TICC Capital Corp.
TICC Capital Corp. is a company.
Financial History
Leadership Team
Key people at TICC Capital Corp..
TICC Capital Corp. is a company.
Key people at TICC Capital Corp..
Key people at TICC Capital Corp..
Oxford Square Capital Corp. (formerly TICC Capital Corp.) is a publicly traded business development company (BDC) regulated as a closed-end, non-diversified management investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940.[1][2][3][4][6][7] It primarily invests in debt and equity securities of technology-related companies, including syndicated bank loans, collateralized loan obligation (CLO) vehicles, warehouse facilities, secured and unsecured senior debt, subordinated debt, preferred stock, and common stock, targeting firms with annual revenues under $200 million and market caps or enterprise values below $300 million.[2][3][4] The firm's investment philosophy centers on mezzanine and private equity-style opportunities in sectors like computer software, Internet, IT infrastructure, media, telecommunications, semiconductors, hardware, technology-enabled services, medical devices, and networking systems, with typical investments of $5-30 million per deal and exits within 7 years.[3]
As of available data (pre-2018), it reported a market cap of $315 million, annual sales of $61 million, net income of $44 million, and a high dividend yield of 13.24% (annual rate $0.80), though with negative growth trends including -38% 5-year returns and declining revenue/earnings.[2] Its mission aligns with providing capital to lower-middle-market tech firms while generating income through debt-focused strategies.[1][5]
Founded in 2003 as TICC Capital Corp. and headquartered in Greenwich, Connecticut, the firm was established as a Maryland corporation electing BDC status to deploy capital into technology-related debt securities.[3][6][7] Key figures include Jonathan H. Cohen (CEO and Interested Director since 2003, age 58 as of profile), Steven P. Novak (Independent Chairman since 2003), Charles Morgan Royce (Interested Director since 2003), and others like George Stelljes (Independent Director since 2016) and Barry A. Osherow (Independent Director since 2002).[3] In March 2018, it rebranded to Oxford Square Capital Corp. (ticker: OXSQ) to better align with affiliates managing CLO-focused funds like Oxford Lane Capital Corp. (OXLC) and Oxford Bridge, LLC, shifting emphasis toward CLO debt/equity and syndicated loans while retaining its BDC structure.[4]
This evolution reflects a pivot from broad tech debt investments to specialized credit strategies in structured finance, building on early focus in sub-$300M enterprise value tech targets.[2][3]
Oxford Square rides the trend of structured credit and CLO growth, fueled by demand for yield in a low-interest environment and tech firms' need for non-dilutive debt financing amid high growth costs.[4] Timing mattered post-2003 founding, capitalizing on tech recovery and BDC deregulation to target revenue-constrained innovators in IT, telecom, and semiconductors—sectors driving digital transformation.[2][3] Market forces like rising CLO issuance (for loan aggregation) and mezzanine demand favor its model, influencing the ecosystem by bridging banks and tech borrowers, enabling scaling without heavy equity dilution.[3][4] It amplifies startup funding indirectly via debt to mature tech plays, contrasting pure equity VCs.
Oxford Square is positioned to expand in CLO and syndicated loans as tech credit demand persists amid economic cycles, potentially benefiting from rate normalization and tech M&A.[4] Trends like AI infrastructure and cybersecurity will shape its portfolio, favoring resilient debt in sub-$300M firms. Influence may grow via affiliate synergies, evolving from tech debt specialist to broader credit platform—watch for sustained yields despite past volatility. This ties back to its core as a yield-focused BDC powering tech's debt-fueled ascent.[2][3][4]