Filed by Oaktree Specialty Lending Corporation
pursuant to Rule 425 under the Securities Act of 1933
and deemed filed under Rule 14a-6(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
Subject Company: Oaktree Strategic Income Corporation
File No. of Related Registration Statement: 333-250891
On February 4, 2021, Oaktree Specialty Lending Corporation (“OCSL”) held a conference call to discuss OCSL’s financial results for the quarter ended December 31, 2020. The conference call contained information regarding OCSL’s proposed merger with Oaktree Strategic Income Corporation (“OCSI”). The following are excerpts from the transcript of OCSL’s February 4, 2021 conference call discussing OCSL’s proposed merger with OCSI.
Mathew Pendo:
Before I turn it over to Armen, I wanted to update you on the planned merger of OCSL and Oaktree Strategic Income Corporation. As we discussed on our last call, we expect this will create a larger, more scaled BDC with increased trading liquidity, potentially broadening our institutional shareholder base, and may improve access to lower-cost sources of debt. We also anticipate that it will drive NII accretion over both the near- and long-term.
We are confident that now is the right time to move forward with this merger; both portfolios have strong credit quality and our transition out of non-core assets that we’ve been working on since 2017, is nearly complete.
The registration statement has been declared effective, the proxy solicitation process has begun, and the merger is on track to close by the end of the current quarter, with our shareholders and OCSI shareholders scheduled to vote on the transaction on March 15. We encourage all shareholders to review the proxy materials and vote your shares accordingly.
Overall, we are very pleased with our quarterly results, and we are confident the scale that OCSL will have post-merger will help drive further benefits for our shareholders.
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We’re also looking forward to the pending merger with OCSI as we believe that this combination benefits shareholders of both OCSL and OCSI through scale, portfolio diversity and expected earnings accretion.
We are excited about the future for the combined company and remain optimistic that we will continue to identify new attractive risk-adjusted investment opportunities, enabling us to deliver improved returns to our shareholders.
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Devin Patrick Ryan (JMP Securities):
First question here, just given the overlap between OCSL and the OCSI on the investment side and expectations that the merger will be relatively seamless. It would be great if you could give some additional granularity on expectations for the cadence of investment activity in the coming quarters as you repositioned the 2 portfolios? And what I’m trying to get at here is you hear the comments about very strong pipeline and obviously, expectations for investment versus some of the comments around valuation and market exuberance, and just trying to think about kind of the push-pull in all of that?
Armen Panossian:
Sure. Devin, this is Armen. So in terms of overlap with OCSI and then the cadence of investing after the merger is closed. So in terms of non-overlapping investments that are in OCSI, but not in OCSL, it’s about 33% of the OCSI portfolio at this point, of which 25 percentage points are actually public securities that can be traded and about $47-or-so million of par value of private positions that will take a little bit of a longer time to rotate. So it’s a pretty manageable rotation after the close of the merger that we can effectuate — we think that we can effectuate a rotation, but that will, obviously, as you alluded to, will be predicated on our ability to continue to originate attractive loans.
Maybe we could talk a little bit about the markets. I’m sure others will be asking about what we’re seeing in the market these days. And I would say, as you know, in private credit, it’s not like you could take all of private credit with the same paint brush. There is middle market sponsor finance in support of LBOs. There is some mezzanine within that. There is second lien. And then more typically of what we like doing are the non-sponsored loans. They are harder to predict the timing of. They’re more structured. They’re harder to find. They take longer to execute. And so that’s kind of the other side of what we do here.