Barry Sloane
Analyst · Raymond James
Thank you, Jenny. I would like to turn everyone’s attention to the PowerPoint that we have hung on our website, newtekone.com, go to the Investor Relations section and PowerPoint is there present and will also be archived along with the audio presentation of the call. I would like to turn everyone’s attention to page 2 of the presentation talking about Newtek’s differentiated BDC model, but also like to thank everyone attending the call today. We’ve had a very nice jump in our stock price with a preview of how our business has been doing over the last week or so. I also would like to remind investors that if you look at reports from some analysts that have followed us, the company has returned 25% to shareholders over the last three years, 25% over the last year. And from a performance perspective, the company anticipate subject to Board’s final approval, the payment of five cash dividend this year, which would include the payment received in January from the fourth quarter of last year. Last year, we benefited shareholders by doing a special dividend in the fourth quarter of 2015, the fourth quarter dividend effectively earned from the fourth quarter of 2015 was paid in January of this year. So investors that owned the stock as of January 1, based upon forecasts and the Board declaring dividends, should earn a forecasted $1.53 plus the $0.40 to equal 1.93. Now, let’s go forward. Why we think our business model is better? Importantly, we are internally managed BDCs. We say we don’t pay a 4% external management fee to an external advisor. Typical deal out there is 2 and 20. There’s a lot of fees that are going out the window that are not going into calculating the dividend yield. So in our world, we believe there’s no free lunches. We’ll get into that a little bit deeper into the slide. But essentially in order to get to 10% to 11% yield that our competitors are offering, they’ve got to start with significantly higher coupons and significantly higher leverage, which means significantly higher risk. We invest in and importantly originate primarily senior secured loans and in operating businesses, our portfolio companies which are wholly-owned most over 10 years by Newtek Business Services Corp. We are not buying packaged loans in auction process from Wall Street or brokers. We’re in the lending business. We’re originating loans directly with retail clients doing our own assembly, our own packaging, our own underwriting and our own closing. From a standpoint of conflict of interest, the inside ownership is very much in line with the external shareholders. The insiders includes myself, the other large Founder, the Board, Management owns about 15% of the outstanding shares. Vote [ph] number four, which relates to vote number one, when you look at our risk profile extremely important, not a lot of leverage. So most of our competitors have got to invest in higher risk type assets that are paying off higher coupons in order to get through the 4%. Some of these have an equity kicker. You can call them as capital. You can call them sub-debt, even the players that claim they’re doing senior secured, but typically doing senior secured LBO deals that may not have collateral behind them that are very excess at EBITDA level – EBITDA numbers. So if you really want to take a look at our business model, please understand that what we are investing in are things that we as a management team and ownership structure have had familiarity with over the course of 10 years. We’re not investing in other people’s securities or things. We do a little bit of that. We obviously lend money to other people, but we’ve been in the lending business now for over 13 years. We’re not acquiring equity investment in CDOs, which is another form of excessive leverage. Many times, I’m asked by investors, do you have SBIC debt on our portfolio? The answer is no. SBICs are very good way for BDCs to actually get higher levels of dividend. But I got to tell you, SBIC debt is SBIC debt. You’ve got to pay it back, it’s extra leverage. Yes, it doesn’t count for the BDC test, but the fact of the matter is, it’s extra leverage. So the fact that we currently don’t have it, that’s not to say, we won’t use it in the future also accrues to the fact that we’re earning a really good return without excessive amounts of leverage in cash – without excessive amounts of leverage in risk. We’re forecasting to pay an annual dividend of $1.53 per share in 2016, that’s up a $0.01 from the other – from the previous forecast equate to an annual dividend of approximately 11%, another comment I’d like to make on how the Street estimates dividends. They typically take the most recent quarter that’s earned to calculate what dividend yield is. Well, our dividend quarter-to-quarter are not stable. They do change from time to time. They have a little bit of volatility. As a matter of fact over the last three years, we’ve consistently said, most of our earnings come in the second-half of the year. There’s nothing we can do about that. Christmas only comes once and it’s in the fourth quarter, but our payment processor does a significant amount of its business, and lending business that also tends to be secured to the third and fourth quarter closings. So I think it’s important to note a little bit more volatility from quarter-to-quarter in the dividend yield, but we think it’s worth it. Potential NAV upside as operating businesses grow, and we get a larger sizes in the portfolio companies versus public valuations. If you look at our competitors in this space, NAV 10 and would grow if rates fall good luck on that, but we could go negative here, or credit spreads type, I also say good luck on that, because we’re fairly at historic tight spreads with respect to credit. With our NAV, you’re investing primarily in businesses that are getting larger, that are having earnings growth, that are doing a great job in managing the risk. And from a total valuation standpoint, we hope and expect to deliver to our shareholders, I’d say this again, we hope and expect to deliver higher NAV upside as these operating businesses grow and approach larger sizes. There’s no derivative securities in the BDC. We avoid second lien or mezz financing at the business line. And we haven’t feasted on oil and gas or volatile industries, as we’re putting money out. Our industries are very sexy, they could be a new bowler [ph] or could be a bowling alley. The good news is we typically have historic cash flows, historic operating histories, and we think stability in the credits is extremely important to us, where our competitors have to go for things that are more volatile to be able to get – acquire a higher rate and/or maybe an equity kicker. One last point on this page. Last year, approximately 35% of the dividend that we paid to shareholders was qualified. It was qualified, because the portfolio companies, which are already taxed once, upstream is income for the holding company makes a difference. So the market looks at our dividend yield. It needs to differentiate between the fact that 35% of our dividend yield, the taxable entities is taxed at a qualified rate of 20% to 30% tax once versus a typical high rate in a non-qualified dividend of 38%, 39%. Let’s move to Slide #3. Second quarter 2016 financial highlights, we bumped our dividend to a – of a $0.01 to a $1.53 as based upon management’s improved outlook for the second-half of the year. We also want to elaborate that we do think we get the majority of our earnings in Q3 or Q4 in a quarterly calendar year. Our NAV came in at $14.11 per share at June 30, 2016, as compared to $14.06. Mind you this boxed again – box up against a BDC trend that has a declining NAV based upon credit concerns as the economy seems to weaken and credit spreads widening. Dividend income from controlled portfolio companies of 38.9% increase, debt to equity ratio of 76.3%. We are very mindful of where we are here. We just did a fairly significant baby bond deal in the second quarter, raised about $40 million of debt. Those bonds trade on the NASDAQ, NEWTZ, NEWTL. The recent raise NEWTL of $40 million transaction. Total investment portfolio increased by 14.6%, and the second quarter dividend was $5.1 million, a $0.35 a share. Some people are looking at the fact that the dividend we paid in Q1 and Q2 for the second quarter was below the adjusted NII. Once again, I want to repeat, most of our income comes in, in the second-half of the year, historically been about 60%. So what we’re trying to do is placing some of the investors by having a first quarter dividend and the second quarter dividend be closer to the third and fourth. But I think all you can sort of calculate the math and based upon $1.53 forecast, we’re looking at about $0.85 dividend in the second-half of year. On Slide #4, our SBA lending highlights. We funded $75.8 million in the second quarter of 2016. This is based – this is basically where we had expected the number to come in at an increase of 40%. For the six months ended June 30, 2016, loan fundings were up by 27.4%. Once again realized the first quarter less than the second quarter, that’s just our business model. In July 2016, we funded $25.9 million very valuable. Typically, we have funded last – in the first-month of a quarter, we’re starting to even that out, as we’ve improved our technology. We’ve improved our management resources and our total flow in the lending business. We reaffirmed the loan funding forecast of $320 million. We change the breakout a little bit of $300 million in 7(a), $20 million is 504. And as of July 1, 2016, approximately $105 million of 7(a) loans were sitting in underwriting. We believe we’re well-positioned to achieve several outstanding quarter and meet our guidance for the rest of the year. Going to Slide #5, a comparison of internally managed BDCs versus external managed BDCs. I really want to focus to the bottom part of the chart, Triangle, Main Street and Hercules, these are the BDCs that we obviously aspire to reach their types of valuations. They’re all internally managed. They typically invest in portfolios of securities. If you look at the seasoning of these entities, they’re around for nine years, they’re around for six years, they’re around for 11 years. That’s Triangle, Main Street, Hercules, KCAP then around for 10 years. One of the reasons we believe that they have multiples of 1.34 times now, 1.6, 1.39 is the longevity, also the market cap, significantly larger. So, as we grow our business model, obviously we plan on being around for a long period of time. We also plan on growing the market size, pretty more shares out growing the investor base and growing the liquidity. These are the types of NAV multiples that we hope to aspire to. As we closed yesterday, we were pretty close to NAV. I would also – and I’ll use the word boast. We believe our business model is a better business model than our competitors that remains to be seen over the course of time. We’re approaching our two-year anniversary in November of this year as BDC. Moving to Slide #6, new company headquarters in Lake Success, a couple of important aspects here. We have 180 workstations, 40 offices, we finally got four of the primary operating businesses in one location. We think this kind of lead to tremendous operating efficiencies over the course of time. That’s going to take many quarters to happen. But I think you’ll see it quarter-to-quarter to lead to more efficient and effective cross-selling and cross-marketing. We also recorded a three-month loss in the end of the quarter of $1.5 million, relating to the remaining liability under the West Hempstead lease, which is the majority of the staff relocated here. As we sublet space in West Hempstead, as we recently did in our New York City office, which moves out of the close, some of that $0.10 a share will hopefully come back to us. It’s about 22,000 square feet in the West Hempstead office. Moving to Slide #7, debt-to-equity ratio, we talked about 76.3%. We also want to talk about at the end of each quarter, we typically have and this was somewhere – somewhat apparent on June 30 by $19.9 million of actual leverage. In the event that we’ve ever got tied to the leverage cap at the end of the quarter, we could basically curtail funding and selling within the last two weeks of the 12-month cycle to effectively collapse that position that we get is under the cap, that’s about 10% of our total assets side. I think it’s just a valuable consideration to look at. I had recently somebody come up to me and say, you’re raising equity money in the third quarter. And I just said, I don’t really know what plan you’re on. I know the third quarter is out and I’m never going to say, never. People have gotten a lot of trouble doing that, but I also would say, it’s pretty unlikely. But I think when people are trying to figure out what our leverage is, they don’t understand how our business model works. This is the business model that we have some functional control over. Please also understand that our Goldman Sachs line that we currently have about $22 million drawn, which is currently outstanding at $38 million, which we’re in the process of renegotiating that cap up, because our cash flows are better. Our EBITDAs are better. We get more availability to enable us to use a little bit more leverage versus raising equity. These are the things that we’re looking at in the marketplace. So really enhanced our performance for all of our stakeholders. Moving to Slide #8, couple of important data points. On June 29, 2016, we completed our investment in banc-serv Partners. On May 20, 2016, we acquired the assets of ITAS and Deer Valley. I think these are important items to note – notice that, they’re pretty much towards the end of the quarter. Our funding from the baby bond yield came in, in April. So we picked up around a little over $500,000 worth of interest expense, which is somewhat punitive. We just started putting that money out. So many of you take that slide rule out that’s all straight line. And I – we’d love you to put that slide rule away, because we’re not necessarily straight line. We’ve been a public company for a long period of time. Our stock perform, because we do what we say. We think you should look at the overall business model. But I think the important aspect here is, you certainly can be punitive if you want to look at the 518,000 of interest expense and that given us time prudently with the money out. So the money is now out. We should be able to start to deploy more of that cash as we go forward for the loans, possible acquisitions, and other really attractive risk versus reward opportunities that come to us. We told two things off of our pipeline previously reported. There was an insurance agency and a payer processing company. We’re currently looking at staffing company and a PEO, which could be interesting for us. If looking back on banc-serv Partners, banc-serv is Indiana based, has 40 employees, great management team, have relationships with 350 lending institutions that they perform, historically an outsource service of assembly underwriting and servicing and compliance. The value prop with banc-serv is, we think we acquired a company with attractive cash flows at an attractive EBITDA multiple. But importantly banc-serv clients, which are typically smaller entities that may not be able to fund opportunities that are out of the footprint, maybe a little too large, maybe doesn’t fit a industry classification or underwriting classification that we have. We expect to get as a banc-serv service to their clients lending opportunities that we will fund in Newtek Small Business Finance or BDC. We also believe that of the 350 clients, many of those are now interested in lot of our other services. The payments, solutions, opportunity, the payment and benefit solution opportunity, insurance opportunity, technology opportunity, so we will over the course of time approach banc-serv’s clients 350 million of them into our portfolio to be able to get the other originations going. We think banc-serv conservatively has the potential to increase our SBA 7(a) loan fundings in 2017 by $30 million. Slide #10 is a slide that many of you are very familiar with. It show our pedigree in originating 7(a) loans, I’ve been doing this for 13 years. They have extremely important with the eight largest SBA 7(a) lender, which includes banks that have a 13-year history of loan to pull frequency and severity by fixed rated securitizations. Average loan size is 172,000 that’s the uninsured piece that sits on our books. We finance those credit securitizations. Looking at Slide #14, and there’s a lot of discussion over the next several pages, which talks about wealth. I think the most important aspect of growth with respect to our leading opportunities, in our business model, given that we’re not buying BDO product, we’re not buying package loans in auction. We’re not buying brokered commodity that are shopped to multiple lenders. And if you get the highest price than the worst, credit risk ratios for dealing directly with small business, yes to our alliance partners, but the intermediary is involved in the coaching of the structuring process. The secret to us making good credits and growing is to have a lot of looks and opportunities, which drove first six months of the year, I think came in at $2 billion in Q1, $1.7 billion, $1.8 billion in Q2. Lots – I’m sorry, I apologize. Lending [indiscernible] I got a rate here in front of me, I guess I should just read, $3.7 billion of referrals submitted through June 30, 2016, year-over-year comparison $2.3 billion, 62% increase in referrals. So what does this do? This gives us an opportunity to pick and choose through a lot of opportunities directly dealing with borrowers. Units closed of 57%. At the end of the day, this is the secret sauce to be able to cost-effectively look at large quantities of opportunities, pick the best ones and fund small businesses, which is an important part of our charter. Our average loan size has been declining that is a concentrated effort for us as we improve our efficiencies with technology and staffing, smaller funding sizes gives us greater diversification and greater prices in the secondary market and a greater ability to securitize with higher advance rates. Moving on to Slide number 10, you can see the growth in 7(a) fundings, six months ended June 30, 2015 versus 2016, up $131 million versus $103 million. Year-to-date, we’re looking at $157.8 million versus $107 million that includes July 31. In July 2016, we funded $25.9 million, largest dollar volume of SBA loans funded in a single month. We take a look at the pipeline, prequaled loans in underwriting and approved pending closing. Pipeline is up by 78.4%. We’re proud of that. We’ve left out a few categories like loan sitting in suspense and just total gross referrals in the prequaled category. We’re doing a much better job of cleaning out the pipeline early, obviously people come to us from all different areas, all walks of life, they come to us and they’re not ready to borrow, but because kicking tires or cleaning that up quicker, we are putting that in suspense. We have people that will have a couple of conversations with them. We take it an above for month two or three. That can be a variety of reasons. So we’re doing a much better job of keeping the data, being able to go back to customer but really focusing on the live hot, warmer opportunities, which is leading to better close rates and higher credit quality in the portfolio. Net premium trends for the first six months for the year, 12.28% that’s up from 11.72% last year. We anticipate those trends continuing with our good track record, relative to the full severity and frequency, relative to the interest rate climate that currently appears to be stable. So, we don’t expect any major change, but obviously report that quarter-to-quarter and if we saw anything that was significant on in term basis, we would report that to the marketplace. Going to Slide number 15, we put this slide up to basically demonstrate that the gain on sale, although on most BDCs is totally sporadic. With us, we don’t say its reoccurring income. We say it’s a reoccurring event and this reoccurring event has happened over the course of 13 years. Slide number 16 shows the average loan balance that we funded in 2016, $650,000. That includes the government and non-government guarantee peace. Looking at our loan portfolio performance on Slide number 17, look at statistics that are showing our non-performing portfolio as a percentage of total outstanding loan portfolio, through the first six months of 2016 is 3.68%. I think we give a lot of transparency to the market, showing how our loans effect our NAV. So immediately when we have a non-performer, we write the NAV down or non-accrual we write the NAV down. We take a loss on the loan once it is liquidated, and all of our loans are on our books at fair value, you can look at our [indiscernible] in case every quarter. You can see what performers and non-performers are on our books. And you could see the trends when you go from 2013 to 2014, 2015, 2016, they are very good trends and we believe this is not just a function of an increasing size of the portfolio. I want to make one particular note. For those of us out there that are looking at us real closely, I want to make you aware of the fact that SBA portfolio is very different than types of loans that you might be familiar with, whether it’s residential or some commercial. We have a lot of small businesses that sometimes we have a situation where borrowers have a sickness in the family or some kind of change of control, they’ve some interruption of payments many times our loan will go no nonaccrual and then they come back to us. I think it’s important to note. We have one particular loan, it was a medical practice at a cost basis of 664,000. We had somebody taking a look at this loan saying it was nonaccrual. Fact of the matter is, it did go to nonaccrual, they happen to do a chapter filing, but they made payments, from the beginning loan is originated to the end the loan was well over collateralized and this loan is back to a performing status today. As I said, it was a medical practice, they’re cash flowing, they’re doing well, but they did declare a bankruptcy to remove certain obligations, I will say this, I’m not particularly fond of lending money to businesses that might declare a bankruptcy on an interim basis. But the fact of the matter is, we believe the money alone was money good and had plenty of collateral. And the proof is they have never been late on a payment.
. : Slide number 19, a non-familiar slide to investors that have attended our calls regularly comparative loan portfolio data. We think our portfolio continues to get stronger and stronger I’d like to point out one thing when you look at current weighted average LTV, its gravitating to an 85% number. We think that’s more of a normal number than the historic lower number. That is a function of the fact that our season portfolio, which we acquired in 2013 is really diminished. So we have less seasonal loans in the portfolio and more newer loans. Slide number 20 and 21, I’m not going to go into. Many of you are familiar with how cash works on 7(a) and how income works. Slide number 22 and 23 focus on the 504 market this has been more of a slower starter for us. We have a pretty decent pipeline building in this segment. It will show how cash works, as well as accounting on 504. Looking at our business from a comparative basis, our Live Oak Bank trading at 2.15 book value obviously if we take a look at our book value trade at that type of multiple a very different business model, I think the only thing that’s similar is they do 7(a) loans, we do 7(a) loans and the market’s valuing their book value at a much higher multiple. Take a look at the BankUnited recently acquiring services to small business finance transaction. They paid a 10% premium above the face value of the uninsured loans. 10% premium on the face value of their uninsured loans. Jenny, the face value of uninsured loans at the quarter, $160 million, $170 million?