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Operator
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and thank you for standing by. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to Stellus Capital Investment Corporation's conference call to report financial results for its fourth fiscal quarter and year ended December 31, 2023. (Operator Instructions) This conference is being recorded today, March 5, 2024.
It is now my pleasure to turn the call over to Mr. Robert Ladd, Chief Executive Officer of Stellus Capital Investment Corporation. Mr. Ladd, you may begin.
Robert Ladd - Chairman of the Board, President, Chief Executive Officer
Okay. Thank you, Holly. And good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining the call. Welcome to our conference call covering the quarter and year ended December 31, 2023. Joining me, of course, this morning is Todd Huskinson, our Chief Financial Officer, who will cover important information about forward-looking statements as well as an overview of our financial information.
W. Todd Huskinson - Chief Financial Officer, Chief Compliance Officer, Treasurer, Secretary
Thank you, Rob. I'd like to remind everyone that today's call is being recorded. Please note that this call is the property of Stellus Capital Investment Corporation and that any unauthorized broadcast of this call in any form is strictly prohibited. Audio replay of the call will be available by using the telephone number and PIN provided in our press release announcing this call.
I'd also like to call your attention to the customary Safe Harbor disclosure in our press release regarding forward-looking information. Today's conference call may also include forward-looking statements and projections, and we ask that you refer to our most recent filing with the SEC for important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from these projections. We will not update our forward-looking statements unless required by law. To obtain copies of our latest SEC filings, please visit our website at www.stelluscapital.com under the public investors, or call us at (713) 292-5400.
At this time, I'd like to turn the call back over to our Chief Executive Officer, Rob Ladd.
Robert Ladd - Chairman of the Board, President, Chief Executive Officer
Thank you. Todd will begin the session by discussing our operating results, followed by life-to-date review, a review of the portfolio, including asset quality and then the outlook.
W. Todd Huskinson - Chief Financial Officer, Chief Compliance Officer, Treasurer, Secretary
Thank you, Rob. First, I'll cover operating results. We continue to benefit from our favorable asset liability mix in which 98% of our loans are floating and only 27% of our liabilities are floating. As a result, we had solid results in the fourth quarter as we more than covered our $0.40 per share dividend through core net investment income of $0.50 per share and GAAP net investment income of $0.49 per share.
Net asset value increased $0.07 per share to $13.26 per share. During the fourth quarter, we recorded a tax refund of $3 million, which was the result of recording a realized loss on previously markdown positions. Since our IPO in November 2012, we've invested approximately $2.4 billion in over 195 companies and received approximately $1.5 billion of repayments while maintaining stable asset quality. We have paid over $246 million of dividends to our investors, which represents $15.08 per share to an investor in our IPO in November 2012.
Turning to portfolio and asset quality, we ended the quarter with an investment portfolio at fair value of $874 million across 93 portfolio companies slightly down from $886 million across 96 companies at September 30, 2023.
During the fourth quarter, we invested $40.3 million in 3 new and 11 existing portfolio companies and along with additional fundings of $3.9 million and received five full repayments and four full realizations totaling $39.9 million and $153 million of other repayments resulting in net portfolio decline at costs $39.5 million.
As of December 31, 99% of our loans were secured and 98% were priced at floating rates. We're always focused on diversification. The average loan per company is $9.9 million and the largest overall investment is $18.9 million, both at fair value. Substantially all of the portfolio companies are backed by a private equity firm.
The average leverage of the portfolio companies is around 4 times, an average EBITDA of approximately $19 million per company. Overall, our asset quality is slightly better than plan, 24% of our portfolio is rated a 1 or ahead of plan, and 14% of the portfolio is marked at an investment category of 3 or below. As of year end, we had four loans on nonaccrual, which comprise 1.3% of fair value of the total loan portfolio.
And with that, I'll turn it back over to Rob to discuss dividends and overall outlook.
Robert Ladd - Chairman of the Board, President, Chief Executive Officer
Okay. Thank you, Todd. As a reminder, part of our investment strategy has been to invest in the equity of our portfolio companies in a modest way, but in order to generate realized gains sufficient to offset losses over time. While we had modest equity realizations more recently, we expect this activity to pick up over the next 6 to 12 months.
To this end, we are aware of two possible equity realizations that could occur in the second quarter. The proceeds of approximately $7 million and a potential realized gain of $4 million. As at the end of the year, we have $60 million of equity investments at cost that were marked at $72 million.
Our historical performance would indicate that the ultimate realization for this portfolio would be greater than 2 times our portfolio's cost basis. However, of course, the ultimate performance of our current equity positions will depend on a variety of factors, including, among other things, the current economic environment and sponsors' equity exit strategy.
Now turning to dividends. We continue to cover our dividend $0.40 per share per quarter as a result of the greater earnings that we are generating in this higher interest rate environment.
As Todd mentioned, we are well positioned to benefit from the higher interest rates as our portfolio is over 98% floating and our liability structure is approximately 73% fixed rate.
Looking forward to Q2 of this year, we expect subject to our Board of Directors approval to continue our monthly dividend of approximately $0.13 per share, resulting in aggregate dividends of $0.40 per share for the second quarter. It's worth noting that based on the average price of our stock over the last 10 days and yesterday, our current dividend equates to an annual yield of about 12.4%.
Now turning to outlook. Since year end, we have funded $4.7 million at par in 7 existing portfolio companies and have received one full repayment of $16.2 million. This brings our total portfolio to approximately $863 million at fair value with 92 portfolio companies.
We are experiencing a somewhat slower environment for originations than in the previous few quarters, and we expect our funding for the remainder of the quarter will be offset by expected repayments of approximately the same amount.
It is worth noting. We do expect for a variety of reasons that investment activity will pick up in the second half of this year. We have substantial capacity for new investments, which of course, would increase with likely repayments.
With that, I will open it up for questions. And Holly, we can begin the Q&A session, please.
Operator
(Operator Instructions)
Paul Johnson, KBW.
Paul Johnson - Analyst
Good afternoon. Thanks for taking my questions. So just on some of the remarks you gave on the portfolio of 14% or so, as fair value in your sort of internal risks at 3 or below kind of setting aside the nonaccrual, I think that accounts for 1% of that, correct me if I'm wrong. I mean, how do you kind of think about those situations? I mean, do you think that those are situations you feel are stabilized and performing, albeit maybe below sort of projection? Or are they still already this still has to work in progress?
Robert Ladd - Chairman of the Board, President, Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. So Paul, as a general matter, we certainly think these are all manageable positions. They vary by company. The one attribute that would be true for substantially. All of them is that they do have private equity ownership and backing and support. And so I think the way to think about our risk grade 3 and below is perhaps performing under plan. That combined though with private equity support, we think that the results are quite predictable. But again, ups and downs in the portfolio. But I'd say no change, substantial change over our history.
Paul Johnson - Analyst
Thanks for that, Rob. And then kind of looking into next year fee income this year, other incomes this year, it's relatively light. I mean, I'm just thinking about kind of activity, as you mentioned, if you expect to sort of pick up in the next year, you expect that to drive any sort of central prepayment come back to the year, depending what sort of turnover, I guess you're expecting for the year?
Robert Ladd - Chairman of the Board, President, Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. Paul, just in terms of, so one way to think about it. We had a little bit of more than normal other income in the fourth quarter based on repayments. We think that slowed in this first quarter of this year, but we see repayments picking up toward the middle and latter part of the year. So on balance, you'll see it more. But just to flag that in the first quarter, we would expect less of that other income than we had in the fourth quarter.
Paul Johnson - Analyst
Thanks for the clarification there. And then last one for me just on in terms of liabilities, I realize that your unsecured notes are due in 2026, but there's some SBA debentures that are rolling off over the next year or so. Where are you guys in terms of SBIC licenses and current capacity on those licenses?
Robert Ladd - Chairman of the Board, President, Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. So as a quick recap, and then Todd will add in here. So we have two licenses currently all of the debentures have been drawn, which amount to $325 million. We do have some debentures from the first license that come due next year in 2025, roughly $25 million.
So those will be prepared to retire certainly on or in advance of their coming due. And then so we are looking at working with the SBA for a third license. As we've reached the some of the debentures from the first license are starting to come due and our investment period for the second license is coming up toward the end of this year. So we'll be in discussions with the SBA to see if we can obtain a third license.
Operator
Erik Zwick, Hovde Group.
Erik Zwick - Analyst
Good afternoon. I wanted to start just on the comments, Rob, you made about expectations for funding with the pickup in the second half of the year? And just curious if that is driven by kind of increase in pipeline activity that you're saying or more based on kind of broad market developments or potentially a combination of both of those.
Robert Ladd - Chairman of the Board, President, Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. So probably, Erika, thank you for joining. So a variety of factors. So certainly when we've in overtime, if things are slower, they tend to pick up. So that'd be one overall observation. But more importantly, the we know there's a tremendous amount of dry powder in all of private equity hands, but especially in the lower middle market where we operate.
We also know that from their holdings and private equity firms that are either the fund life is reaching an end or some continuation end. And there'll be some realizations that private equity firms will start to generate. So our general impression is that things will pick up towards the second half of the year. We are seeing activity, but it's not as heavy as it has been. So this is a more forward looking toward the end of Q2 and third and fourth quarters.
Erik Zwick - Analyst
Thanks for the insight there. And then just looking at the 4Q funding activity as well as what's been done quarter to date, a greater percentage of add-on. New investments versus new and wondering if that's just kind of based on the opportunities that you're seeing or if you have a preference for those, certainly companies that you've already made investments for and continue to grow. I'm sure you would love to build a continued support them. So curious about that mix as we look out into 2024 and what it could look like as well?
Robert Ladd - Chairman of the Board, President, Chief Executive Officer
Sure, so I'd say, we like both. We really like the new financing, where it's an acquisition of a fresh company, fresh diligence, new equity capital. So that's an ideal structure for us. But that I'd say, equally as good would be add on where we already know the company. It's performing well and they're expanding.
This would be a lot of the strategy of the companies that we back is that the private equity firm takes the platform initial acquisition and then their plan is to grow it from here with the with add-ons or acquisitions, if you will.
So again, both are attractive to us. The add-ons come more naturally. And as when we're already in the credit. In terms of looking forward this year, we would expect many of our portfolio companies and their owners to be acquisitive. So you should see more activity there. But I think that comes naturally with the existing and then, of course, we're always searching for new opportunities and new new company.
Erik Zwick - Analyst
Thanks. And then last one for me, and I'll step aside. Just looking at the kind of the exits and some of the restructurings that took place towards the back half of the year, any expectations for what a PIK income may look like in 2024?
Robert Ladd - Chairman of the Board, President, Chief Executive Officer
It would be, we've had a little bit of an increase in 2023, where we've had some restructuring who's worked on. So I don't think we expect it to materially change in 2024. We have noted in the past that when we're the only lender or just a small group of lenders. And you have a company that might be struggling making their interest coverage, which most of our, substantial of ours can. But if you have that case, we have the flexibility as a lender to provide some pick interest. Ultimately, it will collect it, but this can help the cash flow. So but don't expect that to materially change in 2024.
Erik Zwick - Analyst
Thanks for taking my questions today.
Robert Ladd - Chairman of the Board, President, Chief Executive Officer
Thank you.
Operator
Christopher Nolan, Ladenburg Thalmann.
Christopher Nolan - Analyst
-- On your comments in terms of slowing deal activity, I presume that's simply because the private equity partners you work with are just seeing slower investment activity as well. Is there a correlation?
Robert Ladd - Chairman of the Board, President, Chief Executive Officer
That's correct. It's highly correlate. I'd say it's M&A activity is down, and I think you may have heard that from others as well. So that's the most impact for sure.
Christopher Nolan - Analyst
And then I guess in terms of the reinvestments, do the private equity firms have a drag-along clause for you guys, where if they reinvest into a portfolio company, you need to invest as well or how does that work?
Robert Ladd - Chairman of the Board, President, Chief Executive Officer
Christy, do you mean, when they're making a new acquisition?
Christopher Nolan - Analyst
Follow-on acquisition to the existing portfolio company?
Robert Ladd - Chairman of the Board, President, Chief Executive Officer
Sure. So in many cases, we'll have already established a delayed draw term loan that they would automatically draw upon if the acquisition follow on qualified. So this would be normal. Absent that where there's not a pre-existing commitment, any new acquisition they'd make we'd have to re-underwrite.
Christopher Nolan - Analyst
And then I guess final question is on, last year you had some pretty good dividend supplements. What's the spillover income and what are your thoughts by supplemental these daus?
Robert Ladd - Chairman of the Board, President, Chief Executive Officer
Sure, let me turn it over to Todd for that.
W. Todd Huskinson - Chief Financial Officer, Chief Compliance Officer, Treasurer, Secretary
Sure, Chris, so our spillover is going to be about $37 million and our current dividends or are $38.5 million. So at our current dividend level with the additional shares that we raised or we issued, we've got enough regular dividend cover the spillover going forward. But things could change in terms of gains and losses and taxable income in future years.
Christopher Nolan - Analyst
Okay. Thanks for the detail. That's it for me. Thanks guys.
Robert Ladd - Chairman of the Board, President, Chief Executive Officer
Thank you, Chris.
Operator
Robert Dodd, Raymond James.
Robert Dodd - Analyst
Hi, guys. On the -- you mentioned there's going to be potentially realizations in the second quarter and maybe equity realizations in realized gain and maybe more activity in the second half of the year?
I mean everything we're hearing is private equity or LPs in private equity funds want realizations the full fledged fund, new funds. If there are more realizations from your private equity partners in private equity environment as a whole, would you expect or are there going to be more equity realizations in the back half of the year? Could we accelerate that as a source of capital to be reinvested as we get later into this year.
Robert Ladd - Chairman of the Board, President, Chief Executive Officer
Yes, Robert, and that's a good point that you brought out that I alluded to, which is some LPs and longer-dated funds looking for realizations. So we think this will drive new activity for us as these companies are sold and we have the chance to finance them for the next owner. But as you're pointing out would also result in realizations for us.
So yes, and as I said in my remarks, that we do think that the equity realizations activity will pick up and there are a few more that we know of that I didn't mention, but not as clear as the two that we're hearing about. So I think that's right.
And again, we have substantial capital to invest as a reminder, our entire platform is roughly $2.8 billion of AUM across Stellus platforms. And then within the public company, of course, quite a bit of capacity to invest, given that our credit facility, we're only borrowed about $150 million currently. So again, that couple was repayments. So we will be ready for the new deals that'll come in the second half of the year.
Robert Dodd - Analyst
Got it. Thank you. Any particular industries that you're thinking are increasingly attractive in this. If we've got higher rates right now, but if they are going to decline, are there any particular areas you think are appealing in that kind of environment?
Robert Ladd - Chairman of the Board, President, Chief Executive Officer
It's interesting. We haven't thought of it in those terms. We were looking for a handful of basic kind of requirements in the companies we look at which start with substantial free cash flow generation as well as growth that's built into the company. We avoid the commodity price risk, we avoid high maintenance CapEx. So we really look more at those factors versus any one industry sector per se.
And if that's helpful, and as you've heard me say before, we also look at companies and industry sectors that there's some history of how they perform in a recession. And this is helpful in terms of resiliency, if you have such a downturn. So again, I think we've approached it more that way versus specific industry sectors.
Robert Dodd - Analyst
I appreciate that. Thank you.
Robert Ladd - Chairman of the Board, President, Chief Executive Officer
Thank you, Robert.
Operator
Bryce Rowe, B. Riley.
Bryce Rowe - Analyst
Thanks. Good afternoon. -- Wanted to start with the NAV movement quarter-over-quarter. Obviously, you covered the dividend and solving that go up from here over the quarter. Can you speak to maybe the mark within the quarter. Maybe what kind of effect did broader credit markets have on the fair value marks in the quarter? And then were there any kind of specific call-outs beyond the non-accruals that we've already talked about?
Robert Ladd - Chairman of the Board, President, Chief Executive Officer
Yes, please, I'll turn it over to Todd.
W. Todd Huskinson - Chief Financial Officer, Chief Compliance Officer, Treasurer, Secretary
Brice, so did have we had the realized loss that was reversed. We had I'd say in general, there was a general decline from an unrealized loss perspective, but we also had a few specific write-downs on specific companies. And you can tell from that SOI, one of them was JR Watkins, where we had written that down some as well. So that would that was the primary difference between the two offsetting the taxes and the dividend?
Robert Ladd - Chairman of the Board, President, Chief Executive Officer
And maybe just add to what Todd said. So no general market decline was, so these were just be as in previous quarters, except during COVID, this is company-specific.
Bryce Rowe - Analyst
Okay. And I mean on a JR Watkins, in particular, Todd, I know, it's just one investment, but it looks like it's marked below 50% of calls. I mean, what's the comfort level there? How do you think about that staying on on accrual versus putting it on nonaccrual or maybe asked a different way. There a certain threshold where even if it's still accruing interest paying interest, even if it's marked at a certain level, you consider putting it on non-accrual versus keeping it on accrual?
Robert Ladd - Chairman of the Board, President, Chief Executive Officer
I might just jump in here. So I think that's definitely that's definitely right. And as an example, this one will be looked at in this quarter.
Bryce Rowe - Analyst
Okay. That's helpful, Robert. And last one for me. In terms of kind of balance sheet leverage and managing the balance sheet, no ATM activity in the quarter after a few quarters of some activity. Any reason for that? Is that more driven by your repayment activity outpacing originations? Or is there some other way to think about it? Thanks.
Robert Ladd - Chairman of the Board, President, Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. So no, I think that's right. We had very fortunate successful year for the ATM coming into the fourth quarter. And as I said earlier, substantial capital investment where we're focused on investing what we've raised at this point.
Bryce Rowe - Analyst
Got it. Okay. I think that's it for me. Appreciate the time.
Robert Ladd - Chairman of the Board, President, Chief Executive Officer
Okay. Thank you, Bryce.
Operator
We have reached the end of the question-and-answer session, and I will now turn the call over to Robert Ladd for closing remarks.
Robert Ladd - Chairman of the Board, President, Chief Executive Officer
All right. Very good. Thank you, everyone, for being on. Thank you for your support and we look forward to updating you again for the first quarter, which our call will be in early May. Thanks again.
Operator
This concludes today's conference and you may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation.