MFICL
MidCap Financial Investment Corporation 8.00% Notes due 2028
MidCap Financial Investment Corporation 8.00% Notes due 2028 (MFICL) is currently in a range/mixed trend, above the 200-day MA but below the 50-day MA. RSI is at 50.4, with 2/3 trend checks passing.
MFICL with MA50 and MA200
Key levels & signals
MFICL valuation multiples (TTM)
MFICL analyst consensus
MidCap Financial Investment Corporation 8.00% Notes due 2028 (MFICL) looks more range-bound than strongly trending, but there are still a few supportive signs on the chart. The latest available price is $25.34, and 2 of 3 core trend checks are currently passing. Price is trading below the 50-day moving average by 0.2% and above the 200-day moving average by 17.9%.
MFICL currently has an RSI reading of 50.4, which sits in a neutral range. That usually means momentum is not especially stretched in either direction, so traders may need to rely more on chart structure than on oscillator extremes alone.
This page is designed to help you quickly understand what the MFICL chart looks like before opening the full dashboard. The aim is not to tell you what to buy or sell, but to make it easier to judge whether the stock is trending cleanly, becoming stretched, or simply moving in a more awkward range.
About MidCap Financial Investment Corporation 8.00% Notes due 2028
MidCap Financial Investment Corporation, formerly known as Apollo Investment Corporation, operates as an externally managed, closed-end, and non-diversified management investment vehicle. It holds the classification of a Business Development Company (BDC) under the Investment Company Act of 1940. The firm's primary investment strategy focuses on private equity opportunities within private middle-market companies. This encompasses providing capital for leveraged buyouts, corporate acquisitions, financial recapitalizations, growth initiatives, and refinancing efforts. MidCap offers a comprehensive array of financing options, including direct equity capital alongside various debt instruments such as mezzanine, first lien secured, stretch senior, unitranche, second lien secured, senior secured, unsecured, and subordinated loans. Its equity involvement further extends to preferred equity, common equity interests, and warrants, often through co-investment partnerships. Beyond these core activities, the fund also explores Private Investment in Public Equity (PIPEs) transactions and may acquire securities of thinly traded public companies, structured products, or investments from secondary markets. Additional potential allocations include cash equivalents, U.S. government securities, high-quality short-term debt, high-yield and distressed bonds, non-U.S. investments, and publicly traded companies that are not thinly traded. Specialized instruments like collateralized loan obligations (CLOs) and credit-linked notes (CLNs) are also within its scope. Predominantly, MidCap Financial Investment Corporation targets its investments within the United States. It generally allocates between $20 million and $250 million per portfolio company, focusing on businesses with less than $75 million in EBITDA. The fund typically seeks investments with a maturity range of five to ten years. The corporation's industry exposure is broad and diverse, spanning sectors such as construction and building materials, business services, plastics & rubber, advertising, capital equipment, education, cable television, chemicals, consumer products (both durable and non-durable), customer services, direct marketing, and various energy segments (oil & gas, electricity, utilities). It also covers aerospace & defense, wholesale, telecommunications, financial services, hospitality (hotels, gaming, leisure, restaurants), environmental industries, healthcare and pharmaceuticals, high-tech sectors, food and beverage (including tobacco), manufacturing, diverse media and production, printing and publishing, retail, automation, and multiple transportation categories (aviation, consumer transport, cargo, and distribution).
MFICL 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 MFICL
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.
