J. Powell Brown
Thanks, Deedee. Good morning, everyone, and welcome to our second quarter earnings call. Before we get into the results for the quarter, we wanted to provide an update on the acquisition of RSC Topco, or as we refer to it, Accession. Post the announcement, John Mina, myself and a number of other senior leaders met with many of the teammates from Accession and the feedback has been positive. We're very excited about our expanded capabilities and how we can leverage them for the benefit of our customers. From a regulatory standpoint, we have substantially all approvals and anticipate an 8/1 close. From a financing standpoint, we completed a very successful follow-on equity issuance and a multi-tranche bond issuance that were both significantly oversubscribed. The teams have been working on our integration plans and efforts are well underway to bring our 2 great companies together. Now let's transition to the results. I'll provide some high-level comments regarding our performance, along with updates on the insurance market and the M&A landscape. Then Andy will discuss our financial performance in more detail. Lastly, I'll wrap up with some closing thoughts before we open it up for Q&A. I'm on Slide #4. For the second quarter, we delivered $1.3 billion of revenue, growing 9.1% in total and 3.6% organically as compared to the same period in the prior year. Our adjusted EBITDAC margin improved by 100 basis points to 36.7% and our adjusted earnings per share grew over 10% to $1.03. On the M&A front, we completed 15 acquisitions with estimated annual revenues of $22 million. I'm on Slide 5. At a macroeconomic level, things have not changed substantially. Customer outlook and confidence seem to be fairly similar to the first quarter. Generally, customers are cautiously optimistic that the uncertainties of tariffs and other matters will resolve in a favorable manner. We continue to see many customers investing in their businesses, while some customers are delaying investment decisions until they have a better view on growth trajectory. With continued economic and job expansion, we think some customers will more than likely only be able to delay their investment decisions for so long. Overall, we believe the economy is still in a good place. From an insurance pricing standpoint, rates for most lines moderated even further in the second quarter and in some cases, more than we expected. The outliers were auto, casualty and cat property. We're now seeing classic market softening signs for certain lines of business, where carriers can have a material difference in quoted rates for renewal business versus new business on similar insured assets. Pricing for U.S. employee benefits was similar to prior quarters as medical costs are up 6% to 8% and pharmacy costs are generally up over 10%. We do not expect this trend to slow over the coming quarters, which will continue to drive demand for our consulting businesses. Rates in the admitted P&C market continue to moderate down. While rates were up 1% to 5% versus the prior year. This is in comparison to rate increases of 2% to 7% in the first quarter of '25 and rate increases of 5% to 10% in the second quarter of last year. The downward trend on workers' compensation rates remained in most states and were flat to down 5%. For non-cat property, we're seeing a general softening of rates, which were down 5% to up 5%. It totally depends on the loss experience. For casualty, we're seeing rate increases of 5% to 10% for primary and excess layers and believe this trend will continue over the coming quarters. For Professional Liability, rates were down 5% to up 5% as compared to last year. Shifting to E&S property market. In the first quarter, rates were generally down 10% to 20%. The trend continued throughout the second quarter with rates down 15% to 30%. We saw more pressure on rates at the end of the quarter. Consistent with previous quarters and the softening cycle, there continues to be exceptions to the ranges. With the decline in admitted rates, customers are more times than not pocketing the savings, while we saw certain non-admitted customers consider higher limits or deductible buydowns, which partially offset the premium decline related to the changes in rates. On an M&A front, we had another good quarter. On a year- to-date basis, we've acquired 29 companies with annual revenues of approximately $60 million. I'm on Slide 6. Let's transition to the performance of our 3 segments for the quarter. Retail delivered organic growth of 3% with the results impacted by slowing admitted and cat property rates and lower new business. Regarding new business, we continue to have a good pipeline and can have fluctuations by quarter. Programs delivered 4.6% organic growth for the quarter. We had several programs that performed well, including our lender-placed business. Our organic growth was impacted by the slowing of our commercial cat programs. We saw increased downward pressure on rates late in the quarter. Brokerage delivered organic revenue growth of 3.9%. This performance was driven by growth across most lines of business with the growth partially offset by rate declines and the seasonality of property renewals. From an open brokerage standpoint, we had a good quarter even with the decline in property rates. For both binding and personal lines, we're seeing increased competition from other markets. Professional Liability rates continue to decline during the quarter for D&O and EPL. Now I'll turn it over to Andy to get into more details regarding our financial results.