Welcome to our dedicated page for Goldman Sachs SEC filings (Ticker: GSBD), a comprehensive resource for investors and traders seeking official regulatory documents including 10-K annual reports, 10-Q quarterly earnings, 8-K material events, and insider trading forms.
The Goldman Sachs BDC, Inc. (GSBD) SEC filings page brings together the company’s official regulatory documents filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. GSBD is a specialty finance company that has elected to be regulated as a business development company under the Investment Company Act of 1940, and its common stock is listed on the New York Stock Exchange. As a reporting company, it files annual reports on Form 10-K, quarterly reports on Form 10-Q and current reports on Form 8-K, along with registration statements and indenture-related documents for its debt offerings.
In its 10-K and 10-Q filings, Goldman Sachs BDC, Inc. provides detailed information on its investment portfolio, including the breakdown of first lien/senior secured debt, first lien/last-out unitranche, second lien debt, unsecured debt, preferred stock, common stock and warrants. These reports also present total investment income, net investment income, net asset value per share, leverage metrics and disclosures about non-accrual investments. Investors can review these filings to understand how the company’s strategy of lending to U.S. middle-market companies is reflected in its financial statements and risk measures.
Form 8-K filings document material events such as quarterly earnings announcements, dividend declarations, amendments to the senior secured revolving credit facility and capital markets transactions. Recent 8-Ks describe twelfth and thirteenth amendments to the Truist revolving credit facility, the underwriting agreement and indenture for 5.650% notes due 2030, and board actions related to base, supplemental and special dividends.
GSBD’s debt-related filings, including indentures and supplemental indentures, outline the terms of its unsecured notes, covenants tied to asset coverage requirements under the Investment Company Act of 1940 and provisions related to change of control repurchase events. Together, these documents give a comprehensive view of the company’s capital structure and obligations.
On Stock Titan, AI-powered tools can help interpret lengthy GSBD filings by highlighting key sections on portfolio composition, leverage, dividend policy and material agreements, allowing investors to navigate complex disclosures more efficiently while still relying on the underlying SEC documents.
Chi Alex, an officer of Goldman Sachs BDC, Inc. (GSBD), filed a Form 4 reporting that they no longer serve as Co-Chief Executive Officer and Co-President effective at the close of business on August 7, 2025. The form, signed by attorney-in-fact Edward Meehan on August 11, 2025, contains no non-derivative or derivative securities transactions in the included tables.
Vivek Bantwal filed an Initial Statement of Beneficial Ownership (Form 3) reporting his relationship to Goldman Sachs BDC, Inc. (GSBD) as an Officer with the remark Co-Chief Executive Officer. The event date triggering the filing was 08/07/2025. The form states that no securities are beneficially owned by the reporting person as of the filing: both non-derivative and derivative securities sections list zero holdings. The document is signed by an attorney-in-fact, Edward Meehan, on 08/11/2025, and includes an exhibit reference for a Power of Attorney (Exhibit 24.0).
Goldman Sachs BDC (NYSE:GSBD) filed an 8-K announcing a Twelfth Amendment to its senior secured revolving credit facility with Truist Bank.
- Maturity extended from 18 Oct 2028 to 24 Jun 2030 for Extending Lenders
- Commitment termination moved to 22 Jun 2029
- Interest margins lowered to 0.90% (ABR) and 1.90% (Term Benchmark/Daily Simple RFR), with a further step-down possible upon achieving investment-grade ratings or a 1.60× borrowing-base multiple
The filing constitutes an entry into a material definitive agreement (Item 1.01) and the creation of a direct financial obligation (Item 2.03). Although facility size is unchanged, the longer tenor and reduced pricing improve liquidity and may lower future interest expense, materially affecting GSBD’s financing profile.