Earnings Labs

FS KKR Capital Corp. (FSK)

Q2 2025 Earnings Call· Thu, Aug 7, 2025

$10.78

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Transcript

Operator

Operator

Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. Welcome to the FS KKR Capital Corp.'s Second Quarter 2025 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] Please note that this conference is being recorded. At this time, Anna Kleinhenn, Head of Investor Relations, will proceed with the introduction. Ms. Kleinhenn, you may begin.

Anna Kleinhenn

Analyst

Thank you. Good morning, and welcome to FS KKR Capital Corp.'s Second Quarter 2025 Earnings Conference Call. Please note that FS KKR Capital Corp. may be referred to as FSK, the fund or the company throughout the call. Today's conference call is being recorded, and an audio replay of the call will be available for 30 days. Replay information is included in a press release that FSK issued yesterday. In addition, FSK has posted on its website, a presentation containing supplemental financial information with respect to its portfolio and financial performance for the quarter ended June 30, 2025. A link to today's webcast and the presentation is available on the Investor Relations section of the company's website under Events & Presentations. Please note that this call is the property of FSK. Any unauthorized rebroadcast of this call in any form is strictly prohibited. Today's conference call includes forward-looking statements and are subject to risks and uncertainties that could affect FSK or the economy generally. We ask that you refer to FSK's most recent filings with the SEC for important factors and risks that could cause actual results or outcomes to differ materially from these statements. FSK does not undertake to update its forward-looking statements, unless required to do so by law. In addition, this call will include certain non-GAAP financial measures. For such measures, reconciliations to the most directly comparable GAAP measures can be found in FSK's second quarter earnings release that was filed with the SEC on August 6, 2025. Non-GAAP information should be considered supplemental in nature and should not be considered in isolation or as a substitute for the related financial information prepared in accordance with GAAP. In addition, these non-GAAP financial measures may not be the same as similarly named measures reported by other companies. To obtain copies of the company's latest SEC filings, please visit FSK's website. Speaking on today's call will be Michael Forman, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman; Dan Pietrzak, Chief Investment Officer and President; and Steven Lilly, Chief Financial Officer. Also joining us on the call today are Co-Chief Operating Officers, Drew O'Toole and Ryan Wilson. I'll now turn the call over to Michael.

Michael Craig Forman

Analyst

Thank you, Anna, and good morning, everyone. Thank you all for joining us for FSK's Second Quarter 2025 Earnings Conference Call. During the second quarter, FSK generated net investment income totaling $0.62 per share and adjusted net investment income totaling $0.60 per share as compared to our public guidance of approximately $0.64 and $0.62 per share, respectively. Our net asset value per share declined 6.2% from $23.37 to $21.93 during the quarter. Our operating results this quarter primarily were attributable to company-specific situations impacting 4 portfolio companies. Dan will provide significant detail in each company shortly. Our new investment activity has remained strong despite the still somewhat slow M&A environment. During the first half of 2025, the investment team originated $3.4 billion of investments, of which $1.4 billion were originated during the second quarter. We continue to find compelling ABF opportunities, and this segment of our portfolio remains a strong performer while also providing enhanced portfolio diversification. Additionally, we have continued to scale our Credit Opportunities Partners Joint Venture, which expands our investment funnel and delivers a consistent stream of recurring dividend income on both a quarterly and annual basis. On the right side of the balance sheet, we continue to maintain strong liquidity to support our funding needs, ending the quarter with $3.1 billion of availability across cash, unsettled trades and undrawn credit facilities. Our 2025 distribution guidance remains in place, and we continue to expect our distributions during the full year will total $2.80 per share, comprised of $2.56 per share of base distributions and $0.24 per share of supplemental distributions. Our Board has declared a third quarter distribution of $0.70 per share, consisting of our base distribution of $0.64 per share and a supplemental distribution of $0.06 per share. As we previously have stated, our 2025 distribution strategy was designed to provide shareholders with additional distributions from the spillover income that we have accumulated. As we approach our target spillover balance range, we expect our 2026 distribution strategy will be based on key factors, including prevailing interest rates, our overall portfolio yield, the spread environment with respect to new investments and the weighted average cost of our liability structure. In keeping with our long-held view of providing as much transparency as possible to the market, we plan to provide additional details regarding our 2026 dividend strategy on our third quarter earnings call. And with that, I'll turn the call over to Dan.

Daniel Ryan Pietrzak

Analyst

Thanks, Michael. I'll keep my macro and industry remarks brief this quarter and instead focus my time discussing as many specifics as we can with regards to the 4 companies Michael referenced. In recent months, geopolitical tensions, regulatory changes, tariffs and market volatility have combined to increase uncertainty about the timing of the resurgence of M&A transactions. While transactions have been getting done, global M&A volume is down close to 10% year-over-year. Despite these overall declines, our team evaluated more opportunities in Q2 than in any of the previous 8 quarters. This continued increase in deals screened, together with the recent legislative developments, supports our cautious optimism that conditions are aligned for an increase in M&A activity later this year and into next year. During our first quarter earnings call, we estimated that approximately 8% of our portfolio could have direct exposure to tariffs. Since then, the landscape has continued to evolve with changes to both the country's impacted and specific tariffs. We have remained closely engaged with our portfolio companies and their sponsors, actively updating our analysis to reflect the latest developments. Based on this updated analysis, we estimate that our direct tariff exposure has declined and now falls within the low to mid-single- digit range. The companies which are either affected or potentially will be affected have been proactive in mitigating potential impacts, including exploring alternative supply chain strategies and passing through costs where possible. While our portfolio and the private credit market in general both continue to demonstrate stability, we experienced an increase in nonaccruals this quarter due to specific situations with 4 companies. Three of these companies are larger investments in our portfolio, which accounted for the negative move in our net asset value during the quarter. Comments regarding the 4 companies are as follows. Our…

Steven C. Lilly

Analyst

Thanks, Dan. As of June 30, 2025, FSK's investment portfolio had a fair value of $13.6 billion, consisting of 218 portfolio companies. At the end of the second quarter, our 10 largest portfolio companies represented approximately 19% of the fair value of our portfolio compared to 20% as of the end of the first quarter. We remain focused on senior secured investments as our portfolio consisted of approximately 59% first lien loans and 64% senior secured debt as of June 30. In addition, our joint venture represented approximately 12% of the fair value of our portfolio. As a result, when investors consider our entire portfolio, looking through to the investments in our joint venture, and first lien loans totaled approximately 68% of our total portfolio and senior secured investments totaled approximately 73% of our portfolio as of June 30. The weighted average yield on accruing debt investments was 10.6% as of June 30, a decrease of 20 basis points compared to 10.8% as of March 31. As a reminder, the calculation of weighted average yield is adjusted to exclude the accretion associated with the merger of FSKR. Turning to our quarterly operating results. Our total investment income was $398 million for the second quarter, which is a decrease of $2 million compared to the first quarter. The quarter-over-quarter change in total income was primarily driven by the decline in interest income as a result of investments that were placed on nonaccrual during the quarter, coupled with lower fee income due to a more normalized origination quarter. The primary components of our total investment income during the second quarter were as follows. total interest income was $298 million, a decrease of $4 million quarter-over-quarter; dividend and fee income totaled $100 million, an increase of $2 million quarter- over-quarter. Our total dividend…

Michael Craig Forman

Analyst

Thanks, Steven. As we look toward the second half of the year, we acknowledge the significant work currently taking place with regard to the 4 companies Dan mentioned. Since its establishment in 2018, investments originated by FS/KKR Advisor consistently have performed meaningfully better than the BDC's industry's long-term average nonaccrual rate of 3.7%. We look forward to bringing this quarter's nonaccrual rate more in line with this and ultimately below this industry average. We are confident in our team and in our ability to navigate periods of stress, which inevitably occur from time to time. As always, we appreciate your participation on the call today and for your interest in FSK. Operator, we'd like to open the line for questions.

Operator

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Our first question today comes from Arren Cyganovich with Trust Securities.

Arren Saul Cyganovich

Analyst

There's been a lot of discussion about the investing environment picking up in the second half and folks are quite busy in a typically slow August period. What are you seeing on your end? And what are you thinking about in terms of originations in the second half?

Daniel Ryan Pietrzak

Analyst

Yes. Arren, it's Dan. Thanks for the question. I think just two things I want to start with. First, clearly, this is a bit of a harder quarter for us, right? So we know we have some work to do as we go forward, and I want to make sure it's clean or clear the team is focused on that. And before I get to your question, just second, I mean, I did want to acknowledge the senseless and tragic events in New York City last week. All the businesses, the people and the families impacted by these events are in our thoughts and prayers. I think when we get to the investing environment, I think the way you put it, it's well said. I mean people are busier now, I think, than they've been in some time. Just from a pure deal count perspective, we've looked at more deals in Q2 than we have in, I think, the prior 8 quarters. That was off of a very kind of ugly April on the other side of Liberation Day. So I think that the key data points hold, right? There is significant pressure from LPs to get cash back from their private equity GPs. We continue to hear that. We know there's a lot of dry powder in kind of newer vintage private equity funds that I think is looking to deploy. I think we've probably seen more activity in names where they don't have to talk about tariffs or sort of worry about tariffs, but definitely a certain amount of green shoots. That said, I am expecting still bouts of volatility to sort of play it through. But again, busier this past quarter than we've been for a while.

Arren Saul Cyganovich

Analyst

Great. That's helpful. And then I appreciate all of the details about the 4 companies that you have on nonaccrual and information around that. Beyond those 4 companies in terms of like a watch list, do you have any others that are bubbling up to the top? Or maybe you could just talk a little bit about the portfolio performance at a portfolio company level for the rest of the portfolio.

Daniel Ryan Pietrzak

Analyst

Yes, happy to do that, and fair question. I think a couple of things, right?. I mean we -- I think we've tried to provide on not just this call but prior calls as much detail as we can on certain names. I think each of the issues in some way was unique to the companies we discussed, although there was, I think, clearly, with KBS and 48forty a bit of material amount of over-earning kind of driven by COVID and then companies kind of unlevered on the other side. In terms of watch list, I think probably the simplest thing to point to is kind of the risk ratings that we publish in kind of the QAR bucket 3 and 4, you've got roughly 7-odd percent of the portfolio. I would note a couple of those names, which we've talked about on prior calls are Global Jet and JWA, which we've seen some positive momentum on each of those names. On the other side of that, there are some things that do worry us, right? The higher rate environment is stressful on companies, things like those or impact to sort of government contracts or government services is kind of definitely on our mind. And I think maybe -- I want to make sure we're cautious and maybe a little bit more negative than most on certain things. But the consumer has performed quite well, right? We've seen that in some of the consumer businesses that we lend to or some of the consumer portfolios that we own in the asset-backed side, although that's been predominantly skewed to kind of higher FICO. But I think you got to be a little bit mindful there as we go into the second half or deeper in the second half of the year and into '26.

Operator

Operator

Our next question comes from Finian O'Shea with Wells Fargo Securities.

Finian Patrick O'Shea

Analyst

We wanted to ask first about the COP JV. Steven, I think your guide for 3Q of $55 million, that's a touch lower than what you had guided for this Q, which was $56 million. I know it came in well above that, but you're guiding it down a little bit despite a bit of a ramp there. So seeing what kind of earnings situation and also credit situation, how that has compared to the mothership BDC? And then sort of finally, what I'm getting at is, is the JV in a similar place where as we go into '26 and it maybe pays down spillover perhaps, is that going to also be a lower reset payout?

Steven C. Lilly

Analyst

Fin, it's Steven. I'll take your -- the first part of your question and then hand the second part over to Dan. The difference in the anticipated dividend from COP for the third quarter versus what we received in the second is really driven by the timing of certain ABF dividends. We received a bit higher dividends in the second quarter. And correspondingly, we'll have a bit lower dividends in the third. As you certainly know and others know, dividend payers in the ABF portfolio, it tends to be a little bit lumpy. It's not spread evenly over 4 quarters of the year. So kind of somewhat normal and customary there. But we would expect the JV over time to -- because we are -- have expanded it to your point, to be at that sort of mid-50s or even a little better level over time as those investments season in that portfolio.

Daniel Ryan Pietrzak

Analyst

Yes. Maybe just to add to those points. And I think you've spent enough time on the asset-based finance space that you've got to get that. But just to be clear on those deals, that was more of a timing issue than any type of performance point. We do have a desire to continue to ramp this but inside the [indiscernible] of probably [ 15% ] max that we discussed. The only other point that I probably would note is -- and I don't have this at my fingertips, so we can circle back. I do expect that the joint venture has a higher percentage of floating rate debt and fixed rate than is in kind of the parent company.

Finian Patrick O'Shea

Analyst

Okay. That's helpful. And next question, so portfolio conditions today given this quarter probably mean that you're below book for a little while. Seeing your view on the buyback and something you could put in place to potentially take advantage of that at a point where, say, the stock becomes cheap and you become confident in portfolio stability.

Daniel Ryan Pietrzak

Analyst

Yes. I'll take that, Fin. I think a couple of points there, right? I mean we have historically been active in buybacks, as you know. I do think we'll have to balance that with what we see as the market opportunity and where we are vis-à-vis a target leverage ratio. I think the target leverage ratio is kind of important to us. We're kind of with inside our sort of band now. But my guess is we're probably very little bit sort of above maybe recent historical average. So I think we have to just factor all those pieces together as we plan forward.

Operator

Operator

The next question is from Sean-Paul Adams with B. Riley Securities.

Sean-Paul Aaron Adams

Analyst

On the new nonaccruals, it seems like they've largely been legacy troubled assets that had proactive restructuring, however, continue to have further subsequent headwinds. When you're looking over the past troubled assets that have underwent some of that proactive intervention, how many are you currently monitoring for situations like this? Out of Worldwise, Kellermeyer and Alacrity, it seemed that there was a significant change in quarter-over-quarter marks. So just if you could provide any more color on that.

Daniel Ryan Pietrzak

Analyst

Yes. No, I'm happy to do that. And I think just for the sake of clarity, you are correct in the sense that KBS has been, for lack of a better word, going on for a period of time, PRG would be the same. PRG had an initial restructuring in '20, but that was in the depth of COVID. It's a business that focuses on Broadway and sort of entertainment. So obviously, revenue went to 0. And quite frankly, it was probably over-levered going into that. But just to the KBS, 48forty and Worldwise were regular way sort of KKR originations. When we do what we call something legacy would have been kind of prior adviser that would have been PRG. I think our workout team has done a good job. We've got a strong group of people from the leadership of that team to the various folks along that with skill sets of financial kind of modeling/financial restructuring skills, bankruptcy lawyers, even down to some PE experience to where we have to sort of run these. And I do think, in some ways, that workout term is probably a little bit of a misnomer, right? That team is getting involved the moment something goes on the watch list. In some ways, some of the most value that gets added from that is kind of at that stage because we can tighten up documents, try to derisk the position. I think we talked about one of those names on our last call when we had a repayment of a company called ThreeSixty, which was probably the biggest tariff exposure we had in the entire portfolio that was gone on for an extended period of time. I think each of these is in a different spot, Sean-Paul, like the PRG name has been ongoing for some extended period of time. The lender group on KBS is working hard. That initial restructuring is probably only a year old. 48forty is still paying interest, so clear. I think just our expectation is that's where it's sort of trending. So the team is prepared to spend a significant amount of time to try to maximize the outcome, kind of maximize the return on capital.

Operator

Operator

The next question is from Robert Dodd with Raymond James.

Robert James Dodd

Analyst

And kind of a short follow-up to Sean's. When we look at these assets that have kind of re-defaulted, if you will, it does seem to be -- from what I'm looking at, it's becoming a bit more common and not just in your portfolio, right, there are other assets around the space where we've seen the same kind of thing. I mean is there a theme or anything -- I mean, obviously, yes, it's like you point out for each individual asset, it's idiosyncratic, but there are increasingly like re-defaults rather than new defaults, if you will, where struggling assets been restructured and then they're continuing to have problems and the ones that didn't have problems to start with are doing okay. So I mean is there a theme or anything that's leading to that? And it kind of ties into the like should initial restructurings be more aggressive? Is there a problem? Would you have liked to have been more aggressive, but the lender group didn't want to be? I mean any thoughts there?

Daniel Ryan Pietrzak

Analyst

Well, it's an interesting question. I'm not sure there's a theme, Robert. I mean -- and to be clear on the names here, I mean, there is another restructuring expected on PRG, KBS is more of a valuation point. And even though the company stabilized, I think that it's just been sort of delayed. And I think the churn numbers we've seen there have taken a longer sort of time period to maybe stabilize in a manner that we're sort of happy with or satisfactory to us and the lender group. I do think the one point you said in there is correct. And each of these situations is probably specific is are you able to restructure it sort of "enough?" We have seen some names where none of these are either left in the portfolio or would be extremely de minimis amounts. Are you able to get and it's probably more highly correlated to if there's a larger 1L group in there, get the position to a spot that you feel the go-forward is self-sufficient versus maybe the capital structure sort of being too unlevered or too levered. So I don't think there's any themes. I think each of these are specific. But just to your specific point, the only name that we're talking about actually sort of "restructuring" again of those 4 is PRG. The others is just downside versus kind of [indiscernible].

Robert James Dodd

Analyst

Got it. Understood. Then sort of flipping the topic. On the -- you mentioned you've seen more deals to review than any time in the last 8 quarters. I mean like how realistic now given we're in August and there's only 4 months left in the year, is it for any of those to a material number of those to close this year? I mean is the optimism, should we be looking more at '26? Is there enough time for the end of this year to actually see a real rebound in activity?

Daniel Ryan Pietrzak

Analyst

Yes. I mean I think from the numbers perspective, I think you're correct, right, because deals being reviewed now would go through kind of the regular way investment process for 4 or 6, 8 weeks, and they probably take, on average, 2 months to close. Some things could be faster, some things could have a longer sort of tail. But I think you did see some of that from our reduced fee income that you saw this quarter versus last quarter. I think that is a spot on a go-forward basis that we would expect to see upside at least from the Q2 number. The only word of caution there is, I think, upfront fees and OID on new loans is decently tighter now than it was a year ago.

Operator

Operator

And our next question comes from Casey Alexander with Compass Point Research & Trading.

Casey Jay Alexander

Analyst · Compass Point Research & Trading.

Yes. And Dan, I echo your sentiments to our friends in Midtown. It's a really difficult situation for a lot of folks, and our heart goes out to them. It looks like it's pretty clear that the company is going to be, to a certain extent, restating its dividend philosophy. And at one point in time, the company had what you could describe as a modified variable dividend based upon earnings, and then you kind of got away from that for 1.5 years or 2 years as you were working on the spillover. Is that what we should think about you going back to, which is maybe a base and some supplemental that toggles with earnings? Or how does the company see reformulating that dividend policy?

Daniel Ryan Pietrzak

Analyst · Compass Point Research & Trading.

Yes. I mean, Casey, it's a fair question. I think we wanted to address that a bit in kind of our prepared remarks in terms of coming out kind of formally when we're on the call for sort of Q3. And you're correct. I mean we did kind of lean into that sort of variable dividend policy point. I think we tried to evolve or maybe thread the needle a little bit differently based upon a feedback from maybe the market broader because if you do recall, our base used to be $0.60, then we upped to the $0.64, then we put the supplemental in place to almost get to that variable sort of point. And then we actually added a special on top for a handful of quarters. I do think -- I think we need to kind of acknowledge, and I'm sure, Casey, you get this in reading your reports, spread environment is down, right? The yield on our accruing assets is down, I think, 140 basis points over the past year. That's picking up a little bit of the benchmark, but spreads, I think it's more likely than not rates do go down in the near term. I mentioned kind of that fee income point, but maybe with rates coming down, we could see a little bit of spread widening to sort of offset that, but it will not be kind of basis point for basis point in my mind. I think we've been very happy with what we've done on the liability side of our balance sheet. As Steven mentioned, we're 54% on the unsecured side. I think we like our maturity ladder a lot, but where we were able to issue those deals was in a very different rate environment, so we will be looking to refinance there. So I think all of that is going to get put forward in kind of our view. Now there are certain offsets there, right? There could be additional deal volume. We do have kind of more non-income-producing assets than we sort of would like. So there's a couple of levers there. But where I would focus you and kind of folks, I think we're really going to be kind of NII led here, right? So where we see kind of forward earnings spitting out is where we're going to talk about kind of dividend levels. But we as well like kind of the point of really that variability and tying into sort of NII and then trying to make sure everyone is comfortable that there's a steady base, but we'll keep all that in mind for sure.

Casey Jay Alexander

Analyst · Compass Point Research & Trading.

Okay. Secondly, to extend on the conversation of the high level of activity that you're seeing, there's not unlimited room in the target range of your leverage ratio. Do you have some line of sight to a level of repayments that will allow you to take on some of this activity? Or is -- I'm not sure how much capacity there is for the JV. I know you increased your equity commitment to the JV last quarter, but you downstreamed a fair amount of paper to the JV this quarter. How do you manage the inflow unless there's some outflow?

Daniel Ryan Pietrzak

Analyst · Compass Point Research & Trading.

Yes. And I think maybe there's 2 points there. I mean there is room for the JV to grow even with the assets that were sort of put down, and I think you'll continue to see that. I think that's been a great partnership with our partner there. And I think we have almost $600- plus million of uncalled sort of equity capital there. That's on one side. I think you have a very, very high correlation between new deal flow and repayments. And with the syndicated loan market picking up, we've seen some deals being refinanced by sort of that market as well. So I think we do have the levers. That said, you are not incorrect. I mean operating inside of our target leverage band is paramount to us. But I think those 2 things will help offset that. And like I said, I think we're happy with the amount of deals we were able to screen in this prior sort of quarter. It's not kind of where I think we will be 4 quarters from now, so I'm expecting more. But I think the correlation of repayments with new deal flow will remain high.

Operator

Operator

The next question is from Paul Johnson with KBW.

Paul Conrad Johnson

Analyst

Just broadly on activity potentially picking up here. Your EBITDA -- your median EBITDA is $114 million. You guys focus on the upper middle market. Obviously, there's a lot of competition in that part of the market. I mean how much do you expect any sort of pickup in activity to go into the BSL market versus private credit?

Daniel Ryan Pietrzak

Analyst

Yes, it's a good question. I'd take one step back. My sense is and what we communicated to kind of our investors kind of broadly is we are focused on the upper end of the middle market. We're probably defining that really in the $50 million to $150 million range. We're there on purpose because we've historically seen better management teams, less customer supplier concentrations. There's more levers to pull if certain things do go wrong. I think at times of market volatility, we're probably able to lean into larger companies more because the syndicated loan market is shut. I think we have seen a bunch of larger names who prefer to be in the private markets. All that being said, I think we are trying to make sure that our origination funnel is as broad as possible. So in addition to covering the 250 sponsors out there, we've got a dedicated non-sponsor team. We've probably been a little cautious on it, but we're prepared to play in certain junior debt deals, but the EBITDA of those businesses is higher. Obviously, we've got an active kind of asset-based finance pipeline in here to sort of bring that together. And we will go below $50 million. I mean I don't think we're going to go below $25 million to be blunt, and there's probably a higher bar for that size of the company. We're trying to make sure our origination aperture is as big as it can be. And we just haven't seen, at least on our side, that you're getting paid enough to be in the $10 million, $15 million, $20 million range. It doesn't mean there's anything wrong with those loans, but it's just not where we're spending time.

Paul Conrad Johnson

Analyst

Got it. Appreciate that, Dan. That's very helpful. One on the JV. I mean you guys dropped quite a few of assets in the JV this quarter. It looked like there might have been a little bit of a fair value loss this quarter or write-down on the investment. Can you just provide maybe a little bit of color on what drove that? Was that just some of the same investments on FSK's balance sheet that -- on the JV that were written down? Was there -- what are the current nonaccrual levels in the JV? Anything that kind of provide color on that?

Daniel Ryan Pietrzak

Analyst

Yes. No. And then you're correct. I mean we did kind of drop sort of assets down in there. I think we've been pretty happy with our inception-to-date performance on the joint venture. You are correct as well. One of the, we'll call it, "mark-to-market moves" this quarter would have been the JV itself. That would have been more correlated though, more consistent with some of the same names that we talked about. The JV has been more regularly used for accessing other parts of the KKR sort of origination funnel than regular way kind of U.S. direct lending, but some parts of KBS, 48forty and Worldwise were in there.

Paul Conrad Johnson

Analyst

Got it. That's very helpful there. And last question for me was just as you guys are evaluating the dividend going forward next year, I was just wondering what all is completely on the table here, considering any sort of shareholder protection, dividend downside protection, potentially with the new dividend, any sort of fee waivers, that sort of thing? Or is it just fitting the distribution kind of into the future earnings power and sort of prevailing interest rates at the time?

Daniel Ryan Pietrzak

Analyst

Yes. I mean obviously, there's a couple of sort of points within there, right? We have, I think, historically been on the wider end of dividends sort of being paid. I think it's important for us to kind of be in line with any sort of market or historical of industry averages. Obviously, we'll kind of think about if we need to adjust the portfolio or otherwise to sort of get there. I think the point that Casey raised in a prior question was an interesting one, right? We've talked about our dividend policy now for some time is kind of a base and supplemental concept, the supplemental either being -- just being able to be paid in the future or having it in a fixed actually payout number. So I think we're going to have to go through all of that as we kind of understand where the rate environment is kind of trending. We did pay out $0.70 on purpose this year, right? We had this excess spillover number that we wanted to guide down to a more target range. I think going into the year, we probably expected more rate moves than we've seen thus far, and we wanted to give investors consistency for '25, kind of take something off the table. But as I said, the factors of where we stand vis-à-vis the market and otherwise, we'll factor into how we look at the dividend on a go-forward basis.

Operator

Operator

Our next question is from Melissa Wedel with JPMorgan.

Melissa Wedel

Analyst

Most of them have already been asked and answered, but I wanted to follow up briefly on the level of spillover income. I might have missed it, but can you give us a -- refresh our memory on where that stands on a per share basis after this quarter?

Steven C. Lilly

Analyst

Yes. Melissa, it's Steven. Just to refresh, we started the year with rough numbers about $525 million of spillover, and then through the year through June, we reduced that number down to, I'd call it, the high 400s. And then with the current quarter dividend that we just announced, we would reduce it a little more to somewhere, call it, the mid-400s. And we'll publish obviously, intra-year, the team is making estimates because we don't have all the appropriate information tax-wise and other items. So we'll publish again in the 10-K at the end of the year. But we're sort of in that, call it, somewhat plus or minus the $450 million range, I guess, I would call it today. And then when you pro forma for the dividend that we just announced today, you'd be somewhere, call it, below $450 million but certainly well above $400 million. And when you think about in today's world, a current dividend just in total dollars, it's about $196 million on a quarterly basis at the full $0.70. So we're still above that kind of 2 quarters' worth of dividends. And as you know certainly from covering us a while, our long-term target there is plus or minus 2 quarters' worth of dividends. So we sort of see ourselves gliding right down to kind of that level as we get to the end of the year.

Melissa Wedel

Analyst

My other question goes back to sort of the ABF opportunities that you're seeing. And I know that's been an area where you've been investing for a while. I think there was a reference earlier on the call to some of the more consumer-oriented ABF opportunities. I was hoping you could give a quick recap of kind of your allocation across asset classes within ABF. And give us an update on historically where you've invested versus the current opportunity.

Daniel Ryan Pietrzak

Analyst

Yes, I'm happy to take that, Melissa. It has been a space we spent a lot of time on, right? We've got a large dedicated 50-person team here. I think we've taken the tack of investing sort of on a multi-asset class on a global basis. So we're playing in a lot of different parts of the market. To answer the consumer's point specifically, it's roughly kind of 2%, 2.5% of the portfolio diversified in a couple of names. I would say on the consumer side, we have definitely targeted more the higher FICO borrower. I think you've seen that in some of the larger deals that we've done of late would have been Discover or a recent deal with Harley-Davidson. Or we're playing in deals that are targeting homeowners who've got a more positive bias to as it relates to credit performance or other forms of secured deals like auto. So net-net, pretty small sort of balanced diversified under a bunch of names. We have been active in the resi mortgage space. We've been active in the hard asset space, probably with the main focus on aviation or equipment leasing, that's probably roughly another 2% of the portfolio. We've done historically some more esoteric things like investing in music IP, which was a position inside of FSK, which we did and has since been sort of sold. So we're trying to create that broad footprint. We're trying to enable the team with that footprint to pivot where they see the best risk-adjusted returns. We're probably at a little bit more of the top end of the range on ABF exposure inside of FSK as we think about most deals in there would be under the non-EPC bucket. But we think we -- as I said, we've been happy with the diversification and additional return profile that it's given.

Operator

Operator

This does conclude our question-and-answer session. I would now like to turn it back to Dan Pietrzak for closing remarks.

Daniel Ryan Pietrzak

Analyst

I want to thank everyone for taking the time to join us on the call today. If you do have any follow-up points or questions, please do not hesitate to reach out. Wishing you a good end of the summer. Thank you.

Operator

Operator

Thank you for your participation in today's conference. This does conclude the program, and you may now disconnect.