Published on April 10th, 2026 by Bob Ciura
Business Development Companies – or BDCs, for short – can be a great source of current yield for income investors.
BCP Investment Corp. (BCIC) is a great example of this. The stock has a current dividend yield of 14%. Better yet, BCIC stock pays monthly dividends.
You can download our full Excel spreadsheet of all 118 monthly dividend stocks (along with metrics that matter, like dividend yield and payout ratio) by clicking on the link below:
The stock’s high dividend yield and monthly payments make it a solid choice for income investors.
This article will discuss the investment prospects of BCIC in detail.
Business Overview
BCP Investment Corporation is an externally managed business development company focused on generating current income, and secondarily capital appreciation, by lending to and investing in middle-market companies.
It mainly invests in first- and second-lien secured loans, mezzanine debt, and selected equity-linked instruments, and also has smaller exposures to joint ventures and CLO fund securities.
BCP targets privately held businesses with EBITDA of about $10 million to $50 million. BCP is managed by Sierra Crest Investment Management, an affiliate of BC Partners.
As of 2025 end, its investment portfolio totaled about $501.0 million at fair value across 108 entities and 41 industries.
On March 5th, 2025, BCP Investment Corporation posted its full-year results for the period ending December 31st, 2025. BCP Investment reported net investment income of $25.1 million, or $2.28 per share, up from $24.0 million, or $2.59 per share, in 2024.
Total investment income edged down to $61.2 million from $62.4 million, while net expenses improved to $36.0 million from $38.4 million, helped by lower incentive fees and a partial fee waiver.
Total net assets increased to $209.2 million from $178.5 million, largely reflecting capital activity tied to the Logan Ridge acquisition, although NAV per share declined to $16.68 from $19.41.
Growth Prospects
BCP has not managed to grow over the past decade. From 2020 to 2023, NII/share recovered as Portman Ridge gained scale through the GARS and HCAP acquisitions and shifted toward middle-market credit under BC Partners.
The 2020 rebound was aided by a partial incentive-fee waiver, while later years benefited from a larger earning-asset base.
By 2022, and especially 2023, higher floating-rate asset yields pushed NII/share to $2.51 and then $3.16, though 2023 also included adviser reimbursements related to transition-service costs from prior mergers.
The decline to $2.59 in 2024 and $2.27 in 2025 reflects a different set of pressures. In 2024, higher financing costs weighed on results, with interest expense taking up a much larger share of average net assets.
In 2025, total NII still rose to about $25.1 million, but NII/share fell because the Logan Ridge acquisition increased the share count, while pre-incentive income softened and interest expense remained meaningful.
Overall, the long-run pattern runs from legacy KCAP weakness, to a consolidation-driven recovery under external management, to a larger but still share-count and funding-sensitive BDC model.
Going forward, we expect no growth in EPS or the dividend, as higher funding costs, share-count dilution from acquisitions, and limited underlying earnings growth are likely to offset the benefits of greater scale.
Dividend & Valuation Analysis
BCIC scores weakly on safety and business quality as its dividend capacity relies on credit performance, leverage, funding costs, and manager execution rather than on any durable underlying franchise.
It has no real moat, as it is an externally managed BDC, so any advantage is mostly in sourcing and underwriting, and the company’s long record of mergers, book value erosion, and periods of over-distribution suggests that edge has not translated into meaningful long-term shareholder outcomes.
Its resiliency is also limited because a weaker economy can quickly pressure portfolio company fundamentals, non-accruals, realized losses, and NAV at the same time.
Overall, we view BCIC as a risky income vehicle and one where investors should remain cautious about treating the dividend as fully dependable through a cycle.
Shares of BCIC are trading at 3.1 times expected NII at the moment, which is slightly above our target of 3.0. Multiple contraction could deduct 0.5% from annual returns over the next five years.
Along with our expectation for no NII growth and the 14.0% dividend yield, we project total annual returns of 10.9% through 2031.
Final Thoughts
BCIC is a high-yield, high-risk BDC best viewed as a discounted income vehicle with some upside from credit stability and portfolio scale.
However, limited valuation support because weak business quality, no moat, and a long history of NAV erosion make the dividend and earnings stream hard to fully trust.
While we forecast double-digit annualized returns in the medium-term, that assumes the dividend holds at this level, and that’s not guaranteed.
We believe this is a risky investment with no dependable dividend growth prospects. Thus we rate the stock a sell.
Further Reading: The Highest-Yielding BDCs
Don’t miss the resources below for more monthly dividend stock investing research.
And see the resources below for more compelling investment ideas for dividend growth stocks and/or high-yield investment securities.
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