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Financial Services - Insurance - Specialty - NASDAQ - BM
$ 4.63
-2.32 %
$ 175 M
Market Cap
2.48
P/E
EARNINGS CALL TRANSCRIPT
EARNINGS CALL TRANSCRIPT 2016 - Q4
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Executives

Kevin Copeland - Head of Investor Relations Adam Abram - Chairman of the Board, Chief Executive Officer Bob Myron - President, Chief Operating Officer, Director Sarah Doran - Chief Financial Officer.

Analysts

Charles Sebaski - BMO Capital Markets Randy Binner - FBR Mark Hughes - SunTrust Meyer Shields - KBW.

Operator

Good day ladies and gentlemen and welcome to James River Group Holdings Q4 2016 earnings conference call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. Later we will conduct a question-and-answer session and instructions will be given at that time. [Operator Instructions]. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded.

I would now like to introduce Head of Investor Relations, Mr. Kevin Copeland. Please go ahead, sir..

Kevin Copeland

Thank you Andrew. Good morning everyone and welcome to the James River Group fourth quarter 2016 earnings conference call. During the call, we will be making forward-looking statements.

These statements are based on current beliefs, intentions, expectations and assumptions that are subject to various risks and uncertainties, which may cause actual results to differ materially.

For a discussion of such risks and uncertainties, please see the cautionary language regarding forward-looking statements in yesterday's earnings release and the Risk Factor section of our most recent Form 10-K, Form 10-Qs and other reports and filings we make with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

We do not undertake any duty to update any forward-looking statements. I will now turn the call over to Adam Abram, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of James River Group..

Adam Abram

Thank you Kevin. Bob Myron, our President and Chief Operating Officer and Sarah Doran, who recently joined us as our Chief Financial Officer and I are all here together. And I want to welcome Sarah and to say how glad we are to have her take a prominent role in directing our company.

And welcome also to everyone who is on this call live or taking time to listen to the recorded version. December marked the end of our second year as a publicly traded company and we really do appreciate your contingent interest in our results.

As a direct result of the efforts of people all around our company, we enjoyed a very profitable fourth quarter and the full year for 2016. I think the headlines in our press release, which many of you may have seen, provide a good summary of the value our company delivered to shareholders this quarter and for the year.

We had record annual net income. We enjoyed a 24.7% growth in the fourth quarter from our very profitable E&S segment and 20.1% for the full year. We have doubled gross fee income from the prior year and we think that affirms our strategy of growing fee income is working.

We enjoyed a 2.3% reduction in our group-wide expense ratio, demonstrating the increasing expense advantage we have when compared to many of our excellent competitors.

We earned a 14.6% operating return on tangible equity for the full year and if we add it back to dividends that we pay, we calculate it at 17.2% growth in tangible book value for the year.

We paid $66.3 million in regular and special dividends to shareholders and this represented a 6.5% yield on the weighted average trading price of our stock over the year.

As always, the metric we pay most attention to is our underwriting profitability and you may already have noticed that we have reported a group-wide combined ratio of 94.3% for 2016 and 92% for the fourth quarter. This may be an appropriate moment to confirm our guidance.

We expect to earn a 12% or better return on tangible equity and to write to a combined ratio of between 92% and 95%. The value proposition we are working to deliver for our shareholders is that we are highly experienced underwriters who seek to deliver consistent underwriting profits.

We grow by seeking opportunities and we shrink when necessary to preserve underwriting profitability. We underwrite accounts. We understand the market prices we believe provides a margin appropriate for the risk we take when we promise coverage to policyholders.

We are actively exploring new risks to broaden our opportunities for growth and we are streamlined this business or risk structure, we believe introduce substantial volatility in our book. We are low volatility underwriters.

And the capital markets underpinning the insurance and reinsurance world have changed substantially over the past many years and alternative capital sources play a larger role than ever in addressing risk in the United States where we are focused and around the world.

We are actively working to develop strong and mutually beneficial relationships with these new capital sources and to deliver value to them in return for earning fees that benefit our shareholders by boosting our return on shareholder equity. And in part, our growth in fee income reflects that emphasis on our part.

Turning for a second to market conditions, before we get to your questions. Our E&S segment continues to see record number of submissions. We were up 12.8% for the year and we continue, as I mentioned before, to grow very nicely in this profitable area. Rates for the year and for the fourth quarter in the E&S segment were essentially flat.

They were down 0.3% for the year. But that's a perfectly satisfactory state of affairs for a segment that continues to produce very good underwriting ratios. During the fourth quarter, we were able to grow in commercial auto, in environmental, in excess casualty, in excess property and sports and entertainment within the E&S segment.

And in keeping with our focus on underwriting profitability, we wrote less premiums in manufacturers and contractors, energy, medical professionals and professional liability. I just like to salute the leadership and the entire team of our E&S division for their terrific underwriting in 2016.

In our specialty admitted segment, we managed to double gross written premiums for the year from $91 million in 2015 to $182 million in 2016. However, in keeping with our focus on building partnerships with other capital providers, the specialty admitted segment retained only 30% of the written premium.

Fee income in this segment almost tripled in the fourth quarter compared to a year ago and more than doubled for the year. This has been an area of focus for us in our specialty admitted segment and the management and team there is absolutely delivering on this goal and we salute them too.

It's worth noting that the directly written workers' compensation book we have in this division also grew and achieved some of the best risk adjusted rates we have seen in a long time in that segment during the fourth quarter of 2016.

Our casualty reinsurance segment essentially broke even on an underwriting basis for the year and for the quarter, reporting 100.1% combined ratio for the year and 101.8% combined ratio for the quarter.

I suspect many listeners on this call are aware that the environment for casualty reinsurance is tough but we think these are reasonable results in this environment. Our book continues to be insulated from volatility because we write no property.

The book is overwhelmingly pro rata casualty, 94% pro rata casualty and we take modest participations on accounts where the underlying policy limits are generally $1 million per recurrence risks.

The existence of our reinsurance segment underpins our corporate structure and you may have already noticed that our estimated group-wide tax rate for 2016 is 6.1%. We believe the book that the management team has put together here is a very solid low volatility book of casualty reinsurance well underwritten. Turning quickly to investments.

We were pleased with the performance of our investment portfolio for the quarter and the year.

Our strategy is to invest the vast majority of our portfolio in traditional high quality government and corporate bonds and then to supplement returns by investing a small amount of our total corporates in alternative assets where we expect to earn outsized returns and add meaningfully to our overall investment returns.

Our strategy worked well this quarter and we saw high returns and profits from renewable energy investments and all the other alternatives also made a meaningful contribution to our overall investment returns.

So we entered 2017 with confidence about our underwriting, bolstered by the knowledge that we began with a solid balance sheet, appreciative of our shareholders for support and support of all of you on this phone, grateful for the excellence and thoughtful work that all of our colleagues throughout the company do and we are looking forward to another good year together.

With that, let me open the floor to questions..

Operator

[Operator Instructions]. And I am showing our first question comes from the line of Charles Sebaski with BMO Capital Markets. Your line is now open..

Charles Sebaski

Thank you. Good morning..

Adam Abram

Good morning Charles..

Charles Sebaski

So I guess the first question I have is, any update on your share in economy, new economy business not any particular lines, just if there's been growth or how much is that contributing to E&S growth and has there been any expansion on the client base?.

Adam Abram

Well, I think in general, we all know, everybody knows that the new economy or capital goods sharing part of the economy continues to grow. We now have, I think, 49 or 50 total accounts that fall under this category, most of them in commercial auto and yes, we see good growth among many of those clients.

For us, we think that's really a very, very interesting business. It's profitable business. To the extent that it's commercial auto business, it tends to have a higher current year.

We posted at a higher accident year loss ratio and you may see some escalation in the escalated or forecast or booked current accident year loss ratio on the E&S division where most of that business is written. It's just reflective of the higher loss ratios typically in the commercial auto business.

That's offset by lower expense ratios associated with that business. And by the way, across those lines and for all those accounts, we reserve them with essentially the same discipline that we use for our entire book of business and try to post it in a cautious and current accident year and then develop.

We have also developed an awful lot of expertise in the claims handling side of this business. And I think that's been a key for us being able to develop some of these accounts. But it's a growing area of the economy and it grows for us and we are very interested in that business. We think it's fascinating..

Charles Sebaski

Excellent. I guess then any announcement in general, how is the competition? Or I mean, how is the competitive market? I am just curious if there's been any changes over the last quarter, the back half of the year, either with standard markets or new competitors.

Or how this would be overall for competitive environment across the lines is looking?.

Adam Abram

Yes. Well, I would characterize it has competitive, but highly rational. Absolutely, there are number of carriers that are there. It is good, healthy competition in that business for the year. I think I said that the rates were down for the year 0.3%. Actually in the fourth quarter, rates were slightly up. We see lots of opportunities.

We have never ever had more submissions in our E&S division than we have today. This is the period of highest submission activity we have ever seen. So we think there's plenty of opportunity there. There is competition. Remember that we are in the smaller end of this market, small account market and we think there is really good opportunity there.

And we think the margins are holding up quite nicely.

Bob, if you want to add to that?.

Bob Myron

Just let me add that similar to what we have said in the past, there is more competition in the larger accounts space. And for us, that's six figure accounts and up. That's definitely more competitive space than where our average premium is.

But I would just echo that in the excess and surplus lines space and also in the specialty admitted small accounts space, the competition is definitely rational and we are putting business on the books at, what we think are, perfectly acceptable margins..

Charles Sebaski

All right..

Bob Myron

And then the last piece of that as we continue to see benign underlying loss trends..

Adam Abram

One final thought about that is, if there is a stimulus program, a meaningful stimulus program in the United States, that will almost certainly benefit the E&S business and particularly the small to medium size account sector where we write. That will do very well in the context of economic stimulus..

Charles Sebaski

Excellent, I guess then just one final kind of numbers based question. Looking out over this year, just trying to get a sense on the fee income and how that ramps up over this year and the kind of benefit we could think that would have on the expense offset? I know that some of that gets booked through expense offsets.

So thinking about your expense ratio going through 2017, is the fee income a 200 basis point benefit to the expense ratio in 2017? Is that a reasonable way to think about it? I am just trying to --.

Adam Abram

Yes. I don't think we want to give specific guidance on where we think fee income will grow or exactly how much of the input active would have on the expense ratio.

I think that we do however, I think generally, expect it to grow as we continue to, we are getting fee income from a couple of places as you know, from funding of programs in the specialty admitted segment and clearly the gross written premium there is growing quite a bit.

And as the gross written turns into earned, our earned fee income will continue to go up. And then in the servicing of claims, in particular in the commercial auto area, as we continue to get growth there in terms of underlying exposures and miles driven and the like, we would continue to expect fee income to grow in that space as well.

We are just not going to give specific guidance on dollar amounts or necessarily the expense ratio impact..

Charles Sebaski

Okay. Fair enough. Please..

Sarah Doran Chief Financial Officer

Sorry Chuck. I would just point out that for this quarter in particular, it was a 2.2% reduction to the expense ratio to fee income..

Charles Sebaski

Excellent. Thanks a lot the answers and nice quarter..

Adam Abram

Thank you..

Operator

And our next question comes from the line of Randy Binner with FBR. Your line is now open..

Randy Binner

Hi. Good morning. Thanks..

Adam Abram

Hi Randy..

Randy Binner

So I guess I kind of wanted to push a little bit on the guidance and it's good, first, in this environment as you have laid out, but there is a 12% tangible ROE and then 92% to 95% in the combined. You did deliver a higher ROE than that in 2016.

And so I think of James River as being conservative historically, but I just want to kind of flush out, how we should think about the accident year loss pick? You mentioned in your previous comments that there is a relationship with a higher loss ratio and a lower expense ratio in a lot of the new economy commercial auto business you are writing.

But that still doesn't quite get us as well as we thought that that underlying combined might be.

And so, I guess the gist of the question is, is this a business, is this new economy commercial auto, where I am thinking a lot of this growth is coming from, is it going to be like a lower margin higher, but you make up for it in volume kind of business? Or is this a function of a higher accident year loss pick your putting up, because you are growing faster and it's kind of your typical profile conservatism on your initial loss pick?.

Adam Abram

Well, let me just start with guidance. And let me go back to where you started with the question, which was about our guidance. We thought long and hard and we recognize that in 2016 our results exceeded the guidance that we offered.

But really, if you think about a 12% return on tangible equity and 92% to 95% combined ratio, I think that captures two really important signals that we are trying to send to our shareholders. One is a lack of volatility and a real focus on underwriting. And two, 12% is roughly 1,000 basis points above the risk free rate.

And we think that's a signal that we think that our process and our method is going to deliver really good consistent returns. And I think we approach providing guidance in the same way we approach taking other risks. And we are careful to try to articulate goals that we think are ambitious.

But we are also careful not to setup a situation where we would disappoint. So that's the beginning part. Then the second part you asked was, is the new economy business more or less profitable than the rest of our E&S business? We have targets for profitability in that E&S business.

I think the new economy business meets our general targets for that profitability and return on tangible equity. We don't see and overall if you take the entire book of our business, E&S, specialty admitted and casualty reinsurance, I don't think we are anticipating in 2017 a contraction in our underwriting total margins.

But the number we are comfortable putting out there is a 12% or better return on tangible equity and the 92% to 95% combined, which we think is, in the context of the world, an ambitious target. We would love to beat it again. But I think that's an ambitious target and a good signal. It's meant to be a strong signal.

But not without getting over our skis or ahead of ourselves..

Randy Binner

Okay. That's fair.

And then I guess just a follow-up question because this can affect the E, is I just want to confirm there is no signal here on any sort of change in the tolerance, the pay out of special dividend to the extent that your capital levels remain good and remain well supported by the reserve redundancies?.

Adam Abram

Well, our reserved redundancies and our capital levels are two different issues.

But to be fair about it, we are very comfortable with our balance sheet and our reserving methodology relative to the information and good insights we get from the independent actuaries who look at our book remain, their methodology remains consistent and our position relative to the independent work remains consistent. So that's one.

Two, we are careful to announce dividends one at a time. But we do think we are a well capitalized company. And I am not today, as I sit here, concerned about our ability to handle the growth we anticipate or the business we anticipate and our balance sheet is in good shape.

And if you looked at our BCAR scores are rather, you would see that we are well capitalized company.

Anything else, Bob or Sarah on that?.

Bob Myron

I would just reiterate that I wouldn't take that guidance to signal anything with respect to changes in capital management, but would reiterate that we look at dividends a quarter at a time. In particular, a special dividend which we will assess at the end of the year, if anything, to be paid in that respect..

Randy Binner

All right. Thanks a lot for the answers..

Adam Abram

Thank you..

Operator

And our next question comes from the line of Mark Hughes with SunTrust. Your line is now open..

Mark Hughes

Yes. Thank you. Good morning..

Adam Abram

Good morning Mark..

Mark Hughes

Anything in the manufacturers and contractors segment that got your attention this quarter? I think you have said you wrote less business there.

Is that a pricing issue? Are there just less premium to be had there?.

Bob Myron

Well, the first thing I would say about it, Mark, this is Bob Myron, is that we did grow that division for the year. There was a little bit of a reduction in the quarter. I don't think we make up, take a lot from that. It's always been one of our largest divisions. And so I think it's probably just a little bit of a quarterly adjustment, so to speak.

But we did have about 6% growth in that division with it for the course of 2016. So we feel great about where it is and what the prospects are for it going forward.

And I think, as Adam said, that's certainly one of the divisions that could benefit significantly from economic stimulus and the pricing in that division continues to be perfectly reasonable..

Mark Hughes

Great. In the reinsurance, your topline was up in the gross written premium, high-single-digits.

Is the model still to hold that steady? Or is it growing a little bit here?.

Bob Myron

In general, the model is to hold it steady. We had growth, a large percentage growth, in the quarter in that segment. But on a dollar basis, I think it was like $12 million or something. So it wasn't a lot.

I think it was opportunistically just a couple of more treaties than what we were expecting and relative to last year a couple of additional small deals. And I think the team down here is going to just continue to be opportunistic. In this environment, there is certainly not a charge to grow.

But to the extent that small additions that are profitable cross their desk and it fits within our underwriting parameters, it's something that they would certainly do and can do..

Sarah Doran Chief Financial Officer

I think the other thing I would add on that is, there was significant growth over the quarter, but not on a yearly basis. It was really just the timing difference quarter-over-quarter. So that signal is going back..

Mark Hughes

Okay.

Adam, you had mentioned the new capital sources and how you are developing relationships there, helping out presumably your fee business specialty admitted? What's the pipeline look like? Are we going to see another big contract, potentially a merger in 2017?.

Adam Abram

We don't preannounce any of this. But we are very interested in that business and we are talking to a number of really, we think very solid, very thoughtful players in that industry. We hope to develop relationships. We can't predict timing or how it would work out.

But certainly, we think it's an important opportunity for us to fully explore and our management team is really engaged, I think, in productive ways in those conversations. We will see what emerges from it..

Mark Hughes

And then finally, you wrote less medical professional. I think that has been the trend. You pointed out fewer doctors are getting kicked out of their coverage these days.

Did you see any particular transition at year-end? Or is it just more of the same?.

Adam Abram

I think it's a continuation of the trend and it's just a smaller pool to choose from..

Mark Hughes

Thank you..

Operator

[Operator Instructions]. And our next question comes from the line of Meyer Shields with KBW. Your line is now open..

Meyer Shields

Great. Thanks. Good morning. So, one I guess, small question and one big one.

Most commercial auto insurers are reporting unanticipated high frequency and severity trends and recognize that your reserving has proven to be consistently conservative, but how are you reflecting that particular dynamic in the sort of newer economy product lines?.

Adam Abram

Well, we are spending an awful lot of time analyzing the results in granular detail. You are correct to point out that this is a tricky line of business. And this is not like taxis or some of the other more traditional commercial lines of business.

This tends to be new economy ride share where people are using their own vehicles part of the time and then driving for commercial purposes part of the time. There is a fair amount of technology associated in this. And the other thing I would point out to you that, much of the noise in the commercial auto business is associated with trucking.

And this is passenger auto related business. So it's different in that regard. There's a very big distinction between a mid-size car going down the street and a several thousand ton truck barreling down a crowded highway in terms of the consequences of those accidents. So we look at it very carefully. It's a very prescribed book.

We have got a lot of information on it. We spend a lot of time analyzing it. It does have a higher loss ratio, as I mentioned, than the other parts of our liability book in the E&S sector and you could see that's in the rising current period pick in the E&S into that higher pick influences, the overall loss ratio there.

It also enjoys somewhat lower expense ratio, which is an offset because we are really focused on the pre-tax bottom line there. I hope that answers your question..

Meyer Shields

It does. No, it's very helpful. And then sort of a speculative question. Obviously there's a lot of chatter about lower domestic tax rates in the US.

So I guess the two areas that I would ask you to comment on are, one whether that lower tax rate could imply more price competition from, let's say domestic carriers that don't have the same sort of internal quota share arrangements that James River does? And second, whether it's likely to affect the demand for casualty reinsurance to the extent that there is sort of an arbitrage opportunity with a Bermuda-based reinsurer?.

Adam Abram

Well, the first thing I am tempted to say is that we have consulted with General Flynn during the campaign and he assured us that there will be no tax changes. But, well that's not, that was meant as a joke, probably not a very funny one..

Meyer Shields

I liked it..

Adam Abram

Thank you. Look, we view underwriting and every single underwriter in our company, at every single level of our company are judging pricing and loss costs on a pre-tax basis. We are not sitting there making calculations or ascribing cost to capital at the underwriting level on an after-tax basis. This is a pre-tax business from our point of view.

And when we say, we are going to make an underwriting profit, we mean we are going make an underwriting profit pre-tax. If the tax rates go down, that's fine and that will play out where it is. We have done a lot of work on this. I think it's very confusing for anybody to try to predict where the Congress may or may not come out on this.

But I just don't see a tax rate decrease spurring competition because I think most people who are measured on combined ratios are thinking about that as a pre-tax measure..

Meyer Shields

Okay.

Does that flow through, in terms of your perception of the demand for reinsurance that you meet?.

Adam Abram

Yes. I think so. Look, much of our reinsurance, if you look at that book, remember that is 94% pro rata or quota share. Many, many, in fact, I would say probably the majority of our partners in the reinsurance side of the business are seeking surplus relief.

And so we are supporting them in lines of business where they need additional capital and we have respect for their underwriting. So I don't think a reduction in tax rates will dramatically affect that..

Meyer Shields

Okay. Fantastic. Thank you so much..

Adam Abram

Thank you..

Operator

And at this time, I am showing no further questions. So with that said, I would like to turn the conference back over to the Chairman and CEO, Mr. Adam Abram for closing remarks..

Adam Abram

Thank you Andrew and thank you everybody who joined us and a very, very loud and thank you to all of the colleagues and associates all around James River for a wonderful 2016 year and a great set up for 2017. And we look forward to joining our shareholders and others on this call at the end of the first quarter. Thank you..

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for participating in today's conference. This does conclude the program and you may all disconnect. Everyone have a wonderful day..

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