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Hercules Capital, Inc.
7/28/2022
Good day, ladies and gentlemen, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Hercules Capital's second quarter 2022 earnings conference call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speaker's remarks, there will be a question and answer session. To ask a question during the session, you will need to press star 1 1 on your telephone. At this time, I would like to turn the conference over to your host, Mr. Michael Hara. Sir, please begin.
Thank you, Howard. Good afternoon, everyone, and welcome to Hercules conference call for the second quarter 2022. With us on the call today from Hercules are Scott Bluestein, CEO and Chief Investment Officer, and Seth Meyer, CFO. Hercules second quarter 2022 financial results were released just after today's market close and can be accessed from Hercules investor relations section at investor.httc.com. An archived webcast will be available on the investor relations webpage for at least 30 days following the conference call. During this call, we may make forward-looking statements based on our own assumptions and current expectations. These forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance and should not be relied upon in making any investment decision. Actual financial results may differ from the forward-looking statements made during this call for a number of reasons, including but not limited to the risks identified in our annual report on Form 10-K and other findings that are publicly available on the SEC's website. Any forward-looking statements made during this call are made only as of today's date, and Hercules assumes no obligation to update any such statements in the future. And with that, we'll turn the call over to Scott.
Thank you, Michael, and thank you all for joining us today. Despite a more volatile and challenging economic and capital markets environment, Hercules Capital continued to deliver strong operating results in Q2. and took additional steps to further position the company for continued asset and earnings growth in the second half of 2022. Our record originations performance in Q1 continued with record Q2 gross debt and equity commitments of over $1.04 billion. The first time in our history that we have delivered over a billion dollars of new commitments in a quarter. Our gross fundings were also strong during the quarter with over $439 million. For the first half of 2022, we delivered record gross debt and equity commitments of $1.66 billion and record gross fundings of over $790 million. Similar to what we saw in Q1, early payoffs during Q2 remained low, which resulted in strong sequential net debt investment portfolio growth of over $169 million during the second quarter. and a record $360 million for the first half of 2022. We anticipate that this record net debt investment portfolio growth from the first half of 2022 will continue to drive our core income and NII per share higher during the second half of 2022. This, combined with the current rate environment, has put us in a strong position to be able to raise our quarterly base distribution to 35 cents for Q2. our second base distribution increase in the last 12 months. Our outlook on originations remains favorable, and as a result, we executed on a series of capital markets transactions during Q2, which boosted our liquidity position to over $779 million and put us in a great position heading into the second half of 2022. Let me recap some of the key highlights of our performance for Q2. Our record Q2 originations activity was once again driven by both our technology and life sciences teams delivering strong performance during the quarter. Our commitments and funding activity demonstrated balance between our two core verticals, and our new commitments during the quarter were split nearly evenly between technology and life sciences. Having an investment team of over 50 individuals with domain expertise in a specific area that we focus on, and the ability to consistently deliver originations in both the technology and life sciences verticals continues to be a significant competitive advantage for us in the market. We funded capital to 29 different companies in Q2, of which 15 were new borrower relationships. For the first half of 2022, we have added 25 new borrower relationships, which further expand our scale in the market. In addition to strong funding activity for new portfolio companies, we were able to expand our funding relationship once again with numerous portfolio companies that continue to show strength and achieve performance milestones during the quarter. As a result of our recent focus on larger and later stage transactions, as well as continued prudent and conservative underwriting, our funding to commitment ratio at closing has declined slightly. This, combined with the record $2.64 billion of new debt and equity commitments that we delivered in 2021, should continue to drive strong funding activity from the existing portfolio over the next several quarters, irrespective of the market for new loan originations. In addition, approximately 48% or $237 million out of the currently available unfunded commitments of $489 million will expire in 2022. which we anticipate will drive further portfolio growth near term, assuming that this capital is drawn prior to expiration. Since the close of Q2 and as of July 26, 2022, our deal team has already closed over $250 million of new commitments, and we have pending commitments of an additional $171 million in signed non-binding term sheets. Combined, our year-to-date closed and pending new commitments currently exceeds $2 billion, which is the strongest start to any year that we have ever delivered through this period. We expect this trend to continue in Q3, but moderate slightly a bit for seasonality, given that Q3 is typically a slower quarter for new originations. Our new deal pipeline remains very healthy and active, and currently continues to exceed $1 billion of potential investments. Volatility across the equity markets, particularly for growth stage companies, accelerated in Q2. As a result, we expect our pipeline to continue to be strong near to medium term as companies continue to look for creative and non-dilutive structured capital solutions from debt providers that they trust. In periods like this, we believe that the benefits of scale and diversification help drive sustained and continued outperformance. In our asset class, having a strong balance sheet, conservative leverage profile, and an abundance of liquidity are essential, and Hercules is incredibly well positioned in each of these areas. Although the capital raising environment for many BDCs and similar vehicles has become more challenging, Hercules was able to successfully raise over $525 million of new capital during Q2. and maintain our cost of debt capital at 4% for the second quarter. As we indicated on previous earnings calls, while the continued equity market volatility for certain growth stage companies may negatively impact net asset value short term, as it did again in Q2, we expect it to be a long term net benefit to our business in terms of increased investment opportunities and net debt portfolio growth. This is exactly what we have seen year to date. Consistent with our historical approach to underwriting credit, we intend to remain patient and disciplined on new originations, irrespective of market conditions, and we do not plan to chase yields for higher risk transactions. Based on the current market volatility and increasingly challenging macro environment, we are being even more selective than normal in terms of underwriting new credits, with an increasing emphasis on later stage and more established companies. where we believe the risk-adjusted profile is better at this time, and we are avoiding certain industries and end markets that are more susceptible to a potential downturn. During Q2, portfolio company exits and liquidity events for the industry continue to reflect the ongoing pressure in the equity markets. Year to date, we've had four companies complete their IPOs, including two in Q2, and five companies announce or complete M&A transactions. In addition, we have two companies that have registered for their IPOs or have entered into definitive agreements to go public via merger or SPAC transaction. As the IPO market remains uncertain and cautious, we expect M&A to accelerate over the next several quarters across our addressable markets. Early loan repayments were approximately 33 million, well below our guidance of 150 million to 250 million. and a significant decrease from $85 million in Q1 2022. While the lower level of early loan prepayments reduced our Q2 NII per share, it resulted in strong net debt portfolio growth in the quarter, which positions us very well for strong earnings growth in the second half of 2022. For Q3 2022, we expect prepayments to remain low and be between $50 million and $150 million. although this could change as we progress in the quarter. In Q2, we generated total investment income of $72.1 million and net investment income of $40.1 million, or 32 cents per share. Assuming that the interest rate increases that took place during Q2 were in place at the beginning of the quarter, our Q2 NII per share would have been approximately 35 cents. even with the lower level of prepayment activity during the quarter. During Q2, our portfolio generated a record of over $70 million of core income, which excludes any benefit received from early payoffs. Our expectation is that both core income and net investment income will further increase in Q3 and that net investment income per share will fully cover the recently raised base distribution in the third quarter. Our portfolio generated a GAAP effective yield of 11.5% in Q2 and a core yield of 11.3%, which was consistent with our guidance for the quarter. With net regulatory leverage at a very conservative 92.7% and continued robust liquidity across our platform, our balance sheet remains very well positioned. Credit quality of the debt investment portfolio remains strong and consistent with what we reported in Q1. Our weighted average internal credit rating of 2.13 was slightly higher than the 2.10 rating in Q1. Our grade one and two credits decreased slightly to 70.4% compared to 73.2% in Q1. Grade three credits were also slightly higher at 29% in Q2. versus 26.4% in Q1. Our rated four credits made up 0.5%, and our rated five credits represented 0.1% of the portfolio. Capital raising across our portfolio remains strong in Q2, with our active portfolio companies once again raising over a billion dollars of equity and strategic capital during the quarter. In Q2, the number of loans on non-accrual increased by one, with a total of two debt investments with an investment cost and fair value of approximately $19.7 million and $1.9 million respectively, or 0.7% and 0.1% as a percentage of the company's total investment portfolio at cost and value respectively. Since inception, Hercules has emphasized diversification and credit discipline as key cornerstones of our investment strategy and credit performance. we believe that our diversified and defensive positioning should serve us well in this environment. For our portfolio companies, having ample liquidity is just one important factor that we monitor. As a result of the recent market volatility, we wanted to provide a brief update on what we are seeing across our investment portfolio. When looking at our entire outstanding debt investment portfolio, we estimate that approximately 74% of the portfolio currently has 12 plus months of liquidity with another 18% with six to 12 months of current liquidity on their balance sheets. Loans which have three months or less of liquidity make up approximately 2% of our outstanding debt portfolio. During Q2, Hercules had net realized losses of 2.1 million. This was comprised of gross realized gains of 1.2 million. offset by $2 million due to the write-off of one public equity position and $1.3 million due to the write-off of legacy equity and warrant positions. Thanks to the tremendous and timely efforts of our broader finance team, we ended Q2 with strong liquidity of $780 million, which provides us with ample coverage of our available unfunded commitments of $489 million and the ability to fund our ongoing anticipated business activities. The venture capital ecosystem continued its healthy pace for the first half of 2022, with fundraising activity at $121 billion and investment activity at $144 billion, according to data gathered by PitchBook and the National Venture Capital Association. Fundraising activity continues on its record pace to exceed 2021's level of $139 billion, while investment activity remained on par with Q1 2022. We exited Q2 with undistributed earnings spillover of over $150 million, or $1.18 per share. The undistributed earnings spillover continues to provide us with added flexibility with respect to our shareholder distributions going forward and the ability to continue to invest in our team and platform. For Q2, we increased our base distribution to $0.35 from $0.33, and once again declared a supplemental distribution of 15 cents per share. We will continue to evaluate the quarterly variable-based distribution with a particular focus on the net debt portfolio growth and NII growth that we are expecting to materialize. In closing, our momentum has continued through the first half of 2022, and we remain well positioned from all aspects to take advantage of market conditions and grow our core income-generating assets and as a result, the earnings power of the business. We will remain steadfast with our core themes of maintaining a strong balance sheet and staying disciplined on new underwritings while continuing to invest in our teams and platform. We are thankful to the many companies, management teams, and investors that continue to make Hercules their partner of choice. I will now turn the call over to Seth.
Thank you, Scott, and good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. While the capital raising environment and broader markets deteriorated in Q2, this was a very busy and successful quarter for Hercules in terms of accessing the capital markets. To support the record net debt portfolio growth that the investment team delivered in the first half of 2022, and with support of our financial institutional partners, Hercules was able to leverage our recognized credit first culture and strong investment grade ratings to raise over $530 million of equity, debt financing, and credit facility capacity in Q2. With the addition of our fourth investment grade rating from Fitch in May, we continue to benefit with a significant competitive advantage in terms of being able to raise institutional capital in a cost-effective manner. These steps have positioned us well for the continued uncertainty in the broader market and compared to our competitive landscape. Net investment income was $40.1 million, a 12% quarter-over-quarter increase, or $0.32 per share in Q2. This was achieved by delivering record core income despite a historically low volume of prepayments, which overall impacted second quarter NII but is beneficial for the long term, especially in this rising interest rate environment. With that in mind, let's review the following areas, the income statement performance and highlights, NAV, unrealized and realized activity, leverage and liquidity, and the financial outlook. Turning to the income statement performance and highlights, as previously mentioned, Net investment income was $40.1 million, a 12% quarter over quarter increase, or $0.32 per share in Q2. Total investment income was $72.1 million, an increase compared to the prior quarter driven by 16% growth in the debt portfolio year to date on strong new business, lower prepayments, and an increase in benchmark rates. Our effective and core yields in the second quarter were 11.5 and 11.3% respectively, compared to 11.5 and 11.1% in the first quarter. The increase in the core yield was due to an increase in coupon interest as a result of base rate interest increases. We expect this trend to continue throughout the remainder of the year with the full quarter impact of past Fed policy interest rate changes as well as the recent decision. Turning to expenses, our gross operating expenses for the quarter increased to $35.1 million compared to $30.8 million in the prior quarter. Net of costs recharged to the RIA, our operating expenses were $32 million. Interest expenses and fees increased to $14.2 million from $13.5 million in the prior quarter due to the growth of the investment portfolio. SG&A expenses increased to $20.9 million from $17.3 million in the prior quarter within my guidance. Net of costs recharged to the RIA, the SG&A expenses were $17.8 million. Our weighted average cost of debt remained consistent at 4% with the prior quarter. Our ROAE or NII over average equity increased 100 basis points to 12% for the second quarter and the ROAA or NII over average total assets was 5.9%. Switching to the NAV, unrealized and realized activity, During the quarter, our NAV decreased $0.39 per share to $10.43 per share. This represents an NAV per share decrease of 3.6% quarter over quarter. The main driver for the decrease was the $48.3 million of change in unrealized depreciation primarily related to the mark-to-market movement on our publicly traded equity positions. Credit was stable during the quarter and was not a material contributor to the decline in NAV. The net realized loss of $2.1 million comprised of $1.2 million of gains from the disposal of equity and warrant positions and investment fund distributions offset by $3.3 million of realized loss related to the losses and write-off of legacy equity and warrant positions. Moving to leverage and liquidity. Our gap in regulatory leverage were 114.5% and 101.3%, respectively, which increased compared to the prior quarter due to the net growth in the investments. As a result of our strong fundraising during the quarter, we held more cash than normal on the balance sheet throughout quarter end. Netting out leverage with cash on the balance sheet, our net gap and regulatory leverage was 105.8 and 92.7% respectively. We ended the quarter with liquidity of $780 million. As a reminder, this excludes capital raised by the funds managed by our wholly owned RIA subsidiary. We believe our strong liquidity position positions us very well in the current rate environment and if the recent low prepayment trend continues. As previously disclosed, in June we completed two institutional debt financings and expanded our capacity on both credit facilities to support the continued growth of the portfolio. In total, $470 million of additional debt financing and credit facility capacity was made available to Hercules, demonstrating our ability to raise significant amounts of capital at attractive rates in a period of significant volatility for the capital markets. We continue to access the ATM market during the quarter and raised $62 million at an average price of 1.4 times to NAV, resulting in a 15-cent accretion to NAV. Finally, on the outlook points, for the third quarter, we're increasing our core yield guidance range to 11.5 to 12%. As a reminder, approximately 95% of our debt portfolio is floating with a floor. So the recent interest rate hike and any additional in 2022 will benefit our core yield going forward. Although very difficult to predict as communicated by Scott, we expect 50 to 150 million in prepayment activity in the third quarter. We expect our third quarter interest expense to increase compared to the prior quarter due to the balance sheet growth experienced in the second quarter. For the third quarter, we expect SG&A expenses of $19 to $20 million and a similar level of RIA expense allocation compared to the first quarter, both based on a more normal level of funding and allocation for the quarter. In closing, we are positioned well to benefit from this market and are looking forward to continued growth of our core income. I will now turn the call over to Howard to begin the Q&A portion of our call. Howard, over to you.
Ladies and gentlemen, once again, if you have a question or comment at this time, please press star 1 1 on your telephone keypad. Again, press star 1 1 on your telephone keypad. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. Our first question or comment comes from the line of Crispin Love from Piper Sandler. Your line is open.
Thank you. Good afternoon. So first one I have is on credit quality. So I'm just curious if you can speak to your outlook for credit quality for the next several quarters. There's some worries out there that the venture-backed companies are burning cash at a quicker rate and then just some confidence is deteriorating. So And I appreciate the liquidity numbers you provided earlier, but I'm just curious on how you're viewing the credit environment from your seat looking forward.
Sure. Thanks, Crispin. We continue to feel good about the credit portfolio. We have always maintained a very disciplined approach to underwriting, and that really has not changed over the last few years. There is no question that there has been an increasing amount of volatility in the equity markets. But we really have not seen a material impact yet with respect to our portfolio company's ability to raise capital. In Q1, the markets were very choppy. Our portfolio companies raised over a billion dollars of new equity. In Q2, the volatility of the equity markets increased. Our portfolio companies once again raised over a billion dollars of equity capital in the quarter. We have several companies right now that are in the middle of equity financings that we expect to get done. So we're obviously watching credit very closely, but we have not yet seen any material impact that would cause us to be concerned. The other key things that we look at very closely, weighted average credit rating across the portfolio. Historically, that range for us was about 220 to 230. That was sort of the normal range for us on a weighted average portfolio basis. Even with the slight uptake that we saw in Q2 from 2.10 to 2.13, still below the low end of that range. We also watch our rated four and rated five credits very closely. Those continue to make up less than 0.6% of the entire portfolio at fair value. And we have two small legacy loans that are on non-accrual, and we don't have any additional loans right now that we're watching for non-accrual. So I think all in all, we continue to feel positive about the credit environment. We're watching, obviously, the volatility of the equity markets. We have taken some additional steps to be a little bit more cautious and a little bit more prudent from a monitoring perspective, but we feel pretty good about what we're seeing right now.
Okay, great. Thank you for the color there, Scott. And then just one other one for me. Can you just remind me on the mechanics of the undistributed earnings spillover? Does the $1.18 of spillover that you currently have Does that need to be paid out over the next 12 months or is there another timeframe? I'm just curious what the details are on that spillover.
Sure. Absolutely, Crispin. So we've already distributed the majority of what needs to be distributed in the current year related to the spillover related to last year. So we have to distribute about 90% of our earnings annually within the following year. And so the distributions that we've made already in the year count towards that. We have very little after we make the distribution in August that is required to be distributed for last year.
Okay, great. Thank you. I appreciate you taking my questions.
Thank you. Our next question or comment comes from the line of Kevin Fultz from JMP Securities. Your line is open, Mr. Fultz.
Hi, good afternoon, and thank you for taking my questions. Could you talk a little bit about how the competitive environment has shifted over the past two quarters given increased market uncertainty and how that's impacting documentation and deal pricing? I'm just hoping you can quantify the change in pricing that you've seen as market conditions have evolved.
Sure. Thanks, Kevin. So, a couple of things with respect to the competitive environment. We are continuing to see, I think, a healthy competitive environment. I think the one or two things that we have noticed, particularly over the last quarter or so, is that several of our competitors appear to be pulling back a little bit given some leverage and liquidity constraints. That's why we went out of our way to emphasize our conservative leverage position and the abundance of liquidity that we have on the balance sheet. We've seen a little bit of a pullback just given liquidity and leverage across some of our competitor balance sheets. The other thing that we've seen a little bit is that from a competitive perspective, some funds are making the strategic choice to chase yields. There have been several deals that have been done in the markets throughout the course of Q1 and Q2. Our assessment of those deals is that they are higher risk deals and therefore lenders are able to generate some higher onboarding yields on those deals. That's not the model that we've taken historically and that's not the model that we're taking into the current environment. We're comfortable with the yield that we're getting on new originations. We have seen a little bit of an uptick in terms of onboarding originations just given the rate environment that we're currently in. But it's not one for one. And we made this comment on the Q1 call as well. So if you assume prime rate for us is up about 200 plus basis points over the last several quarters, we have not seen a 200 basis point increase in our ability to generate higher onboarding yields. We've seen about a 25 to 50 basis point increase in onboarding yields. So there is some correlation, but it's certainly not one to one. We did increase our core yield guidance for the portfolio that range last quarter with 11 to 11 and a half percent. Our new guidance for that as Seth indicated is 11 and a half to 12%. Part of that is obviously driven by the fact that 95% of the book is floating and the majority of our portfolio is now going up from a rate perspective. But the other part of that is also that we're onboarding deals at a slightly higher yield relative to where we were one or two quarters ago.
Okay, that's all really helpful. And then just to follow up a modeling question around fundings, fundings allocated to the private funds, clearly that was elevated this quarter. But just curious if you expect the first private fund to be fully ramped by the time you launch the third fund and what the timing is for launching that third fund as well.
So we're not going to provide any guidance in terms of timing for a potential third private fund. I would tell you that the two private funds that we currently manage have continued to grow. We did give some guidance with respect to sort of size at the end of the year, and we're not going to update that now outside of the quarterly allocation numbers that we're providing on a quarterly basis. Q2 was very strong in terms of investments for us out of the two private vehicles that we managed. We expect that number to sort of come down a little bit and probably revert back to what we saw throughout the course of last year for Q3 and Q4. Okay.
That's fair, Scott. I'll leave it there. Congratulations on a solid quarter. Thanks, Kevin.
Thank you. Our next question or comment comes from the line of Christopher Nolan from Leidenberg Thalman. Mr. Nolan, your line is open.
Hey, guys, and again, congratulations on a really solid quarter. The interest rate sensitivity, I noticed in the queue that you guys are not hedging your interest rate sensitivity. What are your thoughts about that? Because you talk to different people, and the outlook on this changes dramatically. Some people are not quite so certain that the Fed's all going to be continuing to raise. So a little clarification in terms of what you're thinking along those lines.
Right. Yeah, no, historically we have not hedged our interest rate exposure, mainly because our expectation for the fixed environment versus floating is that often the yield curves are way out of whack compared to what actually evolves. And so what you end up doing is trying to pick the correct yield curve position. So we're very comfortable with choosing the right moment to fix our interest rate. And when you look at Q2, we were very careful about choosing the duration and the amount versus the amount that we decided to pick into the credit facilities. So an allocation stratification giving us optionality, but not a preference to swap into a floating rate environment. Scott?
Yeah, and Chris, the one thing that I would just add to that is we do have some built-in protection given how we structure these loans. When we onboard a new loan, generally speaking, they are floating with a floor, and that contractual floor is set at the base rate at origination. So to the extent that we're originating deals right now, there is no downside in those loans to the extent that the Fed starts moving backwards over the course of the next year or so. So, yeah, I would just sort of add that fact to what Seth said.
Great. And as a follow-up, in your comments, you mentioned the focus on larger companies, which seem to be new verbiage compared to more recent earnings calls. Does this imply that you're focusing on larger companies, given your increased scale? And if so, does that mean that we should expect higher operating expenses to scale up the operation further?
Yeah, so no real change in OpEx expectations outside of the guidance that Seth gave in his prepared remarks. The comment that we made about the focus is consistent with what we said in Q1. Given the volatility that we're seeing sort of across the venture and growth stage landscape, we made the strategic decision starting in Q4 of last year to begin to shift our underwriting screens a little bit into more later stage, more established companies. takes away some of the inherent risk with earlier stage companies. That's not to say that every deal is going to fit that sort of specific parameter, but that's really the focal point for us from an origination perspective. So these are companies that have raised three to four rounds of institutional capital. These are companies that, to the extent that they are public, are generally trading at a $500 million to a billion-dollar-plus market capitalization even after significant pullbacks. And on the technology side, just much more established, better capitalized companies, which you may be down a little bit from a yield perspective, but we think it's the right decision from a credit perspective. And at the end of the day, we're managers of credit, and that's always going to be our focal point. Okay.
Thank you, guys.
Thanks, Chris.
Thank you. Our next question or comment comes from the line Kenneth Lee from RBC Capital Markets. Mr. Lee, your line is open. I'm sorry, my is Mr. Lynch from KBW. Mr. Lynch, your line is open.
Hey, good afternoon. I had a couple questions. The first one, I was very interested by your comment regarding that your portfolio companies were not having any increased difficulty raising additional capital. I think you quoted that the numbers were very similar in Q1 and Q2. I'd love if you could just provide some more color on that because that seems, you know, very counterintuitive to what we're hearing in the market with fundraising being down and capital deployed on the venture equity side coming under pressure recently. And we've seen all the memos from, you know, the Sequoias and that sort of stuff of, you know, telling founders that capital raising is going to be much harder to tighten the belt. So, I guess I'm a little bit surprised to hear that fundraising really hasn't been an issue for any of your portfolio accomplishments. Are they just raising at flat or down rounds, or what's going on there? Because that's kind of counterintuitive to what's going on in the broader markets.
Sure. So the comment that we made was not that we have not had any portfolio companies have trouble raising capital. What we said was that we have not seen any real material impact across the portfolio in terms of the ability to raise equity capital. We monitor... our company's ability to raise capital on a quarterly basis. As you mentioned in Q1, that number was over a billion dollars across the portfolio. In Q2, equity market volatility for our companies clearly increased, and yet our portfolio companies, yes, there was a little bit of growth, but our portfolio companies once again went out and raised over a billion dollars of equity capital, and that was spread across well over a dozen different names. What we have seen is that it is taking a little bit longer to raise capital. Valuations are not what board members, investors, management teams initially wanted or expected, but we have not seen it yet turn into an inability to raise capital for good companies. I think what you're seeing from a VC perspective is much more selectivity. They're being much more focused in terms of their capital deployment. But there should be no doubt that venture capital firms are continuing to invest meaningful amounts of capital. If you look at the data that we have, in Q1, venture capital firms invested over $70 billion of equity. In Q2, venture capital firms invested, once again, over $70 billion of equity capital. So you're at over $140 billion of venture capital equity invested in the first half of this year, despite the volatility. That funding is going to fewer companies, but it is still flowing into companies that deserve to be funded. And so given our, still flowing into companies that deserve to be funded. And so given our historical emphasis on prudent and conservative underwriting, So far, we've seen the majority of our companies be able to go out and continue to raise equity capital.
That's helpful clarification. And then you obviously deployed a lot of capital this quarter, had a greater number of commitments in this quarter, which isn't surprising. I mean, the need for venture capital or need for venture debt is probably very desirable in these marketplaces as people are looking for non-dilutive capital. I'm just curious. Has your investment approach changed at all? Because I would think borrowers are looking for non-dilutive rounds in this environment, but you're going to want borrowers who have abundant liquidity. And I would think people aren't going to be looking to raise capital in this environment right now if they don't have to. And so how are you kind of treading this marketplace where you're probably getting approached by a lot of good companies who are, you know, would rather do debt capital than equity capital to extend liquidity, um, because it's not dilutive. However, you probably, I would think would also want to see companies with abundance of liquidity and runway as you, uh, provide some, some really great stats. And I do appreciate the liquidity stats you provided, um, as far as runway goes. So how are you navigating, you know, those two sort of forces?
Yeah, you know, it's a great, it's a great question. And I say a couple of things. So first, um, for us, we're following the same playbook that we have successfully followed for the last 17 plus years, irrespective of market conditions. We think our first and utmost priority is to be disciplined managers of credit. So we think we take a very conservative and prudent view on underwriting new credit. And that doesn't change whether we're talking about 2020, 2021, or 2022. In terms of the funding to commitment ratio, that absolutely has come down and it's really a function of two things. Number one, we are specifically targeting later stage, more well capitalized companies. Those companies by definition are going to want to borrow less at closing. The second part is, we are using milestones more aggressively than we even have historically. And this is a function of the current environment and just a more cautious approach on our side. And so as we utilize more performance covenants, as we utilize more capital raising covenants, that funding to commitment ratio is naturally going to come down. In Q2, it was below 50%. So on a billion of commitments, we funded 440 million. Really the first time that I can recall where that number has been below 50%. We think the right way to think about it right now is really in that 50% to 60% range, and that's where we expect it to sort of normalize into. The last point that I would make, despite the record growth that we delivered in the first half of the year, the net debt investment portfolio growth for Hercules was over $360 million in the first half, which is a record for us. Despite that, we're not managing this business and running this business focused on growth. So what we have told our investment teams is to continue to make sure that we are doing the right deals, not every deal. We're an internally managed BDC. We're not going to get paid more or less depending on what our asset base is. And that really gives us the ability to focus on making sure that we are doing the right deals with the right companies.
That's helpful. I appreciate the time this afternoon. I'll hop back in the queue.
Thanks, Ryan.
Thank you. Our next question or comment comes from Kenneth Lee from RBC Capital Markets. Just a second. Mr. Lee, your line is open.
Hi, thanks for taking my question. For your portfolio companies, given potential changes to private company valuations, what's your best sense of how loan to value ratios have changed within your portfolio? Thanks.
Sure. Thanks Ken. So we track loan to value on a quarterly basis. Generally speaking, if you look at our book historically, our LTVs on a weighted average basis per quarter have been in the 7% range up to 20 to 25% on the high end. If you look at where we were in the sort of latter half of last year, Our LTVs were down to sort of low teens, about 11%, 12%, 13%. Right now, even with the significant pullbacks that we've seen from a valuation perspective, our LTVs on a weighted average basis across the portfolio are in the 15% to 17% range. So we've certainly seen a little bit of movement up, but it still continues to be a very conservative number, given what our onboarding LTVs tend to be on these companies.
Gotcha. Gotcha. Very helpful there. And one follow-up, if I may, have you been having conversations with the financial sponsors of the portfolio companies? And if so, how would you assess their willingness or their tone to provide additional capital if need be during the really volatile market times? Thanks.
Sure. So I think a really important part of what we do and what our teams do on a daily basis is to have open communication with our management teams and with the board members and investors of all of our companies. And those conversations take place in good markets. Those conversations take place in bad markets. And so our teams are continuously talking to our companies. What we're continuing to hear is obviously concern about the broader market. We're seeing and we're hearing VCs and board members push companies to reduce expenses, to reduce burn, to extend runway. But at the same time, we are seeing the VC firms continue to fund the companies that they think deserve to be funded. And that's why we had, again, our companies raise over a billion dollars of equity capital during the quarter. Some of that was on the private side. Some of that was on the public side. So I think you're seeing sort of caution from the investor community but you are still seeing capital be deployed in the right opportunities.
Gotcha.
Very helpful there. Thanks again. Thank you. Our next question or comment comes from the line of Finian O'Shea from Wells Fargo and Company.
Hi, guys. Hi, this is Jordan on for FEN today. I wanted to ask about, there's a handful of companies you guys have that had planned to go public via SPAC or D-SPAC that have basically turned on that and announced the termination of their plans to go public that way. Just as a category, could you maybe give us some color on how that process or the end of that process might affect their exit potential? And maybe a little, some of your thoughts on whether or not your underwriting is inside of that new path to the public markets or M&A or however the new exit might be.
Sure, Jordan. So we've seen sort of a mixed bag on the SPAC side. We've had some companies make the strategic decision to go through with SPAC transactions and execute successful SPAC transactions. We had one that got done in Q2. We've had other companies that have made the strategic decision that they did not want to pursue the SPAC route and ended up terminating their SPAC agreements. Those are obviously still private companies, so we're not going to speak to anything that we shouldn't be speaking to in terms of their plans. But what we can tell you is that in each of these cases, we underwrite to the assumption that the SPAC transactions are not going to get done. So with respect to the deals that we specifically underwrote to that were in SPAC transactions, we continue to feel very comfortable with those companies and their ability to raise equity capital privately now that the SPAC transactions have been terminated.
Okay, great. Thank you so much. That's it for me.
Thanks, Jordan.
Thank you. Our next question or comment comes from the line of Casey Alexander from Compass Point. Mr. Alexander, your line is open.
Hi. Good afternoon. I have a couple questions. One is, you know, the volatility of the equity markets affects things in a lot of different ways. The vintage of loans that you're writing now, as you said, you're onboarding at a little bit higher yields. But would it also be your expectation that that you're setting a basis point on the equity slices that you get from those at a lower level because of comps? And would it be your expectation that you would be able to generate better ROEs on the loan vintage that you're originating right now?
Yeah, so the answer to that, Casey, is yes. If you remember, there are two components to sort of the equity pieces that we generally get in transactions. In certain cases, we'll receive warrants. Most of the time those warrants will be priced at the better of last round or next round. So we'll have next round protection to the extent that there is a down round in the future. We generally have protection and we reset our price and valuation. So we have some inherent upside with respect to the warrant position. The second equity component that we get in a number of our deals is the RTI, which is the right to invest. that right to invest is a contractual right to invest in a subsequent equity round. So if those companies are going out and raising equity rounds, whether it's publicly or privately, at more attractive valuations this year, to the extent that we think the equity investment makes sense and we choose to exercise that RTI, we do think that there will be some, again, inherent upside in those equity positions on a go-forward basis, just given that the valuations appear to be more attractive.
Okay, thank you. Secondly, You guys did an outright sale of debt investments during the quarter of $73 million. I'm curious why it's not something that you guys do on a regular basis. How many loans were involved? Was it one or several loans? And how did you go about it? Because generally, you know, that's not a super liquid market for just going out and selling loans.
Sure, so it is not something that we've done historically, I would I would add one point to that that those loans were not sold in the general market. Those loans were sold to our to private funds so just a little bit different than what we typically do, which is when we assign those fundings at closing. This quarter, given how strong our commitment numbers were and how strong our funding numbers were, we made the decision to also do a sale of a couple of pieces of a handful of loans. I think the number was about five or six loans. They were not the entirety of the loans. They were parts of specific loans. And that was really done, one, just given the strength of the funding activity and commitment activity that we saw during the quarter. But also, as we sort of think about portfolio diversification, as we think about concentrations, as we think about ineligible assets, we obviously are watching those things very closely. So in this quarter, there was an opportunity for us to sort of, in addition to the assignments to the private funds, sell down an additional $73, $74 million of loans to the private funds, which remain very well capitalized. And from our perspective and from a BDC perspective, given that those private funds are managed by the wholly owned RIA, the benefit of those loans ultimately accretes back to the shareholders regardless.
All right, great. Thank you. That perfectly explains it, and I appreciate your taking my questions. Thanks, Casey.
Thank you. I'm sure no additional questions in the queue at this time. I'd like to turn the conference back over to management for any closing remarks.
Thank you, Operator, and thanks to everyone for joining our call today. We look forward to reporting our progress on our next earnings call. Thanks, and have a great earnings call.
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for participating in today's conference. This concludes the program. You may now disconnect. Everyone, have a wonderful day.