Hero image for CSWC in 2026: Can That 11% BDC Yield Really Hold?
By Passive Income Tools Team

CSWC in 2026: Can That 11% BDC Yield Really Hold?


Three BDC dividend cuts in four months. FSK slashed 31%. GBDC cut 15.4%. TSLX trimmed 8.7%. The category-wide story heading into mid-2026 has been coherent: floating-rate income compresses as the rate cycle shifts, PE sponsor deal flow thins, and the 10%+ payouts many BDCs established in 2022–2023 aren’t sustainable at current portfolio yields.

Then there’s Capital Southwest Corporation (NASDAQ: CSWC). Paying $0.1934/month in regular dividends. A $0.06 quarterly supplemental on top. Regular dividend coverage at 106% for the trailing twelve months. And $1.02/share in undistributed taxable income sitting in reserve: accumulated income from periods when the portfolio earned more than it distributed.

The headline yield at current prices approaches 11%, including the supplemental. That’s in the same neighborhood as FSK and GBDC before they cut. The question is whether CSWC belongs in the same sentence as those names, or whether the internal structure here is genuinely different.

It is genuinely different. But you should understand why before adding it to a portfolio.

Quick Verdict

FactorDetails
Regular monthly dividend$0.1934/share
Quarterly supplemental$0.06/share
Total annualized distribution~$2.56/share (regular + supplemental)
Headline yield~10.7–11.3% depending on price
TTM NII coverage (regular dividend)106% — positive but thin
Undistributed taxable income (UTI)$1.02/share as of Q3 FY2026 (Dec 31, 2025)
First-lien concentration99% of credit portfolio
Portfolio weighted average yield11.3% (down from 11.8% three quarters prior)
Management structureInternally managed
Payment frequencyMonthly regular + quarterly supplemental
Passivity score8/10

Best for: Income investors who want an internally managed BDC with deep credit quality, maximum first-lien concentration, and a meaningful income buffer — and who understand the compression headwind in portfolio yield

Skip if: You need NII coverage well above 1.0x on the full distribution. The 106% covers only the regular monthly dividend; the supplemental draws from UTI reserves, not current-quarter income

What Is Capital Southwest Corporation (CSWC)?

Capital Southwest Corporation (NASDAQ: CSWC) is an internally managed Business Development Company headquartered in Dallas, Texas that provides first-lien senior secured loans to middle-market companies. As of Q3 fiscal year 2026 (quarter ended December 31, 2025), 99% of its credit portfolio is first-lien senior secured debt, and the company has paid monthly dividends continuously since converting to a BDC structure in 2015.

That sentence alone separates CSWC from most of the names in this series.

Internally managed means no external management fees eating into portfolio income before NII reaches shareholders. The structure that makes MAIN the gold standard for BDC reliability is the same structure CSWC uses. Every dollar of portfolio income flows directly to NII — no base management fee to an outside manager, no income incentive fee on earnings above a hurdle rate. At ARCC, those fees cost shareholders a meaningful percentage of gross portfolio income each quarter. At CSWC, that cost is zero.

99% first-lien means what it says. BDCs take on credit risk by definition — they’re lending to middle-market companies that can’t access public capital markets. The risk control question is where in the capital structure you sit. First-lien senior secured is the top. You get paid first in a liquidation, you hold the documentation rights if a borrower needs to restructure, and your recovery rate in a hard default is substantially higher than for subordinated or second-lien holders. GBDC runs roughly 85–90% first-lien. ARCC is similar. CSWC’s 99% is an outlier — conservative to the point where it’s clearly a deliberate strategy, not a coincidence.

How Does CSWC’s Dividend Structure Actually Work?

What does CSWC’s $0.1934/month regular dividend cover?

CSWC pays a regular monthly dividend of $0.1934/share, which annualizes to approximately $2.32/share. Over the trailing twelve months, net investment income covered this regular dividend at 106%. The quarterly supplemental of $0.06/share is paid from the $1.02/share undistributed taxable income reserve, not from current-quarter NII surplus. The monthly structure provides 12 income events per year versus the standard quarterly BDC payment schedule.

The distinction between “regular dividend coverage” and “full distribution coverage” is doing real work in the CSWC income thesis.

106% TTM coverage on the regular dividend means NII is generating a thin positive margin above the monthly payment. It’s positive — but it’s not 1.15x (ARCC), not 1.20x on the base (HTGC), and not the 1.26–1.31x that MAIN runs on its core distribution. This is the honest tension in the CSWC story: the regular dividend is supported, but not with a wide cushion of current-quarter income.

The supplemental is paid from UTI. $1.02/share in accumulated undistributed taxable income represents prior-period income CSWC earned but didn’t distribute (excess NII stockpiled over time). The $0.24/year supplemental (at $0.06/quarter) draws from that reservoir. At $1.02/share, there are roughly 4.25 years of supplemental dividends already earned and waiting to be paid out before UTI approaches zero — assuming no new additions from future quarters where NII exceeds the regular dividend.

That’s a substantial cushion. It’s not infinite. It’s not guaranteed to grow. But $1.02/share sitting in UTI against a $0.06 quarterly supplemental is a very different picture than a BDC where the supplemental depends entirely on current-quarter excess NII. Compare this to FSK and GBDC heading into their cuts: neither had that kind of reserve to draw from.

Why Internal Management Changes the Math

There’s a reason MAIN commands a premium valuation and a 7% yield while peers are offering 10–11%.

MAIN’s internal management structure means zero external fee drag. No base management fee. No income incentive fee. Every dollar the portfolio earns goes to NII. That’s why MAIN’s coverage ratios consistently run higher than externally managed peers — not because MAIN’s portfolio generates more gross income per dollar of assets, but because more of that income reaches the NII line.

CSWC runs the same structure. The math is direct: at a portfolio generating 11.3% weighted average yield, internal management retains more of that income as NII than an externally managed BDC generating 11.3% while paying a 1.5% base management fee plus an incentive fee split above a hurdle rate. The gap is real and it compounds.

This is why comparing CSWC’s 106% regular coverage to FSK’s post-cut coverage (still running around 92–94% of even the reduced payout) misses the point. CSWC’s 106% is achieved without the fee drag that compresses FSK’s or GBDC’s NII. The underlying income generation efficiency is structurally different.

The 99% First-Lien Position

Real estate has location. BDC credit quality has capital structure position.

99% first-lien senior secured means that in a default scenario, CSWC’s claim on the borrower’s assets sits first in line. Bond investors, subordinated debt holders, equity holders — all of them wait until CSWC and any co-lenders in the first-lien tranche are made whole. That doesn’t mean no losses ever; first-lien lenders take losses in hard liquidations. But it means recovery rates are substantially higher than for second-lien or subordinated debt holders, and it means CSWC controls the documentation rights that matter most when a borrower needs to restructure.

FSK’s nonaccrual rate hit 5.1% of portfolio cost (on KKR-originated deals) heading into 2026. OBDC ran multiple consecutive quarters with NII below its distribution, partly due to credit marks. The correlation between credit positioning and payout stress isn’t coincidental — portfolios with more subordinated or second-lien exposure face steeper unrealized losses and more frequent actual credit events when conditions tighten.

CSWC’s 99% first-lien positioning is the structural answer to “what happens to the income if credit conditions deteriorate further.” The answer isn’t zero credit events. It’s: the recovery rates on any losses are as high as a BDC portfolio can achieve, and the income disruption from any given default is more contained than in a blended or subordinated-heavy book.

The Honest Headwind: Portfolio Yield Compression

This is the number that doesn’t appear in the bull case and should.

CSWC’s weighted average portfolio yield has compressed from 11.8% three quarters ago to 11.3% as of Q3 FY2026. That’s 50 basis points of compression over roughly nine months.

50 basis points on a portfolio of CSWC’s size isn’t catastrophic. But it’s directional and ongoing. Floating-rate loans reprice lower as benchmark rates fall or reset at lower spreads. New originations come in at yields that reflect current market pricing, which is lower than the 2022–2023 vintage loans they’re supplementing. Both forces are present.

The reason this matters specifically for CSWC: the 106% regular dividend coverage is already thin. At 11.3% average yield, the NII math barely clears the regular monthly dividend. If compression continues to 11.0% or 10.8%, coverage ratio compresses with it — and at some point, the margin turns negative. CSWC’s $1.02/share UTI provides substantial runway before a cut becomes necessary, but yield compression is the mechanism by which future pressure would build if the rate environment continued in the same direction.

This is the honest version of the CSWC thesis: internally managed, 99% first-lien, deep UTI, monthly payments — all structurally strong. The portfolio yield trend is the watch variable.

CSWC in the Full BDC Picture

This series has now covered eight BDCs. The table tells the story better than any individual data point.

CSWCMAINARCCHTGCGBDCFSK
Headline yield~11%~7%~10%~10.8%~9%~10%
ManagementInternally managedInternally managedExternally (Ares)ExternallyExternally (Golub)Externally (FS/KKR)
NII coverage106% TTM (regular dividend)~1.26–1.31x1.15x1.20x base / 1.02x fullBelow 1.0x (post-cut)~92–94% guided
UTI buffer$1.02/shareGrowing~$1.38/share ($988M)$149.1MCompressedVery compressed
First-lien %99%High — diversified~65–70%98% floating (venture)~85–90%~75–80%
2026 dividend actionUnchangedUnchanged, growingUnchangedUnchangedCut 15.4%Cut 31%
Payment frequencyMonthlyMonthlyQuarterlyQuarterlyQuarterlyQuarterly

Two companies in this series are internally managed: MAIN and CSWC. They’re not identical — MAIN has the longer no-cut record (since October 2007), the lower yield, and a more diversified middle-market book with equity co-investment exposure. CSWC has the more aggressive income posture, the 99% first-lien concentration, and a UTI buffer that’s large relative to the distribution.

The $1.02/share UTI is the number that most distinguishes CSWC from the BDCs that cut in 2026. FSK and GBDC didn’t have that cushion when their NII margins compressed past the breaking point. CSWC has been building this reserve for years. UTI represents the difference between a BDC currently earning its payout and one that’s cumulatively earned it — and that distinction matters when a quarter runs light.

The Tax Math

Monthly income sounds great until you run it through the tax table.

BDC dividends are ordinary income — not qualified dividends, not long-term capital gains. At 35–37% federal marginal rates, CSWC’s ~11% headline yield compresses to approximately 6.9–7.2% after federal tax in a taxable account. That’s still a solid number compared to T-bills at ~4.2% or municipal bonds around 5%+ tax-equivalent yield for high-bracket investors. But 11% gross becoming 7% net is a number worth knowing before you size the position.

Monthly payment frequency doesn’t change the treatment. Each of CSWC’s 12 annual dividends hits the 1099 as ordinary income regardless of when it arrives.

In a Roth IRA or traditional IRA, the ordinary income designation disappears. The 11% compounds without annual tax friction. For income investors who want CSWC’s combination of monthly payments, conservative credit positioning, and UTI-backed supplemental — a tax-advantaged account is where the math makes the cleanest case.

Who Should Own CSWC

Income investors who want the internal management advantage at higher yield than MAIN. The no-fee structure compounds quietly. At ARCC’s external fee structure, a meaningful percentage of gross portfolio income is captured by Ares before NII reaches shareholders. CSWC retains that income. At a comparable portfolio yield, that structural advantage shows up as better NII per dollar of assets — which is why CSWC can run 106% regular coverage despite thinner headline coverage numbers than MAIN.

Conservative credit investors who prioritize capital structure position. 99% first-lien is a deliberate posture, not an accident. The BDC names that hit trouble in 2025–2026 were disproportionately concentrated in riskier credit positions. CSWC’s credit positioning is structurally better than most of the category. For investors where loss recovery matters as much as yield level, this concentration matters.

Monthly income investors in tax-advantaged accounts. Twelve income events per year plus quarterly supplementals is a genuine cash-flow advantage for retirees or investors structuring systematic income. In an IRA where the ordinary income haircut doesn’t apply, the monthly structure and ~11% yield combine cleanly.

Who Should Skip CSWC

Investors who need NII coverage well above 1.0x on the full distribution. The 106% covers the regular monthly dividend. The supplemental comes from accumulated UTI, not from current-quarter NII surplus. If what you’re looking for is a BDC where NII comfortably covers the entire payout — HTGC at 1.20x on the base or ARCC at 1.15x on the full quarterly distribution — CSWC’s coverage structure is narrower than that when measured against total payments.

Anyone who hasn’t modeled the compression trend. 11.8% → 11.3% over three quarters is a direction, not just a data point. If portfolio yield compresses further as benchmark rates fall, the 106% coverage tightens toward parity. The UTI buffer buys years of runway. It doesn’t make the trend irrelevant.

Investors treating the supplemental as permanent. The $0.06 quarterly supplemental is paid from accumulated earnings, and a board that decides to preserve UTI rather than continue supplemental distributions has that flexibility. The monthly regular dividend is the income floor to plan around — the supplemental is the upside that comes from a favorable rate and credit environment.

The Bottom Line

Three names in this series cut dividends in 2026. CSWC didn’t — and the structural reasons matter.

Internally managed means fee drag doesn’t work against NII. 99% first-lien means the credit portfolio is positioned for maximum recovery in a downturn. $1.02/share in UTI means there are approximately four years of supplemental dividends already earned and waiting to be distributed. Monthly payments mean income lands 12 times a year. These aren’t marketing claims — they’re structural features that show up in how the BDC has actually performed while peers were cutting.

The honest tension: 106% regular dividend coverage is thin by quality-tier standards. MAIN runs wider. ARCC runs wider. HTGC’s base runs wider. CSWC’s income case depends partly on UTI as a buffer — which is real and substantial — and on arresting the portfolio yield compression trend before it erodes the current margin. The 50-basis-point compression over three quarters is the watch variable.

The anti-cut story in a deteriorating BDC sector is real. The structural quality is real. The $1.02/share UTI buffer is real and larger than most of this category can point to. An 11% yield that’s monthly, internally managed, and backed by 99% first-lien credit positioning holds up under scrutiny.

Just don’t model CSWC like it’s MAIN. MAIN’s no-cut record since October 2007 and consistently wider coverage margins represent a structural edge that a 1.06x regular dividend coverage ratio doesn’t match. CSWC is the right answer for income investors who want maximum income from a conservatively structured, internally managed BDC. For investors who want maximum conservatism at a lower yield, MAIN is still the correct pick. Those are different questions — and they have different answers.


Financial data from Capital Southwest investor relations and Q3 FY2026 earnings results (quarter ended December 31, 2025). Dividend history and structure sourced from Capital Southwest’s IR division. BDC series comparisons from prior posts in this series. This is not financial or investment advice. Verify current NAV, yield, and dividend data before making investment decisions.