Cincinnati Financial Corporation (NASDAQ:CINF) held its Third Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call on [insert date], detailing a combination of growth and challenges. The company reported a net income of $820 million, bolstered by a substantial increase in the fair value of equity securities, while non-GAAP operating income declined due to higher catastrophe losses. Despite these losses, Cincinnati Financial achieved significant growth in net written premiums and investment income, alongside a positive outlook from Fitch Ratings.
Key Takeaways
Net income stood at $820 million, influenced by a $645 million after-tax increase in equity securities value. Non-GAAP operating income decreased by $37 million year-over-year, primarily due to an $86 million rise in catastrophe losses. Net written premiums grew by 17%, with commercial and personal lines up by 11% and 29%, respectively. Investment income increased by 15%, with a notable 21% rise in bond interest income. The company’s property casualty combined ratio deteriorated to 97.4%. Cash flow from operations was strong at $2 billion, marking a 36% year-over-year increase. A total of $365 million was returned to shareholders through dividends and share repurchases. Fitch Ratings revised the company’s outlook to positive, reflecting sustained profitability.Company Outlook
Book value reached a record high of $88.32 per share, indicating potential for insurance operations growth. CEO Steve Spray expressed confidence in the company’s momentum and financial stability. Positive growth outlook across all lines, with a shift towards high net worth clients in personal lines.Bearish Highlights
Operating income declined due to higher catastrophe losses. The combined ratio worsened by 3.0 percentage points from the previous year.Bullish Highlights
Strong premium growth supported by improved pricing precision. Significant increase in cash flow from operations. The value creation ratio for the third quarter was robust at 9.0%.Misses
Despite overall growth, there was a slight year-over-year decline in new business in Florida.Q&A Highlights
No material prior year development in commercial casualty lines, but an increase in incurred losses. Continued growth expected in commercial lines, particularly in liability coverage. Active management of the investment portfolio, taking advantage of favorable market conditions. The E&S segment shows growth potential, with a focus on expanding expertise and product offerings. Pricing strategies may lead to further rate increases in personal lines due to loss cost trends. Core loss ratios have increased, reflecting volatility in smaller segments and rising litigation costs.Cincinnati Financial Corporation’s earnings call underscored a period of growth tempered by increased catastrophe losses. The company’s strategic focus on premium growth, investment income, and shareholder returns, coupled with a positive revision from Fitch Ratings, positions it well for future profitability. However, challenges such as increased loss ratios and a cautious approach to underwriting, particularly in high-risk areas like Florida, are part of the complex landscape the company navigates. With a shift towards serving high net worth clients and a commitment to agency relationships, Cincinnati Financial continues to adapt to market conditions while maintaining a conservative stance on reserve management.
InvestingPro Insights
Cincinnati Financial Corporation’s (CINF) recent earnings call paints a picture of resilience and growth, which is further supported by data from InvestingPro. The company’s strong performance is reflected in its market capitalization of $22.11 billion, underlining its significant presence in the insurance sector.
One of the most notable InvestingPro Tips is that CINF has maintained dividend payments for an impressive 52 consecutive years. This remarkable track record aligns with the company’s reported $365 million returned to shareholders through dividends and share repurchases, demonstrating a consistent commitment to shareholder value. The current dividend yield stands at 2.34%, with a dividend growth of 8.0% over the last twelve months, further emphasizing the company’s financial stability and shareholder-friendly policies.
The company’s P/E ratio of 10.27 suggests that CINF may be undervalued relative to its earnings potential, especially considering its strong revenue growth of 13.61% over the last twelve months. This growth is consistent with the reported 17% increase in net written premiums mentioned in the earnings call.
CINF’s profitability is evident from its operating income margin of 25.69% and a return on assets of 6.5%. These figures support the CEO’s confidence in the company’s momentum and financial stability, as expressed during the earnings call.
Interestingly, CINF is trading near its 52-week high, with a price that is 99.39% of its 52-week high value. This, coupled with a strong return of 15.6% over the last three months, indicates positive market sentiment towards the company’s performance and outlook.
For investors seeking more comprehensive analysis, InvestingPro offers additional tips and insights. In fact, there are 11 more InvestingPro Tips available for CINF, providing a deeper understanding of the company’s financial health and market position.
Full transcript – Cincinnati Financial Corporation (CINF) Q3 2024:
Operator: Good day and welcome to the Cincinnati Financial Corporation’s Third Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. All participants will be in a listen-only mode. [Operator Instructions] Please note this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Dennis McDaniel, Investor Relations Officer. Please go ahead.
Dennis McDaniel: Hello. This is Dennis McDaniel at Cincinnati Financial. Thank you for joining us for our third quarter 2024 earnings conference call. Late yesterday, we issued a news release on our results along with our supplemental financial package, including our quarter-end investment portfolio. To find copies of any of these documents, please visit our Investor website, investors.cinfin.com. The shortest route to the information is the quarterly results link in the navigation menu on the far left. On this call, you’ll first hear from President and Chief Executive Officer Steve Spray, and then from Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer Mike Sewell. After their prepared remarks, investors participating on the call may ask questions. At that time, some responses may be made by others in the room with us, including Executive Chairman, Steve Johnston, Chief Investment Officer, Steve Soloria, and Cincinnati Insurance’s Chief Claims Officer, Mark Schambow, and Senior Vice President of Corporate Finance, Teresa Hopper. Please note that some of the matters to be discussed today are forward-looking. These forward-looking statements involve certain risks and uncertainties. With respect to these risks and uncertainties, we direct your attention to our news release and to our various filings with the SEC. Also, a reconciliation of non-GAAP measures was provided with the news release. Statutory accounting data is prepared in accordance with statutory accounting rules, and therefore is not reconciled to GAAP. Now I’ll turn over the call to Steve.
Steve Spray: Good morning, and thank you for joining us today to hear more about our results. We are pleased with our operating performance for the third quarter and first nine months of the year. Several metrics show the progress we are making as we work to provide value to shareholders over time and to deliver outstanding service to agencies and their clients through our dedicated associates. Our combined ratio continues to improve, absent the volatility caused by severe weather. While the devastation Hurricane Helene, in particular, inflicted on communities is heartbreaking, our claims associates are working tirelessly to deliver superior service with empathy and care. We had another quarter of strong premium growth, bolstered by improved pricing precision and risk segmentation by our underwriters on a policy-by-policy basis. In addition to another quarter with nice investment income growth, we executed investment portfolio rebalancing to a larger degree than a typical quarter. We believe that effort will produce both near-term and long-term financial benefits. Net income of $820 million for the third quarter of 2024 included recognition of $645 million on an after-tax basis for the increase in fair value of equity securities still held. Non-GAAP operating income of $224 million for the third quarter was down $37 million from a year ago, driven by an $86 million increase in after-tax catastrophe losses. Our 97.4% third quarter 2024 property casualty combined ratio was 3.0 percentage points higher than the third quarter of last year and included an increase of 3.9 points for catastrophe losses. Our 86.8% accident year 2024 combined ratio before catastrophe losses improved by 0.9 percentage points compared with accident year 2023 for the third quarter and was 0.8 points better on a nine-month basis. We had another quarter of what we believe is profitable premium growth. Agencies representing Cincinnati Insurance again produced a robust amount of new business for us and we continue to appoint agencies where we identify appropriate expansion opportunities. Our underwriters use pricing segmentation by risk plus average price increases along with careful risk selection to help improve our underwriting profitability. Estimated average renewal price increases for the third quarter improved incrementally compared with the second quarter of this year. Commercial lines moved a little higher in this high single-digit percentage range and excess and surplus lines remained in the high single-digit range. Our personal line segment also moved a little higher with personal auto in the low double-digit range and homeowner in the high single-digit range. Our consolidated property casualty net written premiums grew 17% for the quarter, including 16% growth in agency renewal premiums and 30% in new business premiums. As I next comment on performance by insurance segment, I’ll focus on third quarter premium growth and underwriting profitability compared with a year ago. Commercial lines grew net written premiums 11%, with an excellent 93.0% combined ratio that improved by 2.2 percentage points, including 1.3 points from lower catastrophe losses. Personal lines grew net written premiums 29%, including growth in middle market accounts and Cincinnati private client business for our agency’s high network clients. Its combined ratio was 110.3%, 10.4 percentage points higher than last year, driven by an increase of 12.7 points from higher catastrophe losses. Excess and surplus lines grew net written premiums 23%, with a combined ratio of 95.3%. While that’s still quite profitable, it’s less so than a year ago due to higher catastrophe losses and a modest amount of unfavorable reserve development on prior accident years. Both Cincinnati REIT and Cincinnati Global were again profitable and continue to reflect our efforts to diversify risk and further improve income stability. Cincinnati REIT grew third quarter 2024 net written premiums 5% and had a 95.6% combined ratio, bringing its nine-month combined ratio to a very profitable 81.5%. The $38 million of catastrophe losses Cincinnati REIT reported for the quarter included approximately $19 million for Hurricane Helene. Cincinnati Global’s combined ratio was an outstanding 66.6% for the third quarter, with 12% growth in net written premiums. Our life insurance subsidiary had another profitable quarter, including net income of $20 million and term life insurance earned premium growth of 4%. Before I close my prepared remarks, I’d like to briefly comment on the estimated effects of Hurricane Milton on fourth quarter results. While it is still early, we estimate our pre-tax incurred losses will total between $75 million and $125 million, net of any applicable reinsurance recoveries. Catastrophe losses for direct business written by the Cincinnati Insurance Company represents less than $15 million of that estimate while Cincinnati REIT represents more than half. Now, I’ll conclude as usual with our primary measure of long-term financial performance, the value creation ratio. Our third quarter 2024 VCR was 9.0%, bringing the nine-month total to an excellent 17.8%. Net income before investment gains or losses for the quarter contributed 1.7%, higher overall valuation of our investment portfolio and other items contributed 7.3%. Next, Chief Financial Officer Mike Sewell will highlight some additional aspects of our financial performance.
Mike Sewell: Thank you, Steve, and thanks to all of you for joining us today. Investment income had another round of strong growth, up 15% for the third quarter of ‘24, compared with the same quarter in ‘23. Dividend income was down 1%, reflecting $959 million of net sales of equity securities during the third quarter, primarily from some portfolio rebalancing through trimming or exiting positions of seven common stocks among our 63 holdings at the beginning of the quarter. As Steve mentioned in our news release, this does not represent a change in our investment approach of holding a significant amount of equities as we work to balance near-term income generation with long-term book value growth. The large cash balance generated during the third quarter has been reduced and should continue to decline with additional bond purchases during the remainder of the year. Bond interest income grew 21% for the third quarter of this year. Net purchases of fixed maturity securities totaled $672 million for the quarter and $1.4 billion for the first nine months of the year. The third quarter pre-tax average yield of 4.8% for the fixed maturity portfolio was up 36 basis points compared with last year. The average pre-tax yield for the total of purchased taxable and tax-exempt bonds during the third quarter of this year was 5.53%. Valuation changes in aggregate for the third quarter were favorable for both our equity portfolio and our bond portfolio. Before tax effects, the net gain was $841 million for the equity portfolio and $411 million for the bond portfolio. At the end of the third quarter, the total investment portfolio net appreciated value was approximately $7.3 billion. The equity portfolio was in a net gain position of $7.5 billion, while the fixed maturity portfolio was in a net loss position of $203 million. Cash flow, in addition to higher bond yields, again, boosted investment income growth. Cash flow from operating activities for the first nine months of 2024 reached $2 billion, up 36% from a year ago. I’ll briefly comment on expense management and our efforts to balance expense control with strategic business investments. The third quarter 2024 property casualty underlying expense ratio decrease of 0.2 percentage points was largely due to lower levels of profit sharing commissions for agencies. Moving on to loss reserves, our approach remains consistent and aims for net amounts in the upper half of the actuarially estimated range of net loss and loss expense reserves. As we do each quarter, we consider new information, such as paid losses and case reserves. Then we updated estimated ultimate losses and loss expenses by accident year and line of business. For the first nine months of 2024, our net addition to property casualty loss and loss expense reserves was $963 million, including $917 million for the IB&R portion. During the third quarter, we experienced $71 million of property casualty net favorable reserve development on prior accident years that benefited the combined ratio by 3.2 percentage points. For commercial casualty line of business, there was no material reserve development for any prior accident year during the quarter. On an all lines basis by accident year, net reserve development for the first nine months of ‘24 included favorable $326 million for ‘23, favorable $55 million for ‘22, favorable $10 million for ‘21, and an unfavorable $180 million in aggregate for accident years prior to ‘21. My final comments pertain to capital management. During the first nine months of 2024, we returned capital to shareholders through $365 million of dividends paid and nearly 1.1 million shares repurchased at an average price of approximately $112 per share. Earlier this month, another dividend was paid, returning another $120 million or so to shareholders. That payment completed the company’s 64th consecutive year of increasing shareholder dividends, a streak we believe is matched by only seven other publicly traded companies based in the United States. We believe our financial flexibility and our financial strength are both in stellar condition. Parent company cash and marketable securities at quarter end exceeded $5 billion. Debt to total capital remained under 10%. And our quarter end book value was at a record high, $88.32 per share with nearly $14 billion of GAAP consolidated shareholders equity providing plenty of capacity for profitable growth of our insurance operations. Now I’ll turn the call back over to Steve.
Steve Spray: Thanks, Mike. The momentum we have right now is powerful. As we put the finishing touches on department plans for next year, you can feel the excitement and see the opportunities that lie ahead in all corners of the company. Agents Echo that feeling as they comment on their appreciation for our ability to deliver stability, consistency, and financial strength, giving them a first-class carrier to support their most well-managed accounts. Last week, Fitch Ratings Agency agreed, affirming our current financial strength ratings and revising our outlook to positive from stable based on our sustained track record of profitability and proven financial strength. As a reminder, with Mike and me today are Steve Johnston, Steve Soloria, Mark Schambow, and Teresa Hopper. Betsy, please open the call for questions.
Operator: We will now begin the question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] The first question today comes from Michael Phillips with Oppenheimer. Please go ahead.
Michael Phillips: Thanks. Michael Phillips from Oppenheimer. I appreciate it. Thanks for the time, and good morning, everybody. I want to start with the commercial casualty. Steve, you mentioned no material favorable PYB there. Last quarter, you had a little bit, and the recent action years are favorable. I say as a backdrop, because if you look at the current action year there, it’s up a bit. In commercial casualty, it’s up almost 6 points and I kind of want to drill into what’s driving that? You say in the Q that for commercial lines total, there’s more IBNR. It looks like that might be the case for some other lines, but if we can kind of do back of the envelope, the higher loss pick for commercial casualty, it seems like it might be more paid activity. I want to see if you can confirm that and maybe what else might be going on in commercial casualty? Thank you.
Steve Spray: Yes, thanks, Mike. Mike Sewell is going to go ahead and tackle this, and then I may add some commentary at the end.
Mike Sewell: No, I appreciate it, and thanks for the question. So, yes, as you already noted, there was no prior accident year that had a material development during this quarter. So, recent quarters, we’ve added to or we’ve slowed the release of IBNR reserves as we’ve reacted to lost payments and case reserve increases that were higher than expected for some accident years related to the commercial casualty line. There has been some higher case incurred losses that were spread across several accident years that was more severity than frequency. But, as you’re probably looking at page 9 of the supplement and you’re seeing the loss pick being elevated a little bit, it’s really, Mike, it’s just related to prudent case reserves or prudent reserves that we’re adding. There’s a lot of uncertainty there. You’re seeing a lot of things in the industry that’s out there. If I were to take a look at the nine-month compared to nine-month for that loss pick, you’re really only about two full points higher. We are adding to the IBNR you’ve seen that on page 11 of the supplement, and you’ll see that the commercial casualty is the largest area that we’re adding IBNR. So, that’s probably a lot of information, but, yes, that’s the background. Thank you.
Michael Phillips: Okay, thanks. I guess if we stick with that line for a second, Steve, your opening comments didn’t seem like there was much of a change in commentary on renewed price changes, and yet this line saw a pretty good jump in premium growth. I’m so curious what’s driving that and how we should think about the commercial casualty going forward with top-line growth?
Steve Spray: Yes, I think, yes, Mike, the pricing there just remains strong. Everything that Mike said, I’d probably focus from the pricing standpoint, just the uncertainty around social inflation, legal system abuse, however you want to title that, but just uncertainty in general. I think the key with us, and I always go back to this, one, we’re a package writer. We don’t write monoline business. And two, our underwriters, whether they’re in the field or here in headquarters, are just tackling these accounts risk by risk. One by one, they’re using the art of underwriting that we’ve all grown up with, and then the science. I think we’re kind of at a nice spot intersection there. Just the way we can segment our book with sophisticated pricing tools, I think there’s runway and rate in all lines of business and commercial, may be minus workers’ compensation, but general liability and umbrella, certainly I think there’s runway for more rate there. And currently, as we disclosed, we’re getting high single digits in the casualty, but again, that’s that point estimate. You really have to look at the — just kind of the — that average doesn’t tell the whole story. You got to look at the whole book, and there’s a fair amount of our book that we would consider price adequate, and then in various levels and tranches where we need more rate.
Michael Phillips: Okay. Thank you. I’ll follow up in a bit. Thanks so much.
Operator: The next question comes from Mike Zaremski with BMO. Please go ahead.
Michael Zaremski: Okay. Thanks. I guess this is a quick follow-up to the last question and answer on playing offense in commercial casualty, and I could see commercial auto, too. Is it my understanding correctly that you’re clearly playing more offense and feel better even despite the loss ratio in those two lines being booked at not ideal levels because you’re just being more conservative in your picks like you have historically, and so as the years unfold, hopefully that conservatism comes back in a good guy through reserve releases over time? Am I thinking about it correctly?
Steve Spray: Yes. Mike, let me — this is Steve again. Let me try that and then give me a follow-up. First of all, overarching, we feel good about our pricing. Obviously, where we’re focused is on prospective pricing or rating periods. So we feel good about our pricing. We feel good about team that’s executing on that as well. And we look at that state by state and like I said, risk by risk, by line of business. I would say we’re definitely playing offense. We’ve got $13.8 billion of GAAP equity now supporting a little more than $9 billion of premium. I think that puts us in an enviable position. We — as you know, our deep relationships with our agents we are regularly communicating with them. And I can tell you that the feedback we get from them is one of the appreciation for our consistency, our stability, our financial strength. We’re playing offense, I think, in all segments and all lines of business. We’ve — I talk about it a lot when we have these one-on-one investor meetings as well, but we’ve got that proven track record that proven business model, our field focused, the way we handle claims, our agency focus. But over the last 12, 13 years, the biggest improvement that has really driven our confidence and playing offense is that pricing sophistication and segmentation that we are — we’ve been executing on for a decade plus. But that, along with the team that puts those predictive models in play, that just gives me a tremendous amount of confidence in everything we’re doing and being able to grow through all market cycles. In Personal Lines, we’re — I’ve talked about this in the past, too. I think we’re in a once in a lifetime, once in a generation, however you’d like to put it, you could call it hard market, I look at it as a market opportunity. And we — our ex cat there continues to improve. We’re not just — that doesn’t make us happy. We got to pay cat dollars with real money. Commercial lines — or excuse me, personal lines last year had 100.4 combined. The four years prior to that, in a rising cat environment had an all-in underwriting profit. So just feel good about, again, all lines of business and all segments. I hope that answers it.
Michael Zaremski: Yes. Honestly, if you’re booking a much better loss ratio in some of those lines, may be the stock would be up today, but I don’t know how much people — would some people would believe in it. So it seems like you are being conservative, makes sense. I guess just switching gears. So on the large sell-down on the investment portfolio, I think what you’re saying is just no real change there due to Steve’s new leadership? Or you’re just kind of saying, if we just do the math on equities as a percentage of shareholders’ equity XOCI, we’re running well above historic levels. So you’re trimming. And is that the right way to think about it? And will you continue to trim to get to a lower ratio?
Steve Spray: Mike, I’ll tackle the first part of that. I can tell you that there is absolutely no change in our philosophy because of a new CEO. But I’ll let Steve Soloria kind of dive into the details there for you.
Steve Soloria: Mike, this is Steve Soloria. Again, I would agree with what you said. We view it as just standard prudent portfolio management. We were trying to be opportunistic. We will periodically trim or prune names in the portfolio for a variety of reasons, managing within our investment policy statement, evaluating stocks on a fundamental basis. And we felt that with that in mind, selling into a strong equity market on a couple of names that had run a bit was, again, opportunistic. And as we looked at that, we started to look at where to invest those funds. Where was the best opportunity? Was it rolling back into a hot market or maybe taking advantage of interest rates that this — the window may be closing on higher rates. So we started to roll into those, again, opportunistically. And as we looked at that, we were looking at tax implications and what booking gains was going to do for us and trying to offset some of those losses. So it was kind of a perfect storm of several different factors that kind of drove us to the scale of where we were. But the typical activity is stuff that we do on a quarterly basis anyway. So we feel we’ll revert back to a more normalized activity level.
Michael Zaremski: Okay. That’s helpful, Steve. And may be lastly, switching to the access and surplus lines segment. Just focusing specifically on the top line growth acceleration trend in recent quarters. I know there’s historically been plenty of top line volatility in this segment, too, and it’s a smaller segment, but is there a trend line we should be thinking of or something changing? Or I’m not saying we’re going to run rate 23% top line growth. But I’m just curious if there’s something underlying that we should be appreciating? Thanks.
Steve Spray: Yes. Thanks, Mike. Yes, nothing changing there. We’re about 90% casualty in our E&S space. You can get some inherent variability or volatility in E&S, just in general, as you mentioned, as you know, both with premium and with losses. If you lose a larger account or so that will put pressure quarter-to-quarter on that net written premium. But I would sum it up to you this way is that we’re working on 12 years, again, of underwriting profit in our E&S company customary to the way we look at reserving throughout the entire company, we take prudent approach. We equipped to act when we see things. And as far as the growth goes, I would be consistent there as well. I think we’re in a — definitely in a favorable environment, but I think we can grow our E&S company through all environments. I think we’re still just scratching the surface with what we can do from an excess and surplus line standpoint.
Michael Zaremski: Is it worth elaborating on why do you think you discretion the surface? Is it just you, over time, get more data and can expand your underwriting appetite or hiring more folks or trying to understand that thing.
Steve Spray: Yes. I think — yes, yes, that’s a good follow-up. I think it’s all of the above. We continue to expand our expertise. We continue to expand the team. We continue to expand the products that we look at, we’re adding more agencies across the entire company that favorably impacts our E&S company as well. So — and when we look at the business that our agents write the amount of business that they placed in the E&S space, we can just see tremendous opportunity. And I think our business model the fact that we deal directly with the retail agents. We’ve got our own in-house brokerage. We can return more of the compensation directly to our agents. We have direct bill we handle claims with our own people. You get the point that I just think is an attractive model that we can continue to just expand.
Operator: The next question comes from Gregory Peters with Raymond James. Please go ahead.
Gregory Peters: Good morning, everyone. So kind of, I guess, building a little bit on Mike’s question, but more importantly, some comments that you made talking about the generational opportunities for growth, I think, in personal lines. Can you give us some perspective on your view on what used to be when you’re throwing all the new business on the “new business penalty” and attended both personal lines and commercial lines? Can you give us a sense of how the profile business has changed over the last couple of years? Or is it a geographic change or just some color on how the company is changing as it grows.
Steve Spray: Yes. I think it’s — I think, yes, that book of business has evolved for sure. 10 years ago, we were 90%, what we would call middle-market personal lines. that now, that book has grown considerably, as you can see, and we’re just under 60%, which would be considered private client or high net worth I think the reason I say once in the lifetime is just there’s just so many macro things going on there, Greg, both in the middle market space, primarily around severe convective storm, I’d say, in the Midwest. Inflation hit that pretty hard as well. The traditional competitors that we had in that marketplace just seem to be disrupted. Our balance sheet strength allowed us to take advantage of that opportunity. I think one of the big strengths we have in personal lines today, and I’ll talk about it a lot, is that we — and this is our agents telling this. I think we are considered a premier market, both in the high net worth or private client and in middle market. One of the advantages to us is, obviously, with deep agency relationships, we can be a solution or being more important to each of them with being able to handle middle market and the high net worth I think, in a first-class way. Financially, it’s giving us some diversification both by a line of business and geographically. High net worth or private client is typically it’s property driven, less so auto, middle market, the exact opposite, auto driven more or less so on the home high net worth tends to be on the coast. We write it everywhere, but it tends to be coastal, middle market, more in the middle of the country. So we just think we’re getting a nice mix and diversification across that entire segment. Now on the pricing, yes, I think it’s the same confidence that I talked about with Mike on commercial lines. It’s just we’ve got an experienced team with a ton of expertise in building these models across the entire business. New business penalty, I don’t believe in a new business penalty, I think you’ve got to write every risk at the right rate on a risk-adjusted basis. And I’m just confident in where our pricing is going on a prospective basis. I hope that answers.
Gregory Peters: Yes, it does. It does. I mean one of the — you were mentioning the opportunities with severe convective storms. You’re talking about E&S. I just have this, I guess, this natural pivot that I think you’re growing your exposures like in California, Texas and Florida, may be a little bit in the Northeast versus other areas of the country. But I guess that’s what I was kind of thinking about because you talked about your losses to Milton, and it doesn’t seem to be as large as, I guess, it could have potentially been but maybe your exposures are running in different areas of the state in Florida?
Steve Spray: Yes. Our Florida new business in Personal Lines is down a little over $4 million year-over-year. But let me make sure I’m clear on that as well. It’s not just the rate that we’re driving, particularly in the middle market severe convective storm exposed property. Terms and conditions are probably equally as important there, whether it be wind inhale deductibles, ACV or roof schedules. And then when you speak specifically to E&S on the personal line side, Greg that is predominantly right now for us. That’s California home. We’ve got our E&S capability up and running in 10-plus states, most of those coastal. But as an example, even in Florida, we’re writing new business on an E&S basis. But we just haven’t seen that — we feel that the pricing the terms and conditions that we can get are as attractive as we would need. So we’ll continue to be conservative there.
Gregory Peters: Fair enough. I just pivot to another company question on the agents. I view them as a critical strength of your company, the agent relationships. Can you talk to us as you look out to next year, what you think the growth of the agency force might look like or the appointments that you make in ’25? Or do you have a target? Or how do you sort of approach that, please?
Steve Spray: Yes. We’re not making public. Greg, our goal for agencies for next year. What I can tell you is that we are committed to expanding that distribution. We think there’s plenty of opportunity without “diluting the franchise”. We will not — this is kind of my thought, and this is the direction we’re heading is we will not dilute the franchise by the number of agencies we appoint. What we have to focus on is making sure that we continue to do business with the most professional, and candidly, those who are most aligned just with the way we do business, locally fast, fair, handling business at the local level. You’re right. The agency relationships are key to everything we do. I think it’s our differentiator. It’s something that we’re going to continue to stay focused on doing business locally is a big piece of that. But you can expect us to continue to expand the distribution I would say, roughly at a clip that you’ve seen us this year and over the last couple of years.
Gregory Peters: Fair enough. Thank you for answering my questions.
Steve Spray: Yes, absolutely. Thank you for the questions.
Operator: The next question comes from Jing Li with KBW. Please go ahead.
Jing Li: Hi. Thank you for taking my questions. I just have a question on E&S unfavorable development. I know it’s pretty small, but I appreciate if you can add some colors on that.
Steve Spray: Jing, yes, the — I think you were referring to the unfavorable development on the E&S casualty. And I would just say for you there. It’s just that we saw case incurred losses that are emerging at amounts higher than we expected. Like I mentioned earlier, that business — that book of business is 90% casualty, it’s E&S. So it’s got inherent volatility in it, inherent variability, but we’ve got a great track record of profitability in our E&S company. And we’ll just continue to stay prudent like we always have company-wide with the reserves. So that’s about all I’d have to add on unfavorable in the quarter for E&S.
Jing Li: Got it. Thank you. I have a follow-up on the personal auto and personal line. So the rate accelerated from high single digit to low double digit. Just curious about your view to reach rate adequacy. Do you think that you still need double digit for 2025 and beyond?
Steve Spray: Yes. I wouldn’t necessarily be able to give you, Jing the kind of run rate. All I can tell you is that we’ve still got a lot of rate earning into the book. And I think just with the — all the things that we’ve talked about here, just with the changing weather patterns, I think there’s still runway for rate across the entire personal lines book. We — and I would say this, again, the key for us is looking at it prospectively, and we do feel on a prospective basis that our rates in personal lines are ahead of loss cost trends.
Jing Li: Got it. Thank you.
Operator: [Operator Instructions]. The next question comes from Grace Carter with Bank of America. Please go ahead.
Grace Carter: Hi, everyone. I realize these are smaller segments, but the core loss ratio ticked up quite a bit versus recent history in both other commercial and other personal. So I was hoping that you could kind of give us an update on what you’re seeing there? And if there’s any sort of intra-year movement in there? And if it’s just kind of related to some of the comments you’ve heard across the industry on pressure on long tail lines? Thank you.
Steve Spray: Yes, Grace, thank you. You alluded to it. They’re smaller premiums there. You’re going to have — I think it’s just a lot of inherent variability or volatility in those lines. As an example, in personal lines, it could be a little watercraft that you’re seeing there in our book. But we do a deep dive on every line of business on a regular basis. And there’s nothing there that points us in the direction of anything to be concerned about as far as geographic or agency or line of business. So I think that’s about all I’d have to add on that for you, Grace.
Grace Carter: Okay. Thank you. And I guess I had another question on commercial casualty. I mean I think usually, you all have said that historically, you see the core loss ratio higher in core 1 or in quarter — in the first quarter relative to the last three quarters of the year, just given higher uncertainty from the newness of the accident year I guess I’m just kind of trying to understand better like what exactly you all saw this quarter that resulted in Q3 kind of moving above Q1 and just kind of trying to think about if maybe a year-to-date number is the best way to think about sort of where we should see that trending going forward? Or just kind of any sort of color you can give on whether or not the Q3 level might be kind of the new run rate? Thank you.
Steve Spray: Yes, Grace, you’re absolutely right. We — typically, every quarter that we get more data, more information, you just refine those picks even more. I think what you’ve got going on and commercial casualty is just the macro things that Mike alluded to earlier litigation costs up. The number of claims that are turning into litigation, social inflation, the legal system abuse, third-party litigation funding. It’s all just really kind of in that line of business, industry-wide, I think, a little upside down. So I think that’s why you’re seeing that in the third quarter, it’s just — we’re really trying to be prudent on that line of business just because the amount of uncertainty there has stayed pretty consistent. So as you know, we’ve got 30-plus years of favorable development. And we do that through a consistent process, consistent people and acting quickly when we see things that just cause us concern. But there’s nothing specific in that third quarter other than, I would say, macro uncertainty.
Grace Carter: Thank you.
Operator: This concludes our question-and-answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Steve Spray for any closing remarks.
Steve Spray: Well, thank you all for joining us today. We look forward to speaking with you again on the fourth quarter call. I hope everybody has a nice weekend.
Operator: The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today’s presentation. You may now disconnect.
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