David B. Golub
Hello, everybody, and thanks for joining us today. I'm joined by my colleagues, Tim Topicz and Chris Ericson. For those of you who are new to GBDC, our investment strategy is focused on providing first lien senior secured loans to healthy, resilient middle market companies that are backed by strong partnership-oriented private equity sponsors. Yesterday, we issued our earnings press release for the fiscal quarter and year ended September 30, 2025, and we posted an earnings presentation to our website. We'll be referring to that presentation during the call today. I'm going to start with headlines and a summary of performance for both the quarter and the fiscal year. Then Tim and Chris are going to go through our operating and financial performance for the quarter in more detail. And finally, I'll come back and wrap up with some observations on current market conditions and our outlook for the coming period. With that, let's jump in. So I see 2 primary headlines to today's news. The first, GBDC had a solid quarter and a strong end to fiscal year 2025. It was bolstered by solid credit results across our portfolio. Second, at the same time, the private credit direct lending market faces some headwinds and GBDC is not immune from those headwinds. Let me expand and unpack each of these headlines. First, let's talk about performance. For the quarter, adjusted NII per share was $0.39, and that translates to an adjusted NII ROE of 10.4%. Adjusted net income per share was $0.36 for an adjusted ROE of 9.6%. For fiscal year 2025, GBDC paid $1.65 per share of cumulative distributions, representing 10.9% of end-of-year net asset value per share. Further, GBDC ended fiscal year 2025 with a net asset value per share of $14.97. That's $0.34 above GBDC's net asset value per share at its IPO in 2010. GBDC is one of only a very small number of BDCs that have delivered NAV per share growth since IPO. GBDC's performance reflected a continuation of trends that you've heard me talk about over the last several quarters. Overall credit performance remained solid and earnings were supported by decreasing but still attractive portfolio spreads and attractive borrowing costs. At the same time, and this is the second key headline, the direct lending market is facing some headwinds, headwinds that GBDC isn't immune to. What are those headwinds? First, spreads have narrowed. Now this isn't just true of middle market direct lending. We've seen tighter spreads across traditional fixed income, asset-based finance, high yield, the broadly syndicated loan market. Spreads are tighter just about everywhere other than subprime. Second headwind, base rates have started to come down, and the market expects them to come down further. Third headwind, and this is the most important, we're in a credit cycle. There's an unusual level of defaults and credit stress in the leveraged loan market today. That's both the liquid leveraged loan market, including the broadly syndicated market as well as the private credit market. This has been the case for over a year, and I anticipate it's going to continue for some time. We'll talk more about these headwinds over the course of today's call, but I want to highlight 2 ramifications of these headwinds. First, they're causing a spade of colorful news articles about the sector. Some of these articles are quite insightful, some less so. I'm going to talk in my closing remarks about some of the insightful ones. And second, they're causing very significant dispersion in performance among direct lending managers. Some managers are continuing to produce solid returns, mostly down a bit from last year, but still solid. And some other managers are producing poor results. I described this last quarter as being a story about winners and whiners, and I said this pattern would continue, and it is continuing. Before I pass the mic to Tim and Chris to go over operating results in more detail, I want to comment on the decision by our Board to declare a $0.39 per share distribution for the first fiscal quarter of 2026. In connection with this decision, the Board also determined that it would be prudent to revisit GBDC's dividend policy early next year when we hope to have more information on the forward outlook for rates and asset spreads and financing costs. GBDC plans to approach the dividend question with the same underlying strategy we've had since our IPO. To remind those of you who haven't heard me talk about dividend strategy before, we're guided by 4 goals. First, we seek to maintain a stable net asset value per share over time. Second, we seek to minimize excise taxes over time. Third, we seek to adjust our base distribution level infrequently. And finally, we seek to pay as high a dividend yield on NAV as sustainable, consistent with the above goals, the 3 prior goals. Now we can't always achieve all 4 of these goals at the same time. And at such times, we need to find the right balance. I'll have more to say in my closing remarks, but to sum up my intro, GBDC demonstrated strong and resilient earnings in fiscal 2025 despite macro surprises and despite market volatility. The market today is challenging. But based on our experience through multiple cycles over multiple decades, we believe this is the kind of environment where we and other private credit specialists outperform. Now I'll pass the call over to Tim Topicz to discuss the quarter in more detail.