Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund·Financial Services
Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund is a business development and finance company, which engages in lending to middle-market companies. It invests in directly originated senior secured term loans including first lien senior secured term loans and second lien senior secured term loans. The company was founded on May 30, 2019 and is headquartered in New York, NY.
Financial Services
Financial - Conglomerates
2024-01-24
0.42

NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund (NYSE: MSDL) ("MSDL”), a business development company externally managed by MS Capital Partners Adviser Inc., today announced it will release its financial results for the first quarter ended March 31, 2026, on Thursday, May 7, 2026, after the market closes. MSDL will host a conference call at 10:00 am ET on Friday, May 8, 2026, to review its financial results and conduct a question-and-answer session. Conference Call Information All.

In Q1, the narrative that we had at the start of the year has completely changed. The market has stopped chatting about new record highs and started to dig deep to find areas of shelter. The 11%+ yield territory is probably the last thing that would come to retirement income investors' minds when thinking about protection.

I see recent credit risk repricing as excessively aggressive and overblown, creating potential opportunity. Market reactions often swing violently when sentiment shifts, lacking balanced or rational repricing. Current drawdowns are being fueled by any available argument, logical or not, amplifying volatility.

Morgan Stanley Direct Lending Fund and Energy Transfer both offer high yields, discounted valuations, and solid dividend coverage. MSDL trades at a 29% discount to NAV, has a 12.5% yield, and maintains a conservative, first-lien-heavy portfolio with low non-accruals. ET provides a 7.05% distribution yield, robust fee-based cash flows, and is positioned for growth from U.S. energy exports and data center demand.

Ares Capital, Capital Southwest, and Trinity Capital stand out as attractive BDCs for income-focused investors amid sector headwinds. Rising defaults, increased leverage (average 1.25x), and potential recession risks warrant caution across the BDC sector despite appealing yields. Dividend safety is not guaranteed by spillover income; recent cuts at TPVG and MSDL underscore this vulnerability.

The performance of the VanEck BDC Income Exchange Traded Fund, which includes over 30 BDCs in its market cap-weighted index, gives a good sense of how BDCs performed in these different environments. During the rate-cutting period, which initiated the pressure on BDC profits, BDCs have had to cope with the DeepSeek AI shock, peaking just ahead of that event on 19 February 2025. With AI technologies seemingly set to destroy any potential profitability these firms had, many BDCs were suddenly faced with having to write down large portions of their portfolios. But not all BDCs are in that boat.