     Precedent Transaction Analysis   Original cost     1.0       1.0  
Other equity investments     9,373     Comparable Multiples   EV / EBITDA     7.6 - 17.2       11.3  
    $ 1,741,919                          

 

    As of December 31, 2023  
          Valuation   Unobservable         Weighted  
    Fair Value     Technique   Input   Range     Average  
First-lien senior secured debt investments   $ 1,346,174     Discounted cash flow analysis   Discount rate      8.3% – 15.0 %     10.2 %
Preferred equity investment       9,287     Discounted cash flow analysis   Discount rate     15.0 %     15.0 %
Other equity investments     8,037     Comparable Multiples   EV / EBITDA     7.1 – 17.2       11.5  
    $ 1,363,498                          

 

F-39

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

(amounts in 000’s, except share and per share amounts)

 

Note 6. Debt

 

Corporate Credit Facility

 

As of December 31, 2024, the Company had a senior secured revolving credit facility (the “Corporate Credit Facility”), that has a total commitment of $475,000, $400,000 of which has a maturity date of November 22, 2029 and the remaining $75,000 of which has a maturity date of February 18, 2027, following the Company’s amendment of the Corporate Credit Facility on November 22, 2024. The Corporate Credit Facility also provides for a feature that allows the Company, under certain circumstances, to increase the overall size of the Corporate Credit Facility to a maximum of $600,000. The interest rate on the Corporate Credit Facility is equal to Term SOFR (a forward-looking rate based on SOFR futures) plus an applicable spread of 2.10% per annum or an “alternate base rate” (as defined in the agreements governing the Corporate Credit Facility) plus an applicable spread of 1.00%. The Company is also required to pay a commitment fee of 0.375% per annum on any unused portion of the Corporate Credit Facility.

 

Under the Corporate Credit Facility, the Company is required to comply with various covenants, reporting requirements and other customary requirements for similar revolving credit facilities, including, without limitation, covenants related to: (a) limitations on the incurrence of additional indebtedness and liens, (b) limitations on certain investments, (c) limitations on certain restricted payments, (d) maintaining a certain minimum stockholders’ equity, and (e) maintaining a ratio of total assets (less total liabilities not representing indebtedness) to total indebtedness of the Company and its consolidated subsidiaries of not less than 1.5:1.0. These covenants are subject to important limitations and exceptions that are described in the agreements governing the Corporate Credit Facility. Amounts available to borrow under the Corporate Credit Facility are subject to compliance with a borrowing base that applies different advance rates to different types of assets (based on their value as determined pursuant to the Corporate Credit Facility) that are pledged as collateral. The Corporate Credit Facility is secured by certain assets in the Company’s portfolio and excludes investments held by Kayne Anderson BDC Financing LLC (“KABDCF”) under the Revolving Funding Facility and by Kayne Anderson BDC Financing II, LLC (“KABDCF II”) under the Revolving Funding Facility II (each as defined below).

 

For the years ended December 31, 2024 and 2023, the average amount of borrowings outstanding under the Corporate Credit Facility was $173,911 and $251,655, respectively, with a weighted average interest rate of 7.42% and 7.35%, respectively, for the Corporate Facility portion. As of December 31, 2024, the Company had $250,000 outstanding under the Corporate Credit Facility at a weighted average interest rate of 6.49%. See Note 13 – Subsequent Events.

 

Revolving Funding Facility

 

As of December 31, 2024, the Company had a senior secured revolving funding facility (the “Revolving Funding Facility”), that has a total commitment of $600,000. On April 3, 2024, the Company and its wholly owned, special purpose financing subsidiary, Kayne Anderson BDC Financing, LLC (“KABDCF”), amended the Revolving Funding Facility. Under the terms of the third amendment, the Company and KABDCF increased the commitment amount from $455,000 to $600,000. The end of the reinvestment period was extended to April 2, 2027, and the maturity date was extended to April 3, 2029. The interest rate on the Revolving Funding Facility was reduced from daily SOFR plus 2.75% per annum to SOFR plus 2.375% - 2.50% per annum depending on the mix of loans securing the Revolving Funding Facility. All other terms of the Revolving Funding Facility remained substantially the same. The Revolving Funding Facility is secured by all of the assets held by KABDCF and the Company has agreed that it will not grant or allow a lien on the membership interest of KABDCF.

 

KABDCF is also required to pay a commitment fee of between 0.50% and 1.50% per annum depending on the size of the unused portion of the Revolving Funding Facility. Amounts available to borrow under the Revolving Funding Facility are subject to a borrowing base that applies different advance rates to different types of assets held by KABDCF and is subject to limitations with respect to the loans securing the Revolving Funding Facility, including restrictions on, loan size, industry concentration, payment frequency and status, as well as restrictions on portfolio company leverage, all of which may also affect the borrowing base and therefore amounts available to borrow. The Company and KABDCF are also required to comply with various covenants, reporting requirements and other customary requirements for similar facilities. These covenants are subject to important limitations and exceptions that are described in the agreements governing the Revolving Funding Facility. See Note 13 – Subsequent Events.

 

F-40

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements
(amounts in 000’s, except share and per share amounts)

 

For the years ended December 31, 2024 and 2023, the average amount of borrowings outstanding under the Revolving Funding Facility was $371,041 and $290,890, respectively, with a weighted average interest rate of 7.67% and 7.74%, respectively. As of December 31, 2024, the Company had $420,000 outstanding under the Revolving Funding Facility at a weighted average interest rate of 6.72 %. 

 

Revolving Funding Facility II

 

As of December 31, 2024, the Company and Kayne Anderson BDC Financing II, LLC (“KABDCF II”), a wholly-owned, special purpose financing subsidiary, had a senior secured revolving credit facility (the “Revolving Funding Facility II”). The Revolving Funding Facility II has an initial commitment of $150,000 which, under certain circumstances, can be increased up to $500,000. The Revolving Funding Facility II is secured by all of the assets held by KABDCF II and the Company has agreed that it will not grant or allow a lien on the membership interest of KABDCF II. The end of the reinvestment period and the stated maturity date for the Revolving Funding Facility II are December 22, 2026, and December 22, 2028, respectively. The interest rate on the Revolving Funding Facility II is equal to 3-month term SOFR plus 2.70% per annum. KABDCF II is also required to pay a commitment fee of 0.50% between December 22, 2023 and September 22, 2024 and 0.75% thereafter on the unused portion of the Revolving Funding Facility II.

 

Amounts available to borrow under the Revolving Funding Facility II are subject to a borrowing base that has limitations with respect to the loans securing the Revolving Funding Facility II, including limitations on, loan size, payment frequency and status, sector concentrations, as well as restrictions on portfolio company leverage, all of which may also affect the borrowing base and therefore amounts available to borrow. The Company and KABDCF II are also required to comply with various covenants, reporting requirements and other customary requirements for similar facilities. These covenants are subject to important limitations and exceptions that are described in the agreements governing the Revolving Funding Facility II.

 

For the year ended December 31, 2024, the average amount of borrowings outstanding under the Revolving Funding Facility was $82,432, with a weighted average interest rate of 7.84%. For the period ended December 22, 2023 through December 31, 2023, the average amount of borrowings outstanding under the Revolving Funding Facility II was $70,000, with a weighted average interest rate of 8.07%. As of December 31, 2024, the Company had $113,000 outstanding under the Revolving Funding Facility II at a weighted average interest rate of 7.29%. See Note 13 – Subsequent Events.

 

Subscription Credit Agreement 

 

On April 1, 2024, the Company fully repaid all amounts outstanding and terminated the remaining commitment of $50,000 under its credit agreement (the “Subscription Credit Agreement”) that was scheduled to mature on December 31, 2024. The Subscription Credit Agreement permitted the Company to elect the commitment amount each quarter to borrow up to $50,000, subject to availability under the borrowing base which was calculated based on the unused capital commitments of the investors meeting various eligibility requirements. The interest rate under the Subscription Credit Agreement was equal to the Secured Overnight Financing Rate (“SOFR”) plus 2.25% (subject to a 0.275% SOFR floor). The Company was also required to pay a commitment fee of 0.25% per annum on any unused portion of the Subscription Credit Agreement. The Company also paid an extension fee of 0.075% per quarter on the elected commitment amount on the first day of each calendar quarter.

 

For the years ended December 31, 2024 and 2023, the average amount of borrowings outstanding under the Subscription Credit Agreement were $3,306 and $41,782, respectively, with a weighted average interest rate of 7.61% and 7.03%, respectively.  

 

Senior Unsecured Notes

 

As of December 31, 2024, the Company had $75,000 aggregate principal amount of senior unsecured notes (the “Notes”).

 

F-41

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

(amounts in 000’s, except share and per share amounts)

 

The table below sets forth a summary of the key terms of each series of Notes outstanding at December 31, 2024.

 

Series   Principal
Outstanding
December 31,
2024
    Unamortized
Issuance
Costs
    Estimated
Fair Value
December  31,
2024
    Fixed
Interest
Rate
    Maturity
A   $ 25,000     $ 196     $ 26,860       8.65 %   6/30/2027
B     50,000       447       54,580       8.74 %   6/30/2028
    $ 75,000     $ 643     $ 81,440              

  

Holders of the Notes are entitled to receive cash interest payments semi-annually (on January 30 and July 30) at the fixed rate. As of December 31, 2024, the weighted average interest rate on the outstanding Notes was 8.71%.

 

As of December 31, 2024, the Notes were rated “BBB” by Kroll Bond Rating Agency (“KBRA”). The Company is required to maintain a current rating from one rating agency with respect to the Notes. In the event the Company does not maintain a current rating from a rating agency for a specified period of time or the credit rating on the Notes falls below “BBB-” (a “Below Investment Grade Event”), the interest rate per annum on the Notes will increase by 1.0% during the period the Notes are rated below “BBB-”. In the event the Company’s Secured Debt Ratio exceeds 55% (a “Secured Debt Ratio Event”), the interest rate per annum on the Notes will increase by 1.5% during the period the ratio is above stated percentage. If a Below Investment Grade Event and a Secured Debt Ratio Event is continuing at the same time the aggregate increase in interest rate per annum will not exceed 2.0%.

 

The Notes were issued in private placement offerings to institutional investors and are not listed on any exchange or automated quotation system. The Notes contain various covenants related to other indebtedness, liens and limits on the Company’s overall leverage. The Company must maintain a minimum amount of shareholder equity and the Company’s asset coverage ratio must be greater than 150% as of the last business day of each fiscal quarter. The Notes are redeemable in certain circumstances at the option of the Company and may be redeemed under certain circumstances to cure the asset coverage ratio covenant.

 

The Notes are unsecured obligations of the Company and, upon liquidation, dissolution or winding up of the Company, will rank: (1) senior to all of the Company’s outstanding common shares; (2) on parity with any unsecured creditors of the Company and any unsecured senior securities representing indebtedness of the Company; and (3) junior to any secured creditors of the Company.

 

At December 31, 2024, the Company was in compliance with all covenants under the Notes agreements.

 

Debt obligations consisted of the following as of December 31, 2024 and 2023.

 

   December 31, 2024 
   Aggregate
Principal Committed
   Outstanding
Principal
   Amount
Available(1)
   Net
Carrying
Value(2)
 
Notes  $75,000   $75,000   $
-
   $74,357 
Corporate Credit Facility   475,000    250,000    225,000    246,765 
Revolving Funding Facility   600,000    420,000    180,000    415,254 
Revolving Funding Facility II   150,000    113,000    37,000    111,749 
Total debt  $1,300,000   $858,000   $442,000   $848,125 

 

(1)The amounts available under the Company’s credit facilities do not reflect any limitations related to each borrowing base as of December 31, 2024.
   
(2)The carrying value of the Notes, Corporate Credit Facility, Revolving Funding Facility and Revolving Funding Facility II are presented net of deferred financing costs totaling $9,875.

  

F-42

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

(amounts in 000’s, except share and per share amounts)

 

    December 31, 2023  
    Aggregate
Principal
Committed
    Outstanding Principal     Amount Available(1)     Net Carrying Value(2)  
Notes   $ 75,000     $ 75,000     $ -     $ 74,149  
Corporate Credit Facility     400,000       234,000       166,000       232,285  
Revolving Funding Facility     455,000       306,000       18,536       303,981  
Revolving Funding Facility II     150,000       70,000       9,716       68,195  
Subscription Credit Agreement     50,000       10,750       39,250       10,709  
Total debt   $ 1,130,000     $ 695,750     $ 233,502     $ 689,319  

 

(1)The amount available under the Company’s credit facilities reflects the assets held at KABDCF and KABDCF II and any limitations related to each borrowing base as of December 31, 2023.

 

(2)The carrying value of the Notes, Corporate Credit Facility, Revolving Funding Facility, Revolving Funding Facility II and Subscription Credit Agreement are presented net of deferred financing costs totaling $6,431.

  

For the years ended December 31, 2024, 2023 and 2022, the components of interest expense were as follows:

 

   For the years ended 
   December 31,
2024
   December 31,
2023
   December 31,
2022
 
Interest expense  $57,798   $49,620   $18,170 
Amortization of debt issuance costs   3,718    2,694    2,122 
Total interest expense  $61,516   $52,314   $20,292 
Average interest rate   8.6%   8.4%   5.5%
Average borrowings  $705,690   $624,464   $368,182 

 

F-43

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

(amounts in 000’s, except share and per share amounts)

 

Note 7. Share Transactions

 

Common Stock Issuances

 

The following tables summarize the number of common stock shares issued and aggregate proceeds received from such issuances related to the Company’s capital call notices pursuant to subscription agreements with investors for the years ended December 31, 2024, 2023 and 2022. See Note 13 – Subsequent Events.

 

On May 24, 2024, the Company completed its IPO, issuing 6,000,000 shares of its common stock at a public offering price of $16.63 per share. Net of underwriting fees and offering expenses, the Company received net cash proceeds of $92,363. The Company’s common stock began trading on the NYSE under the ticker symbol “KBDC” on May 22, 2024.

  

For the year ended December 31, 2024
Common stock issue date  Offering price per share   Common stock shares issued   Aggregate offering amount 
February 14, 2024  $16.74    7,089,771   $118,689 
April 2, 2024  $16.63    16,232,415    269,945 
May 24, 2024  $16.63    6,000,000    99,780 
Total common stock issued        29,322,186   $488,414 

 

For the year ended December 31, 2023  
    Offering           Aggregate  
    price per     Common stock     offering  
Common stock issue date   share     shares issued     amount  
April 4, 2023   $ 16.61       3,010,942     $ 50,000  
August 8, 2023   $ 16.82       2,411,582       40,575  
Total common stock issued             5,422,524     $ 90,575  

 

For the year ended December 31, 2022  
    Offering           Aggregate  
    price per     Common stock     offering  
Common stock issue date   share     shares issued     amount  
January 24, 2022   $ 16.36       4,191,292     $ 68,582  
July 22, 2022   $ 16.30       7,666,830       125,000  
October 31, 2022   $ 16.58       1,485,844       24,636  
December 9, 2022   $ 16.89       2,961,068       50,000  
Total common stock issued             16,305,034     $ 268,218  

 

F-44

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

(amounts in 000’s, except share and per share amounts)

 

Share Repurchase Plan

 

On May 21, 2024, the Company entered into a share repurchase plan, or the Company 10b5-1 Plan, to acquire up to $100,000 in the aggregate of the Company’s Common Stock at prices below the Company’s net asset value per share over a specified period, in accordance with the guidelines specified in Rule 10b5-1 and Rule 10b-18 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. The Company 10b5-1 Plan was approved by the Board of Directors on March 6, 2024. The Company 10b5-1 Plan requires Morgan Stanley Corporation as the Company’s agent, to repurchase Common Stock on its behalf when the market price per share is below the most recently reported net asset value per share (including any updates, corrections or adjustments publicly announced by the Company to any previously announced net asset value per share, including any distributions declared). Under the Company 10b5-1 Plan, the volume of purchases would be expected to increase as the price of the Company’s Common Stock declines, subject to volume restrictions. The timing and amount of any share repurchases will depend on the terms and conditions of the Company 10b5-1 Plan, the market price of the Company’s Common Stock and trading volumes, and no assurance can be given that Common Stock be repurchased in any particular amount or at all. The repurchase of shares pursuant to the Company 10b5-1 Plan is intended to satisfy the conditions of Rule 10b5-1 and Rule 10b-18 under the Exchange Act, and will otherwise be subject to applicable law, including Regulation M, which may prohibit repurchases under certain circumstances. The Company 10b5-1 Plan commenced beginning 60 calendar days following the end of the “restricted period” under Regulation M and will terminate upon the earliest to occur of (i) the close of business on May 24, 2025, (ii) the end of the trading day on which the aggregate purchase price for all shares purchased under the Company 10b5-1 Plan equals $100,000 and (iii) the occurrence of certain other events described in the Company 10b5-1 Plan.

 

The “restricted period” under Regulation M ended upon the closing of the Company’s IPO and, therefore, the Common Stock repurchases/purchases described above began on July 23, 2024.

 

For the year ended December 31, 2024, the agent has repurchased shares of common stock pursuant to the Plan as follows:

  

Period  Total number of shares
repurchased
   Average
price paid
per share
   Approximate
dollar
value of
shares that
have been purchased
under the plan
   Approximate
dollar
value of
shares that
may yet be
purchased
under the plan
 
July 23 - 31, 2024   12,861   $16.20   $208   $99,792 
August 1 - 31, 2024   38,271   $16.08    615   $99,177 
September 1 - 30, 2024   17,548   $16.16    284   $98,893 
October 1 - 31, 2024   19,810   $16.08    319   $98,574 
November 1 - 30, 2024   6,123   $16.24    99   $98,475 
Total stock repurchased   94,613        $1,525      

 

F-45

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

(amounts in 000’s, except share and per share amounts)

 

Dividends and Dividend Reinvestment

 

The following tables summarize the dividends declared and payable by the Company for the years ended December 31, 2024, 2023 and 2022. For the year ended December 31, 2024, the $0.10 per share dividend with a payment date of December 20, 2024 was one of three special dividends declared by the Board of Directors in conjunction with the Company’s IPO in May 2024. See Note 13 – Subsequent Events.

 

For the year ended December 31, 2024  
Dividend declaration date  Dividend record date  Dividend payment date  Dividend
per share
 
March 6, 2024  March 29, 2024  April 17, 2024  $0.40  
May 8, 2024  June 28, 2024  July 15, 2024   0.40  
August 7, 2024  September 30, 2024  October 15, 2024   0.40  
May 8, 2024  December 5, 2024  December 20, 2024   0.10  
November 6, 2024  December 31, 2024  January 15, 2025   0.40  
Total dividends declared        $1.70  

 

For the year ended December 31, 2023  
            Dividend  
Dividend declaration date   Dividend record date   Dividend payment date   per share  
March 7, 2023   March 31, 2023   April 14, 2023   $ 0.47  
May 10, 2023   June 30, 2023   July 14, 2023     0.53  
August 10, 2023   September 29, 2023   October 13, 2023     0.53  
November 9, 2023   December 29, 2023   January 16, 2024     0.53  
Total dividends declared           $ 2.06  

 

For the year ended December 31, 2022  
            Dividend  
Dividend declaration date   Dividend record date   Dividend payment date   per share  
April 19, 2022   April 20, 2022   April 26, 2022   $ 0.26  
July 19, 2022   July 20, 2022   July 27, 2022     0.30  
October 18, 2022   October 13, 2022   October 25, 2022     0.35  
December 16, 2022   December 29, 2022   January 13, 2023     0.43  
Total dividends declared           $ 1.34  

 

The following tables summarize the amounts received and shares of common stock issued to shareholders pursuant to the Company’s dividend reinvestment plan (“DRIP”) for the years ended December 31, 2024, 2023 and 2022. See Note 13 - Subsequent Events.

 

For the year ended December 31, 2024 
    DRIP     
    shares   DRIP 
Dividend record date  Dividend payment date  issued   value 
December 29, 2023  January 16, 2024   95,791   $1,573 
March 29, 2024  April 17, 2024   94,816   1,577 
June 28, 2024  July 15, 2024   
-
    
-
 
September 30, 2024  October 15, 2024   
-
    
-
 
December 5, 2024  December 20, 2024   37,843    632 
       228,450   $3,782 

 

For the dividend paid on July 15, 2024, the DRIP value was $4,431 and fulfilled through open market purchases of common stock.

 

For the dividend paid on October 15, 2024, the DRIP value was $4,521 and was fulfilled through open market purchases of common stock.

 

F-46

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

(amounts in 000’s, except share and per share amounts)

 

For the dividend paid on December 20, 2024, the DRIP value was $1,084. Of this DRIP amount, $452 was fulfilled through open market purchases of common stock and $632 was fulfilled with the issuance of 37,843 shares of common stock.

 

For the dividend paid on January 15, 2025, the DRIP value was $3,923. This DRIP is excluded from the table above, as the DRIP share activity was after December 31, 2024.

 

For the year ended December 31, 2023
      DRIP     
      shares   DRIP 
Dividend record date  Dividend payment date  issued   value 
December 29, 2022  January 13, 2023   57,860   $955 
March 31, 2023  April 14, 2023   65,733    1,089 
June 30, 2023  July 14, 2023   81,527    1,352 
September 29, 2023  October 13, 2023   96,731    1,586 
       301,851   $4,982 

 

For the dividend paid on January 16, 2024, there were 95,791 shares issued with a DRIP value of $1,573. These shares are excluded from the table above, as the DRIP shares were issued after December 31, 2023.

 

For the year ended December 31, 2022
      DRIP     
      shares   DRIP 
Dividend record date  Dividend payment date  issued   value 
December 29, 2021  January 18, 2022   55,590   $902 
April 20, 2022  April 26, 2022   75,270    1,222 
July 20, 2022  July 27, 2022   88,081    1,431 
October 13, 2022  October 25, 2022   127,414    2,087 
       346,355   $5,642 

 

For the dividend paid on January 13, 2023, there were 57,860 shares issued with a DRIP value of $955. These shares are excluded from the table above, as the DRIP shares were issued after December 31, 2022.

 

On May 10, 2024, in conjunction with the Company’s IPO, the Board of Directors declared the following special dividends:

 

Record date   Pay date   Special Dividend  
December 5, 2024   December 20, 2024   $ 0.10  
March 3, 2025   March 18, 2025   $ 0.10  
June 9, 2025   June 24, 2025   $ 0.10  

 

Note 8. Commitments and Contingencies

 

The Company had an aggregate of $186,282 and $147,928, respectively, of unfunded commitments to provide debt financing to its portfolio companies as of December 31, 2024 and December 31, 2023. Such commitments are generally subject to the satisfaction of certain financial and nonfinancial covenants and certain operational metrics. The commitment period for these amounts may be shorter than the maturity date if drawn or funded. These commitments are not reflected in the Company’s consolidated statement of assets and liabilities. Consequently, such commitments result in an element of credit risk in excess of the amount recognized in the Company’s consolidated statement of assets and liabilities.

 

F-47

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

(amounts in 000’s, except share and per share amounts)

 

A summary of the composition of the unfunded commitments as of December 31, 2024 and 2023 is shown in the table below.

  

   As of   As of 
   December 31,
2024
   December 31,
2023
 
Alcami Corporation (Alcami)  $1,447   $2,543 
Allcat Claims Service, LLC   10,803    5,370 
Allentown, LLC   663    785 
American Equipment Holdings LLC   2,922    483 
American Soccer Company, Incorporated (SCORE)   2,601    2,601 
Arborworks Acquisition LLC   1,792    1,872 
MRC Keystone Acquisition LLC (Automated Handing Solutions)   3,864    
-
 
Basel U.S. Acquisition Co., Inc. (IAC)   2,930    1,622 
BCI Burke Holding Corp.   
-
    4,659 
OAO Acquisitions, Inc. (BearCom)   2,482    6,982 
Bloomington Holdco, LLC (BW Fusion)   6,421    
-
 
BLP Buyer, Inc. (Bishop Lifting Products)   2,878    6,548 
BR PJK Produce, LLC (Keany)   
-
    2,870 
Carton Packaging Buyer, Inc.   2,848    2,848 
CCFF Buyer, Inc (California Custom Fruits & Flavors, LLC)   9,812    
-
 
CGI Automated Manufacturing, LLC   2,242    2,390 
City Line Distributors, LLC   2,530    5,322 
Curio Brands, LLC   1,719    1,719 
DISA Holdings Corp. (DISA)   3,331    6,142 
Diverzify Intermediate, LLC   3,155    
-
 
DRS Holdings III, Inc. (Dr. Scholl’s)   310    310 
Eastern Wholesale Fence   198    1,332 
EIS Legacy, LLC   
-
    6,922 
Energy Acquisition LP (Electrical Components International, Inc. - ECI)   1,442    
-
 
Envirotech Services, LLC   6,746    
-
 
Eppinger Technologies, LLC   1,145    1,450 
FCA, LLC (FCA Packaging)   
-
    2,670 
Fastener Distribution Holdings, LLC   7,502    
-
 
Foundation Consumer Brands   577    577 
Fralock Buyer LLC   
-
    300 
Guardian Dentistry Partners   773    
-
 
Guided Practice Solutions: Dental, LLC (GPS)   
-
    10,299 
Gulf Pacific Holdings, LLC   1,798    10,153 
Gusmer Enterprises, Inc.   3,676    3,676 
Home Brands Group Holdings, Inc. (ReBath)   2,099    2,099 
I.D. Images Acquisition, LLC   2,020    2,020 
IF&P Foods, LLC (FreshEdge)   2,813    1,656 
Improving Acquisition LLC   1,672    1,672 
Krayden Holdings, Inc.   5,438    5,438 
Superior Intermediate LLC (Landmark Structures)   10,006    
-
 
Light Wave Dental Management LLC   4,171    827 
LSL Industries, LLC (LSL Healthcare)   5,224    15,224 
MacNeill Pride Group   1,798    3,877 
ML Buyer, LLC (Mama Lycha Foods, LLC)   3,991    
-
 
NMA Holdings, LLC (Neuromonitoring Associates)   7,459    
-
 
Phoenix YW Buyer, Inc. (Elida Beauty)   1,960    
-
 
Pixel Intermediate, LLC   1,482    
-
 
PMFC Holding, LLC   
-
    137 
Redwood MSO, LLC   2,784    
-
 
Refocus Management Services, LLC   6,269    
-
 
Regiment Security Partners LLC   104    104 
The Robinette Company   5,047    
-
 
Ruff Roofers Buyer, LLC   7,138    10,966 
SGA Dental Partners Holdings, LLC   
-
    5,087 
Siegel Egg Co., LLC   501    537 
Silk Holdings III Corp. (Suave)   6,667    
-
 
Speedstar Holding LLC   666    
-
 
Sundance Holdings Group, LLC   
-
    439 
Tapco Buyer LLC   9,435    
-
 
Trademark Global LLC   480    480 
US Anchors Group, Inc. (Mechanical Plastics Corp.)   2,819    
-
 
United Safety & Survivability Corporation (USSC)   
-
    469 
USALCO, LLC   
-
    1,494 
Vehicle Accessories, Inc.   2,064    1,671 
Workholding US Holdings, LLC (Forkardt Hardinge)   3,144    
-
 
Worldwide Produce Acquisition, LLC   424    1,286 
Total unfunded commitments  $186,282   $147,928 

 

From time to time, the Company may become a party to certain legal proceedings incidental to the normal course of its business. As of December 31, 2024 and 2023, management was not aware of any material pending or threatened litigation that would require accounting recognition or financial statement disclosure. 

 

F-48

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

(amounts in 000’s, except share and per share amounts)

 

Note 9. Earnings Per Share

 

In accordance with the provisions of ASC Topic 260, Earnings per Share (“ASC 260”), basic earnings per share is computed by dividing earnings available to common stockholders by the weighted average number of shares outstanding during the period. Other potentially dilutive common shares, and the related impact to earnings, are considered when calculating earnings per share on a diluted basis. As of December 31, 2024, 2023 and 2022, there were no dilutive shares.

 

The following table sets forth the computation of basic and diluted earnings per share of common stock for the years ended December 31, 2024, 2023 and 2022.

  

   For the years ended 
   December 31,
2024
   December 31,
2023
   December 31,
2022
 
             
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations  $131,940   $77,075   $45,765 
Weighted average shares of common stock outstanding - basic and diluted   63,762,377    39,250,232    27,184,302 
Earnings (loss) per share of common stock - basic and diluted  $2.07   $1.96   $1.68 

 

Note 10. Income Taxes

 

The Company has elected to be treated as a RIC under the Code beginning with the taxable year end December 31, 2021. As a RIC, the Company is not subject to a federal excise tax based on distributive requirements of its taxable income on a calendar year basis. Depending on the level of taxable income earned in a tax year, the Company may choose to carry forward taxable income in excess of current year distributions into the next tax year and pay a 4% excise tax on such income, to the extent required.

 

The Company makes certain adjustments to the classification of net assets as a result of permanent book-to-tax differences, which include differences in the book and tax basis of certain assets and liabilities, and nondeductible federal taxes or losses among other items. To the extent these differences are permanent, they are charged or credited to additional paid in capital, or total distributable earnings (losses), as appropriate.

 

The permanent differences for tax purposes from distributable earnings to additional paid in capital were reclassified for tax purposes for the tax years ended December 31, 2024, 2023 and 2022.

 

These reclassifications have no impact on net assets.

 

   For the years ended 
   December 31,
2024
   December 31,
2023
   December 31,
2022
 
Increase (decrease) in distributable earnings  $819   $101   $29 
Increase (decrease) in additional paid-in capital  $(819)  $(101)  $(29)

 

Taxable income generally differs from the net increase in net assets resulting from operations for financial reporting purposes due to (1) unrealized appreciation (depreciation) on investments, as gains and losses are generally not included in taxable income until these are realized; (2) income or loss recognition on exited investments; (3) non-deductible U.S. federal excise taxes; and (4) other non-deductible expense.

 

The following reconciles net increase in net assets resulting from operations to taxable income for the years ended December 31, 2024, 2023 and 2022:

 

   For the years ended 
   December 31,
2024
   December 31,
2023
   December 31,
2022
 
Net increase (decrease) in net assets resulting from operations  $131,940   $77,075   $45,765 
Net change in unrealized losses (gains) from investments, net of deferred income tax expense, if any   (2,098)   (2,944)   (5,502)
Net realized gains from investments(1)   (570)   
-
    
-
 
Non-deductible expenses, including excise taxes and offering costs disallowed   819    101    29 
Capital loss carryforward   
-
    10,686    
-
 
Other book tax differences   (66)   (65)   (67)
Taxable income before deductions for distributions  $130,025   $84,853   $40,225 

 

(1)

The realized gains of $570 are offset by capital losses generated for the year ended December 31, 2023 of $10,686.

 

For income tax purposes, distributions made to stockholders are reported as ordinary income, capital gains, non-taxable return of capital, or a combination thereof.

 

F-49

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

(amounts in 000’s, except share and per share amounts)

 

For the years ended December 31, 2024 and 2023, the Company incurred $817 and $101, respectively, of U.S. federal excise tax. There was no U.S. federal excise tax incurred for the year ended December 31, 2022.

 

The final determination of tax character will not be made until the Company files its tax return for each tax year and the tax characteristics of all distributions will be reported to stockholders on Form 1099 after the end of each calendar year. The tax character of distributions paid to stockholders during the tax years ended December 31, 2024, 2023 and 2022 were as follows.

 

   For the years ended 
   December 31,
2024
   December 31,
2023
   December 31,
2022
 
             
Ordinary income  $111,908   $81,617   $39,553 
Capital gains   
-
    
-
    
-
 
Return of capital   
-
    
-
    
-
 
Total  $111,908   $81,617   $39,553 

 

For the years ended December 31, 2024, 2023 and 2022, the components of accumulated earnings on a tax basis were as follows.

 

   For the years ended 
   December 31,
2024
   December 31,
2023
   December 31,
2022
 
Undistributed net investment income (loss)  $22,345   $4,227   $991 
Undistributed capital gains   
-
    
-
    
-
 
Capital loss carryforward   (13,357)   (10,686)   
-
 
Other accumulated gain (loss)   
-
    
-
    
-
 
Other temporary book / tax differences   (727)   (792)   (857)
Net unrealized appreciation (depreciation), net of deferred income tax expense, if any   25,614    20,275    17,331 
Total  $33,875   $13,024   $17,465 

  

Capital losses can be carried forward indefinitely to offset future capital gains. As of December 31, 2024, the Company had a capital loss carryforward of $401, which was characterized as short-term, and $12,956, which was characterized as long-term. As of December 31, 2023, the Company had a capital loss carryforward of $263, which was characterized as short-term, and $10,423, which was characterized as long-term. As of December 31, 2022, the Company had no capital loss carryforwards.

 

As of December 31, 2024, 2023 and 2022, the Company’s aggregate unrealized appreciation and depreciation on investments based on cost for U.S. federal income tax purposes was as follows:

 

   For the years ended 
   December 31,
2024
   December 31,
2023
   December 31,
2022
 
Tax cost  $2,017,154   $1,356,025   $1,157,635 
                
Gross unrealized appreciation   36,977    25,718    21,476 
Gross unrealized depreciation   (10,646)   (5,443)   (4,145)
Net unrealized appreciation/(depreciation) on investments  $26,331   $20,275   $17,331 

 

KABDC Corp, LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary, has elected to be treated as a corporation for U.S. tax purposes. As such, KABDC Corp, LLC is subject to U.S. Federal, state and local taxes. For the Company’s tax year ended December 31, 2024, KABDC Corp, LLC had a deferred income tax expense and a net deferred tax liability of $717. The net deferred tax liability of $717 is included in accrued expense and other liabilities on the Company’s Consolidated Statement of Assets and Liabilities as of December 31, 2024. For the Company’s tax years ended December 31, 2023 and 2022, KABDC Corp, LLC did not have a material provision for income taxes.

 

FASB ASC Topic 740, Accounting for Uncertainty in Income Taxes (“ASC 740”) provides guidance for how uncertain tax positions should be recognized, measured, presented, and disclosed in the consolidated financial statements. ASC 740 requires the evaluation of tax positions taken or expected to be taken in the course of preparing the Company’s tax returns to determine whether the tax positions are “more-likely-than-not” of being sustained by the applicable tax authority. The Company recognizes the tax benefits of uncertain tax positions only where the position is “more likely than not” to be sustained assuming examination by tax authorities. As of December 31, 2024, 2023 and 2022, management has analyzed the Company’s tax positions, and has concluded that no liability for unrecognized tax benefits should be recorded related to uncertain tax positions taken in the Company’s current year tax return. The Company is not aware of any tax positions for which it is reasonably possible that the total amounts of unrecognized tax benefits will change materially in the next 12 months. Management’s determinations regarding ASC 740 may be subject to review and adjustment at a later date based upon factors including, but not limited to, an ongoing analysis of tax laws, regulations and interpretations thereof.

 

F-50

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

(amounts in 000’s, except share and per share amounts)

 

Note 11. Financial Highlights

 

The following per share of common stock data has been derived from information provided in the audited financial statements. The following is a schedule of financial highlights for the years ended December 31, 2024, 2023, 2022 and 2021.

  

   For the years ended December 31, 
   (amounts in thousands, except share and per share amounts) 
Per Common Share Operating Performance (1)  2024   2023   2022   2021 
Net Asset Value, Beginning of Period(2)  $16.42   $16.50    16.22   $14.86 
                     
Results of Operations:                    
Net Investment Income   2.03    2.16    1.48    0.94 
Net Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) on Investments(3)   0.06    (0.18)   0.14    1.28 
Net Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets Resulting from Operations   2.09    1.98    1.62    2.22 
                     
Distributions to Common Stockholders                    
Distributions   (1.70)   (2.06)   (1.34)   (0.86)
Net Decrease in Net Assets Resulting from Distributions   (1.70)   (2.06)   (1.34)   (0.86)
                     
Capital Share Transactions                    
Issuance of Common Stock, net of Underwriting and Offering Costs   (0.11)   
-
    
-
    
-
 
Net Increase (Decrease) Resulting from Capital Share Transactions   (0.11)   
-
    
-
    
-
 
Net Asset Value, End of Period  $16.70   $16.42   $16.50   $16.22 
Per Share Market Value, End of Period  $16.54   $N/A    N/A    N/A 
                     
Shares Outstanding, End of Period   71,059,689    41,603,666    35,879,291    19,227,902 
                     
Ratio/Supplemental Data                    
Net assets, end of period  $1,186,342   $683,056    592,041   $311,969 
Weighted-average shares outstanding   63,762,377    39,250,232    27,184,302    10,718,083 
Total Return based on net asset value(4)   12.6%   12.5%   10.3%   14.2%
Total Return based on market value(5)   7.5%   N/A    N/A    N/A 
Portfolio turnover   20.7%   15.5%   17.6%   31.3%
Ratio of operating expenses to average net assets before waivers(6)   10.1%   11.9%   7.9%   5.8%
Ratio of operating expenses to average net assets with waiver(6)   8.3%   11.9%   7.9%   5.8%
Ratio of net investment income (loss) to average net assets(6)   12.8%   13.3%   9.1%   6.8%

 

(1)The per common share data was derived by using weighted average shares outstanding.

 

(2)On February 5, 2021, the initial offering price of $15.00 per share less $0.14 per share of organizational costs.

 

(3)Realized and unrealized gains and losses per share in this caption are balancing amounts necessary to reconcile the change in net asset value per share for the period and may not reconcile with the aggregate gains and losses in the Consolidated Statement of Operations due to share transactions during the period.

 

For the years ended December 31, 2024, 2023, 2022 and 2021, such share transactions include the effect of share issuances of $0.00, $0.00, $0.04 and $0.19 per share, respectively. During the period, shares were issued at prices that reflect the aggregate amount of the Company’s initial organizational and offering expenses. As a result, investors subscribing after the initial capital call are allocated organizational expenses consistently with all stockholders.

 

(4)Total return is calculated as the change in net asset value (“NAV”) per share during the period, plus distributions per share (if any), divided by the beginning NAV per share. The calculation also assumes reinvestment of dividends at actual prices pursuant to the Company’s dividend reinvestment plan. Total return is not annualized.

 

F-51

 

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

(amounts in 000’s, except share and per share amounts)

 

(5)Total return based on market value is calculated as the change in market value per share during the respective periods, plus distributions per share, if any, divided by the beginning market value per share. The calculation also assumes reinvestment of dividends at actual prices pursuant to the Company’s dividend reinvestment plan. The beginning market value per share is based on the initial public offering price of $16.63 per share and not annualized.

 

(6) The ratios reflect an annualized amount, except in the case of non-recurring expenses (e.g. initial organizational expense of $175 for the period February 5, 2021 (commencement of operations) through December 31, 2021).

 

Note 12. Segment Reporting

 

The Company operates through a single operating and reporting segment with an investment objective to generate both current income and capital appreciation through debt and equity investments. The CODM is comprised of the Company’s co-chief executive officers and these CODMs assess the performance and make operating decisions of the Company on a consolidated basis primarily based on the Company’s net increase in stockholders’ equity resulting from operations (“net income”). In addition to numerous other factors and metrics, the CODMs utilize net income as a key metric in determining the amount of dividends to be distributed to the Company’s stockholders. As the Company’s operations comprise of a single reporting segment, the segment assets are reflected on the accompanying consolidated balance sheet as “total assets” and the significant segment expenses are listed on the accompanying consolidated statement of operations.

 

Note 13. Subsequent Events

 

The Company’s management has evaluated subsequent events through the date of issuance of the financial statements included herein. There have been no subsequent events that require recognition or disclosure in these financial statements except as described below.

 

On January 15, 2025, the Company paid a regular dividend of $0.40 per share to each common stockholder of record as of December 31, 2024. The total dividend was $28,424 and $3,923 of the total was DRIP.

 

On February 5, 2025, the Company and KABDCF II entered into an amendment of its Revolving Funding Facility II. Under the terms of the amendment, the lender increased its commitment from $150,000 to $250,000 and decreased the interest rate on borrowings outstanding from 3-month term SOFR plus 2.70% to 3-month term SOFR plus 2.25%. Additionally, the maturity date of the facility was extended one year to December 22, 2029. All other terms of the Revolving Funding Facility II remain substantially the same.

 

On February 13, 2025, the Company and KABDCF entered into an amendment of its Revolving Funding Facility. Under the terms of the amendment, the lenders increased their commitments from $600,000 to $675,000 and decreased the interest rate on borrowings outstanding from daily SOFR plus 2.375% - 2.50%, depending upon the mix of loans, to daily SOFR plus 2.15%. Additionally, the maturity date of the facility was extended to February 13, 2030. All other terms of the Revolving Funding Facility remain substantially the same.

 

On February 14, 2025, the Company reduced the size of its Corporate Credit Facility from $475,000 to $400,000. This commitment reduction was done in conjunction with the $75,000 increase to its Revolving Funding Facility from $600,000 to $675,000.

 

On February 19, 2025, the Board of Directors of the Company declared a regular dividend to common stockholders in the amount of $0.40 per share. The regular dividend of $0.40 per share will be paid on April 15, 2025 to stockholders of record as of the close of business on March 31, 2025, payable in cash or shares of common stock of the Company pursuant to the Company’s Dividend Reinvestment Plan, as amended.

  

F-52

 

 

ITEM 9. CHANGES IN AND DISAGREEMENTS WITH ACCOUNTANTS ON ACCOUNTING AND FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE

 

There are not and have not been any disagreements between us and our accountant on any matter of accounting principles, practices or financial statement disclosure.

 

ITEM 9A. CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES

 

Evaluation of Disclosure Controls and Procedures

 

As of the end of the period covered by this report, our management carried out an evaluation, under the supervision and with the participation of our Co-Chief Executive Officers and Chief Financial Officer, of the effectiveness of the design and operation of our disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e) under the Exchange Act). Based on that evaluation, our Co-Chief Executive Officers and Chief Financial Officer have concluded that our disclosure controls and procedures were effective at the reasonable assurance level as of December 31, 2024. In designing and evaluating our disclosure controls and procedures, management recognizes that any controls and procedures, no matter how well designed and operated, can provide only reasonable assurance of achieving their objectives, and management necessarily applies its judgment in evaluating the benefits of possible controls and procedures relative to their costs.

 

Report of Management on Internal Control Over Financial Reporting

 

Our management is responsible for establishing and maintaining adequate internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f) of the Exchange Act). Under the supervision and with the participation of management, including the Co-Chief Executive Officers and Chief Financial Officer, we conducted an evaluation of the effectiveness of our internal control over financial reporting based on the criteria established in “Internal Control—Integrated Framework” (2013) issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission. Because of its inherent limitations, internal control over financial reporting may not prevent or detect misstatements. Also, projections of any evaluation of effectiveness to future periods are subject to the risk that controls may become inadequate because of changes in conditions, or that the degree of compliance with the policies or procedures may deteriorate. Based on the evaluation, management concluded that the Company's internal control over financial reporting was effective as of December 31, 2024. The Company's independent registered public accounting firm, PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, has audited the effectiveness of the Company's internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2024, as stated in their report which appears herein.

 

Attestation Report of the Registered Public Accounting Firm

 

Our independent registered public accounting firm, PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, has audited the effectiveness of the Company’s internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2024, as stated in their report which is included herein.

 

Changes in Internal Control over Financial Reporting

 

There have been no changes in our internal control over financial reporting that occurred during our most recently completed fiscal quarter ended December 31, 2024 that have materially affected, or are reasonably likely to materially affect, our internal control over financial reporting.

  

ITEM 9B. OTHER INFORMATION

 

None.

 

ITEM 9C. DISCLOSURE REGARDING FOREIGN JURISDICTIONS THAT PREVENT INSPECTIONS

 

Not Applicable.

 

77

 

 

PART III

 

ITEM 10. DIRECTORS, EXECUTIVE OFFICERS AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE

 

The information required by this item will be contained in the Company’s definitive Proxy Statement for its 2025 Annual Stockholder Meeting, to be filed with the SEC within 120 days after December 31, 2024 and is incorporated herein by reference.

 

ITEM 11. EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

 

The information required by this item will be contained in the Company’s definitive Proxy Statement for its 2025 Annual Stockholder Meeting, to be filed with the SEC within 120 days after December 31, 2024 and is incorporated herein by reference.

 

ITEM 12. SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT AND RELATED STOCKHOLDER MATTERS

 

The information required by this item will be contained in the Company’s definitive Proxy Statement for its 2025 Annual Stockholder Meeting, to be filed with the SEC within 120 days after December 31, 2024 and is incorporated herein by reference.

 

ITEM 13. CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS, AND DIRECTOR INDEPENDENCE

 

The information required by this item will be contained in the Company’s definitive Proxy Statement for its 2025 Annual Stockholder Meeting, to be filed with the SEC within 120 days after December 31, 2024 and is incorporated herein by reference.

 

ITEM 14. PRINCIPAL ACCOUNTING FEES AND SERVICES

 

The information required by this item will be contained in the Company’s definitive Proxy Statement for its 2025 Annual Stockholder Meeting, to be filed with the SEC within 120 days after December 31, 2024 and is incorporated herein by reference.

 

78

 

 

PART IV

 

ITEM 15. EXHIBITS AND FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULES

 

(a) DOCUMENTS FILED AS PART OF THIS REPORT

 

The following is a list of our consolidated financial statements included in this Annual Report on Form 10-K under Item 8 of Part II hereof:

 

1. CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND SUPPLEMENTAL DATA

 

Index to Consolidated Financial Statements

 

    Page
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm   F-2
Consolidated Statements of Assets and Liabilities as of December 31, 2024 and 2023   F-3
Consolidated Statements of Operations for the years ended December 31, 2024, 2023 and 2022   F-4
Consolidated Statements of Changes in Net Assets for the years ended December 31, 2024, 2023 and 2022   F-5
Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows for the years ended December 31, 2024, 2023 and 2022   F-6
Consolidated Schedules of Investments as of December 31, 2024 and 2023   F-7
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements   F-25

  

79

 

 

(b) EXHIBITS

 

3.1   Certificate of Formation (3)
3.2   Initial Limited Liability Company Agreement (1)
3.3   Certificate of Conversion (2)
3.4   Certificate of Incorporation (2)
3.5   Amended and Restated Bylaws (5)
4.1   Description of Securities (3)
10.1   Investment Advisory Agreement (1)
10.2   Amendment to Investment Advisory Agreement (8)
10.3   Amended and Restated Investment Advisory Agreement (13)
10.4   Administration Agreement (1)
10.5   License Agreement (1)
10.6   Indemnification Agreement (1)
10.7   Custody Agreement (1)
10.8   Subscription Agreement (1)
10.9   Loan and Security Agreement, dated as of February  5, 2021, by and between KA Credit Advisors, LLC, as collateral manager, Kayne Anderson BDC Financing, LLC, as borrower, certain lenders thereto, administrative agent for the lenders, and collateral agent for the lenders (2)
10.10   Credit Agreement, dated February 5, 2021, by and between Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc., as borrower, lenders signatories thereto, and agent and the lead arranger (2)
10.11   Second Amendment to Credit Agreement, dated December 3, 2021, by and between Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc., as borrower, lender signatories thereto, and agent and lead arranger (5)
10.12   Third Amendment to the Credit Agreement, dated December 30, 2022, by and between Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc., as borrower, lenders, and City National Bank as administrative agent for the lenders (7)
10.13   Fourth Amendment to the Credit Agreement, dated December 31, 2023, by and between Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc., as borrower, lenders, and City National Bank as administrative agent for the lenders (11)
10.14   Senior Secured Revolving Credit Agreement (4)
10.15   Second Amendment to Senior Secured Revolving Credit Agreement (14)
10.16   Loan and Security Agreement (4)
10.17   First Amendment to Loan and Security Agreement, dated November 17, 2022, by and between KA Credit Advisors, LLC, as collateral manager, Kayne Anderson BDC Financing, LLC, as borrower, certain lenders thereto, administrative agent for the lenders, and collateral agent for the lenders (6)
10.18   Second Amendment to Loan and Security Agreement, dated June 29, 2023, by and between KA Credit Advisors, LLC, as collateral manager, Kayne Anderson BDC Financing, LLC, as borrower, certain lenders thereto, administrative agent for the lenders, and collateral agent for the lenders (9)
10.19   Third Amendment to Loan and Security Agreement, dated April 3, 2024, by and between KA Credit Advisors, LLC, as collateral manager, Kayne Anderson BDC Financing, LLC, as borrower, certain lenders thereto, administrative agent for the lenders, and collateral agent for the lenders (12)
10.20   Fourth Amendment to Loan and Security Agreement, dated December 13, 2024, by and between KA Credit Advisors, LLC, as collateral manager, Kayne Anderson BDC Financing, LLC, as borrower, certain lenders thereto, administrative agent for the lenders, and collateral agent for the lenders *
10.21   Fifth Amendment to Loan and Security Agreement, dated February 13, 2025, by and between KA Credit Advisors, LLC, as collateral manager, Kayne Anderson BDC Financing, LLC, as borrower, certain lenders thereto, administrative agent for the lenders, and collateral agent for the lenders (16)
10.22   Loan and Security Agreement, dated December 22, 2023, by and between KA Credit Advisors, LLC, as portfolio manager, Kayne Anderson BDC Financing II, LLC, as borrower, certain lenders thereto, collateral administrator for the lenders, collateral agent for the lenders, securities intermediary party, and administrative agent for the lenders (10)

 

80

 

 

10.23   Amendment No. 2 to Loan and Security Agreement, dated December 22, 2023, by and between KA Credit Advisors, LLC, as portfolio manager, Kayne Anderson BDC Financing II, LLC, as borrower, certain lenders thereto, collateral administrator for the lenders, collateral agent for the lenders, securities intermediary party, and administrative agent for the lenders (15)
10.24   Notes Purchase Agreement, dated June 29, 2023, by and among the Company and the Purchasers party thereto (9)
14.1  

Code of Ethics as amended November 9, 2023 *

14.2   Supplemental Antifraud Code of Ethics for Principal Officers and Senior Financial Officers (8)
21.1   Subsidiaries of Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc. (3)
31.1*   Certification of Chief Executive Officer pursuant to Securities Exchange Act Rule 13a-14(a), as adopted pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
31.2*   Certification of Chief Financial Officer pursuant to Securities Exchange Act Rule 13a-14(a), as adopted pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
32.1*   Certification of Chief Executive Officer pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
32.2*   Certification of Chief Financial Officer pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
101.INS   Inline XBRL Instance Document.*
101.SCH   Inline XBRL Taxonomy Extension Schema Document.*
101.CAL   Inline XBRL Taxonomy Extension Calculation Linkbase Document.*
101.DEF   Inline XBRL Taxonomy Extension Definition Linkbase Document.*
101.LAB   Inline XBRL Taxonomy Extension Label Linkbase Document.*
101.PRE   Inline XBRL Taxonomy Extension Presentation Linkbase Document.*
104   Cover Page Interactive Data File (formatted as Inline XBRL and contained in Exhibit 101).

  

(1) Incorporated by reference from the Company’s Amendment No. 2 to Form 10, as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on November 9, 2020.
(2) Incorporated by reference from the Company’s Form 8-K, as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on February 9, 2021.
(3) Incorporated by reference from the Company’s Form 10-K, as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on February 26, 2021.
(4) Incorporated by reference from the Company’s Form 8-K, as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on February 25, 2022.
(5) Incorporated by reference from the Company’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended June 30, 2022, as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on August 15, 2022.
(6) Incorporated by reference from the Company’s Form 8-K, as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on November 22, 2022.
(7) Incorporated by reference from the Company’s Form 8-K, as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on January 6, 2023.
(8) Incorporated by reference from the Company’s Form 10-K, as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on March 13, 2023.
(9) Incorporated by reference from the Company’s Form 8-K, as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on July 5, 2023.
(10) Incorporated by reference from the Company’s Form 8-K, as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on December 29, 2023.
(11) Incorporated by reference from the Company’s Form 8-K, as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on January 5, 2024.
(12) Incorporated by reference from the Company’s Form 8-K, as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on April 8, 2024.
(13) Incorporated by reference from the Company’s Quarterly report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended June 30, 2024, as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on August 13, 2024.
(14) Incorporated by reference from the Company’s Form 8-K, as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on November 26, 2024.
(15) Incorporated by reference from the Company’s Form 8-K, as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on February 10, 2025.
(16) Incorporated by reference from the Company’s Form 8-K, as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on February 18, 2025.

 

* Filed herewith.

 

ITEM 16. FORM 10-K SUMMARY

 

None. 

81

 

 

SIGNATURES

 

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned thereunto duly authorized.

 

  Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.
   
Date: March 3, 2025  
   
    /s/ Douglas L. Goodwillie
  Name:  Douglas L. Goodwillie
  Title: Co-Chief Executive Officer
    (Co-Principal Executive Officer)
     
Date: March 3, 2025  
   
    /s/ Kenneth B. Leonard
  Name:  Kenneth B. Leonard
  Title: Co-Chief Executive Officer
    (Co-Principal Executive Officer)
     
Date: March 3, 2025  
    /s/ Terry A. Hart
  Name: Terry A. Hart
  Title: Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer
    (Principal Financial and Accounting Officer)

 

 

82

 

As of December 31, 2023, all investments are non-controlled, non-affiliated investments. Non-controlled, non-affiliated investments are defined as investments in which the Company owns less than 5% of the portfolio company’s outstanding voting securities and does not have the power to exercise control over the management or policies of such portfolio company. In November 2023, the Company completed a restructure of the investment in Arborworks Acquisition LLC whereby the existing term loan and revolver were restructured to a new term loan and preferred and common equity. KABDC Corp II, LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of the Company, holds the preferred and common equity of Arborworks Acquisition LLC that the Company owns following this restructure. The Company has a senior secured loan in an investment vehicle (BC CS 2, L.P.) that is collateralized by a preferred stock investment in Cuisine Solutions, Inc.. In September 2024, the Company completed a restructure of the investment in Trademark Global LLC whereby the existing term loan and revolver became a restructured term loan and revolver and no debt was converted to equity. The Company did receive new common units in TG Parent Newco LLC for which it owns 6.23% of the overall business (Kayne Anderson entities as a whole own 20.77%). As of December 31, 2024, the amortized cost basis of Trademark Global LLC was $15,438 and was 0.8% of the total amortized cost basis of our debt investments of $1,952,708. The restructure extended the maturity from July 30, 2024 to July 30, 2030; the rate changed from S + 5.75% to S + 8.50%. As defined in the 1940 Act, the Company is deemed to be an “affiliated person” of this portfolio company as the Company owns more than 5% but less than 25% of the portfolio company’s voting securities or has the power to exercise control over management or policies of such portfolio company, including through a management agreement (“non-controlled affiliate”). As of September 30, 2024, the total value of the Company’s non-controlled affiliated investments was $12,196. Transactions related to the Company’s investment in a non-controlled affiliate for the period September 30, 2024 were as follows: Investment Value at December 31, 2023 Gross Additions(a) Gross Reductions (b) Net Change in Unrealized Gains (Losses) Value at September 30, 2024 Interest and PIK Income Dividend Income Other Income Trademark Global, LLC $ 13,129 $ 1,010 $ - $ (1,943 ) $ 12,196 $ 754 $ - $ - TG Parent Newco LLC (Trademark Global LLC) - - - - - - - - Total $ 13,129 $ 1,010 $ - $ (1,943 ) $ 12,196 $ 754 $ - $ - (a) Gross additions may include increases in the cost basis of investments resulting from new investments, amounts related to payment-in-kind (“PIK”) interest capitalized and added to the principal balance of the respective loans, the accretion of discounts, the exchange of one or more existing investments for one or more new investments and the movement at fair value of an existing portfolio company into this controlled affiliated category from a different category. (b) Gross reductions may include decreases in the cost basis of investments resulting from principal collections related to investment repayments and sales, return of capital, the amortization of premiums and the exchange of one or more existing securities for one or more new securities. As of December 31, 2023, the tax cost of the Company’s investments approximates their amortized cost. Loan contains a variable rate structure, that may be subject to an interest rate floor. Variable rate loans bear interest at a rate that may be determined by reference to either the Secured Overnight Funding Rate (“SOFR” or “S”) (which can include one-, three- or six-month SOFR), or an alternate base rate (which can include the Federal Funds Effective Rate or the Prime Rate or “P”). Non-qualifying investment as defined by Section 55(a) of the Investment Company Act of 1940. The Company may not acquire any non-qualifying asset unless, at the time of acquisition, qualifying assets represent at least 70% of the Company’s total assets. As of December 31, 2023, 4.8% of the Company’s total assets were in non-qualifying investments. Debt investment on non-accrual status as of December 31, 2023. In September 2024, the Company completed a restructure of the investment in Trademark Global LLC whereby the existing term loan and revolver became a restructured term loan and revolver and no debt was converted to equity. The Company did receive new common units in TG Parent Newco LLC for which it owns 6.23% of the overall business (Kayne Anderson entities as a whole own 20.77%). As of December 31, 2024, the amortized cost basis of Trademark Global LLC was $15,438 and was 0.8% of the total amortized cost basis of our debt investments of $1,952,708. The restructure extended the maturity from July 30, 2024 to July 30, 2030; the rate changed from S + 5.75% to S + 8.50%. As defined in the 1940 Act, the Company is deemed to be an “affiliated person” of this portfolio company as the Company owns more than 5% but less than 25% of the portfolio company’s voting securities or has the power to exercise control over management or policies of such portfolio company, including through a management agreement (“non-controlled affiliate”). As of December 31, 2024, the total value of the Company’s non-controlled affiliated investments was $12,196. Transactions related to the Company’s investment in a non-controlled affiliate for the period December 31, 2024 were as follows: Investment(1) Value at 12/30/2023 Gross Additions(a) Gross Reductions (b) Net Change in Unrealized Gains(Losses) Value at 12/31/2024 Interest and PIK Income Dividend Income Other Income Trademark Global, LLC $ 13,129 $ 1,010 $ - $ (1,943 ) $ 12,196 $ 754 $ - $ - TG Parent Newco LLC (Trademark Global LLC) - - - - - - - - Total $ 13,129 $ 1,010 $ - $ (1,943 ) $ 12,196 $ 754 $ - $ - (a) Gross additions may include increases in the cost basis of investments resulting from new investments, amounts related to payment-in-kind (“PIK”) interest capitalized and added to the principal balance of the respective loans, the accretion of discounts, the exchange of one or more existing investments for one or more new investments and the movement at fair value of an existing portfolio company into this controlled affiliated category from a different category. (b) Gross reductions may include decreases in the cost basis of investments resulting from principal collections related to investment repayments and sales, return of capital, the amortization of premiums and the exchange of one or more existing securities for one or more new securities. Realized and unrealized gains and losses per share in this caption are balancing amounts necessary to reconcile the change in net asset value per share for the period and may not reconcile with the aggregate gains and losses in the Consolidated Statement of Operations due to share transactions during the period. For the years ended December 31, 2024, 2023, 2022 and 2021, such share transactions include the effect of share issuances of $0.00, $0.00, $0.04 and $0.19 per share, respectively. During the period, shares were issued at prices that reflect the aggregate amount of the Company’s initial organizational and offering expenses. 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Exhibit 10.20

 

EXECUTION VERSION

Conformed through Fourth Amendment, dated as of December 13, 2024

 

 

$600,000,000

 

LOAN AND SECURITY AGREEMENT

 

by and among

 

KA CREDIT ADVISORS, LLC,
(Collateral Manager)

 

KAYNE ANDERSON BDC FINANCING, LLC,
(Borrower)

 

KAYNE ANDERSON BDC, INC.,
(Seller)

 

EACH OF THE LENDERS FROM TIME TO TIME PARTY HERETO,
(Lenders)

 

WELLS FARGO BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION,
(Administrative Agent)

 

WILMINGTON TRUST, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION,
(Collateral Agent)

 

and

 

WILMINGTON TRUST, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION,

(Custodian)

 

Dated as of February 18, 2022

 

 

 

 

TABLE OF CONTENTS
    Page
     
ARTICLE I
     
DEFINITIONS
Section 1.1 Certain Defined Terms 2
Section 1.2 Other Terms 48
Section 1.3 Computation of Time Periods 48
Section 1.4 Interpretation 48
     
ARTICLE II
     
THE ADVANCES
 
Section 2.1 The Advances 51
Section 2.2 Procedures for Advances by the Lenders 52
Section 2.3 Reduction of the Facility Amount; Principal Repayments 53
Section 2.4 Determination of Interest 54
Section 2.5 [Reserved] 54
Section 2.6 Borrowing Base Deficiency Cures 54
Section 2.7 Priority of Payments 55
Section 2.8 Alternate Priority of Payments 57
Section 2.9 Collections and Allocations 58
Section 2.10 Payments, Computations, etc 59
Section 2.11 Fees 59
Section 2.12 Increased Costs; Capital Adequacy; Illegality 60
Section 2.13 Taxes 62
Section 2.14 Reinvestment; Discretionary Sales, Substitution and Optional Sales of Loans 66
Section 2.15 Assignment of the Sale Agreement and Guarantee 70
Section 2.16 Capital Contributions 70
Section 2.17 Defaulting Lenders 70
Section 2.18 Reserved 71
Section 2.19 Benchmark Replacement Settings 71
     
ARTICLE III
     
CONDITIONS TO CLOSING AND ADVANCES
 
Section 3.1 Conditions to Closing 73
Section 3.2 Conditions Precedent to All Advances and Acquisitions of Loans 75
Section 3.3 Custodianship; Transfer of Loans and Permitted Investments 78

 

-i-

 

 

ARTICLE IV
     
REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES
 
Section 4.1 Representations and Warranties of the Borrower 79
Section 4.2 Representations and Warranties of the Borrower Relating to this Agreement and the Collateral 89
Section 4.3 Representations and Warranties of the Collateral Manager 90
Section 4.4 Representations and Warranties of the Collateral Agent 92
Section 4.5 Representations and Warranties of the Seller 93
     
ARTICLE V
     
GENERAL COVENANTS
 
Section 5.1 Affirmative Covenants of the Borrower 94
Section 5.2 Negative Covenants of the Borrower 100
Section 5.3 Affirmative Covenants of the Collateral Manager 102
Section 5.4 Negative Covenants of the Collateral Manager 105
Section 5.5 Affirmative Covenants of the Collateral Agent 106
Section 5.6 Negative Covenants of the Collateral Agent 107
Section 5.7 Covenant of the Seller 107
     
ARTICLE VI
     
COLLATERAL ADMINISTRATION
 
Section 6.1 Appointment of the Collateral Manager 108
Section 6.2 Duties of the Collateral Manager 108
Section 6.3 Authorization of the Collateral Manager 116
Section 6.4 Collection of Payments; Accounts 117
Section 6.5 Realization Upon Loans Subject to an Assigned Value Adjustment Event 118
Section 6.6 Collateral Manager Compensation 118
Section 6.7 Expense Reimbursement 118
Section 6.8 Reports; Information 118
Section 6.9 Annual Statement as to Compliance 120
Section 6.10 The Collateral Manager Not to Resign 120
Section 6.11 Collateral Manager Termination Events 120
     
ARTICLE VII
     
THE Collateral Agent
 
Section 7.1 Designation of Collateral Agent 121
Section 7.2 Duties of Collateral Agent 121

 

-ii-

 

 

Section 7.3 Merger or Consolidation 124
Section 7.4 Collateral Agent Compensation 125
Section 7.5 Collateral Agent Removal 125
Section 7.6 Limitation on Liability 125
Section 7.7 Resignation of the Collateral Agent 129
Section 7.8 [Reserved] 130
Section 7.9 [Reserved] 130
Section 7.10 Access to Certain Documentation and Information Regarding the Collateral; Audits 130
     
ARTICLE VIII
     
SECURITY INTEREST
 
Section 8.1 Grant of Security Interest 131
Section 8.2 Release of Lien on Collateral 132
     
ARTICLE IX
     
EVENTS OF DEFAULT
 
Section 9.1 Events of Default 133
Section 9.2 Remedies 135
Section 9.3 Collateral Agent Shall Enforce Claims 136
Section 9.4 Application of Cash Collected 137
Section 9.5 Rights of Action 137
Section 9.6 Unconditional Rights of Lenders to Receive Principal and Interest 137
Section 9.7 Restoration of Rights and Remedies 137
Section 9.8 Rights and Remedies Cumulative 138
Section 9.9 Delay or Omission Not Waiver 138
Section 9.10 Waiver of Stay or Extension Laws 138
Section 9.11 Power of Attorney 138
     
ARTICLE X
     
INDEMNIFICATION
 
Section 10.1 Indemnities by the Borrower 139
Section 10.2 Indemnities by the Collateral Manager 142
     
ARTICLE XI
     
THE ADMINISTRATIVE AGENT
 
Section 11.1 Appointment 143
Section 11.2 Standard of Care 143

 

-iii-

 

 

Section 11.3 Administrative Agent’s Reliance, etc 144
Section 11.4 Credit Decision with Respect to the Administrative Agent 144
Section 11.5 Indemnification of the Administrative Agent 144
Section 11.6 Successor Administrative Agent 145
Section 11.7 Payments by the Administrative Agent 145
Section 11.8 Erroneous Payments 146
     
ARTICLE XII
     
MISCELLANEOUS
 
Section 12.1 Amendments and Waivers 148
Section 12.2 Notices, etc 149
Section 12.3 Ratable Payments 150
Section 12.4 No Waiver; Remedies 150
Section 12.5 Binding Effect; Benefit of Agreement 150
Section 12.6 Term of this Agreement 150
Section 12.7 Governing Law; Consent to Jurisdiction; Waiver of Objection to Venue 151
Section 12.8 Waivers 151
Section 12.9 Costs and Expenses 152
Section 12.10 No Proceedings 152
Section 12.11 Recourse Against Certain Parties 153
Section 12.12 Protection of Right, Title and Interest in the Collateral; Further Action Evidencing Advances 154
Section 12.13 Confidentiality 155
Section 12.14 Execution in Counterparts; Severability; Integration 157
Section 12.15 Waiver of Setoff 157
Section 12.16 Assignments by the Lenders 158
Section 12.17 Heading and Exhibits 159
Section 12.18 Intent of the Parties 160
Section 12.19 Acknowledgement and Consent to Bail-In of EEA Financial Institutions 160
Section 12.20 Recognition of the U.S. Special Resolution Regimes 160
     
ARTICLE XIII
     
THE CUSTODIAN
 
Section 13.1 Designation of Custodian 161
Section 13.2 Duties of the Custodian 161
Section 13.3 Concerning the Custodian 163
Section 13.4 Release of Documents 166
Section 13.5 Return of Required Loan Documents 167
Section 13.6 Access to Certain Documentation and Information Regarding the Collateral; Audits 167
Section 13.7 Merger or Consolidation 167
Section 13.8 Custodian Compensation 167
Section 13.9 Custodian Removal 168
Section 13.10 Resignation 168
Section 13.11 Limitations on Liability 168
Section 13.12 Custodian as Agent of Collateral Agent 168

 

-iv-

 

 

EXHIBITS
 
EXHIBIT A-1 Form of Funding Notice
EXHIBIT A-2 Form of Repayment Notice
EXHIBIT A-3 Form of Reinvestment Notice
EXHIBIT A-4 Form of Borrowing Base Certificate
EXHIBIT A-5 Form of Approval Notice
EXHIBIT B [Reserved]
EXHIBIT C Form of Officer’s Certificate as to Solvency
EXHIBIT D [Reserved]
EXHIBIT E Form of Release of Underlying Instruments
EXHIBIT F Form of Assignment of Underlying Instruments
EXHIBIT G [Reserved]
EXHIBIT H Form of Joinder Supplement
EXHIBIT I Form of Section 2.13 Certificate
EXHIBIT J Form of Custodian Report
EXHIBIT K Form of Loan Checklist
   
SCHEDULES
   
SCHEDULE I Legal Names
SCHEDULE II Industry Classifications
SCHEDULE III Loan Schedule
SCHEDULE IV Agreed-Upon Procedures
SCHEDULE V Authorized Persons
   
ANNEXES
   
ANNEX A Addresses for Notices
ANNEX B Commitments
ANNEX C Specified Limitations

 

-v-

 

 

LOAN AND SECURITY AGREEMENT

 

THIS LOAN AND SECURITY AGREEMENT (as amended, modified, waived, supplemented, restated or replaced from time to time, this “Agreement”) is made as of February 18, 2022, by and among:

 

(1) KA CREDIT ADVISORS, LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, as collateral manager (the “Collateral Manager”);

 

(2) KAYNE ANDERSON BDC FINANCING, LLC, a bankruptcy remote, special purpose Delaware limited liability company, as borrower (the “Borrower”);

 

(3) KAYNE ANDERSON BDC, INC, a Delaware corporation, as seller (the “Seller”);

 

(4) EACH OF THE LENDERS FROM TIME TO TIME PARTY HERETO (together with its respective successors and assigns in such capacity, each a “Lender,” collectively, the “Lenders”);

 

(5) WELLS FARGO BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, a national banking association (“Wells Fargo”), as the administrative agent hereunder (together with its successors and assigns in such capacity, the “Administrative Agent”);

 

(6) WILMINGTON TRUST, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, not in its individual capacity but as the collateral agent (together with its successors and assigns in such capacity, the “Collateral Agent”); and

 

(7) WILMINGTON TRUST, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, not in its individual capacity but as the custodian (together with its successors and assigns in such capacity, the “Custodian”).

 

RECITALS

 

WHEREAS, the Borrower has requested that the Lenders extend credit hereunder by providing Commitments and making Advances (each as defined below) from time to time prior to the Reinvestment Period End Date (as defined below) for the general business purposes of the Borrower;

 

WHEREAS, the Borrower has requested that the Collateral Manager act as the collateral manager of the Borrower and manage the Collateral (as defined below); and

 

WHEREAS, the Lenders are willing to extend such credit to the Borrower on the terms and subject to the conditions set forth herein.

 

NOW, THEREFORE, based upon the foregoing Recitals, the mutual premises and agreements contained herein, and other good and valuable consideration, the receipt and sufficiency of which is hereby acknowledged, the parties hereto, intending to be legally bound, hereby agree as follows:

 

-1-

 

 

ARTICLE I

 

DEFINITIONS

 

Section 1.1 Certain Defined Terms.

 

Certain capitalized terms used throughout this Agreement are defined in this Section 1.1. As used in this Agreement and its schedules, exhibits and other attachments, unless the context requires a different meaning, the following terms shall have the following meanings:

 

1940 Act”: The United States Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, and the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder.

 

Account”: Any of the Collateral Account, the Collection Account, the Principal Collection Account, the Interest Collection Account, the Unfunded Exposure Account and any sub-accounts thereof deemed appropriate or necessary by the Collateral Agent or Securities Intermediary for convenience in administering such accounts.

 

Accreted Interest”: Interest accrued on a Loan that is added to the principal amount of such Loan instead of being paid as it accrues.

 

Accrual Period”: With respect to (a) the first Payment Date, the period from and including the Closing Date to and including the Determination Date preceding the first Payment Date, and (b) any subsequent Payment Date, the period from but excluding the Determination Date preceding the previous Payment Date to and including the Determination Date preceding the current Payment Date (or, in the case of the final Payment Date, to and including such Payment Date).

 

Adjusted Borrowing Value”: For any Eligible Loan, on any date, an amount equal to the Assigned Value for such Eligible Loan on such date multiplied by the outstanding principal balance of such Loan (exclusive of Accreted Interest); provided that, the parties hereby agree that the Adjusted Borrowing Value of any Loan that is no longer an Eligible Loan shall be zero.

 

Administrative Agent”: Wells Fargo, in its capacity as administrative agent, together with its successors and assigns, including any successor appointed pursuant to Section 11.6.

 

Administrative Expenses”: All fees, expenses and indemnification payments (other than such amounts specified in Section 2.7(a)(1), (a)(2), (a)(3) and (a)(5), Section 2.7(b)(1), (b)(2), (b)(3) and (b)(6) and Section 2.8(1), (2), (3) and (7)) due or accrued and payable by the Borrower to any Person pursuant to any provision of any Transaction Document.

 

Advance”: The meaning specified in Section 2.1(a).

 

-2-

 

 

Advance Date”: With respect to any Advance, the date on which such Advance is made.

 

Advance Date Assigned Value”: With respect to any Eligible Loan, the lower of (a) the Purchase Price of such Eligible Loan and (b) the value of such Eligible Loan (expressed as a percentage of par) as determined by the Administrative Agent in its sole discretion as of the date upon which such Eligible Loan is acquired by the Borrower.

 

Advances Outstanding”: On any date of determination, the aggregate principal amount of all Advances outstanding on such day, after giving effect to all repayments of Advances and the making of new Advances on such day.

 

Advisers Act”: The United States Investment Advisers Act of 1940, as amended.

 

Affected Financial Institution”: (a) Any EEA Financial Institution or (b) any UK Financial Institution.

 

Affected Party”: The Administrative Agent, the Lenders and each of their respective assigns.

 

Affiliate”: With respect to a Person, means any other Person that, directly or indirectly, controls, is controlled by or is under common control with such Person, or is a director or officer of such Person; provided that solely for purposes of determining whether any Loan is an Eligible Loan or any Obligor is an Eligible Obligor, the term Affiliate shall not include any Affiliate relationship which may exist solely as a result of direct or indirect ownership of, or control by, a common Financial Sponsor. For purposes of this definition, “control,” when used with respect to any specified Person means the possession, directly or indirectly, of the power to vote 20% or more of the voting securities of such Person or to direct or cause the direction of the management or policies of such Person, whether through the ownership of voting securities, by contract or otherwise.

 

Agented Loan”: Any Loan which is agented by a Person (other than the Borrower) on behalf of each lender that is at any time party to the related Underlying Instruments.

 

Agreement”: The meaning specified in the Preamble.

 

Anti-Corruption Laws”: (a) The U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act of 1977, as amended; (b) the U.K. Bribery Act 2010, as amended; (c) the Corruption of Foreign Public Officials Act (Canada) and (d) any other anti-bribery or anti-corruption laws, regulations or ordinances in any jurisdiction in which the Borrower, the Collateral Manager, the Seller or any of their respective Subsidiaries is located or doing business.

 

Anti-Money Laundering Laws”: Applicable laws or regulations in any jurisdiction in which the Borrower, the Collateral Manager, the Seller or any of their respective Subsidiaries are located or doing business (including the applicable laws and regulations of Canada) that relates to money laundering or terrorism financing, any predicate crime to money laundering, or any financial record keeping and reporting requirements related thereto.

 

-3-

 

 

Applicable Law”: For any Person or property of such Person, all existing and future laws, rules, regulations (including proposed, temporary and final income tax regulations), statutes, treaties, codes, ordinances, permits, certificates, orders and licenses of and interpretations by any Governmental Authority which are applicable to such Person or property (including, without limitation, predatory lending laws, usury laws, the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, the Federal Truth in Lending Act, and Regulation Z and Regulation B of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System), and applicable judgments, decrees, injunctions, writs, awards or orders of any court, arbitrator or other administrative, judicial, or quasi-judicial tribunal or agency of competent jurisdiction.

 

Applicable Percentage”: (i) In the case of a Broadly Syndicated Loan, 72.5%, (ii) in the case of a First Lien Middle Market Loan, 65.0%, (iii) in the case of a First Lien Last Out Loan, 45.0% and (iv) in the case of a Second Lien Loan, 25.0%.

 

Applicable Spread”: The rate per annum set forth in each Fee Letter.

 

Approval Notice”: An approval notice delivered to the Administrative Agent and the Collateral Agent substantially in the form of Exhibit A-5 hereto.

 

Asset Coverage Ratio”: The asset coverage ratio of the Equityholder as a “business development company” under the 1940 Act calculated in accordance with the 1940 Act.

 

Asset Rejection Percentage”: The ratio of (a) the number of Partially Eligible Loans submitted by the Borrower to the Administrative Agent to be included in the Collateral which are rejected by the Administrative Agent pursuant to clause (B) of the definition of “Eligible Loan” to (b) the total number of Partially Eligible Loans submitted by the Borrower to the Administrative Agent to be included in the Collateral; provided that, until ten (10) Partially Eligible Loans have been submitted to the Administrative Agent by the Borrower, the Asset Rejection Percentage shall be zero.

 

Assigned Value”: With respect to each Loan:

 

(a) the Advance Date Assigned Value;

 

(b) on any date following the occurrence of an Assigned Value Adjustment Event with respect to such Loan, the value of such Loan (expressed as a percentage of par) as determined by the Administrative Agent in its sole discretion; provided that solely with respect to the occurrence of an Assigned Value Adjustment Event of the type described in clause (a)(ii) of the definition thereof, immediately after giving effect to any such reevaluation, the Assigned Value shall, to the extent applicable, be increased to the lower of (x) the original Assigned Value and (y) such value that would result in the Facility Attachment Ratio for such Loan being lower than the “Minimum Facility Attachment Ratio” specified therefore in accordance with the grid below:

 

-4-

 

 

First Lien Middle Market Loans

Net Senior Leverage Ratio Minimum Facility Attachment Ratio
Less than 4.25x 2.90x
Greater than or equal to 4.25 and less than 5.00x 2.80x
Greater than or equal to 5.00 and less than 6.00x 2.70x
Greater than or equal to 6.00 and less than 7.00x 2.60x
Greater than or equal to 7.00 and less than 8.00x 2.40x
Greater than or equal to 8.00x 0.00x
   

First Lien Last Out Loans

Net Total Leverage Ratio Minimum Facility Attachment Ratio
Less than 5.00x Facility Attachment Ratio as of the date of acquisition of such Loan
Greater than or equal to 5.00 and less than 6.00x Facility Attachment Ratio as of the date of acquisition of such Loan less 0.25x
Greater than or equal to 6.00 and less than 7.00x Facility Attachment Ratio as of the date of acquisition of such Loan less 0.50x
Greater than or equal to 7.00x 0.00x
   

Second Lien Loans

Net Total Leverage Ratio Minimum Facility Attachment Ratio
Less than 5.00x Facility Attachment Ratio as of the date of acquisition of such Loan
Greater than or equal to 5.00 and less than 6.00x Facility Attachment Ratio as of the date of acquisition of such Loan less 0.25x
Greater than or equal to 6.00 and less than 7.00x Facility Attachment Ratio as of the date of acquisition of such Loan less 0.50x
Greater than or equal to 7.00x 0.00x
   

Designated Loans

Net Total Leverage Ratio Minimum Facility Attachment Ratio
Less than 6.00x Lesser of (x) the Facility Attachment Ratio as of the date of acquisition of such Loan and (y) 2.00x
Greater than or equal to 6.00x 0.00x

 

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(c) if such Loan is a Broadly Syndicated Loan (other than (x) a Broadly Syndicated Loan subject to any Assigned Value Adjustment Event described in clauses (c) through (f) of the definition thereof or (y) a Broadly Syndicated Loan subject to any Material Modification described in clauses (a), (b), or (f) of the definition thereof), the Assigned Value shall not be less than (i) the value (expressed as a percentage of par) assigned to such Loan through bid-side quotes determined by any two of LoanX Mark It Partners, Loan Pricing Corporation or another nationally recognized pricing service or broker-dealer selected by the Collateral Manager and approved in writing by the Administrative Agent, (ii) if the Administrative Agent, in its reasonable discretion, determines that the value assigned by clause (i) is not current, accurate or available, or does not represent a bona fide trading level, the value for such Loan (expressed as a percentage of par) shall be (a) the average of the bid-side quotes determined by three independent broker-dealers active in the trading of such Loan; or (b) if only two such bid-side quotes can be obtained, the average of the bid-side quotes of such two bids; or (c) if only one such bid-side quote can be obtained, such bid-side quote; provided that, if the Administrative Agent determines that any such quote is not current or accurate or does not represent a bona fide trading level, the Administrative Agent may reject such quote, (iii) if the value of such Loan cannot be determined pursuant to clauses (i) and (ii) above, the value for such Loan (expressed as a percentage of par) shall be the price provided by the Borrower in a bona fide bid in writing (via standard emails sent by broker-dealers engaged in trading such Loans) from a dealer and (iv) if the value of such Loan cannot be determined pursuant to clauses (i), (ii) and (iii) above, the Assigned Value will be determined by the Administrative Agent;

 

(d) after the occurrence or during an ongoing Assigned Value Adjustment Event, the Borrower may request, or the Administrative Agent may apply absent a Borrower request, an increase to the Assigned Value, up to the Advance Date Assigned Value;

 

(e) at any time, the Borrower may request a revaluation of any Eligible Loan with an Assigned Value less than 100% and the Administrative Agent may adjust the applicable Assigned Value to the lesser of (i) its discretionary Assigned Value (not to be less than the existing Assigned Value) or (ii) 100%; provided that, following any such adjustment, the Administrative Agent may, in its sole discretion, reset the Cash Interest Coverage Ratio, the Net Senior Leverage Ratio and/or the Net Total Leverage Ratio as of such date for the related Eligible Loan;

 

(f) the Assigned Value shall be zero for any Loan that is not an Eligible Loan; and

 

(g) the Assigned Value shall be zero for any Loan subject to mandatory repurchase by the Seller under the Sale Agreement.

 

Any Assigned Value determined hereunder with respect to any Loan on any date after the date such Loan is transferred to the Borrower shall be communicated by the Administrative Agent to the Borrower, the Collateral Manager, the Collateral Agent and all other Lenders pursuant to an Assigned Value Notice.

 

Assigned Value Adjustment Event”: With respect to any Eligible Loan, the occurrence of any one or more of the following events after the related Funding Date:

 

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(a) the Net Senior Leverage Ratio (or, with respect to any First Lien Last Out Loan, Second Lien Loan or Designated Loan, the Net Total Leverage Ratio) for any Relevant Test Period of the related Obligor with respect to such Loan is both (i) greater than 3.50 and (ii) greater than 0.75 higher than such ratio as calculated on the date such Loan was acquired by the Borrower; provided that in connection any Revenue Recognition Implementation or any Operating Lease Implementation, the Administrative Agent (with the consent of the Collateral Manager (such consent not to be unreasonably withheld, delayed or conditioned)) may retroactively adjust the Net Senior Leverage Ratio for any Loan as determined on the date such Loan was acquired by the Borrower;

 

(b) the Cash Interest Coverage Ratio for any Relevant Test Period of the related Obligor with respect to such Loan is (i) less than 1.50 and (ii)  85% or less of the Original Cash Interest Coverage Ratio; provided that in connection any Revenue Recognition Implementation or any Operating Lease Implementation, the Administrative Agent (with the consent of the Collateral Manager (such consent not to be unreasonably withheld, delayed or conditioned)) may retroactively adjust the Cash Interest Coverage Ratio for any Loan as determined on the date such Loan was acquired by the Borrower;

 

(c) an Obligor payment default in the payment of principal or interest under such Loan (after giving effect to the shorter of (x) any applicable grace period and (y) five (5) Business Days);

 

(d) an Obligor default under such Loan, together with the election by any agent or lender (including, without limitation, the Borrower) to accelerate such Loan or to enforce any of their respective rights or remedies under the applicable UCC or by other institution of legal or equitable proceedings, in each case pursuant to the applicable Underlying Instruments; provided that, the election to sweep cash pursuant to any applicable account control agreement shall not, absent acceleration or the enforcement of any other rights or remedies, constitute an Assigned Value Adjustment Event under this clause (d);

 

(e) the occurrence of a Material Modification with respect to such Loan;

 

(f) the occurrence of an Insolvency Event with respect to the related Obligor;

 

(g) unless otherwise agreed to by the Administrative Agent in its sole discretion, the failure to deliver any monthly reports, quarterly reports, annual reports or other financial statements (including unaudited financial statements) provided by the related Obligor and required under the related Underlying Instruments by the earlier of (i) five (5) Business Days of the Borrower’s or Collateral Manager’s receipt thereof or (ii) with respect to any (A) monthly report or statement, forty-five (45) days (or sixty (60) days, solely to the extent the related Underlying Instruments permit the related Obligor to deliver such monthly reports or statements within forty-five (45) days after the end of such month) after the end of the applicable calendar month, (B) quarterly report or statement, within seventy-five (75) days after the end of the applicable fiscal quarter and (C) annual report or statement within one hundred fifty (150) days after the end of the applicable fiscal year; or

 

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(h) the Borrower delivers a written notice to the Administrative Agent requesting that the Assigned Value with respect to such Loan be re-determined.

 

For the avoidance of doubt, an Eligible Loan shall not cease to be an Eligible Loan solely as a result of a change in Assigned Value pursuant to an Assigned Value Adjustment Event, but will remain an Eligible Loan at the new Assigned Value.

 

Assigned Value Notice”: A notice (which may be sent by e-mail) which shall be delivered by the Administrative Agent to the Borrower, the Lenders, the Collateral Manager and the Collateral Agent following any re-determination of an Assigned Value under this Agreement, specifying the value of a Loan determined in accordance with terms of the definition of “Assigned Value” in this Section 1.1.

 

Authorized Person”: An officer or employee of the Borrower listed on Schedule V.

 

Available Funds”: With respect to any Payment Date, all amounts on deposit in the Collection Account (including, without limitation, any Collections) as of the last day of the related Collection Period.

 

Available Tenor”: As of any date of determination and with respect to any then-current Benchmark (a) if such Benchmark is a term rate, any tenor for such Benchmark (or component thereof) that is or may be used for determining the length of an Accrual Period pursuant to this Agreement or (b) otherwise, any payment period for interest calculated with reference to such Benchmark (or component thereof) that is or may be used for determining any frequency of making payments of interest calculated with reference to such Benchmark, in each case, as of such date and not including, for the avoidance of doubt, any tenor for such Benchmark that is then-removed from the definition of “Accrual Period” pursuant to Section 2.19(d).

 

Bail-In Action”: The exercise of any Write-Down and Conversion Powers by the applicable Resolution Authority in respect of any liability of an Affected Financial Institution.

 

Bail-In Legislation”: (a) With respect to any EEA Member Country implementing Article 55 of Directive 2014/59/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council of the European Union, the implementing law, regulation rule or requirement for such EEA Member Country from time to time which is described in the EU Bail-In Legislation Schedule and (b) with respect to the United Kingdom, Part I of the United Kingdom Banking Act 2009 (as amended from time to time) and any other law, regulation or rule applicable in the United Kingdom relating to the resolutions of unsound or failing banks, investment firms or other financial institutions or their affiliates (other than through liquidation, administration or other insolvency proceedings).

 

Bankruptcy Code”: The United States Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1978 (11 U.S.C. § 101, et seq.), as amended from time to time.

 

Base Rate”: For any day, the rate per annum (rounded upward, if necessary, to the next 1/100 of 1%) equal to the greater of (a) zero, (b) the Federal Funds Rate in effect on such day plus ½ of 1% and (c) the Prime Rate in effect on such day.

 

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Benchmark”: Initially, Daily Simple SOFR; provided that if a Benchmark Transition Event has occurred with respect to Daily Simple SOFR or then-current Benchmark for Dollars, then “Benchmark” means, with respect to such Obligations, interest, fees, commissions or other amounts, the applicable Benchmark Replacement to the extent that such Benchmark Replacement has replaced such prior benchmark rate pursuant to Section 2.19(a).

 

Benchmark Replacement”: With respect to any Benchmark Transition Event, the sum of: (a) the alternate benchmark rate that has been selected by the Administrative Agent and the Borrower as the replacement for the applicable then-current Benchmark giving due consideration to (i) any selection or recommendation of a replacement benchmark rate or the mechanism for determining such a rate by the Relevant Governmental Body or (ii) any evolving or then-prevailing market convention for determining a benchmark rate as a replacement to the then-current Benchmark for Dollar-denominated syndicated credit facilities at such time and (b) the related Benchmark Replacement Adjustment; provided that, if such Benchmark Replacement as so determined would be less than zero, such Benchmark Replacement will be deemed to be zero for purposes of this Agreement.

 

Benchmark Replacement Adjustment”: With respect to any replacement of any then-current Benchmark with an Unadjusted Benchmark Replacement for each applicable Available Tenor, the spread adjustment, or method for calculating or determining such spread adjustment, (which may be a positive or negative value or zero) that has been selected by the Administrative Agent and the Borrower giving due consideration to (a) any selection or recommendation of a spread adjustment, or method for calculating or determining such spread adjustment, for the replacement of such Benchmark with the applicable Unadjusted Benchmark Replacement by the Relevant Governmental Body or (b) any evolving or then-prevailing market convention for determining a spread adjustment, or method for calculating or determining such spread adjustment, for the replacement of such Benchmark with the applicable Unadjusted Benchmark Replacement for Dollar-denominated syndicated credit facilities at such time.

 

Benchmark Replacement Date”: The earliest to occur of the following events with respect to the then-current Benchmark:

 

(a) in the case of clause (a) or (b) of the definition of “Benchmark Transition Event,” the later of (i) the date of the public statement or publication of information referenced therein and (ii) the date on which the administrator of such Benchmark permanently or indefinitely ceases to provide all Available Tenors of such Benchmark (or such component thereof); or

 

(b) in the case of clause (c) of the definition of “Benchmark Transition Event,” the first date on which such Benchmark (or the published component used in the calculation thereof) has been determined and announced by or on behalf of the administrator of such Benchmark (or such component thereof) or the regulatory supervisor for the administrator of such Benchmark (or such component thereof) to be non-representative or non-compliant with or non-aligned with the International Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO) Principles for Financial Benchmarks; provided that such non-representativeness, non-compliance or non-alignment will be determined by reference to the most recent statement or publication referenced in such clause (c) and even if any Available Tenor of such Benchmark (or such component thereof) continues to be provided on such date.

 

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For the avoidance of doubt, the “Benchmark Replacement Date” will be deemed to have occurred in the case of clause (a) or (b) with respect to any Benchmark upon the occurrence of the applicable event or events set forth therein with respect to all then-current Available Tenors of such Benchmark (or the published component used in the calculation thereof).

 

Benchmark Transition Event”: With respect to the then-current Benchmark, the occurrence of one or more of the following events with respect to such Benchmark:

 

(a) a public statement or publication of information by or on behalf of the administrator of such Benchmark (or the published component used in the calculation thereof) announcing that such administrator has ceased or will cease to provide all Available Tenors of such Benchmark (or such component thereof), permanently or indefinitely; provided that, at the time of such statement or publication, there is no successor administrator that will continue to provide any Available Tenor of such Benchmark (or such component thereof);

 

(b) a public statement or publication of information by the regulatory supervisor for the administrator of such Benchmark (or the published component used in the calculation thereof), the FRB, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, an insolvency official with jurisdiction over the administrator for such Benchmark (or such component), a resolution authority with jurisdiction over the administrator for such Benchmark (or such component) or a court or an entity with similar insolvency or resolution authority over the administrator for such Benchmark (or such component), which states that the administrator of such Benchmark (or such component) has ceased or will cease to provide all Available Tenors of such Benchmark (or such component thereof) permanently or indefinitely; provided that, at the time of such statement or publication, there is no successor administrator that will continue to provide any Available Tenor of such Benchmark (or such component thereof); or

 

(c) a public statement or publication of information by or on behalf of the administrator of such Benchmark (or the published component used in the calculation thereof) or the regulatory supervisor for the administrator of such Benchmark (or such component thereof) announcing that all Available Tenors of such Benchmark (or such component thereof) are not, or as of a specified future date will not be, representative or in compliance with or aligned with the International Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO) Principles for Financial Benchmarks.

 

For the avoidance of doubt, a “Benchmark Transition Event” will be deemed to have occurred with respect to any Benchmark if a public statement or publication of information set forth above has occurred with respect to each then-current Available Tenor of such Benchmark (or the published component used in the calculation thereof).

 

Benchmark Transition Start Date”: With respect to any Benchmark, in the case of a Benchmark Transition Event, the earlier of (a) the applicable Benchmark Replacement Date and (b) if such Benchmark Transition Event is a public statement or publication of information of a prospective event, the 90th day prior to the expected date of such event as of such public statement or publication of information (or if the expected date of such prospective event is fewer than 90 days after such statement or publication, the date of such statement or publication).

 

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Benchmark Unavailability Period”: With respect to any then-current Benchmark, the period (if any) (x) beginning at the time that a Benchmark Replacement Date with respect to such Benchmark pursuant to clauses (a) or (b) of that definition has occurred if, at such time, no Benchmark Replacement has replaced such Benchmark for all purposes hereunder and under any Transaction Document in accordance with Section 2.19(a) and (y) ending at the time that a Benchmark Replacement has replaced such Benchmark for all purposes hereunder and under any Transaction Document in accordance with Section 2.19(a).

 

Beneficial Ownership Certification”: A certification regarding beneficial ownership required by the Beneficial Ownership Regulation, which certification shall be substantially similar in form and substance to the form of Certification Regarding Beneficial Owners of Legal Entity Customers published jointly, in May 2018, by the Loan Syndications and Trading Association and Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association.

 

Beneficial Ownership Regulation”: 31 C.F.R. § 1010.230.

 

Benefit Plan Investor”: A “benefit plan investor” as defined in Section 3(42) of ERISA and any regulations promulgated thereunder.

 

BHC Act Affiliate”: The meaning assigned to the term “affiliate” in, and interpreted in accordance with, 12 U.S.C. § 1841(k).

 

Borrower”: The meaning specified in the Preamble.

 

Borrower’s Notice”: Any (a) Funding Notice or (b) Reinvestment Notice.

 

Borrowing Base”: As of any Measurement Date, an amount equal to the least of:

 

(a) the aggregate sum of (i) the sum of the products, for each Eligible Loan as of such date, of (A) the Applicable Percentage for each such Eligible Loan as of such date and (B) the Adjusted Borrowing Value of each such Eligible Loan as of such date, plus (ii) the amount on deposit in the Principal Collection Account as of such date, minus (iii) the Unfunded Exposure Equity Amount, plus (iv) the amount on deposit in the Unfunded Exposure Account;

 

(b) (i) the aggregate Adjusted Borrowing Value of all Eligible Loans as of such date minus (ii)  the Minimum Equity Amount plus (iii) the amount on deposit in the Principal Collection Account as of such date, minus (iv) the Unfunded Exposure Equity Amount, plus (v) the amount on deposit in the Unfunded Exposure Account; and

 

(c) (i) the Facility Amount, minus (ii) the Unfunded Exposure Equity Amount, plus (iii) the amount on deposit in the Unfunded Exposure Account.

 

Borrowing Base Certificate”: A certificate setting forth the calculation of each Borrowing Base as of each Measurement Date, in the form of Exhibit A-4, prepared by the Collateral Manager.

 

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Borrowing Base Deficiency”: A condition occurring on any date on which the Advances Outstanding exceed the Borrowing Base.

 

Broadly Syndicated Loan”: A Loan that, as of the date on which it was acquired by the Borrower, (i)(a) has an original tranche size (including any pari passu tranches and last-out component but excluding any second lien or unsecured tranche (provided the commitment shall be utilized with respect to any revolving loans or delayed draw term loans in the determination of tranche size)) of $350,000,000 or greater and (b) has an EBITDA for the prior twelve months of at least $75,000,000 (after giving pro forma effect to any acquisition in connection therewith) at the time of acquisition, (ii) is not (and cannot by its terms become) subordinate in right of payment to any obligation of the Obligor in any bankruptcy, reorganization, insolvency, moratorium or liquidation proceedings (subject to customary exceptions, including for permitted working capital facilities, finance leases and purchase money indebtedness), (iii) is secured by a pledge of collateral, which security interest is validly perfected and first priority under Applicable Law (subject to liens permitted under the applicable credit agreement that are reasonable and customary for similar loans, and liens accorded priority by law in favor of the United States or any state or agency), (iv) is publicly rated by both S&P and Moody’s (or the Obligor thereof is rated by both S&P and Moody’s) and no such rating is lower than “B-” in the case of S&P or “B3” in the case of Moody’s and (v) for which the Collateral Manager determines in good faith that the value (which may include enterprise value) of the collateral securing such Loan on or about the time of origination equals or exceeds the Outstanding Balance of such Loan plus the outstanding principal balance of all other loans of equal or higher seniority secured by the same collateral.

 

Business Day”: Any day (other than a Saturday or a Sunday) on which banks are not required or authorized to be closed in New York, New York; Charlotte, North Carolina or the United States location of the Collateral Agent’s or the Custodian’s Corporate Trust Office. For avoidance of doubt, if the offices of the Collateral Agent or the Custodian are authorized by applicable law, regulation or executive order to close on any day but such offices remain open on such day, such day shall not be a “Business Day.”

 

Capital Call Notice”: A notice from the Borrower to the Administrative Agent which (a) is delivered to the Administrative Agent not later than three (3) Business Days after the occurrence of a Borrowing Base Deficiency, (b) sets forth evidence satisfactory to the Administrative Agent in its sole discretion that a formal capital call has been made on investors in the Equityholder.

 

Capital Stock”: Any and all shares, interests, participations or other equivalents (however designated) of capital stock of a corporation or a limited liability company, any and all similar ownership interests in a Person (other than a corporation), and any and all warrants, rights or options to purchase any of the foregoing.

 

Cash”: Cash or legal currency of the United States of America as at the time shall be legal tender for payment of all public and private debts.

 

Cash Interest Coverage Ratio”: With respect to any Loan for any Relevant Test Period, either (a) the meaning of “Cash Interest Coverage Ratio” or comparable definition set forth in the Underlying Instruments for such Loan, or (b) in the case of any Loan with respect to which the related Underlying Instruments do not include a definition of “Cash Interest Coverage Ratio” or comparable definition, the ratio of (i) EBITDA to (ii) Cash Interest Expense of such Obligor as of such Relevant Test Period, as calculated by the Collateral Manager (on behalf of the Borrower) in good faith.

 

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Cash Interest Expense”: With respect to any Obligor for any period, the amount which, in conformity with GAAP, would be set forth opposite the caption “interest expense” (exclusive of any Accreted Interest that, according to the term of the Underlying Instruments, can never be converted to cash interest that is due and payable prior to maturity) or any like caption reflected on the most recent financial statements delivered by such Obligor to the Borrower for such period.

 

Certificated Security”: The meaning specified in Section 8-102(a)(4) of the UCC.

 

Change of Control”: The occurrence of any of the following events with respect to the Borrower or the Collateral Manager, as applicable: (a) with respect to the Borrower, the Equityholder ceases to own, of record, beneficially and directly, 100% of the Capital Stock of the Borrower or (b) with respect to the Collateral Manager, the failure of Kayne Anderson Capital Advisors, L.P. to control, directly or indirectly, the Collateral Manager (for purposes of this definition, “control,” means the possession, directly or indirectly, of the power to direct or cause the direction of the management, actions or policies of a Person, whether through voting rights, ownership rights, by contract or otherwise).

 

Clearing Agency”: An organization registered as a “clearing agency” pursuant to Section 17A of the Exchange Act.

 

Clearing Corporation”: The meaning specified in Section 8-102(a)(5) of the UCC.

 

Closing Date”: February 18, 2022.

 

Code”: The Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended from time to time.

 

Collateral”: All of the Borrower’s right, title and interest in, to and under (in each case, whether now owned or existing, or hereafter acquired or arising) all “Accounts” (as defined in the UCC), General Intangibles, Instruments and Investment Property and any and all other property of any type or nature owned by it, including but not limited to:

 

(a) all Loans, Permitted Investments and Equity Securities, all payments thereon or with respect thereto and all contracts to purchase, commitment letters, confirmations and due bills relating to any Loans, Permitted Investments or Equity Securities;

 

(b) the Accounts and all Cash and Financial Assets credited thereto and all income from the investment of funds therein;

 

(c) all Transaction Documents;

 

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(d) all funds (other than funds determined by the Administrative Agent in its sole discretion to be Excluded Amounts); and

 

(e) all accounts, accessions, profits, income benefits, proceeds, substitutions and replacements, whether voluntary or involuntary, of and to any of the property of the Borrower described in the preceding clauses.

 

provided, that the “Collateral” shall not include amounts paid to the Borrower pursuant to Section 2.7(a)(9), Section 2.7(b)(10) or Section 2.8(10) or any account or accounts owned by the Borrower used solely for the purpose of holding such amounts.

 

Collateral Account”: A Securities Account created and maintained on the books and records of the Securities Intermediary entitled “Collateral Account” in the name of the Borrower and subject to the prior Lien of the Collateral Agent for the benefit of the Secured Parties.

 

Collateral Agent”: Wilmington Trust, National Association, not in its individual capacity, but solely as Collateral Agent, its successor in interest pursuant to Section 7.3 or such Person as shall have been appointed Collateral Agent pursuant to Section 7.5.

 

Collateral Agent Fee”: The fees, expenses and indemnities set forth as such in the Collateral Agent and Custodian Fee Letter and as provided for in this Agreement or any other Transaction Document.

 

Collateral Agent and Custodian Fee Letter”: The fee schedule of the Collateral Agent and Custodian as accepted and acknowledged by the Borrower or the Collateral Manager (on behalf of the Borrower).

 

Collateral Agent Termination Notice”: The meaning specified in Section 7.5.

 

Collateral Management Fee”: The fee payable to the Collateral Manager on each Payment Date in arrears in respect of each Accrual Period pursuant to Sections 2.7(a)(2) and (b)(2) or Section 2.8(2), as applicable, which fee shall be equal to (a) the sum of the Adjusted Borrowing Value of each Loan as of the first day of such Accrual Period and as of the last day of such Accrual Period divided by two multiplied by (b) a rate equal to 0.50% per annum.

 

Collateral Manager”: The meaning specified in the Preamble.

 

Collateral Manager Indemnified Party”: The meaning specified in the Section 10.2.

 

Collateral Manager LLC Agreement”: The Limited Liability Agreement of the Collateral Manager, dated as of February 18, 2022, as the same may be amended, restated, modified or supplemented from time to time.

 

Collateral Manager Standard”: The meaning specified in Section 6.2(e).

 

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Collateral Manager Termination Event”: The occurrence of any one of the following:

 

(a) any failure by the Collateral Manager to deposit (or caused to be deposited) into the Collection Account any Collections received by it in accordance with Section 2.9(a);

 

(b) any failure on the part of the Collateral Manager (in each case, solely in its capacity as Collateral Manager) to duly observe or perform in any material respect the covenants or agreements of the Collateral Manager set forth in any Transaction Document to which the Collateral Manager is a party (including, without limitation, any material delegation of the Collateral Manager’s duties not permitted by this Agreement), which failure continues unremedied for a period of thirty (30) days after the earlier to occur of (i) the date on which written notice of such failure shall have been delivered to the Collateral Manager by any Lender or the Borrower, and (ii) the date on which a Responsible Officer of the Collateral Manager acquires knowledge thereof;

 

(c) an Insolvency Event shall occur with respect to the Collateral Manager;

 

(d) the occurrence of a Change of Control with respect to the Collateral Manager; or the assignation by the Collateral Manager of any of its rights or obligations under any Transaction Document to any person without the prior written consent of the Administrative Agent; provided, that, if such assignment is to an affiliate of the Collateral Manager, the written consent of the Administrative Agent shall not be unreasonable withheld, delayed or conditioned;

 

(e) any failure by the Collateral Manager to deliver any Required Reports (other than any Required Reports not yet received by the Collateral Manager) required to be delivered by the Collateral Manager hereunder or any other information reasonably requested by the Administrative Agent on or before the date occurring five (5) Business Days after written notice of such failure or such request is delivered to the Collateral Manager by the Administrative Agent;

 

(f) any representation, warranty or certification made by the Collateral Manager (in each case, solely in its capacity as Collateral Manager) in any Transaction Document or in any certificate delivered pursuant to any Transaction Document shall prove to have been incorrect in any material respect when made, which inaccuracy has a material adverse effect on the Lenders and which continues to be unremedied for a period of thirty (30) days after the earlier to occur of (i) the date on which written notice of such inaccuracy shall have been given to the Collateral Manager by the Administrative Agent or the Borrower and (ii) the date on which a Responsible Officer of the Collateral Manager acquires knowledge thereof;

 

(g) the rendering against the Collateral Manager of one or more final judgments, decrees or orders for the payment of money in excess of $5,000,000, individually or in the aggregate, and the Collateral Manager shall not have either (i) discharged any such judgment, decree or order dismissed, or (ii) perfected a timely appeal of such judgment, decree or order and caused the execution of same to be stayed during the pendency of the appeal, in each case, within sixty (60) days from date of entry thereof;

 

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(h) Intentionally Omitted;

 

(i) the occurrence or existence of any change with respect to the Collateral Manager which has a material and adverse effect on the Collateral Manager’s ability to perform its obligations under the Transaction Documents;

 

(j) At any time prior to the consummation of an initial public offering of the shares of the Equityholder, all of Kenneth Leonard, James Baker and Doug Goodwillie shall fail to provide active and material participation in the Collateral Manager’s daily activities (including, without limitation, general management, underwriting, credit approval, and credit monitoring) and such persons are not replaced with other individuals reasonably acceptable to the Administrative Agent and the Required Lenders within 90 days;

 

(k) the failure of the Collateral Manager to make any payment when due (after giving effect to any related grace period) under one or more agreements for borrowed money which is to a borrower in an aggregate amount in excess of $5,000,000, individually or in the aggregate, or the occurrence of any event if the effect of such event is to accelerate or permit the acceleration of such amount of such recourse debt, whether or not waived;

 

(l) the Asset Coverage Ratio fails to be at least 1.5:1 as of the end of any fiscal quarter; or

 

(m)   the Equityholder shall fail to maintain, (i) shareholders’ equity (determined without any deductions at the end of the most recently ended fiscal quarter of the Equityholder and reflected in the Equityholder’s most recent SEC Form 10-Q or Form 10-K) in an amount equal to $260,000,000 plus 50% of the net proceeds of the sale of equity interests in the Equityholder received by the Equityholder after the Closing Date and (ii) its status as a “business development company” under the 1940 Act.

 

Collateral Manager Termination Notice”: The meaning specified in Section 6.11.

 

Collection Account”: Collectively, the General Collection Account, the Interest Collection Account and the Principal Collection Account.

 

Collection Date”: The date on which the Obligations have been irrevocably paid in full in accordance with Section 2.3(b) and Section 2.7 or 2.8, as applicable, and the Commitments have been irrevocably terminated in full pursuant to Section 2.3(a) or as a result of the end of the Reinvestment Period.

 

Collection Period”: With respect to (a) the first Payment Date, the period from and including the Closing Date to and including the sixth Business Day prior to such Payment Date, and (b) any subsequent Payment Date, the period from but excluding the last day of the immediately preceding Collection Period to and including the sixth Business Day prior to such Payment Date; provided that, the final Collection Period shall end on the earlier to occur of the Collection Date and the Termination Date.

 

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Collections”: (a) All cash collections and other cash proceeds of any Loan, including, without limitation or duplication, any Interest Collections, Principal Collections, amendment fees, late fees, prepayment fees, waiver fees or other amounts received in respect thereof (but excluding any Excluded Amounts) and (b) earnings on Permitted Investments or otherwise in any Account. For the avoidance of doubt, Advances shall not constitute Collections.

 

Commitment”: With respect to each Lender, the commitment of such Lender to make Advances in accordance herewith prior to the Reinvestment Period End Date, in an amount not to exceed the Facility Amount and, for each Lender, the amount opposite such Lender’s name set forth on Annex B hereto or on Schedule I to the Joinder Supplement relating to each such Lender.

 

Commitment Reduction Fee”: With respect to any reduction of the Facility Amount pursuant to Section 2.3(a), an amount equal to the product of (a) the amount of such reduction multiplied by (b) the applicable Commitment Reduction Percentage.

 

Commitment Reduction Percentage”: On any date where (a) the Asset Rejection Percentage is less than or equal to 50%, if such date is on or prior to the first anniversary of the Third Amendment Closing Date, 1.00% and (b) either the Asset Rejection Percentage is greater than 50% or such date is after the first anniversary of the Third Amendment Closing Date, zero percent.

 

Conforming Changes”: With respect to the use or administration of Daily Simple SOFR or the use, administration, adoption or implementation of any Benchmark Replacement, any technical, administrative or operational changes (including changes to the definition of “Base Rate”, the definition of “Business Day,” the definition of “Accrual Period” or any similar or analogous definition (or the addition of a concept of “interest period”), timing and frequency of determining rates and making payments of interest, timing of borrowing requests or prepayment, conversion or continuation notices, the applicability and length of lookback periods, the applicability of Section 2.12 and other technical, administrative or operational matters) that the Administrative Agent decides may be appropriate to reflect the adoption and implementation of any such rate or to permit the use and administration thereof by the Administrative Agent in a manner substantially consistent with market practice (or, if the Administrative Agent decides that adoption of any portion of such market practice is not administratively feasible or if the Administrative Agent determines that no market practice for the administration of any such rate exists, in such other manner of administration as the Administrative Agent decides is reasonably necessary in connection with the administration of this Agreement and the other Transaction Documents).

 

Connection Income Taxes”: Other Connection Taxes that are imposed on or measured by net income (however denominated) or that are franchise Taxes or branch profits Taxes.

 

Contractual Obligation”: With respect to any Person, any provision of any securities issued by such Person or any mortgage, deed of trust, contract, undertaking, agreement, instrument or other document to which such Person is a party or by which it or any of its property is bound or to which either is subject.

 

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Control”: The possession, directly or indirectly, of the power to direct or cause the direction of the management or policies of a Person, whether through the ability to exercise voting power, by contract or otherwise.

 

Corporate Trust Office”: The applicable designated corporate trust office of the Collateral Agent or the Custodian, as applicable, specified on Annex A hereto, or such other address within the United States as the Collateral Agent or the Custodian may designate from time to time by at least 30 days prior written notice to the Administrative Agent.

 

Covenant Compliance Period”: The period beginning on the Closing Date and ending on the date on which all Commitments have been terminated and the Obligations have been paid in full (other than contingent indemnification and reimbursement obligations for which no claim giving rise thereto has been asserted).

 

Covered Party”: Any Secured Party that is one of the following: (i) a “covered entity” as that term is defined in, and interpreted in accordance with, 12 C.F.R. §252.82(b); (ii) a “covered bank” as that term is defined in, and interpreted in accordance with, 12 C.F.R. §47.3(b), or any subsidiary of such a covered bank to which 12 C.F.R. Part 47 applies in accordance with 12 C.F.R. §47.3(b); or (iii) a “covered FSI” as that term is defined in, and interpreted in accordance with, 12 C.F.R. §382.2(b).

 

Custodian”: Wilmington Trust, National Association, not in its individual capacity, but solely as Custodian, its successor in interest pursuant to Section 13.7 or such Person as shall have been appointed Custodian pursuant to Section 13.9.

 

Custodian Fee”: The fees, expenses and indemnities set forth as such in the Collateral Agent and Custodian Fee Letter and as provided for in this Agreement or any other Transaction Document.

 

Custodian Report”: The meaning specified in Section 13.2(a)(ii).

 

Custodian Termination Notice”: The meaning specified in Section 13.9.

 

Daily Simple SOFR”: For any day (a “SOFR Rate Day”), a rate per annum equal to the greater of (a) SOFR for the day (such day, a “SOFR Determination Day”) that is five (5) U.S. Government Securities Business Days prior to (i) if such SOFR Rate Day is a U.S. Government Securities Business Day, such SOFR Rate Day or (ii) if such SOFR Rate Day is not a U.S. Government Securities Business Day, the U.S. Government Securities Business Day immediately preceding such SOFR Rate Day, in each case, as such SOFR is published by the SOFR Administrator on the SOFR Administrator’s Website, and (b) zero. If by 5:00 p.m. on the second (2nd) U.S. Government Securities Business Day immediately following any SOFR Determination Day, SOFR in respect of such SOFR Determination Day has not been published on the SOFR Administrator’s Website and a Benchmark Replacement Date with respect to Daily Simple SOFR has not occurred, then SOFR for such SOFR Determination Day will be SOFR as published in respect of the first preceding U.S. Government Securities Business Day for which such SOFR was published on the SOFR Administrator’s Website; provided that any SOFR determined pursuant to this sentence shall be utilized for purposes of calculation of Daily Simple SOFR for no more than three (3) consecutive SOFR Rate Days. Any change in Daily Simple SOFR due to a change in SOFR shall be effective from and including the effective date of such change in SOFR without notice to the Borrower.

 

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Default”: Any event that, with the giving of notice or the lapse of time, or both, would become an Event of Default.

 

Default Right”: The meaning assigned to that term in, and interpreted in accordance with, 12 C.F.R. §§ 252.81, 47.2 or 382.1, as applicable.

 

Defaulting Lender”: Any Lender that (i) has failed to fund any portion of the Advances required to be funded by it hereunder within one Business Day of the date required to be funded by it hereunder, (ii) has otherwise failed to pay over to the Administrative Agent or any other Lender any other amount required to be paid by it hereunder within three Business Days of the date when due, unless such amount is the subject of a good faith dispute, (iii) has notified the Borrower, the Administrative Agent or any other Lender in writing that it does not intend to comply with any of its funding obligations under this Agreement or has made a public statement to the effect that it does not intend to comply or has failed to comply with its funding obligations under this Agreement or generally under other agreements in which it commits or is obligated to extend credit, (iv) has, other than pursuant to an Undisclosed Administration, become or is insolvent or has become the subject of a bankruptcy or insolvency proceeding, or has had a receiver, conservator, trustee or custodian appointed for it, or has taken any action in furtherance of, or indicating its consent to, approval of or acquiescence in any such proceeding or appointment, or (v) becomes subject to a Bail-In Action.

 

Delayed Draw Loan”: A Loan that requires one or more future advances to be made by the Borrower and which does not permit the re-borrowing of any amount previously repaid by the related Obligor; provided that such loan shall only be considered a Delayed Draw Loan for so long as any future funding obligations remain in effect and only with respect to any portion which constitutes a future funding obligation.

 

Designated Loan”: Any Loan that the Administrative Agent, in its sole discretion, designates on the related Approval Notice as a “Designated Loan”.

 

Determination Date”: With respect to each Payment Date, the last day of the calendar month ending immediately prior to such Payment Date.

 

Discretionary Sale”: The meaning specified in Section 2.14(c).

 

Disruption Event”: The occurrence of any of the following: (a) any Lender shall have notified the Administrative Agent, the Collateral Agent, the Collateral Manager and the Borrower of a determination by such Lender that it would be contrary to law or to the directive of any central bank or other Governmental Authority (whether or not having the force of law) to obtain Dollars in the London interbank market to fund any Advance, (b) any Lender shall have notified the Administrative Agent, the Collateral Agent, the Collateral Manager and the Borrower of a determination by such Lender that the rate at which Dollars are being offered to such Lender in the London interbank market does not accurately reflect the cost to such Lender of making, funding or maintaining any Advance or (c) any Lender shall have notified the Administrative Agent, the Collateral Agent, the Collateral Manager and the Borrower of the inability of such Lender, as applicable, to obtain Dollars in the London interbank market to make, fund or maintain any Advance.

 

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Dollars”: Means, and the conventional “$” signifies, the lawful currency of the United States.

 

EBITDA”: With respect to the Relevant Test Period with respect to the related Loan, the meaning of “EBITDA,” “Adjusted EBITDA” or any comparable definition in the Underlying Instruments for such Loan, and in any case that “EBITDA,” “Adjusted EBITDA” or such comparable definition is not defined in such Underlying Instruments, an amount, for the Obligors on such Loan (determined on a consolidated basis without duplication in accordance with GAAP) equal to earnings from continuing operations for such period plus (a) interest expense, (b) income taxes, (c) depreciation and amortization for such Relevant Test Period (to the extent deducted in determining earnings from continuing operations for such period), (d) amortization of intangibles (including, but not limited to, goodwill, financing fees and other capitalized costs), other non-cash charges and organization costs, (e) extraordinary losses in accordance with GAAP, (f) one-time, non-recurring non-cash charges consistent with the compliance statements and financial reporting packages provided by the Obligors, and (g) any other item the Borrower (or the Collateral Manager) and the Administrative Agent mutually deem to be appropriate.

 

EEA Financial Institution”: (a) Any credit institution or investment firm established in any EEA Member Country which is subject to the supervision of an EEA Resolution Authority, (b) any entity established in an EEA Member Country which is a parent of an institution described in clause (a) of this definition, or (c) any financial institution established in an EEA Member Country which is a subsidiary of an institution described in clauses (a) or (b) of this definition and is subject to consolidated supervision with its parent.

 

EEA Member Country”: Any of the member states of the European Union, Iceland, Liechtenstein, and Norway.

 

EEA Resolution Authority”: Any public administrative authority or any Person entrusted with public administrative authority of any EEA Member Country (including any delegee) having responsibility for the resolution of any EEA Financial Institution to the extent such public administrative authority or Person has the authority to exercise Write-Down and Conversion Powers.

 

Eligible Loan”: Each Loan (A) for which the Administrative Agent and the Collateral Agent have received (or, in accordance with the definition of “Required Loan Documents,” will receive) the related Required Loan Documents; (B) with respect to which the Administrative Agent has executed an Approval Notice on or prior to the applicable Transaction date; and (C) that satisfies each of the following eligibility requirements (unless the Administrative Agent (or the Required Lenders with respect to clauses (d), (k) and (v) and each Lender affected thereby with respect to clause (k)) in its sole discretion agrees to waive any such eligibility requirement with respect to such Loan):

 

(a) such Loan is a First Lien Loan, a First Lien Last Out Loan or a Second Lien Loan;

 

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(b) such Loan is payable in Dollars and does not permit the currency in which such Loan is payable to be changed;

 

(c) the acquisition (including the manner of acquisition, ownership, enforcement and disposition) of such Loan did not and will not subject the Borrower or the Seller to any withholding tax (other than withholding tax with respect to waiver, amendment, consent, commitment or other similar fees) unless the Obligor thereon is required under the terms of the related Underlying Instrument to make “gross-up” payments that cover the full amount of such withholding tax on an after-tax basis;

 

(d) the acquisition of such Loan will not cause the Borrower or the pool of Collateral to be required to register as an investment company under the 1940 Act;

 

(e) such Loan is not a financing by a debtor-in-possession pursuant to any proceeding under Insolvency Law;

 

(f) the primary Underlying Asset for such Loan is not real property;

 

(g) such Loan is in the form of and is treated as indebtedness of the related Obligor for U.S. federal income tax purposes;

 

(h) as of the date such Loan is first included as part of the Collateral, such Loan is not delinquent in payment of principal, interest or any other amounts required to be paid thereunder;

 

(i) as of the date such Loan is first included as part of the Collateral, such Loan and any Underlying Assets (or, with respect to clause (ii), the acquisition thereof) (i) have not, and will not, be used by the related Obligor in any manner or for any purpose that would result in any material risk of liability being imposed upon the Borrower or any Secured Party under any Applicable Law, and (ii) comply in all material respects with, and will not violate, any Applicable Law or cause any Lender (in its commercially reasonable judgment) to fail to comply with any request or directive from any Governmental Authority having jurisdiction over such Lender;

 

(j) (A) the Obligor with respect to such Loan (and each other material guarantor of such Obligor’s obligations thereunder) had full legal capacity to execute and deliver the related Underlying Instruments and (B) such Loan, together with the Underlying Instruments related thereto, (i) is in full force and effect and constitutes the legal, valid and binding obligation of the related Obligor and each guarantor thereof, enforceable against such Obligor and each such guarantor in accordance with its terms, subject to usual and customary bankruptcy, insolvency and equity limitations, (ii) is not subject to, or the subject of any assertions in respect of, any material litigation, dispute or offset, and (iii) contains provisions substantially to the effect that the Obligor’s and each guarantor’s payment obligations thereunder are absolute and unconditional without any right of rescission, setoff, counterclaim or defense for any reason against the Seller, the Borrower or any assignee;

 

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(k) the Obligor with respect to such Loan is not engaged in the development, acquisition, possession, use, movement, importation, exportation, manufacture, sale or distribution of cluster munitions (as defined in Article 2 of the Convention on Cluster Munitions);

 

(l) for any Loan originated by the Seller or its Affiliates, the Seller or its applicable Affiliate had all necessary licenses and permits to originate such Loan in the State where the related Obligor is located and the Borrower has all necessary licenses and permits to purchase and own such Loan and enter into the applicable Underlying Instruments as a lender in the State where such Obligor is located;

 

(m)   such Loan and the Underlying Instruments related thereto, are eligible to be sold, assigned or transferred to the Borrower and to have a security interest therein granted to the Collateral Agent, as agent for the Secured Parties, and neither the sale, transfer or assignment of such Loan to the Borrower, nor the granting of a security interest hereunder to the Collateral Agent, violates, conflicts with or contravenes (and are permitted by) any Applicable Law or any contractual or other restriction, limitation or encumbrance;

 

(n) such Loan requires the related Obligor to maintain the Underlying Assets for such Loan in good repair and to maintain adequate insurance with respect thereto;

 

(o) such Loan has an original term to stated maturity that does not exceed seven (7) years (or, in the case of a Second Lien Loan, eight (8) years);

 

(p) the Underlying Instruments for such Loan do not contain a confidentiality provision that would prohibit the Collateral Agent or the Administrative Agent from accessing all necessary information with regard to such Loan, subject to compliance with the confidentiality obligations set forth in this Agreement;

 

(q) the Obligor with respect to such Loan is an Eligible Obligor;

 

(r)   such Loan is either not a “registration required obligation” within the meaning of Section 163(f)(2) of the Code, or is Registered;

 

(s)   such Loan is not a participation interest;

 

(t) all information provided by either the Borrower or the Collateral Manager with respect to such Loan is true, correct and complete in all material respects; provided that, to the extent any such information was furnished to the Borrower or the Collateral Manager, as applicable, by a related Obligor or any other third party, such information is true, correct and complete to the best of the knowledge of the Borrower or of the Collateral Manager, as applicable;

 

(u) such Loan (A) is not an Equity Security and (B) does not provide by its terms for the conversion or exchange into an Equity Security at any time on or after the date it is included as part of the Collateral;

 

(v) such Loan does not constitute Margin Stock;

 

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(w) after giving effect to such Loan as part of the Collateral, (i) the aggregate Adjusted Borrowing Value of all First Lien Loans and First Lien Last Out Loans made to the related Obligor and its affiliates does not exceed, if such Obligor is one of the three Obligors with the highest such Adjusted Borrowing Values, the applicable amount noted in Annex C, if otherwise, the applicable amount noted in Annex C and (ii) the aggregate Adjusted Borrowing Value of all Second Lien Loans made to the related Obligor and its affiliates does not exceed the applicable amount noted in Annex C;

 

(x) after giving effect to the acquisition of such Loan, the sum of (x) the Outstanding Balances of all Revolving Loans and Delayed Draw Loans owned by the Borrower plus (y) the Unfunded Exposure Amount does not exceed 20% of the Maximum Facility Amount;

 

(y) there are no proceedings pending wherein the related Obligor, any other party obligated with respect to such Loan or any Governmental Authority has alleged that such Loan or any related Underlying Instrument is illegal or unenforceable;

 

(z) if such Loan is acquired by the Borrower from the Seller, (i) such Loan was sourced or originated by the Seller or its Affiliates in the ordinary course of business, and (ii) the Seller has caused its master computer records to be clearly and unambiguously marked to indicate that such Loan has been sold to the Borrower;

 

(aa) after giving effect to the acquisition of such Loan the sum of the Outstanding Balances of all First Lien Last Out Loans and Second Lien Loans owned by the Borrower does not exceed 20% of the Maximum Facility Amount; provided that the sum of the Outstanding Balances of all Second Lien Loans owned by the Borrower shall not exceed 10% of the Maximum Facility Amount;

 

(bb) such Loan requires (i) periodic payments of accrued and unpaid interest in cash (x) in a minimum amount of 2.0% per annum and (y) on a current basis no less frequently than semi-annually and (ii) a fixed amount of principal payable in cash no later than its stated maturity;

 

(cc) after giving effect to the acquisition of such Loan, the sum of the Outstanding Balances of all Eligible Loans in the same Industry Classification Group shall not exceed 17.5% of the Outstanding Balances of all Eligible Loans; provided that (i) Eligible Loans in the first largest Industry Classification Group may be up to 25.0% of the Outstanding Balances of all Eligible Loans, (ii) Eligible Loans in the second largest Industry Classification Group may be up to 22.5% of the Outstanding Balances of all Eligible Loans and (iii) Eligible Loans in the third largest Industry Classification Group may be up to 20.0% of the Outstanding Balances of all Eligible Loans; and

 

(dd) as of the date such Loan is first included as part of the Collateral, such Loan has not been accelerated and become due on such date by the applicable secured parties.

 

For purposes of determining compliance with clause (B) of this definition of “Eligible Loan,” each Loan included on the list of Loans set forth on Schedule III hereto as of the Closing Date shall be deemed to approved by the Administrative Agent.

 

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For purposes of determining compliance with clause (C) of this definition of “Eligible Loan,” with respect to subclauses (w), (x), (aa) and (cc), only the portion of such Loan that exceeds the applicable threshold will be deemed to not satisfy the definition of “Eligible Loan.”

 

Eligible Obligor”: On any date of determination, any Obligor that:

 

(a) is a business organization (and not a natural person) duly organized and validly existing under the laws of its jurisdiction of organization;

 

(b) is not a Governmental Authority;

 

(c) is not, unless otherwise approved by the Administrative Agent in its sole discretion, an Affiliate of, or controlled by, the Borrower, the Seller or the Collateral Manager;

 

(d) is domiciled and organized or incorporated in the United States or any State thereof;

 

(e) (x) is not the subject of and, to the best of the Collateral Manager’s knowledge is not threatened with any proceeding which would result in, an Insolvency Event with respect to such Obligor and (y) as of the date on which such Loan becomes part of the Collateral, such Obligor is not in financial distress or experiencing a material adverse change in its condition, financial or otherwise; and

 

(f) is not, unless otherwise approved by the Required Lenders and each Lender affected hereby, engaged in the development, acquisition, possession, use, movement, importation, exportation, manufacture, sale or distribution of cluster munitions (as defined in Article 2 on the Convention on Cluster Munitions).

 

Equityholder”: Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc.

 

Equity Security”: Any stock or similar security, certificate of interest or participation in any profit sharing agreement, preorganization certificate or subscription, transferable share, voting trust certificate or certificate of deposit for an equity security, limited partnership interest, interest in a joint venture, or certificate of interest in a business trust; any security future on any such security; or any security convertible, with or without consideration into such a security, or carrying any warrant or right to subscribe to or purchase such a security; or any such warrant or right; or any put, call, straddle, or other option or privilege of buying such a security from or selling such a security to another without being bound to do so.

 

ERISA”: The United States Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as amended from time to time, and the regulations promulgated or issued thereunder.

 

ERISA Affiliate”: (a) Any corporation that is a member of the same controlled group of corporations (within the meaning of Section 414(b) of the Code) as the Borrower, (b) a trade or business (whether or not incorporated) under common control (within the meaning of Section 414(c) of the Code) with the Borrower, or (c) a member of the same affiliated service group (within the meaning of Section 414(m) of the Code) as the Borrower.

 

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Erroneous Payment”: The meaning specified in Section 11.8(a).

 

Erroneous Payment Deficiency Assignment”: The meaning specified in Section 11.8(d).

 

Erroneous Payment Return Deficiency”: The meaning specified in Section 11.8(d).

 

EU Bail-In Legislation Schedule”: The EU Bail-In Legislation Schedule published by the Loan Market Association (or any successor person), as in effect from time to time.

 

Events of Default”: The meaning specified in Section 9.1.

 

Excepted Persons”: The meaning specified in Section 12.13(a).

 

Exchange Act”: The United States Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, and the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder.

 

Excluded Amounts”: (i) Any amount received in the Collection Account with respect to any Loan included as part of the Collateral, which amount is attributable to the payment of any Tax, fee or other charge imposed by any Governmental Authority on such Loan or on any Underlying Assets, (ii) any interest or fees (including origination, agency, structuring, management or other up-front fees) that are for the account of the Seller or any other Person from whom the Borrower purchased such Loan (including, without limitation, interest accruing prior to the date such Loan is purchased by the Borrower), (iii) any reimbursement of insurance premiums, (iv) any escrows relating to Taxes, insurance and other amounts in connection with Loans which are held in an escrow account for the benefit of the Obligor and the secured party pursuant to escrow arrangements under Underlying Instruments or (v) any amount deposited into the Collection Account in error.

 

Excluded Taxes”: Any of the following Taxes imposed on or with respect to an Affected Party or required to be withheld or deducted from a payment to an Affected Party, (a) Taxes imposed on or measured by net income (however denominated), franchise Taxes, and branch profits Taxes, in each case, (i) imposed as a result of such Affected Party being organized under the laws of, or having its principal office or, in the case of any Lender, its applicable lending office located in, the jurisdiction imposing such Tax (or any political subdivision thereof) or (ii) that are Other Connection Taxes, (b) in the case of a Lender, U.S. federal withholding Taxes imposed on amounts payable to or for the account of such Lender with respect to an applicable interest in the Obligations or Commitments pursuant to a law in effect on the date on which (i) such Lender acquires such interest (other than pursuant to an assignment effected in accordance with Section 2.12(h)) or (ii) such Lender changes its lending office, except in each case to the extent that, pursuant to Section 2.13, amounts with respect to such Taxes were payable either to such Lender’s assignor immediately before such Lender became a party hereto or to such Lender immediately before it changed its lending office, (c) Taxes attributable to such Lender’s failure to comply with Section 2.13(f) and (d) any withholding Taxes imposed under FATCA.

 

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Facility Amount”: The Maximum Facility Amount, as such amount may vary from time to time pursuant to Section 2.3 hereof; provided that on or after the Reinvestment Period End Date, the Facility Amount shall mean the Advances Outstanding.

 

Facility Attachment Ratio”: With respect to any Eligible Loan, as of any date of determination, an amount equal to (i) with respect to any First Lien Middle Market Loan, the product of (a) its Net Senior Leverage Ratio, (b) its Applicable Percentage and (c) its Assigned Value, in each case, as of such date, (ii) with respect to any First Lien Last Out Loan, the sum of (a) its First Out Attachment Ratio and (b) the product of (A)(x) its Last Out Attachment Ratio less (y) its First Out Attachment Ratio, (B) its Applicable Percentage and (C) its Assigned Value, in each case, as of such date, (iii) with respect to any Second Lien Loan, the sum of (a) its Net Senior Leverage Ratio and (b) the product of (A)(x) its Net Total Leverage Ratio less (y) its Net Senior Leverage Ratio, (B) its Applicable Percentage and (C) its Assigned Value, in each case, as of such date and (iv) with respect to any Designated Loan, the product of (a) its Net Total Leverage Ratio, (b) its Applicable Percentage and (c) its Assigned Value, in each case, as of such date.

 

Facility Maturity Date”: April 3, 2029.

 

FATCA”: Sections 1471 through 1474 of the Code, as of the date of this Agreement (or any amended or successor version that is substantively comparable and not materially more onerous to comply with), any current or future regulations or official interpretations thereof and any agreements entered into pursuant to Section 1471(b)(1) of the Code, and any fiscal or regulatory legislation, rules or practices adopted pursuant to any intergovernmental agreement, treaty or convention among Governmental Authorities and implementing such Sections of the Code.

 

FDIC”: The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, and any successor thereto.

 

Federal Funds Rate”: For any period, a fluctuating interest per annum rate equal, for each day during such period, to the weighted average of the overnight federal funds rates as reported in Federal Reserve Board Statistical Release H.15(519) or any successor or substitute publication selected by the Administrative Agent (or, if such day is not a Business Day, for the next preceding Business Day), or, if for any reason such rate is not available on any day, the rate determined, in the sole discretion of the Administrative Agent, to be the rate at which overnight federal funds are being offered in the national federal funds market at 9:00 a.m. on such day.

 

Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s Website”: The website of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York at http://www.newyorkfed.org, or any successor source.

 

Fee Letter”: Each Fee Letter, dated as of the date hereof, from the Administrative Agent to the Lenders and/or the Borrower, as the same may be amended, restated, modified or supplemented from time to time.

 

Fees”: All fees required to be paid by the Borrower pursuant to this Agreement and each Fee Letter.

 

Financial Asset”: The meaning specified in Section 8-102(a)(9) of the UCC.

 

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Financial Sponsor”: Any Person, including any Subsidiary of such Person, whose principal business activity is acquiring, holding, and selling investments (including controlling interests) in otherwise unrelated companies that each are distinct legal entities with separate management, books and records and bank accounts, whose operations are not integrated with one another and whose financial condition and creditworthiness are independent of the other companies so owned by such Person.

 

First Lien Last Out Loan”: A Loan which (a) satisfies clause (a) of the definition of First Lien Loan except that such Loan is subordinated in application of proceeds pursuant to a specified priority of payments to other senior secured loans of the same Obligor until such other senior secured loans are paid in full and (b) has not been designated as a First Lien Loan pursuant to clause (b) of the definition of First Lien Loan.

 

First Lien Loan”: A Broadly Syndicated Loan or a First Lien Middle Market Loan.

 

First Lien Middle Market Loan”: A Loan that either (a)(i) is not (and cannot by its terms become) subordinate in right of payment to any obligation of the related Obligor in any bankruptcy, reorganization, arrangement, insolvency, moratorium or liquidation proceedings, (ii) is secured by a pledge of collateral, which security interest is validly perfected and first priority under Applicable Law (but subject to any other Liens permitted under the related Underlying Instruments that are reasonable and customary for similar loans, and Liens accorded priority by law in favor of the United States or any state or agency thereof), and (iii) with respect to which the Collateral Manager determines in good faith that the value of the collateral or enterprise value securing the Loan on or about the time of origination equals or exceeds the outstanding principal balance of the Loan plus the aggregate outstanding balances of all other loans of equal or higher seniority secured by the same collateral or (b) is a First Lien Last Out Loan and is designated by the Administrative Agent in its sole discretion as a “First Lien Middle Market Loan” on the related Approval Notice.

 

First Out Attachment Ratio”: With respect to any Eligible Loan, as of any date of determination, an amount equal to the Net Senior Leverage Ratio with respect to all or any portion of such Eligible Loan that constitutes first lien senior secured Indebtedness that is not (and cannot by its terms become) subordinate in right of payment to any obligation of the Obligor in any bankruptcy, reorganization, arrangement, insolvency, moratorium or liquidation proceedings (excluding any First Lien Last Out Loan or other first lien last out Indebtedness within the capital structure).

 

Foreign Lender”: (a) if the Borrower is a U.S. Person, a Lender that is not a U.S. Person, and (b) if the Borrower is not a U.S. Person, a Lender that is resident or organized under the laws of a jurisdiction other than that in which the Borrower is resident for tax purposes.

 

Fitch”: Fitch Ratings, Inc. or any successor thereto.

 

Funding Date”: With respect to any Advance, the Business Day of receipt by the Administrative Agent and Collateral Agent of a Funding Notice and other required deliveries in accordance with Section 2.2.

 

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Funding Notice”: A notice in the form of Exhibit A-1 signed by an Authorized Person on behalf of the Borrower requesting an Advance, including the items required by Section 2.2.

 

GAAP”: Generally accepted accounting principles as in effect from time to time in the United States.

 

General Collection Account”: A Securities Account created and maintained on the books and records of the Securities Intermediary entitled “General Collection Account” in the name of the Borrower and subject to the prior Lien of the Collateral Agent for the benefit of the Secured Parties.

 

General Intangible”: The meaning specified in Section 9-102(a)(42) of the UCC.

 

Governing Documents”: (a) With respect to any corporation, the certificate or articles of incorporation and the bylaws (or equivalent or comparable constitutive documents with respect to any non-U.S. jurisdiction), (b) with respect to any limited liability company, the certificate or articles of formation or organization and operating agreement, and (c) with respect to any partnership, joint venture, trust or other form of business entity, the partnership, joint venture or other applicable agreement of formation or organization and, if applicable, any agreement, instrument, filing or notice with respect thereto filed in connection with its formation or organization with the applicable Governmental Authority in the jurisdiction of its formation or organization and, if applicable, any certificate or articles of formation or organization of such entity.

 

Governmental Authority”: With respect to any Person, any nation or government, any state or other political subdivision thereof, any central bank (or similar monetary or regulatory authority) thereof, any body or entity exercising executive, legislative, judicial, regulatory or administrative functions of or pertaining to government and any court or arbitrator having jurisdiction over such Person, including any supranational bodies (such as the European Union and the European Central Bank).

 

Governmental Plan”: The meaning specified in Section 4.1(ff).

 

Guarantee”: That certain Guarantee, dated as of the date hereof, executed and delivered by the Equityholder.

 

Guarantee Obligation”: As to any Person (the “guaranteeing person”), any obligation of (a) the guaranteeing person or (b) another Person (including, without limitation, any bank under any letter of credit) to induce the creation of which the guaranteeing person has issued a reimbursement, counterindemnity or similar obligation, in either case guaranteeing or in effect guaranteeing any Indebtedness, leases, dividends or other obligations (the “primary obligations”) of any other third Person (the “primary obligor”) in any manner, whether directly or indirectly, including, without limitation, any obligation of the guaranteeing person, whether or not contingent, (i) to purchase any such primary obligation or any Property constituting direct or indirect security therefor, (ii) to advance or supply funds (1)  for the purchase or payment of any such primary obligation or (2) to maintain working capital or equity capital of the primary obligor or otherwise to maintain the net worth or solvency of the primary obligor, (iii) to purchase Property, securities or services primarily for the purpose of assuring the owner of any such primary obligation of the ability of the primary obligor to make payment of such primary obligation or (iv) otherwise to assure or hold harmless the owner of any such primary obligation against loss in respect thereof; provided, however, that the term “Guarantee Obligation” shall not include endorsements of instruments for deposit or collection in the ordinary course of business. The terms “Guarantee” and “Guaranteed” used as a verb shall have a correlative meaning. The amount of any Guarantee Obligation of any guaranteeing person shall be deemed to be the lower of (a) an amount equal to the stated or determinable amount of the primary obligation in respect of which such Guarantee Obligation is made and (b) the maximum amount for which such guaranteeing person may be liable pursuant to the terms of the instrument embodying such Guarantee Obligation, unless such primary obligation and the maximum amount for which such guaranteeing person may be liable are not stated or determinable, in which case the amount of such Guarantee Obligation shall be such guaranteeing person’s maximum reasonably anticipated liability in respect thereof as determined by the Borrower in good faith.

 

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Highest Required Investment Category”: (a) With respect to ratings assigned by Moody’s, “Aa2” or “P-1” for one-month instruments, “Aa2” and “P-1” for three-month instruments, “Aa2” and “P-1” for six-month instruments and “Aaa” and “P-1” for instruments with a term in excess of six-months, (b) with respect to rating assigned by S&P, “A-1+” for short-term instruments and “AAA” for long-term instruments, and (c) with respect to rating assigned by Fitch (if such investment is rated by Fitch), “F-1+” for short-term instruments and “AAA” for long-term instruments.

 

IFRS”: The international financial reporting standards applicable to private enterprises in the applicable jurisdiction, which are applicable to the circumstances as of any day.

 

Increased Costs”: Any amounts required to be paid by the Borrower to an Indemnified Party pursuant to Section 2.12.

 

Indebtedness”: With respect to (x) any Obligor if “Indebtedness” or any comparable definition is set forth in the Underlying Instruments for the related Loan, such definition or (y) otherwise, without duplication, (a) all indebtedness of such Person for borrowed money (whether by loan or the issuance and sale of debt securities) or for the deferred purchase price of Property or services (other than current trade liabilities incurred in the ordinary course of business and payable in accordance with customary practices), (b) any other indebtedness of such Person which is evidenced by a note, bond, debenture or similar instrument or other evidence of indebtedness customary for indebtedness of that type, (c) all obligations of such Person in respect of letters of credit, acceptances or similar instruments issued or created for the account of such Person, (d) all liabilities secured by (or for which the holder of such obligations has an existing right, contingent or otherwise, to be secured by) any Lien on any Property owned by such Person even though such Person has not assumed or otherwise become liable for the payment thereof, and (e) all Guarantee Obligations of such Person in respect of obligations of the kind referred to in clauses (a) through (d) above. The amount of any Indebtedness under clause (d) shall be equal to the lesser of (A) the stated amount of the relevant obligations and (B) the fair market value of the Property subject to the relevant Lien. The amount of any Indebtedness of any Person shall include the Indebtedness of any other entity (including any partnership in which such Person is a general partner) to the extent such Person is liable therefor as a result of such Person’s ownership interest in or other relationship with such entity, except to the extent the terms of such Indebtedness expressly provide that such Person is not liable therefor.

 

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Indemnified Amounts”: The meaning specified in Section 10.1(a).

 

Indemnified Parties”: The meaning specified in Section 10.1(a).

 

Indemnified Taxes”: (a) Taxes, other than Excluded Taxes, imposed on or with respect to any payment made by or on account of any obligation of the Borrower under any Transaction Document and (b) to the extent not otherwise described in (a), Other Taxes.

 

Independent Manager”: The meaning specified in Section 4.1(u)(xxvi).

 

Indorsement”: The meaning specified in Section 8-102(a)(11) of the UCC, and “Indorsed” has a corresponding meaning.

 

Industry Classification Group”: Any of the classification groups set forth in Schedule II hereto, together with any such classification groups that may be subsequently established by S&P and provided by the Borrower to the Administrative Agent.

 

Insolvency Event”: With respect to a specified Person, (a) the filing of a decree or order for relief by a court having jurisdiction over such Person or any substantial part of its property in an involuntary case under any applicable Insolvency Law now or hereafter in effect, or appointing a receiver, liquidator, assignee, custodian, trustee, sequestrator or similar official for such Person or for any substantial part of its property, or ordering the winding-up or liquidation of such Person’s affairs, and such decree, order or appointment shall remain unstayed and in effect for a period of sixty (60) consecutive days, (b) the commencement by such Person of a voluntary case under any applicable Insolvency Law now or hereafter in effect, or the consent by such Person to the entry of an order for relief in an involuntary case under any such law, (c) the consent by such Person to the appointment of or taking possession by a receiver, liquidator, assignee, custodian, trustee, sequestrator or similar official for such Person or for any substantial part of its property, or the making by such Person of any general assignment for the benefit of creditors, or (d) the failure by such Person generally to pay its debts as such debts become due, or the taking of action by such Person in furtherance of any of the foregoing.

 

Insolvency Laws”: The Bankruptcy Code and all other applicable liquidation, conservatorship, bankruptcy, moratorium, rearrangement, receivership, insolvency, reorganization, suspension of payments, or similar debtor relief laws from time to time in effect affecting the rights of creditors generally.

 

Insolvency Proceeding”: Any case, action or proceeding before any court or other Governmental Authority relating to any Insolvency Event.

 

Instrument”: The meaning specified in Section 9-102(a)(47) of the UCC.

 

Insurance Policy”: With respect to any Loan, an insurance policy covering liability and physical damages to, or loss of, the related Underlying Assets.

 

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Interest”: For each Accrual Period and the Advances Outstanding, the sum of the products (for each day during such Accrual Period) of:

 

IR x P x 1/D

 

where:

 

IR = the Interest Rate applicable on such day;
     
P = the Advances Outstanding on such day;
     
D = 360 days (or, to the extent the Interest Rate is the Base Rate, 365 or 366 days, as applicable).

 

provided that, (i) no provision of this Agreement shall require the payment or permit the collection of Interest in excess of the maximum permitted by Applicable Law, and (ii) Interest shall not be considered paid by any distribution if at any time such distribution is rescinded or must otherwise be returned for any reason.

 

Interest Collection Account”: A Securities Account created and maintained on the books and records of the Securities Intermediary entitled “Interest Collection Account” in the name of the Borrower and subject to the prior Lien of the Collateral Agent for the benefit of the Secured Parties.

 

Interest Collections”: All (a) payments of interest and delayed compensation (representing compensation for delayed settlement) received in Cash by or on behalf of the Borrower on the Collateral, including the accrued interest received in connection with a sale thereof, (b) principal and interest payments received by or on behalf of the Borrower on Permitted Investments purchased with Interest Collections and (c) all amendment and waiver fees, late payment fees, ticking fees and other fees received by the Borrower, except for those in connection with a Material Modification of the related Loan; provided that Interest Collections shall not include (x) Sale Proceeds representing accrued interest that are applied toward payment for accrued interest on the purchase of a Loan (including in connection with a Substitution) and (y) interest received in respect of a Loan (including in connection with any sale thereof), which interest was purchased with Principal Collections.

 

Interest Rate”: (a) The Benchmark plus (b) the Applicable Spread; provided that, if a Lender shall have notified the Administrative Agent that a Disruption Event has occurred, with respect to the Advances owing to such Lender, “Interest Rate” shall mean the Base Rate plus the Applicable Spread until such Lender shall have notified the Administrative Agent that such Disruption Event has ceased, at which time the Interest Rate shall again be equal to the Benchmark for such date plus the Applicable Spread.

 

Intermediary”: (a) A Clearing Corporation or (b) a Person, including a bank or broker, that in the ordinary course of its business maintains Securities Accounts for others and is acting in that capacity, which in each case is not an Affiliate of the Borrower or the Collateral Manager.

 

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Investment”: With respect to any Person, any direct or indirect loan, advance or investment by such Person in any other Person, whether by means of share purchase, capital contribution, loan or otherwise, excluding the acquisition of Loans, Permitted Investments and the acquisition of Equity Securities otherwise permitted by the terms hereof which are related to such Loans.

 

Investment Property”: The meaning specified in Section 9-102(a)(49) of the UCC.

 

Joinder Supplement”: An agreement among the Borrower, a Lender and the Administrative Agent in the form of Exhibit H to this Agreement (appropriately completed) delivered in connection with a Person becoming a Lender hereunder after the Closing Date, as contemplated by Section 2.1(c), a copy of which shall be delivered to the Collateral Agent and the Collateral Manager.

 

Kayne Competitor”: Any investment fund that is primarily in the business of originating portfolios of non-investment grade middle market loans.

 

Last Out Attachment Ratio”: With respect to any Eligible Loan, as of any date of determination, an amount equal to the Net Senior Leverage Ratio with respect to all or any portion of such Eligible Loan that constitutes first lien senior secured Indebtedness that is not (and cannot by its terms become) subordinate in right of payment to any obligation of the Obligor in any bankruptcy, reorganization, arrangement, insolvency, moratorium or liquidation proceedings (including any First Lien Last Out Loan or other first lien last out Indebtedness within the capital structure).

 

Lenders”: The meaning specified in the Preamble, including Wells Fargo and each financial institution which may from time to time become a Lender hereunder by executing and delivering a Joinder Supplement to the Administrative Agent, the Collateral Agent, the Collateral Manager and the Borrower as contemplated by Section 2.1(c).

 

Lien”: Any mortgage, lien, pledge, charge, right, claim, security interest or encumbrance of any kind of or on any Person’s assets or properties in favor of any other Person.

 

Loan”: Any commercial loan or note (a) which is sourced or originated by the Seller or any of its Affiliates and which the Borrower acquires or (b) which the Borrower acquires from a third party in the ordinary course of its business.

 

Loan Checklist”: An electronic or hard copy, as applicable, of a checklist in the form of Exhibit K delivered by or on behalf of the Borrower to the Custodian for each Loan of all related Required Loan Documents, which shall also specify whether such document is an original or a copy.

 

Loan File”: With respect to each Loan, a file containing (a) each of the documents and items as set forth on the Loan Checklist with respect to such Loan and (b) duly executed originals or copies of any other relevant records relating to such Loans and the Underlying Assets pertaining thereto.

 

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Loan Register”: The meaning specified in Section 5.3(l).

 

Loan Schedule”: The schedule listing each Loan owned or scheduled to be acquired by the Borrower setting forth the information listed on Schedule III.

 

Margin Stock”: “Margin Stock” as defined under Regulation U.

 

Material Adverse Effect”: With respect to any event or circumstance, a material adverse effect on (a) the business, assets, financial condition or, solely with respect to the Collateral Manager, operations, of the Collateral Manager or the Borrower, (b) the validity or enforceability of this Agreement or any other Transaction Document or the validity, enforceability or collectability of the Loans generally or any material portion of the Loans, (c) the rights and remedies of the Collateral Agent, the Administrative Agent and the Lenders with respect to matters arising under this Agreement or any other Transaction Document, (d) the ability of each of the Borrower or the Collateral Manager, as applicable, to perform its respective obligations under any Transaction Document to which it is a party, or (e) the status, existence, perfection, priority or enforceability of the Collateral Agent’s Lien on the Collateral.

 

Material Modification”: Any amendment or waiver of, or modification or supplement to, an Underlying Instrument governing an Eligible Loan executed or effected on or after the date on which such Loan is transferred to the Borrower, that:

 

(a) extends or delays the stated maturity date, or any scheduled amortization, prepayment or repayment date (including any scheduled or required excess cash flow sweeps), of such Eligible Loan;

 

(b) waives one or more interest payments, reduces the amount of interest due with respect to such Loan or permits any interest due in cash to be deferred or capitalized and added to the principal amount of such Loan (excluding any deferral or capitalization of the portion of any interest accruing at the incremental portion of any interest rate increased subsequent to the closing date of such Loan);

 

(c) contractually or structurally subordinates such Loan by operation of a priority of payments, turnover provisions, the transfer of assets in order to limit recourse to the related Obligor or the granting of Liens (other than Permitted Liens) on any of the Underlying Assets securing such Loan;

 

(d) substitutes, alters or releases (other than as permitted by such Underlying Instruments) (i) the Underlying Assets securing such Loan (excluding any such release arising in connection with a sale of assets, the proceeds of which are applied to repay such Loan, and after giving effect to such prepayment, the leverage ratio of such Loan is unchanged or improved) or (ii) any material guarantor of such Eligible Loan, and each such substitution, alteration or release, as determined in the sole reasonable discretion of the Administrative Agent, materially and adversely affects the value of such Loan;

 

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(e) amends, waives, forbears, supplements or otherwise modifies in any way the definition of “Net Senior Leverage Ratio,” “Net Total Leverage Ratio” or “Cash Interest Coverage Ratio” (or any respective comparable definitions in its Underlying Instruments) or the definition of any component thereof (including any adjustment to EBITDA or Adjusted EBITDA or any similar definition) in a manner that, in the sole reasonable discretion of the Administrative Agent, is materially adverse to any Lender; provided that in connection any Revenue Recognition Implementation or any Operating Lease Implementation, the Administrative Agent may waive any Material Modification resulting from such implementation pursuant to this clause (e); or

 

(f)   makes such Loan a Principal Reduced Loan.

 

Maximum Facility Amount”: The aggregate Commitments as then in effect, as such amount may be reduced pursuant to Section 2.3 or increased pursuant to Section 2.1(c); provided that on or after the Reinvestment Period End Date, the Maximum Facility Amount shall mean the Advances Outstanding.

 

Measurement Date”: Each of (i) the Closing Date; (ii) the date of any Borrower’s Notice; (iii) the Business Day following the date that a Responsible Officer of the Collateral Manager has actual knowledge of the occurrence of any Assigned Value Adjustment Event; (iv) the Business Day following the date that the Assigned Value of any Loan is adjusted; (v) the date that is two (2) Business Days prior to each Payment Date; (vi) the date on which any Loan included in the latest calculation of the Borrowing Base fails to meet one or more of the criteria listed in the definition of “Eligible Loan” (other than any criteria thereof waived by the Administrative Agent); (vii) on or prior to each Reinvestment, Discretionary Sale, Substitution or Optional Sale pursuant to Section 2.14 and Section 3.2, as applicable; (viii) each Reporting Date; and (ix) each other date requested by the Administrative Agent.

 

Minimum Equity Amount”: As of any date of determination, the applicable amount in Annex C.

 

Moody’s”: Moody’s Investors Service, Inc., and any successor thereto.

 

Multiemployer Plan”: A “multiemployer plan” as defined in Section 4001(a)(3) of ERISA that is or was at any time during the current year or the preceding six (6) years contributed to by the Borrower or any ERISA Affiliate on behalf of its employees.

 

Net Senior Leverage Ratio”: With respect to any Loan for any Relevant Test Period, either (a) the meaning of “Net Senior Leverage Ratio” or comparable definition set forth in the Underlying Instruments for such Loan, or (b) in the case of any Loan with respect to which the related Underlying Instruments do not include a definition of “Net Senior Leverage Ratio” or comparable definition, the ratio of (i) the senior Indebtedness (including, without limitation, such Loan) of the applicable Obligor as of the date of determination minus the Unrestricted Cash of such Obligor as of such date to (ii) EBITDA of such Obligor with respect to the applicable Relevant Test Period, as calculated by the Borrower or the Collateral Manager in good faith using information from and calculations consistent with the relevant compliance statements and financial reporting packages provided by the relevant Obligor in accordance with the requirements of the Underlying Instruments.

 

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Net Total Leverage Ratio”: With respect to any Loan for any Relevant Test Period either (a) the meaning of “Net Total Leverage Ratio” or any comparable definition set forth in the Underlying Instruments for such Loan, or (b) in the case of any Loan with respect to which the related Underlying Instruments do not include a definition of “Net Total Leverage Ratio” or comparable definition, the ratio of the ratio of (i) Indebtedness (including, without limitation, such Loan) of the applicable Obligor as of the date of determination minus Unrestricted Cash of such Obligor as of such date to (ii) EBITDA of such Obligor with respect to the applicable Relevant Test Period, as calculated by the Borrower or the Collateral Manager in good faith, using information from and calculations consistent with the relevant compliance statements and financial reporting packages provided by the relevant Obligor as per the requirements of the Underlying Instruments for such Loan.

 

Non-Usage Fee”: The meaning set forth in each Fee Letter.

 

Noteless Loan”: A Loan with respect to which the Underlying Instruments either (i) do not require the Obligor to execute and deliver a promissory note to evidence the indebtedness created under such Loan or (ii) require execution and delivery of such a promissory note only upon the request of any holder of the indebtedness created under such Loan, and as to which the Borrower has not requested a promissory note from the related Obligor.

 

Notice of Exclusive Control”: The meaning specified in the Securities Account Control Agreement.

 

Obligations”: The unpaid principal amount of, and interest (including, without limitation, interest accruing after the maturity of the Advances and interest accruing after the filing of any petition in bankruptcy, or the commencement of any insolvency, reorganization or like proceeding, relating to the Borrower, whether or not a claim for post-filing or post-petition interest is allowed in such proceeding) on the Advances and all other obligations and liabilities of the Borrower to the Secured Parties, whether direct or indirect, absolute or contingent, due or to become due, or now existing or hereafter incurred, which may arise under, or out of or in connection with any Transaction Document, and any other document made, delivered or given in connection therewith or herewith, whether on account of principal, interest, reimbursement obligations, fees, indemnities, costs, expenses (including, without limitation, all fees and disbursements of counsel to the Administrative Agent, the Collateral Agent or to the Lenders that are required to be paid by the Borrower pursuant to the terms of the Transaction Documents) or otherwise.

 

Obligor”: With respect to any Loan, any Person or Persons obligated to make payments pursuant to or with respect to such Loan, including any guarantor thereof.

 

Offer”: A tender offer, voluntary redemption, exchange offer, conversion or other similar action.

 

Officer’s Certificate”: A certificate signed by a Responsible Officer of the Person providing the applicable certification, as the case may be.

 

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Operating Lease Implementation”: The implementation by an Obligor of IFRS 16/ASC 842.

 

Opinion of Counsel”: A written opinion of counsel, which opinion and counsel are acceptable to the Administrative Agent in its reasonable discretion.

 

Optional Sale”: The meaning specified in Section 2.14(d).

 

Original Cash Interest Coverage Ratio”: With respect to any Loan, the Cash Interest Coverage Ratio for such Loan on the date such Loan was acquired by the Borrower.

 

Other Connection Taxes”: With respect to any Affected Party, Taxes imposed as a result of a present or former connection between such Affected Party and the jurisdiction imposing such Tax (other than connections arising from such Affected Party having executed, delivered, become a party to, performed its obligations under, received payments under, received or perfected a security interest under, engaged in any other transaction pursuant to or enforced any Transaction Document, or sold or assigned an interest in any Obligation or Transaction Document).

 

Other Taxes”: All present or future stamp, court or documentary, intangible, recording, filing or similar Taxes that arise from any payment made under, from the execution, delivery, performance, enforcement or registration of, from the receipt or perfection of a security interest under, or otherwise with respect to, any Transaction Document, except any such Taxes that are Other Connection Taxes imposed with respect to an assignment (other than an assignment made pursuant to Section 2.12(h)).

 

Outstanding Balance”: With respect to any Loan as of any date of determination, the outstanding principal balance of any advances or loans made by the Borrower to the related Obligor pursuant to the related Underlying Instruments as of such date of determination (exclusive of any interest and Accreted Interest).

 

Partially Eligible Loan”: Any Loan which meets each of the criteria listed in the definition of “Eligible Loan” other than clause (B) of such definition, whether or not rejected by the Administrative Agent pursuant to such clause (B).

 

Participant Register”: The meaning specified in Section 12.16(d).

 

Payment Date”: Quarterly on the 10th day of each January, April, July and October or, if such day is not a Business Day, the next succeeding Business Day, commencing in April 2022.

 

Payment Date Statement”: A statement initially prepared by the Collateral Agent and verified by the Collateral Manager prior to each Payment Date setting forth the calculation of each amount payable out of available Collections on such Payment Date pursuant to either Section 2.7 or 2.8, as applicable, together with the payment information for each recipient of such amounts.

 

Payment Duties”: The meaning specified in Section 7.2(b)(iv).

 

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Payment Recipient”: The meaning specified in Section 11.8(a).

 

Pension Plans”: The meaning specified in Section 4.1(w).

 

Permitted Investments”: Negotiable instruments or securities or other investments, which may include obligations or securities of issuers for which the Collateral Agent or an Affiliate of the Collateral Agent provides services or receives compensation that (i) except in the case of demand or time deposits and investments in money market funds, are represented by instruments in bearer or registered form or ownership of which is represented by book entries by a Clearing Agency or by a Federal Reserve Bank in favor of depository institutions eligible to have an account with such Federal Reserve Bank who hold such investments on behalf of their customers and (ii) evidence:

 

(a) direct obligations of, and obligations fully guaranteed as to full and timely payment by, the United States (or by any agency thereof to the extent such obligations are backed by the full faith and credit of the United States);

 

(b) demand deposits, time deposits, bank deposit products of or certificates of deposit of depository institutions or trust companies incorporated under the laws of the United States or any state thereof and subject to supervision and examination by federal or state banking or depository institution authorities; provided that at the time of the Borrower’s investment or contractual commitment to invest therein, the commercial paper, if any, and short-term unsecured debt obligations (other than such obligation whose rating is based on the credit of a Person other than such institution or trust company) of such depository institution or trust company shall have a credit rating from Fitch and each Rating Agency in the Highest Required Investment Category granted by Fitch and such Rating Agency;

 

(c) commercial paper, or other short term obligations, having, at the time of the Borrower’s investment or contractual commitment to invest therein, a rating in the Highest Required Investment Category granted by each Rating Agency and Fitch;

 

(d) demand deposits, time deposits or certificates of deposit that are fully insured by the FDIC and either have a rating on their certificates of deposit or short-term deposits from Moody’s and S&P of “P-1” and “A-1”, respectively, and if rated by Fitch, from Fitch of “F-1+”;

 

(e) investments in taxable money market funds or other regulated investment companies having, at the time of the Borrower’s investment or contractual commitment to invest therein, a rating of the Highest Required Investment Category from each Rating Agency and Fitch (if rated by Fitch); or

 

(f) time deposits (having maturities of not more than 90 days) by an entity the commercial paper of which has, at the time of the Borrower’s investment or contractual commitment to invest therein, a rating of the Highest Required Investment Category granted by each Rating Agency and Fitch;

 

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provided, that notwithstanding the foregoing clauses (a) through (f), unless the Borrower has received the written advice of counsel of national reputation experienced in such matters to the contrary (together with an Officer’s Certificate of the Borrower to the Administrative Agent and the Collateral Agent (on which the Administrative Agent and the Collateral Agent may rely) that the advice specified in this definition has been received by the Borrower), Permitted Investments may only include obligations or securities that constitute cash equivalents for purposes of the rights and assets in paragraph (c)(8)(i)(B) of the exclusions from the definition of “covered fund” for purposes of the Volcker Rule. The Collateral Agent shall have no duty to determine or oversee compliance with the foregoing.

 

Permitted Liens”:

 

(a) with respect to the interest of the Seller or the Borrower in the Loans included in the Collateral: (i) Liens in favor of the Borrower created pursuant to the Sale Agreement and (ii) Liens in favor of the Collateral Agent created pursuant to this Agreement; and

 

(b) with respect to the interest of the Seller or the Borrower in the other Collateral (including any Underlying Assets): (i) materialmen’s, warehousemen’s, mechanics’ and other Liens arising by operation of law in the ordinary course of business for sums not due or sums that are being contested in good faith, (ii) purchase money security interests in certain items of equipment, (iii) Liens for Taxes if such Taxes shall not at the time be due and payable or if a Person shall currently be contesting the validity thereof in good faith by appropriate proceedings and with respect to which reserves in accordance with GAAP have been provided on the books of such Person, (iv) other customary Liens permitted by the applicable Underlying Instruments with respect thereto consistent with the Collateral Manager Standard, (v) Liens in favor of the Borrower created by the Seller under the Sale Agreement and transferred by the Borrower pursuant to this Agreement, (vi) Liens in favor of the Collateral Agent created pursuant to this Agreement, (vii) with respect to Agented Loans, Liens in favor of the lead agent, the collateral agent or the paying agent for the benefit of all holders of Indebtedness of such Obligor, (viii) with respect to any Equity Security, any Liens granted (x) on such Equity Security to secure Indebtedness of the related Obligor and/or (y) under any governing documents or other agreement between or among or binding upon the Borrower as the holder of such Equity Security (provided that, in each case, such Liens have no higher priority than they did on the date such Loan was approved by the Administrative Agent) and (ix) with respect to any Underlying Assets, Liens permitted by the applicable Underlying Instruments.

 

Permitted RIC Distribution”: Distributions on any Payment Date to the Equityholder (from the Collection Account) to the extent required to allow the Equityholder to make sufficient distributions to qualify as a regulated investment company, and to otherwise eliminate federal or state income or excise taxes payable by the Equityholder in or with respect to any taxable year of the Equityholder (or any calendar year, as relevant); provided that the amount of any such payments made in or with respect to any such taxable year (or calendar year, as relevant) of the Equityholder shall not exceed 115% of the amounts that the Borrower would have been required to distribute to the Equityholder to: (i) allow the Borrower to satisfy the minimum distribution requirements that would be imposed by Section 852(a) of the Code (or any successor thereto) to maintain its eligibility to be taxed as a regulated investment company for any such taxable year, (ii) reduce to zero for any such taxable year the Borrower’s liability for federal income taxes imposed on (x) its investment company taxable income pursuant to Section 852(b)(1) of the Code (or any successor thereto), or (y) its net capital gain pursuant to Section 852(b)(3) of the Code (or any successor thereto), and (iii) reduce to zero the Borrower’s liability for federal excise taxes for any such calendar year imposed pursuant to Section 4982 of the Code (or any successor thereto), in the case of each of (i), (ii) or (iii), calculated assuming that the Borrower had qualified to be taxed as a regulated investment company under the Code.

 

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Permitted Securitization”: Any private or public term or conduit securitization transaction undertaken by the Borrower or an Affiliate thereof that is secured, directly or indirectly, by any Loan currently or formerly included in the Collateral or any portion thereof or any interest therein released from the Lien of this Agreement, including, without limitation, any collateralized loan obligation or collateralized debt obligation offering or other asset securitization or term facility.

 

Person”: An individual, partnership, corporation, limited liability company, joint stock company, trust (including a statutory or business trust), unincorporated association, sole proprietorship, joint venture, government (or any agency, instrumentality or political subdivision thereof), estate, company, limited liability partnership, nonprofit corporation, group, sector, territory or other entity.

 

Prime Rate”: The greater of (x) zero and (y) the rate announced by Wells Fargo from time to time as its prime rate in the United States, such rate to change as and when such designated rate changes. The Prime Rate is not intended to be the lowest rate of interest charged by Wells Fargo or any other specified financial institution in connection with extensions of credit to debtors.

 

Principal Collection Account”: A Securities Account created and maintained on the books and records of the Securities Intermediary entitled “Principal Collection Account” in the name of the Borrower and subject to the prior Lien of the Collateral Agent for the benefit of the Secured Parties.

 

Principal Collections”: All amounts received by the Borrower or the Collateral Agent that are not Interest Collections to the extent received in cash by or on behalf of the Borrower or the Collateral Agent.

 

Principal Reduced Loan”: Any Loan where any or all of the principal amount due thereunder is reduced, waived or forgiven or any lenders’ rights to payment of principal as and when due thereunder has been waived or delayed or lenders thereunder have agreed to forbear from enforcing their rights to such payment.

 

Proceeds”: With respect to any Collateral, all property that is receivable or received when such Collateral is collected, sold, liquidated, foreclosed, exchanged, or otherwise disposed of, whether such disposition is voluntary or involuntary, and includes all rights to payment with respect to any insurance relating to such Collateral.

 

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Property”: Any right or interest in or to property of any kind whatsoever, whether real, personal or mixed and whether tangible or intangible, including, without limitation, Capital Stock.

 

Pro Rata Share”: With respect to any Lender, the percentage obtained by dividing the Commitment of such Lender (as determined pursuant to the definition of Commitment) by the aggregate Commitments of all the Lenders (as determined pursuant to the definition of Commitment) or, if the Commitments have been terminated, based on the Advances Outstanding.

 

Purchase Price”: With respect to any Loan, an amount (expressed as a percentage of par) equal to (i) the purchase price in Dollars (or, if different principal amounts of such Loan were purchased at different purchase prices, the weighted average of such purchase prices) paid by the Borrower for such Loan (exclusive of any interest, Accreted Interest, original issue discount and upfront fees) divided by (ii) the principal balance of the portion of such Loan purchased by the Borrower outstanding as of the date of such purchase (exclusive of any interest, Accreted Interest, original issue discount and upfront fees); provided, that any Loan (x) acquired by the Borrower in connection with the origination or primary syndication of such Loan and (y) with a “Purchase Price” of at least 97% (including, for the avoidance of doubt, in excess of 100%), shall be deemed to have a “Purchase Price” of 100%.

 

QFC”: The meaning assigned to the term “qualified financial contract” in, and interpreted in accordance with, 12 U.S.C. 5390(c)(8)(D).

 

Qualified Institution”: A depository institution or trust company organized under the laws of the United States of America or any one of the States thereof or the District of Columbia (or any domestic branch of a foreign bank), (i)(a) that has either (1) a long-term unsecured debt rating of “A” or better by S&P and “A2” or better by Moody’s or (2) a short-term unsecured debt rating or certificate of deposit rating of “A-1” or better by S&P or “P-1” or better by Moody’s, (b) the parent corporation of which has either (1) a long-term unsecured debt rating of “A” or better by S&P and “A2” or better by Moody’s or (2) a short-term unsecured debt rating or certificate of deposit rating of “A-1” or better by S&P and “P-1” or better by Moody’s or (c) is otherwise acceptable to the Administrative Agent and (ii) the deposits of which are insured by the FDIC.

 

Rating Agency”: Each of Moody’s, Fitch and S&P.

 

Register”: The meaning specified in Section 12.16(b).

 

Registered”: With respect to any registration-required obligation within the meaning of Section 163(f)(2) of the Code, a debt obligation that was issued after July 18, 1984 and that is in registered form within the meaning of Section 5f.103-1(c) of the Treasury Regulations.

 

Regulation U”: Regulation U of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 12 C.F.R. § 221, or any successor regulation.

 

Reinvestment”: The meaning specified in Section 2.14(a)(i).

 

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Reinvestment Notice”: Each notice required to be delivered by the Collateral Manager in respect of any Reinvestment of Principal Collections pursuant to Section 3.2(b) in the form of Exhibit A-3.

 

Reinvestment Period”: The period commencing on the Closing Date and ending on the day preceding the Reinvestment Period End Date.

 

Reinvestment Period End Date”: The earliest to occur of (a) the date of the declaration of the Reinvestment Period End Date pursuant to Section 9.2(a), (b) the Termination Date pursuant to Section 9.2(a), (c) the date of the termination of all of the Commitments pursuant to Section 2.3(a), (d) the Scheduled Reinvestment Period End Date or (e) the date on which the Equityholder’s “investment period” ends.

 

Related Parties”: With respect to any Person, such Person’s Affiliates and the partners, directors, officers, employees, agents, trustees, administrators, managers, advisors and representatives of such Person and of such Person’s Affiliates.

 

Relevant Governmental Body”: The Federal Reserve Board and/or the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, or a committee officially endorsed or convened by the Federal Reserve Board and/or the Federal Reserve Bank of New York or any successor thereto.

 

Relevant Test Period”: With respect to any Loan, the relevant test period for the calculation of Net Senior Leverage Ratio, Net Total Leverage Ratio, Cash Interest Coverage Ratio or EBITDA as applicable, for such Loan in accordance with the related Underlying Instruments or, if no such period is provided for therein, (i) for Obligors delivering monthly financial statements, each period of the last twelve (12) consecutive reported calendar months, and (ii) for Obligors delivering quarterly financial statements, each period of the last four (4) consecutive reported fiscal quarters of the principal Obligor on such Loan; provided that with respect to any Loan for which the relevant test period is not provided for in the related Underlying Instruments, if an Obligor is a newly-formed entity as to which twelve (12) consecutive calendar months have not yet elapsed, “Relevant Test Period” shall initially include the period from the date of formation of such Obligor to the end of the twelfth (12th) calendar month or fourth (4th) fiscal quarter (as the case may be) from the date of formation, and shall subsequently include each period of the last twelve (12) consecutive reported calendar months or four (4) consecutive reported fiscal quarters (as the case may be) of such Obligor.

 

Repayment Notice”: Each notice required to be delivered by the Borrower in respect of any reduction of the Commitments or by the Borrower or the Collateral Manager (on behalf of the Borrower) in respect of any repayment of Advances Outstanding, in the form of Exhibit A-2.

 

Reportable Event”: The meaning specified in Section 4.1(w).

 

Reporting Date”: The date that is two (2) Business Days prior to the 20th of each calendar month, with the first Reporting Date occurring in March 2022.

 

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Required Lenders”: The Administrative Agent and the Lenders representing an aggregate of more than 50% of the aggregate Commitments (or, if the applicable Commitments have been terminated, Advances Outstanding); provided that, for the purposes of determining the Required Lenders, (i) if at any time there is more than one non-Defaulting Lender (counting affiliated Lenders as a single Lender), at least two unaffiliated non-Defaulting Lenders shall be required to constitute “Required Lenders”, (ii) the Commitment of any Defaulting Lender shall be disregarded for purposes of determining whether the consent of the Required Lenders has been obtained and such Lender shall not constitute a Required Lender hereunder and (iii) the Commitment (or, if the applicable Commitment has been terminated, Advances Outstanding) of any Lender that is an Affiliate of the Borrower or the Equityholder shall be disregarded for purposes of determining whether the consent of the Required Lenders has been obtained and such Lender shall not constitute a Required Lender hereunder.

 

Required Loan Documents”: For each Loan, the following documents or instruments, in each case as specified on the related Loan Checklist:

 

(a) (i) the original executed promissory note or, in the case of a lost note, a copy of the executed underlying promissory note accompanied by an original executed affidavit and indemnity endorsed by the Borrower in blank (and an unbroken chain of endorsements from each prior holder of such promissory note to the Borrower), or (ii) if no promissory note is issued in the name of the Borrower or such Loan is a Noteless Loan, (A) an executed copy of each assignment and assumption agreement, transfer document or instrument relating to such Loan evidencing the assignment of such Loan from any prior third party owner thereof to the Borrower and from the Borrower in blank;

 

(b) to the extent applicable for the related Loan, copies of the executed (i) guaranty, (ii) underlying credit or loan agreement (or similar agreement pursuant to which the related Loan has been issued or created), (iii) acquisition agreement (or similar agreement) and (iv) security agreement, mortgage or other agreement that secures the obligations represented by such Loan, in each case as set forth on the Loan Checklist; and

 

(c) with respect to any Loan originated by the Seller and with respect to which the Seller acts as administrative agent (or in a comparable capacity), either (i) copies of any related UCC-1 Financing Statements and any related UCC-3 continuation statements, each showing the related Obligor as debtor and the Collateral Agent as total assignee or showing the Obligor, as debtor and the Seller as secured party and each with evidence of filing thereon, or (ii) copies of any such financing and continuation statements certified by the Collateral Manager to be true and complete copies thereof in instances where the original financing statements have been sent to the appropriate public filing office for filing, in each case, as set forth in the related Loan Checklist.

 

Required Reports”: Collectively, the Borrowing Base Certificate, the Payment Date Statement, financial statements of each Obligor, the Collateral Manager and the Borrower required to be delivered under the Transaction Documents (including, without limitation, pursuant to Sections 5.1(q), 5.3(g) and 6.8(a) hereof), the annual statements as to compliance and the annual independent public accountant’s report pursuant to Section 5.1(r).

 

Resolution Authority”: An EEA Resolution Authority or, with respect to any UK Financial Institution, a UK Resolution Authority.

 

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Responsible Officer”: With respect to any Person, any duly authorized officer of such Person with direct responsibility for the administration of this Agreement and also, with respect to a particular matter, any other duly authorized officer of such Person to whom such matter is referred because of such officer’s knowledge of and familiarity with the particular subject, and with respect to the Collateral Agent or Securities Intermediary, an officer to whom a corporate trust matter is referred because of such person’s knowledge of and familiarity with the particular subject and having direct responsibility for the administration of this transaction.

 

Restricted Payment”: (i) Any dividend or other distribution, direct or indirect, on account of any class of membership interests of the Borrower now or hereafter outstanding, except a dividend or distribution paid solely in interests of that class of membership interests or in any junior class of membership interests of the Borrower; (ii) any redemption, retirement, sinking fund or similar payment, purchase or other acquisition for value, direct or indirect, of any class of membership interests of the Borrower now or hereafter outstanding, and (iii) any payment made to redeem, purchase, repurchase or retire, or to obtain the surrender of, any outstanding warrants, options or other rights to acquire membership interests of the Borrower now or hereafter outstanding.

 

Revenue Recognition Implementation”: The implementation by an Obligor of IFRS 15/ASC 606.

 

Review Criteria”: The meaning specified in Section 7.2(b)(i).

 

Revolving Loan”: Any Loan (other than a Delayed Draw Loan) that is a senior secured obligation (including funded and unfunded portions of revolving credit lines and letter of credit facilities, unfunded commitments under specific facilities and other similar loans and investments) that under the Underlying Instruments relating thereto may require one or more future advances to be made to the Obligor by the Borrower; provided that, any such Loan will be a Revolving Loan only until all commitments by the Borrower to make advances to the Obligor thereof expire, or are terminated, or are irrevocably reduced to zero.

 

S&P”: Standard & Poor’s Ratings Services, a Standard & Poor’s Financial Services LLC business, and any successor thereto.

 

Sale Agreement”: The Loan Sale Agreement, dated as of the date hereof by and between the Seller and the Borrower.

 

Sale Proceeds”: With respect to any Loan, all proceeds received as a result of the sale of such Loan, net of all out-of-pocket expenses of the Borrower, the Collateral Manager and the Collateral Agent incurred in connection with any such sale.

 

Sanction” or “Sanctions”: Individually and collectively, respectively, any and all economic or financial sanctions, sectoral sanctions, secondary sanctions, trade embargoes and anti-terrorism laws, including but not limited to those imposed, administered or enforced from time to time by: (a) the United States of America, including those administered by the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (“OFAC”), the U.S. Department of the Treasury, the U.S. Department of State, the U.S. Department of Commerce, or through any existing or future executive order; (b) the United Nations Security Council; (c) the European Union; (d) the United Kingdom; (e) Canada or (f) any other governmental authorities with jurisdiction over the Borrower, the Collateral Manager, the Seller or any of their respective Subsidiaries.

 

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Sanctioned Person”: Any Person that is a target of Sanctions, including without limitation, a Person that is: (a) listed on OFAC’s Specially Designated Nationals (SDN) and Blocked Persons List; (b) listed on OFAC’s Consolidated Non-SDN List; (c) a legal entity that is deemed by OFAC to be a Sanctions target based on the ownership of such legal entity by Sanctioned Person(s); or (d) a Person that is a Sanctions target pursuant to any territorial or country-based Sanctions program.

 

Scheduled Payment”: Each scheduled payment of principal and/or interest required to be made by an Obligor on the related Loan, as adjusted pursuant to the terms of the related Underlying Instruments, if applicable.

 

Scheduled Reinvestment Period End Date”: April 2, 2027 (or such later date as is agreed to in writing by the Borrower, the Collateral Manager, the Administrative Agent and the Lenders pursuant to Section 2.1(d)).

 

SEC”: The Securities and Exchange Commission or any successor Governmental Authority.

 

Second Lien Loan”: A Loan that (i) does not satisfy each requirement set forth in the definition of “First Lien Loan” or “First Lien Last Out Loan,” (ii) is secured by a pledge of collateral, which security interest is validly perfected and second priority under Applicable Law (subject to Permitted Liens), (iii) is pari passu or subordinated to in right of payment with the Indebtedness of the holders of the first priority security interest (other than following an event of default) and (iv) pursuant to an intercreditor agreement between the Borrower and the holder of the first priority Lien over the Underlying Assets, the amount of Indebtedness secured by such first priority Lien is limited (in terms of aggregate dollar amount or percent of outstanding principal or both).

 

Section 28(e)”: The meaning specified in Section 6.2(l).

 

Secured Party”: (i) Each Lender, (ii) the Administrative Agent, (iii) the Collateral Agent, (iv) the Securities Intermediary and (v) the Custodian.

 

Securities Account”: The meaning specified in Section 8-501(a) of the UCC.

 

Securities Account Control Agreement”: Collectively (x) the Account Control Agreement, dated as of the date hereof, among the Borrower, U.S. Bank Trust Company, National Association, as the collateral agent, the Administrative Agent, the Collateral Manager and U.S. Bank National Association as the Securities Intermediary, as the same may be amended, modified, waived, supplemented or restated from time to time and (y) the Account Control Agreement, dated as of November 3, 2023, among the Borrower, the Collateral Agent, the Administrative Agent, the Collateral Manager and Wilmington Trust, National Association as the Securities Intermediary, as the same may be amended, modified, waived, supplemented or restated from time to time.

 

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Securities Act”: The U.S. Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder.

 

Securities Intermediary”: U.S. Bank National Association and Wilmington Trust, National Association, each in its capacity as securities intermediary pursuant to a Securities Account Control Agreement, or any subsequent (i) Clearing Corporation; or (ii)  Person, including a bank or broker, that in the ordinary course of its business maintains Securities Accounts for others and is acting in that capacity, agreeing to act in such capacity pursuant to the Securities Account Control Agreement.

 

Security Certificate”: The meaning specified in Section 8-102(a)(16) of the UCC.

 

Security Entitlement”: The meaning specified in Section 8-102(a)(17) of the UCC.

 

Seller”: The meaning specified in the Preamble.

 

Similar Law”: The meaning specified in Section 4.1(ff).

 

SOFR”: A rate equal to the secured overnight financing rate as administered by the SOFR Administrator.

 

SOFR Administrator”: The Federal Reserve Bank of New York (or any successor administrator).

 

SOFR Administrator’s Website”: The website of the SOFR Administrator, currently at http://www.newyorkfed.org, or any successor source for the secured overnight financing rate identified as such by the SOFR Administrator from time to time.

 

Solvent”: As to any Person at any time, having a state of affairs such that all of the following conditions are met: (a) the fair value of the property of such Person is greater than the amount of such Person’s liabilities (including disputed, contingent and unliquidated liabilities) as such value is established and liabilities evaluated for purposes of Section 101(32) of the Bankruptcy Code; (b) the present fair saleable value of the property of such Person in an orderly liquidation of such Person is not less than the amount that will be required to pay the probable liability of such Person on its debts and other liabilities as they become absolute and matured; (c) such Person is able to realize upon its property and pay its debts and other liabilities (including disputed, contingent and unliquidated liabilities) as they mature in the normal course of business; (d) such Person does not intend to, and does not believe that it will, incur debts or liabilities beyond such Person’s ability to pay as such debts and liabilities mature; and (e) such Person is not engaged in a business or a transaction, and does not propose to engage in a business or a transaction, for which such Person’s property assets would constitute unreasonably small capital.

 

Subsidiary”: As to any Person, a corporation, partnership, limited liability company or other entity of which shares of stock or other ownership interests having ordinary voting power (other than stock or such other ownership interests having such power only by reason of the happening of a contingency) to elect a majority of the board of directors or other managers of such corporation, partnership or other entity are at the time owned, or the management of which is otherwise controlled, directly or indirectly, through one or more intermediaries, or both, by such Person.

 

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Substitution”: The meaning specified in Section 2.14(b).

 

Taxes”: All present or future taxes, levies, imposts, duties, deductions, withholdings (including backup withholding), assessments, fees or other charges imposed by any Governmental Authority, including any interest, additions to tax or penalties applicable thereto.

 

Term SOFR”: The forward-looking term rate based on SOFR that has been selected or recommended by the Relevant Governmental Body.

 

Termination Date”: The earliest of (a) the date of the termination of all the Commitments pursuant to Section 2.3(a), (b) the Facility Maturity Date, and (c) the Business Day following the date of the declaration of the Termination Date or the date of the automatic occurrence of the Termination Date pursuant to Section 9.2(a).

 

Third Amendment Closing Date”: April 3, 2024.

 

Transaction”: The meaning specified in Section 3.2.

 

Transaction Documents”: This Agreement, the Sale Agreement, each Fee Letter, the Securities Account Control Agreement, the Guarantee, any Joinder Supplement and the Collateral Agent and Custodian Fee Letter.

 

Unadjusted Benchmark Replacement”: The Benchmark Replacement excluding the Benchmark Replacement Adjustment.

 

UCC”: The Uniform Commercial Code as from time to time in effect in the applicable jurisdiction or jurisdictions.

 

UK Financial Institution”: Any BRRD Undertakings (as such term is defined under the PRA Rulebook (as amended from time to time) promulgated by the United Kingdom Prudential Regulation Authority) or any person falling within IFPRU 11.6 of the FCA Handbook (as amended from time to time) promulgated by the United Kingdom Financial Conduct Authority, which includes certain credit institutions and investment firms, and certain affiliates of such credit institutions or investment firms.

 

UK Resolutions Authority”: The Bank of England or any other public administrative authority having responsibilities for the resolution of any UK Financial Institution.

 

Uncertificated Security”: The meaning specified in Section 8-102(a)(l8) of the UCC.

 

Underlying Assets”: With respect to a Loan, any property or other assets designated and pledged as collateral to secure repayment of such Loan, including, without limitation, to the extent provided for in the relevant Underlying Instruments, a pledge of the stock, membership or other ownership interests in the related Obligor and all Proceeds from any sale or other disposition of such property or other assets.

 

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Underlying Instruments”: The loan agreement, credit agreement or other agreement pursuant to which a Loan has been issued or created and each other agreement that governs the terms of or secures the obligations represented by such Loan or Permitted Investment or of which the holders of such Loan or Permitted Investment are the beneficiaries.

 

Undisclosed Administration”: In relation to a Lender or its direct or indirect parent company that is a solvent person, the appointment of an administrator, provisional liquidator, conservator, receiver, trustee, custodian, or other similar official by a supervisory authority or regulator under or based on the law in the country where such Lender or such parent company is subject to home jurisdiction, if applicable law requires that such appointment not be disclosed.

 

Unfunded Exposure Account”: A Securities Account created and maintained on the books and records of the Securities Intermediary entitled “Unfunded Exposure Account” in the name of the Borrower and subject to the prior Lien of the Collateral Agent for the benefit of the Secured Parties.

 

Unfunded Exposure Amount”: As of any date of determination, an amount equal to the aggregate amount (without duplication) of all unfunded commitments of the Borrower associated with the Loans.

 

Unfunded Exposure Equity Amount”: As of any date of determination, with respect to any Loan, an amount equal to the sum of (i) the product of (a) the Unfunded Exposure Amount with respect to such Loan multiplied by (b) the difference of (x) 100% minus (y) the Applicable Percentage for such Loan plus (ii) any Assigned Value reductions (expressed in Dollars) associated with the Unfunded Exposure Amount with respect to such Loan.

 

United States” or “U.S.”: The United States of America.

 

Unrestricted Cash”: The meaning of “Unrestricted Cash” or any comparable definition in the Underlying Instruments for each Loan, and in any case that “Unrestricted Cash” or such comparable definition is not defined in such Underlying Instruments, all cash available for use for general corporate purposes and not held in any reserve account or legally or contractually restricted for any particular purposes or subject to any lien (other than blanket liens permitted under or granted in accordance with such Underlying Instruments), as reflected on the most recent financial statements of the relevant Obligor that have been delivered to the Borrower.

 

Unused Facility Amount”: At any time, (a) the Facility Amount minus (b) the Advances Outstanding at such time.

 

U.S. Borrower”: Any Borrower that is a U.S. Person.

 

U.S. Person”: Any Person that is a “United States person” as defined in Section 7701(a)(30) of the Code.

 

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U.S. Special Resolution Regime”: Each of (i) the Federal Deposit Insurance Act and the regulations promulgated thereunder and (ii) Title II of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act and the regulations promulgated thereunder.

 

U.S. Tax Compliance Certificate”: The meaning set forth in Section 2.13(f).

 

USA Patriot Act”: The Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism Act of 2001, Public Law 107-56.

 

Volcker Rule”: Section 13 of the U.S. Bank Holding Company Act of 1956, as amended, and the applicable rules and regulations thereunder.

 

Wells Fargo”: The meaning specified in the Preamble.

 

Withholding Agent”: The Borrower and the Administrative Agent.

 

Write-Down and Conversion Powers”: (a) With respect to any EEA Resolution Authority, the write-down and conversion powers of such EEA Resolution Authority from time to time under the Bail-In Legislation for the applicable EEA Member Country, which write-down and conversion powers are described in the EU Bail-In Legislation Schedule, and (b) with respect to the United Kingdom, any powers of the applicable Resolution Authority under the Bail-In Legislation to cancel, reduce, modify or change the form of a liability of any UK Financial Institution or any contract or instrument under which that liability arises, to convert all or part of that liability into shares, securities or obligations of that person or any other person, to provide that any such contract or instrument is to have effect as if a right had been exercised under it or to suspend any obligation in respect of that liability or any of the powers under that Bail-In Legislation that are related to or ancillary of any those powers.

 

Section 1.2 Other Terms.

 

All accounting terms used but not specifically defined herein shall be construed in accordance with GAAP. All terms used in Article 9 of the UCC in the State of New York, and used but not specifically defined herein, are used herein as defined in such Article 9.

 

Section 1.3 Computation of Time Periods.

 

Unless otherwise stated in this Agreement, in the computation of a period of time from a specified date to a later specified date, the word “from” means “from and including” and the words “to” and “until” each mean “to but excluding.” All time deadlines shall be based on the Eastern Standard Time zone unless stated otherwise.

 

Section 1.4 Interpretation.

 

In each Transaction Document, unless a contrary intention appears:

 

(a) the singular number includes the plural number and vice versa;

 

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(b) reference to any Person includes such Person’s successors and assigns but, if applicable, only if such successors and assigns are permitted by the Transaction Documents;

 

(c) reference to any gender includes each other gender;

 

(d) reference to day or days without further qualification means calendar days;

 

(e) reference to any time means New York, New York time;

 

(f) the word “including” is not limiting and means “including without limitation;”

 

(g) the word “any” is not limiting and means “any and all” unless the context clearly requires or the language provides otherwise;

 

(h) reference to any agreement (including any Transaction Document), document or instrument means such agreement, document or instrument as amended, modified, waived, supplemented, restated or replaced and in effect from time to time in accordance with the terms thereof and, if applicable, the terms of the other Transaction Documents, and reference to any promissory note includes any promissory note that is an extension or renewal thereof or a substitute or replacement therefor;

 

(i) reference to any Applicable Law means such Applicable Law as amended, modified, codified, replaced or reenacted, in whole or in part, and in effect from time to time, including rules and regulations promulgated thereunder and reference to any Section or other provision of any Applicable Law means that provision of such Applicable Law from time to time in effect and constituting the substantive amendment, modification, codification, replacement or reenactment of such Section or other provision;

 

(j) reference to any delivery or transfer to the Collateral Agent or the Custodian, as applicable, with respect to the Collateral means delivery or transfer to the Collateral Agent or the Custodian on behalf of the Secured Parties;

 

(k) if any date for compliance with the terms or conditions of any Transaction Document falls due on a day which is not a Business Day, then such due date shall be deemed to be the immediately following Business Day;

 

(l) reference to the date of any acquisition or disposition of any Collateral, or the date on which any asset is added to or removed from the Collateral shall mean the related “settlement date” and not the related “trade date”;

 

(m) references herein to the knowledge or actual knowledge of a Person shall mean, except as provided herein, the actual knowledge following due inquiry of a responsible officer of such Person;

 

(n) for purposes of this Agreement, an Event of Default shall be deemed to be continuing until it is waived in accordance with Section 12.1;

 

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(o) unless otherwise expressly stated in this Agreement, if at any time any change in generally accepted accounting principles (including the adoption of IFRS) would affect the computation of any covenant (including the computation of any financial covenant) set forth in this Agreement or any other Transaction Document, the Borrower and the Administrative Agent shall negotiate in good faith to amend such covenant to preserve the original intent in light of such change; provided, that, until so amended, (i) such covenant shall continue to be computed in accordance with the application of generally accepted accounting principles prior to such change and (ii) the Borrower shall provide to the Administrative Agent a written reconciliation in form and substance reasonably satisfactory to the Administrative Agent, between calculations of such covenant made before and after giving effect to such change in generally accepted accounting principles;

 

(p) any reference to “execute”, “executed”, “sign”, “signed”, “signature” or any other like term hereunder shall include execution by electronic signature (including, without limitation, any .pdf file, .jpeg file, or any other electronic or image file, or any “electronic signature” as defined under the U.S. Electronic Signatures in Global and National Commerce Act (“E-SIGN”) or the New York Electronic Signatures and Records Act (“ESRA”), which includes any electronic signature provided using Orbit, Adobe Sign, DocuSign, or any other similar plat-form identified by the Borrower and reasonably available at no undue burden or expense to the Collateral Agent), except to the extent the Collateral Agent requests otherwise. Any such electronic signatures shall be valid, effective and legally binding as if such electronic signatures were handwritten signatures and shall be deemed to have been duly and validly delivered for all purposes hereunder. Each party hereto shall be entitled to conclusively rely upon, and shall have no liability with respect to, any faxed, scanned, or photocopied manual signature, or other electronic signature, of any other party and shall have no duty to investigate, confirm or otherwise verify the validity or authenticity thereof; and

 

(q) neither the Administrative Agent nor the Collateral Agent warrant or accept any responsibility for, and shall not have any liability with respect to, (a) the continuation of, administration of, submission of, calculation of or any other matter related to Daily Simple SOFR or any other Benchmark, or any component definition thereof or rates referred to in the definition thereof, or with respect to any alternative, successor or replacement rate thereto (including any Benchmark Replacement), including whether the composition or characteristics of any such alternative, successor or replacement rate (including any Benchmark Replacement), as it may or may not be adjusted pursuant to Section 2.19, will be similar to, or produce the same value or economic equivalence of, or have the same volume or liquidity as, Daily Simple SOFR such Benchmark or any other Benchmark prior to its discontinuance or unavailability, or (b) the effect, implementation or composition of any Conforming Changes. The Administrative Agent and their Affiliates or other related entities may engage in transactions that affect the calculation of a Benchmark, any alternative, successor or replacement rate (including any Benchmark Replacement) or any relevant adjustments thereto and such transactions may be adverse to the Borrower. The Administrative Agent may select information sources or services in its reasonable discretion to ascertain any Benchmark, any component definition thereof or rates referred to in the definition thereof, in each case pursuant to the terms of this Agreement, and shall have no liability to the Borrower, any Lender or any other person or entity for damages of any kind, including direct or indirect, special, punitive, incidental or consequential damages, costs, losses or expenses (whether in tort, contract or otherwise and whether at law or in equity), for any error or calculation of any such rate (or component thereof) provided by any such information source or service.

 

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ARTICLE II

THE ADVANCES

 

Section 2.1 The Advances.

 

(a) During the Reinvestment Period, the Borrower may, at its option, request the Lenders to make advances of funds (each, an “Advance”) under this Agreement pursuant to a Funding Notice; provided, however, that no Lender shall be obligated to make any Advance on or after the date that is two (2) Business Days prior to the Reinvestment Period End Date, unless the Borrower has entered into a binding commitment to purchase an Eligible Loan prior to the declaration of the Termination Date or the Reinvestment Period End Date pursuant to Section 9.2(a) and the related Advance Date is not more than thirty (30) days after such declaration; provided, further, that no Lender shall be obligated to make any Advance if such Advance would result in such Lender exceeding its Commitment.

 

(b) Following the receipt of a Funding Notice during the Reinvestment Period and subject to the terms and conditions hereinafter set forth, the Lenders shall fund such Advance. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary herein, no Lender shall make any Advance if, after giving effect to such Advance and the addition to the Collateral of the Eligible Loans to be acquired by the Borrower with the proceeds of such Advance, (i) in the sole discretion of any such Lender, a Default or Event of Default would or could reasonably be expected to result therefrom or (ii) the aggregate Advances Outstanding would exceed the Borrowing Base.

 

(c) So long as no Event of Default has occurred and is continuing, the Borrower may, with the written consent of the Administrative Agent, add additional Persons who satisfy the requirements set forth in Section 12.16 (and subject to recordation in the Register) as Lenders and, upon prior written notice to the Lenders, increase the Commitments hereunder (up to $800,000,000); provided that the Commitment of any Lender may only be increased with the prior written consent of such Lender, in its sole discretion, and the Administrative Agent. Each additional Lender shall become a party hereto by executing and delivering to the Administrative Agent, the Collateral Agent, the Collateral Manager and the Borrower a Joinder Supplement.

 

(d) The Borrower may, within 90 days but not less than 30 days prior to the Reinvestment Period End Date, make a request to the Lenders to extend the Reinvestment Period End Date for an additional period of one or more years, which response to such request shall be delivered to the Borrower (with failure to deliver such response deemed a denial of such request). Upon mutual agreement among the Administrative Agent, each of the relevant Lenders, the Borrower and the Collateral Manager, the Reinvestment Period End Date shall be extended. The Borrower confirms that any of the Lenders or the Administrative Agent, in their sole and absolute discretion, without regard to the value or performance of the Loans or any other factor, may elect not to extend the Reinvestment Period End Date.

 

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Section 2.2 Procedures for Advances by the Lenders.

 

(a) Subject to the limitations set forth in Section 2.1(a), the Borrower may request an Advance from the Lenders by delivering to the Lenders at certain times the information and documents set forth in this Section 2.2.

 

(b) With respect to all Advances, no later than 10:00 a.m. on the proposed Funding Date, the Borrower (or the Collateral Manager on the Borrower’s behalf) shall deliver:

 

(i) to the Administrative Agent (with a copy to the Collateral Agent) a wire disbursement and authorization form, to the extent not previously delivered; and

 

(ii) to the Administrative Agent (with a copy to each Lender and the Collateral Agent) a duly completed Funding Notice (including a duly completed Borrowing Base Certificate updated to the date such Advance is requested and giving pro forma effect to the Advance requested and the use of the proceeds thereof) which shall (i) specify the desired amount of such Advance, which amount shall not cause the Advances Outstanding to exceed the Borrowing Base and must be at least equal to $250,000, to be allocated to each Lender in accordance with its Pro Rata Share, (ii) specify the proposed Funding Date of such Advance, (iii) specify the Loan(s) (if any) to be financed on such Funding Date (including the appropriate file number, Obligor, Outstanding Balance, Assigned Value, Advance Date Assigned Value and Purchase Price for such Loan(s) (if any)), and (iv) include a representation that all conditions precedent for an Advance described in Article III hereof have been met. Each Funding Notice shall be irrevocable. If any Funding Notice is received by the Administrative Agent after 4:00 p.m. on the proposed Funding Date or on a day that is not a Business Day, such Funding Notice shall be deemed to be received by the Administrative Agent at 9:00 a.m. on the next Business Day.

 

(c) On the proposed Funding Date, subject to the limitations set forth in Section 2.1(a) and upon satisfaction of the applicable conditions set forth in Article III, each Lender shall make available to the Borrower in same day funds, by wire transfer to the account designated by Borrower in the Funding Notice given pursuant to this Section 2.2, an amount equal to such Lender’s Pro Rata Share of the least of (i) the amount requested by the Borrower for such Advance, (ii) the aggregate unused Commitments then in effect and (iii) the maximum amount that, after taking into account the proposed use of the proceeds of such Advance, could be advanced to the Borrower hereunder without causing either the Advances Outstanding to exceed the Borrowing Base.

 

(d) On each Funding Date, the obligation of each Lender to remit its Pro Rata Share of any such Advance shall be several from that of each other Lender and the failure of any Lender to so make such amount available to the Borrower shall not relieve any other Lender of its obligation hereunder.

 

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Section 2.3 Reduction of the Facility Amount; Principal Repayments.

 

(a) The Borrower (or the Collateral Manager on behalf of the Borrower) may irrevocably terminate the Commitments in whole or irrevocably reduce in part the portion of the Commitments that exceed the sum of the Advances Outstanding and accrued Interest with respect thereto; provided that (i) the Borrower shall provide a Repayment Notice at least one (1) Business Day prior to the date of such termination or reduction to the Administrative Agent (with a copy to the Collateral Manager); (ii) any partial reduction of the Commitments shall be in an amount equal to $1,000,000 and in integral multiples of $250,000 in excess thereof, and (iii) in the case of such termination or permanent reduction on or prior to the Scheduled Reinvestment Period End Date other than in connection with a Permitted Securitization or an amendment and restatement of this Agreement, the Borrower shall pay to the Administrative Agent for distribution to the Lenders the applicable Commitment Reduction Fee. Each notice of a reduction or termination pursuant to this Section 2.3(a) shall be irrevocable. The applicable Commitment of each Lender shall be reduced by an amount equal to its Pro Rata Share (prior to giving effect to any reduction of the Commitments hereunder) of the aggregate amount of any reduction under this Section 2.3(a); provided that, notwithstanding anything herein to the contrary, if a Lender provides notice of its intent to assign its Commitment without the consent of the Collateral Manager pursuant to Section 12.16(a)(iii)(y) to a Kayne Competitor, (x) such reduction may (as directed by the Borrower) be solely with respect to the Commitment held by such Lender if it reduces the Commitment of such Lender to zero, (y) the Advances Outstanding owing to such Lender may be repaid in full on a non-pro rata basis (unless a Default or Event of Default has occurred and is continuing or would result) to effect such Commitment reduction and (z) no Commitment Reduction Fee shall be due to such Lender.

 

(b) The Borrower (or the Collateral Manager on behalf of the Borrower) may, at any time, reduce Advances Outstanding; provided that (i) the Borrower shall provide a Repayment Notice at least one (1) Business Day prior to the date of such reduction to the Administrative Agent, the Collateral Agent and the Lenders (provided that same day notice may be given with respect to curing any Borrowing Base Deficiency) and (ii) any reduction of Advances Outstanding (other than with respect to repayments of Advances Outstanding made by the Borrower to reduce Advances Outstanding such that no Borrowing Base Deficiency exists) shall be in a minimum amount of $250,000 and in integral multiples of $100,000 in excess thereof. In connection with any such reduction of Advances Outstanding, the Borrower (or, in the case of curing a Borrowing Base Deficiency, the Equityholder on behalf of the Borrower) shall deliver (1) to the Administrative Agent, the Collateral Agent and each Lender of such Advances, a Repayment Notice and (2) funds to the Collateral Agent for payment to the Lenders of such Advances sufficient to repay such Advances Outstanding, accrued Interest thereon which may include instructions to the Collateral Agent to use funds from the Principal Collection Account and/or funds otherwise provided by the Borrower or the Equityholder to the Collateral Agent with respect thereto; provided that, the Advances Outstanding will not be reduced unless sufficient funds have been remitted to pay all such amounts in the succeeding sentence in full. Any Advance so repaid may, subject to the terms and conditions hereof, be reborrowed during the Reinvestment Period. Any Repayment Notice relating to any repayment pursuant to this Section 2.3(b) shall be irrevocable.

 

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(c) Unless sooner prepaid pursuant to the terms hereof, the Advances Outstanding shall be repaid in full on the Termination Date or on such later date as is agreed to in writing by the Borrower, the Collateral Manager, the Administrative Agent and the Lenders.

 

Section 2.4 Determination of Interest.

 

(a) The Administrative Agent shall determine the Interest (including unpaid Interest related thereto, if any, due and payable on a prior Payment Date) to be paid by the Borrower on each Payment Date for the related Accrual Period and shall advise the Collateral Manager, the Collateral Agent and the Borrower thereof on the fourth Business Day prior to such Payment Date.

 

(b) No provision of this Agreement shall require the payment or permit the collection of Interest in excess of the maximum permitted by Applicable Law.

 

(c) No Interest shall be considered paid by any distribution if at any time such distribution is rescinded or must otherwise be returned for any reason.

 

Section 2.5 [Reserved].

 

Section 2.6 Borrowing Base Deficiency Cures.

 

Any Borrowing Base Deficiency may be cured by the Borrower taking one or more of the following actions:

 

(i) crediting Cash into the Principal Collection Account;

 

(ii) repaying the applicable Advances Outstanding in accordance with Section 2.3(b); or

 

(iii) posting additional Eligible Loans and/or Permitted Investments as Collateral; provided that the amount of any reduction of a Borrowing Base Deficiency pursuant to any such additional Eligible Loans shall be the Adjusted Borrowing Value of such Eligible Loans.

 

For the avoidance of doubt, the Borrower may cure a Borrowing Base Deficiency by any combination of (i), (ii) or (iii) of this Section 2.6 (or by any other action with the prior written consent of the Administrative Agent and the Required Lenders). Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Agreement, if the Borrower has eliminated a Borrowing Base Deficiency pursuant to clause (i) of this Section 2.6, upon written request of the Borrower to the Collateral Agent to release such funds from the Principal Collection Account and certification by the Borrower that immediately after giving effect to the return of any such Cash, no Borrowing Base Deficiency will exist, the Borrower shall be permitted the return of all or a portion of the Cash so deposited in the Principal Collection Account and the Collateral Agent shall pay the amount so requested to the Borrower and, for the avoidance of doubt, such amount shall not constitute Available Funds.

 

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Section 2.7 Priority of Payments.

 

(a) Interest Collection Account. On each Payment Date, so long as no Event of Default has occurred and is continuing, the Collateral Manager shall direct the Collateral Agent to pay pursuant to the related Payment Date Statement (and the Collateral Agent shall make payment from the Interest Collection Account to the extent of Available Funds, in reliance on the information set forth in such Payment Date Statement) to the following Persons, the following amounts in the following order of priority:

 

(1) pro rata to the Collateral Agent, the Custodian and the Securities Intermediary, in an amount equal to any accrued and unpaid Collateral Agent Fees and Custodian Fees owing to such Person; provided that the aggregate amounts payable pursuant to Section 2.7(a)(1), Section 2.7(b)(1) and Section 2.8(1) shall not, collectively, exceed $200,000 for the 12-month period immediately preceding such Payment Date;

 

(2) to the Collateral Manager, in an amount equal to any accrued and unpaid Collateral Management Fee;

 

(3) pro rata to each Lender, in an amount equal to any accrued and unpaid Interest and Non-Usage Fee;

 

(4) pro rata to the Administrative Agent and each Lender, all Administrative Expenses and any Increased Costs due and owing to such Person;

 

(5) if a Borrowing Base Deficiency exists, pro rata to the Lenders to reduce the Advances Outstanding in an amount necessary to cure such Borrowing Base Deficiency;

 

(6) to the Equityholder, to make any applicable Permitted RIC Distribution;

 

(7) pro rata to each Lender, in an amount equal to (A) any accrued and unpaid Commitment Reduction Fee plus (B) if such Payment Date is the Termination Date, the Advances Outstanding;

 

(8) so long as no Borrowing Base Deficiency or Event of Default has occurred and is continuing or would result from such payment, to the Borrower, for distribution to the Equityholder, the funds necessary for the Equityholder to satisfy its tax liabilities in respect of U.S. federal taxes, but only to the extent such tax liabilities are directly attributable to the activities of the Borrower (and any of its subsidiaries) in each case, as determined by the Collateral Manager;

 

(9) pro rata to each applicable party to pay all other outstanding amounts under the Transaction Documents; and

 

(10) so long as no Default has occurred and is continuing, any remaining amounts shall be deemed released from the Lien of the Collateral Agent hereunder and distributed to the Borrower.

 

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(b) Principal Collection Account. On each Payment Date, so long as no Event of Default has occurred and is continuing, the Collateral Manager shall direct the Collateral Agent to pay pursuant to the related Payment Date Statement (and the Collateral Agent shall make payment from the Principal Collection Account to the extent of Available Funds, in reliance on the information set forth in such Payment Date Statement) to the following Persons, the following amounts in the following order of priority:

 

(1) to the extent not paid pursuant to Section 2.7(a)(1), pro rata to the Collateral Agent, the Custodian and the Securities Intermediary, in an amount equal to any accrued and unpaid Collateral Agent Fees and Custodian Fees owing to such Person; provided that the aggregate amounts payable pursuant to Section 2.7(a)(1), Section 2.7(b)(1) and Section 2.8(1) shall not, collectively, exceed $200,000 for the 12-month period immediately preceding such Payment Date;

 

(2) to the extent not paid pursuant to Section 2.7(a)(2), to the Collateral Manager, in an amount equal to any accrued and unpaid Collateral Management Fee;

 

(3) to the extent not paid pursuant to Section 2.7(a)(3), pro rata to each Lender, in an amount equal to any accrued and unpaid Interest and Non-Usage Fee;

 

(4) to the extent not paid pursuant to Section 2.7(a)(4), pro rata to the Administrative Agent and each Lender, all Administrative Expenses and any Increased Costs due and owing to such Person;

 

(5) after the Reinvestment Period, to the Unfunded Exposure Account in an amount necessary to cause the amount on deposit in the Unfunded Exposure Account to equal the Unfunded Exposure Amount;

 

(6) (i) during the Reinvestment Period, to the extent not paid pursuant to Section 2.7(a)(5), pro rata to the Lenders to reduce the Advances Outstanding in an amount necessary to cure such Borrowing Base Deficiency or (ii) after the end of the Reinvestment Period, pro rata to each Lender to pay the Advances Outstanding until paid in full;

 

(7) to the extent not paid pursuant to Section 2.7(a)(6), to the Equityholder to make any applicable Permitted RIC Distribution;

 

(8) to the extent not paid pursuant to Section 2.7(a)(6), pro rata to each Lender, in an amount equal to any accrued and unpaid Commitment Reduction Fee owing to the Lenders;

 

(9) so long as no Borrowing Base Deficiency or Event of Default has occurred and is continuing or would result from such payment, to the Borrower, for distribution to the Equityholder, the funds necessary for the Equityholder to satisfy its tax liabilities in respect of U.S. federal taxes, but only to the extent such tax liabilities are directly attributable to the activities of the Borrower (and any of its subsidiaries) in each case, as determined by the Collateral Manager;

 

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(10) to the extent not paid pursuant to Section 2.7(a)(8), pro rata to each applicable party to pay all other amounts owing under the Transaction Documents; and

 

(11) so long as no Default has occurred and is continuing, any remaining amounts shall be deemed released from the Lien of the Collateral Agent hereunder and distributed to the Borrower or any nominee thereof.

 

Section 2.8 Alternate Priority of Payments.

 

On (x) each Business Day (a) following the occurrence and during the continuance of an Event of Default or (b) following the declaration of the occurrence, or the deemed occurrence, as applicable, of the Termination Date pursuant to Section 9.2(a) or (y) the date of an Optional Sale, the Collateral Manager (or, in the case of clause (x), after delivery of a Notice of Exclusive Control, the Administrative Agent) shall direct the Collateral Agent to pay pursuant to the related Payment Date Statement (and the Collateral Agent shall make payment from the Collection Account to the extent of Available Funds, in reliance on the information set forth in such Payment Date Statement) to the following Persons, the following amounts in the following order of priority:

 

(1) pro rata to the Collateral Agent, the Custodian and the Securities Intermediary, in an amount equal to any accrued and unpaid Collateral Agent Fees and the Custodian Fees owing to such Person; provided that the aggregate amounts payable pursuant to Section 2.7(a)(1), Section 2.7(b)(1) and Section 2.8(1) shall not, collectively, exceed $200,000 for the 12-month period immediately preceding such Payment Date;

 

(2) to the Collateral Manager, in an amount equal to any accrued and unpaid Collateral Management Fee;

 

(3) pro rata to each Lender, in an amount equal to any accrued and unpaid Interest and Non-Usage Fee;

 

(4) pro rata to the Administrative Agent and each Lender, all Administrative Expenses and any Increased Costs due and owing to such Person;

 

(5) to the Unfunded Exposure Account, in an amount necessary to cause the amount in the Unfunded Exposure Account to equal (i) prior to the Reinvestment Period End Date, the Unfunded Exposure Equity Amount and (ii) after the Reinvestment Period End Date, the Unfunded Exposure Amount;

 

(6) pro rata to the Lenders to pay the Advances Outstanding until paid in full;

 

(7) pro rata to each Lender, in an amount equal to any accrued and unpaid Commitment Reduction Fee owing to the Lenders;

 

(8) pro rata to each applicable party to pay all other amounts outstanding under the Transaction Documents;

 

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(9) to the applicable Governmental Authority, any Tax or withholding Tax required by applicable law to be paid or withheld; and

 

(10) any remaining amounts shall be deemed released from the Lien of the Collateral Agent hereunder and distributed to the Borrower or any nominee thereof.

 

Section 2.9 Collections and Allocations.

 

(a) Collections. The Collateral Manager shall promptly identify any Collections received directly by it as Interest Collections or Principal Collections and shall transfer all such Collections to the appropriate Collection Account within three (3) Business Days after its receipt thereof. Upon the receipt of Collections in the Collection Account during any Collection Period, the Collateral Manager shall identify Principal Collections and Interest Collections no later than the Measurement Date related to the Payment Date immediately following such Collection Period and direct the Collateral Agent and Securities Intermediary to transfer the same to the Principal Collection Account and the Interest Collection Account, respectively. The Collateral Manager shall further include a statement as to the amount of Principal Collections and Interest Collections on deposit in the Principal Collection Account and the Interest Collection Account on each Reporting Date in the Borrowing Base Certificate delivered pursuant to Section 6.8(d).

 

(b) Excluded Amounts. With the prior written consent of the Administrative Agent, the Collateral Manager may direct the Collateral Agent and the Securities Intermediary to withdraw from the Collection Account and pay to the Person entitled thereto any amounts credited thereto constituting Excluded Amounts if the Collateral Manager has, prior to such withdrawal and consent, delivered to the Administrative Agent, the Collateral Agent, the Borrower and each Lender a report setting forth the calculation of such Excluded Amounts in form and substance reasonably satisfactory to the Administrative Agent and each Lender.

 

(c) Initial Deposits. On the initial Funding Date with respect to any Loan, the Collateral Manager will deposit or cause to be deposited into the Collection Account all Collections received in respect of such Loan on such initial Funding Date. The Borrower shall confirm to the Administrative Agent in writing when it has provided each such payment instruction.

 

(d) Investment of Funds. All uninvested amounts on deposit in the Collection Account shall be invested at the direction of the Collateral Manager pursuant to the definition of Permitted Investments. All earnings (net of losses and investment expenses) thereon shall be retained or deposited into the Principal Collection Account and shall be applied on each Payment Date pursuant to the provisions of Section 2.7 or Section 2.8 (as applicable).

 

(e) Unfunded Exposure Account. On the last day of the Reinvestment Period, the Borrower shall fund an amount equal to the Unfunded Exposure Amount into the Unfunded Exposure Account. All funding requests associated with the Unfunded Exposure Amount shall be made from the Unfunded Exposure Account after the Reinvestment Period End Date. All uninvested amounts on deposit in the Unfunded Exposure Account shall be invested at the direction of the Collateral Manager pursuant to the definition of Permitted Investments.

 

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Section 2.10 Payments, Computations, etc.

 

(a) Unless otherwise expressly provided herein, all amounts to be paid or deposited by the Borrower hereunder shall be paid or deposited in accordance with the terms hereof no later than 3:00 p.m. on the day when due in lawful money of the United States in immediately available funds and any amount not received before such time shall be deemed received on the next Business Day. The Borrower shall, to the extent permitted by law, pay to the Secured Parties interest on all amounts not paid or deposited when due hereunder at 2.00% per annum above the Prime Rate, payable on demand; provided that (i) such interest rate shall not at any time exceed the maximum rate permitted by Applicable Law and (ii) such additional interest shall not accrue unless an Event of Default then exists. Such interest shall be for the account of the applicable Secured Party. All computations of interest and other fees hereunder shall be made on the basis of a year consisting of 360 days (other than calculations with respect to the Base Rate, which shall be based on a year consisting of 365 or 366 days, as applicable) for the actual number of days elapsed.

 

(b) Whenever any payment hereunder shall be stated to be due on a day other than a Business Day, such payment shall be made on the next succeeding Business Day, and such extension of time shall in such case be included in the computation of the payment of Interest or any fee payable hereunder, as the case may be. For avoidance of doubt, to the extent that Available Funds are insufficient on any Payment Date to satisfy the full amount of any Increased Costs pursuant to Section 2.12, such unpaid amounts shall remain due and owing and shall accrue interest as provided in Section 2.10(a) until repaid in full.

 

(c) If any Advance requested by the Borrower is not effectuated as a result of the Collateral Manager’s or the Borrower’s actions or failure to fulfill any condition under Section 3.2, (which, in the case of the Collateral Manager, is solely within the control of the Collateral Manager) as the case may be, on the date specified therefor, whichever of the Collateral Manager or the Borrower is at fault, such Person shall indemnify the applicable Lender against any reasonable loss, cost or expense incurred by the applicable Lender, including, without limitation, any loss, cost or expense incurred by reason of the liquidation or reemployment of deposits or other funds acquired by the applicable Lender to fund or maintain such Advance upon receipt by the Borrower of documentation setting forth such costs.

 

Section 2.11 Fees.

 

The Borrower shall pay to Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft LLP as counsel to the Administrative Agent and the Lenders and Nixon Peabody LLP, as counsel to the Collateral Agent and the Custodian, within two (2) Business Days following an invoice therefor, its reasonable invoiced fees and out-of-pocket expenses through the Closing Date.

 

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Section 2.12 Increased Costs; Capital Adequacy; Illegality.

 

(a) If either (i) the introduction of or any change (including, without limitation, any change by way of imposition or increase of reserve requirements) in or in the interpretation of any Applicable Law or (ii) the compliance by an Affected Party with any guideline or request from any central bank or other Governmental Authority (whether or not having the force of law), shall (A) subject any Affected Party to any Taxes (other than (i) Indemnified Taxes, (ii) Taxes described in clauses (b) through (d) of the definition of Excluded Taxes and (iii) Connection Income Taxes) on its loans, loan principal, letters of credit, commitments, or other obligations, or its deposits, reserves, other liabilities or capital attributable thereto, (B) impose, modify or deem applicable any reserve requirement (including, without limitation, any reserve requirement imposed by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, but excluding any reserve requirement, if any, included in the determination of Interest), special deposit or similar requirement against assets of, deposits with or for the amount of, or credit extended by, any Affected Party or (C) impose any other condition affecting any Affected Party’s rights hereunder or under any other Transaction Document, the result of which is to increase the cost to any Affected Party or to reduce the amount of any sum received or receivable by an Affected Party under this Agreement or under any other Transaction Document, then on the Payment Date following demand by such Affected Party (which demand shall be accompanied by a statement setting forth the basis for such demand), the Borrower shall pay directly to such Affected Party such additional amount or amounts as will compensate such Affected Party for such additional or increased cost incurred or such reduction suffered.

 

(b) If either (i) the introduction of or any change in or in the interpretation of any law, guideline, rule, regulation, directive or request or (ii) compliance by any Affected Party with any law, guideline, rule, regulation, directive or request from any central bank or other Governmental Authority or agency (whether or not having the force of law), including, without limitation, compliance by an Affected Party with any request or directive regarding capital adequacy, but excluding Taxes, has or would have the effect of reducing the rate of return on the capital of any Affected Party as a consequence of its obligations hereunder or arising in connection herewith to a level below that which any such Affected Party could have achieved but for such introduction, change or compliance (taking into consideration the policies of such Affected Party with respect to capital adequacy) by an amount deemed by such Affected Party to be material, then from time to time, on the Payment Date following demand by such Affected Party (which demand shall be accompanied by a statement setting forth the basis for such demand), the Borrower shall pay directly to such Affected Party such additional amount or amounts as will compensate such Affected Party for such reduction. For the avoidance of doubt, if the issuance of any amendment or supplement to Interpretation No. 46 or to Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 140 by the Financial Accounting Standards Board or any other change in accounting standards or the issuance of any other pronouncement, release or interpretation, causes or requires the consolidation of all or a portion of the assets and liabilities of the Seller, the Borrower or any Affected Party with the assets and liabilities of the Administrative Agent or any Lender or shall otherwise impose any loss, cost, expense, reduction of return on capital or other loss, such event shall constitute a circumstance on which such Affected Party may base a claim for reimbursement under this Section 2.12. Notwithstanding the foregoing, but subject to Section 6.7, the provisions of this Section 2.12(b) shall not apply to the consolidation of the Borrower for accounting purposes as required by GAAP with the Collateral Manager or any Affiliate thereof, whether or not an Affected Party.

 

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(c) If as a result of any event or circumstance similar to those described in clause (a) or (b) of this Section 2.12, any Affected Party is required to compensate a bank or other financial institution providing liquidity support, credit enhancement or other similar support to such Affected Party in connection with this Agreement or the funding or maintenance of Advances hereunder, then within ten (10) days after demand by such Affected Party to the extent of funds available in the Collection Account (and, to the extent of any additional amounts, on the next Payment Date pursuant to Section 2.7 or 2.8, as applicable, occurring at least five (5) Business Days after the request for such invoice), the Borrower shall pay to such Affected Party such additional amount or amounts as may be necessary to reimburse such Affected Party for any amounts payable or paid by it.

 

(d) In determining any amount provided for in this Section 2.12, the Affected Party may use any reasonable averaging and attribution methods. Any Affected Party making a claim under this Section 2.12 shall submit to the Borrower and the Collateral Manager a written description as to such additional or increased cost or reduction, which written description shall be conclusive absent manifest error; provided, however, that no Lender shall be requested to disclose confidential or price-sensitive information or any other information, to the extent prohibited by law.

 

(e) If a Disruption Event with respect to any Lender occurred, such Lender shall in turn so notify the Borrower, whereupon all Advances Outstanding of the affected Lender in respect of which Interest accrues at Daily Simple SOFR shall immediately be converted into Advances Outstanding in respect of which such Interest accrues at the Base Rate.

 

(f)   Failure or delay on the part of any Affected Party to demand compensation pursuant to this Section 2.12 shall not constitute a waiver of such Affected Party’s right to demand or receive such compensation. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Section 2.12, the Borrower shall not be required to compensate an Affected Party pursuant to this Section 2.12 for any amounts incurred more than six (6) months prior to the date that such Affected Party notifies the Borrower of such Affected Party’s intention to claim compensation therefor; provided that, if the circumstances giving rise to such claim have a retroactive effect, then such six (6) month period shall be extended to include the period of such retroactive effect.

 

(g) Each Lender agrees that it will take such commercially reasonable actions as the Borrower may reasonably request (including designating a different lending office for funding or booking its Advances hereunder or assigning its rights and obligations hereunder to another of its offices, branches or affiliates) that will avoid the need to pay, or reduce the amount of, any increased amounts referred to in this Section 2.12 or Section 2.13; provided that no Lender shall be obligated to take any actions that would, in the reasonable opinion of such Lender, subject such Lender to any unreimbursed cost or expense or otherwise be disadvantageous to such Lender. In no event will Borrower be responsible for increased amounts referred to in this Section 2.12 relating to any other entities to which Lenders provide financing or resulting from any Lender subject to a Bail-In Action being deemed a Defaulting Lender or such Lender not receiving interest on Advances that it does not fund as a result of a Bail-In Action.

 

(h) If any Lender requests compensation under this Section 2.12, any Lender refuses to consent to any amendment, waiver or other modification of any Loan Document requested by Borrower that requires the consent of a greater percentage of the Lenders than the Required Lenders and such amendment, waiver or other modification is consented to by the Required Lenders, or if the Borrower is required to pay any Indemnified Taxes to any Lender or any Governmental Authority for the account of any Lender pursuant to Section 2.13, then the Borrower may, at its sole expense and effort, upon notice to such Lender and the Administrative Agent, require such Lender to assign and delegate, without recourse (in accordance with and subject to the restrictions contained in, and consents required by, Section 12.16), all of its interests, rights (other than its existing rights to payments pursuant to this Section 2.12 or Section 2.13) and obligations under this Agreement and the related Transaction Documents to an eligible assignee that shall assume such obligations (which assignee may be another Lender, if a Lender accepts such assignment).

 

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Section 2.13 Taxes.

 

(a) Any and all payments by or on account of any obligation of the Borrower under any Transaction Document shall be made without deduction or withholding for any Taxes, except as required by applicable law. If any applicable law (as determined in the good faith discretion of an applicable Withholding Agent) requires the deduction or withholding of any Tax from any such payment by a Withholding Agent, then the applicable Withholding Agent shall be entitled to make such deduction or withholding and shall timely pay the full amount deducted or withheld to the relevant Governmental Authority in accordance with applicable law and, if such Tax is an Indemnified Tax, then the sum payable shall be increased as necessary so that after such deduction or withholding has been made (including such deductions and withholdings applicable to additional sums payable under this Section 2.13) the applicable Affected Party receives an amount equal to the sum it would have received had no such deduction or withholding been made.

 

(b) The Borrower shall timely pay to the relevant Governmental Authority in accordance with applicable law, or at the option of the applicable Affected Party timely reimburse it for the payment of, any Other Taxes.

 

(c) The Borrower shall indemnify each Affected Party, within 10 days after demand therefor, for the full amount of any Indemnified Taxes (including Indemnified Taxes imposed or asserted on or attributable to amounts payable under this Section 2.13) payable or paid by such Affected Party or required to be withheld or deducted from a payment to such Affected Party and any reasonable expenses arising therefrom or with respect thereto, whether or not such Indemnified Taxes were correctly or legally imposed or asserted by the relevant Governmental Authority. A certificate as to the amount of such payment or liability delivered to the Borrower by a Lender (with a copy to the Administrative Agent), or by the Administrative Agent on its own behalf or on behalf of a Lender, shall be conclusive absent manifest error.

 

(d) Without limiting the generality of Section 11.5, each Lender shall severally indemnify the Administrative Agent, within 10 days after demand therefor, for (i) any Indemnified Taxes attributable to such Lender (but only to the extent that the Borrower has not already indemnified the Administrative Agent for such Indemnified Taxes and without limiting the obligation of the Borrower to do so), (ii) any Taxes attributable to such Lender’s failure to comply with the provisions of Section 12.16(d) relating to the maintenance of a Participant Register and (iii) any Excluded Taxes attributable to such Lender, in each case, that are payable or paid by the Administrative Agent in connection with any Transaction Document, and any reasonable expenses arising therefrom or with respect thereto, whether or not such Taxes were correctly or legally imposed or asserted by the relevant Governmental Authority. A certificate as to the amount of such payment or liability delivered to any Lender by the Administrative Agent shall be conclusive absent manifest error. Each Lender hereby authorizes the Administrative Agent to set off and apply any and all amounts at any time owing to such Lender under any Transaction Document or otherwise payable by the Administrative Agent to the Lender from any other source against any amount due to the Administrative Agent under this Section 2.13(d).

 

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(e) As soon as practicable after any payment of Taxes by the Borrower to a Governmental Authority pursuant to this Section 2.13, the Borrower shall deliver to the Administrative Agent the original or a certified copy of a receipt issued by such Governmental Authority evidencing such payment, a copy of the return reporting such payment or other evidence of such payment reasonably satisfactory to the Administrative Agent.

 

(f) (i) Any Lender that is entitled to an exemption from or reduction of withholding Tax with respect to payments made under any Transaction Document shall deliver to the Borrower and the Administrative Agent, at the time or times reasonably requested by the Borrower or the Administrative Agent, such properly completed and executed documentation reasonably requested by the Borrower or the Administrative Agent as will permit such payments to be made without withholding or at a reduced rate of withholding. In addition, any Lender, if reasonably requested by the Borrower or the Administrative Agent, shall deliver such other documentation prescribed by applicable law or reasonably requested by the Borrower or the Administrative Agent as will enable the Borrower or the Administrative Agent to determine whether or not such Lender is subject to backup withholding or information reporting requirements. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in the preceding two sentences, the completion, execution and submission of such documentation (other than such documentation set forth in Section 2.13(f)(ii)(1), Section 2.13(f)(ii)(2), and Section 2.13(f)(ii)(4) below) shall not be required if in the Lender’s reasonable judgment such completion, execution or submission would subject such Lender to any material unreimbursed cost or expense or would materially prejudice the legal or commercial position of such Lender.

 

(ii) Without limiting the generality of the foregoing,

 

(1) any Lender that is a “U.S. Person” shall deliver to the Borrower and the Administrative Agent on or prior to the date on which such Lender becomes a Lender under this Agreement (and from time to time thereafter upon the reasonable request of the Borrower or the Administrative Agent), executed copies of IRS Form W-9 certifying that such Lender is exempt from U.S. federal backup withholding tax;

 

(2) any Foreign Lender shall, to the extent it is legally entitled to do so, deliver to the Borrower and the Administrative Agent (in such number of copies as shall be requested by the recipient) on or prior to the date on which such Foreign Lender becomes a Lender under this Agreement (and from time to time thereafter upon the reasonable request of the Borrower or the Administrative Agent), whichever of the following is applicable:

 

a. in the case of a Foreign Lender claiming the benefits of an income tax treaty to which the United States is a party (x) with respect to payments of interest under any Transaction Document, executed copies of IRS Form W-8BEN or IRS Form W-8BEN-E, as applicable, establishing an exemption from, or reduction of, U.S. federal withholding Tax pursuant to the “interest” article of such tax treaty and (y) with respect to any other applicable payments under any Transaction Document, IRS Form W-8BEN or IRS Form W-8BEN-E, as applicable, establishing an exemption from, or reduction of, U.S. federal withholding Tax pursuant to the “business profits” or “other income” article of such tax treaty;

 

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b. executed copies of IRS Form W-8ECI;

 

c. in the case of a Foreign Lender claiming the benefits of the exemption for portfolio interest under Section 881(c) of the Code, (x) a certificate substantially in the form of Exhibit 2.13-1 to the effect that such Foreign Lender is not a “bank” within the meaning of Section 881(c)(3)(A) of the Code, a “10 percent shareholder” of the Borrower within the meaning of Section 881(c)(3)(B) of the Code, or a “controlled foreign corporation” described in Section 881(c)(3)(C) of the Code (a “U.S. Tax Compliance Certificate”) and (y) executed copies of IRS Form W-8BEN or IRS Form W-8BEN-E, as applicable; or

 

d. to the extent a Foreign Lender is not the beneficial owner of the income, executed copies of IRS Form W-8IMY, accompanied by IRS Form W-8ECI, IRS Form W-8BEN, IRS Form W-8BEN-E, a U.S. Tax Compliance Certificate substantially in the form of Exhibit 2.13-2 or Exhibit 2.13-3, IRS Form W-9, and/or other certification or documents from each beneficial owner, as applicable; provided that if the Foreign Lender is a partnership and one or more direct or indirect partners of such Foreign Lender are claiming the portfolio interest exemption, such Foreign Lender may provide a U.S. Tax Compliance Certificate substantially in the form of Exhibit 2.13-4 on behalf of each such direct and indirect partner;

 

(3) any Foreign Lender shall, to the extent it is legally entitled to do so, deliver to the Borrower and the Administrative Agent (in such number of copies as shall be requested by the recipient) on or prior to the date on which such Foreign Lender becomes a Lender under this Agreement (and from time to time thereafter upon the reasonable request of the Borrower or the Administrative Agent), executed copies of any other form prescribed by applicable law as a basis for claiming exemption from or a reduction in U.S. federal withholding Tax, duly completed, together with such supplementary documentation as may be prescribed by applicable law to permit the Borrower or the Administrative Agent to determine the withholding required to be made; and

 

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(4) if a payment made to a Lender under any Transaction Document would be subject to U.S. federal withholding Tax imposed by FATCA if such Lender were to fail to comply with the applicable reporting requirements of FATCA (including those contained in Section 1471(b) or 1472(b) of the Code, as applicable), such Lender shall deliver to the Borrower and the Administrative Agent at the time or times prescribed by law and at such time or times reasonably requested by the Borrower or the Administrative Agent such documentation prescribed by applicable law (including as prescribed by Section 1471(b)(3)(C)(i) of the Code) and such additional documentation reasonably requested by the Borrower or the Administrative Agent as may be necessary for the Borrower and the Administrative Agent to comply with their obligations under FATCA and to determine that such Lender has complied with such Lender’s obligations under FATCA or to determine the amount to withhold from such payment. Solely for purposes of this clause (4), “FATCA” shall include any amendments made to FATCA after the date of this Agreement.

 

Each Lender agrees that if any form or certification it previously delivered expires or becomes obsolete or inaccurate in any respect, it shall update such form or certification or promptly notify the Borrower and the Administrative Agent in writing of its legal inability to do so.

 

(g) If any party determines, in its sole discretion exercised in good faith, that it has received a refund of any Taxes as to which it has been indemnified pursuant to this Section 2.13 (including by the payment of additional amounts pursuant to this Section 2.13), it shall pay to the indemnifying party an amount equal to such refund (but only to the extent of indemnity payments made under this Section 2.13 with respect to the Taxes giving rise to such refund), net of all out-of-pocket expenses (including Taxes) of such indemnified party and without interest (other than any interest paid by the relevant Governmental Authority with respect to such refund). Such indemnifying party, upon the request of such indemnified party, shall repay to such indemnified party the amount paid over pursuant to this Section 2.13(g) (plus any penalties, interest or other charges imposed by the relevant Governmental Authority) in the event that such indemnified party is required to repay such refund to such Governmental Authority. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Section 2.13(g), in no event will the indemnified party be required to pay any amount to an indemnifying party pursuant to this Section 2.13(g) the payment of which would place the indemnified party in a less favorable net after-Tax position than the indemnified party would have been in if the Tax subject to indemnification and giving rise to such refund had not been deducted, withheld or otherwise imposed and the indemnification payments or additional amounts with respect to such Tax had never been paid. This paragraph shall not be construed to require any indemnified party to make available its Tax returns (or any other information relating to its Taxes that it deems confidential) to the indemnifying party or any other Person.

 

(h) Each party’s obligations under this Section 2.13 shall survive the resignation or replacement of the Administrative Agent or any assignment of rights by, or the replacement of, a Lender, the termination of the Commitments and the repayment, satisfaction or discharge of all obligations under any Transaction Document.

 

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Section 2.14 Reinvestment; Discretionary Sales, Substitution and Optional Sales of Loans.

 

(a) Reinvestment. On the terms and conditions hereinafter set forth as certified in writing to the Administrative Agent and the Collateral Agent, prior to the Facility Maturity Date, the Borrower may withdraw funds on deposit in the Principal Collection Account for the following purposes:

 

(i)   to reinvest such funds in Loans to be pledged hereunder (a “Reinvestment”), so long as (1) all conditions precedent set forth in Section 3.2 have been satisfied and (2) each Loan acquired by the Borrower in connection with such reinvestment shall be an Eligible Loan; or

 

(ii) to make payments in respect of the Advances Outstanding at such time in accordance with and subject to the terms of Section 2.3(b).

 

Upon the satisfaction of the applicable conditions set forth in this Section 2.14(a) (as certified by the Borrower to the Administrative Agent and the Collateral Agent), the Collateral Agent will release funds from the Principal Collection Account to be applied pursuant to clause (i) or clause (ii) above in an amount not to exceed the lesser of (A) the amount requested by the Borrower and (B) the amount on deposit in the Principal Collection Account on such day.

 

(b) Substitutions. Subject to Sections 2.14(e) and (f), the Borrower (x) may, during the Reinvestment Period, sell any Loan and replace such Loan with another Loan (each such sale and replacement, a “Substitution”) and (y) shall, to the extent a Substitution is required under the Sale Agreement, effect a Substitution, in each case so long as (i)  no Event of Default has occurred and is continuing and, immediately after giving effect to such Substitution, no Default or Event of Default shall have occurred, (ii) each substitute Loan acquired by the Borrower in connection with a Substitution shall be an Eligible Loan, (iii) 100% of the proceeds from the sale of the Loan(s) to be replaced in connection with such Substitution are either applied by the Borrower to acquire the substitute Loan(s) or deposited in the Collection Account, (iv) all conditions precedent set forth in Section 3.2 have been satisfied with respect to each substitute Loan to be acquired by the Borrower in connection with such Substitution and (v) immediately after giving effect to such Substitution, no Borrowing Base Deficiency exists; provided that, notwithstanding anything to the contrary set forth in Section 3.2, in the event a Borrowing Base Deficiency shall have existed immediately prior to giving effect to such Substitution, the Borrower may effect a Substitution so long as, immediately after giving effect to such Substitution and any other sale or transfer substantially contemporaneous therewith, such Borrowing Base Deficiency is reduced or cured.

 

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(c) Discretionary Sales. Subject to Sections 2.14(e) and (f), the Borrower shall be permitted to sell Loans (each, a “Discretionary Sale”) so long as (i) the Borrower provides no less than one (1) Business Day’s prior written notice to the Administrative Agent (with a copy to the Collateral Agent and the Lenders) of such sale (other than the sale of a Broadly Syndicated Loan, in which case notice shall be provided at the time of such sale), (ii) no Event of Default has occurred and is continuing and, immediately after giving effect to such Discretionary Sale, no Default or Event of Default shall have occurred, (iii) unless the Administrative Agent has provided its prior written consent, the sale price (as a percentage of par) of each Loan (other than a Broadly Syndicated Loan) sold pursuant to a Discretionary Sale shall be greater than or equal to its Assigned Value and (iv) immediately after giving effect to such Discretionary Sale, no Borrowing Base Deficiency exists; provided that, in the event a Borrowing Base Deficiency shall have existed immediately prior to giving effect to such Discretionary Sale, the Borrower may effect a Discretionary Sale so long as, immediately after giving effect to such Discretionary Sale and any other sale or transfer substantially contemporaneous therewith, such Borrowing Base Deficiency is (i) cured or (ii) with the Administrative Agent’s prior written consent, reduced.

 

(d) Optional Sales. Subject to Section 2.14(e), the Borrower shall have the right to sell all of the Loans included in the Collateral (an “Optional Sale”) on any Business Day. The proceeds of any Optional Sale shall be distributed on the related sale date in accordance with Section 2.8.

 

(e) Conditions to Sales, Substitutions and Repurchases. Any Discretionary Sale, sale pursuant to a Substitution or Optional Sale effected pursuant to Sections 2.14(b), (c), or (d) shall be subject to the satisfaction of the following conditions:

 

(i) except in connection with an Optional Sale, the Borrower shall deliver a Borrowing Base Certificate to the Administrative Agent;

 

(ii) the Borrower shall deliver a list of all Loans to be sold or substituted to the Administrative Agent and the Collateral Agent;

 

(iii) except in connection with an Optional Sale, as certified in writing to the Administrative Agent by the Borrower, no selection procedures adverse to the interests of the Administrative Agent or the Lenders were utilized by the Borrower or the Collateral Manager, as applicable, in the selection of the Loans to be sold or substituted;

 

(iv) the Borrower shall notify the Administrative Agent and Collateral Agent of any amount to be deposited into the Collection Account in connection with any sale or substitution;

 

(v) each such Discretionary Sale, sale pursuant to a Substitution and Optional Sale complies with Section 6.2(m);

 

(vi) (A) the Borrower shall be deemed to have certified to the Administrative Agent that the representations and warranties contained in Section 4.1 and 4.2 hereof and (B) the Seller shall be deemed to have certified to the Administrative Agent that the representations and warranties contained in Section 4.5 hereof shall continue to be correct in all material respects following any sale or substitution, except to the extent any such representation or warranty relates to an earlier date;

 

(vii) any repayment of Advances Outstanding in connection with any sale or substitution of Loans hereunder shall comply with the requirements set forth in Section 2.3;

 

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(viii) as certified in writing to the Administrative Agent by the Borrower, any Discretionary Sale or sale in connection with a Substitution shall be made by the Borrower to a third-party purchaser unaffiliated with the Seller or the Collateral Manager in a transaction (1) reflecting arm’s-length market terms and (2) in which the Borrower makes no representations, warranties or covenants and provides no indemnification for the benefit of any other party to such sale (other than the representations, warranties and covenants set forth in the LSTA Par/Near Par Trade Confirmation, the LSTA Distressed Trade Confirmation or the LSTA Purchase and Sale Agreement for Distressed Trades, in each case as published by The Loan Syndications and Trading Association, Inc. as of the date of such confirmation or agreement, or substantially similar representations, warranties and covenants, to the extent such documentation is not used in connection with such transaction), provided that, notwithstanding the foregoing, the Borrower may make a Discretionary Sale or sale in connection with a Substitution, in each case for fair market value, to the Seller, the Collateral Manager or an Affiliate of the Borrower, the Collateral Manager or the Seller with the prior written consent of the Administrative Agent in its sole discretion (except that, so long as no Event of Default exists, no such consent shall be required in connection with a Discretionary Sale or Substitution (1) to the Seller pursuant to any exercise of the Seller’s mandatory repurchase or Substitution obligation under Section 7.1 of the Sale Agreement or (2) permitted by Section 2.14(f)); provided, further, that after the occurrence of an Event of Default, the Borrower may only make Discretionary Sales, sales pursuant to a Substitution or an Optional Sale with the prior written consent of the Administrative Agent in its sole discretion;

 

(ix) the Borrower shall pay an amount equal to all accrued and unpaid costs and expenses (including, without limitation, reasonable legal fees) of the Administrative Agent, the Lenders and the Collateral Agent in connection with any such sale, substitution or repurchase (including, but not limited to, expenses incurred in connection with the release of the Lien of the Collateral Agent on behalf of the Secured Parties and any other party having an interest in the Loan in connection with such sale, substitution or repurchase);

 

(x) with respect to an Optional Sale, the Borrower shall, not later than ten (10) Business Days prior to the date of such sale, deliver to the Administrative Agent and each Lender a certificate and evidence to the reasonable satisfaction of such parties (which satisfaction shall be confirmed in writing by the Administrative Agent and each Lender) that the Borrower shall have sufficient funds on or prior to the date of such sale to pay the outstanding Obligations in full pursuant to Section 2.8 (which funds may be derived from completion of such Optional Sale); and

 

(xi) if any Loan sold pursuant to a Discretionary Sale, sale pursuant to a Substitution or Optional Sale is sold for a price less than 95% of its Adjusted Borrowing Value, the Administrative Agent shall have provided its prior written consent to such sale in its sole discretion.

 

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(f) Limitations on Sales, Substitutions and Repurchases.

 

(i) Affiliates. The aggregate Outstanding Balance of all Loans which are sold or intended to be sold by the Borrower to Affiliates of the Borrower in connection with a Substitution or a Discretionary Sale during any 12-month rolling period shall not exceed, collectively, 25% of the Facility Amount as of the start of such 12-month period (or such lesser number of months as shall have elapsed as of such date); provided that, the aggregate Outstanding Balance of all Loans which are sold or intended to be sold by the Borrower to Affiliates of the Borrower in connection with a Substitution or a Discretionary Sale whose Assigned Value was not reduced by the Administrative Agent during any 12-month rolling period shall not exceed 7.5% (or, with the consent of the Administrative Agent in its sole discretion, 15%) of the Facility Amount as of the start of such 12-month period (or such lesser number of months as shall have elapsed as of such date); provided, further that (A) any Loans which are sold or intended to be sold by the Borrower to Affiliates of the Borrower shall be excluded from each of the foregoing thresholds so long as such Loan is sold within 150 days of the closing date of such Loan and (B) the limitation set forth in this clause (i) shall not apply with respect to (x) any Substitution or Discretionary Sale of a Loan with an Assigned Value of zero or any Equity Security, (y) Discretionary Sales of Loans certified by the Collateral Manager to the Administrative Agent to be to existing collateralized loan obligation facilities managed by the Collateral Manager or any Affiliate of the Collateral Manager and (z) Broadly Syndicated Loans acquired by the Borrower after the Third Amendment Closing Date and prior to the second anniversary of the Third Amendment Closing Date.

 

(ii) Third Parties. The aggregate Outstanding Balance of all Loans which are sold or intended to be sold by the Borrower to Persons other than Affiliates of the Borrower in connection with a Substitution or a Discretionary Sale during any 12-month rolling period shall not exceed, collectively, 30% (or, after the second anniversary of the Closing Date, 50%) of the Facility Amount as of the start of such 12-month period (or such lesser number of months as shall have elapsed as of such date); provided that, the limitation set forth in this clause (ii) shall not apply with respect to (x) any Substitution or Discretionary Sale of a Loan with an Assigned Value of zero or any Equity Security, (y) Discretionary Sales of Loans certified by the Collateral Manager to the Administrative Agent to be to existing collateralized loan obligation facilities managed by the Collateral Manager or any Affiliate of the Collateral Manager and (z) Broadly Syndicated Loans acquired by the Borrower after the Third Amendment Closing Date and prior to the second anniversary of the Third Amendment Closing Date.

 

(g) Sales of Loans with an Assigned Value of Zero and Sales of Equity Securities. The Borrower may sell any (i) Loan with an Assigned Value of zero; provided, that (a) any such sale shall be made on an arm’s-length basis at fair market value (or, solely with respect to any Loan purchased by the Seller pursuant to Section 7.1 of the Sale Agreement, the applicable Transfer Deposit Amount (as defined in the Sale Agreement)), and (b) any such sale shall comply with Section 6.2(m) or (ii) any Equity Security to any Person.

 

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Section 2.15 Assignment of the Sale Agreement and Guarantee.

 

The Borrower hereby assigns to the Collateral Agent, for the benefit of the Secured Parties, all of the Borrower’s right, title and interest in and to, but none of its obligations under, the Sale Agreement, the Guarantee and any UCC financing statements filed under or in connection therewith. In furtherance and not in limitation of the foregoing, the Borrower hereby assigns to the Collateral Agent for the benefit of the Secured Parties its right to indemnification under each of the Sale Agreement and the Guarantee. The Borrower confirms that the Collateral Agent, on behalf of the Secured Parties, shall have the right to enforce the Borrower’s rights and remedies under the Sale Agreement, the Guarantee and any UCC financing statements filed under or in connection therewith for the benefit of the Collateral Agent for the benefit of the Secured Parties.

 

Section 2.16 Capital Contributions.

 

Any direct or indirect owner of the Borrower may, but shall not be obligated to, make a capital contribution in Cash or securities to the Borrower at any time, including for the purpose of providing a portion of the acquisition cost of Eligible Loans not available for borrowing by the Borrower hereunder.

 

Section 2.17 Defaulting Lenders.

 

(a) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in this Agreement, if any Lender becomes a Defaulting Lender, then, until such time as that Lender is no longer a Defaulting Lender, to the extent permitted by Applicable Law:

 

(i) such Defaulting Lender’s right to approve or disapprove any amendment, waiver or consent with respect to this Agreement shall be restricted as set forth in Section 12.1;

 

(ii) any payment of principal, interest, fees or other amounts received by the Administrative Agent for the account of that Defaulting Lender (whether voluntary or mandatory, at maturity, or otherwise), shall be applied at such time or times as may be determined by the Administrative Agent as follows: first, to the payment of any amounts owing by that Defaulting Lender to the Administrative Agent hereunder; second, as the Borrower may request (so long as no Default or Event of Default exists), to the funding of any Advance in respect of which such Defaulting Lender has failed to fund its portion thereof as required by this Agreement, as determined by the Administrative Agent; third, if so determined by the Administrative Agent and the Borrower, to be held in a non-interest bearing deposit account and released in order to satisfy obligations of that Defaulting Lender to fund future Advances under this Agreement; fourth, to the payment of any amounts owing to the other Lenders as a result of any judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction obtained by any Lender against such Defaulting Lender as a result of such Defaulting Lender’s breach of its obligations under this Agreement; fifth, so long as no Default or Event of Default exists, to the payment of any amounts owing to the Borrower as a result of any judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction obtained by such Borrower against such Defaulting Lender as a result of such Defaulting Lender’s breach of its obligations under this Agreement; and sixth, to that Defaulting Lender or as otherwise directed by a court of competent jurisdiction; provided that if such payment is a payment of the principal amount of any Advances in respect of which such Defaulting Lender has not fully funded its appropriate share, such payment shall be applied solely to pay the Advances of all non-Defaulting Lenders on a pro rata basis prior to being applied to the payment of any Advances of such Defaulting Lender. Any payments, prepayments or other amounts paid or payable to a Defaulting Lender that are applied (or held) to pay amounts owed by a Defaulting Lender or to post cash collateral pursuant to this Section 2.17 shall be deemed paid to and redirected by such Defaulting Lender, and each Lender irrevocably consents hereto; and

 

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(iii) such Defaulting Lender shall not be entitled to receive any Non-Usage Fee for any period during which that Lender is a Defaulting Lender (and under no circumstance shall the Borrower retroactively be or become required to pay any such fee that otherwise would have been required to have been paid to such Defaulting Lender).

 

(b) If the Administrative Agent determines in its sole discretion that a Defaulting Lender should no longer be deemed to be a Defaulting Lender, the Administrative Agent will so notify the parties hereto, whereupon as of the effective date specified in such notice and subject to any conditions set forth therein (which may include arrangements with respect to any cash collateral), such Lender will, to the extent applicable, purchase that portion of outstanding Advances of the other Lenders or take such other actions as the Administrative Agent may determine to be necessary to cause the Advances to be held on a pro rata basis by the Lenders, whereupon that Lender will cease to be a Defaulting Lender; provided that no adjustments will be made retroactively with respect to fees accrued or payments made by or on behalf of the Borrower while that Lender was a Defaulting Lender; provided, further, that except to the extent otherwise expressly agreed by the affected parties, no change hereunder from Defaulting Lender to Lender will constitute a waiver or release of any claim of any party hereunder arising from that Lender’s having been a Defaulting Lender.

 

Section 2.18 Reserved.

 

Section 2.19 Benchmark Replacement Settings.

 

(a) Benchmark Replacement. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary herein or in any other Transaction Document, upon the occurrence of a Benchmark Transition Event with respect to any Benchmark, the Administrative Agent and the Borrower may amend this Agreement to replace such Benchmark with a Benchmark Replacement. Any such amendment with respect to a Benchmark Transition Event will become effective at 5:00 p.m. on the fifth (5th) Business Day after the Administrative Agent has posted such proposed amendment to all affected Lenders and the Borrower so long as the Administrative Agent has not received, by such time, written notice of objection to such amendment from Lenders comprising the Required Lenders. No replacement of a Benchmark with a Benchmark Replacement pursuant to this Section 2.19(a) will occur prior to the applicable Benchmark Transition Start Date.

 

(b) Benchmark Replacement Conforming Changes. In connection with the use, administration, adoption or implementation of a Benchmark Replacement, the Administrative Agent will have the right to make Conforming Changes from time to time and, notwithstanding anything to the contrary herein or in any other Transaction Document, any amendments implementing such Conforming Changes will become effective without any further action or consent of any other party to this Agreement or any other Transaction Document.

 

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(c) Notices; Standards for Decisions and Determinations. The Administrative Agent will promptly notify the Borrower, the Collateral Agent and the Lenders of (A) the implementation of any Benchmark Replacement and (B) the effectiveness of any Conforming Changes in connection with the use, administration, adoption or implementation of a Benchmark Replacement. The Administrative Agent will promptly notify the Borrower of the removal or reinstatement of any tenor of a Benchmark pursuant to Section 2.19(d). Any determination, decision or election that may be made by the Administrative Agent or, if applicable, any Lender (or group of Lenders) pursuant to this Section 2.19, including any determination with respect to a tenor, rate or adjustment or of the occurrence or non-occurrence of an event, circumstance or date and any decision to take or refrain from taking any action or any selection, will be conclusive and binding absent manifest error and may be made in its or their sole discretion and without consent from any other party to this Agreement or any other Transaction Document, except, in each case, as expressly required pursuant to this Section 2.19.

 

(d) Unavailability of Tenor of Benchmark. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary herein or in any other Transaction Document, at any time (including in connection with the implementation of a Benchmark Replacement), if any then-current Benchmark is a term rate and either (1) no tenor for such Benchmark is displayed on a screen or other information service that publishes such rate from time to time as selected by the Administrative Agent in its reasonable discretion or (2) the administrator of such Benchmark or the regulatory supervisor for the administrator of such Benchmark has provided a public statement or publication of information announcing that any tenor that is the then-applicable to such Benchmark is not or will not be representative or in compliance with or aligned with the International Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO) Principles for Financial Benchmarks, then the Administrative Agent may modify the definition of “Accrual Period” (or any similar or analogous definition) for any Benchmark settings as of the date of or following such occurrence to remove such unavailable, non-representative, non-compliant or non-aligned tenor provided that if a tenor that was removed pursuant to this Section 2.19(d) either (1) is subsequently displayed on a screen or information service that publishes such Benchmark from time to time or (2) is not, or is no longer, subject to an announcement that it is not or will not be representative or in compliance with or aligned with the International Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO) Principles for Financial Benchmarks, then the Administrative Agent may modify the definition of “Accrual Period” (or any similar or analogous definition) for all Advances made at or after such occurrence to reinstate such previously removed tenor.

 

(e) Benchmark Unavailability Period. Upon the Borrower’s receipt of notice of the commencement of a Benchmark Unavailability Period with respect to any then-current Benchmark, the Borrower may revoke any pending request for an Advance to be made during such Benchmark Unavailability Period. During a Benchmark Unavailability Period with respect to any then-current Benchmark or at any time that all tenors for any then-current Benchmark are unavailable, the Base Rate shall be used instead of such Benchmark to calculate Interest.

 

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ARTICLE III

 

CONDITIONS TO CLOSING AND ADVANCES

 

Section 3.1 Conditions to Closing.

 

No Lender shall be obligated to make any Advance hereunder, nor shall any Lender, the Administrative Agent or the Collateral Agent be obligated to take, fulfill or perform any other action hereunder, until the following conditions have been satisfied, in the sole discretion of, or waived in writing by the Administrative Agent:

 

(a) Each Transaction Document shall have been duly executed by, and delivered to, the parties thereto, and the Administrative Agent shall have received such other documents, instruments, agreements and legal opinions as the Administrative Agent shall reasonably request in connection with the transactions contemplated by this Agreement, each in form and substance satisfactory to the Administrative Agent;

 

(b) The Administrative Agent shall have received satisfactory evidence that each of the Seller, the Borrower and the Collateral Manager has obtained all required consents and approvals of all Persons to the execution, delivery and performance of this Agreement and the other Transaction Documents to which it is a party and the consummation of the transactions contemplated hereby or thereby;

 

(c) The Seller, the Collateral Manager and the Borrower shall each have delivered to the Administrative Agent a certificate as to whether such Person is Solvent in the form of Exhibit C;

 

(d) (i) The Borrower shall have delivered to the Administrative Agent a certification that no Default, Event of Default or Change of Control with respect to the Borrower has occurred, (ii) the Collateral Manager shall have delivered to the Administrative Agent a certification that no Default, Event of Default or Change of Control with respect to the Collateral Manager or Collateral Manager Termination Event has occurred and (iii) the Seller shall have delivered to the Administrative Agent a certification that no Default, Event of Default or Change of Control with respect to the Seller has occurred;

 

(e) The Administrative Agent and the Collateral Manager shall have received, with a counterpart for each Lender, the executed legal opinion or opinions of Paul Hastings LLP, counsel to the Borrower, covering enforceability, grant and perfection of the security interests on the Collateral, in each case, in form and substance acceptable to the Administrative Agent in its reasonable discretion;

 

(f) The Borrower and the Administrative Agent shall have received the executed legal opinion or opinions of Paul Hastings LLP, counsel to the Seller and to the Collateral Manager, covering enforceability of the Transaction Documents to which the Seller or the Collateral Manager is a party, in each case, in form and substance acceptable to the Administrative Agent in its reasonable discretion;

 

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(g) The Administrative Agent, the Lenders, the Collateral Agent and the Custodian shall have received the fees (including fees, disbursements and other charges of counsel to the Administrative Agent, the Custodian and the Collateral Agent) to be received on date of the initial Advance referred to herein;

 

(h) The Administrative Agent and the Lenders shall have received, sufficiently in advance of the Closing Date, all documentation and other information required by bank regulatory authorities under applicable “know your customer” and anti-money laundering rules and regulations, including the USA Patriot Act;

 

(i) [Reserved];

 

(j) [Reserved];

 

(k) The UCC-1 financing statements naming (1) the Borrower as debtor and the Collateral Agent as secured party and (2) the Seller as debtor and the Collateral Agent as secured party are in proper form for filing in the filing office of the appropriate jurisdiction and, when filed, together with the Securities Account Control Agreement, are effective to perfect the Collateral Agent’s security interest in the Collateral such that the Collateral Agent’s security interest in the Collateral ranks senior to that of any other creditors of the Borrower, Equityholder or Seller (whether now existing or hereafter acquired);

 

(l) The Administrative Agent shall have received an officer’s certificate of the Seller, the Collateral Manager and the Borrower, with a counterpart for each Lender, that includes a copy of the resolutions (or other authorizing instruments, if applicable), in form and substance satisfactory to the Administrative Agent, of the Board of Directors (or similar governing or managing body) of such Person authorizing (i) the execution, delivery and performance of this Agreement and the other Transaction Documents to which it is a party, (ii) in the case of the Borrower, the borrowings contemplated hereunder, (iii) in the case of the Borrower and the Seller, the granting by it of the Liens created pursuant to the Transaction Documents and (iv) in the case of the Equityholder, the guarantee of the obligations of the Collateral Manager under the Guarantee, certified by a Responsible Officer (or other authorized Person) of such Person as of the Closing Date, which certification shall be in form and substance satisfactory to the Administrative Agent and shall state that the resolutions, or other authorizing instruments, if applicable, thereby certified have not been amended, modified, revoked or rescinded;

 

(m)   The Administrative Agent shall have received, with a counterpart for each Lender, a certificate of the Seller, the Collateral Manager and the Borrower, dated the Closing Date, as to the incumbency and signature of the officers of such Person executing any Transaction Document, which certification shall be included in the certificate delivered in respect of such Person pursuant to Section 3.1(l) and satisfactory in form and substance to the Administrative Agent, and shall be executed by a Responsible Officer (or other authorized Person) of such Person;

 

(n) The Administrative Agent shall have received, with a counterpart for each Lender, true and complete copies of the Governing Documents of the Seller, the Collateral Manager and the Borrower, certified as of the Closing Date as complete and correct copies thereof by a Responsible Officer (or other authorized Person) of such Person, which certification shall be included in the certificate delivered in respect of such Person pursuant to Section 3.1(l) and shall be in form and substance satisfactory to the Administrative Agent;

 

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(o) The Administrative Agent shall have received, with a copy for each Lender, certificates dated as of a recent date from the Secretary of State or other appropriate authority, evidencing the good standing of the Seller, the Collateral Manager and the Borrower (i) in the jurisdiction of its organization and (ii) in each other jurisdiction where its ownership, lease or operation of Property or the conduct of its business requires it to qualify as a foreign Person except, as to this subclause (ii), where the failure to so qualify could not be reasonably expected to have a Material Adverse Effect;

 

(p) The Administrative Agent shall have received evidence in form and substance satisfactory to it that all filings, recordings, registrations and other actions, including, without limitation, the filing of duly executed financing statements on form UCC-1 necessary or, in the opinion of the Administrative Agent, desirable to perfect the Liens created, or purported to be created, by the Transaction Documents shall have been completed;

 

(q) The Administrative Agent shall have received the results of a recent search by a Person satisfactory to the Administrative Agent, of the UCC, judgment and tax lien filings which may have been filed with respect to personal property of the Borrower, and bankruptcy and pending lawsuits with respect to the Borrower and the results of such search shall be satisfactory to the Administrative Agent;

 

(r)   The Borrower shall have received the executed legal opinion or opinions of Nixon Peabody LLP, counsel to the Collateral Agent, covering enforceability of the Transaction Documents to which the Collateral Agent is a party; and

 

(s)   The Collateral Manager, as of the Third Amendment Closing Date, has delivered evidence reasonably satisfactory to the Lender that the Equityholder has at least $750,000,000 in committed and subscribed in capital.

 

Section 3.2 Conditions Precedent to All Advances and Acquisitions of Loans.

 

Each Advance under this Agreement, each Reinvestment of Principal Collections pursuant to Section 2.14(a)(i) and each acquisition of Loans in connection with a Substitution pursuant to Section 2.14(b) (each, a “Transaction”) shall be subject to the further conditions precedent that:

 

(a) With respect to any Advance, the Collateral Manager shall have delivered to the Administrative Agent (with a copy to the Collateral Agent and each Lender) no later than 10:00 a.m. on the related Funding Date:

 

(i) a Funding Notice in the form of Exhibit A-1, a Borrowing Base Certificate and a Loan Schedule listing each Loan, if any, proposed to be acquired by the Borrower in connection with such Transaction; and

 

(ii) if a Loan is being acquired with such Advance, a certificate of assignment in the form of Exhibit F (including Exhibit A thereto) and containing such additional information as may be reasonably requested by the Administrative Agent and each Lender;

 

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(b) With respect to any Reinvestment of Principal Collections permitted by Section 2.14(a)(i) and each acquisition of Loans in connection with a Substitution pursuant to Section 2.14(b), the Collateral Manager shall have delivered to the Administrative Agent, no later than 2:00 p.m. on the Business Day prior to any such reinvestment, a Reinvestment Notice in the form of Exhibit A-3 and a Borrowing Base Certificate, executed by the Collateral Manager on behalf of the Borrower;

 

(c) On the date of such Transaction (A) the Borrower shall be deemed to have certified that each of the following statements shall be true and correct as of such date and (B) if the related Borrower’s Notice is executed by the Borrower, the Borrower shall have certified in such notice that (other than with respect to the Collateral Manager’s certifications in clauses (d) and, with respect to reports required to be delivered by the Collateral Manager under the Transaction Documents, (g) and the conditions precedent in clauses (f), (h) and (i) of this Section 3.2) all conditions precedent to the requested Transaction have been satisfied:

 

(i) the representations and warranties contained in Section 4.1 and Section 4.2 are true and correct in all respects on and as of such day (other than any representation and warranty that is made as of a specific date);

 

(ii) no event has occurred and is continuing, or would result from such Transaction or from the application of proceeds thereof, that constitutes a Default or an Event of Default;

 

(iii) on and as of such day, immediately after giving effect to such Transaction, the Advances Outstanding do not exceed the Borrowing Base (or, to the extent permitted under Section 2.14(b), any Borrowing Base Deficiency is reduced);

 

(iv) to the extent applicable to the requested Transaction and with respect to the Borrower, no Applicable Law shall prohibit or enjoin the proposed Reinvestment of Principal Collections or acquisition of Loans; and

 

(v) on and as of such day, immediately after giving effect to such Transaction the Advances Outstanding do not exceed the Facility Amount.

 

(d) On the date of such Transaction (A) the Collateral Manager shall be deemed to have certified that each of the following statements shall be true and correct as of such date and (B) the Collateral Manager shall have certified in the related Borrower’s Notice that (other than with respect to the Borrower’s certifications in clauses (c) and, with respect to reports required to be delivered by the Borrower under the Transaction Documents, (g) and the conditions precedent in clauses (f), (h) and (i) of this Section 3.2) all conditions precedent to the requested Transaction have been satisfied:

 

(i) no event has occurred and is continuing, or would result from such Transaction or from the application of proceeds thereof, that constitutes a Default, an Event of Default or a Collateral Manager Termination Event;

 

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(ii) on and as of such day, immediately after giving effect to such Transaction, the Advances Outstanding do not exceed the Borrowing Base (or, to the extent permitted under Section 2.14(b), any Borrowing Base Deficiency is reduced);

 

(iii) the representations and warranties contained in Section 4.3 are true and correct in all respects on and as of such day (other than any representation and warranty that is made as of a specific date);

 

(iv)   on and as of such day, immediately after giving effect to such Transaction, the Advances Outstanding do not exceed the Facility Amount.

 

(e) (i) With respect to any Advance under this Agreement or any Reinvestment of Principal Collections pursuant to Section 2.14(a)(i), the Reinvestment Period End Date shall not have occurred, and (ii) with respect to any Transaction, the Termination Date shall not have occurred;

 

(f) On each date specified in Section 4.5, the Seller shall be deemed to have certified that the representations and warranties contained in Section 4.5 are true and correct in all respects on and as of such day (other than any representation and warranty that is made as of a specific date);

 

(g) The Borrower and Collateral Manager shall have delivered to the Administrative Agent all reports required to be delivered by either thereof as of the date of such Transaction including, without limitation, all deliveries required by Section 2.2;

 

(h) The Borrower shall have paid all fees then required to be paid and, without duplication of Section 2.11, shall have reimbursed the Lenders, the Collateral Agent and the Administrative Agent for all fees, costs and expenses then required to be paid in connection with the closing of the transactions contemplated hereunder and under the other Transaction Documents, including the reasonable attorney fees and any other legal and document preparation costs incurred by the Lenders, the Collateral Agent and the Administrative Agent;

 

(i) The Borrower and the Collateral Manager shall have received a copy of an Approval Notice, executed by the Administrative Agent, evidencing the approval of the Administrative Agent, in its sole discretion in accordance with clause (B) of the definition of “Eligible Loan,” of the Loans to be added to the Collateral;

 

(j) In connection with the initial Advance with respect to the acquisition of any Loan, the Borrower shall have delivered to the Custodian (with a copy to the Administrative Agent), no later than 2:00 p.m. on the related Advance Date, an emailed copy of the duly executed original promissory notes for each such Loan in respect of which a promissory note is issued (or, in the case of any Noteless Loan, a fully executed assignment agreement), and, if any Loans are closed in escrow, a certificate from the closing attorneys of such Loan confirming the possession of the Required Loan Documents; provided that, notwithstanding the foregoing, the Borrower shall cause the Loan Checklist and the Required Loan Documents to be in the possession of the Custodian within five (5) Business Days of any related Advance Date with respect to any Loan; and

 

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(k) To the extent any Loans being acquired by the Borrower in connection with such Transaction are being purchased from the Seller, a true sale opinion with respect to each Loan, in each case, in form and substance acceptable to the Administrative Agent in its reasonable discretion (it being acknowledged and agreed that the opinion delivered by Paul Hastings LLP on the Closing Date is acceptable to the Administrative Agent and satisfies the requirements of this Section 3.2(k), so long as such sales are made in accordance with the facts described in such opinion and pursuant to the Sale Agreement); and

 

(l) solely with respect to the first Transaction, the Borrower and the Administrative Agent shall have received the executed legal opinion or opinions of Paul Hastings LLP, counsel to the Borrower, the Seller and to the Collateral Manager, covering (i) and non-consolidation of the Borrower with the Seller and (ii) true sale of the Loans from the Seller to the Borrower, in each case, in form and substance acceptable to the Administrative Agent in its reasonable discretion.

 

The failure of any of the foregoing conditions precedent to be satisfied in respect of any Advance shall give rise to a right of the Administrative Agent and the applicable Lender, which right may be exercised at any time on the demand of the applicable Lender, to rescind the related Advance and direct the Borrower to pay to the Administrative Agent for the benefit of the applicable Lender an amount equal to the related Advances made during any such time that any of the foregoing conditions precedent were not satisfied.

 

Section 3.3 Custodianship; Transfer of Loans and Permitted Investments.

 

(a) The Collateral Agent and/or the Custodian shall hold all Certificated Securities and Instruments in physical form at its offices set forth in Section 5.5(c). Other than Wilmington Trust, National Association, any successor Collateral Agent or Custodian shall be a state or national bank or trust company which is not an Affiliate of the Borrower or the Seller, which is a Qualified Institution.

 

(b) Each time that the Borrower shall direct or cause the acquisition of any Loan or Permitted Investment, the Borrower shall, if such Permitted Investment or, in the case of a Loan, the related promissory note or (with respect to a Noteless Loan) assignment documentation has not already been delivered to the Collateral Agent or the Custodian in accordance with the requirements set forth in the definition of “Required Loan Documents”, cause the delivery of such Permitted Investment or, in the case of a Loan, the related promissory note or (with respect to a Noteless Loan) assignment documentation in accordance with the requirements set forth in the definition of “Required Loan Documents” to the Collateral Agent or the Custodian to be credited by the Collateral Agent to the Collateral Account or held by the Custodian in accordance with the terms of this Agreement. The security interest of the Collateral Agent in the funds or other property utilized in connection with such acquisition shall, immediately and without further action on the part of the Collateral Agent, be released.

 

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(c) The Borrower shall cause all Loans or Permitted Investments acquired by the Borrower to be transferred to the Collateral Agent or the Custodian for credit by the Collateral Agent to the Collateral Account, and shall cause all Loans and Permitted Investments acquired by the Borrower to be delivered to the Collateral Agent or the Custodian by one of the following means (and shall take any and all other actions necessary to create and perfect in favor of the Collateral Agent a valid security interest in each Loan and Permitted Investment, which security interest shall be senior (subject to Permitted Liens) to that of any other creditor of the Borrower (whether now existing or hereafter acquired)):

 

(i) in the case of an Instrument or a Certificated Security represented by a Security Certificate in registered form by having it Indorsed to the Collateral Agent or in blank by an effective Indorsement or registered in the name of the Collateral Agent and by (A) delivering such Instrument or Security Certificate to the Securities Intermediary at the Corporate Trust Office and (B) causing the Securities Intermediary to maintain (on behalf of the Collateral Agent for the benefit of the Secured Parties) continuous possession of such Instrument or Security Certificate at its offices set forth in Section 5.5(c);

 

(ii) in the case of an Uncertificated Security, by (A) causing the Collateral Agent to become the registered owner of such Uncertificated Security and (B) causing such registration to remain effective;

 

(iii) in the case of any Security Entitlement, by causing each such Security Entitlement to be credited to a Securities Account in the name of the Borrower pursuant to the Securities Account Control Agreement;

 

(iv) in the case of General Intangibles (including any Loan or Permitted Investment not evidenced by an Instrument) by filing, maintaining and continuing the effectiveness of, a financing statement naming the Borrower as debtor and the Collateral Agent as secured party and describing the Loan or Permitted Investment (as the case may be) as the collateral (or describing the collateral as “all assets,” or words of similar effect) at the filing office of the Secretary of State of the State of Delaware.

 

(d) The security interest of the Collateral Agent in any Collateral disposed of in a transaction permitted by this Agreement shall, immediately and without further action on the part of the Collateral Agent, be released and the Collateral Agent shall immediately release such Collateral to, or as directed by, the Borrower.

 

ARTICLE IV

 

REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES

 

Section 4.1 Representations and Warranties of the Borrower.

 

The Borrower represents and warrants as follows as of the Closing Date, each Funding Date, and as of each other date provided under this Agreement or the other Transaction Documents on which such representations and warranties are required to be (or deemed to be) made (unless such representation is only made as of a specific date set forth below):

 

(a) Organization and Good Standing. The Borrower has been duly organized, and is validly existing as a limited liability company in good standing, under the laws of the State of Delaware, with all requisite limited liability company power and authority to own or lease its properties and conduct its business as such business is presently conducted, and had at all relevant times, and now has all necessary power, authority and legal right to acquire, own and sell the Collateral.

 

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(b) Due Qualification. The Borrower is (i) duly qualified to do business and is in good standing as a limited liability company in its jurisdiction of formation, and (ii) has obtained all necessary qualifications, licenses and approvals, in all jurisdictions in which the ownership or lease of property or the conduct of its business requires such qualifications, licenses or approvals, except where the failure to be qualified, licensed or approved would not reasonably be expected to have a Material Adverse Effect. This Agreement and each other Transaction Document to which the Borrower is a party have been duly executed and delivered by the Borrower.

 

(c) Power and Authority; Due Authorization; Execution and Delivery. The Borrower (i) has all necessary limited liability company power, authority and legal right to (a) execute and deliver each Transaction Document to which it is a party, and (b) carry out the terms of the Transaction Documents to which it is a party, and (ii) has duly authorized by all necessary limited liability company action, the execution, delivery and performance of each Transaction Document to which it is a party and the pledge and assignment of a security interest in the Collateral on the terms and conditions herein provided.

 

(d) Binding Obligation. Each Transaction Document to which the Borrower is a party constitutes a legal, valid and binding obligation of the Borrower enforceable against the Borrower in accordance with its respective terms, except as such enforceability may be limited by Insolvency Laws and by general principles of equity (whether such enforceability is considered in a suit at law or in equity).

 

(e) No Violation. The execution, delivery and performance of each Transaction Document to which it is a party and the fulfillment of the terms thereof will not (i) violate any Governing Documents of the Borrower or any Contractual Obligation of the Borrower, (ii) result in the creation of any Lien on the Collateral (other than any Permitted Lien), or (iii) violate any Applicable Law in any material respect.

 

(f)   Agreements. The Borrower is not a party to any agreement or instrument or subject to any limited liability company restriction that has resulted or could reasonably be expected to result in a Material Adverse Effect. The Borrower is not in default in any manner under any provision of any agreement or instrument evidencing Indebtedness, or any other material agreement or instrument to which it is a party or by which it or any of its properties or assets are or may be bound, where such defaults could reasonably be expected to result in a Material Adverse Effect.

 

(g) No Proceedings. There is no litigation, proceeding or investigation pending or, to the knowledge of a Responsible Officer of the Borrower, threatened against the Borrower, before any Governmental Authority (i) asserting the invalidity of any Transaction Document to which the Borrower is a party, (ii) seeking to prevent the consummation of any of the transactions contemplated by any Transaction Document to which the Borrower is a party or (iii) that could reasonably be expected to have a Material Adverse Effect.

 

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(h) All Consents Required. All approvals, authorizations, consents, orders, licenses, filings or other actions of any Person or of any Governmental Authority (if any) required for the due execution, delivery and performance by the Borrower of each Transaction Document to which the Borrower is a party have been obtained.

 

(i) Bulk Sales. The execution, delivery and performance of this Agreement and the transactions contemplated hereby do not require compliance with any “bulk sales” act or similar statutory provisions in effect in any applicable jurisdiction by the Borrower.

 

(j) Solvency. The Borrower is not the subject of any Insolvency Proceedings or Insolvency Event. The transactions under the Transaction Documents to which the Borrower is a party do not and will not render the Borrower not Solvent and the Borrower shall deliver to the Administrative Agent on the Closing Date a certification in the form of Exhibit C.

 

(k) Taxes. The Borrower (i) is and has always been treated as either (x) a domestic partnership, each of whose partners (as determined for U.S. federal income tax purposes) will be U.S. Persons or (y) a disregarded entity of a U.S. Person for U.S. federal income tax purposes and (ii) has timely filed or caused to be filed all material U.S. federal Tax returns and reports required to be filed by it and has paid or caused to be paid all material; U.S. federal Taxes required to be paid by it, except, in each case, Taxes that are being contested in good faith by appropriate proceedings and for which the Borrower has set aside on its books adequate reserves in accordance with GAAP.

 

(l) Exchange Act Compliance; Regulations T, U and X. None of the transactions contemplated herein or in the other Transaction Documents (including, without limitation, the use of the proceeds from the transfer of the Collateral) will violate or result in a violation of Section 7 of the Exchange Act, or any regulations issued pursuant thereto, including, without limitation, Regulations T, U and X of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 12 C.F.R., Chapter II. The Borrower does not own or intend to carry or purchase, and no proceeds from the Advances will be used to carry or purchase, any “margin stock” within the meaning of Regulation U or to extend “purpose credit” within the meaning of Regulation U.

 

(m) Security Interest.

 

(i) This Agreement creates a valid and continuing security interest (as defined in the UCC as in effect from time to time in the State of New York) in the Collateral in favor of the Collateral Agent, on behalf of the Secured Parties, which security interest is validly perfected under Article 9 of the UCC and is prior to all other Liens (except for Permitted Liens), and is enforceable as such against creditors of and purchasers from the Borrower;

 

(ii) the Collateral is comprised of “instruments”, “security entitlements”, “general intangibles”, “certificated securities”, “uncertificated securities”, “securities accounts”, “investment property” and “proceeds” (each as defined in the applicable UCC) and such other categories of collateral under the applicable UCC as to which the Borrower has complied with its obligations under Section 4.1(m)(i);

 

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(iii) with respect to Collateral that constitute Security Entitlements:

 

(1) all of such Security Entitlements have been credited to one of the Accounts and the securities intermediary for each Account has agreed to treat all assets credited to such Account as Financial Assets within the meaning of the UCC as in effect from time-to-time in the State of New York;

 

(2) the Borrower has taken all steps necessary to enable the Collateral Agent to obtain “control” (within the meaning of the UCC as in effect from time-to-time in the State of New York) with respect to each Account; and

 

(3) the Accounts are not in the name of any Person other than the Borrower, subject to the lien of the Collateral Agent for the benefit of the Secured Parties. The Borrower has not instructed the securities intermediary of any Account to comply with the entitlement order of any Person other than the Collateral Agent; provided that, until the Collateral Agent delivers a Notice of Exclusive Control, the Borrower and the Collateral Manager may cause Cash in the Accounts to be invested in Permitted Investments, and the proceeds thereof to be paid and distributed in accordance with this Agreement.

 

(iv) all Accounts constitute “securities accounts” as defined in the Section 8-501(a) of the UCC as in effect from time to time in the State of New York;

 

(v) the Borrower owns and has good and marketable title to (or, with respect to assets securing any Collateral, a valid security interest in) the Collateral free and clear of any Lien (other than Permitted Liens) of any Person;

 

(vi) the Borrower has received all consents and approvals required by the terms of any Loan to the granting of a security interest in the Loans hereunder to the Collateral Agent, on behalf of the Secured Parties;

 

(vii) the Borrower has taken all necessary steps to file all appropriate financing statements in the proper filing office in the appropriate jurisdictions under Applicable Law in order to perfect the security interest in that portion of the Collateral in which a security interest may be perfected by filing pursuant to Article 9 of the UCC as in effect in the Borrower’s jurisdiction of organization;

 

(viii) other than as expressly permitted by the terms of this Agreement and the security interest granted to the Collateral Agent, on behalf of the Secured Parties, pursuant to this Agreement, the Borrower has not pledged, assigned, sold, granted a security interest in or otherwise conveyed any of the Collateral. The Borrower has not authorized the filing of and is not aware of any financing statements against the Borrower that include a description of any collateral included in the Collateral other than any financing statement (A) relating to the security interest, if any, granted to the Borrower under the Sale Agreement or (B) that has been terminated and/or fully and validly assigned to the Collateral Agent or the Borrower on or prior to the date hereof;

 

(ix) the Borrower is not aware of the filing of any judgment or Lien for Taxes filed against the Borrower;

 

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(x) other than in the case of Noteless Loans, all original executed copies of each underlying promissory note that constitute or evidence each Loan that is evidenced by a promissory note has been or, subject to the delivery requirements contained herein, will be delivered to the Custodian;

 

(xi) other than in the case of Noteless Loans, the Borrower has received, or subject to the delivery requirements contained herein will receive, a written acknowledgment from the Custodian that the Custodian or its bailee is holding the underlying promissory notes that evidence all Loans evidenced by a promissory note solely on behalf of the Collateral Agent for the benefit of the Secured Parties;

 

(xii) none of the underlying promissory notes (if any) that constitute or evidence the Loans has any marks or notations indicating that they have been pledged, assigned or otherwise conveyed to any Person other than the Collateral Agent on behalf of the Secured Parties;

 

(xiii) with respect to Collateral that constitutes a “certificated security,” such certificated security has been delivered to the Collateral Agent on behalf of the Secured Parties and, if in registered form, has been specially Indorsed to the Collateral Agent, on behalf of the Secured Parties, or in blank by an effective Indorsement or has been registered in the name of the Collateral Agent, on behalf of the Secured Parties, upon original issue or registration of transfer by the Borrower; and

 

(xiv) in the case of an Uncertificated Security, the Borrower shall cause the issuer of such uncertificated security to register the Collateral Agent, on behalf of the Secured Parties, as the registered owner of such uncertificated security.

 

(n) Reports Accurate. Any of the following information provided or prepared by an Obligor, the Collateral Manager, the Seller or the Collateral Agent, including, without limitation, any financial statements required pursuant to Section 5.3(f), all information, exhibits, financial statements, documents, books, records or reports furnished or to be furnished to the Administrative Agent or any Lender in connection with this Agreement are, as of their respective delivery dates, (or in the case of reports, financial statements or similar information or records, the stated date thereof), true, complete and correct in all material respects; provided, that, solely with respect to written or electronic information furnished by the Collateral Manager which was provided to the Collateral Manager from an Obligor with respect to a Loan, such information need only be accurate, true and correct to the knowledge of the Borrower.

 

(o) Location of Offices. The Borrower’s location (within the meaning of Article 9 of the UCC) is, and at all times has been, the State of Delaware. The Borrower’s Federal Employee Identification Number is correctly set forth on the certificate required pursuant to Section 3.1(l). The Borrower has not changed its name (whether by amendment of its certificate of formation, by reorganization or otherwise) or its jurisdiction of organization and has not changed its location within the four (4) months preceding the Closing Date.

 

(p) Collection Accounts. The Collection Accounts (including any sub accounts thereof) are the only accounts to which Collections are sent.

 

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(q) Intentionally Omitted.

 

(r) Sale Agreement. The Sale Agreement is the only agreement pursuant to which the Borrower purchases Collateral from the Seller.

 

(s) Value Given. The Borrower has given reasonably equivalent value to the Seller or the applicable third party seller of Collateral in consideration for the transfer to the Borrower of the Collateral, and no such transfer shall have been made for or on account of an antecedent debt, and no such transfer is or may be voidable or subject to avoidance under any Section of the Bankruptcy Code.

 

(t) Accounting. Other than for tax purposes, the Borrower accounts for the transfers to it of interests in Collateral as purchases of such Collateral for financial accounting purposes (including notations on its books, records and financial statements, in each case consistent with GAAP and with the requirements set forth herein).

 

(u) Special Purpose Entity. At all times on and after the Closing Date through (but not including) Collection Date, the Borrower has not and shall not:

 

(i) engage in any business or activity other than the purchase, receipt, management and sale of Collateral, the transfer and pledge of Collateral pursuant to the terms of the Transaction Documents, the entry into and the performance under the Transaction Documents and such other activities as are incidental thereto;

 

(ii) acquire or own any assets other than (a) the Collateral or (b) incidental property as may be necessary for the operation of the Borrower and the performance of its obligations under the Transaction Documents including, without limitation, capital contributions which it may receive from the Equityholder;

 

(iii) merge into or consolidate with any Person or dissolve, terminate or liquidate in whole or in part, transfer or otherwise dispose of all or substantially all of its assets (other than in accordance with the provisions hereof), without in each case first obtaining the prior written consent of the Administrative Agent, or except as permitted by this Agreement, change its legal structure, or jurisdiction of formation, unless, in connection with any of the foregoing, such action shall result in the substantially contemporaneous occurrence of the Collection Date;

 

(iv) except as otherwise permitted under clause (iii), fail to preserve its existence as an entity duly organized, validly existing and in good standing under the laws of the jurisdiction of its organization or formation, or without the prior written consent of the Administrative Agent, amend, modify, terminate or fail to comply with the provisions of its limited liability company agreement or fail to observe limited liability company formalities;

 

(v) form, acquire or own any Subsidiary, own any Capital Stock in any other entity (other than Capital Stock in Obligors in connection with the exercise of any remedies with respect to a Loan or any exchange offer, work-out or restructuring of a Loan), or make any Investment in any Person (other than Permitted Investments or Capital Stock in Obligors in connection with the exercise of any remedies with respect to a Loan or any exchange offer, work-out or restructuring of a Loan) without the prior written consent of the Administrative Agent;

 

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(vi) commingle its assets with the assets of any of its Affiliates, or of any other Person;

 

(vii) incur any Indebtedness, secured or unsecured, direct or contingent (including guaranteeing any obligation), other than (1) Indebtedness to the Secured Parties hereunder or in conjunction with a repayment of all Advances owed to the Lenders and a termination of all the Commitments and (2) ordinary course contingent obligations under the Underlying Instruments (such as customary indemnities to fronting banks, administrative agents, collateral agents, depository banks, escrow agents, etc.);

 

(viii) become insolvent or fail to pay its debts and liabilities from its assets as the same shall become due;

 

(ix) fail to maintain its records, books of account and bank accounts separate and apart from those of any other Person;

 

(x) enter into any contract or agreement with any Person, except (a) the Transaction Documents, (b) organizational documents, (c) Underlying Instruments and (d) other contracts or agreements that are upon terms and conditions that are commercially reasonable and substantially similar to those that would be available on an arm’s-length basis with third parties other than such Person; provided that, for the avoidance of doubt with regard to this clause (x), (i) acquisitions of Collateral from the Seller or its Affiliates, and sales of Collateral to the Seller and its Affiliates, each in accordance with other provisions of this Agreement (including, without limitation, Section 6.2(m) and Section 6.2(n)) and the other Transaction Documents shall be permitted and (ii) the Equityholder may contribute cash or other property as a capital contribution to the Borrower;

 

(xi) seek its dissolution or winding up in whole or in part;

 

(xii) fail to correct any known misunderstandings regarding the separate identities of the Borrower, on the one hand, and any Affiliate or any principal thereof or any other Person, on the other hand;

 

(xiii) except pursuant to this Agreement, guarantee, become obligated for, or hold itself out to be responsible for the debt of another Person;

 

(xiv) fail either to hold itself out to the public as a legal entity separate and distinct from any other Person or to conduct its business, solely in its own name in order not (a) to mislead others as to the identity of the Person with which such other party is transacting business, or (b) to suggest that it is responsible for the debts of any third party (including any of its principals or Affiliates);

 

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(xv) fail to maintain adequate capital for the normal obligations reasonably foreseeable in a business of its size and character and in light of its contemplated business operations;

 

(xvi) file or consent to the filing of any petition as to the Borrower, either voluntary or involuntary, to take advantage of any applicable insolvency, bankruptcy, liquidation or reorganization statute, or make an assignment for the benefit of creditors;

 

(xvii) except as may be required or permitted by the Code and regulations thereunder or other applicable state or local tax law, hold itself out as or be considered as a department or division of (a) any of its principals or Affiliates, (b) any Affiliate of a principal or (c) any other Person;

 

(xviii) fail to maintain separate books and records, showing its assets and liabilities separate and apart from those of any other Person and not have its assets listed on any financial statement of any other Person; provided, however, that the Borrower’s assets may be included in a consolidated financial statement of its Affiliates so long as appropriate notation shall be made on such consolidated financial statements to indicate the separateness of the Borrower from such Person and to indicate that the Borrower’s assets and credit are not available to satisfy the debts and other obligations of such Person or any other Person;

 

(xix) fail to pay its own liabilities and expenses only out of its own funds;

 

(xx) fail to maintain a sufficient number of employees, if any, in light of its contemplated business operations or to pay the salaries of its own employees, if any;

 

(xxi) except in connection with any exchange offer, work-out, restructuring or the exercise of any rights or remedies with respect to any Loan with respect to which an Obligor is or would thereby become an Affiliate, acquire the obligations or securities issued by its Affiliates or members (unless approved by the Administrative Agent in its sole discretion);

 

(xxii) fail to allocate fairly and reasonably any overhead expenses that are shared with an Affiliate, including paying for office space and services performed by any employee of an Affiliate;

 

(xxiii) to the extent used, fail to use separate invoices and checks bearing its own name;

 

(xxiv) except for any Permitted Lien relating to any Equity Security, pledge its assets to secure the obligations of any other Person;

 

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(xxv) fail at any time to have at least one (1) independent manager or director (the “Independent Manager”) who has prior experience as an independent director, independent manager or independent member with at least three years of employment experience and who is provided by CT Corporation, Corporation Service Company, National Registered Agents, Inc., Wilmington Trust Company or Lord Securities Corporation, in each case that is not an Affiliate of the Borrower, the Seller or the Collateral Manager and that provides professional Independent Managers and other corporate services in the ordinary course of its business, and which individual is duly appointed as an Independent Manager and is not, and has never been, and will not while serving as Independent Manager be, any of the following: (a) a member, partner, equityholder, manager, director, officer or employee of the Borrower or any of its equityholders, the Collateral Manager or Affiliates (other than as an Independent Manager of an Affiliate of the Borrower that is not in the direct chain of ownership of the Borrower and that is required by a creditor to be a single purpose bankruptcy-remote entity, provided that such Independent Manager is employed by a company that routinely provides professional Independent Managers or directors); (b) a creditor, supplier or service provider (including provider of professional services) to the Borrower, the Collateral Manager or any of its equityholders or Affiliates (other than a nationally recognized company that routinely provides professional Independent Managers and other corporate services to the Borrower, the Collateral Manager or any of its equityholders or Affiliates in the ordinary course of business); (c) a family member of any such member, partner, equityholder, manager, director, officer, employee, creditor, supplier or service provider; or (d) a Person that controls (whether directly, indirectly or otherwise) any of (a), (b) or (c) above. A natural person who otherwise satisfies the foregoing definition and satisfies subparagraph (a) by reason of being the Independent Manager of a “special purpose entity” affiliated with the Borrower shall be qualified to serve as an Independent Manager of the Borrower, provided that the fees that such individual earns from serving as Independent Manager of Affiliates of the Borrower in any given year constitute in the aggregate less than five percent (5%) of such individual’s annual income for that year;

 

(xxvi) fail to ensure that all limited liability company action relating to the appointment, maintenance or replacement of the Independent Manager are complied with;

 

(xxvii) fail to provide that the unanimous consent of all managers (including the consent of the Borrower’s Independent Manager) is required for the Borrower to (a) institute proceedings to be adjudicated bankrupt or insolvent, (b) institute or consent to the institution of bankruptcy or insolvency proceedings against it, (c) file a petition seeking or consent to reorganization or relief under any applicable federal or state law relating to bankruptcy or insolvency, (d) seek or consent to the appointment of a receiver, liquidator, assignee, trustee, sequestrator, Collateral Agent or any similar official for the Borrower, (e) make any assignment for the benefit of the Borrower’s creditors, (f) admit in writing its inability to pay its debts generally as they become due, or (g) take any action in furtherance of any of the foregoing; or

 

(xxviii) fail to file its own tax returns separate from those of any other Person, except to the extent that the Borrower is treated as a disregarded entity for U.S. federal income tax purposes or to the extent that such failure does not constitute a breach of Section 5.1(k).

 

(v) Investment Company Act. The Borrower is not an “investment company” within the meaning of, and is not subject to regulation under, the 1940 Act.

 

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(w) ERISA. Except as would not reasonably be expected to constitute a Material Adverse Effect, (i) the present value of all benefits vested under all “employee pension benefit plans,” as such term is defined in Section 3 of ERISA which are subject to Title IV of ERISA or Section 412 of the Code and maintained by the Borrower, or in which employees of the Borrower are entitled to participate, other than a Multiemployer Plan (the “Pension Plans”), does not exceed the value of the assets of the Pension Plan allocable to such vested benefits (based on the value of such assets as of the most recent annual financial statements reflecting such amounts), (ii) no non-exempt prohibited transactions, accumulated funding deficiencies, withdrawals or reportable events within the meaning of 4043 of ERISA, other than those events as to which the 30-day notice period referred to in Section 4043(c) of ERISA has been waived, (each a “Reportable Event”) have occurred with respect to any Pension Plans that, in the aggregate, could subject the Borrower to any material tax, penalty or other liability and (iii) no notice of intent to terminate a Pension Plan has been filed, nor has any Pension Plan been terminated under Section 4041(f) of ERISA, nor has the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation instituted proceedings to terminate, or appoint a trustee to administer a Pension Plan and no event has occurred or condition exists that might constitute grounds under Section 4042 of ERISA for the termination of, or the appointment of a trustee to administer, any Pension Plan.

 

(x) Compliance with Law. The Borrower has complied in all material respects with all Applicable Law to which it may be subject, and no item of Collateral contravenes any Applicable Law (including, without limitation, all applicable predatory and abusive lending laws, laws, rules and regulations relating to licensing, truth in lending, fair credit billing, fair credit reporting, equal credit opportunity, fair debt collection practices and privacy).

 

(y) No Material Adverse Effect. No event, change or condition has occurred that has had, or could reasonably be expected to have, a Material Adverse Effect on the Borrower since the Closing Date.

 

(z) Collections. The Borrower acknowledges that all Collections received by it or its Affiliates with respect to the Collateral transferred hereunder are held and shall be held in trust for the benefit of the Secured Parties until deposited into the Collection Account within two Business Days after receipt as required herein.

 

(aa) Full Payment. As of the initial Funding Date thereof, the Borrower had no knowledge of any fact which should lead it to expect that any Loan will not be repaid by the applicable Obligor in full.

 

(bb) Accuracy of Representations and Warranties. Each representation or warranty by the Borrower contained herein or in any report, financial statement, exhibit, schedule, certificate or other document furnished by the Borrower pursuant hereto, in connection herewith or in connection with the negotiation hereof is true and correct in all material respects as of the date made or deemed made.

 

(cc) Sanctions. None of the Borrower, any Person directly or indirectly Controlling the Borrower nor any Person directly or indirectly Controlled by the Borrower and, to the Borrower’s knowledge, no Affiliate of the foregoing (i) is a Sanctioned Person; (ii) is controlled by or is acting on behalf of a Sanctioned Person; (iii) is, to the Borrower’s knowledge, under investigation for an alleged breach of Sanction(s) by a governmental authority that enforces Sanctions; or (iv) will fund any repayment of the Obligations with proceeds derived from any transaction that would be prohibited by Sanctions or would otherwise cause any Lender or any other party to this Agreement, or, to the Borrower’s knowledge, any Related Party, to be in breach of any Sanctions. To the Borrower’s knowledge, no investor in the Borrower, any Person directly or indirectly Controlling the Borrower nor any Person directly or indirectly Controlled by the Borrower is a Sanctioned Person. The Borrower will notify each Lender and Administrative Agent in writing not more than one (1) Business Day after becoming aware of any breach of this section.

 

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(dd) Good Title. The Borrower has good and marketable title in the Collateral.

 

(ee) Beneficial Ownership Certification. As of the Closing Date, the information included in the Beneficial Ownership Certification is true and correct in all respects.

 

(ff) Benefit Plan Investor. The Borrower (i) is not a Benefit Plan Investor and (ii) is not a “governmental plan” within the meaning of Section 3(32) of ERISA (“Governmental Plan”), and neither the Borrower nor any transactions by or with the Borrower are subject to state statutes regulating investments of and fiduciary obligations with respect to Governmental Plans or to state statutes that impose prohibitions similar to those contained in Section 406 of ERISA or Section 4975 of the Code (“Similar Law”).

 

(gg) Proceeds of Crime (Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Act (Canada). The Borrower acknowledges that, pursuant to the Proceeds of Crime (Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Act (Canada) and other applicable anti-money laundering, anti-terrorist financing, government sanction and “know your client” laws (collectively, including any guidelines or others thereunder, “AML Legislation”), the Secured Parties may be required to obtain, verify and record information regarding the Borrower, its directors, authorized signing officers, direct or indirect shareholders or other Persons in control of the Borrower and/or the Collateral Manager, and the transactions contemplated hereby. The Collateral Manager shall promptly provide all such information (to the extent reasonably available to the Collateral Manager), including supporting documentation and other evidence, as may be reasonably requested by any Secured Party, or any prospective assignee or participant of a Secured Party, in order to comply with any applicable AML Legislation, whether now or hereafter in existence.

 

Section 4.2 Representations and Warranties of the Borrower Relating to this Agreement and the Collateral.

 

The Borrower hereby represents and warrants as of the Closing Date and as of each Funding Date:

 

(a) Valid Security Interest. This Agreement constitutes a valid grant of a security interest in all of the Collateral to the Collateral Agent, for the benefit of the Secured Parties, which security interest constitutes a valid and first priority perfected security interest in all of the Collateral (subject to Permitted Liens) in that portion of the Collateral in which a security interest may be created under Article 9 of the UCC as in effect from time to time in the State of New York.

 

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(b) Eligibility of Collateral. As of the Closing Date and each Funding Date, (i) the information contained in each Funding Notice delivered pursuant to Section 2.2, is an accurate and complete listing of all Loans included in the Collateral as of the related Funding Date and the information contained therein with respect to the identity of such Loans and the amounts owing thereunder is true, correct and complete as of the related Funding Date and (ii) with respect to each Loan included in the Collateral, each Loan is an Eligible Loan at such time.

 

(c) No Fraud. Each Loan originated by an unaffiliated third party was, to the best of the Borrower’s knowledge, originated without any fraud or material misrepresentation.

 

Section 4.3 Representations and Warranties of the Collateral Manager.

 

The Collateral Manager represents and warrants as follows as of the Closing Date, each Funding Date, and as of each other date provided under this Agreement or the other Transaction Documents on which such representations and warranties are required to be (or deemed to be) made:

 

(a) Organization and Good Standing. The Collateral Manager has been duly organized, and is validly existing as a limited liability company in good standing, under the laws of the State of Delaware, with all requisite limited liability company power and authority to own or lease its properties and conduct its business as such business is presently conducted.

 

(b) Due Qualification. The Collateral Manager is duly qualified to do business and is in good standing as a limited liability company, and has obtained all necessary qualifications, licenses and approvals, in all jurisdictions in which the ownership or lease of property or the conduct of its business requires such qualifications, licenses or approvals, except where the failure to be so qualified or obtain such qualifications, licenses or approvals would not reasonably be expected to have a Material Adverse Effect.

 

(c) Power and Authority; Due Authorization; Execution and Delivery. The Collateral Manager (i) has all necessary limited liability company power, authority and legal right to (a) execute and deliver each Transaction Document to which it is a party, and (b) carry out the terms of the Transaction Documents to which it is a party, and (ii) has duly authorized by all necessary limited liability company action, the execution, delivery and performance of each Transaction Document to which it is a party. This Agreement and each other Transaction Document to which the Collateral Manager is a party have been duly executed and delivered by the Collateral Manager.

 

(d) Binding Obligation. Each Transaction Document to which the Collateral Manager is a party constitutes a legal, valid and binding obligation of the Collateral Manager enforceable against the Collateral Manager in accordance with its respective terms, except as such enforceability may be limited by Insolvency Laws and general principles of equity (whether considered in a suit at law or in equity).

 

(e) No Violation. The consummation of the transactions contemplated by each Transaction Document to which it is a party and the fulfillment of the terms thereof will not (i) conflict with, result in any breach of any of the terms and provisions of, or constitute (with or without notice or lapse of time or both) a default under, the Collateral Manager’s certificate of formation, operating agreement or any Contractual Obligation of the Collateral Manager, (ii) result in the creation or imposition of any Lien upon any of the Collateral Manager’s properties pursuant to the terms of any such Contractual Obligation, or (iii) violate, in any material respect any Applicable Law.

 

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(f) No Proceedings. There is no litigation, proceeding or investigation pending or, to the knowledge of a Responsible Officer of the Collateral Manager threatened against the Collateral Manager, before any Governmental Authority (i) asserting the invalidity of any Transaction Document to which the Collateral Manager is a party, (ii) seeking to prevent the consummation of any of the transactions contemplated by any Transaction Document to which the Collateral Manager is a party or (iii) that could reasonably be expected to have a Material Adverse Effect.

 

(g) All Consents Required. All approvals, authorizations, consents, orders, licenses, filings or other actions of any Person or of any Governmental Authority (if any) required for the due execution, delivery and performance by the Collateral Manager of each Transaction Document to which the Collateral Manager is a party have been obtained.

 

(h) Reports Accurate. All information, financial statements of the Collateral Manager, documents, books, records or reports furnished by the Collateral Manager to the Administrative Agent, any Lender or the Collateral Agent in connection with this Agreement are true, complete and correct in all material respects; provided that, the Collateral Manager makes no representation with respect to any information furnished by an Obligor, the Borrower or the Seller or with respect to certification of information provided by the Borrower unless the Collateral Manager has also certified as to such information.

 

(i) Solvency. The Collateral Manager is not the subject of any Insolvency Proceedings or Insolvency Event. The transactions under the Transaction Documents to which the Collateral Manager is a party do not and will not render the Collateral Manager not Solvent and the Collateral Manager shall deliver to the Administrative Agent on the Closing Date a certification in the form of Exhibit C.

 

(j) No Fraud. Each Loan originated by an unaffiliated third party was, to the best of the Collateral Manager’s knowledge, originated without any fraud or material misrepresentation.

 

(k) Compliance with Law. The Collateral Manager has complied in all material respects with all Applicable Law to which it may be subject.

 

(l) Sanctions. None of the Collateral Manager, any Person directly or indirectly Controlling the Collateral Manager nor any Person directly or indirectly Controlled by the Collateral Manager and, to the Collateral Manager’s knowledge, no Affiliate of the foregoing (i) is a Sanctioned Person; (ii) is controlled by or is acting on behalf of a Sanctioned Person; (iii) is, to the Collateral Manager’s knowledge, under investigation for an alleged breach of Sanction(s) by a governmental authority that enforces Sanctions; or (iv) will fund any repayment of the Obligations with proceeds derived from any transaction that would be prohibited by Sanctions or would otherwise cause any Lender or any other party to this Agreement, or to the Collateral Manager’s knowledge, any Related Party, to be in breach of any Sanctions. To the Collateral Manager’s knowledge, no investor in the Collateral Manager, any person directly or indirectly Controlling the Collateral Manager nor any Person directly or indirectly Controlled by the Collateral Manager is a Sanctioned Person. The Collateral Manager will notify each Lender and Administrative Agent in writing not more than one (1) Business Day after becoming aware of any breach of this section.

 

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(m) No Material Adverse Effect. No event, change or condition has occurred that has had, or could reasonably be expected to have, a Material Adverse Effect on the Collateral Manager since the Closing Date.

 

Section 4.4 Representations and Warranties of the Collateral Agent.

 

The Collateral Agent in its individual capacity and as Collateral Agent represents and warrants as follows:

 

(a) Organization; Power and Authority. It is a duly organized and validly existing national banking association in good standing under the laws of the United States. It has full corporate power, authority and legal right to execute, deliver and perform its obligations as Collateral Agent under this Agreement.

 

(b) Due Authorization. The execution and delivery of this Agreement and the consummation of the transactions provided for herein have been duly authorized by all necessary association action on its part, either in its individual capacity or as Collateral Agent, as the case may be.

 

(c) No Conflict. The execution and delivery of this Agreement, the performance of the transactions contemplated hereby and the fulfillment of the terms hereof will not conflict with, result in any breach of its articles of incorporation or bylaws or any of the material terms and provisions of, or constitute (with or without notice or lapse of time or both) a default under any Contractual Obligation to which the Collateral Agent is a party or by which it or any of its property is bound.

 

(d) No Violation. The execution and delivery of this Agreement, the performance of the Transactions contemplated hereby and the fulfillment of the terms hereof will not conflict with or violate, in any material respect, any Applicable Law as to the Collateral Agent.

 

(e) All Consents Required. All approvals, authorizations, consents, orders or other actions of any Person or Governmental Authority applicable to the Collateral Agent, required in connection with the execution and delivery of this Agreement, the performance by the Collateral Agent of the transactions contemplated hereby and the fulfillment by the Collateral Agent of the terms hereof have been obtained.

 

(f) Validity, Etc. This Agreement constitutes the legal, valid and binding obligation of the Collateral Agent, enforceable against the Collateral Agent in accordance with its terms, except as such enforceability may be limited by applicable Insolvency Laws and general principles of equity (whether considered in a suit at law or in equity).

 

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(g) Corporate Collateral Agent Required; Eligibility. The Collateral Agent (including any successor Collateral Agent appointed pursuant to Section 7.5) hereunder (i) is a national banking association or banking corporation or trust company organized and doing business under the laws of any state or the United States, (ii) is authorized under such laws to exercise corporate trust powers, (iii) has a combined capital and surplus of at least $200,000,000, and (iv) is subject to supervision or examination by federal or state authority. If such banking association publishes reports of condition at least annually, pursuant to Applicable Law or the requirements of the aforesaid supervising or examining authority, then for the purposes of this Section 4.4(g) its combined capital and surplus shall be deemed to be as set forth in its most recent report of condition so published. In case at any time the Collateral Agent shall cease to be eligible in accordance with the provisions of this Section 4.4(g), the Collateral Agent shall give prompt notice to the Borrower, the Collateral Manager and the Lenders that it has ceased to be eligible to be the Collateral Agent.

 

Section 4.5 Representations and Warranties of the Seller.

 

The Seller hereby represents and warrants, as of the Closing Date and each date the Borrower acquires any Collateral from the Seller:

 

(a) Eligibility of Collateral. The Seller has conducted the due diligence and other review it considered necessary with respect to the Loans set forth on Schedule III and each other Loan acquired by the Borrower from the Seller. As of the Closing Date and each date the Borrower acquires any Collateral from the Seller, (i) each Loan included in the Borrowing Base is an Eligible Loan and (ii) each Loan included in the Collateral is free and clear of any Lien of any Person (other than Permitted Liens and any Lien which will be released contemporaneously with the acquisition thereof by the Borrower) and in compliance in all material respects with all Applicable Laws.

 

(b) No Fraud. Each Loan originated by an unaffiliated third party was, to the best of the knowledge of a Responsible Officer of the Seller, originated without any fraud or material misrepresentation.

 

(c) Sanctions. None of the Seller, any Person directly or indirectly Controlling the Seller nor any Person directly or indirectly Controlled by the Seller and, to the Seller’s knowledge, no Affiliate of the foregoing (i) is a Sanctioned Person; (ii) is controlled by or is acting on behalf of a Sanctioned Person; (iii) is, to the Seller’s knowledge, under investigation for an alleged breach of Sanction(s) by a governmental authority that enforces Sanctions; or (iv) will fund any repayment of the Obligations with proceeds derived from any transaction that would be prohibited by Sanctions or would otherwise cause any Lender or any other party to this Agreement, or any Related Party, to be in breach of any Sanctions. To the Seller’s knowledge, no investor in the Seller, any Person directly or indirectly Controlling the Seller nor any Person directly or indirectly Controlled by the Seller is a Sanctioned Person. The Seller will notify each Lender and Administrative Agent in writing not more than one (1) Business Day after becoming aware of any breach of this section.

 

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ARTICLE V

 

GENERAL COVENANTS

 

Section 5.1 Affirmative Covenants of the Borrower.

 

The Borrower covenants and agrees with the Lenders that during the Covenant Compliance Period:

 

(a) Compliance with Laws. The Borrower will comply in all material respects with all Applicable Laws, including those with respect to the Collateral or any part thereof.

 

(b) Preservation of Company Existence. The Borrower will (i) preserve and maintain its limited liability company existence, rights, franchises and privileges in the jurisdiction of its formation, (ii) qualify and remain qualified in good standing as a limited liability company in each jurisdiction where the failure to preserve and maintain such existence, rights, franchises, privileges and qualification would have, or could reasonably be expected to have, a Material Adverse Effect and (iii) maintain the Governing Documents of the Borrower in full force and effect and shall not amend the same in any manner adverse to the Lenders without the prior written consent of the Administrative Agent; provided that the Borrower shall be permitted to change its registered agent without the consent of (but with prior notice to) the Administrative Agent.

 

(c) Performance and Compliance with Collateral. The Borrower will, at the Borrower’s expense, timely and fully perform and comply (or, by exercising its rights thereunder, cause the Seller to perform and comply pursuant to the Sale Agreement) with all provisions, covenants and other promises required to be observed by it under the Collateral, the Transaction Documents and all other agreements related to such Collateral.

 

(d) Keeping of Records and Books of Account. The Borrower will (or will cause the Collateral Manager to) keep proper books of record and account in which full, true and correct entries in conformity with GAAP and all requirements of law are made of all dealings and transactions in relation to its business and activities. The Borrower will permit any representatives designated by the Administrative Agent to visit and inspect the financial records and the properties of such person during normal office hours and upon reasonable notice no more than twice in any fiscal year when no Event of Default is in existence; provided that after the occurrence of an Event of Default and during its continuance, there shall be no limit to the number of such visits and inspections, and after the resolution of such Event of Default, the number of visits occurring in the current fiscal quarter shall be deemed to be zero.

 

(e) Protection of Interest in Collateral. With respect to the Collateral acquired by the Borrower, the Borrower will (i) acquire such Collateral pursuant to and in accordance with the terms of the Sale Agreement or directly from an unaffiliated third party, (ii) at the Borrower’s expense, take all action necessary to perfect, protect and more fully evidence the Borrower’s ownership of such Collateral free and clear of any Lien other than the Lien created hereunder and Permitted Liens, including, without limitation, (a) with respect to the Loans and that portion of the Collateral in which a security interest may be perfected by filing and maintaining (at the Borrower’s expense), effective financing statements against the Seller in all necessary or appropriate filing offices, (including any amendments thereto or assignments thereof) and filing continuation statements, amendments or assignments with respect thereto in such filing offices, (including any amendments thereto or assignments thereof) and (b) executing or causing to be executed such other instruments or notices as may be necessary or appropriate, (iii) permit the Administrative Agent or its respective agents or representatives to visit the offices of the Borrower during normal office hours and upon reasonable notice examine and make copies of all documents, books, records and other information concerning the Collateral and discuss matters related thereto with any of the Responsible Officers of the Borrower having knowledge of such matters no more than twice in any fiscal year when no Event of Default is in existence, and (iv) take all additional action that the Administrative Agent may reasonably request to perfect, protect and more fully evidence the respective interests of the parties to this Agreement in the Collateral.

 

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(f) Deposit of Collections.

 

(i) The Borrower shall promptly (but in no event later than two (2) Business Days after receipt), or shall cause the Collateral Manager to, instruct each Obligor (or, with respect to any Agented Loan, the paying agent) to deliver all Collections in respect of the Collateral to the Collection Account. Any Scheduled Payment in respect of which a dishonored check is received shall be deemed not to have been paid.

 

(ii) The Borrower shall promptly (but in no event later than two (2) Business Days after receipt), or shall cause the Collateral Manager to, identify Principal Collections and Interest Collections no later than the Measurement Date related to the Payment Date immediately following such Collection Period, and direct the Collateral Agent and Securities Intermediary to transfer the same to the Principal Collection Account and the Interest Collection Account, respectively.

 

(g) Special Purpose Entity. The Borrower shall be in compliance with the special purpose entity requirements set forth in Section 4.1(u).

 

(h) Borrower’s Notice. On each Funding Date and on the date of each Reinvestment of Principal Collections pursuant to Section 2.14(a)(i) or acquisition by the Borrower of Loans in connection with a Substitution pursuant to Section 2.14(b), the Borrower will provide the applicable Borrower’s Notice and a Borrowing Base Certificate, each updated as of such date, to the Administrative Agent (with a copy to the Collateral Agent).

 

(i) Events of Default. Promptly following the actual knowledge or receipt of notice by a Responsible Officer of the Borrower of the occurrence of any Event of Default or Default, the Borrower will provide the Administrative Agent with written notice of the occurrence of such Event of Default or Default of which the Borrower has knowledge or has received notice. In addition, such notice will include a written statement of a Responsible Officer of the Borrower setting forth the details of such event (to the extent known by the Borrower) and the action, if any, that the Borrower proposes to take with respect thereto.

 

(j) Obligations. The Borrower shall pay its Indebtedness and other obligations promptly and in accordance with their terms except where the amount or validity thereof is currently being contested in good faith by appropriate proceedings and reserves with respect thereto have been provided on the books of the Borrower.

 

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(k) Taxes. The Borrower (i) will be treated as either (x) a domestic partnership (each of whose partners (as determined for U.S. federal income tax purposes) will be U.S. Persons) or (y) a disregarded entity of a U.S. Person for U.S. federal income tax purposes and (ii) will timely file or cause to be filed all material U.S. federal Tax returns and reports required to be filed by it and will pay or cause to be paid all material U.S. federal Taxes required to be paid by it, except, in each case, Taxes that are being contested in good faith by appropriate proceedings and for which the Borrower sets aside on its books adequate reserves in accordance with GAAP.

 

(l) Use of Proceeds. The Borrower will use the proceeds of the Advances only to acquire Eligible Loans, to make distributions to its member in accordance with the terms hereof or to pay related expenses (including expenses payable hereunder) in accordance with Sections 2.7 and 2.8.

 

(m) Obligor Notification Forms. The Administrative Agent may, in its discretion after the occurrence and during the continuance of a Collateral Manager Termination Event or an Event of Default pursuant to Section 9.1(a) or (b), and with two Business Days advance written notice to the Borrower, send notification forms giving the Obligors and/or agents on Agented Loans notice of the Collateral Agent’s interest in the Collateral and the obligation to make payments as directed by the Collateral Agent.

 

(n) Adverse Claims. The Borrower will not create, or participate in the creation of, or permit to exist, any Liens on any of the Accounts other than the Lien created by this Agreement.

 

(o) Notices. The Borrower will (or will cause the Collateral Manager to) furnish to the Administrative Agent:

 

(i) Auditors’ Management Letters. Promptly after the receipt thereof, any auditors’ management letters are received by the Borrower or by its accountants;

 

(ii) Representations and Warranties. Promptly after a Responsible Officer’s obtaining knowledge or notice of the same, the Borrower shall notify the Administrative Agent if any representation or warranty set forth in Section 4.1 or Section 4.2 was incorrect at the time it was given or deemed to have been given and at the same time deliver to the Administrative Agent a written notice setting forth in reasonable detail the nature of such facts and circumstances. In particular, but without limiting the foregoing, the Borrower shall notify the Administrative Agent in the manner set forth in the preceding sentence before any Funding Date of any facts or circumstances within the knowledge of a Responsible Officer of the Borrower which would render any of the said representations and warranties untrue as of such Funding Date;

 

(iii) ERISA. Promptly after receiving notice of any “reportable event” (as defined in Title IV of ERISA) with respect to the Borrower (or any ERISA Affiliate thereof), a copy of such notice;

 

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(iv) Proceedings. As soon as possible and in any event within three (3) Business Days after a Responsible Officer of the Borrower receives notice or obtains knowledge thereof, notice of any settlement of, material judgment (including a material judgment with respect to the liability phase of a bifurcated trial) in or commencement of any material labor controversy, material litigation, material action, material suit or material proceeding before any court or governmental department, commission, board, bureau, agency or instrumentality, domestic or foreign, affecting the Collateral, the Transaction Documents, the Collateral Agent’s interest in the Collateral, or the Borrower or the Equityholder; provided that notwithstanding the foregoing, any settlement, judgment, labor controversy, litigation, action, suit or proceeding affecting the Collateral, the Transaction Documents, the Collateral Agent’s interest in the Collateral, the Borrower or the Equityholder in excess of $1,000,000 or more shall be deemed to be material for purposes of this Section 5.1(o)(iv);

 

(v) Notice of Certain Events. Promptly upon a Responsible Officer of the Borrower becoming aware thereof (and, in any event, within three (3) Business Days, thereof), notice of (1) any Collateral Manager Termination Event, (2) any Assigned Value Adjustment Event, (3) any failure to comply with Section 5.1(s), (4) any other event or circumstance that could reasonably be expected to have a Material Adverse Effect, (5) any event or circumstance whereby any Loan which was included in the latest calculation of the Borrowing Base as an Eligible Loan shall fail to meet one or more of the criteria (other than criteria waived by the Administrative Agent, on or prior to the related Funding Date in respect of such Loan), or (6) unless notice of such default has been provided by the Collateral Manager under Section 5.3(j), the occurrence of any default by an Obligor on any Loan in the payment of principal or interest, a financial covenant default or that would result in an Assigned Value Adjustment Event;

 

(vi) Organizational Changes. As soon as possible and in any event within fifteen (15) Business Days after the effective date thereof, notice of any change in the name, jurisdiction of organization, organizational structure or location of records of the Borrower; provided that the Borrower agrees not to effect or permit any change referred to in the preceding sentence unless (x) all filings have been made under the UCC or otherwise that are required in order for the Collateral Agent to continue at all times following such change to have a valid, legal and perfected security interest in all the Collateral and (y) if such change could reasonably be expected to have a Material Adverse Effect, the Borrower has obtained the prior written consent of the Required Lenders; and

 

(vii) Accounting Changes. As soon as possible and in any event within ten (10) Business Days after the effective date thereof, notice of any change in the accounting policies of the Borrower.

 

(viii) [Reserved].

 

(ix) Notice of Liens. Promptly after receipt by a Responsible Officer of the Borrower of knowledge or notice thereof, the Borrower will promptly notify the Administrative Agent and the Collateral Agent of the existence of any Lien (including Liens for Taxes) other than Permitted Liens on any Collateral and the Borrower shall defend the right, title and interest of the Collateral Agent, for the benefit of the Secured Parties in, to and under the Collateral against all claims of third parties; provided that nothing in this Section 5.1(o)(ix) shall prevent or be deemed to prohibit the Borrower from suffering to exist Permitted Liens upon any of the Collateral.

 

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(p) Contest Recharacterization. The Borrower shall in good faith contest any attempt to recharacterize the treatment of the Loans as property of the bankruptcy estate of the Seller.

 

(q) Financial Statements. The Borrower shall (or shall cause the Equityholder to) furnish to the Administrative Agent for distribution to each Lender:

 

(i) for each fiscal year of the Equityholder commencing with the 2022 fiscal year, as soon as available, but in any event within 120 days after the end of such fiscal year of the Equityholder, a copy of the consolidated audited balance sheet of the Equityholder, as at the end of such year and the related statements of income and retained earnings and of cash flows for such year, reported on without a “going concern” or like qualification or exception, or qualification arising out of the scope of the audit, by an independent certified public accountants of nationally recognized standing; and

 

(ii) for each of the first three fiscal quarters of each fiscal year of the Equityholder commencing with the quarter ending in March 2022, as soon as available, but in any event within 60 days after the end of such fiscal quarter of the Equityholder, a copy of the consolidated unaudited balance sheet of the Equityholder, as at the end of such quarter and the related statements of income and retained earnings and of cash flows for such fiscal quarter.

 

(r) Certificates; Other Information. The Borrower shall furnish to the Administrative Agent for distribution to each Lender:

 

(i) [reserved];

 

(ii) within five (5) Business Days after the same are sent, copies of all financial statements and reports which the Borrower sends to its investors; and

 

(iii)   within five (5) Business Days after the same are filed, copies of all financial statements, filings and reports which the Borrower may make to, or file with, the SEC or any successor or analogous Governmental Authority.

 

(s) Further Assurances. The Borrower will execute any and all further documents, financing statements, agreements and instruments, and take all further action (including filing UCC and other financing statements, agreements or instruments) that may be required under applicable law, or that the Administrative Agent may reasonably request, in order to effectuate the transactions contemplated by the Transaction Documents and in order to grant, preserve, protect and perfect the validity and first priority (subject to Permitted Liens) of the security interests and Liens created or intended to be created hereby. Such security interests and Liens will be created hereunder and the Borrower shall deliver or cause to be delivered to the Administrative Agent all such instruments and documents (including legal opinions and lien searches) as it shall reasonably request to evidence compliance with this Section 5.1(s). The Borrower agrees to provide such evidence as the Administrative Agent shall reasonably request as to the perfection and priority status of each such security interest and Lien.

 

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(t) Non-Consolidation. The Borrower shall at all times refrain from any action, or conducting its affairs in a manner, that is likely to result in its separate existence being ignored or in its assets and liabilities being substantively consolidated with any other Person in a bankruptcy, reorganization or other insolvency proceeding, or that otherwise causes it to make incorrect any of the assumptions made by Paul Hastings LLP in its opinions delivered pursuant to Section 3.1.

 

(u) Loan Acquisitions. All Loans acquired by the Borrower shall be acquired from the Seller pursuant to the Sale Agreement or from an unaffiliated third party.

 

(v) Lien Searches Against Obligors. The Administrative Agent shall, at any time, have the right to run a UCC lien search against any Obligor. Each such UCC lien search shall be at the sole expense of the Borrower.

 

(w) Other. The Borrower will furnish to the Administrative Agent promptly, from time to time, such other information, documents, records or reports respecting the Collateral or the condition or operations, financial or otherwise, of the Borrower as the Administrative Agent may from time to time reasonably request in order to protect the interests of the Collateral Agent or the other Secured Parties under or as contemplated by this Agreement.

 

(x) Compliance with Anti-Money Laundering Laws and Anti-Corruption Laws. The Borrower shall, each Person directly or indirectly Controlling the Borrower and each Person directly or indirectly Controlled by the Borrower and, to the Borrower’s knowledge, any Affiliate of the foregoing shall: (i) comply with all applicable Anti–Money Laundering Laws and Anti-Corruption Laws in all material respects, and shall maintain policies and procedures reasonably designed to ensure compliance with the Anti-Money Laundering Laws and Anti-Corruption Laws; (ii) conduct the requisite due diligence in connection with the transactions contemplated herein for purposes of complying with the Anti-Money Laundering Laws, including with respect to the legitimacy of any applicable investor and the origin of the assets used by such investor to purchase the property in question, and will maintain sufficient information to identify any applicable investor for purposes of the Anti-Money Laundering Laws; (iii) ensure that it does not use any of the credit hereunder in violation of any Anti-Corruption Laws or Anti-Money Laundering Laws; and (iv) ensure it does not fund any repayment of the Obligations in violation of any Anti-Corruption Laws or Anti-Money Laundering Laws.

 

(y) Beneficial Ownership Regulation. Promptly following any request therefor, the Borrower shall deliver to the Administrative Agent information and documentation reasonably requested by the Administrative Agent or any Lender for purposes of compliance with the Beneficial Ownership Regulation.

 

(z) Notice of Benefit Plan Investor Status or Prohibited Transaction. The Borrower shall promptly notify the Administrative Agent and each Lender in the event the Borrower becomes a Benefit Plan Investor, in the event the Borrower becomes subject to state statutes regulating investments of or fiduciary obligations with respect to such governmental plans or to state statutes that impose prohibitions similar to those contained in Section 406 of ERISA or Section 4975 of the Code or in the event the Borrower has knowledge that this Agreement or any other action or transaction in connection with this Agreement or any other Transaction Document will constitute or result in a non-exempt prohibited transaction under Section 406 of ERISA or Section 4975 of the Code or a non-exempt violation of Similar Law.

 

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Section 5.2 Negative Covenants of the Borrower.

 

During the Covenant Compliance Period:

 

(a) Other Business. The Borrower will not (i) engage in any business other than (A) entering into and performing its obligations under the Transaction Documents and other activities contemplated by the Transaction Documents or incidental thereto, (B) the acquisition, ownership and management of the Collateral and (C) the sale of the Collateral as permitted hereunder, (ii) incur any Indebtedness, obligation, liability or contingent obligation of any kind other than pursuant to the Transaction Documents, or (iii) except as otherwise provided in Section 4.1(u)(v), form any Subsidiary or make any Investment in any other Person.

 

(b) Collateral Not to be Evidenced by Instruments. The Borrower will not take any action to cause any Loan that is not, as of the Closing Date or the related Funding Date, as the case may be, evidenced by an Instrument, to be so evidenced except in connection with the enforcement or collection of such Loan or unless such Instrument is promptly delivered to the Collateral Agent, together with an Indorsement in blank, as collateral security for such Loan.

 

(c) Security Interests. Except as otherwise permitted herein and in respect of any Discretionary Sale, Substitution, Optional Sale, or other sale permitted hereunder or required under the Sale Agreement, the Borrower will not sell, pledge, assign or transfer to any other Person, or grant, create, incur, assume or suffer to exist any Lien (other than Permitted Liens) on any Collateral, whether now existing or hereafter transferred hereunder, or any interest therein.

 

(d) Mergers, Acquisitions, Sales, etc. The Borrower will not be a party to any merger or consolidation, or purchase or otherwise acquire any of the assets or any stock of any class of, or any partnership or joint venture interest in, any other Person (excluding receipt of Equity Securities in the ordinary course of collection of a debt previously contracted in good faith), or sell, transfer, convey or lease any of its assets, or sell or assign with or without recourse any Collateral or any interest therein, other than as permitted or required pursuant to this Agreement (including as provided in Section 4.1(u)(iii)) or the Sale Agreement.

 

(e) Restricted Payments. The Borrower shall not make any Restricted Payments other than with respect to amounts the Borrower receives in accordance with Section 2.7, or Section 2.8 and any other provision of any Transaction Document which expressly requires or permits payments to be made to or amounts to be reimbursed to the Borrower.

 

(f) Change of Location of Underlying Instruments. The Borrower shall not, without the prior consent of the Administrative Agent, consent to the Collateral Agent moving any Certificated Securities or Instruments from the Collateral Agent’s offices set forth in Section 5.5(c) on the Closing Date, unless the Borrower has given at least ten (10) days’ written notice to the Administrative Agent and has taken all actions required under the UCC of each relevant jurisdiction in order to ensure that the Collateral Agent’s first priority perfected security interest (subject to Permitted Liens) continues in effect.

 

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(g) ERISA Matters. The Borrower will not (i) engage or permit any ERISA Affiliate to engage in any prohibited transaction for which an exemption is not available or has not previously been obtained from the United States Department of Labor, (ii) permit to exist any accumulated funding deficiency, as defined in Section 302(a) of ERISA and Section 412(a) of the Code, or funding deficiency with respect to any Pension Plan other than a Multiemployer Plan, (iii) fail to make or permit any ERISA Affiliate to fail to make, any payments to a Multiemployer Plan that the Borrower or any ERISA Affiliate may be required to make under the agreement relating to such Multiemployer Plan or any law pertaining thereto, (iv) terminate any Pension Plan so as to result in any liability, (v) permit to exist any occurrence of any Reportable Event with respect to a Pension Plan or (vi) become a Benefit Plan Investor.

 

(h) Limited Liability Company Agreement. The Borrower will not amend, modify, waive or terminate any provision of its limited liability company agreement without (x) the prior written consent of the Administrative Agent and (y) if such amendment, modification, waiver or termination is materially adverse to the interests of the Lenders, the prior written consent of the Required Lenders.

 

(i) Changes in Payment Instructions to Obligors. The Borrower will not make any change, or permit the Collateral Manager to make any change, in its instructions to Obligors (or agents on any Agented Loan) regarding payments to be made with respect to the Collateral to the Collection Account, unless the Administrative Agent has consented to such change.

 

(j) Preservation of Security Interest. The Borrower (at its expense) hereby authorizes the Collateral Agent to file such financing and continuation statements and any other documents that may be required by any law or regulation of any Governmental Authority to preserve and protect fully the first priority perfected ownership and security interest of the Collateral Agent for the benefit of the Secured Parties in, to and under the Loans and proceeds thereof and that portion of the Collateral in which a security interest may be perfected by filing.

 

(k) Fiscal Year. The Borrower shall not change its fiscal year or method of accounting without providing the Administrative Agent with at least fifteen (15) days’ prior written notice (i) providing a detailed explanation of such changes and (ii) including a pro forma financial statements demonstrating the impact of such change.

 

(l) Change of Control. The Borrower shall not enter into (or, to the extent permitted by Applicable Law, recognize as a member of the Borrower any transferee in connection with) any transaction or agreement or any sale, assignment or transfer (whether direct or indirect) which results in a Change of Control with respect to the Borrower.

 

(m) Ownership. The Borrower shall not have any owner other than the Equityholder and shall not permit the Equityholder to incur any Lien on the Capital Stock of the Borrower.

 

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(n) Compliance with Sanctions. None of the Borrower, any Person directly or indirectly Controlling the Borrower nor any Person directly or indirectly Controlled by the Borrower and, to the Borrower’s knowledge, no Affiliate of the foregoing will, directly or indirectly, use the proceeds of any Advance hereunder, or lend, contribute, or otherwise make available such proceeds to any subsidiary, joint venture partner, or other Person (i) to fund any activities or business of or with a Sanctioned Person, or (ii) in any manner that would be prohibited by Sanctions or would otherwise cause any Lender to be in breach of any Sanctions. Each Person shall comply with all applicable Sanctions in all material respects, and shall maintain policies and procedures reasonably designed to ensure compliance with Sanctions. Each Person will notify each Lender and the Administrative Agent in writing not more than one (1) Business Day after becoming aware of any breach of this section.

 

Section 5.3 Affirmative Covenants of the Collateral Manager.

 

The Collateral Manager covenants and agrees with the Borrower and the Lenders that during the Covenant Compliance Period:

 

(a) Compliance with Law. The Collateral Manager will comply in all material respects with all Applicable Law, including those with respect to the performance of its obligations under this Agreement.

 

(b) Preservation of Company Existence. The Collateral Manager will (i) preserve and maintain its company existence, rights, franchises and privileges in the jurisdiction of its formation and (ii) qualify and remain qualified in good standing as a limited liability company in each jurisdiction where the failure to preserve and maintain such existence, rights, franchises, privileges and qualification has had, or could reasonably be expected to have, a Material Adverse Effect.

 

(c) Performance and Compliance with Collateral. The Collateral Manager will exercise its rights hereunder in order to permit the Borrower to duly fulfill and comply with all obligations on the part of the Borrower to be fulfilled or complied with under or in connection with each item of Collateral and will take all necessary action to preserve the first priority security interest of the Collateral Agent for the benefit of the Secured Parties in the Collateral.

 

(d) Keeping of Records and Books of Account.

 

(i) The Collateral Manager will maintain and implement administrative and operating procedures (including, without limitation, an ability to recreate records evidencing Collateral in the event of the destruction of the originals thereof), and keep and maintain all documents, books, records and other information reasonably necessary or advisable for the collection of all Collateral and the identification of the Collateral.

 

(ii) The Collateral Manager shall permit the Borrower, the Administrative Agent or their respective designated representatives, to visit the offices of the Collateral Manager during normal office hours and upon reasonable notice and examine and make copies of all documents, books, records and other information concerning the Collateral and discuss matters related thereto with any of the officers or employees of the Collateral Manager having knowledge of such matters; provided, that the Borrower and the Collateral Manager shall not be liable to the Administrative Agent for costs or expenses related to more than two such visits in any calendar year.

 

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(iii) The Collateral Manager will on or prior to the date hereof, mark its master data processing records and other books and records relating to the Collateral indicating that the Loans are owned by the Borrower subject to the Lien of the Collateral Agent for the benefit of the Secured Parties hereunder.

 

(iv) The Collateral Manager will cooperate with the Borrower and provide all information in its possession or reasonably available to it to the Borrower or any Person designated by the Borrower to receive such information so the Borrower may comply with and perform its obligations under the Transaction Documents.

 

(e) Events of Default. Promptly following the Collateral Manager’s knowledge or notice of the occurrence of any Event of Default or Default, the Collateral Manager will provide the Borrower and the Administrative Agent with written notice of the occurrence of such Event of Default or Default of which the Collateral Manager has knowledge or has received notice. In addition, such notice will include a written statement of a Responsible Officer of the Collateral Manager setting forth the details (to the extent known by the Collateral Manager) of such event and the action, if any, that the Collateral Manager proposes to take with respect thereto.

 

(f) Reserved.

 

(g) Other. The Collateral Manager will promptly furnish to the Borrower and the Administrative Agent such other information, documents, records or reports respecting the Collateral or the condition or operations, financial or otherwise, of the Collateral Manager as the Administrative Agent may from time to time reasonably request in order to protect the interests of the Administrative Agent, the Collateral Agent or the Secured Parties under or as contemplated by this Agreement.

 

(h) Proceedings. The Collateral Manager will furnish to the Administrative Agent, as soon as possible and in any event within three (3) Business Days after the Collateral Manager receives notice or obtains knowledge thereof, notice of any settlement of, material judgment (including a material judgment with respect to the liability phase of a bifurcated trial) in or commencement of any material labor controversy, material litigation, material action, material suit or material proceeding before any court or governmental department, commission, board, bureau, agency or instrumentality, domestic or foreign, affecting the Collateral, the Transaction Documents, the Collateral Agent’s interest in the Collateral, the Collateral Manager, or the Seller; provided that notwithstanding the foregoing, any settlement, judgment, labor controversy, litigation, action, suit or proceeding affecting the Collateral, the Transaction Documents, the Collateral Agent’s interest in the Collateral, the Borrower, the Collateral Manager, or the Seller in excess of $1,000,000 or more shall be deemed to be material for purposes of this Section 5.3(h).

 

(i) Deposit of Collections. The Collateral Manager shall (and shall cause each of its Affiliates to) promptly, but in any event within two (2) Business Days after its receipt thereof, deposit any Collections received by it into the Collection Account and provide the related Obligor with instructions to remit payments directly to the Collection Account as required herein.

 

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(j) Required Notices. The Collateral Manager will furnish to the Borrower and the Administrative Agent, promptly upon becoming aware thereof (and, in any event, within two (2) Business Days), notice of (1) any Collateral Manager Termination Event, (2) any Assigned Value Adjustment Event, (3) any Change of Control with respect to the Collateral Manager, (4) any other event or circumstance with respect to the Collateral Manager that could reasonably be expected to have a Material Adverse Effect, (5) any event or circumstance whereby any Loan which was included in the latest calculation of the Borrowing Base as an Eligible Loan shall fail to meet one or more of the criteria (other than criteria waived by the Administrative Agent, on or prior to the related Funding Date in respect of such Loan) listed in the definition of “Eligible Loan”, (6) the occurrence of any default by an Obligor on any Loan in the payment of principal or interest, a financial covenant default or that would result in an Assigned Value Adjustment Event, (7) any change or amendment to the Collateral Manager LLC Agreement that would result in a Material Adverse Effect or (8) the existence of any Lien (including Liens for Taxes) other than Permitted Liens on any Collateral.

 

(k) Accounting Changes. As soon as possible and in any event within three (3) Business Days after the effective date thereof, the Collateral Manager will provide to the Administrative Agent notice of any change in the accounting policies of the Collateral Manager that could reasonably be expected to result in a Material Adverse Effect.

 

(l) Loan Register. The Collateral Manager will maintain, or cause to be maintained, with respect to each Noteless Loan a register (each, a “Loan Register”) in which it will record, or cause to be recorded, (v) the principal amount of such Noteless Loan, (w) the amount of any principal or interest due and payable or to become due and payable from the Obligor thereunder, (x) the amount of any sum in respect of such Noteless Loan received from the related Obligor, (y) the date of origination of such Noteless Loan and (z) the maturity date of such Noteless Loan. At any time a Noteless Loan is included in the Collateral, the Collateral Manager shall deliver to the Borrower, the Administrative Agent and the Collateral Agent a copy of the related Loan Register, together with a certificate of a Responsible Officer of the Collateral Manager certifying to the accuracy of such Loan Register as of the date of acquisition of such Noteless Loan by the Borrower, all of which information may be included in the applicable Borrowing Base Certificate.

 

(m) Compliance with Anti-Money Laundering Laws and Anti-Corruption Laws. The Collateral Manager, each Person directly or indirectly Controlling the Collateral Manager and each Person directly or indirectly Controlled by the Collateral Manager and, to the Collateral Manager’s knowledge, any Related Party of the foregoing shall: (i) comply with all applicable Anti-Money Laundering Laws and Anti-Corruption Laws in all material respects, and shall maintain policies and procedures reasonably designed to ensure compliance with the Anti-Money Laundering Laws and Anti-Corruption Laws; (ii) conduct the requisite due diligence in connection with the transactions contemplated herein for purposes of complying with the Anti-Money Laundering Laws, including with respect to the legitimacy of any applicable investor and the origin of the assets used by such investor to purchase the property in question, and will maintain sufficient information to identify any applicable investor for purposes of the Anti-Money Laundering Laws; (iii) ensure that it does not use any of the credit hereunder in violation of any Anti-Corruption Laws or Anti-Money Laundering Laws; and (iv) ensure it does not fund any repayment of the Obligations in violation of any Anti-Corruption Laws or Anti-Money Laundering Laws.

 

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(n) Sanctions. The Collateral Manager shall promptly, but no later than one (1) Business Day after becoming aware thereof, notify the Administrative Agent and the Lenders in writing of any breach of any representation, warranty or covenant relating to Sanctions or Sanctioned Persons by itself or by the Borrower.

 

Section 5.4 Negative Covenants of the Collateral Manager.

 

During the Covenant Compliance Period:

 

(a) Mergers, Acquisition, Sales, etc. The Collateral Manager will not consolidate with or merge into any other Person or convey or transfer its properties and assets substantially as an entirety to any Person, unless the Collateral Manager is the surviving entity and unless:

 

(i) the Collateral Manager has delivered to the Administrative Agent an Officer’s Certificate and an Opinion of Counsel each stating that any such consolidation, merger, conveyance or transfer and any supplemental agreement executed in connection therewith comply with this Section 5.4 and that all conditions precedent herein provided for relating to such transaction have been complied with and, in the case of the Opinion of Counsel, that such supplemental agreement is legal, valid and binding with respect to the Collateral Manager and such other matters as the Administrative Agent may reasonably request;

 

(ii) the Collateral Manager shall have delivered notice of such consolidation, merger, conveyance or transfer to the Administrative Agent;

 

(iii) after giving effect thereto, no Event of Default or Collateral Manager Default or event that with notice or lapse of time would constitute either an Event of Default or a Collateral Manager Default shall have occurred; and

 

(iv) the Administrative Agent has consented in writing to such consolidation, merger, conveyance or transfer.

 

(b) Change of Location of Underlying Instruments. The Collateral Manager shall not, without the prior consent of the Administrative Agent, consent to the Collateral Agent moving any Certificated Securities or Instruments from the Collateral Agent’s offices set forth in Section 5.5(c) on the Closing Date, unless the Collateral Manager has given at least ten (10) days’ written notice to the Administrative Agent and has authorized the Administrative Agent to take all actions required under the UCC of each relevant jurisdiction in order to continue the first priority perfected security interest of the Collateral Agent for the benefit of the Secured Parties in the Collateral.

 

(c) Change in Payment Instructions to Obligors. The Collateral Manager will not make any change in its instructions to Obligors or agents of Agented Loans regarding payments to be made with respect to the Collateral to the Collection Account, unless the Administrative Agent, the Collateral Agent and, so long as no Event of Default has occurred and is continuing, the Borrower, have consented to such change.

 

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(d) Compliance with Sanctions. None of the Collateral Manager, any Person directly or indirectly Controlling the Collateral Manager nor any Person directly or indirectly Controlled by the Collateral Manager and, to the Collateral Manager’s knowledge, no Affiliate of the foregoing will, directly or indirectly, use the proceeds of any Advance hereunder, or lend, contribute, or otherwise make available such proceeds to any subsidiary, joint venture partner, or other Person (i) to fund any activities or business of or with a Sanctioned Person, or (ii) in any manner that would be prohibited by Sanctions or would otherwise cause any Lender to be in breach of any Sanctions. Each Person shall comply with all applicable Sanctions in all material respects, and shall maintain policies and procedures reasonably designed to ensure compliance with Sanctions. Each Person will notify each Lender and the Administrative Agent in writing not more than one (1) Business Day after becoming aware of any breach of this section.

 

Section 5.5 Affirmative Covenants of the Collateral Agent.

 

During the Covenant Compliance Period:

 

(a) Compliance with Law. The Collateral Agent will comply in all material respects with all Applicable Law.

 

(b) Preservation of Existence. The Collateral Agent will preserve and maintain its existence, rights, franchises and privileges in the jurisdiction of its formation and qualify and remain qualified in good standing in each jurisdiction where failure to preserve and maintain such existence, rights, franchises, privileges and qualification has had, or could reasonably be expected to have, a Material Adverse Effect.

 

(c) Location of Underlying Instruments. Subject to Section 7.8, the Underlying Instruments shall remain at all times in the possession of the Collateral Agent or the Custodian at the address set forth on Annex A hereto, unless notice of a different address is given in accordance with the terms hereof or unless the Administrative Agent agrees to allow certain Underlying Instruments to be released to the Collateral Manager on a temporary basis in accordance with the terms hereof, except as such Underlying Instruments may be released pursuant to this Agreement.

 

(d) Corporate Collateral Agent Required; Eligibility. The Collateral Agent (including any successor Collateral Agent appointed pursuant to Section 7.5) hereunder shall at all times (i) be a national banking association or banking corporation or trust company organized and doing business under the laws of any state or the United States, (ii) be authorized under such laws to exercise corporate trust powers, (iii) have a combined capital and surplus of at least $200,000,000, and (iv) be subject to supervision or examination by federal or state authority. If such banking association publishes reports of condition at least annually, pursuant to Applicable Law or the requirements of the aforesaid supervising or examining authority, then for the purposes of this Section 5.5(d) its combined capital and surplus shall be deemed to be as set forth in its most recent report of condition so published. In case at any time the Collateral Agent shall cease to be eligible in accordance with the provisions of this Section 5.5(d), the Collateral Agent shall give prompt notice to the Borrower, the Collateral Manager and the Lenders that it has ceased to be eligible to be the Collateral Agent.

 

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Section 5.6 Negative Covenants of the Collateral Agent.

 

During the Covenant Compliance Period:

 

(a) Underlying Instruments. The Collateral Agent will not dispose of any documents constituting the Underlying Instruments in any manner that is inconsistent with the performance of its obligations as the Collateral Agent pursuant to this Agreement and will not dispose of any Collateral except as contemplated by this Agreement.

 

(b) No Changes to Collateral Agent Fee. The Collateral Agent will not make any changes to the Collateral Agent Fee set forth in the Collateral Agent and Custodian Fee Letter without the prior written approval of the Administrative Agent and the Borrower.

 

Section 5.7 Covenant of the Seller.

 

(a) Notice. Promptly after the knowledge or receipt of notice of a Responsible Officer of the Seller of the same, the Seller shall notify the Administrative Agent and the Borrower if any representation or warranty set forth in Section 4.5 was incorrect at the time it was given or deemed to have been given and at the same time deliver to the Administrative Agent a written notice setting forth in reasonable detail the nature of such facts and circumstances. The Seller shall notify the Administrative Agent and the Borrower in the manner set forth in the preceding sentence before any Funding Date of any facts or circumstances within the knowledge of a Responsible Officer of the Seller which would render any of the said representations and warranties untrue as of such Funding Date.

 

(b) Negative Pledge. The Seller shall not permit any Person to have a Lien over the Capital Stock of the Borrower.

 

(c) Financial Statements. The Seller shall furnish to the Administrative Agent and each Lender (which may not be distributed to any other Person without the Seller’s prior written consent) for each fiscal year of the Seller commencing with the 2022 fiscal year, as soon as available, but in any event within 120 days after the end of each fiscal year of the Seller, a copy of the audited balance sheet of the Seller as at the end of such year and any other related information reasonably requested by the Administrative Agent and not, in the Seller’s reasonable determination, deemed private or sensitive information, or such alternative information that the Seller reasonably believes would satisfy the Administrative Agent’s request, reported on without a “going concern” or like qualification or exception, or qualification arising out of the scope of the audit, by an independent certified public accountants of nationally recognized standing.

 

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ARTICLE VI

 

COLLATERAL ADMINISTRATION

 

Section 6.1 Appointment of the Collateral Manager.

 

The Collateral Manager is hereby appointed as collateral manager and servicing agent of the Borrower for the purpose of performing certain collateral management functions including, without limitation, directing and supervising the investment and reinvestment of the Loans and Permitted Investments, servicing the Collateral, enforcing the Borrower’s rights and remedies in, to and under the Collateral and performing certain administrative functions on behalf of the Borrower delegated to it under this Agreement and in accordance with the applicable provisions of the Transaction Documents, and the Collateral Manager hereby accepts such appointment. The Collateral Manager shall have the power to execute and deliver all necessary and appropriate documents and instruments on behalf of the Borrower in connection with performing its obligations set forth herein. Except as may otherwise be expressly provided in this Agreement, the Collateral Manager will perform its obligations hereunder in accordance with the Collateral Manager Standard. The Collateral Manager and the Borrower hereby acknowledge that the Collateral Agent, the Administrative Agent, the Equityholder and the other Secured Parties are third party beneficiaries of the obligations undertaken by the Collateral Manager hereunder.

 

Section 6.2 Duties of the Collateral Manager.

 

(a) Duties. Subject to the provisions concerning its general duties and obligations as set forth in Section 6.1 and the terms of this Agreement, the Collateral Manager agrees to manage the investment and reinvestment of the Collateral and shall perform on behalf of the Borrower all duties and functions assigned to the Borrower in this Agreement and the other Transaction Documents and the duties that have been expressly delegated to the Collateral Manager in this Agreement; it being understood that the Collateral Manager shall have no obligation hereunder to perform any duties other than as specified herein and in the other Transaction Documents. The Borrower hereby irrevocably (except as provided below) appoints the Collateral Manager as its true and lawful agent and attorney-in-fact (with full power of substitution) in its name, place and stead in connection with the performance of its duties provided for in this Agreement, including, without limitation, the following powers: (A) to give or cause to be given any necessary receipts or acquittance for amounts collected or received hereunder, (B) to make or cause to be made all necessary transfers of the Loans, Equity Securities and Permitted Investments in connection with any acquisition, sale or other disposition made pursuant hereto, (C) to execute (under hand, under seal or as a deed) and deliver or cause to be executed and delivered on behalf of the Borrower all necessary or appropriate bills of sale, assignments, agreements and other instruments in connection with any such acquisition, sale or other disposition and (D) to execute (under hand, under seal or as a deed) and deliver or cause to be executed and delivered on behalf of the Borrower any consents, votes, proxies, waivers, notices, amendments, modifications, agreements, instruments, orders or other documents in connection with or pursuant to this Agreement and relating to any Loan, Equity Security or Permitted Investment. The Borrower hereby ratifies and confirms all that such attorney-in-fact (or any substitute) shall lawfully do hereunder and pursuant hereto and authorizes such attorney-in-fact to exercise full discretion and act for the Borrower in the same manner and with the same force and effect as the managers or officers of the Borrower might or could do in respect of the performance of such services, as well as in respect of all other things the Collateral Manager deems necessary or incidental to the furtherance or conduct of the Collateral Manager’s services under this Agreement, subject in each case to the applicable terms of this Agreement. The Borrower hereby authorizes such attorney-in-fact, in its sole discretion (but subject to applicable law and the provisions of this Agreement), to take all actions that it considers reasonably necessary and appropriate in respect of the Loans, the Equity Securities, the Permitted Investments and this Agreement. Nevertheless, if so requested by the Collateral Manager or a purchaser of any Loan, Equity Security or Permitted Investment, the Borrower shall ratify and confirm any such sale or other disposition by executing and delivering to the Collateral Manager or such purchaser all proper bills of sale, assignments, releases, powers of attorney, proxies, dividends, other orders and other instruments as may reasonably be designated in any such request. Except as otherwise set forth and provided for herein, this grant of power of attorney is coupled with an interest, and it shall survive and not be affected by the subsequent dissolution or bankruptcy of the Borrower. Notwithstanding anything herein to the contrary, the appointment herein of the Collateral Manager as the Borrower’s agent and attorney-in-fact shall automatically cease and terminate upon the resignation of the Collateral Manager pursuant to Section 6.10 or any termination and removal of the Collateral Manager pursuant to Section 6.11. Each of the Collateral Manager and the Borrower shall take such other actions, and furnish such certificates, opinions and other documents, as may be reasonably requested by the other party hereto in order to effectuate the purposes of this Agreement and to facilitate compliance with applicable laws and regulations and the terms of this Agreement. The Collateral Manager shall provide, and is hereby authorized to provide, the following services to the Borrower:

 

(i) select the Loans and Permitted Investments to be acquired and select the Loans, Equity Securities and Permitted Investments to be sold or otherwise disposed of by the Borrower;

 

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(ii) invest and reinvest the Collateral;

 

(iii) instruct the Collateral Agent with respect to any acquisition, disposition, or tender of, or Offer with respect to, a Loan, Equity Security, Permitted Investment or other assets received in respect thereof by the Borrower;

 

(iv) perform the investment-related duties and functions (including, without limitation, the furnishing of Funding Notices, Repayment Notices, Reinvestment Notices, Borrowing Base Certificates and other notices and certificates that the Collateral Manager is required to deliver on behalf of the Borrower) as are expressly required to be performed by the Collateral Manager hereunder with regard to acquisitions, sales or other dispositions of Loans, Equity Securities, Permitted Investments and other assets permitted to be acquired or sold under, and subject to this Agreement (including any proceeds received by way of Offers, workouts and restructurings on Loan or other assets owned by the Borrower) and shall comply with any applicable requirements required to be performed by the Collateral Manager in this Agreement with respect thereto;

 

(v) negotiate on behalf of the Borrower with prospective originators, sellers or purchasers of Loans as to the terms relating to the acquisition, sale or other dispositions thereof;

 

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(vi) subject to any applicable terms of this Agreement, monitor the Collateral on behalf of the Borrower on an ongoing basis and shall provide or cause to be provided to the Borrower copies of all reports, schedules and other data reasonably available to the Collateral Manager that the Borrower is required to prepare and deliver or cause to be prepared and delivered under this Agreement, in such forms and containing such information required thereby, in reasonably sufficient time for such required reports, schedules and data to be reviewed and delivered by or on behalf of the Borrower to the parties entitled thereto under this Agreement. The obligation of the Collateral Manager to furnish such information is subject to the Collateral Manager’s timely receipt of necessary reports and the appropriate information from the Person responsible for the delivery of or preparation of such information or such reports (including without limitation, the Obligors of the Loans, the Borrower, the Collateral Agent, the Administrative Agent or any Lender) and to any confidentiality restrictions with respect thereto. The Collateral Manager shall be entitled to rely upon, and shall not incur any liability for relying upon, any notice, request, certificate, consent, statement, instrument, document or other writing reasonably believed by it to be genuine and to have been signed or sent by a Person that the Collateral Manager has no reason to believe is not duly authorized. The Collateral Manager also may rely upon any statement made to it orally or by telephone and made by a Person the Collateral Manager has no reason to believe is not duly authorized, and shall not incur any liability for relying thereon. The Collateral Manager is entitled to rely on any other information furnished to it by third parties that it reasonably believes in good faith to be genuine provided that no Responsible Officer of the Collateral Manager has knowledge that such information is materially incorrect;

 

(vii) subject to and in accordance with this Agreement, as agent of the Borrower and on behalf of the Borrower, direct the Collateral Agent to take, or take on behalf of the Borrower, as applicable, any of the following actions with respect to a Loan, Equity Security or Permitted Investment:

 

(1) purchase or otherwise acquire such Loan or Permitted Investment;

 

(2) retain such Loan, Equity Security or Permitted Investment;

 

(3) sell or otherwise dispose of such Loan, Equity Security or Permitted Investment (including any assets received by way of Offers, workouts and restructurings on assets owned by the Borrower) in the open market or otherwise;

 

(4) if applicable, tender such Loan, Equity Security or Permitted Investment;

 

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(5) if applicable, consent to or refuse to consent to any proposed amendment, modification, restructuring, exchange, waiver or Offer and give or refuse to give any notice or direction;

 

(6) retain or dispose of any securities or other property (if other than cash) received by the Borrower;

 

(7) call or waive any default with respect to any Loan;

 

(8) vote to accelerate the maturity of any Loan;

 

(9) participate in a committee or group formed by creditors of an Obligor under a Loan or issuer or obligor of a Permitted Investment;

 

(10) after the occurrence of the Collection Date, determine in consultation with the Borrower when, in the view of the Collateral Manager, it would be in the best interest of the Borrower to liquidate all or any portion of the Collateral (and, if applicable, after discharge of the Lien of the Collateral Agent in the Collateral under this Agreement) and, subject to the prior approval of the Borrower, execute on behalf of the Borrower any such liquidation or any actions necessary to effectuate any of the foregoing;

 

(11) advise and assist the Borrower with respect to the valuation of the Loans, to the extent required or permitted by this Agreement, and advise and assist the Equityholder with respect to the valuation of the Borrower; and

 

(12) exercise any other rights or remedies with respect to such Loan, Equity Security or Permitted Investment as provided in the Underlying Instruments of the Obligor or issuer under such assets or the other documents governing the terms of such assets or take any other action consistent with the terms of this Agreement which the Collateral Manager reasonably determines to be in the best interests of the Borrower.

 

(viii) The Collateral Manager may, but shall not be obligated to:

 

(1) retain accounting, tax, legal and other professional services on behalf of the Borrower as may be needed by the Borrower; and/or

 

(2) consult on behalf of the Borrower with the Collateral Agent, the Administrative Agent and the Lenders at such times as may be reasonably requested thereby in accordance with this Agreement and provide any such Person requesting the same with the information they are then entitled to have in accordance with this Agreement;

 

(ix) in connection with the purchase of any Loan by the Borrower, the Collateral Manager shall prepare, on behalf of the Borrower, the information required to be delivered to the Collateral Agent with respect to such Loan, the Administrative Agent or any other Lender pursuant to this Agreement.

 

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(x) prepare and submit claims to, and act as post-billing liaison with, Obligors on each Loan (for which no administrative or similar agent exists);

 

(xi) maintain all necessary records and reports with respect to the Collateral and provide such reports to the Borrower and the Administrative Agent in respect of the management and administration of the Collateral (including information relating to its performance under this Agreement) as may be required hereunder or as the Borrower or the Administrative Agent may reasonably request;

 

(xii) maintain and implement administrative and operating procedures (including, without limitation, an ability to recreate management and administration records evidencing the Collateral in the event of the destruction of the originals thereof) and keep and maintain all documents, books, records and other information reasonably necessary or advisable for the collection of the Collateral;

 

(xiii) promptly deliver to the Borrower, the Administrative Agent or the Collateral Agent, from time to time, such information and management and administration records (including information relating to its performance under this Agreement) as such Person may from time to time reasonably request;

 

(xiv) identify each Loan clearly and unambiguously in its records to reflect that such Loan is owned by the Borrower and that the Borrower has granted a security interest therein to the Collateral Agent for the benefit of the Secured Parties pursuant to this Agreement;

 

(xv) notify the Borrower and the Administrative Agent promptly upon obtaining knowledge of any material action, suit, proceeding, dispute, offset, deduction, defense or counterclaim (1) that is or is threatened to be asserted by an Obligor with respect to any Loan (or portion thereof) of which it has knowledge or has received notice; or (2) that could reasonably be expected to have a Material Adverse Effect;

 

(xvi) assist the Borrower in maintaining the first priority, perfected security interest (subject to Permitted Liens) of the Collateral Agent, for the benefit of the Secured Parties, in the Collateral;

 

(xvii) maintain the Loan File(s) with respect to Loans included as part of the Collateral; provided that upon the occurrence of an Event of Default or a Collateral Manager Termination Event, the Administrative Agent may request the Loan File(s) to be sent to the Collateral Agent or its designee;

 

(xviii) with respect to each Loan included as part of the Collateral, make the applicable Loan File available for inspection by the Borrower or the Administrative Agent, upon reasonable advance notice, at the offices of the Collateral Manager during normal business hours; and

 

(xix) direct the Collateral Agent to make payments pursuant to the instructions set forth in the latest Payment Date Statement in accordance with Section 2.7 and Section 2.8 and prepare such other reports as required to be prepared by the Collateral Manager pursuant to Section 6.8.

 

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It is acknowledged and agreed that the Borrower possesses only such rights with respect to the enforcement of rights and remedies with respect to the Loans and the Underlying Assets and under the Underlying Instruments as have been transferred to the Borrower with respect to the related Loan, and therefore, for all purposes under this Agreement, the Collateral Manager shall perform its administrative and management duties hereunder only to the extent that, as a lender under the related loan syndication Underlying Instruments, it has the right to do so.

 

(b) In performing its duties hereunder and when exercising its discretion and judgment in connection with any transactions involving the Loans, Equity Securities or Permitted Investments, the Collateral Manager shall carry out any reasonable written directions of the Borrower for the purpose of preventing a breach of this Agreement or any other Transaction Document; provided that such directions are not inconsistent with any provision of this Agreement by which the Collateral Manager is bound or Applicable Law.

 

(c) In providing services hereunder, the Collateral Manager may, without the consent of any party but with prior written notice to each of the Borrower and the Administrative Agent, employ third parties, including, without limitation, its Affiliates, to render advice (including investment advice), to provide services to arrange for trade execution and otherwise provide assistance to the Borrower and to perform any of its duties hereunder; provided that such delegation of any of its duties hereunder or performance of services by any other Person shall not relieve the Collateral Manager of any of its duties or liabilities hereunder.

 

(d) The Collateral Manager assumes no responsibility under this Agreement other than to perform the Collateral Manager’s duties called for hereunder and under the terms of this Agreement applicable to the Collateral Manager, in good faith and, subject to the Collateral Manager Standard, shall not be responsible for any action of the Borrower or the Collateral Agent in following or declining to follow any advice, recommendation or direction of the Collateral Manager.

 

(e) In performing its duties, the Collateral Manager shall perform its obligations with reasonable care using a similar degree of care, skill and attention as it employs with respect to similar collateral that it manages for itself and its Affiliates having similar investment objectives and restrictions which the Collateral Manager believes to be consistent with the customary standards, policies and procedures followed by institutional managers of national standing relating to assets of the nature and character of the Loans, except as and to the extent expressly provided otherwise in this Agreement (the “Collateral Manager Standard”).

 

(f) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained herein, the exercise by the Collateral Agent, the Administrative Agent or the Secured Parties of their rights hereunder (including, but not limited to, the delivery of a Collateral Manager Termination Notice), shall not release the Collateral Manager, the Seller or the Borrower from any of their duties or responsibilities with respect to the Collateral, except that the Collateral Manager’s obligations hereunder shall terminate upon its removal under this Agreement. The Secured Parties, the Administrative Agent and the Collateral Agent shall not have any obligation or liability with respect to any Collateral, other than as provided for herein or in any other Transaction Document, nor shall any of them be obligated to perform any of the obligations of the Collateral Manager hereunder.

 

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(g) Nothing in this Section 6.2 or any other obligations of the Collateral Manager under this Agreement shall release, modify, amend or otherwise affect any of the obligations of the Borrower or any other party hereunder.

 

(h) Any payment by an Obligor in respect of any Indebtedness owed by it to the Borrower shall, except as otherwise specified by such Obligor or otherwise required by contract or law, be applied as a collection of a payment by such Obligor (starting with the oldest such outstanding payment due) to the extent of any amounts then due and payable thereunder before being applied to any other receivable or other obligation of such Obligor.

 

(i) It is hereby acknowledged and agreed that, in addition to acting in its capacity as Collateral Manager pursuant to the terms of this Agreement, KA Credit Advisors, LLC (and its Affiliates) will engage in other business and render other services outside the scope of its capacity as Collateral Manager (including acting as administrative agent or as a lender with respect to Underlying Instruments or as collateral manager to other funds and investment vehicles). It is hereby further acknowledged and agreed that such other activities shall in no way whatsoever alter, amend or modify any of the Collateral Manager’s rights, duties or obligations under the Transaction Documents.

 

(j) Subject to the provisions of this Agreement and Applicable Law, the Collateral Manager is hereby authorized to effect client cross-transactions in which the Collateral Manager causes the purchase or sale of a Loan to be effected between the Borrower and another account advised by the Collateral Manager or any of its Affiliates. In addition, the Collateral Manager is authorized to enter into agency cross-transactions in which the Collateral Manager or any of its Affiliates act as broker for the Borrower and for the other party to the transaction, to the extent permitted under Applicable Law, in which case any such Affiliate will have a potentially conflicting division of loyalties and responsibilities regarding, both parties to the transaction. The Borrower hereby authorizes and consents to such broker engaging in such transactions and acting in such capacities.

 

(k) The Collateral Manager, subject to and in accordance with the applicable provisions of this Agreement and the Sale Agreement, hereby agrees that it shall cause any transaction relating to the Loans, the Equity Securities and the Permitted Investments to be conducted on terms and conditions negotiated on an arm’s-length basis and in accordance with Applicable Law.

 

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(l) In circumstances where the consent of a Person acting on behalf of the Borrower and independent of the Collateral Manager to the acquisition or sale of a Loan, an Equity Security or a Permitted Investment is not obtained, the Collateral Manager will use commercially reasonable efforts to obtain the best execution (but shall have no obligation to obtain the best prices available) for all orders placed with respect to any purchase or sale of any Loan, Equity Security or Permitted Investment, in a manner permitted by law and in a manner it believes to be in the best interests of the Borrower, considering all circumstances. Subject to the preceding sentence, the Collateral Manager may, in the allocation of business, select brokers and/or dealers with whom to effect trades on behalf of the Borrower and may open cash trading accounts with such brokers and dealers (provided that none of the assets of the Borrower may be credited to, held in or subject to the lien of the broker or dealer with respect to any such account). In addition, subject to the first sentence of this paragraph, the Collateral Manager may, in the allocation of business, take into consideration research and other brokerage services furnished to the Collateral Manager or its Affiliates by brokers and dealers which are not Affiliates of the Collateral Manager; provided that the Collateral Manager in good faith believes that the compensation for such services rendered by such brokers and dealers complies with the requirements of Section 28(e) of the Exchange Act (“Section 28(e)”), or in the case of principal or fixed income transactions for which the “safe harbor” of Section 28(e) is not available, the amount of the spread charged is reasonable in relation to the value of the research and other brokerage services provided. Such services may be used by the Collateral Manager in connection with its other advisory activities or investment operations. The Collateral Manager may aggregate sales and purchase orders placed with respect to the Loans with similar orders being made simultaneously for other clients of the Collateral Manager or of Affiliates of the Collateral Manager, if in the Collateral Manager’s reasonable judgment such aggregation shall not result in an overall economic loss to the Borrower, taking into consideration the availability of purchasers or sellers, the selling or purchase price, brokerage commission or other expenses, as well as the availability of such Loans on any other basis. In accounting for such aggregated order price, commissions and other expenses may be apportioned on a weighted average basis. When any purchase or sale of a Loan, Equity Security or Permitted Investment occurs as part of any aggregate sales or purchase orders, the objective of the Collateral Manager will be to allocate the executions among the clients in an equitable manner and in accordance with the internal policies and procedures of the Collateral Manager and, to the extent relevant, Applicable Law.

 

(m) The Collateral Manager shall not have authority to cause the Borrower to purchase or sell any Collateral from or to the Collateral Manager or any of its Affiliates as principal, or from or to any other account, portfolio or person for which the Collateral Manager or any of its Affiliates serves as investment advisor, unless (i) the terms and conditions thereof are no less favorable to the Borrower as the terms it would obtain in a comparable arm’s length transaction with a non-Affiliate and (ii) the transactions are effected in accordance with all Applicable Laws (including, without limitation, the Advisers Act). To the extent that Applicable Law requires disclosure to and the consent of the Borrower to any purchase or sale transaction on a principal basis with the Collateral Manager or any of its Affiliates, such requirement may be satisfied with respect to the Borrower pursuant to any manner that is permitted pursuant to then Applicable Law.

 

(n) In the event that, in light of market conditions and investment objectives, the Collateral Manager determines that it would be advisable to (i) facilitate the sale of the same asset both for the Borrower and for either the proprietary account of the Collateral Manager or any Affiliate of the Collateral Manager or for another client of the Collateral Manager or any Affiliate thereof or (ii) facilitate the acquisition of the same asset both for the Borrower and for either the proprietary account of the Collateral Manager or any Affiliate of the Collateral Manager or for another client of the Collateral Manager or any Affiliate thereof, then, in each such case, such purchases or sales will be allocated in a manner believed by the Collateral Manager to be equitable and that is consistent with the Collateral Manager’s obligations hereunder, the Collateral Manager Standard and Applicable Law.

 

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(o) The Borrower and the Lenders acknowledge that the Collateral Manager is an Affiliate of the Seller. In certain circumstances, the interests of the Borrower and/or the Lenders with respect to matters as to which the Collateral Manager is advising the Borrower may conflict with the foregoing interests of the Seller and the Collateral Manager. The Borrower hereby acknowledges and consents to various potential and actual conflicts of interest that may exist with respect to the Collateral Manager as described above. If the Collateral Manager, in its good faith judgment, determines that a conflict of interest exists, the Collateral Manager will be guided by its good faith judgment as to the best interests of the Borrower and will take such actions as it determines to be necessary or appropriate to ameliorate the conflict. To this end, the Collateral Manager may consult with an independent advisor, and act in accordance with the written instructions thereof, or may seek to resolve the conflict in any other manner that it believes in good faith is permitted or required under Applicable Law.

 

Section 6.3 Authorization of the Collateral Manager.

 

(a) Each of the Borrower and the Collateral Agent hereby authorizes the Collateral Manager to take any and all reasonable steps in its name and on its behalf necessary or desirable in the determination of the Collateral Manager and not inconsistent with the grant by the Borrower to the Collateral Agent for the benefit of the Secured Parties, of a security interest in the Collateral that at all times ranks senior to any other creditor of the Borrower, to collect all amounts due under any and all Collateral, including, without limitation, endorsing any of their names on checks and other instruments representing Collections, executing and delivering any and all instruments of satisfaction or cancellation, or of partial or full release or discharge, and all other comparable instruments, with respect to the Collateral and, after the delinquency of any Collateral and to the extent permitted under and in compliance with Applicable Law, to commence proceedings with respect to enforcing payment thereof, to the same extent as the Seller could have done if it had continued to own such Collateral. Each of the Borrower and the Collateral Agent, on behalf of the Secured Parties shall furnish the Collateral Manager with any powers of attorney and other documents necessary or appropriate to enable the Collateral Manager to carry out its management and administrative duties hereunder, and shall cooperate with the Collateral Manager to the fullest extent in order to permit the collectability of the Collateral. In no event shall the Collateral Manager be entitled to make any Secured Party or the Collateral Agent a party to any litigation without such party’s express prior written consent, or to make the Borrower a party to any litigation (other than any foreclosure or similar collection procedure) without the prior written consent of the Borrower and the Administrative Agent.

 

(b) After the declaration of the Termination Date, at the direction of the Administrative Agent, the Collateral Manager shall take such action as the Administrative Agent may deem necessary or advisable to enforce collection of the Collateral and directs the Collateral Manager; provided that the Collateral Agent may, in accordance with Section 5.1(m), notify any Obligor with respect to any Collateral of the assignment of such Collateral to the Collateral Agent, on behalf of the Secured Parties, and direct that payments of all amounts due or to become due be made directly to the Collateral Agent or any collection agent, sub-agent or account designated by the Collateral Agent and, upon such notification and at the expense of the Borrower, the Collateral Agent may enforce collection of any such Collateral, and adjust, settle or compromise the amount or payment thereof.

 

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(c) In dealing with the Collateral Manager and its duly appointed agents, none of the Administrative Agent, the Collateral Agent nor any Lender shall be required to inquire as to the authority of the Collateral Manager or any such agent to bind the Borrower.

 

Section 6.4 Collection of Payments; Accounts.

 

(a) Collection Efforts. The Collateral Manager will use commercially reasonable efforts consistent with the Collateral Manager Standard to collect or cause to be collected all payments called for under the terms and provisions of the Loans included in the Collateral as and when the same become due.

 

(b) Taxes and other Amounts. To the extent the Borrower is required under the Underlying Instruments to perform such duties, the Collateral Manager will collect all payments with respect to amounts due for Taxes, assessments and insurance premiums relating to each Loan to the extent required to be paid to the Borrower for such application under the Underlying Instrument, directing all such payments to be paid to the Collection Account, and direct the Collateral Agent to remit such amounts to the appropriate Governmental Authority or insurer as required by the Underlying Instruments.

 

(c) Payments to Collection Account. On or before the applicable Funding Date, the Borrower or the Collateral Manager, as applicable, shall have instructed all Obligors and paying agents of Agented Loans to make all payments owing to the Borrower in respect of the Collateral directly to the Collection Account in accordance with Section 2.9; provided that neither the Borrower nor the Collateral Manager is required to so instruct any Obligor which is solely a guarantor unless and until the Collateral Manager (on behalf of the Borrower) directly calls on the related guaranty.

 

(d) Accounts. Each of the parties hereto hereby agrees that each Account shall be deemed to be a Securities Account. Each of the parties hereto hereby agrees to cause the Collateral Agent or any other Securities Intermediary that holds any Cash or other Financial Asset for the Borrower in an Account to agree with the parties hereto that (A) the cash and other property (subject to Section 6.4(e) below with respect to any property other than investment property, as defined in Section 9-102(a)(49) of the UCC) is to be treated as a Financial Asset and (B) the jurisdiction governing the Account, all Cash and other Financial Assets credited to the Account and the “securities intermediary’s jurisdiction” (within the meaning of Section 8-110(e) of the UCC) shall, in each case, be the State of New York. In no event may any Financial Asset held in any Account be registered in the name of, payable to the order of, or specially Indorsed to, the Borrower, unless such Financial Asset has also been Indorsed in blank or to the Collateral Agent or other Securities Intermediary that holds such Financial Asset in such Account.

 

(e) Underlying Instruments. Notwithstanding any term hereof (or any term of the UCC that might otherwise be construed to be applicable to a “securities intermediary” as defined in the UCC) to the contrary, none of the Collateral Agent nor any Securities Intermediary shall be under any duty or obligation in connection with the acquisition by the Borrower, or the grant by the Borrower of a security interest to the Collateral Agent, of any Loan to examine or evaluate the sufficiency of the documents or instruments delivered to it by or on behalf of the Borrower under the related Underlying Instruments, or otherwise to examine the Underlying Instruments, in order to determine or compel compliance with any applicable requirements of or restrictions on transfer (including without limitation any necessary consents). The Collateral Agent shall hold any Instrument delivered to it evidencing any Loan transferred to the Collateral Agent hereunder as custodial agent for the Secured Parties in accordance with the terms of this Agreement.

 

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Section 6.5 Realization Upon Loans Subject to an Assigned Value Adjustment Event.

 

The Collateral Manager will use reasonable efforts consistent with the Underlying Instruments to exercise available remedies, if any, relating to a Loan that has become subject to one or more Assigned Value Adjustment Events in order to maximize recoveries thereunder in accordance with the Collateral Manager Standard. Subject to the terms of the Underlying Instruments and the Collateral Manager Standard, the Collateral Manager will comply in all material respects with Applicable Law in exercising such remedies.

 

Section 6.6 Collateral Manager Compensation.

 

As compensation for its administrative and management activities hereunder, the Collateral Manager or its designee shall be entitled to receive (but shall be permitted to waive by providing written notice of such waiver to the Collateral Agent at least two (2) Business Days prior to the Payment Date on which such payment is due and payable) the Collateral Management Fee pursuant to the provisions of Sections 2.7 and Section 2.8, as applicable. For the avoidance of doubt, the Collateral Manager may not defer all or any portion of the Collateral Management Fee.

 

Section 6.7 Expense Reimbursement.

 

The Collateral Manager will be required to pay all expenses incurred by it in connection with its activities under this Agreement, including fees and disbursements of its independent accountants, Taxes imposed on the Collateral Manager, expenses incurred by the Collateral Manager in connection with payments and reports pursuant to this Agreement, and all other fees and expenses not expressly stated under this Agreement for the account of the Borrower. The Collateral Manager shall be required to pay such expenses for its own account and shall not be entitled to any payment therefor other than the Collateral Management Fee.

 

Section 6.8 Reports; Information.

 

(a) Obligor Financial Statements; Other Reports. The Collateral Manager will deliver to the Borrower and the Administrative Agent, to the extent received by the Collateral Manager (on behalf of the Borrower) pursuant to the Underlying Instruments, the complete financial reporting package with respect to each Obligor and with respect to each Loan for such Obligor (including any financial statements, management discussion and analysis, executed covenant compliance certificates and related covenant calculations with respect to such Obligor and with respect to each Loan for such Obligor) provided to the Collateral Manager (on behalf of the Borrower) for the periods required by the Underlying Instruments, which delivery shall be made within ten (10) Business Days after receipt by the Borrower or the Collateral Manager (on behalf of the Borrower) as specified in the Underlying Instruments. The Collateral Manager will provide, promptly upon request from the Administrative Agent or the Borrower, such other information received by it from any Obligor as may reasonably be requested with respect to such Obligor.

 

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(b) Amendments to Loans. The Collateral Manager will post on a password protected website maintained by the Collateral Manager to which the Borrower and the Administrative Agent will have access (or otherwise deliver to the Borrower and the Administrative Agent, including, without limitation, by electronic mail) a copy of any material amendment, restatement, supplement, waiver or other modification to the Underlying Instruments of any Loan (along with any internal documents prepared by the Collateral Manager and provided to its investment committee in connection with such amendment, restatement, supplement, waiver or other modification) within ten (10) Business Days of the effectiveness of such amendment, restatement, supplement, waiver or other modification.

 

(c) Payment Date Reporting. The Collateral Manager shall deliver a Borrowing Base Certificate and a Payment Date Statement prepared by the Collateral Agent, in each case determined as of the end of the Collection Period and delivered two (2) Business Days prior to each Payment Date, to the Administrative Agent, the Collateral Agent and the Borrower not later than the Business Day preceding the related Payment Date. Each such Payment Date Statement shall contain instructions to the Collateral Agent to withdraw on the related Payment Date from the applicable Collection Account and pay or transfer amounts set forth in such report in the manner specified, and in accordance with the priorities established, in Section 2.7 or Section 2.8, as applicable.

 

(d) Certificates; Other Information.

 

(i) The Collateral Manager on behalf of the Borrower shall furnish to the Borrower and to the Administrative Agent for distribution to each Lender, within ten (10) days after the end of each calendar month and on each Funding Date pursuant to Section 2.2(b)(ii), a Borrowing Base Certificate showing the Borrowing Base as of such date, certified as complete and correct by a Responsible Officer of the Collateral Manager.

 

(ii) The Collateral Manager will provide the Borrower and the Equityholder with a monthly report regarding the Collateral and its activities hereunder in such form as they may mutually agree to be delivered on or prior to the tenth (10th) calendar day of each month (or, if such date is not a Business Day, the immediately following Business Day).

 

(iii) The Collateral Manager shall furnish to the Administrative Agent for distribution to each Lender within one hundred and twenty (120) days after the end of each fiscal year of the Borrower and the Equityholder, commencing with the 2022 fiscal year, a report covering such fiscal year of a firm of independent certified public accountants of nationally recognized standing to the effect that such accountants have applied certain agreed-upon procedures (a copy of which procedures are attached hereto as Schedule IV, it being understood that the Collateral Manager and the Administrative Agent will provide an updated Schedule IV reflecting any further amendments to such Schedule IV prior to the issuance of the first such agreed-upon procedures report, a copy of which shall replace the then existing Schedule IV) to certain documents and records relating to the Collateral, the Borrower, the Equityholder and the Collateral Manager, compared the information contained in the Borrowing Base Certificates and Payment Date Statements delivered during the period covered by such report with such documents and records and that no matters came to the attention of such accountants that caused them to believe that the information and the calculations included in such Borrowing Base Certificates and Payment Date Statements were not determined or performed in accordance with the provisions of this Agreement, except for such exceptions as such accountants shall believe to be immaterial and such other exceptions as shall be set forth in such statement.

 

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Section 6.9 Annual Statement as to Compliance.

 

The Collateral Manager will provide to the Borrower and the Administrative Agent, within thirty (30) days following the end of each fiscal year of the Collateral Manager, commencing with the fiscal year ending on December 31, 2022, a report signed by a Responsible Officer of the Collateral Manager certifying that (a) a review of the activities of the Collateral Manager, and the Collateral Manager’s performance pursuant to this Agreement, for the fiscal period ending on the last day of such fiscal year has been made under such Person’s supervision and (b) the Collateral Manager has performed or has caused to be performed in all material respects all of its obligations under this Agreement throughout such year and no Collateral Manager Termination Event has occurred or, if any such Collateral Manager Termination Event has occurred, a statement describing the nature thereof and the steps being taken to remedy such Collateral Manager Termination Event.

 

Section 6.10 The Collateral Manager Not to Resign.

 

The Collateral Manager shall not resign from the obligations and duties hereby imposed on it except upon the Collateral Manager’s good faith determination in consultation with legal counsel that (i) the performance of its duties hereunder is or becomes impermissible under Applicable Law and (ii) there is no reasonable action that the Collateral Manager could take to make the performance of its duties hereunder permissible under Applicable Law. In connection with any such determination permitting the resignation of the Collateral Manager, the Collateral Manager shall deliver to the Administrative Agent and the Borrower a description of the circumstances giving rise to such determination.

 

Section 6.11 Collateral Manager Termination Events.

 

Upon the occurrence of a Collateral Manager Termination Event, notwithstanding anything herein to the contrary, the Administrative Agent, by written notice to the Collateral Manager with a copy to the Borrower, the Equityholder, the Collateral Agent and each other Lender (such notice, a “Collateral Manager Termination Notice”), may, in its sole discretion, terminate all of the rights and obligations of the Collateral Manager as “Collateral Manager” under this Agreement. Each Collateral Manager Termination Notice shall designate the replacement Collateral Manager, who shall be selected by the Administrative Agent in its sole discretion. Until a Collateral Manager Termination Notice is delivered as set forth above, the Collateral Manager shall (i) unless otherwise notified by the Administrative Agent, continue to act in such capacity pursuant to Section 6.1 and (ii) as requested by the Administrative Agent in its sole discretion (A) terminate some or all of its activities as Collateral Manager hereunder by the Administrative Agent in its sole discretion as necessary or desirable, (B) provide such information as may be requested by the Administrative Agent to facilitate the transition of the performance of such activities to the Administrative Agent or any agent thereof and (C) take all other actions requested by the Administrative Agent, in each case to facilitate the transition of the performance of such activities to the Administrative Agent or any agent thereof.

 

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ARTICLE VII

 

THE Collateral Agent

 

Section 7.1 Designation of Collateral Agent.

 

(a) Initial Collateral Agent. The role of Collateral Agent hereunder and under the other Transaction Documents to which the Collateral Agent is a party shall be conducted by the Person designated as Collateral Agent hereunder from time to time in accordance with this Section 7.1. Until the Administrative Agent shall give to Wilmington Trust, National Association a Collateral Agent Termination Notice, Wilmington Trust, National Association is hereby appointed as, and hereby accepts such appointment and agrees to perform the duties and obligations of, Collateral Agent pursuant to the terms hereof.

 

(b) Successor Collateral Agent. Upon the Collateral Agent’s receipt of a Collateral Agent Termination Notice from the Administrative Agent of the designation of a successor Collateral Agent pursuant to the provisions of Section 7.5, the Collateral Agent agrees that it will terminate its activities as Collateral Agent hereunder.

 

Section 7.2 Duties of Collateral Agent.

 

(a) Appointment. Each of the Borrower and the Administrative Agent hereby designate and appoint the Collateral Agent to act as its agent and hereby authorizes the Collateral Agent to take such actions on its behalf and to exercise such powers and perform such duties as are expressly granted to the Collateral Agent by this Agreement. The Collateral Agent hereby accepts such agency appointment to act as Collateral Agent pursuant to the terms of this Agreement.

 

(b) Duties. On or before the initial Funding Date, and until its removal pursuant to Section 7.5, the Collateral Agent shall perform, on behalf of the Administrative Agent and the Secured Parties, the following duties and obligations:

 

(i) [Reserved].

 

(ii) In taking and retaining custody of the Underlying Instruments, the Collateral Agent shall be deemed to be acting as the agent of the Secured Parties; provided that the Collateral Agent makes no representations as to the existence, perfection or priority of any Lien on the Underlying Instruments or the instruments therein; and provided further that the Collateral Agent’s duties as agent shall be limited to those expressly contemplated herein.

 

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(iii) [Reserved].

 

(iv) [Reserved].

 

(v) The Collateral Agent, subject to Section 7.2(b)(viii), agrees to cooperate with the Administrative Agent and take any reasonable action requested by the Administrative Agent that the Administrative Agent deems necessary or desirable in order to exercise or enforce any of the rights of a Secured Party hereunder. In the event the Collateral Agent receives instructions from the Collateral Manager or the Borrower which conflict with any instructions received by the Administrative Agent, the Collateral Agent shall rely on and follow the instructions given by the Administrative Agent, and the Collateral Agent shall not be liable for its reliance upon and compliance with such instructions.

 

(vi) The Collateral Agent shall, promptly upon its actual receipt of a Borrowing Base Certificate from the Collateral Manager on behalf of the Borrower, based solely on the information provided in the Collateral Database, confirm the Outstanding Balance of each Loan and the balance of each Account used in the calculation of the Borrowing Base provided by the Collateral Manager in the Borrowing Base Certificate, and, if the Collateral Agent’s amounts do not correspond with those provided by the Collateral Manager on such Borrowing Base Certificate, deliver a report identifying such amounts to each of the Administrative Agent, Borrower and Collateral Manager within one (1) Business day of receipt by the Collateral Agent of such Borrowing Base Certificate and the parties shall use commercially reasonable efforts to reconcile such discrepancy; provided any such Borrowing Base Certificate received by the Collateral Agent after 1:00 p.m. on any Business Day shall be deemed received on the next Business Day. The Collateral Agent shall also make required calculations for each Payment Date Statement as of the day that is four (4) Business Days prior to the applicable Payment Date, and deliver such calculations to the Borrower and the Collateral Manager (and, following the delivery of a Notice of Exclusive Control, the Administrative Agent and the Collateral Manager) for the Collateral Manager’s (or Administrative Agent’s, as applicable) review no later than two (2) Business Days prior to such Payment Date. Upon the approval (which may be by email) by the Collateral Manager (or after delivery of a Notice of Exclusive Control, the Administrative Agent), the Payment Date Statement shall constitute instructions by the Collateral Manager (or after delivery of a Notice of Exclusive Control, the Administrative Agent) to the Collateral Agent to withdraw on the related Payment Date from the applicable Collection Account and pay or transfer amounts set forth in such report in the manner specified, and in accordance with the priorities established, in Section 2.7 or Section 2.8, as applicable.

 

(vii) The Collateral Agent shall make payments in accordance with Section 2.7 and Section 2.8 and as otherwise expressly provided under this Agreement (the “Payment Duties”).

 

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(viii) The Administrative Agent and each other Secured Party further authorizes the Collateral Agent to take such action as agent on its behalf and to exercise such powers under this Agreement and the other Transaction Documents as are expressly delegated to the Collateral Agent by the terms hereof and thereof, together with such powers as are reasonably incidental thereto. In furtherance, and without limiting the generality of the foregoing, each Secured Party hereby appoints the Collateral Agent (acting at the direction of the Administrative Agent) as its agent to execute and deliver all further instruments and documents, and take all further action that the Administrative Agent deems necessary or desirable in order to perfect, protect or more fully evidence the security interests granted by the Borrower hereunder, or to enable any of them to exercise or enforce any of their respective rights hereunder, including, without limitation, the execution by the Collateral Agent as secured party/assignee of such financing or continuation statements, or amendments thereto or assignments thereof, relative to all or any of the Loans now existing or hereafter arising, and such other instruments or notices, as may be necessary or appropriate for the purposes stated hereinabove. Nothing in this clause shall be deemed to relieve the Borrower or the Collateral Manager of their respective obligations to protect the interest of the Collateral Agent (for the benefit of the Secured Parties) in the Collateral, including to file financing and continuation statements in respect of the Collateral.

 

(ix) If, in performing its duties under this Agreement, the Collateral Agent is required to decide between alternative courses of action, the Collateral Agent may request written instructions from the Administrative Agent as to the course of action desired by the Administrative Agent. If the Collateral Agent does not receive such instructions within two (2) Business Days after its request therefor, the Collateral Agent may, but shall be under no duty to, take or refrain from taking any such courses of action. The Collateral Agent shall act in accordance with instructions received after such two (2) Business Day period except to the extent it has already taken, or committed itself to take, action inconsistent with such instructions. The Collateral Agent shall be entitled to rely on the advice of legal counsel and independent accountants obtained in good faith in performing its duties hereunder and shall be deemed to have acted in good faith if it acts in accordance with such advice.

 

(x) The Collateral Agent shall create a collateral database with respect to the Collateral based on information received from the Borrower, the Collateral Manager, the Administrative Agent and other third party sources (the “Collateral Database”), and update the Collateral Database daily for changes, including to reflect the sale or other disposition of the Collateral, based upon, and to the extent of, information furnished to the Collateral Agent by the Borrower as may be reasonably required by the Collateral Agent.

 

(xi) The Collateral Agent shall track the receipt and daily allocation to the Accounts of Collections, the outstanding balances therein, and any withdrawals therefrom and, on each Business Day, provide to the Collateral Manager daily reports reflecting such actions as of the close of business on the preceding Business Day.

 

(xii) The Collateral Agent shall provide such other information with respect to the Collateral as may be contained within the Collateral Database as may be required by this Agreement, in each case as the Borrower, Collateral Manager or the Administrative Agent may reasonably request from time to time.

 

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(xiii) The Collateral Agent shall notify the Borrower, the Collateral Manager and the Administrative Agent upon a Responsible Officer of the Collateral Agent upon receiving notices, reports or proxies or any other requests relating to corporate actions affecting the Collateral.

 

(xiv) In performing its duties, (A) the Collateral Agent shall comply with the standard of care set forth in Section 7.6(c) and the express terms of the Transaction Documents with respect to the Collateral and (B) all calculations made by the Collateral Agent pursuant to this Section 7.2(b) using information that is not routinely maintained by the Collateral Agent, including EBITDA, Assigned Value and Unrestricted Cash of any Obligor shall be made using such amounts as provided by the Administrative Agent, the Borrower or the Collateral Manager to the Collateral Agent.

 

(xv) The Administrative Agent may direct the Collateral Agent to take actions which are incidental to the actions specifically delegated to the Collateral Agent hereunder; provided that the Collateral Agent shall not be required to take any such incidental action hereunder, but shall be required to act or to refrain from acting (and shall be fully protected in acting or refraining from acting) upon the direction of the Administrative Agent; provided, further, that the Collateral Agent shall not be required to take any action hereunder if the taking of such action, in the reasonable determination of the Collateral Agent, (x) shall be in violation of any Applicable Law or contrary to any provisions of this Agreement or (y) shall expose the Collateral Agent to liability hereunder or otherwise (unless it has received an indemnity reasonably satisfactory to it with respect thereto).

 

(xvi) Nothing herein shall prevent the Collateral Agent or any of its Affiliates from engaging in other businesses or from rendering services of any kind to any Person.

 

(xvii) Concurrently herewith, the Administrative Agent directs the Collateral Agent and the Collateral Agent is authorized to enter into each Securities Account Control Agreement. For the avoidance of doubt, all the Collateral Agent’s rights, protections and immunities provided herein shall apply to the Collateral Agent for any actions taken or omitted to be taken under the Securities Account Control Agreement.

 

Section 7.3 Merger or Consolidation.

 

Any Person (i) into which the Collateral Agent may be merged or consolidated, (ii) that may result from any merger or consolidation to which the Collateral Agent shall be a party, or (iii) that may succeed to the properties and assets of the Collateral Agent substantially as a whole, which Person in any of the foregoing cases executes an agreement of assumption to perform every obligation of the Collateral Agent hereunder, shall be the successor to the Collateral Agent under this Agreement without further act of any of the parties to this Agreement.

 

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Section 7.4 Collateral Agent Compensation.

 

As compensation for its Collateral Agent activities hereunder, the Collateral Agent shall be entitled to a Collateral Agent Fee pursuant to the provision of Section 2.7(a)(1), Section 2.7(b)(1) or Section 2.8(1), as applicable. The Collateral Agent’s entitlement to receive the Collateral Agent Fee shall cease on the earlier to occur of: (i) its removal as Collateral Agent pursuant to Section 7.5 or (ii) the termination of this Agreement.

 

Section 7.5 Collateral Agent Removal.

 

The Collateral Agent may be removed, with or without cause, by the Administrative Agent by thirty (30) days’ written notice given in writing to the Collateral Agent and the Lenders (the “Collateral Agent Termination Notice”); provided that notwithstanding its receipt of a Collateral Agent Termination Notice, the Collateral Agent shall continue to act in such capacity until a successor Collateral Agent has been appointed, has agreed to act as Collateral Agent hereunder in full compliance with the requirements of Section 5.5(d), and has received all Underlying Instruments held by the previous Collateral Agent. In the case of a resignation or removal of the Collateral Agent, if no successor shall have been appointed and an instrument of acceptance by a successor shall not have been delivered to the Collateral Agent within ninety (90) days after the giving of such notice of resignation or removal, the Collateral Agent may petition any court of competent jurisdiction for the appointment of a successor Collateral Agent.

 

Section 7.6 Limitation on Liability.

 

(a) The Collateral Agent may conclusively rely on and shall be fully protected in acting upon any certificate (including an Officer’s Certificate of the Collateral Manager or the Borrower), instrument, opinion, notice, letter, facsimile, electronic transmission or other document delivered to it and that in good faith it reasonably believes to be genuine and that has been signed or presented by the proper party or parties. Any electronically signed document delivered via electronic mail or other transmission method from a person purporting to be an Responsible Officer shall be considered signed or executed by such Responsible Officer on behalf of the applicable Person, and the Collateral Agent shall have no duty to inquire into or investigate the authenticity or authorization of any such electronic signature and shall be entitled to conclusively rely on any such electronic signature without any liability with respect thereto The Collateral Agent may rely conclusively on and shall be fully protected in acting upon (a) the written instructions of any designated officer of the Administrative Agent or (to the extent applicable) the Collateral Manager or (b) the verbal instructions of the Administrative Agent or (to the extent applicable) the Collateral Manager. The Collateral Agent shall not be liable for any action taken by it in good faith and reasonably believed by it to be within the discretion or powers conferred upon it, or taken by it pursuant to any direction or instruction by which it is governed hereunder, or omitted to be taken by it by reason of the lack of direction or instruction required hereby for such action.

 

(b) The Collateral Agent may consult counsel satisfactory to it and the advice or opinion of such counsel shall be full and complete authorization and protection in respect of any action taken, suffered or omitted by it hereunder in good faith and in accordance with the advice or opinion of such counsel.

 

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(c) The Collateral Agent shall not be liable for any error of judgment, or for any act done or step taken or omitted by it, in good faith, or for any mistakes of fact or law, or for anything that it may do or refrain from doing in connection herewith except in the case of its willful misconduct, bad faith or grossly negligent performance or omission of its duties.

 

(d) The Collateral Agent makes no warranty or representation and shall have no responsibility (except as expressly set forth in this Agreement) as to the content, enforceability, completeness, validity, sufficiency, value, genuineness, ownership or transferability of the Collateral, and will not be required to and will not make any representations as to the validity or value (except as expressly set forth in this Agreement) of any of the Collateral. The Collateral Agent shall not be obligated to take any legal action hereunder that might in its judgment be contrary to Applicable Law or involve any expense or liability unless it has been furnished with an indemnity reasonably satisfactory to it.

 

(e) The Collateral Agent shall have no duties or responsibilities except such duties and responsibilities as are specifically set forth in this Agreement and no covenants or obligations shall be implied in this Agreement against the Collateral Agent. Without limiting the generality of the foregoing, the Collateral Agent, except as expressly set forth herein, shall have no obligation to supervise, verify, monitor or administer the performance of the Collateral Manager or the Borrower, shall not be responsible for any action or omission of the Administrative Agent, the Lenders, the Collateral Manager, the Borrower or any Lender and, absent written notice to a Responsible Officer of the Collateral Agent, shall be entitled to assume that such person is in compliance with its obligations under this Agreement or any other document related to this transaction.

 

(f) The Collateral Agent shall not be required to expend or risk its own funds in the performance of its duties hereunder.

 

(g) It is expressly agreed and acknowledged that the Collateral Agent is not guaranteeing or overseeing the performance of or assuming any liability for the obligations of the other parties hereto or any parties to the Collateral.

 

(h) The Collateral Agent may execute any of the trusts or powers hereunder or perform any duties hereunder either directly or by or through agents or attorneys; provided, that the Collateral Agent shall not be responsible for any actions or omissions on the part of any non-Affiliated agent or attorney appointed with due care by it hereunder.

 

(i) The Collateral Agent shall not be responsible for delays or failures in performance resulting from circumstances beyond its control (such circumstances include but are not limited to acts of God, strikes, lockouts, riots, acts of war, loss or malfunctions of utilities, computer (hardware or software) or communications services); errors by the Collateral Manager or any other Secured Party in its instructions to the Collateral Agent; or changes in applicable law, regulation or orders.

 

(j) The Collateral Agent shall have no responsibility and shall have no liability for (i) preparing, recording, filing, re-recording or re-filing any financing statement, continuation statement, document, instrument or other notice in any public office at any time or times, (ii) the correctness of any such financing statement, continuation statement, document or instrument or other such notice, (iii) taking any action to perfect or maintain the perfection of any security interest granted to it hereunder or otherwise or (iv) the validity or perfection of any such lien or security interest.

 

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(k) In order to comply with the laws, rules, regulations and executive orders in effect from time to time applicable to banking institutions, including those relating to the funding of terrorist activities and money laundering (collectively, “Applicable Banking Laws”), the Collateral Agent may be required to obtain, verify and record certain information relating to individuals and entities which maintain a business relationship with the Collateral Agent. Accordingly, each of the parties agrees to provide to the Collateral Agent upon its request from time to time such identifying information and documentation as may be available for such party in order to enable the Collateral Agent to comply with Applicable Banking Laws.

 

(l) In no event shall the Collateral Agent be liable for special, punitive, indirect or consequential loss or damage of any kind whatsoever (including but not limited to lost profits or diminution in value) even if the Collateral Agent has been advised of the likelihood of such damages and regardless of the form of such action.

 

(m) The Collateral Agent shall be under no obligation to exercise or to honor any of the discretionary rights or powers vested in it by this Agreement at the request or direction of the Administrative Agent or any Lender, unless the Administrative Agent or such Lender shall have provided to the Collateral Agent security or indemnity reasonably satisfactory to it against the costs, expenses (including reasonable attorneys’ fees and expenses) and liabilities which might reasonably be incurred by it in compliance with such request or direction.

 

(n) The Collateral Agent shall not be bound to make any investigation into the facts or matters stated in any resolution, certificate, statement, instrument, opinion, report, notice, request, direction, consent, order, note or other paper, electronic transmission or document, but the Collateral Agent, in its discretion, may, and upon the written direction of the Administrative Agent shall, make such further inquiry or investigation into such facts or matters as it shall be directed, and the Collateral Agent shall be entitled, on not less than five (5) Business Days’ prior notice to the Borrower and the Collateral Manager, to examine the books and records relating to the Advances and the Loans, personally or by agent or attorney, at a mutually agreed time during the Borrower’s or the Collateral Manager’s normal business hours; provided that prior to the occurrence of an Event of Default that has not been cured, waived or rescinded, such examination shall not occur more than twice in any twelve month period.

 

(o) The Collateral Agent shall (i) not have any obligation to determine if a Loan meets the criteria specified in the definition of Eligible Loan, (ii) have no discretion to select or make investments but shall be entitled to solely rely upon the investment directions of the Borrower (or the Collateral Manager on behalf of the Borrower) and (iii) have no duty or liability to independently confirm or determine whether any investment made hereunder qualifies as a Permitted Investment.

 

(p) The Collateral Agent shall not be liable for the actions or omissions of the Collateral Manager, the Borrower or the Administrative Agent and the Collateral Agent shall not be under any obligation to monitor, evaluate or verify compliance by the Collateral Manager with the terms hereof, or, other than as expressly set forth herein, to verify or independently determine the accuracy of information received by it from the Collateral Manager (or from any selling institution, agent bank, trustee or similar source) with respect to the Collateral.

 

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(q) The powers conferred on the Collateral Agent hereunder are solely to protect its interest (on behalf of the Secured Parties) in the Collateral and shall not impose any duty on it to exercise any such powers. Except for (x) as expressly set forth herein and (y) the reasonable care of any Collateral in its possession and the accounting for moneys actually received by it hereunder, the Collateral Agent shall have no duty as to any Collateral or responsibility for (i) ascertaining or taking action with respect to calls, maturities, tenders or other matters relative to any Collateral, whether or not the Collateral Agent has or is deemed to have knowledge of such matters, or (ii) taking any necessary steps to preserve rights against prior parties or any other rights pertaining to any Collateral.

 

(r) The Collateral Agent shall not be deemed to have notice or knowledge of any matter unless a Responsible Officer of the Collateral Agent has actual knowledge thereof or unless written notice thereof is received by the Collateral Agent at the Corporate Trust Office and such notice references the Borrower or this Agreement or otherwise identifies the Transaction Documents.

 

(s) The Collateral Agent and its respective affiliates, directors, officers, agents or employees shall not be responsible for or have any duty to ascertain, inquire into or verify (i) any statement, warranty or representation of the Borrower, the Collateral Manager, the Equityholder, the Administrative Agent or any Lender made in connection with this Agreement; (ii) the performance or observance of any of the covenants or agreements of the Borrower, Collateral Manager or the Equityholder or to inspect the property (including the books and records) of any of the Borrower, Collateral Manager or the Equityholder; (iii) the satisfaction of any condition specified in Article III; or (iv) the validity, effectiveness or genuineness of this Agreement, the other Transaction Documents or any other instrument or writing furnished by the Borrower, the Collateral Manager, the Equityholder, the Administrative Agent or any Lender in connection herewith. Other than as expressly set forth in a Transaction Document as an obligation of the Collateral Agent, the Collateral Agent shall be under no obligation to take any action to collect from any Obligor any amount payable by such Obligor on any related Loan or any other Collateral under any circumstances, including if payment is refused after due demand upon such Obligor.

 

(t) It is expressly acknowledged by the parties hereto that the application and performance by the Collateral Agent of its various duties hereunder (including recalculations to be performed in respect of the matters contemplated hereby) shall be based upon, and in reliance upon, data, information and notice provided to it by the Collateral Manager, the Administrative Agent, the Borrower and/or any related bank agent, obligor or similar party, and the Collateral Agent shall have no responsibility for the accuracy of any such information or data provided to it by such persons and shall be entitled to update its records (as it may deem necessary or appropriate).

 

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(u) The parties acknowledge that in accordance with the Customer Identification Program (CIP) requirements under the USA Patriot Act and its implementing regulations, the Collateral Agent in order to help fight the funding of terrorism and money laundering, is required to obtain, verify, and record information that identifies each person or legal entity that establishes a relationship or opens an account with the Collateral Agent. Each Borrower hereby agrees that it shall provide the Collateral Agent with such information as it may reasonably request including, but not limited to, such Borrower’s name, physical address, tax identification number and other information that will help the Collateral Agent to identify and verify such Borrower’s identity (and in certain circumstances, the beneficial owners thereof) such as organizational documents, certificate of good standing, license to do business, or other pertinent identifying information.

 

(v) The Collateral Agent shall not have any responsibility for preparing, filing or recording any financing or continuation statement in any public office at any time or to otherwise perfect or maintain the perfection of any security interest or lien granted to it hereunder.

 

(w) The Collateral Agent shall not be liable for any obligation of the Collateral Manager or the Borrower contained in this Agreement or for any errors of the Collateral Manager or the Borrower contained in any computer tape, certificate or other data or document delivered to the Collateral Agent hereunder or on which the Collateral Agent must rely in order to perform its obligations hereunder, and the Secured Parties, the Administrative Agent and the Collateral Agent each agree to look only to the Collateral Manager to perform such obligations. The Collateral Agent shall have no responsibility and shall not be in default hereunder or incur any liability for any failure, error, malfunction or any delay in carrying out any of its duties under this Agreement if such failure or delay results from the Collateral Agent acting in accordance with information prepared or provided by a Person other than the Collateral Agent or the failure of any such other Person to prepare or provide such information. The Collateral Agent shall have no responsibility, shall not be in default and shall incur no liability for (i) any act, delay or failure to act of any third party, including the Collateral Manager, (ii) any inaccuracy or omission in a notice or communication received by the Collateral Agent from any third party, including the Collateral Manager, (iii) the invalidity or unenforceability of any Collateral under Applicable Law, (iv) the breach or inaccuracy of any representation or warranty made with respect to any Collateral, or (v) the acts or omissions of any successor Collateral Agent.

 

Section 7.7 Resignation of the Collateral Agent.

 

The Collateral Agent shall not resign from the obligations and duties hereby imposed on it except upon (a) sixty (60) days’ prior written notice to the Borrower, Collateral Manager, Administrative Agent and each Lender, or (b) thirty (30) days’ prior written notice of the Collateral Agent’s determination that (i) the performance of its duties hereunder is or becomes impermissible under Applicable Law and (ii) there is no reasonable action that the Collateral Agent could take to make the performance of its duties hereunder permissible under Applicable Law. Any such determination permitting the resignation of the Collateral Agent shall be evidenced as to clause (i) above by an Opinion of Counsel to such effect delivered to the Administrative Agent. No such resignation shall become effective until a successor Collateral Agent acceptable to the Administrative Agent, the Collateral Manager (if no Collateral Manager Termination Event has occurred) and the Borrower (if no Default or Event of Default has occurred and is continuing) in their respective sole discretion shall have assumed the responsibilities and obligations of the Collateral Agent hereunder, which Collateral Agent satisfies all requirements of Section 5.5(d).

 

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Section 7.8 [Reserved].

 

Section 7.9 [Reserved].

 

Section 7.10 Access to Certain Documentation and Information Regarding the Collateral; Audits.

 

(a) The Collateral Manager, the Borrower and the Collateral Agent shall provide to the Administrative Agent access to the Underlying Instruments and all other documentation in the possession of such Persons regarding the Collateral including in such cases where the Administrative Agent may direct the Collateral Agent in connection with the enforcement of the rights or interests of the Collateral Agent hereunder, or by applicable statutes or regulations, to review such documentation, such access being afforded without charge but only (i) upon two (2) Business Days’ prior written request, (ii) during normal business hours and (iii) subject to the Collateral Manager’s, the Borrower’s and Collateral Agent’s normal security and confidentiality procedures. Periodically, at the discretion of the Administrative Agent, the Administrative Agent may review the Collateral Manager’s collection and administration of the Collateral in order to assess compliance by the Collateral Manager with Article VI and may conduct an audit of the Collateral, and Underlying Instruments in conjunction with such a review. Such review shall be reasonable in scope and shall be completed in a reasonable period of time.

 

(b) Without limiting the foregoing provisions of Section 7.10(a), from time to time on request of the Administrative Agent, the Collateral Agent shall permit certified public accountants or other independent auditors acceptable to the Administrative Agent to conduct a review of the Underlying Instruments and all other documentation regarding the Collateral. Up to two (2) such reviews per fiscal year shall be at the expense of the Borrower and additional reviews in a fiscal year shall be at the expense of the requesting Lender(s); provided that, after the occurrence of an Event of Default, any such reviews, regardless of frequency, shall be at the expense of the Borrower.

 

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ARTICLE VIII

 

SECURITY INTEREST

 

Section 8.1 Grant of Security Interest.

 

(a) This Agreement constitutes a security agreement and the Advances effected hereby constitute secured loans by the applicable Lenders to the Borrower under Applicable Law. For such purpose, the Borrower hereby transfers, conveys, assigns and grants as of the Closing Date to the Collateral Agent for the benefit of the Secured Parties, a lien and continuing security interest in all of the Borrower’s right, title and interest in, to and under (but none of the obligations under) all Collateral (other than any Collateral which constitutes Margin Stock), whether now existing or hereafter arising or acquired by the Borrower, and wherever the same may be located, to secure the prompt, complete and indefeasible payment and performance in full when due, whether by lapse of time, acceleration or otherwise, of the Obligations of the Borrower arising in connection with this Agreement and each other Transaction Document, whether now or hereafter existing, due or to become due, direct or indirect, or absolute or contingent, including, without limitation, all Obligations. Notwithstanding any of the other provisions set forth in this Agreement, this Agreement shall not constitute a grant of a security interest in any property to the extent that such grant of a security interest is prohibited by any Applicable Law in effect as of the date hereof or requires a consent not obtained of any Governmental Authority pursuant to such Applicable Law. The powers conferred on the Collateral Agent hereunder are solely to protect the Collateral Agent’s interests in the Collateral and shall not impose any duty upon the Collateral Agent to exercise any such powers. The Collateral Agent shall be accountable only for amounts that it actually receives as a result of the exercise of such powers, and neither the Collateral Agent nor any of its officers, directors, employees or agents shall be responsible to the Borrower for any act or failure to act hereunder, except for its own gross negligence or willful misconduct. If the Borrower fails to perform or comply with any of its agreements contained herein, the Collateral Agent, at its option and at the direction of the Administrative Agent, but without any obligation to do so, may itself perform or comply, or otherwise cause performance or compliance, with such agreement. The expenses of the Collateral Agent incurred in connection with such performance or compliance, together with interest thereon at the rate per annum applicable to Advances, shall be payable by the Borrower to the Collateral Agent in accordance with Sections 2.7 and 2.8 and shall constitute Obligations secured hereby.

 

(b) The grant of a security interest under this Section 8.1 does not constitute and is not intended to result in a creation or an assumption by the Collateral Agent of any obligation of the Borrower or any other Person in connection with any or all of the Collateral or under any agreement or instrument relating thereto. Anything herein to the contrary notwithstanding, (a) the Borrower shall remain liable under the Collateral to the extent set forth therein to perform all of its duties and obligations thereunder to the same extent as if this Agreement had not been executed, (b) the exercise by the Collateral Agent on behalf of the Secured Parties, of any of its rights in the Collateral shall not release the Borrower from any of its duties or obligations under the Collateral, and (c) the Collateral Agent shall not have any obligations or liability under the Collateral by reason of this Agreement, nor shall the Collateral Agent be obligated to perform any of the obligations or duties of the Borrower thereunder or to take any action to collect or enforce any claim for payment assigned hereunder.

 

(c) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary, the Lenders, the Seller, the Borrower, the Collateral Manager, the Administrative Agent, the Collateral Agent and each Lender hereby agree to treat, and to cause each of their respective Affiliates to treat, each Advance as indebtedness for purposes of United States federal and state income tax or state franchise tax to the extent permitted by Applicable Law and shall file its tax returns or reports, or cause its Affiliates to file such tax returns or reports, in a manner consistent with such treatment.

 

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Section 8.2 Release of Lien on Collateral.

 

(a) At the same time as (i) any Loan expires by its terms or is prepaid in full and all amounts in respect thereof have been paid in full by the related Obligor and deposited in the Collection Account or (ii) any Loan has been the subject of a Discretionary Sale, Substitution or Optional Sale pursuant to Section 2.14, has been sold to the Seller as required under the Sale Agreement or has been sold pursuant to Section 9.2, the Collateral Agent, as agent for the Secured Parties will, to the extent requested by the Collateral Manager or the Borrower, release its interest in such Collateral. In connection with any release of such Collateral, the Collateral Agent, on behalf of the Secured Parties, will upon receipt into the Collection Account of the Proceeds of any such sale, payment in full or prepayment in full of a Loan, at the sole expense of the Borrower, (i) execute and deliver to the Borrower or the Collateral Manager (or its designee) requesting the same, any assignments, bills of sale, termination statements and any other releases and instruments as such Person may reasonably request in order to effect the release and transfer of such Collateral, (ii) deliver any portion of the Collateral to be released from the Lien granted under this Agreement in its possession to or at the direction of the Borrower and (iii) otherwise take such actions as are necessary and appropriate to release the Lien of the Collateral Agent for the benefit of the Secured Parties on the applicable portion of the Collateral to be released and delivered to or at the direction of the Borrower such portion of the Collateral to be so released; provided that, the Collateral Agent, as agent for the Secured Parties, will make no representation or warranty, express or implied, with respect to any such Collateral in connection with such release, sale, transfer and/or assignment. Nothing in this Section shall diminish the Collateral Manager’s obligations pursuant to Section 6.5 with respect to the Proceeds of any such sale.

 

(b) On the Collection Date, the Collateral Agent, on behalf of the Secured Parties, will release the security interest in the Collateral created hereby, which release shall occur simultaneously with receipt in the Collection Account of the payoff amount specified in a payoff letter signed by the Administrative Agent. Upon request of the Borrower to the Collateral Agent and to the Administrative Agent, the Collateral Agent shall promptly provide to the Borrower and the Administrative Agent a computation of all amounts owing to the Collateral Agent as of the anticipated Collection Date and the Administrative Agent shall promptly provide to the Borrower, with a copy to the Collateral Agent, a computation of all amounts owing to the Administrative Agent and the Lenders as of the anticipated Collection Date. In connection with such release of the Collateral, the Collateral Agent, on behalf of the Secured Parties, will, at the sole expense of the Borrower, (i) execute and deliver to the Borrower or the Collateral Manager (or its designee) requesting the same, any assignments, bills of sale, termination statements and any other releases and instruments as the Borrower may reasonably request in order to effect the release of the Collateral, (ii) deliver any portion of the Collateral to be released from the Lien granted under this Agreement in its possession to or at the direction of the Borrower or the Collateral Manager (on behalf of the Borrower) and (iii) otherwise take such actions as are necessary and appropriate to release the Lien of the Collateral Agent for the benefit of the Secured Parties on the Collateral (including, without limitation, delivering a Termination Notice (as defined in the Securities Account Control Agreement) in respect of the Securities Account Control Agreement); provided that, the Collateral Agent, as agent for the Secured Parties, will make no representation or warranty, express or implied, with respect to any such Collateral in connection with such release.

 

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ARTICLE IX

 

EVENTS OF DEFAULT

 

Section 9.1 Events of Default.

 

The following events shall be Events of Default (“Events of Default”) hereunder:

 

(a) (i) other than as set forth in the following clause (ii), any of the Borrower, the Equityholder (under the Guarantee), the Collateral Manager (under Section 10.2) or the Seller fails to make any payment in excess of $500,000 when due under any Transaction Document, within three (3) Business Days of the day such payment or deposit is required to be made or (ii) the Borrower fails to repay the outstanding Obligations in full on the Termination Date; or

 

(b) either of the Borrower or the Seller defaults in making any payment required to be made under an agreement for borrowed money owing by it (other than, in the case of the Borrower, this Agreement) to which it is a party individually or in an aggregate principal amount in excess of (i) with respect to the Borrower, $500,000, and (ii) with respect to the Seller, $5,000,000, in each case, in excess of any amounts disputed in good faith by such Person and, in each case, such default is not cured within the applicable cure period, if any, provided for under such agreement; or

 

(c) any failure on the part of the Borrower or the Seller to duly observe or perform in any material respect any other covenants or agreements of the Borrower or Seller (other than those specifically addressed by a separate Event of Default), as applicable, set forth in this Agreement or the other Transaction Documents to which the Borrower or Seller is a party and (except in the case of a breach of Section 5.2(g)(vi), to which no grace period shall apply) the same continues unremedied for a period of thirty (30) days (if such failure can be remedied) after the earlier to occur of (i) the date on which written notice of such failure requiring the same to be remedied shall have been given to such Person and (ii) the date on which a Responsible Officer of such Person acquires knowledge thereof; or

 

(d) the occurrence of an Insolvency Event relating to the Borrower or the Seller; or

 

(e) the occurrence of a Collateral Manager Termination Event; or

 

(f)   the rendering of one or more final judgments, decrees or orders by a court or arbitrator of competent jurisdiction for the payment of money in excess individually or in the aggregate of $500,000 (or $5,000,000 with respect to the Seller) against the Borrower or the Seller, and the Borrower or the Seller, as applicable, shall not have either (i) discharged any such judgment, decree or order dismissed, or (ii) perfected a timely appeal of such judgment, decree or order and caused the execution of same to be stayed during the pendency of the appeal, in each case, within sixty (60) days from date of entry thereof; or

 

(g) the Borrower shall assign or attempt to assign any of its rights, obligations or duties under this Agreement without the prior written consent of each Lender in their respective sole discretion; or

 

(h) the Borrower or the Seller shall have made payments (other than payments made on behalf of such Person from insurance proceeds of the Borrower) individually or in the aggregate in excess of $500,000 (or $5,000,000 with respect to the Seller) in settlement of any litigation claim or dispute; or

 

(i) the Borrower, the Seller or the Collateral Manager fails to observe or perform any agreement or obligation with respect to the management and distribution of funds received with respect to the Collateral, and such failure is not cured within five (5) Business Days; or

 

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(j) the Borrower shall have failed to provide a substantive non-consolidation opinion rendered by a law firm reasonably acceptable to the Administrative Agent within thirty (30) days after the Borrower has received written notice from the Administrative Agent that the Administrative Agent believes the Borrower may no longer qualify as a bankruptcy remote-entity based upon criteria set forth in Section 4.1(u);

 

(k) any Transaction Document (or any material provision thereof), or any Lien granted thereunder, shall (except in accordance with its terms), in whole or in part, terminate, cease to be effective or cease to be the legally valid, binding and enforceable obligation of the Borrower, the Collateral Manager or the Seller,

 

(l) the Borrower, the Equityholder, the Collateral Manager, the Seller or any other party shall, directly or indirectly, contest in any manner the effectiveness, validity, binding nature or enforceability of any Transaction Document or any lien or security interest thereunder, or

 

(m) the Borrower ceases to have a valid ownership interest in all of the Collateral (subject to Permitted Liens) or the Collateral Agent shall fail to have a first priority perfected security interest in any part of the Collateral (subject to Permitted Liens) except as otherwise expressly permitted to be released in accordance with the applicable Transaction Document; or

 

(n) the existence of a Borrowing Base Deficiency which continues unremedied for (i) if (x) the Borrower delivers a Capital Call Notice with respect to such Borrowing Base Deficiency and (y) no Material Modification specified in clause (f) of the definition thereof occurred within five (5) Business Days of the occurrence of such Borrowing Base Deficiency, ten (10) Business Days or (ii) otherwise, three (3) Business Days, in each case of clause (i) or (ii), after the earliest to occur of (i) the date on which written notice of such Borrowing Base Deficiency shall have been given to the Borrower, the Collateral Manager or the Administrative Agent, (ii) the date on which a Responsible Officer of the Borrower, the Collateral Manager or the Administrative Agent acquires actual knowledge thereof and (iii) the delivery of any certificate or written calculation of the Borrower which indicates that a Borrowing Base Deficiency exists; or

 

(o) the Borrower, the pool of Collateral or the Seller shall become required to register as an “investment company” within the meaning of the 1940 Act; or

 

(p) the Internal Revenue Service or any other Governmental Authority shall file notice of a lien (other than for a Permitted Lien) pursuant to Section 6323 of the Code with regard to any assets of the Borrower and such Lien shall not have been released within five (5) Business Days, or the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation shall file notice of a lien pursuant to Section 4068 of ERISA with regard to any assets of the Borrower and such lien shall not have been released within five (5) Business Days; or

 

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(q) any representation, warranty or certification made or deemed made by the Borrower, the Equityholder or the Seller in any Transaction Document or in any certificate delivered pursuant to any Transaction Document shall prove to have been incorrect in any material respect when made or deemed made and the same continues to be unremedied for a period of thirty (30) days (if such failure can be remedied) after the earlier to occur of (i) the date on which written notice of such failure requiring the same to be remedied shall have been given to such Person and (ii) the date on which a Responsible Officer of such Person acquires actual knowledge thereof; or

 

(r) a Change of Control of the Borrower or the Seller occurs without the prior written consent of the Administrative Agent and the Required Lenders; or

 

(s) (i) failure of the Borrower to maintain at least one Independent Manager for more than seven days; provided, that no vote for a “Material Action” (as defined in the limited liability company agreement of the Borrower) shall be held until a new Independent Manager is appointed, (ii) the removal of any Independent Manager of the Borrower without “cause” (as such term is defined in the organizational document of the Borrower) or without giving prior written notice to the Administrative Agent, each as required in the organizational documents of the Borrower or (iii) an Independent Manager of the Borrower which is not provided by a nationally recognized service.

 

Section 9.2 Remedies.

 

(a) Upon the occurrence of an Event of Default, the Collateral Agent shall, at the request of the Administrative Agent and by notice to the Borrower, declare (i) the Termination Date to have occurred and all outstanding Obligations to be immediately due and payable in full (without presentment, demand, protest or notice of any kind all of which are hereby waived by the Borrower) or (ii) the Reinvestment Period End Date to have occurred; provided that, in the case of any event involving the Borrower described in Section 9.1(d), all of the Obligations shall be immediately due and payable in full (without presentment, demand, notice of any kind, all of which are hereby expressly, waived by the Borrower) and the Termination Date shall be deemed to have occurred automatically upon the occurrence of any such event.

 

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(b) On and after the declaration or occurrence of the Termination Date, the Collateral Agent, for the benefit of the Secured Parties, shall have, with respect to the Collateral granted pursuant to Section 8.1, and in addition to all other rights and remedies available to the Collateral Agent and the Secured Parties under this Agreement or other Applicable Law, all rights and remedies of a secured party upon default provided under the UCC of each applicable jurisdiction and other Applicable Laws, which rights shall be cumulative. Without limiting the generality of the foregoing, but subject to Section 9.2(c), the Collateral Agent, without demand of performance or other demand, presentment, protest, advertisement or notice of any kind (except any notice required by law referred to below) to or upon the Borrower or any other Person (all and each of which demands, defenses, advertisements and notices are hereby waived), may in such circumstances transfer all or any part of the Collateral into the Collateral Agent’s name or the name of any Secured Party or its nominee or nominees, and/or forthwith collect, receive, appropriate and realize upon the Collateral, or any part thereof, and/or may forthwith sell, lease, assign, give option or options to purchase, or otherwise dispose of and deliver the Collateral or any part thereof (or contract to do any of the foregoing), in one or more parcels at public or private sale or sales, at any exchange, broker’s board or office of the Collateral Agent or any Secured Party or elsewhere upon such terms and conditions (including by lease or by deferred payment arrangement) as it may deem advisable and at such prices as it may deem best, for cash or on credit or for future delivery without assumption of any credit risk and/or may take such other actions as may be available under applicable law. The Collateral Agent or any Secured Party shall have the right upon any such public sale or sales, and, to the extent permitted by law, upon any such private sale or sales, auction or closed tender, to purchase the whole or any part of the Collateral so sold, free of any right or equity of redemption in the Borrower, which right or equity is hereby waived or released. In addition, the Borrower and the Collateral Manager hereby agree that they will, at the Borrower’s expense and at the direction of the Collateral Agent, forthwith, (i) assemble all or any part of the Collateral as directed by the Collateral Agent and make the same available to the Collateral Agent at a place to be designated by the Collateral Agent, whether at the Borrower’s premises or elsewhere, and (ii) without notice except as specified below, sell the Collateral or any part thereof upon such terms, in such lots, to such buyers, and according to such other instructions as the Collateral Agent at the direction of the Administrative Agent may deem commercially reasonable. The Borrower agrees that, to the extent notice of sale shall be required by law, ten (10) days’ notice to the Borrower of any sale hereunder shall constitute reasonable and proper notification. All cash Proceeds received by the Collateral Agent on behalf of the Secured Parties in respect of any sale of, collection from, or other realization upon, all or any part of the Loans (after payment of any amounts incurred in connection with such sale) shall be deposited into the Collection Account and to be applied pursuant to Section 2.8. To the extent permitted by applicable law, the Borrower waives all claims, damages and demands it may acquire against the Collateral Agent or any other Secured Party arising out of the exercise by the Collateral Agent or any other Secured Party of any of its rights hereunder. The Borrower shall remain liable for any deficiency if the proceeds of any sale or other disposition of the Collateral are insufficient to pay the Obligations and the fees and disbursements of any attorneys employed by the Collateral Agent or any Secured Party to collect such deficiency.

 

(c) In connection with the sale of the Collateral following a declaration that the Obligations are immediately due and payable pursuant to Section 9.2(a), the Equityholder or any Affiliates thereof shall have the right to purchase any or all of the Loans in the Collateral, in each case by paying to the Collateral Agent in immediately available funds, an amount equal to all outstanding Obligations. If the Equityholder or any Affiliates thereof fail to exercise this purchase right within ten (10) days following the declaration that the Obligations are immediately due and payable pursuant to Section 9.2(a), then such contractual rights shall be irrevocably forfeited by the Equityholder and Affiliates thereof, but nothing herein shall prevent the Equityholder or its Affiliates from bidding at any sale of such Collateral.

 

Section 9.3 Collateral Agent Shall Enforce Claims.

 

All rights of action and claims under this Agreement or any other Transaction Document shall be prosecuted and enforced by the Collateral Agent, at the direction of the Administrative Agent in accordance with the terms hereof, in any legal or equitable proceeding, judicial or otherwise, relating thereto in its own name as trustee of an express trust, and any recovery of judgment shall be applied as set forth in Section 2.8.

 

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Section 9.4 Application of Cash Collected.

 

Any Cash collected by the Collateral Agent with respect to the Obligations pursuant to this Article IX and any Cash that may then be held or thereafter received by the Collateral Agent with respect to the Obligations hereunder shall be applied in accordance with Section 2.8, at the date or dates fixed by the Collateral Agent; provided, that (a) subject to clause (b), no such date may be fixed by the Collateral Agent unless the Collateral Agent has given the Borrower no fewer than two (2) Business Days’ prior written notice of such date, which notice shall set forth in reasonable detail the expected applications of Cash on such date and (b) no failure by the Collateral Agent to deliver the notice required pursuant to the foregoing clause (a) will affect the application of funds in the Collection Accounts pursuant to Section 2.8 on the next succeeding Payment Date.

 

Section 9.5  Rights of Action.

 

Notwithstanding any other provision of this Agreement (other than Section 12.10) or in any other Transaction Document, the Administrative Agent shall have the right to direct the Collateral Agent to institute any proceedings, judicial or otherwise, with respect to any Transaction Document, or for the appointment of a separate receiver or trustee, or for any other remedy hereunder. The Collateral Agent shall only institute proceedings and exercise remedies hereunder at the direction of the Administrative Agent (which the Collateral Agent shall implement without delay) and, in taking any action as so directed, shall have the right to indemnity against the costs, expenses and liabilities to be incurred in compliance with such request provided, that the Collateral Agent shall not be required to take any such action hereunder or under any other Transaction Document if the taking of such action, in the reasonable determination of the Collateral Agent, shall be in violation of any Applicable Law or contrary to any provisions of this Agreement or other Transaction Document.

 

Section 9.6  Unconditional Rights of Lenders to Receive Principal and Interest

 

(a)  Notwithstanding any other provision in this Agreement, each Lender shall have the right, which is absolute and unconditional, to receive payment of the principal of and interest on the Obligations as such principal and interest become due and payable in accordance with the terms hereof and, subject to the provisions of Section 9.5, to institute proceedings for the enforcement of any such payment, and such right shall not be impaired without the consent of such Lender.

 

(b) If collections in respect of the Collateral are insufficient to make payments due in respect of the Obligations, no other assets will be available for payment of the deficiency following realization of the Collateral and application of the proceeds thereof in accordance with Sections 2.7 and 2.8, and the obligations of the Borrower to pay any deficiency shall thereupon be extinguished and shall not thereafter revive.

 

Section 9.7  Restoration of Rights and Remedies.

 

If the Collateral Agent or any Lender has instituted any judicial proceeding to enforce any right or remedy under this Agreement and such proceeding has been discontinued or abandoned for any reason, or has been determined adversely to the Collateral Agent or to such Lender, then and in every such case the Borrower, the Collateral Agent and the Lenders shall, subject to any determination in such proceeding, be restored severally and respectively to their former positions hereunder, and thereafter all rights and remedies of the Secured Parties shall continue as though no such proceeding had been instituted.

 

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Section 9.8  Rights and Remedies Cumulative.

 

No right or remedy herein conferred upon or reserved to the Collateral Agent or to the Lenders is intended to be exclusive of any other right or remedy, and every right and remedy shall, to the extent permitted by law, be cumulative and in addition to every other right and remedy given hereunder or now or hereafter existing by law or in equity or otherwise. The assertion or employment of any right or remedy hereunder, or otherwise, shall not prevent the concurrent assertion or employment of any other appropriate right or remedy.

 

Section 9.9  Delay or Omission Not Waiver

 

No delay or omission of the Collateral Agent or of any Lender to exercise any right or remedy accruing upon any Event of Default shall impair any such right or remedy or constitute a waiver of any such Event of Default or an acquiescence therein. Every right and remedy given by this Section 9.9 or by law to the Collateral Agent or to the Lenders may be exercised from time to time, and as often as may be deemed expedient, by the Collateral Agent or by the Lenders, as the case may be.

 

Section 9.10  Waiver of Stay or Extension Laws.

 

The Borrower covenants (to the extent that it may lawfully do so) that it will not at any time insist upon, or plead, or in any manner whatsoever claim or take the benefit or advantage of, any stay or extension law wherever enacted, now or at any time hereafter in force (including filing a voluntary petition under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code and by the voluntary commencement of a proceeding or the filing of a petition seeking winding up, liquidation, reorganization or other relief under any bankruptcy, insolvency, receivership or similar law now or hereafter in effect), which may affect the covenants, the performance of or any remedies under this Agreement; and the Borrower (to the extent that it may lawfully do so) hereby expressly waives all benefit or advantage of any such law, and covenant that it will not hinder, delay or impede the execution of any power herein granted to the Collateral Agent, but will suffer and permit the execution of every such power as though no such law had been enacted.

 

Section 9.11 Power of Attorney. The Borrower hereby irrevocably appoints the Collateral Agent its true and lawful attorney (with full power of substitution) in its name, place and stead and at its expense, in connection with the enforcement of the rights and remedies provided for (and subject to the terms and conditions set forth) in this Agreement after the occurrence and during the continuance of a Default or an Event of Default, including without limitation the following powers: (a) to give any necessary receipts or acquittance for amounts collected or received hereunder, (b) to make all necessary transfers of the Collateral in connection with any such sale or other disposition made pursuant hereto, (c) to execute and deliver for value all necessary or appropriate bills of sale, assignments and other instruments in connection with any such sale or other disposition, the Borrower hereby ratifying and confirming all that such attorney (or any substitute) shall lawfully do hereunder and pursuant hereto, and (d) to sign any agreements, orders or other documents in connection with or pursuant to any Transaction Document. Nevertheless, if so requested by the Collateral Agent, the Borrower shall ratify and confirm any such sale or other disposition by executing and delivering to the Collateral Agent or such purchaser all proper bills of sale, assignments, releases and other instruments as may be designated in any such request. For the avoidance of doubt, the power of attorney granted by the Borrower pursuant to this Section 9.11 supersedes any other power of attorney or similar rights granted by the Borrower to any other party (including, without limitation, the Collateral Manager) under this Agreement, any other Transaction Document or any other agreement; provided that, the Collateral Manager may continue to exercise its rights under this Agreement until the Collateral Manager has received notice of the Collateral Agent’s exercise of its power of attorney hereunder.

 

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ARTICLE X

INDEMNIFICATION

 

Section 10.1  Indemnities by the Borrower.

 

(a) Without limiting any other rights that any such Person may have hereunder or under Applicable Law, the Borrower hereby agrees to indemnify the Secured Parties and the Independent Manager and each of their respective assigns and officers, directors, employees and agents thereof (collectively, the “Indemnified Parties”), forthwith on demand, from and against any and all damages, losses, claims (whether brought by or involving the Borrower or any third party), liabilities and related reasonable out-of-pocket costs and expenses, including reasonable attorneys’ fees and disbursements (all of the foregoing being collectively referred to as the “Indemnified Amounts”) awarded against, incurred by or asserted against such Indemnified Party or any of them arising out of or as a result of this Agreement (including the enforcement of any provision hereof) or having an interest in the Collateral or in respect of any Loan included in the Collateral, excluding, however, any Indemnified Amounts to the extent resulting from gross negligence or willful misconduct on the part of any Indemnified Party. If the Borrower has made any indemnity payment pursuant to this Section 10.1 and such payment fully indemnified the recipient thereof and the recipient thereafter collects any payments from others in respect of such Indemnified Amounts then, the recipient shall repay to the Borrower an amount equal to the amount it has collected from others in respect of such Indemnified Amounts. Without limiting the foregoing, the Borrower shall indemnify each Indemnified Party for Indemnified Amounts (except to the extent resulting from gross negligence or willful misconduct on the part of any Indemnified Party) relating to or resulting from:

 

(i) any representation or warranty made or deemed made by the Borrower, the Collateral Manager (on behalf of the Borrower) or any of their respective officers under or in connection with this Agreement or any other Transaction Document, which shall have been false or incorrect in any material respect when made or deemed made or delivered;

 

(ii) the failure of any Loan acquired on the Closing Date to be an Eligible Loan as of the Closing Date and the failure of any Loan acquired after the Closing Date to be an Eligible Loan on the related Funding Date;

 

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(iii) the failure by the Borrower or the Collateral Manager (on behalf of the Borrower) to comply with any term, provision or covenant contained in this Agreement or any agreement executed in connection with this Agreement, or with any Applicable Law, with respect to any Collateral or the nonconformity of any Collateral with any such Applicable Law;

 

(iv) the failure to vest and maintain vested in the Collateral Agent, for the benefit of the Secured Parties, a first priority, perfected security interest in the Collateral, together with all Collections, free and clear of any Lien (other than Permitted Liens) whether existing at the time of any Advance or at any time thereafter;

 

(v) the failure to maintain, as of the close of business on each Business Day prior to the Termination Date, an amount of Advances Outstanding that is less than or equal to the Borrowing Base on such Business Day;

 

(vi) the failure to file, or any delay in filing, financing statements, continuation statements or other similar instruments or documents under the UCC of any applicable jurisdiction or other Applicable Law with respect to any Collateral, whether at the time of any Advance or at any subsequent time;

 

(vii) any dispute, claim, offset or defense (other than the discharge in bankruptcy of the Obligor) of the Obligor to the payment with respect to any Collateral (including, without limitation, a defense based on the Collateral not being a legal, valid and binding obligation of such Obligor enforceable against it in accordance with its terms);

 

(viii) any failure of the Borrower or the Collateral Manager (on behalf of the Borrower) to perform its duties or obligations in accordance with the provisions of this Agreement or any of the other Transaction Documents to which it is a party or any failure by the Borrower or the Collateral Manager (on behalf of the Borrower) to perform its respective duties under any Collateral;

 

(ix) any inability to obtain any judgment in, or utilize the court or other adjudication system of, any state in which an Obligor may be located as a result of the failure of the Borrower to qualify to do business or file any notice or business activity report or any similar report;

 

(x) any action taken by the Borrower or the Collateral Manager (on behalf of the Borrower) in the enforcement or collection of any Collateral;

 

(xi) any products liability claim or personal injury or property damage suit or other similar or related claim or action of whatever sort arising out of or in connection with the Underlying Assets or services that are the subject of any Collateral;

 

(xii) Intentionally Omitted;

 

(xiii) any repayment by the Administrative Agent or another Secured Party of any amount previously distributed in reduction of Advances Outstanding or payment of Interest or any other amount due hereunder which amount the Administrative Agent or another Secured Party believes in good faith is required to be repaid;

 

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(xiv) except with respect to funds held in the Collection Account, the commingling of Collections on the Collateral at any time with other funds;

 

(xv)  any investigation, litigation or proceeding related to this Agreement or the use of proceeds of Advances or the security interest in the Collateral;

 

(xvi)  any failure by the Borrower to give reasonably equivalent value to the Seller or to the applicable third party transferor, in consideration for the transfer by the Seller or such third party to the Borrower of any item of Collateral or any attempt by any Person to void or otherwise avoid any such transfer under any statutory provision or common law or equitable action, including, without limitation, any provision of the Bankruptcy Code;

 

(xvii)  the use of the proceeds of any Advance in a manner other than as provided in this Agreement and the Sale Agreement; or

 

(xviii)  the failure of the Borrower or any of its agents or representatives to remit to the Collateral Manager (on behalf of the Borrower) or the Collateral Agent, Collections on the Collateral remitted to the Borrower, the Collateral Manager (on behalf of the Borrower) or any such agent or representative as provided in this Agreement.

 

(b) Any amounts subject to the indemnification provisions of this Section 10.1 shall be paid by the Borrower to the Indemnified Party pursuant to Section 2.7 or 2.8, as applicable, on the Payment Date following such Person’s demand therefor (if given at least five (5) Business Days prior to such Payment Date, and, if not, on the next subsequent Payment Date), accompanied by a reasonably detailed description in writing of the related damage, loss, claim, liability and related costs and expenses.

 

(c) If for any reason the indemnification provided above in this Section 10.1 is unavailable to the Indemnified Party or is insufficient to hold an Indemnified Party harmless, then the Borrower shall contribute to the amount paid or payable by such Indemnified Party as a result of such loss, claim, damage or liability in such proportion as is appropriate to reflect not only the relative benefits received by such Indemnified Party on the one hand and the Borrower on the other hand but also the relative fault of such Indemnified Party as well as any other relevant equitable considerations; provided that the Borrower shall not be required to contribute in respect of any Indemnified Amounts excluded in Section 10.1(a).

 

(d) The obligations of the Borrower under this Section 10.1 shall survive the resignation or removal of the Administrative Agent, the Collateral Manager, the Collateral Agent or the Custodian and the termination of this Agreement.

 

(e) This Section 10.1 shall not apply with respect to Taxes other than any Taxes representing damages, losses, or claims, etc. arising from non-Tax claims.

 

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Section 10.2 Indemnities by the Collateral Manager.

 

(a)  Without limiting any other rights that any such Person may have hereunder or under Applicable Law, the Collateral Manager hereby agrees to indemnify each Indemnified Party, the Borrower, the Equityholder, and their respective managers, officers, directors, employees and agents (collectively, the “Collateral Manager Indemnified Parties”) forthwith on demand, from and against any and all Indemnified Amounts awarded against or incurred by any such Collateral Manager Indemnified Party by reason of any acts or omissions of the Collateral Manager arising out of a breach of the Collateral Manager’s obligations and duties under this Agreement and each other Transaction Document to which it is a party, including, but not limited to (i) any representation or warranty made by the Collateral Manager under or in connection with any Transaction Document or any other information or report delivered by or on behalf of the Collateral Manager pursuant hereto, which shall have been false, incorrect or misleading in any material respect when made or deemed made, (ii) the failure by the Collateral Manager to comply with any Applicable Law, (iii) the failure of the Collateral Manager to comply with its duties or obligations in accordance with this Agreement, (iv) any gross negligence, willful misconduct, bad faith or fraud on the part of the Collateral Manager or (v) any litigation, proceedings or investigation against the Collateral Manager in connection with any Transaction Document or its role as Collateral Manager hereunder solely to the extent arising from the Collateral Manager’s breach of its obligations and duties under this Agreement or any other Transaction Document to which it is a party excluding, however, any Indemnified Amounts to the extent resulting from gross negligence or willful misconduct on the part of any Collateral Manager Indemnified Party. The provisions of this indemnity shall run directly to and be enforceable by a Collateral Manager Indemnified Party subject to the limitations hereof; provided that the indemnification of the Borrower, the Equityholder and their respective managers, officers, directors, employees and agents shall be in all respects junior and subordinate to the indemnification of the Indemnified Parties and their respective managers, officers, directors, employees and agents.

 

(b)  Any amounts subject to the indemnification provisions of this Section 10.2 shall be paid by the Collateral Manager to the applicable Collateral Manager Indemnified Party within ten (10) Business Days following receipt by the Collateral Manager of the Administrative Agent’s written demand therefor.

 

(c)  For the avoidance of doubt, the Collateral Manager shall have no liability for making indemnification hereunder to the extent any such indemnification constitutes recourse for uncollectible or uncollected Loans.

 

(d)  The obligations of the Collateral Manager under this Section 10.2 shall survive the resignation or removal of the Administrative Agent, the Collateral Agent and the termination of this Agreement.

 

(e)  Any indemnification pursuant to this Section 10.2 shall not be payable from the Collateral.

 

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ARTICLE XI

 

THE ADMINISTRATIVE AGENT

 

Section 11.1  Appointment.

 

Each Secured Party hereby appoints and authorizes the Administrative Agent as its agent and hereby further authorizes the Administrative Agent to appoint additional agents and bailees (including, without limitation, the Collateral Agent) to act on its behalf and for the benefit of each of the Secured Parties. Each Secured Party further authorizes the Administrative Agent to take such action as agent on its behalf and to exercise such powers under this Agreement and the other Transaction Documents as are delegated to the Administrative Agent by the terms hereof and thereof, together with such powers as are reasonably incidental thereto. In furtherance, and without limiting the generality, of the foregoing, each Secured Party hereby appoints the Administrative Agent as its agent to execute and deliver all further instruments and documents, and take all further action that the Administrative Agent may deem necessary or appropriate or that a Secured Party may reasonably request in order to perfect, protect or more fully evidence the security interests granted by the Borrower hereunder, or to enable any of them to exercise or enforce any of their respective rights hereunder, including, without limitation, the execution by the Administrative Agent as secured party/assignee of such financing or continuation statements, or amendments thereto or assignments thereof, relative to all or any of the Collateral now existing or hereafter arising, and such other instruments or notices, as may be necessary or appropriate for the purposes stated hereinabove. The Lenders may direct the Administrative Agent to take any such incidental action hereunder. With respect to other actions which are incidental to the actions specifically delegated to the Administrative Agent hereunder, the Administrative Agent shall not be required to take any such incidental action hereunder, but shall be required to act or to refrain from acting (and shall be fully protected in acting or refraining from acting) upon the direction of the Lenders; provided that the Administrative Agent shall not be required to take any action hereunder if the taking of such action, in the reasonable determination of the Administrative Agent, shall be in violation of any Applicable Law or contrary to any provision of this Agreement or shall expose the Administrative Agent to liability hereunder or otherwise. In the event the Administrative Agent requests the consent of a Lender pursuant to the foregoing provisions and the Administrative Agent does not receive a consent (either positive or negative) from such Person within ten (10) Business Days of such Person’s receipt of such request, then such Lender shall be deemed to have declined to consent to the relevant action. To the extent not delivered or required to be delivered to the Lenders by the Borrower or the Collateral Manager hereunder or the other Transaction Documents, the Administrative Agent shall furnish to the Lenders, promptly upon the Administrative Agent’s receipt of the same, copies of all notices, certificates and other information delivered to the Administrative Agent under the Transaction Documents.

 

Section 11.2  Standard of Care.

 

The Administrative Agent shall exercise such rights and powers vested in it by this Agreement and the other Transaction Documents, and use the same degree of care and skill in their exercise as a prudent person would exercise or use under the circumstances in the conduct of such person’s own affairs.

 

 

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Section 11.3 Administrative Agent’s Reliance, etc.

 

Neither the Administrative Agent nor any of its directors, officers, agents or employees shall be liable for any action taken or omitted to be taken by it or them as Administrative Agent under or in connection with this Agreement or any of the other Transaction Documents, except for its or their own gross negligence or willful misconduct. Without limiting the foregoing, the Administrative Agent: (i) may consult with legal counsel (including counsel for the Borrower or the Seller), independent public accountants and other experts selected by it and shall not be liable for any action taken or omitted to be taken in good faith by it in accordance with the advice of such counsel, accountants or experts; (ii) makes no warranty or representation and shall not be responsible for any statements, warranties or representations made by any other Person in or in connection with this Agreement; (iii) shall not have any duty to ascertain or to inquire as to the performance or observance of any of the terms, covenants or conditions of this Agreement or any of the other Transaction Documents on the part of any of the Borrower, the Collateral Manager, the Equityholder or the Seller or to inspect the property (including the books and records) of any of the Borrower, the Collateral Manager, the Equityholder or the Seller; (iv) shall not be responsible for the due execution, legality, validity, enforceability, genuineness, sufficiency or value of this Agreement, any of the other Transaction Documents or any other instrument or document furnished pursuant hereto or thereto; and (v) shall incur no liability under or in respect of this Agreement or any of the other Transaction Documents by acting upon any notice (including notice by telephone), consent, certificate or other instrument or writing (which may be by facsimile) believed by it to be genuine and signed or sent by the proper party or parties.

 

Section 11.4  Credit Decision with Respect to the Administrative Agent.

 

Each Lender acknowledges that it has, independently and without reliance upon the Administrative Agent, or any of the Administrative Agent’s Affiliates, and based upon such documents and information as it has deemed appropriate, made its own evaluation and decision to enter into this Agreement and the other Transaction Documents to which it is a party. Each Lender also acknowledges that it will, independently and without reliance upon the Administrative Agent, or any of the Administrative Agent’s Affiliates, and based on such documents and information as it shall deem appropriate at the time, continue to make its own decisions in taking or not taking action under this Agreement and the other Transaction Documents to which it is a party.

 

Section 11.5  Indemnification of the Administrative Agent.

 

Each Lender agrees to indemnify the Administrative Agent (to the extent not reimbursed by the Borrower or the Collateral Manager), ratably in accordance with its Pro Rata Share from and against any and all liabilities, obligations, losses, damages, penalties, actions, judgments, suits, costs, expenses or disbursements of any kind or nature whatsoever which may be imposed on, incurred by, or asserted against the Administrative Agent in any way relating to or arising out of this Agreement or any of the other Transaction Documents, or any action taken or omitted by the Administrative Agent hereunder or thereunder; provided that, the Lenders shall not be liable for any portion of such liabilities, obligations, losses, damages, penalties, actions, judgments, suits, costs, expenses or disbursements resulting from the Administrative Agent’s gross negligence or willful misconduct. The payment of amounts under this Section 11.5 shall be on an after-Tax basis. Without limitation of the foregoing, each Lender agrees to reimburse the Administrative Agent, ratably in accordance with its Pro Rata Share promptly upon demand for any reasonable out-of-pocket expenses (including fees of one outside counsel in each applicable jurisdiction) incurred by the Administrative Agent in connection with the administration, modification, amendment or enforcement (whether through negotiations, legal proceedings or otherwise) of, or legal advice in respect of rights or responsibilities under, this Agreement and the other Transaction Documents, to the extent that such expenses are incurred in the interests of or otherwise in respect of the Lenders hereunder and/or thereunder and to the extent that the Administrative Agent is not reimbursed for such expenses by the Borrower or the Collateral Manager.

 

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Section 11.6  Successor Administrative Agent.

 

The Administrative Agent may resign at any time, effective upon the appointment and acceptance of a successor Administrative Agent as provided below, by giving at least ten (10) days’ written notice thereof to each Lender and the Borrower. Upon any such resignation, the Lenders acting jointly shall appoint a successor Administrative Agent with the consent of the Borrower, such consent not to be unreasonably withheld. Each of the Borrower and each Lender agree that it shall not unreasonably withhold or delay its approval of the appointment of a successor Administrative Agent. If no such successor Administrative Agent shall have been so appointed, and shall have accepted such appointment, within thirty (30) days after the retiring Administrative Agent’s giving of notice of resignation, then the retiring Administrative Agent may, on behalf of the Secured Parties, appoint a successor Administrative Agent which successor Administrative Agent shall be either (i) a commercial bank organized under the laws of the United States or of any state thereof and have a combined capital and surplus of at least $50,000,000, (ii) a Lender or (iii) an Affiliate of such a bank or a Lender. Upon the acceptance of any appointment as Administrative Agent hereunder by a successor Administrative Agent, such successor Administrative Agent shall thereupon succeed to and become vested with all the rights, powers, privileges and duties of the retiring Administrative Agent, and the retiring Administrative Agent shall be discharged from its duties and obligations under this Agreement. After any retiring Administrative Agent’s resignation as Administrative Agent, the provisions of this Article XI shall continue to inure to its benefit as to any actions taken or omitted to be taken by it while it was Administrative Agent under this Agreement.

 

Section 11.7  Payments by the Administrative Agent.

 

Unless specifically allocated to a specific Lender pursuant to the terms of this Agreement, all amounts received by the Administrative Agent on behalf of the Lenders shall be paid by the Administrative Agent to the Lenders in accordance with their respective Pro Rata Shares in the applicable Advances Outstanding, or if there are no Advances Outstanding in accordance with their most recent Commitments, on the Business Day received by the Administrative Agent, unless such amounts are received after 3:30 p.m. on such Business Day, in which case the Administrative Agent shall use its reasonable efforts to pay such amounts to each Lender on such Business Day, but, in any event, shall pay such amounts to such Lender not later than the following Business Day.

 

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Section 11.8  Erroneous Payments.

 

(a)  Each Lender, each other Secured Party and any other party hereto hereby severally agrees that if (i) the Administrative Agent or the Collateral Agent notifies (which such notice shall be conclusive absent manifest error) such Lender or any other Secured Party (or any Affiliate of a Secured Party) or any other Person that the Administrative Agent or the Collateral Agent has determined in its sole discretion that such Person has received funds on behalf of a Lender, Secured Party or other Person (each such recipient, a “Payment Recipient”) from the Administrative Agent or the Collateral Agent or any of their Affiliates that were erroneously transmitted to, or otherwise erroneously or mistakenly received by, such Payment Recipient (whether or not known to such Payment Recipient) or (ii) any Payment Recipient receives any payment from the Administrative Agent or the Collateral Agent (or any of their Affiliates) (x) that is in a different amount than, or on a different date from, that specified in a notice of payment, prepayment or repayment sent by the Administrative Agent or the Collateral Agent (or any of their Affiliates) with respect to such payment, prepayment or repayment, (y) that was not preceded or accompanied by a notice of payment, prepayment or repayment sent by the Administrative Agent or the Collateral Agent (or any of their Affiliates) with respect to such payment, prepayment or repayment or (z) that such Payment Recipient otherwise becomes aware was transmitted or received in error or by mistake (in whole or in part) then, in each case, an error in payment shall be presumed to have been made (any such amounts specified in clauses (i) or (ii) of this Section 11.8, whether received as a payment, prepayment or repayment of principal, interest, fees, distribution or otherwise; individually and collectively, an “Erroneous Payment”) then such Payment Recipient is deemed to have knowledge of such error at the time of its receipt of such Erroneous Payment; provided that nothing in this Section shall require the Administrative Agent or the Collateral Agent to provide any of the notices specified in clauses (i) or (ii) above. Each Payment Recipient shall not assert any right or claim to the Erroneous Payment, and hereby waives any claim, counterclaim, defense or right of set-off or recoupment with respect to any demand, claim or counterclaim by the Administrative Agent or the Collateral Agent for the return of any Erroneous Payments, including without limitation waiver of any defense based on “discharge for value” or any similar doctrine.

 

(b)  Without limiting the immediately preceding clause (a), each Payment Recipient agrees that, in the case of clause (a)(ii) above, it shall promptly (and, in all events, within one (1) Business Day of its knowledge (or deemed knowledge) of such error) notify the Administrative Agent or the Collateral Agent in writing of such occurrence.

 

(c)  In the case of either clause (a)(i) or (a)(ii) above, such Erroneous Payment shall at all times remain the property of the Administrative Agent or the Collateral Agent and shall be segregated by the Payment Recipient and held in trust for the benefit of the Administrative Agent or the Collateral Agent, and upon demand from the Administrative Agent or the Collateral Agent such Payment Recipient shall (or, with respect to any Payment Recipient who received such funds on its behalf shall cause such Payment Recipient to), promptly, but in all events no later than one Business Day thereafter, return to the Administrative Agent or the Collateral Agent the amount of any such Erroneous Payment (or portion thereof) as to which such a demand was made in same day funds and in the currency so received, together with interest thereon in respect of each day from and including the date such Erroneous Payment (or portion thereof) was received by such Payment Recipient to the date such amount is repaid to the Administrative Agent or the Collateral Agent at the greater of the Federal Funds Rate and a rate determined by the Administrative Agent or the Collateral Agent in accordance with banking industry rules on interbank compensation from time to time in effect.

 

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(d)  In the event that an Erroneous Payment (or portion thereof) is not recovered by the Administrative Agent or the Collateral Agent for any reason, after demand therefor by the Administrative Agent or the Collateral Agent in accordance with immediately preceding clause (c), from any Lender that is a Payment Recipient (such unrecovered amount as to such Lender, an “Erroneous Payment Return Deficiency”), then at the sole discretion of the Administrative Agent or the Collateral Agent and upon the Administrative Agent’s written notice to such Payment Recipient (i) such Payment Recipient shall be deemed to have assigned its Advances (but not its Commitments) to the Administrative Agent or the Collateral Agent or, at the option of the Administrative Agent or the Collateral Agent, the Administrative Agent’s or the Collateral Agent’s lending affiliate, in a principal amount equal to the Erroneous Payment Return Deficiency (or such lesser amount as the Administrative Agent or the Collateral Agent may specify) (such assignment of the Advances (but not Commitments), the “Erroneous Payment Deficiency Assignment”) at par plus any accrued and unpaid interest, without further consent or approval of any party hereto and without any further payment by the Administrative Agent or the Collateral Agent or its lending affiliate as the assignee of such Erroneous Payment Deficiency Assignment, and the Administrative Agent may reflect in the Register its ownership interest in the Loans subject to the Erroneous Payment Deficiency Assignment. As to any Erroneous Payment Deficiency Assignment, the provisions of this clause (d) shall govern in the event of any conflict with the terms and conditions of Section 12.16. For the avoidance of doubt, no Erroneous Payment Deficiency Assignment will reduce the Commitments of any Lender and such Commitments shall remain available in accordance with the terms of this Agreement.

 

(e)  Each party hereto hereby agrees that (x) in the event an Erroneous Payment (or portion thereof) is not recovered from any Payment Recipient that has received such Erroneous Payment (or portion thereof) for any reason, the Administrative Agent or the Collateral Agent shall be subrogated to all the rights of such Payment Recipient with respect to such amount, (y) the receipt of an Erroneous Payment by a Payment Recipient shall not for the purpose of this Agreement be treated as a payment, prepayment, repayment, discharge or other satisfaction of any Obligations owed by the Borrower (except to the extent that the funds used to make such Erroneous Payment were received from the Borrower as repayment of such Obligations, including any payments made from Collections for such purpose pursuant to Section 2.7 or 2.8) or any other Secured Party and (z) to the extent that an Erroneous Payment was in any way or at any time credited as payment or satisfaction of any of the Obligations, the Obligations or any part thereof that were so credited, and all rights of the Payment Recipient, as the case may be, shall be reinstated and continue in full force and effect as if such payment or satisfaction had never been received (except to the extent that the funds used to make such Erroneous Payment were received from the Borrower as the repayment of such Obligations, including any payments made from Collections for such purpose pursuant to Section 2.7 or 2.8).

 

(f)  Each Payment Recipient hereby authorizes the Administrative Agent or the Collateral Agent to set off, net and apply any and all amounts at any time owing to such Payment Recipient under any Transaction Documents, or otherwise payable or distributable by the Administrative Agent or the Collateral Agent to such Payment Recipient from any source, against any amount due to the Administrative Agent or the Collateral Agent under pursuant to this Section 11.8 or under the indemnification provisions of this Agreement.

 

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(g)  Each party’s obligations under this Section 11.8 shall survive the resignation or replacement of the Administrative Agent or the Collateral Agent or any transfer of right or obligations by, or the replacement of, a Lender, the termination of the Commitments or the repayment, satisfaction or discharge of all Obligations (or any portion thereof) under any Transaction Document. Solely for purposes of this Section 11.8, each of the Collateral Agent and the Securities Intermediary are excluded from the definition of “Secured Party.”

 

ARTICLE XII

MISCELLANEOUS

 

Section 12.1  Amendments and Waivers.

 

Except as provided in this Section 12.1 and Section 2.19, no amendment, waiver or other modification of any provision of this Agreement shall be effective without the written agreement of the Borrower, the Administrative Agent, the Collateral Manager, the Required Lenders and the Equityholder (with written notice to the Collateral Agent and the Custodian); provided that no amendment, waiver or consent shall:

 

(a)  increase the Commitment of any Lender without the written consent of such Lender;

 

(b)  waive, extend or postpone any date fixed by this Agreement or any other Transaction Document for any payment or mandatory prepayment of principal, interest, fees or other amounts due to the Lenders (or any of them) or any scheduled or mandatory reduction of the Commitment hereunder or under any other Transaction Document without the written consent of each Lender directly and adversely affected thereby;

 

(c)  reduce the principal of, or the rate of interest specified herein on, any Advance or Obligation, or any fees or other amounts payable hereunder or under any other Transaction Document without the written consent of each Lender directly and adversely affected thereby;

 

(d)  change Section 2.7, 2.8 or any related definitions or provisions in a manner that would alter the order of application of proceeds or would alter the pro rata sharing of payments required thereby, in each case, without the written consent of each Lender directly and adversely affected thereby;

 

(e)  change any provision of this Section or reduce the percentages specified in the definition of “Required Lenders” or any other provision hereof specifying the number or percentage of Lenders required to amend, waive or otherwise modify any rights hereunder or make any determination or grant any consent hereunder, without the written consent of each Lender directly affected thereby;

 

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(f)  consent to the assignment or transfer by the Borrower, the Seller or the Collateral Manager of such Person’s rights and obligations under any Transaction Document to which it is a party (except as expressly permitted hereunder), in each case, without the written consent of each Lender;

 

(g)  make any modification to the definition of “Applicable Percentage”, “Assigned Value”, “Minimum Equity Amount”, “Eligible Loan”, “Borrowing Base” or “Adjusted Borrowing Value”, in each case, which would have a material adverse effect on the calculation of the Borrowing Base, without the written consent of each Lender;

 

(h)  release all or substantially all of the Collateral or release any Transaction Document (other than as specifically permitted or contemplated in this Agreement or the applicable Transaction Document) without the written consent of each Lender;

 

(i)  make any modification to the definition of “Reinvestment Period End Date” or any component thereof, without the written consent of each Lender; or

 

(j)  agree to the direct or indirect subordination of any Lien securing the Obligations in connection with this Agreement, without the written consent of each Lender;

 

provided, further, that, (i) any amendment of this Agreement that is solely for the purpose of adding a Lender may be effected without the written consent of the Borrower or any Lender, (ii) no such amendment, waiver or modification materially adversely affecting the rights or obligations of the Collateral Agent or the Custodian shall be effective without the written agreement of such Person, (iii) any amendment of this Agreement that a Lender is advised by its legal or financial advisors to be necessary or desirable in order to avoid the consolidation of the Borrower with such Lender for accounting purposes may be effected without the written consent of any other Lender and (iv) the Administrative Agent, the Collateral Manager and the Borrower shall be permitted to amend any provision of the Transaction Documents (and such amendment shall become effective without any further action or consent of any other party to any Transaction Document) if the Administrative Agent, the Collateral Manager and the Borrower shall have jointly identified an obvious error or any error or omission of a technical or immaterial nature in any such provision. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary herein, no Defaulting Lender shall have any right to approve or disapprove any amendment, waiver or consent hereunder, except that the Commitment of such Lender may not be increased or extended without the consent of such Lender.

 

Each waiver, amendment and consent made pursuant to this Section 12.1 shall be effective only in the specific instance and for the specific purpose for which given.

 

Section 12.2  Notices, etc.

 

All notices, reports and other communications provided for hereunder shall, unless otherwise stated herein, be in writing (including communication by facsimile copy) and mailed, e-mailed, faxed, transmitted or delivered, as to each party hereto, at its address set forth on Annex A to this Agreement or at such other address as shall be designated by such party in a written notice to the other parties hereto. All such notices and communications shall be effective (a) upon receipt when sent through the U.S. mails, registered or certified mail, return receipt requested, postage prepaid, with such receipt to be effective the date of delivery indicated on the return receipt, (b) one Business Day after delivery to an overnight courier, (c) on the date personally delivered to a Responsible Officer of the party to which sent, or (d) on the date transmitted by legible facsimile transmission or electronic mail transmission with a confirmation of receipt.

 

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Section 12.3  Ratable Payments.

 

If any Secured Party, whether by setoff or otherwise, has payment made to it with respect to any portion of the Obligations owing to such Secured Party (other than payments received pursuant to Section 10.1) in a greater proportion than that received by any other Secured Party, such Secured Party agrees, promptly upon demand, to purchase for cash without recourse or warranty a portion of the Obligations held by the other Secured Parties so that after such purchase each Secured Party will hold its ratable proportion of the Obligations; provided that if all or any portion of such excess amount is thereafter recovered from such Secured Party, such purchase shall be rescinded and the purchase price restored to the extent of such recovery, but without interest.

 

Section 12.4  No Waiver; Remedies.

 

No failure on the part of the Administrative Agent, the Collateral Agent or a Secured Party to exercise, and no delay in exercising, any right or remedy hereunder shall operate as a waiver thereof; nor shall any single or partial exercise of any right or remedy hereunder preclude any other or further exercise thereof or the exercise of any other right. The rights and remedies herein provided are cumulative and not exclusive of any rights and remedies provided by law.

 

Section 12.5  Binding Effect; Benefit of Agreement.

 

This Agreement shall be binding upon and inure to the benefit of the Borrower, the Collateral Manager, the Administrative Agent, the Collateral Agent, the Secured Parties and their respective successors and permitted assigns. Each Collateral Manager Indemnified Party and each Indemnified Party shall be an express third-party beneficiary of this Agreement to the extent set forth herein. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary herein, the Collateral Manager may not assign any of its rights or obligations hereunder by virtue of any change of control considered an “assignment” within the meaning of Section 202(a)(1) of the Advisers Act without the prior written consent of the Borrower and the Equityholder.

 

Section 12.6  Term of this Agreement.

 

This Agreement, including, without limitation, the Borrower’s representations and covenants set forth in Articles IV and V, and the Collateral Manager’s representations, covenants and duties set forth in Articles IV and V, creates and constitutes the continuing obligation of the parties hereto in accordance with its terms, and shall remain in full force and effect during the Covenant Compliance Period; provided that the rights and remedies with respect to any breach of any representation and warranty made or deemed made by the Borrower or the Collateral Manager pursuant to Articles IV and V, the provisions, including, without limitation the indemnification and payment provisions, of Article X, Section 2.13, Section 12.9, Section 12.10 and Section 12.11, shall be continuing and shall survive (i) any termination of this Agreement and the occurrence of the Collection Date and (ii) with respect to the rights and remedies of the Lenders under Article X, any sale by the Lenders of the Obligations hereunder.

 

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Section 12.7  Governing Law; Consent to Jurisdiction; Waiver of Objection to Venue.

 

THIS AGREEMENT AND THE RIGHTS AND OBLIGATIONS OF THE PARTIES UNDER THIS AGREEMENT SHALL BE GOVERNED BY, AND CONSTRUED AND INTERPRETED IN ACCORDANCE WITH, THE LAW OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK.

 

Section 12.8  Waivers.

 

Each of the Collateral Manager, the Borrower, the Seller, the Lenders, the Administrative Agent and the Collateral Agent hereby irrevocably and unconditionally:

 

(a)  submits for itself and its property in any legal action or proceeding relating to this Agreement and the other Transaction Documents to which it is a party, or for recognition and enforcement of any judgment in respect thereof, to the non-exclusive general jurisdiction of the courts of the State of New York, the courts of the United States of America for the Southern District of New York, and appellate courts from any thereof;

 

(b)  consents that any such action or proceeding may be brought in such courts and waives any objection that it may now or hereafter have to the venue of any such action or proceeding in any such court or that such action or proceeding was brought in an inconvenient court and agrees not to plead or claim the same;

 

(c)  agrees that service of process on the Borrower and Collateral Manager in any such action or proceeding may be effected by mailing a copy thereof by registered or certified mail (or any substantially similar form of mail), postage prepaid, to the Borrower or the Collateral Manager, as applicable;

 

(d)  agrees that nothing herein shall affect the right to effect service of process in any other manner permitted by law or shall limit the right to sue in any other jurisdiction; and

 

(e)  waives, to the maximum extent not prohibited by law, any right it may have to claim or recover in any legal action or proceeding referred to in this Section 12.8 any special, indirect, exemplary, punitive or consequential (including loss of profit)damages.

 

(f)  EACH PARTY HERETO HEREBY IRREVOCABLY WAIVES TO THE FULLEST EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW, ANY AND ALL RIGHT TO TRIAL BY JURY IN ANY LEGAL PROCEEDING ARISING OUT OF OR RELATING TO THIS AGREEMENT OR THE TRANSACTIONS CONTEMPLATED HEREBY.

 

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Section 12.9  Costs and Expenses.

 

(a)  In addition to (and without duplication of) the rights of indemnification granted to the Indemnified Parties under Article X hereof and amounts payable pursuant to Section 2.11, the Borrower agrees to pay on the next Payment Date all reasonable invoiced out-of-pocket costs and expenses of the Secured Parties incurred in connection with the preparation, execution, delivery, administration (including periodic auditing, to the extent required to be paid by the Borrower pursuant to this Agreement), renewal, amendment or modification of, or any waiver or consent issued in connection with, this Agreement and the other documents to be delivered hereunder or in connection herewith, including, without limitation, the reasonable invoiced fees and out-of-pocket expenses of one external counsel for each Secured Party in each applicable jurisdiction with respect thereto and with respect to advising the Administrative Agent, the Collateral Manager, the Collateral Agent and the Secured Parties as to their respective rights and remedies under this Agreement and the other documents to be delivered hereunder or in connection herewith, and all reasonable invoiced out-of-pocket costs and expenses, if any (including reasonable fees and expenses of one external counsel in each applicable jurisdiction for each Secured Party), incurred by the Secured Parties in connection with the enforcement of this Agreement by such Person and the other documents to be delivered hereunder or in connection herewith.

 

(b)  The Borrower shall pay on the Payment Date following receipt of a request therefor, all other reasonable out-of-pocket costs and expenses that have been invoiced at least two (2) Business Days prior to such Payment Date and incurred by the Administrative Agent and the Secured Parties, in each case in connection with periodic audits of the Borrower’s books and records on two (2) occasions per fiscal year.

 

Section 12.10  No Proceedings. Each of the parties hereto hereby agrees that it will not institute against, or join any other Person in instituting against, the Borrower or the Equityholder any Insolvency Proceeding so long as there shall not have elapsed one year and one day (or such longer preference period as shall then be in effect) since the end of the Covenant Compliance Period. The provisions of this Section 12.10 are a material inducement for the Secured Parties to enter into this Agreement and the transactions contemplated hereby and are an essential term hereof. The parties hereby agree that monetary damages are not adequate for a breach of the provisions of this Section 12.10 and the Administrative Agent may seek and obtain specific performance of such provisions (including injunctive relief), including, without limitation, in any bankruptcy, reorganization, arrangement, winding up, insolvency, moratorium, winding up or liquidation proceedings, or other proceedings under U.S. federal or state bankruptcy or similar laws of any jurisdiction. The provisions of this paragraph shall survive the termination of this Agreement.

 

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Section 12.11 Recourse Against Certain Parties.

 

(a)  No recourse under or with respect to any obligation, covenant or agreement (including, without limitation, the payment of any fees or any other obligations) of the Administrative Agent, any Secured Party, the Borrower, the Collateral Manager, the Seller or the Equityholder as contained in this Agreement or any other agreement, instrument or document entered into by it pursuant hereto or in connection herewith shall be had against any incorporator, affiliate, stockholder, officer, partner, member, manager, employee or director of the Administrative Agent, any Secured Party, the Borrower, the Collateral Manager, the Seller or the Equityholder by the enforcement of any assessment or by any legal or equitable proceeding, by virtue of any statute or otherwise; it being expressly agreed and understood that the agreements of the Administrative Agent, any Secured Party, the Borrower, the Collateral Manager, the Seller or the Equityholder contained in this Agreement and all of the other agreements, instruments and documents entered into by it pursuant hereto or in connection herewith are, in each case, solely the corporate or limited liability company obligations of the Administrative Agent, any Secured Party, the Borrower, the Collateral Manager, the Seller or the Equityholder, and that no personal liability whatsoever shall attach to or be incurred by the Administrative Agent, any Secured Party, the Borrower, the Collateral Manager, the Seller or the Equityholder or any incorporator, stockholder, affiliate, officer, partner, member, manager, employee or director of the Administrative Agent, any Secured Party, the Borrower, the Collateral Manager, the Seller or the Equityholder under or by reason of any of the obligations, covenants or agreements of the Administrative Agent, any Secured Party, the Borrower, the Collateral Manager, the Seller or the Equityholder contained in this Agreement or in any other such instruments, documents or agreements, or that are implied therefrom, and that any and all personal liability of the Administrative Agent, any Secured Party, the Borrower, the Collateral Manager, the Seller or the Equityholder and each incorporator, stockholder, affiliate, officer, partner, member, manager, employee or director of the Administrative Agent, any Secured Party, the Borrower, the Collateral Manager, the Seller or the Equityholder, or any of them, for breaches by the Administrative Agent, any Secured Party, the Borrower, the Collateral Manager, the Seller or the Equityholder of any such obligations, covenants or agreements, which liability may arise either at common law or at equity, by statute or constitution, or otherwise, is hereby expressly waived as a condition of and in consideration for the execution of this Agreement; provided that the foregoing non-recourse provisions shall in no way affect any rights the Secured Parties might have against any incorporator, affiliate, stockholder, officer, employee, partner, member, manager or director of the Borrower, the Collateral Manager, the Seller or the Equityholder to the extent of any fraud, misappropriation, embezzlement or any other financial crime constituting a felony by such Person.

 

(b)  Notwithstanding any contrary provision set forth herein, no claim may be made by the Borrower, the Seller, the Collateral Manager or any other Person against the Administrative Agent and the Secured Parties or their respective Affiliates, directors, officers, employees, attorneys or agents for any special, indirect, consequential or punitive damages in respect to any claim for breach of contract or any other theory of liability arising out of or related to the transactions contemplated by this Agreement, or any act, omission or event occurring in connection therewith; and each of the Borrower, the Seller and the Collateral Manager hereby waives, releases, and agrees not to sue upon any claim for any such damages, whether or not accrued and whether or not known or suspected.

 

(c)  Notwithstanding any contrary provision set forth herein, no claim may be made by the Borrower against the Collateral Manager or its Affiliates, directors, officers, employees, attorneys or agents for any special, indirect, consequential or punitive damages in respect to any claim for breach of contract or any other theory of liability arising out of or related to the transactions contemplated by this Agreement, or any act, omission or event occurring in connection therewith; and the Borrower hereby waives, releases, and agrees not to sue upon any claim for any such damages, whether or not accrued and whether or not known or suspected.

 

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(d)  Notwithstanding any contrary provision set forth herein, no claim may be made by the Collateral Manager against the Borrower or its Affiliates, directors, officers, employees, attorneys or agents for any special, indirect, consequential or punitive damages in respect to any claim for breach of contract or any other theory of liability arising out of or related to the transactions contemplated by this Agreement, or any act, omission or event occurring in connection therewith; and the Collateral Manager hereby waives, releases, and agrees not to sue upon any claim for any such damages, whether or not accrued and whether or not known or suspected.

 

(e)  No obligation or liability to any Obligor under any of the Loans is intended to be assumed by the Administrative Agent and the Secured Parties under or as a result of this Agreement and the transactions contemplated hereby.

 

(f)  The provisions of this Section 12.11 shall survive the termination of this Agreement.

 

(g)  Wilmington Trust, National Association agrees to accept and act upon instructions or directions pursuant to this Agreement or any document executed in connection herewith sent by unsecured email, facsimile transmission or other similar unsecured electronic methods; provided, however, that any person providing such instructions or directions shall provide to Wilmington Trust, National Association an incumbency certificate listing persons designated to provide such instructions or directions, which incumbency certificate shall be amended whenever a person is added or deleted from the listing. If such person elects to give Wilmington Trust, National Association email or facsimile instructions (or instructions by a similar electronic method) and Wilmington Trust, National Association in its discretion elects to act upon such instructions, Wilmington Trust, National Association’s reasonable understanding of such instructions shall be deemed controlling. Wilmington Trust, National Association shall not be liable for any losses, costs or expenses arising directly or indirectly from Wilmington Trust, National Association’s reliance upon and compliance with such instructions notwithstanding such instructions conflicting with or being inconsistent with a subsequent written instruction. Any person providing such instructions or directions agrees to assume all risks arising out of the use of such electronic methods to submit instructions and directions to Wilmington Trust, National Association, including without limitation the risk of Wilmington Trust, National Association acting on unauthorized instructions, and the risk of interception and misuse by third parties and acknowledges and agrees that there may be more secure methods of transmitting such instructions than the method(s) selected by it and agrees that the security procedures (if any) to be followed in connection with its transmission of such instructions provide to it a commercially reasonable degree of protection in light of its particular needs and circumstances.

 

Section 12.12  Protection of Right, Title and Interest in the Collateral; Further Action Evidencing Advances.

 

(a)  The Borrower shall cause this Agreement, all amendments hereto and/or all financing statements and continuation statements and any other necessary documents covering the right, title and interest of the Administrative Agent, as agent for the Secured Parties, and of the Secured Parties to the Collateral to be promptly recorded, registered and filed, and at all times to be kept recorded, registered and filed, all in such manner and in such places as may be required by law fully to preserve and protect the right, title and interest of the Administrative Agent, as agent of the Secured Parties, hereunder to all property comprising the Collateral. The Borrower shall cooperate fully with the Collateral Manager in connection with the obligations set forth above and will execute any and all documents reasonably required to fulfill the intent of this Section 12.12(a).

 

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(b)  The Borrower agrees that from time to time, at its expense, it will promptly authorize, execute and deliver all instruments and documents, and take all actions, that the Administrative Agent may reasonably request in order to perfect, protect or more fully evidence the security interest granted in the Collateral, or to enable the Administrative Agent or the Secured Parties to exercise and enforce their rights and remedies hereunder or under any other Transaction Document.

 

(c)  If the Borrower or the Collateral Manager fails to perform any of its obligations hereunder, the Administrative Agent or any Secured Party may (but shall not be required to) perform, or cause performance of, such obligation; and the Administrative Agent’s or such Secured Party’s costs and expenses incurred in connection therewith shall be payable by the Borrower as provided in Article X. The Borrower irrevocably authorizes the Administrative Agent and appoints the Administrative Agent as its attorney-in-fact to act on behalf of the Borrower (i) to execute on behalf of the Borrower as debtor and to file financing statements necessary or desirable in the Administrative Agent’s sole discretion to perfect and to maintain the perfection and priority of the interest of the Secured Parties in the Collateral, including those that describe the Collateral as “all assets,” or words of similar effect, and (ii) to file a carbon, photographic or other reproduction of this Agreement or any financing statement with respect to the Collateral as a financing statement in such offices as the Administrative Agent in its sole discretion deems necessary or desirable to perfect and to maintain the perfection and priority of the interests of the Secured Parties in the Collateral. This appointment is coupled with an interest and is irrevocable.

 

(d)  Without limiting the generality of the foregoing, the Borrower will, not earlier than six (6) months and not later than three (3) months prior to the fifth (5th) anniversary of the date of filing of the financing statements referred to in Section 3.1(k) or any other financing statement filed pursuant to this Agreement or in connection with any Advance hereunder, unless the Covenant Compliance Period shall have ended, authorize, execute and deliver and file or cause to be filed an appropriate continuation statement with respect to each such financing statement.

 

Section 12.13  Confidentiality.

 

(a)  Each of the Administrative Agent, the Secured Parties, the Collateral Agent, the Borrower and the Collateral Manager shall maintain and shall cause each of its employees and officers to maintain the confidentiality of this Agreement and all information with respect to the other parties, including all information regarding the Collateral, the business and beneficial ownership of the Borrower and the Collateral Manager hereto and their respective businesses and its Affiliates and any Obligor obtained by it or them in connection with the structuring, negotiating and execution of the transactions contemplated herein, except that each such party and its officers and employees may (i) disclose such information to its branches and Affiliates and its and their partners, directors, officers, employees (legal and contractual), investment advisors, external accountants, investigators, auditors, attorneys, investors, rating agencies, potential investors or other agents engaged by such party in connection with any due diligence or comparable activities with respect to the transactions and Loans contemplated herein and the agents of such Persons (“Excepted Persons”); provided that each Excepted Person (other than external accountants, auditors, attorneys and other Excepted Persons governed by ethical obligations and requirements) shall, as a condition to any such disclosure, agree that such information shall be used solely in connection with such Excepted Person’s evaluation of, or relationship with, the Borrower, (ii) disclose the existence of this Agreement, but not the financial terms thereof, (iii) disclose such information as is required by Applicable Law, and (iv) disclose this Agreement and such information in any suit, action, proceeding or investigation (whether in law or in equity or pursuant to arbitration) involving any of the Transaction Documents for the purpose of defending itself, reducing its liability, or protecting or exercising any of its claims, rights, remedies, or interests under or in connection with any of the Transaction Documents. It is understood that the financial terms that may not be disclosed except in compliance with this Section 12.13(a) include, without limitation, all fees and other pricing terms, and all Events of Default, Collateral Manager Termination Events, and priority of payment provisions.

 

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(b)  Anything herein to the contrary notwithstanding, each of the Borrower and the Collateral Manager hereby consents to the disclosure of any nonpublic information with respect to it (i) to the Administrative Agent, the Collateral Manager, the Collateral Agent or the Secured Parties by each other, (ii) by the Administrative Agent, the Collateral Agent and the Secured Parties to any prospective or actual assignee or participant of any of them provided such Person agrees to hold such information confidential in accordance with the terms hereof and to use such information solely for the purposes of the transactions contemplated by this Agreement, or (iii) by the Administrative Agent, and the Secured Parties to S&P or Moody’s, any commercial paper dealer or provider of a surety, guaranty or credit or liquidity enhancement to any Lender, and to any officers, directors, employees, outside accountants and attorneys of any of the foregoing, provided each such Person is informed of the confidential nature of such information. In addition, the Secured Parties, the Administrative Agent, and the Collateral Manager may disclose any such nonpublic information as required pursuant to any law, rule, regulation, direction, request or order of any judicial, administrative or regulatory authority or proceedings (whether or not having the force or effect of law).

 

(c)  Notwithstanding anything herein to the contrary, the foregoing shall not be construed to prohibit (i) disclosure of any and all information that is or becomes publicly known; (ii) disclosure of any and all information (A) if required to do so by any applicable statute, law, rule or regulation, (B) to any government agency or regulatory body having or claiming authority to regulate or oversee any aspects of the Administrative Agent’s, the Secured Parties’, the Collateral Agent’s, the Collateral Manager’s, the Equityholder’s or the Borrower’s business or that of their affiliates, (C) pursuant to any subpoena, civil investigative demand or similar demand or request of any court, regulatory authority, arbitrator or arbitration to which the Administrative Agent, the Secured Parties, the Collateral Agent, the Collateral Manager or the Borrower or an officer, director, employee, shareholder or affiliate of any of the foregoing is a party, (D) in any preliminary or final offering circular, registration statement or contract or other document approved in advance by the Borrower or, to the extent information with respect to the Collateral Manager is included therein, the Collateral Manager, (E) to any affiliate, independent or internal auditor, agent (including any potential sub-or-successor servicer), employee or attorney of the Collateral Agent or the Collateral Manager having a need to know the same, (F) to any Person whose consent is required or to whom notice is required to be given in connection with the Borrower’s acquisition or disposition of any Loan or any assignment thereof, or (G) to any Person when required for USA Patriot Act or other “know your customer” purposes, provided that the Collateral Agent or the Collateral Manager, as applicable, advises such recipient of the confidential nature of the information being disclosed; or (iii) any other disclosure authorized by the Borrower or the Collateral Manager, as applicable.

 

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(d)  Notwithstanding any other provision of this Agreement, each of the Borrower and the Collateral Manager shall each have the right to keep confidential from the Administrative Agent, the Collateral Agent and/or the Secured Parties, for such period of time as such Person determines is reasonable (i) any information that such Person reasonably believes to be in the nature of trade secrets and (ii) any other information that such Person or any of their Affiliates, or the officers, employees or directors of any of the foregoing, is required by law as evidenced by an Opinion of Counsel.

 

(e)  Each of the Administrative Agent, the Secured Parties and the Collateral Agent will keep the information of the Obligors confidential in the manner required by the applicable Underlying Instruments.

 

Section 12.14  Execution in Counterparts; Severability; Integration.

 

This Agreement may be executed in any number of counterparts and by different parties hereto in separate counterparts (including by facsimile, electronic transmission or other transmission method (including, without limitation, any .pdf file, .jpeg file, or any other electronic or image file, or any “electronic signature” as defined under E-SIGN or ESRA, which includes any electronic signature provided using Orbit, Adobe Sign, DocuSign, or any other similar platform identified by the Borrower and reasonably available at no undue burden or expense to the Collateral Agent)), each of which when so executed shall be deemed to be an original and all of which when taken together shall constitute one and the same agreement. Delivery of an executed counterpart of this Agreement by e-mail (.pdf file) or facsimile shall be effective as delivery of a manually executed counterpart of this Agreement. In case any provision in or obligation under this Agreement shall be invalid, illegal or unenforceable in any jurisdiction, the validity, legality and enforceability of the remaining provisions or obligations, or of such provision or obligation in any other jurisdiction, shall not in any way be affected or impaired thereby. This Agreement, the other Transaction Documents and any agreements or letters (including fee letters) executed in connection herewith contain the final and complete integration of all prior expressions by the parties hereto with respect to the subject matter hereof and shall constitute the entire agreement among the parties hereto with respect to the subject matter hereof, superseding all prior oral or written understandings.

 

Section 12.15  Waiver of Setoff.

 

Each of the parties hereto hereby waives any right of setoff it may have or to which it may be entitled under this Agreement from time to time against any Lender or its assets.

 

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Section 12.16  Assignments by the Lenders.

 

(a)  Subject to Sections 12.16(b), 12.16(d) and 12.16(f), each Lender may, with the prior written consent of the Borrower (such consent not to be (x) unreasonably withheld, conditioned or delayed or (y) required if an Event of Default has occurred), at any time assign an interest in, or sell a participation interest in any Advance (or portion thereof) or its Commitment hereunder (or any portion thereof) to any Person; provided that, (i) unless an Event of Default has occurred, no transfer of any Advance (or any portion thereof) other than pursuant to the following clause (iii) shall be made unless the transferee has either a long-term unsecured debt rating of “Baa2” or above from Moody’s or “BBB” or above from S&P, (ii) no such transfer may be made to any Kayne Competitor without the prior written consent of the Collateral Manager other than pursuant to the following clause (iii) with, solely in the case of an assignment pursuant to clause (iii)(y), not less than 15 days prior written notice to the Collateral Manager (which notice shall specify the economics of the assignment and the assignee), (iii) subject to Sections 12.16(b) and 12.16(d), the consent of the Borrower is not required for any assignment (x) to any Affiliate of a Lender or (y) required by any change in Applicable Law, (iv) in the case of an assignment of any Commitment (or any portion thereof), any Advance (or any portion thereof) the assignee executes and delivers to the Collateral Manager, the Borrower the Administrative Agent and the Collateral Agent a fully executed Joinder Supplement substantially in the form of Exhibit H hereto and (v) no transfer of any Commitment (or any portion thereof) or Advance (or any portion thereof) shall be made to an Affiliate of the Borrower or the Equityholder. Each Lender hereby represents and warrants that is a “Qualified Purchaser” within the meaning of Section 3(c)(7) of the 1940 Act. The parties to any such assignment or sale of a participation interest shall execute and deliver to such Lender for its acceptance and recording in its books and records, such agreement or document as may be satisfactory to such parties. The Borrower shall not assign or delegate, or grant any interest in, or permit any Lien (except Permitted Liens) to exist upon, any of the Borrower’s rights, obligations or duties under the Transaction Documents without the prior written consent of the Administrative Agent. Notwithstanding anything contained in this Agreement to the contrary, Wells Fargo shall not need prior consent of the Borrower to consolidate with or merge into any other Person or convey or transfer substantially all of its properties and assets, including without limitation any Advance (or portion thereof), to any Person.

 

(b)  The Administrative Agent, acting solely for this purpose as an agent of Borrower, shall maintain a register for the recordation of the names and addresses of the Lenders, and the Commitments of, and principal amounts (and stated interest) of the Obligations owing to, each Lender pursuant to the terms hereof from time to time (the “Register”). The entries in the Register shall be conclusive absent manifest error, and the Borrower, the Collateral Manager the Administrative Agent and the Lenders shall treat each Person whose name is recorded in the Register pursuant to the terms hereof as a Lender hereunder for all purposes of this Agreement. The Register shall be available for inspection by Borrower, the Collateral Manager, the Collateral Agent and any Lender, at any reasonable time and from time to time upon reasonable prior notice.

 

(c)  The Borrower agrees that each participant pursuant to Section 12.16(a) shall be entitled to the benefits of Section 2.12 and Section 2.13 (subject to the requirements and limitations therein, including the requirements under Section 2.13(f) (it being understood that the documentation required under Section 2.13(f) shall be delivered to the participating Lender)) to the same extent as if it were a Lender and had acquired its interest by assignment; provided that such participant (A) agrees to be subject to the provisions of Section 2.12(g) and Section 2.12(h) as if it were an assignee hereunder; and (B) shall not be entitled to receive any greater payment under Section 2.12 or Section 2.13, with respect to any participation, than its participating Lender would have been entitled to receive, except to the extent such entitlement to receive a greater payment results from a change in any Applicable Law that occurs after the participant acquired the applicable participation. Each Lender that sells a participation agrees, at the Borrower’s request and expense, to use reasonable efforts to cooperate with the Borrower to effectuate the provisions of Section 2.12(g) and Section 2.12(h) with respect to the applicable participant.

 

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(d)  Each Lender that sells a participation shall, acting solely for this purpose as an agent of the Borrower, maintain a register on which it enters the name and address of the applicable participants and the principal amounts (and stated interest) of each such participant’s interest in the Obligations (the “Participant Register”); provided that no Lender shall have any obligation to disclose all or any portion of the Participant Register (including the identity of any participant or any information relating to a participant’s interest in any Obligations) to any Person except to the extent that such disclosure is necessary to establish that such Obligation is in registered form under Section 5f.103-1(c) of the United States Treasury Regulations. The entries in the Participant Register shall be conclusive absent manifest error, and such Lender shall treat each Person whose name is recorded in the Participant Register as the owner of such participation for all purposes of this Agreement notwithstanding any notice to the contrary. For the avoidance of doubt, the Administrative Agent (in its capacity as Administrative Agent) shall have no responsibility for maintaining a Participant Register.

 

(e)  Notwithstanding the foregoing provisions of this Section 12.16 or any other provision of this Agreement, any Lender may at any time assign all or any portion of its Advances or Commitments as collateral security to the Federal Reserve Bank or, as applicable, to such Lender’s trustee for the benefit of its investors (but no such assignment shall release any Lender from any of its obligations hereunder).

 

(f)  Wells Fargo, as a Lender, hereby agrees to retain at least 51% of the Commitments unless (a) an Event of Default occurs and is continuing or (b) it is required on advice of internal or external counsel to sell any or all of its Commitments by Applicable Law or any regulatory authority; provided, that Wells Fargo gives prior written notice of such sale to the Collateral Manager.

 

(g)  If a Lender provides notice of its intent to assign its Commitment without the consent of the Collateral Manager pursuant to Section 12.16(a)(iii)(y) to a Kayne Competitor, the Borrower may compel such Lender to assign its interest in full to another assignee meeting the requirements of Section 12.16(a) at an equivalent price (but in any event no greater than par) prior to such assignment to a Kayne Competitor.

 

Section 12.17  Heading and Exhibits.

 

The headings herein are for purposes of reference only and shall not otherwise affect the meaning or interpretation of any provision hereof. The schedules and exhibits attached hereto and referred to herein shall constitute a part of this Agreement and are incorporated into this Agreement for all purposes.

 

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Section 12.18 Intent of the Parties.

 

It is the intent and understanding of each party hereto that the Advances are loans from the Lenders to the Borrower and do not constitute a “security” within the meaning of Section 8-102(15) of the UCC.

 

Section 12.19 Acknowledgement and Consent to Bail-In of EEA Financial Institutions

 

Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in any Transaction Document or in any other agreement, arrangement or understanding among any such parties, each party hereto acknowledges that any liability of any Affected Financial Institution arising under any Transaction Document, to the extent such liability is unsecured, may be subject to the write down and conversion powers of the applicable Resolution Authority and agrees and consents to, and acknowledges and agrees to be bound by:

 

(a)  the application of any Write-Down and Conversion Powers by the applicable Resolution Authority to any such liabilities arising hereunder which may be payable to it by any party hereto that is an Affected Financial Institution; and

 

(b) the effects of any Bail-In Action on any such liability, including, if applicable:

 

(i) a reduction in full or in part or cancellation of any such liability;

 

(ii) a conversion of all, or a portion of, such liability into shares or other instruments of ownership in such Affected Financial Institution, its parent undertaking, or a bridge institution that may be issued to it or otherwise conferred on it, and that such shares or other instruments of ownership will be accepted by it in lieu of any rights with respect to any such liability under this Agreement or any other Transaction Document; or

 

(iii) the variation of the terms of such liability in connection with the exercise of the write down and conversion powers of the applicable Resolution Authority.

 

Section 12.20 Recognition of the U.S. Special Resolution Regimes. To the extent that this Agreement and/or any other Transaction Document constitutes a QFC, the Borrower agrees with each Secured Party as of the Closing Date as follows:

 

(a) In the event a Covered Party becomes subject to a proceeding under a U.S. Special Resolution Regime, the transfer of this Agreement and/or any other Transaction Document, and any interest and obligation in or under this Agreement and/or any other Transaction Document from such Covered Party will be effective to the same extent as the transfer would be effective under the U.S. Special Resolution Regime if this Agreement and/or any other the Transaction Document, and any such interest and obligation, were governed by the laws of the United States or a state of the United States.

 

(b) In the event that a Covered Party or a BHC Act Affiliate of such Covered Party becomes subject to a proceeding under a U.S. Special Resolution Regime, Default Rights under this Agreement and/or any other Transaction Document that may be exercised against such Covered Party are permitted to be exercised to no greater extent than such Default Rights could be exercised under the U.S. Special Resolution Regime if this Agreement and/or any other Transaction Document were governed by the laws of the United States or a state of the United States.

 

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ARTICLE XIII

THE CUSTODIAN

 

Section 13.1 Designation of Custodian.

 

The role of Custodian with respect to the Required Loan Documents shall be conducted by the Person designated as Custodian hereunder from time to time in accordance with this Section 13.1. Wilmington Trust, National Association is hereby appointed as, and hereby accepts such appointment and agrees to perform the duties and obligations of, Custodian pursuant to the terms hereof.

 

Section 13.2 Duties of the Custodian

 

(a) Duties. The Custodian shall perform, on behalf of the Secured Parties, the following duties and obligations:

 

(i) The Custodian shall take and retain custody of the Required Loan Documents delivered by the Borrower pursuant to and in accordance with the terms and conditions of this Agreement, all for the benefit of the Secured Parties. With respect to each delivery of Required Loan Documents, each Borrower shall provide or cause to be provided a related Loan Checklist to the Custodian with respect to such Required Loan Documents that are being delivered.

 

(ii) Within five (5) Business Days of its receipt of any Required Loan Documents and the related Loan Checklist, the Custodian shall review the Required Loan Documents delivered to it (as identified on the related Loan Checklist) to confirm that (A) the Obligor name matches the Loan Checklist, (B) such Required Loan Documents have been executed by each party thereto and appear to have no missing or mutilated pages, (C) each item listed in the Loan Checklist has been provided to the Custodian and (D) the related original balance at the time of assignment or acquisition (based on a comparison to the note or assignment agreement, as applicable) matches the loan balance listed on the related Loan Schedule (such items (A) through (D) collectively, the “Review Criteria”). In order to facilitate the foregoing review by the Custodian, in connection with each delivery of Required Loan Documents hereunder to the Custodian, the Collateral Manager shall provide to the Custodian an electronic copy (in EXCEL or a comparable format acceptable to the Custodian, as applicable) of the related Loan Checklist that contains a list of all related Required Loan Documents and whether they require original signatures, the Loan identification number, the original principal balance of such Loan and the name of the Obligor with respect to each related Loan. Notwithstanding anything herein to the contrary, the Custodian’s obligation to review the Required Loan Documents shall be limited to reviewing such Required Loan Documents based on the information provided on the Loan Checklist. At the conclusion of such review, the Custodian shall provide the Collateral Manager, the Administrative Agent and the applicable Borrower (with a copy to the Collateral Agent) a report in the form attached hereto as Exhibit J identifying each Loan for which it holds Required Loan Documents and the variances to the Review Criteria (the “Custodian Report”), which shall include (i) any discrepancies related to the initial Loan balances of the Loans with respect to which it has received Required Loan Documents and the loan balances provided in the electronic file, and (ii) any Review Criteria that is not satisfied. The Collateral Manager shall have twenty (20) Business Days after delivery of a Custodian Report to correct any non-compliance with any Review Criteria. If after the conclusion of such time period the Collateral Manager has still not cured any non-compliance by a Loan with any Review Criteria, the Custodian shall promptly notify the Collateral Manager, the applicable Borrower and the Administrative Agent of such continued non-compliance and such Loan shall cease to be an Eligible Loan until such non-compliance is cured. The Custodian shall have no duty to monitor the Collateral Manager’s compliance except to provide an updated Custodian Report upon the Administrative Agent’s written request. In addition, if requested in writing in the form of Exhibit E by the Collateral Manager and approved by the Administrative Agent within ten (10) Business Days of the Custodian’s delivery of such report, the Custodian shall return the Required Loan Documents for any Loan which fails to satisfy any Review Criteria to the applicable Borrower. Other than the foregoing, the Custodian shall not have any responsibility for reviewing any Underlying Instruments or Required Loan Documents.

 

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(iii)  In taking and retaining custody of the Required Loan Documents, the Custodian shall be deemed to be acting as the agent of the Secured Parties; provided that the Custodian makes no representations as to the existence, perfection or priority of any Lien on the Required Loan Documents or the instruments therein; and provided, further, that the Custodian’s duties as agent shall be limited to those expressly contemplated herein.

 

(iv)  All Required Loan Documents shall be kept in fire resistant vaults, rooms or cabinets at the offices of the Custodian set forth on Annex A hereto, or at such other office as shall be specified to the Administrative Agent and the Collateral Manager by the Custodian in a written notice delivered at least 30 days prior to such change. All Required Loan Documents shall be placed together with an appropriate identifying label and maintained in such a manner so as to permit retrieval and access. The Custodian shall segregate the Required Loan Documents on its inventory system and will not commingle the physical Required Loan Documents with any other files of the Custodian.

 

(v)  On each Reporting Date, commencing November 2023, the Custodian shall provide a written report to the Administrative Agent and the Collateral Manager (in a form mutually agreeable to the Administrative Agent and the Custodian) identifying each Loan for which it holds Required Loan Documents and any Review Criteria that each such Loan fails to satisfy. The Collateral Manager shall have twenty (20) Business Days after receiving written notice thereof to correct any non-compliance with any Review Criteria. To the extent such non-compliance has not been cured within such time period, such Loan shall cease to be an Eligible Loan until such non-compliance is cured.

 

(vi)  The Custodian agrees, subject to Section 13.2(a)(vii), to cooperate with the Administrative Agent and deliver any Required Loan Documents to the Administrative Agent as requested in order to take any action that the Administrative Agent deems necessary or desirable in order to exercise or enforce any of the rights of a Secured Party hereunder. In the event the Custodian receives instructions from the Collateral Manager or the Borrower which conflict with any instructions received by the Administrative Agent, the Custodian shall rely on and follow the instructions given by the Administrative Agent.

 

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(vii)  The Administrative Agent may direct the Custodian to take any such incidental action hereunder. With respect to other actions which are incidental to the actions specifically delegated to the Custodian hereunder, the Custodian shall not be required to take any such incidental action hereunder, but shall be required to act or to refrain from acting (and shall be fully protected in acting or refraining from acting) upon the direction of the Administrative Agent; provided that the Custodian shall not be required to take any action hereunder at the request of the Administrative Agent, any Secured Parties or otherwise if the taking of such action, in the reasonable determination of the Custodian, (x) shall be in violation of any Applicable Law or contrary to any provisions of this Agreement or (y) shall expose the Custodian to liability hereunder or otherwise (unless it has received indemnity which it reasonably deems to be satisfactory with respect thereto).

 

(viii)  The Custodian shall be entitled to reasonably assume the genuineness of each such document and the genuineness and due authority of any signatures appearing thereon, shall be entitled to assume that each such document is what it purports to be.

 

(ix)  The Custodian shall not be liable for any action taken, suffered or omitted by it in accordance with the request or direction of any Secured Party, to the extent that this Agreement provides such Secured Party the right to so direct the Custodian, or the Administrative Agent. The Custodian shall not be deemed to have notice or knowledge of any matter hereunder, including an Event of Default, unless a Responsible Officer of the Custodian has knowledge of such matter or written notice thereof is received by the Custodian.

 

Section 13.3  Concerning the Custodian.

 

(a)  The acceptance by the Custodian of its appointment hereunder is expressly subject to the following terms, which shall govern and apply to each of the terms and provisions of this Section 13 (whether or not so stated therein or herein):

 

(i)  The Custodian shall have no duties, obligations or responsibilities under this Section 13 or with respect to the Required Loan Documents except for such duties, obligations or responsibilities as are expressly and specifically set forth in this Section 13 as duties obligations or responsibilities on its part to be performed, and the duties obligations and responsibilities of the Custodian shall be determined solely by the express provisions of this Section 13. No implied duties, obligations or responsibilities shall be read into this Agreement against, or on the part of, the Custodian. Any permissive right of the Custodian to take any action hereunder shall not be construed as a duty.

 

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(ii)  The Custodian makes no representations as to and shall not be responsible for or required to verify (x) the validity, legality, enforceability, due authorization, effectiveness, recordability, insurability, sufficiency, value, form, substance, or genuineness of any of the documents contained in any Required Loan Document or (y) the collectability, validity, transferability, insurability, value, effectiveness, perfection, priority or suitability of any Required Loan Document or any document contained therein.

 

(iii)  The Custodian shall have no responsibilities or duties with respect to any Required Loan Document while such Required Loan Document is not in its possession.

 

(iv)  The Custodian may rely on and shall be protected in acting or refraining from acting upon any written notice, instruction, statement, certificate, request, waiver, consent, opinion, report, receipt or other paper, electronic transmission or document furnished to it in accordance with this Section 13, not only as to its due execution and validity, but also as to the truth and accuracy of any information therein contained, which it in good faith believes to be genuine and signed or presented by the proper person (which in the case of any instruction from or on behalf of the Borrower shall be an authorized Person). The Custodian shall be entitled to reasonably presume the genuineness and due authority of any signature appearing thereon. The Custodian shall not be bound to make any independent investigation into the facts or matters stated in any such notice, instruction, statement, certificate, request, waiver, consent, opinion, report, receipt or other paper, electronic transmission or document, provided, however, that if the form thereof is specifically prescribed by the terms of this Section 13, the Custodian shall examine the same to determine whether it substantially conforms on its face to the requirements set forth herein.

 

(v)  Neither the Custodian nor any of its directors, officers or employees shall be liable to anyone for any error of judgment, or for any act done or step taken or omitted to be taken by it (or any of its directors, officers of employees), or for any mistake of fact or law, or for anything which it may do or refrain from doing in connection herewith, unless such action constitutes gross negligence, fraud, bad faith or willful misconduct of the Custodian.

 

(vi)  The Custodian shall not be liable for any action taken by it in good faith and reasonably believed by it to be within powers conferred upon it, or taken by it pursuant to any direction or instruction received by it in accordance with this Section 13, or omitted to be taken by it by reason of the lack of direction or instruction required hereby for such action.

 

(vii)  The Custodian may consult with, and obtain advice from, legal counsel selected in good faith, with respect to any question as to any of the provisions hereof or its duties hereunder, or any matter relating hereto, and the opinion or advice of such counsel shall be full and complete authorization and protection in respect of any action taken, suffered, or omitted by the Custodian in good faith in accordance with the advice or opinion of such counsel. The reasonable and documented out-of-pocket costs and expenses of such advice or opinion shall be reimbursed by the Borrower pursuant to, and to the extent provided for in, Section 12.9 hereof.

 

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(viii)  No provision of this Agreement shall require the Custodian to expend or risk its own funds, take any action hereunder (or omit to take any action) or otherwise incur any financial liability in the performance of its duties under this Section 13 if it shall have grounds for believing that repayment of such funds or indemnity satisfactory is not assured to it.

 

(ix)  The Custodian may act or exercise its duties or powers hereunder through agents or attorneys, and the Custodian shall not be liable or responsible for the actions or omissions of any such agent or attorney appointed and maintained with due care.

 

(x)  If the Custodian shall request instructions from each applicable Borrower with respect to any act, action or failure to act in connection with this Agreement, the Custodian shall be entitled to refrain from taking such action and continue to refrain from acting unless and until the Custodian shall have received written instructions from such Borrower without incurring any liability therefor to such Borrower, or any other Person.

 

(xi)  In no event shall the Custodian or its directors, affiliates, officers, agents and employees be held liable for any lost profits or exemplary, punitive, special, indirect or consequential damages of any kind resulting from any action taken or omitted to be taken by it or them hereunder or in connection herewith even if advised of the possibility of such damages.

 

(xii)  The Custodian shall not be deemed to have notice of any fact, claim or demand with respect hereto unless a Responsible Officer of the Custodian has actual knowledge thereof or written notice thereof. Any other provision of this Agreement to the contrary notwithstanding, the Custodian shall have no notice of and shall not be bound by any of the terms and conditions of any other document or agreement unless the Custodian is a signatory party to that document or agreement.

 

(xiii)  Nothing in this Section 13 shall be deemed to impose on the Custodian any duty to qualify to do business in any jurisdiction, other than (x) any jurisdiction where any Required Loan Document is or may be held by the Custodian from time to time hereunder, and (y) any jurisdiction where its ownership of property or conduct of business requires such qualification and where failure to qualify could have a material adverse effect on the Custodian or its property or business or on the ability of the Custodian to perform its duties hereunder.

 

(xiv)  The Custodian shall have only the duties and responsibilities with respect to the matters set forth herein as is expressly set forth in writing herein and shall not be deemed to be an agent, bailee or fiduciary for any party hereto. The Custodian shall be fully protected in acting or refraining from acting in good faith without investigation on any notice, instruction or request purportedly furnished to it by the Borrower in accordance with the terms hereof, in which case the parties hereto agree that the Custodian has no duty to make any further inquiry whatsoever. It is hereby acknowledged and agreed that the Custodian has no knowledge of (and is not required to know) the terms and provisions of any loan agreements or any other related documentation to which the Lender may be a party or whether any actions by the Borrower or any other person or entity are permitted or a breach thereunder or consistent or inconsistent therewith.

 

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(xv)  The provisions of this Section 13.3 shall survive the termination of this Agreement and the resignation or removal of the Custodian.

 

Section 13.4  Release of Documents.

 

(a)  Release for Servicing. From time to time and as appropriate for the enforcement or servicing of any of the Collateral, the Custodian is hereby authorized (unless and until such authorization is revoked by the Administrative Agent), upon written receipt from the Collateral Manager of a request for release of documents and receipt in the form annexed hereto as Exhibit E, to release to the Collateral Manager the related Required Loan Documents or the documents set forth in such request and receipt to the Collateral Manager. All documents so released to the Collateral Manager shall be held by the Collateral Manager in trust for the Custodian for the benefit of the Secured Parties in accordance with the terms of this Agreement. The Collateral Manager shall return to the Custodian the Required Loan Documents or other such documents (i) immediately upon the request of the Administrative Agent, or (ii) when the Collateral Manager’s need therefor in connection with such foreclosure or servicing no longer exists, unless the Loan shall be liquidated, in which case, upon receipt of an additional request for release of documents and receipt certifying such liquidation from the Collateral Manager to the Custodian in the form annexed hereto as Exhibit E, the Collateral Manager’s request and receipt submitted pursuant to the first sentence of this subsection shall be released by the Custodian to the Collateral Manager.

 

(b)  Limitation on Release. The foregoing provision respecting release to the Collateral Manager of the Required Loan Documents and documents by the Custodian upon request by the Collateral Manager shall be operative only to the extent that at any time the Custodian shall not have released to the Collateral Manager active Required Loan Documents (including those requested) pertaining to more than 15 Loans at the time being serviced by the Collateral Manager under this Agreement. Any additional Required Loan Documents or documents requested to be released by the Collateral Manager may be released only upon written authorization of the Administrative Agent. The limitations of this paragraph shall not apply to the release of Required Loan Documents to the Collateral Manager pursuant to the immediately succeeding subsection.

 

(c)  Release for Payment. Upon receipt by the Custodian of the Collateral Manager’s request for release of documents and receipt in the form annexed hereto as Exhibit E (which certification shall include a statement to the effect that all amounts received in connection with such payment or purchase have been credited to the Collection Account as provided in this Agreement), the Custodian shall promptly release the related Required Loan Documents to the Collateral Manager.

 

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Section 13.5  Return of Required Loan Documents.

 

The Borrower may require that the Custodian return each Required Loan Document (as applicable), respectively (a) delivered to the Custodian in error, (b) as to which the lien on the Underlying Asset has been so released pursuant to Section 8.2, (c) that has been the subject of a Discretionary Sale, Substitution or Optional Sale pursuant to Section 2.14 or (d) that is required to be redelivered to such Borrower in connection with the termination of this Agreement, in each case by submitting to the Custodian a written request in the form of Exhibit E hereto (signed by both such Borrower and the Administrative Agent) specifying the Collateral to be so returned and reciting that the conditions to such release have been met or waived (and specifying the Section or Sections of this Agreement being relied upon for such release). The Custodian shall upon its receipt of each such request for return executed by any applicable Borrower and the Administrative Agent promptly, but in any event within five Business Days, return the Required Loan Documents so requested to such Borrower.

 

Section 13.6  Access to Certain Documentation and Information Regarding the Collateral; Audits.

 

The Custodian shall provide to the Administrative Agent access to the Required Loan Documents and all other documentation in the possession of such Persons regarding the Collateral including in such cases where the Administrative Agent may direct the Custodian in connection with the enforcement of the rights or interests of the Custodian hereunder, or by applicable statutes or regulations, to review such documentation, such access being afforded without charge but only (i) upon two (2) Business Days’ prior written request, (ii) during normal business hours and (iii) subject to the Custodian’s normal security and confidentiality procedures. Periodically, at the discretion of the Administrative Agent, the Administrative Agent may review the Collateral Manager’s collection and administration of the Collateral in order to assess compliance by the Collateral Manager with Article VI and may conduct an audit of the Collateral, and Required Loan Documents in conjunction with such a review. Such review shall be reasonable in scope and shall be completed in a reasonable period of time.

 

Section 13.7  Merger or Consolidation.

 

Any Person (i) into which the Custodian may be merged or consolidated, (ii) that may result from any merger or consolidation to which the Custodian shall be a party, or (iii) that may succeed to the properties and assets of the Custodian substantially as a whole, which Person in any of the foregoing cases executes an agreement of assumption to perform every obligation of the Custodian hereunder, shall be the successor to the Custodian under this Agreement without further act of any of the parties to this Agreement.

 

Section 13.8  Custodian Compensation.

 

As compensation for its Custodian activities hereunder, the Custodian shall be entitled to a Custodian Fee pursuant to the provision of Section 2.7(a)(1), Section 2.7(b)(1) or Section 2.8(1), as applicable. The Custodian’s entitlement to receive the Custodian Fee shall cease on the earlier to occur of: (i) its removal as Custodian and appointment of a successor custodian pursuant to Section 13.9 and the Custodian has ceased to hold any Required Loan Documents or (ii) the termination of this Agreement; provided, however, that the Custodian shall be entitled to receive any accrued and unpaid Custodian Fees due and owing to it at the time of such removal or termination.

 

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Section 13.9  Custodian Removal.

 

The Custodian may be removed, with or without cause, by the Administrative Agent upon at least sixty (60) days’ notice given in writing to the Custodian and the Lenders (the “Custodian Termination Notice”); provided that notwithstanding its receipt of a Custodian Termination Notice, the Custodian shall continue to act in such capacity until a successor Custodian has been appointed in accordance with the requirements of Sections 5.5(d) and 13.10, and has received all Underlying Instruments and Collateral held by the previous Custodian

 

Section 13.10  Resignation.

 

The Custodian shall not resign from the obligations and duties hereby imposed on it except upon (a) sixty (60) days’ prior written notice to the Borrower, the Collateral Manager, the Administrative Agent and each Lender, or (b) the Custodian’s determination that (i) the performance of its duties hereunder is or becomes impermissible under Applicable Law and (ii) there is no reasonable action that the Custodian could take to make the performance of its duties hereunder permissible under Applicable Law. No such resignation shall become effective until a successor Custodian shall have assumed the responsibilities and obligations of the Custodian hereunder; provided that, any successor Custodian shall (y) satisfy all requirements of Section 5.5(d) and (z) be acceptable to the Administrative Agent, the Collateral Manager (if no Collateral Manager Termination Event has occurred) and the Borrower (if no Event of Default has occurred and is continuing) in their respective sole discretion. The Custodian’s sole responsibility after the termination of its obligations as aforesaid shall be to safely maintain all of the Required Loan Documents and to deliver the same to a successor Custodian; provided, further that, if no such successor is appointed within 90 days after the delivery of written notice of the Custodian’s resignation, the Custodian may (i) petition any court of competent jurisdiction for the appointment of a successor Custodian or (ii) deliver all Required Loan Documents and other Collateral in its possession to the Borrower. The Custodian shall not be responsible for the fees and expenses of any successor Custodian. Upon delivery of the Required Loan Documents and other Collateral in its possession to any successor Custodian or to the Borrower as provided in this paragraph, all duties and obligations of the Custodian shall cease and terminate. The payment of all reasonable and documented out-of-pocket costs and expenses relating to the transfer of the Required Loan Documents and any other Collateral (including any shipping costs) upon termination shall be the sole responsibility of the Borrower.

 

Section 13.11  Limitations on Liability.

 

Each of the protections, reliances, indemnities and immunities offered to the Collateral Agent in Article VII shall be afforded to the Custodian and its respective directors, officers, employees, agents, designees, successors and assigns.

 

Section 13.12  Custodian as Agent of Collateral Agent.

 

The Custodian agrees that, with respect to any Required Loan Documents at any time or times in its possession or held in its name, the Custodian shall be the agent and custodian of the Collateral Agent, for the benefit of the Secured Parties, for purposes of perfecting (to the extent not otherwise perfected) the Collateral Agent’s security interest in the Collateral and for the purpose of ensuring that such security interest is entitled to first priority status under the UCC. For so long as the Custodian is the same entity as the Collateral Agent, the Custodian shall be entitled to the same rights and protections afforded to the Collateral Agent hereunder.

 

[Signature pages to follow.]

 

-168-

 

 

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties have caused this Agreement to be executed by their respective officers thereunto duly authorized, as of the date first above written.

 

  BORROWER:
   
  KAYNE ANDERSON BDC FINANCING, LLC
   
  By:  
    Name:
    Title:

 

[Signatures Continued on the Following Page]

 

Signature Page to LSA

 

 

  COLLATERAL MANAGER:
   
  KA CREDIT ADVISORS, LLC
   
  By:  
    Name:
    Title:
   
  SELLER:
   
  KAYNE ANDERSON BDC, INC.
   
  By:  
    Name:
    Title:

 

[Signatures Continued on the Following Page]

 

Signature Page to LSA

 

 

  THE ADMINISTRATIVE AGENT:
   
  WELLS FARGO BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, in its capacity as Administrative Agent
   
  By:  
    Name:
    Title:
   
  LENDER:
   
  WELLS FARGO BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, in its capacity as a Lender
   
  By:  
    Name:
    Title:

 

[Signatures Continued on the Following Page]

 

Signature Page to LSA

 

 

  THE COLLATERAL AGENT:
   
  WILMINGTON TRUST, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, not in its individual capacity but solely as Collateral Agent
   
  By:  
    Name:
    Title:
   
  THE CUSTODIAN:
   
  WILMINGTON TRUST, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, not in its individual capacity but solely as Custodian
   
  By:  
    Name:
    Title:

 

Signature Page to LSA

 

 

Annex A

 

KAYNE ANDERSON BDC FINANCING, LLC

 

[REDACTED]

 

with a copy to:

 

[REDACTED]

 

KA CREDIT ADVISORS, LLC

 

[REDACTED]

 

with a copy to:

 

[REDACTED]

 

KAYNE ANDERSON BDC, INC.

 

[REDACTED]

 

with a copy to:

 

[REDACTED]

 

Annex A to LSA

 

 

Annex A (Continued)

 

WELLS FARGO BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION
as Administrative Agent
[REDACTED]

 

WELLS FARGO BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION
as a Lender
[REDACTED]

 

Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada

as a Lender

[REDACTED]

 

APPLE BANK

as a Lender

[REDACTED]

  

EverBank, N.A. f/k/a TIAA, FSB

as a Lender

[REDACTED]

 

SUMITOMO MITSUI TRUST BANK, LIMITED, NEW YORK BRANCH

as a Lender

[REDACTED]

 

WILMINGTON TRUST, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION,

as Collateral Agent and Custodian

[REDACTED]

 

Annex A to LSA

 

 

Annex B

 

Lender  Commitment 
Wells Fargo Bank, National Association  $380,000,000 
EverBank, N.A. f/k/a TIAA, FSB  $100,000,000 
Apple Bank  $50,000,000 
Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada  $20,000,000 
Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Bank, Limited, New York Branch  $50,000,000 
Total  $600,000,000 

 

Annex B to LSA

 

 

Annex C

 

Specified Limitations

 

Maximum Facility Amount(1)(2)(3) $600,000,000 $650,000,000 $700,000,000 $750,000,000 $800,000,000
Eligibility Criteria: Loan Limits 3 Largest First Lien Obligors $40,000,000 $43,000,000 $46,000,000 $49,000,000 $52,000,000
All Other First Lien Obligors $30,000,000 $33,000,000 $35,000,000 $38,000,000 $40,000,000
Second Lien Obligors $15,000,000 $16,000,000 $17,000,000 $18,000,000 $19,000,000
Minimum Equity Requirement $132,500,000 $145,000,000 $157,500,000 $170,000,000 $182,500,000

 

(1)If the current Maximum Facility Amount is not equal to an amount set forth in the “Maximum Facility Amount” row, then the applicable Maximum Facility Amount shall be the next lowest amount set forth in the “Maximum Facility Amount” row.

(2)If the Maximum Facility Amount is reduced below $600,000,000, each amount in the above chart shall be agreed to in writing (including by email) by the Borrower and the Administrative Agent.

(3)The Borrower, or the Collateral Manager on its behalf, may at any time request revisions to the Eligibility Criteria Loan Limits in this Annex C, which revisions will be subject to the prior written approval of the Administrative Agent.

 

 

Annex C to LSA

 

 

Exhibit 14.1

 

KAYNE ANDERSON BDC, INC.

 

CODE OF ETHICS

 

Introduction

 

Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc. (“KA BDC”) is regulated as a business development company under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the “1940 Act”) and subject to Rule 17j-1 under the Act (“Rule 17j-1”). Rule 17j-1 requires that KA BDC adopt a written code of ethics that specifically addresses trading practices by Access Persons (defined below). Rule 17j-1 makes it unlawful for any Access Person of KA BDC or its investment adviser, KA Credit Advisors, LLC (the “Adviser”) to:

 

Employ any device, scheme or artifice to defraud KA BDC;

 

Make any untrue statement of material fact to KA BDC or omit to state a material fact necessary in order to make the statement made to KA BDC, in light of the circumstances under which they are made, not misleading;

 

Engage in an act, practice, or course of business that operates or would operate as a fraud or deceit on KA BDC; or

 

Engage in any manipulative practice with respect to KA BDC.

 

Furthermore, the following three general fiduciary principles are understood to govern the activities of KA BDC advisory personnel:

 

such personnel have a duty at all times to place the interests of KA BDC shareholders first;

 

all personal securities transactions by such personnel must be conducted consistent with the Code of Ethics and in such a manner as to avoid any actual or potential conflict of interest or any abuse of an individual’s position of trust and responsibility; and

 

such personnel should not take inappropriate advantage of their positions.

 

In accordance with Rule 17j-1, the Company has adopted this Code of Ethics containing provisions it deems reasonably necessary to prevent those of its Access Persons from engaging in any such prohibited acts.

 

In addition, the Adviser is registered as an investment adviser under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (the “Advisers Act”). Rule 204A-1 under the Advisers Act requires a registered investment adviser to establish, maintain and enforce a code of ethics that includes certain specified provisions. The Adviser has adopted a separate code of ethics designed to meet the requirements of Rule 204A-1 and Rule 17j-1.

 

 

 

 

1.Definitions

 

(a)“Access Person” means any officer or director of KA BDC and any of its employees, who, in connection with his or her regular functions or duties, makes, participates in, or obtains information regarding the purchase or sale of a security by KA BDC, or whose functions relate to the making of any recommendations with respect to such purchases or sales; and any natural person in a control relationship to KA BDC who obtains information with respect to KA BDC with regard to the purchase or sale of a security.

 

(b)“Security” shall have the meaning set forth in Section 2(a)(36) of the 1940 Act except securities issued by the Government of the United States or by federal agencies and which are direct obligations of the United States, bankers’ acceptances, certificates of deposit, commercial paper, money market funds and shares of registered open-end investment companies.

 

(c)A “Security held or to be acquired” means a Security which, within the most recent 15 days (i) is or has been held by KA BDC; or (ii) is being or has been considered by KA BDC for purchase, and includes the writing of an option to purchase or sell a Security. A Security is “being considered for the current purchase or sale” when a decision (or recommendation) to purchase or sell a Security has been made and communicated, and, with respect to a person making a decision (or recommendation), when such person believes such decision or recommendation is imminent.

 

(d)“Covered Family Member” means any member of an employee’s immediate family or partner sharing the same household. Immediate family means any child, stepchild, grandchild, parent, stepparent, grandparent, spouse, sibling, mother-in-law, father-in-law, son-in-law, daughter-in-law, brother-in-law or sister-in-law. Adoptive relationships are included.

 

(e)“Beneficial Ownership” shall have the meaning ascribed thereto under Section 16 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, and the rules and regulations thereunder. This means that an Access Person should generally consider himself/herself to have Beneficial Ownership of any Security in which he/she has a direct or indirect pecuniary interest, which includes Securities held by any Covered Family Member. In addition, an Access Person should consider himself/herself to have Beneficial Ownership of any Security held by other persons where, by reason of any contract, arrangement, understanding or relationship, such Access Person has sole or shared voting or investment power.

 

(f)“Investment Personnel” means any person who is involved in the investment decisions for KA BDC and who may have significant opportunities to influence investment decisions for KA BDC to his or her benefit.

 

(g)“Limited Offering” means an offering that is exempt from registration under the Securities Act of 1933 pursuant to section 4(a)(2) or section 4(a)(5) or pursuant to rule 504, or rule 506 under the Securities Act of 1933.

 

2

 

 

2.Pre-Clearance Policy

 

Except as expressly permitted by this Code of Ethics, Access Persons (other than disinterested directors) must have written pre-clearance from the Compliance department for any personal securities transaction. The Chief Compliance Officer reserves the right to disapprove any proposed transaction that may have the appearance of improper conduct, and may decline to pre-approve a proposed transaction by an Access Person for any reason.

 

All requests for approval to engage in personal securities transactions must be submitted to the Compliance department. Pre-clearance approval for a transaction is only valid until the end of market hours on the day the transaction is approved except (i) with respect to transactions that are private offerings or (ii) in cases where the Compliance department specifies otherwise.

 

If the Chief Compliance Officer is the person whose transaction requires approval, he or she must obtain such approval from the Adviser’s General Counsel (or his or her designee).

 

3.Prohibitions

 

No Access Person:

 

(a)Shall purchase or sell, directly or indirectly, any Security in which he or she has, or by reason of such transaction acquires, any direct or indirect beneficial ownership and which to his/her actual knowledge at the time of such purchase or sale:

 

(i)is being considered for purchase or sale by KA BDC; or

 

(ii)is then being purchased or sold by KA BDC.

 

Under this Code of Ethics, all KA BDC employees are required to:

 

(i)avoid purchasing Securities offered and sold as part of an initial public offering (“IPO”) until after the public offering and then only at the prevailing market price, and obtain pre-approval from the Compliance department before directly or indirectly acquiring beneficial ownership in any securities in a Limited Offering;

 

(ii)avoid purchases or sales of Securities that are being considered for current purchase or sale by KA BDC;

 

(iii)avoid purchases or sales of Securities that have been purchased or sold by KA BDC until after any such transaction or series of transactions has been completed (subject to settlement); and

 

(iv)pre-clear purchases or sales of Securities for accounts in which the employee has a Beneficial Ownership interest with Compliance prior to executing such transactions.

 

3

 

 

4.Exempted Transactions

 

Pre-Clearance under Section 2 of this Code of Ethics shall not apply to:

 

(a)Purchases or sales effected in any account over which the Access Person has no direct or indirect influence or control (e.g. transaction in an account managed by an unaffiliated money manager where the Access Person has no investment influence or discretion);

 

(b)Purchases or sales effected pursuant to a program (such as a dividend reinvestment plan) in which periodic purchases (or sales) are made automatically in (or from) investment accounts in accordance with a predetermined schedule and allocation;

 

(c)Purchases effected upon the exercise of rights issued by an issuer pro rata to all holders of a class of its Securities, to the extent such rights were acquired from such issuer, and sales of such rights so acquired.

 

(d)Purchases or sales which are non-volitional on the part of either the Access Person or Covered Family Member (e.g. stock splits, reverse stock splits, mergers, spin-offs, and other similar corporate reorganizations);

 

(e)Charitable donations or other gifts of Securities (other than shares of KA BDC);

 

(f)Purchases or sales of futures and options on commodities, currencies or a securities index;

 

(g)Other non-volitional events, such as exercise of an option at expiration (as opposed to an option exercise at any time prior to expiration, which option exercise does require pre-clearance); or

 

(h)Purchases or sales of sovereign debt securities.

 

5.Minimum Hold Period

 

No Access person may sell a Security within 90 days of purchasing that Security, or “buy to cover” a Security within 90 days of selling short such Security, unless pre-clearance of the transaction is not required under this Code of Ethics or the minimum holding period is waived by the Compliance department.

 

6.Procedural Matters

 

(a)The Chief Compliance Officer of KA BDC shall:

 

(i)Make available to each Access Person a copy of this Code of Ethics.

 

(ii)Notify each such Access Person of his or her obligation to file reports as provided by Section 7 of this Code of Ethics.

 

(iii)Report to the Board of Directors the facts contained in any reports filed with the Chief Compliance Officer pursuant to Section 7 of this Code of Ethics when any such report indicates that an Access Person engaged in a transaction in a Security held or to be acquired by KA BDC. Additionally, an annual written report will be provided to the Board of Directors, describing any material issues that arose during the previous year under this Code of Ethics.

 

(iv)Maintain the records required by paragraph (d) of Rule 17j-1.

 

(b)On an annual basis, the Board of Directors will certify that the Company has adopted procedures reasonably necessary to prevent Access Persons from violating this Code of Ethics.

 

4

 

 

7.Reporting

 

(a)Every Access Person shall report the information described in Section 7(c) of this Code of Ethics with respect to transactions in any Security in which such Access Person has, or by reason of such transaction acquires, any direct or indirect beneficial ownership in the Security; provided, however, that an Access Person shall not be required to make a report with respect to transactions effected for any account over which such person does not have any direct or indirect influence. An Access Person of the Adviser need not make a separate report hereunder to the extent the information in the report would duplicate information required to be reported under the Adviser’s code of ethics.

 

(b)An independent Director, i.e., a Director of KA BDC who is not an “interested person” (as defined in Section 2(a)(19) of the 1940 Act) of KA BDC, is not required to file a report on a transaction in a Security provided such Director neither knew nor, in the ordinary course of fulfilling his or her official duties as a Director of KA BDC, should have known that, during the 15-day period immediately preceding or after the date of the transaction by the Director, such Security is or was purchased or sold by KA BDC or is or was being considered for purchase by the Adviser.

 

(c)An initial report shall be made within 10 days from the date in which a person was deemed an Access Person and annually thereafter (the information in which must be current as of a date no more than 45 days prior to the date the person becomes an Access Person or the annual report is submitted, respectively) and shall contain the following information:

 

(i)A list of Securities, including the title, number of shares, or principal amount (if fixed income securities) of each Security in which the Access Person had any direct or indirect beneficial ownership when the person became an Access Person;

 

(ii)the name of the broker, dealer or bank with whom the Access Person maintained an account in which any Securities were held for the direct or indirect benefit of the Access Person as of the date the person became an Access Person; and

 

(iii)The date that the report is submitted by the Access Person.

 

(d)Thereafter, every report shall be made not later than 30 days after the end of the calendar quarter in which the transactions to which the report relates was effected, and shall contain the following information:

 

(i)the date of each transaction, the name of the Security purchased and/or sold, the interest rate and maturity date (if applicable), the number of shares and/or the principal amount of each Security involved;

 

(ii)the nature of the transaction (i.e., purchase, sale or any other type of acquisition or disposition);

 

(iii)the price at which the transaction was effected;

 

(iv)the name of the broker, dealer or bank with or through whom the transaction was effected;

 

(v)In addition to the Securities transaction data, the report will contain representations that the employee (i) during the period, has not purchased or sold any Securities not listed on the report; (ii) has not opened a securities brokerage account during the period which has not been reported to KA Credit; and (iii) agrees to notify KA Credit if he/she opens a personal securities account which has not otherwise been disclosed to KA Credit; and

 

(vi)The date that the report is submitted by the Access Person.

 

5

 

 

(e)Any such report may contain a statement that the report shall not be construed as an admission by the person making such report that he has any direct or indirect beneficial ownership in the Security to which the report relates.

 

(f)Each Access Person shall re-certify his or her familiarity with this Code of Ethics and report all Security holdings and other items set forth in subsection (c) above annually. Access Persons are required to complete and sign the annual certification and security report within 30 days of the end of the calendar year.

 

(g)The Chief Compliance Officer, or his or her designee, will review the reports submitted, and account statements and account information provided, under this Code of Ethics to determine whether any transaction disclosed therein constitutes a violation of this Code of Ethics. Before making any determination that a violation has been committed by an Access Person, the Chief Compliance Officer shall afford the Access Person an opportunity to supply additional explanatory material.

 

8.Board Oversight

 

The Board of Directors must initially approve the Code of Ethics for KA BDC, and the Board of Directors must approve any material changes to the Code of Ethics within six (6) months of such change. The Chief Compliance Officer or his or her designee shall provide to the Board of Directors a written report outlining any material issues that arose during the previous year and annually certify that KA BDC has adopted procedures in compliance with this Code of Ethics.

 

9.Implementation

 

In order to implement this Code of Ethics, the Chief Compliance Officer and back-ups have been designated for the Company.

 

The Chief Compliance Officer or his delegate shall create a list of all Access Persons and update the list with reasonable frequency. The Compliance Officer or his delegate shall circulate a copy of this Code of Ethics (in hard copy or electronically) to each Access Person at least once each year.

 

10.Violations

 

Upon determination that a violation of this Code of Ethics has occurred, KA BDC may impose such sanctions as it deems appropriate, including, among other things, a memorandum of warning, a ban on personal trading or a suspension or termination of the employment of the violator. Violations of this Code of Ethics and any sanctions imposed with respect thereto shall be reported in a timely manner to the Board of Directors of KA BDC.

 

 

 

 

Exhibit 31.1

 

Certification of Chief Executive Officer

 

I, Douglas L. Goodwillie, Co-Chief Executive Officer of Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc. (the “Company”), certify that:

 

  1. I have reviewed this Annual Report on Form 10-K of the Company;

 

  2. Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this report;

 

  3. Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly present in all material respects the financial condition, results of operations and cash flows of the Company as of, and for, the periods presented in this report;

 

  4. The Company’s other certifying officer and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e)) and internal control over financial reporting (as defined in the Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f)) for the Company and have:

 

  (a) Designed such disclosure controls and procedures, or caused such disclosure controls and procedures to be designed under our supervision, to ensure that material information relating to the Company, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which this report is being prepared;

 

  (b) Designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial reporting to be designed under our supervision, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles;

 

  (c) Evaluated the effectiveness of the Company’s disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report our conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures, as of the end of the period covered by this report based on such evaluation; and

 

  (d) Disclosed in this report any change in the Company’s internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the Company’s most recent fiscal quarter (the Company’s fourth fiscal quarter in the case of an annual report) that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the Company’s internal control over financial reporting; and

 

  5. The Company’s other certifying officer and I have disclosed, based on our most recent evaluation of internal control over financial reporting, to the Company’s auditors and the audit committee of the Company’s board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions):

 

  (a) All significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal control over financial reporting which are reasonably likely to adversely affect the Company’s ability to record, process, summarize and report financial information; and

 

  (b) Any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the Company’s internal control over financial reporting.

 

Date: March 3, 2025 By: /s/ Douglas L. Goodwillie
    Douglas L. Goodwillie
    Co-Chief Executive Officer
(Co-Principal Executive Officer)

 

 

 

 

Certification of Chief Executive Officer

 

I, Kenneth B. Leonard, Co-Chief Executive Officer of Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc. (the “Company”), certify that:

 

  1. I have reviewed this Annual Report on Form 10-K of the Company;

 

  2. Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this report;

 

  3. Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly present in all material respects the financial condition, results of operations and cash flows of the Company as of, and for, the periods presented in this report;

 

  4. The Company’s other certifying officer and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e)) and internal control over financial reporting (as defined in the Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f)) for the Company and have:

 

  (a) Designed such disclosure controls and procedures, or caused such disclosure controls and procedures to be designed under our supervision, to ensure that material information relating to the Company, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which this report is being prepared;

 

  (b) Designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial reporting to be designed under our supervision, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles;

 

  (c) Evaluated the effectiveness of the Company’s disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report our conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures, as of the end of the period covered by this report based on such evaluation; and

 

  (d) Disclosed in this report any change in the Company’s internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the Company’s most recent fiscal quarter (the Company’s fourth fiscal quarter in the case of an annual report) that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the Company’s internal control over financial reporting; and

 

  5. The Company’s other certifying officer and I have disclosed, based on our most recent evaluation of internal control over financial reporting, to the Company’s auditors and the audit committee of the Company’s board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions):

 

  (a) All significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal control over financial reporting which are reasonably likely to adversely affect the Company’s ability to record, process, summarize and report financial information; and

 

  (b) Any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the Company’s internal control over financial reporting.

 

Date: March 3, 2025 By: /s/ Kenneth B. Leonard
    Kenneth B. Leonard
    Co-Chief Executive Officer
(Co-Principal Executive Officer)

 

 

 

Exhibit 31.2

 

Certification of Chief Financial Officer

 

I, Terry A. Hart, Chief Financial Officer of Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc., (the “Company”), certify that:

 

  1. I have reviewed this Annual Report on Form 10-K of the Company;

 

  2. Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this report;

 

  3. Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly present in all material respects the financial condition, results of operations and cash flows of the Company as of, and for, the periods presented in this report;

 

  4. The Company’s other certifying officer and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e)) and internal control over financial reporting (as defined in the Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f)) for the Company and have:

 

  (a) Designed such disclosure controls and procedures, or caused such disclosure controls and procedures to be designed under our supervision, to ensure that material information relating to the Company, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which this report is being prepared;

 

  (b) Designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial reporting to be designed under our supervision, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles;

 

  (c) Evaluated the effectiveness of the Company’s disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report our conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures, as of the end of the period covered by this report based on such evaluation; and

 

  (d) Disclosed in this report any change in the Company’s internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the Company’s most recent fiscal quarter (the Company’s fourth fiscal quarter in the case of an annual report) that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the Company’s internal control over financial reporting; and

 

  5. The Company’s other certifying officer and I have disclosed, based on our most recent evaluation of internal control over financial reporting, to the Company’s auditors and the audit committee of the Company’s board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions):

 

  (a) All significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal control over financial reporting which are reasonably likely to adversely affect the Company’s ability to record, process, summarize and report financial information; and

 

  (b) Any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the Company’s internal control over financial reporting.

 

Date: March 3, 2025 By: /s/ Terry A. Hart
    Terry A. Hart
    Chief Financial Officer
    (Principal Financial and Accounting Officer)

           

 

Exhibit 32.1

 

Certification of Chief Executive Officer Pursuant to

 

Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (18 U.S.C. 1350)

 

In connection with the Annual Report on Form 10-K of Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc. (the “Company”) for the period ended December 31, 2024, as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on the date hereof (the “Report”), Douglas L. Goodwillie, as Co-Chief Executive Officer of the Company certifies, pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 1350, as adopted pursuant to § 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, that, to such officer’s knowledge:

 

  (1) The Report fully complies with the requirements of Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended; and

 

  (2) The information contained in the Report fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and results of operations of the Company.

 

/s/ Douglas L. Goodwillie  
Name:  Douglas L. Goodwillie  
Title: Co-Chief Executive Officer  
  (Co-Principal Executive Officer)  
Date: March 3, 2025  

 

The foregoing certification is being furnished solely pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 1350 and is not being filed as part of the Report or as a separate disclosure document.

 

 

 

 

Certification of Chief Executive Officer Pursuant to

 

Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (18 U.S.C. 1350)

 

In connection with the Annual Report on Form 10-K of Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc. (the “Company”) for the period ended December 31, 2024, as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on the date hereof (the “Report”), Kenneth B. Leonard, as Co-Chief Executive Officer of the Company certifies, pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 1350, as adopted pursuant to § 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, that, to such officer’s knowledge:

 

  (1) The Report fully complies with the requirements of Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended; and

 

  (2) The information contained in the Report fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and results of operations of the Company.

 

/s/ Kenneth B. Leonard  
Name:  Kenneth B. Leonard  
Title: Co-Chief Executive Officer  
  (Co-Principal Executive Officer)  
Date: March 3, 2025  

 

The foregoing certification is being furnished solely pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 1350 and is not being filed as part of the Report or as a separate disclosure document.

 

 

 

 

Exhibit 32.2

 

Certification of Chief Financial Officer Pursuant to

 

Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (18 U.S.C. 1350)

 

In connection with the Annual Report on Form 10-K of Kayne Anderson BDC, Inc. (the “Company”) for the period ended December 31, 2024, as filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on the date hereof (the “Report”), Terry A. Hart, as Chief Financial Officer of the Company certifies, pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 1350, as adopted pursuant to § 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, that, to such officer’s knowledge:

 

  (1) The Report fully complies with the requirements of Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended; and

 

  (2) The information contained in the Report fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and results of operations of the Company.

 

/s/ Terry A. Hart  
Name:  Terry A. Hart  
Title: Chief Financial Officer  
  (Principal Financial and Accounting Officer)  
Date: March 3, 2025  

 

The foregoing certification is being furnished solely pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 1350 and is not being filed as part of the Report or as a separate disclosure document.