MSFO's 44% Yield vs Just Holding Microsoft
Two days ago, the analysis here covered Main Street Capital’s 7% BDC yield — growing NAV at $33.42, coverage running 1.26–1.31x, internally managed, nearly 19 years without a dividend cut. The cleanest BDC income story in the category right now.
Blue Owl Capital Corporation (NYSE: OBDC) operates in the same category — Business Development Company, high-yield pass-through income, U.S. middle-market lending — and pays three percentage points more. At roughly 10% annualized yield on a $0.37 quarterly dividend, OBDC is exactly what income investors are hunting.
It’s also the bearish mirror image of that MAIN story.
NAV has declined four consecutive quarters, ending 2025 at $14.81/share — down 2.9% from the $15.26 where 2024 ended. NII came in below the $0.37 quarterly dividend in both Q3 and Q4 of 2025. The Q1 2026 analyst consensus sits at ~$0.35/share — a projected third straight shortfall. Full Q1 2026 results drop May 6 after market close, which makes this week the window to run the actual numbers before the report lands.
The 10% yield is real. Whether you’re collecting income or slowly being repaid your own capital is a separate question.
Quick Verdict
Factor Details Quarterly dividend $0.37/share ($1.48 annualized) Annualized yield ~10% at current price Q1 2026 NII consensus ~$0.35/share — below the $0.37 dividend Consecutive NII shortfalls 2 reported (Q3 + Q4 2025); Q1 2026 projects as the third Q4 2025 NAV $14.81/share — fourth straight quarterly decline 2025 cumulative NAV decline -$0.45/share (-2.9%) from $15.26 at year-end 2024 MAIN NAV over same period Rose to ~$33.42 — directionally opposite Management structure Externally managed (Blue Owl Credit Advisors) Portfolio (Q4 2025) 234 companies, $16.5B aggregate fair value Q1 2026 earnings May 6, 2026 after market close; call May 7 Passivity score 5/10 — requires tracking NII coverage each quarter Best for: Income-maximizing investors who understand externally managed BDC fee structures, have sized the position to the dividend risk, and believe NII stabilizes in 2026
Skip if: You’re treating 10% as durable income without tracking NII against the dividend — or would rather own the BDC where the asset base is expanding, not contracting
Blue Owl Capital Corporation is an externally managed BDC that provides primarily first lien senior secured debt (along with some subordinated and equity investments) to U.S. middle-market companies, managed by Blue Owl Credit Advisors LLC, an affiliate of Blue Owl Capital Inc.
That external management structure is the first number to understand before looking at any yield figure.
Blue Owl Credit Advisors collects a base management fee (1.50% annually on gross assets — total assets including leverage, not shareholders’ equity) plus an incentive fee on income above a hurdle rate. Those fees come out of portfolio income before NII reaches shareholders. In any quarter where gross portfolio yield compresses — from base rate cuts, spread narrowing, or credit losses — the management fee is still owed. It’s one structural reason externally managed BDC coverage ratios tend to run tighter than internally managed peers like MAIN.
The portfolio itself is substantial. As of December 31, 2025, OBDC held investments in 234 portfolio companies with an aggregate fair value of $16.5 billion. The focus is senior secured floating-rate lending to companies that can’t access public debt markets — a structure that generates strong income when base rates are high and compresses when they fall. Rates moving lower from 2024 peaks is a meaningful part of why NII has been sliding.
Coverage ratio is the number that determines whether a BDC dividend is sustainable or on borrowed time.
A BDC’s dividend coverage ratio divides net investment income (NII) per share by the quarterly dividend per share. A ratio above 1.0x means the company earned its payout from portfolio income. Below 1.0x means the company distributed more than it earned — effectively funding part of the dividend from capital rather than income. Three consecutive quarters below 1.0x signals structural earnings pressure, not a temporary blip.
OBDC’s coverage history heading into Q1 2026:
For reference: MAIN’s Q1 2026 estimated coverage was 1.26–1.31x. ARCC’s Q4 2025 coverage was approximately 1.04x — tight, but still earning the distribution.
OBDC is below both. The shortfall is small in dollar terms (a few cents per share per quarter), but direction matters more than size here. Coverage declining from already-below-1.0x, with Q1 2026 projected at ~$0.35, means the pressure is building rather than stabilizing.
When SOFR-linked portfolio income falls on a $16.5 billion book, the management fee still takes its cut before NII reaches shareholders. That’s the mechanical tension in every externally managed BDC: fee drag is fixed; income is variable.
| Quarter | NAV/Share | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Q4 2024 | $15.26 | Baseline |
| Q3 2025 | $14.89 | Third of four consecutive declines |
| Q4 2025 | $14.81 | Fourth straight quarterly decline |
| 2025 cumulative | -$0.45/share | -2.9% year-over-year |
The full 2025 trajectory: $15.26 to $14.81. Not catastrophic in one quarter. But four quarters in the same direction with the same cause — credit marks plus below-1.0x NII coverage meaning dividends partially funded by capital — is a pattern, not a coincidence.
Two things push BDC NAV lower: unrealized credit losses on portfolio holdings (loans marked down as borrower quality deteriorates) and dividends paid in excess of NII (distributing capital rather than earnings). OBDC has both pressures running simultaneously in 2025.
The contrast with MAIN’s NAV moving from $33.33 to $33.42 over the same period is pointed. MAIN’s equity co-investment structure generates realized and unrealized gains that feed NAV expansion. OBDC’s primarily debt-oriented portfolio marks down with credit stress but doesn’t generate the same equity upside when borrowers perform. Different structures, different trajectories.
What this means practically: a 10% yield on a $14.81 NAV that declined $0.45 in 2025 produces a partial self-cancellation every quarter. Collect $0.37 in income, give back $0.02 to undercoverage, then absorb whatever additional NAV marks come through credit. The headline 10% compresses when that full-quarter math plays out.
OBDC scheduled its Q1 2026 earnings release for May 6 after market close, with the conference call on May 7. That report resolves three questions that matter for dividend holders right now:
Both signals matter. A company buying its own stock at a steep discount to book value believes the market has overpriced the risk. Whether that’s correct becomes clear May 6.
| OBDC | MAIN | ARCC | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Yield | ~10% | ~7% | ~10.6% |
| Management | Externally managed | Internally managed | Externally managed (Ares) |
| Q1 2026 NII coverage | ~95% (projected) | ~1.26–1.31x | ~1.04x (Q4 2025) |
| NAV trend (2025) | -2.9% (four straight declines) | Growing (+$0.09–$0.17/share est. Q1 2026) | Moderate cycle risk |
| Dividend history | Maintained; under earnings pressure | Uncut since Oct 2007 IPO | Cut 2008–09; held 2020 |
| Spillover income cushion | Compressed — below-1.0x coverage compounds the deficit | Growing excess NII | $988M ($1.38/share) |
| Primary strategy | Senior secured floating-rate, middle market | Lower middle market + equity co-investment | Middle market, larger deals |
At 10% yield, OBDC and ARCC are priced similarly. The structural difference: ARCC’s $988 million spillover income cushion can sustain distributions through NII compression. ARCC’s coverage at 1.04x is tight — it’s still above 1.0x. OBDC’s ~95% means distributing capital, not earnings, every quarter the shortfall continues.
MAIN’s 7% with growing NAV is the lower-yield, structurally sounder option. The 3 percentage point yield gap is real money on a large income position. What you’re paying for it: coverage below 1.0x, four quarters of NAV erosion, and external management fee drag that MAIN doesn’t carry. Whether 10% adequately compensates for that package is the actual decision.
Investors who have priced in the coverage risk and believe NII stabilizes. If Q1 2026 prints at $0.35 but Q2 guidance signals improving spread income from base rate stabilization or tighter credit marks, the 10% yield at a below-NAV entry becomes more defensible. The $148M Q4 buyback at a 14% NAV discount is management making exactly that bet with company capital.
BDC sleeve investors sizing positions to risk. MAIN provides structural quality and NAV expansion. ARCC provides scale and spillover cushion. OBDC provides maximum yield with more credit-cycle sensitivity. The right portfolio construction isn’t picking one — it’s weighting them appropriately. A smaller OBDC position alongside larger MAIN and ARCC positions captures the yield range without concentrating in the structure under the most earnings pressure.
Tax-advantaged account investors who’ve run the bracket math. BDC dividends are primarily ordinary income regardless of coverage ratio. In an IRA or 401(k), 10% compounds without annual tax drag. In a taxable account at 35–37%, OBDC’s 10% shrinks to roughly 6.3–6.5% after federal tax — which brings T-bills at ~4.2% with zero credit risk into the actual comparison set. The tax-advantaged case for OBDC is stronger than the taxable one by a meaningful margin.
Investors treating the dividend as locked in. Three consecutive NII shortfalls, four consecutive NAV declines, and a rate environment that hasn’t obviously reversed — management has held $0.37, but they’re doing so while burning the NAV cushion every quarter they do. That’s optionality that has a balance-sheet cost. The dividend survives until the coverage gap becomes wide enough or long enough that the board acts.
Income investors who haven’t run both sets of numbers. MAIN’s structural advantages (1.26–1.31x coverage, growing NAV, no management fee drag) are priced into the 3 percentage point yield difference. You’re not getting extra income for free. In a taxable account at 35–37%, OBDC’s 10% gross also narrows to 6.3–6.5% net, which changes what you’re actually comparing it against.
OBDC’s 10% yield is the number everyone sees first. It’s also the number that requires the most work to evaluate honestly.
Three consecutive quarters of NII falling short of the dividend. Four consecutive NAV declines totaling $0.45/share. An external management structure where fee extraction happens before NII reaches shareholders. A Q1 2026 consensus projecting the shortfall widening to $0.02/share per quarter.
The market has already priced some of this. OBDC traded at a 14% discount to NAV in Q4 2025. That discount might be excessive — which is management’s stated view, backed by the largest buyback in the company’s history. If May 6’s Q1 2026 report delivers NII stabilization and a fifth NAV decline that’s smaller than expected, the risk-reward picture at 10% yield changes.
But until that report lands, coverage math and NAV trajectory both point the same direction. The MAIN comparison shows what 3 extra percentage points of yield costs in structural quality.
Income investors who’ve tracked dividend investing through full credit cycles know this pattern. High yield, tight coverage, declining asset base — the income is real until the quarter it isn’t. OBDC isn’t there yet. But it’s closer than the headline suggests.
Q4 2025 NAV and financial data from the Blue Owl Capital Corporation Q4 2025 financial results release. Q1 2026 earnings schedule from the Blue Owl Capital Corporation Q1 2026 earnings announcement. MAIN comparison from Main Street Capital Q1 2026 preliminary operating results. This is not financial or investment advice. Verify current NAV, yield, and dividend data before making investment decisions.