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monroe capital corp. (NASDAQ:MRCC) spent most of 2025 paying a dividend it couldn’t actually earn. The result was inevitable: a 64% dividend cut was announced for early 2026, reducing the quarterly payout from $0.25 to $0.09 per share. For income investors who still hold shares, the question now is whether the lower payout is even safe, and what happens next given the pending merger.
What is MRCC and how does it pay dividends
MRCC is a business development company (BDC), not an ETF. BDCs lend money to middle-market companies and are required to distribute at least 90% of their taxable income to shareholders. Dividends come from net investment income (NII), which is interest and fees collected from the loan portfolio minus operating expenses. When the NII falls short of the declared dividends, the BDC can temporarily bridge the gap using “spillover income” accumulated from previous years. MRCC did exactly this throughout 2025, until the spillover dried up.
A Year of Dividends That the Portfolio Couldn’t Support
The gap between what MRCC earned and what it paid widened every quarter last year. In Q1 2025, NII was worth $0.19 per share versus a $0.25 dividend, with approximately $0.53 per share available in spillovers. By Q3 2025, NII had fallen to $0.08 per share, while the $0.25 dividend continued, leaving only $0.25 per share in spillovers. Management was effectively creating a savings account to fund the income investors received.
The decline in NII was widespread due to portfolio declines. Non-cumulative investments increased from 3.4% of the portfolio in Q1 2025 to 4.0% by Q4 2025. The average portfolio markup fell to 89.7% of amortized cost by Q4 2025, down from 92.2% a year earlier. The senior loan fund joint venture, which MRCC has closed, has seen its performance decline from 86.8% to 64.9% in the four quarters to 2025.
NAV erosion tells the real story
NAV per share declined every quarter through 2025, from $8.63 in the first quarter to $7.68 in the fourth quarter. The continued decline meant that the asset base supporting the dividend was shrinking, even though management kept the payout stable. Share price thereafter: Shares are down about 11% year to date and about 9% over the last year.
cut and what comes next
CEO Theodore L. Koenig clearly stated that the cut was driven by fundamentals: “Due to the reduction in base rates, we are also adjusting MRCC’s dividend to better align the distribution with MRCC’s net investment income as a stand-alone entity.” At the new $0.09 quarterly rate, the Q4 2025 EPS payment of $0.11 covers the payout, albeit barely. The coverage is so thin that any further NII compression will reopen the gap.
The standalone dividend question is largely academic at this point. MRCC shareholders approved NAV-for-NAV merger with Horizon Technology Finance Corporation (Nasdaq: HRZN), expected to close in late Q1 or early 2026. Upon closing, MRCC stockholders become HRZN stockholders. Management has identified approximately $0.14 per share in undistributed spillover proceeds to be paid upon the closing of the merger, as well as a special distribution of $0.60 with an ex-dividend date of April 9, 2026.
Decision
MRCC’s current $0.09 quarterly dividend is technically covered by earnings, but the company paying it is going bust. The track record to 2025, where dividends exceeded NII every quarter and NAV fell from $8.63 to $7.68, reflects a portfolio under continued pressure from declining base rates and deteriorating credit quality. The $0.25 dividend that attracted most income investors is gone, and the new rate represents a fraction of what shareholders once collected.
Investors who purchased understanding the terms of the merger will receive exposure to the combined entity through HRZN at closing. Investors who held MRCC specifically for their source of income have already suffered losses and the standalone dividend story has come to a close.
