MFIC
MidCap Financial Investment Corporation
MidCap Financial Investment Corporation (MFIC) is currently in a downtrend, trading below both the 50-day and 200-day moving averages. RSI is at 42.8, with 0/3 trend checks passing.
MFIC with MA50 and MA200
Key levels & signals
MFIC valuation multiples (TTM)
MFIC analyst consensus
MidCap Financial Investment Corporation (MFIC) currently looks weaker on the chart and is not showing much trend strength. The latest available price is $9.88, and 0 of 3 core trend checks are currently passing. Price is trading below the 50-day moving average by 5.7% and below the 200-day moving average by 12.2%.
MFIC currently has an RSI reading of 42.8, which leans a little softer than neutral. That does not automatically make the chart bearish, but it does suggest momentum is not especially strong right now.
For traders reviewing MFIC next, the main question is whether weakness is starting to stabilise or whether the chart still looks vulnerable to further downside. Some traders may watch for bounce attempts, but others will want to see stronger proof that the trend is improving before treating the stock as a cleaner setup.
About MidCap Financial Investment Corporation
MidCap Financial Investment Corporation (MFIC) operates as an externally managed, non-diversified, closed-end investment fund, registered as a business development company (BDC) under the Investment Company Act of 1940. The firm specializes in providing private equity and debt capital to private middle-market companies, supporting initiatives such as leveraged buyouts, corporate acquisitions, recapitalizations, growth capital, and refinancing. MFIC offers a comprehensive range of financing instruments, including direct equity investments, preferred and common equity, warrants, and equity co-investments. Its debt solutions encompass mezzanine, first-lien secured, stretch senior, unitranche, second-lien secured, senior secured, unsecured, and subordinated loans. Beyond these core offerings, the fund also participates in Private Investments in Public Equity (PIPEs), acquires assets in the secondary market, and invests in structured products. While primarily focused on private ventures, MFIC may also allocate capital to thinly traded public company securities, cash equivalents, U.S. government debt, short-term high-quality debt, high-yield and distressed debt, and international investments, alongside collateralized loan obligations (CLOs) and credit-linked notes (CLNs). The company's investment focus is primarily within the United States, targeting a broad spectrum of industries. These include construction and building materials, diverse business services, manufacturing (plastics, rubber, chemicals, aerospace & defense), advertising, capital equipment, education, various technology sectors (cable television, telecommunications, high tech, automation), consumer goods and services (durable and non-durable products, retail, hospitality, food & beverage), energy (oil & gas, electricity, utilities), financial services, healthcare and pharmaceuticals, media (diversified, production, printing, publishing), wholesale, environmental services, and transportation (aviation, cargo, distribution). MFIC typically commits between $20 million and $250 million to each portfolio company, with investments generally structured to mature within five to ten years.
MFIC shares outstanding over time
Tracking total shares outstanding is one way to spot dilution — a rising line means the company has issued more shares (stock-based compensation, secondary offerings, convertible debt), which spreads the same earnings and ownership across more shares. A falling line usually reflects buybacks.
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Common questions about MFIC
Is this page a buy or sell recommendation?
No. This page is designed to help you review chart structure, momentum and technical context more quickly, but it is not personal financial advice.
Why can a stock look bullish and overbought at the same time?
Strong trending stocks can still become stretched in the short term. That is why trend traders and dip buyers can read the same chart differently.
What should I do next after reading this page?
Open the full dashboard, review the chart in more detail, compare indicators, and decide whether the setup still makes sense within your own process.
