PennantPark Floating Rate Capital (PFLT)
PennantPark Floating Rate Capital (NYSE:PFLT) invests in middle-market floating rate senior secured loans, operating as a business development company. The stock currently trades at $9.51, offering a 13.2% dividend yield. That’s an eye-catching number for income investors. But can they actually afford it?
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Annual Dividend | $1.23 per share |
| Dividend Yield | 13.2% |
| Payment Frequency | Monthly ($0.1025/month) |
| Consecutive Years of Payments | 14+ years |
| Most Recent Payment | February 2, 2026 |
The Coverage Math Looks Tight
This is where things get concerning. PFLT reported diluted EPS of $0.72 over the trailing twelve months. Against the $1.23 annual dividend, that gives an earnings payout ratio of 171%. The company is paying out significantly more than it earns.
| Metric | TTM Value | Assessment |
|---|---|---|
| Earnings Payout Ratio | 171% | Concerning |
| Net Income (FY2025) | $66.4M | |
| Net Investment Income (Q4 2025) | $27.5M |
The recent earnings trend makes this worse. Net income fell 27.8% year-over-year from $91.8M to $66.4M in fiscal 2025. Even more alarming, Q1 2025 saw net income collapse to just $1.2M. That kind of volatility is dangerous for dividend sustainability.
The company did report net investment income of $27.5M in Q4 2025, up from $18.0M the prior year. That’s a positive. But realized losses of $14.3M and unrealized depreciation of $46.1M show portfolio stress.
Leverage Is Climbing Fast
The balance sheet adds another layer of risk. Total debt jumped to $1.78B in fiscal 2025, up 50.9% from the prior year. Meanwhile, shareholder equity grew only 22.5% to $1.07B.
| Metric | Value | Assessment |
|---|---|---|
| Debt-to-Equity | 1.65x | Elevated |
| Total Debt | $1.78B | Aggressive |
| Cash on Hand | $122.7M | Thin Buffer |
That 1.65x debt-to-equity ratio is aggressive for a BDC, especially with earnings under pressure. Cash of $122.7M doesn’t provide much cushion against $184.6M in short-term debt.
Management Stays Committed
CEO Art Penn struck a cautiously optimistic tone, noting “NII remains stable given interest rate environment” and “targeting growth in NII as we ramp the new joint venture.” The company launched a new joint venture with Hamilton Lane to expand middle-market lending, which could support future income.
The dividend has been paid consistently for 14+ years without cuts. That track record matters. But the current rate of $0.1025 per month has been unchanged since June 2023.
This Dividend Carries Elevated Risk
Dividend Safety Rating: Elevated Risk
The 171% earnings payout ratio is the core problem. PFLT is paying out more than it earns, relying on net investment income to bridge the gap. With earnings down 28% year-over-year and quarterly volatility spiking, that’s not a sustainable model. The rising debt load and thin cash position add further pressure.
The dividend sustainability depends on whether net investment income can stabilize above $100M annually and whether the new joint venture delivers meaningful growth. Further deterioration in earnings or additional debt raises to fund operations would increase dividend risk. Investors should carefully weigh the 13% yield against these fundamental concerns.