Fidus Shares Halted Today Ahead of 3.3% Dividend

Fidus Shares Halted Today Ahead of 3.3% Dividend

May 25, 2026

New York, May 25, 2026, 09:04 (EDT)

  • Nasdaq didn’t open for Memorial Day. Fidus Investment (FDUS) was last at $18.63 on Friday, slipping 0.59%.
  • FDUS has set its next dividend at $0.62 per share for Q2, with payment scheduled for June 29 to shareholders on record as of June 16.
  • U.S. inflation and housing data set for release this week may impact credit-sensitive income stocks.

Fidus Investment Corporation didn’t trade on Monday, with Nasdaq closed for Memorial Day. The stock last finished at $18.63 on Friday, dropping 11 cents. Volume on May 22 was 203,811 shares.

Fidus isn’t seeing a new company surprise right now. When markets open, shares will move on its dividend math, how its loan book looks, and what’s happening with rates. The business is a BDC, or business development company, which means it invests in and lends to smaller firms. Fidus sticks to U.S. lower middle-market companies.

FDUS ended Friday around 4.7% under its March 31 net asset value of $19.55 per share. Net asset value, or NAV, is assets minus liabilities, a fund term investors use to see if a BDC is trading above or below its book.

Fidus’s most recent catalyst is its first-quarter report released May 7. The company posted total investment income of $47.5 million for the quarter. Net investment income came in at $24.6 million, or 65 cents a share—this is income from lending and investments after expenses. Adjusted net investment income was 62 cents a share.

Fidus Investment’s board said it will pay a second-quarter dividend of 62 cents a share, splitting that between a 43-cent regular payout and an extra 19-cent supplemental. At Friday’s close, it works out to a 3.3% yield for the quarter.

Fidus chairman and CEO Edward Ross said the firm has been “over-earning the base dividend” and saw “extremely strong earnings” from its debt portfolio last quarter. Ross noted interest income rose 13.1% and fees were higher. FDUS

The stock wasn’t alone in falling Friday. In BDCs, Ares Capital dropped 15 cents to $18.59. Main Street Capital gave up $1.36 to $49.63, and Golub Capital BDC slipped 7.5 cents to $12.89. The VanEck BDC Income ETF finished down 14.5 cents at $12.38.

But the read isn’t all one direction. Shelby Sherard, Fidus CFO, told investors that a $6.97 million American All Waste refinancing fee gave a lift to fee income and described it as “more of a one-time fee.” If fees like that don’t repeat, repayments slow down or credit pressure goes up in portfolio companies, dividend coverage could tighten. Investing

Fidus posted $12.3 million in net realized investment losses for the quarter, swinging from an $11.5 million gain the same period last year. In its filing, the company pointed to wider risks tied to lending markets, geopolitics, trade policy, rate swings, and inflation.

Markets open this week after the holiday break. Credit traders are watching Thursday, when the Bureau of Economic Analysis releases April personal consumption expenditures price data. The core PCE index, which leaves out food and energy, is a key inflation reading.

Census Bureau releases for April new residential sales and durable goods orders are due May 28. These numbers may be relevant for Fidus since 72.5% of its debt investments at the end of the quarter were variable-rate loans, so interest income can shift as benchmark rates change.

Ross told investors that deal activity was “lackluster” but said the company still expects an “okay to decent originations quarter.” FDUS trades again Tuesday, so holders will see if the market cares more about the dividend support in the near term or if the focus shifts to one-offs, realized losses, and an uncertain rate path. Investing

Marcin Frąckiewicz

Marcin Frąckiewicz is the CEO of TS2 Space and a longtime technology entrepreneur focused on telecommunications, satellite communications and digital innovation. A graduate of the Warsaw School of Economics (SGH), he writes about space technology, artificial intelligence and publicly traded technology companies. His analysis covers major market trends, emerging technologies and the businesses shaping the future of the global economy.

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