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Financial Services - Insurance - Specialty - NYSE - US
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EARNINGS CALL TRANSCRIPT
EARNINGS CALL TRANSCRIPT 2018 - Q2
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Executives

Craig Barberio – Vice President, Investor Relations Dennis Gilmore – Chief Executive Officer Mark Seaton – Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer.

Analysts

Mark Hughes – SunTrust Mackenzie Aron – Zelman & Associates Bose George – KBW John Campbell – Stephens Incorporated Geoffrey Dunn – Dowling & Partners Eric Robinson – Piper Jaffray Mark DeVries – Barclays.

Operator

Greetings, and welcome to First American Financial Corporation Second Quarter Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A brief question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation.

[Operator Instructions] A copy of today’s press release is available on First American’s website at www.firstam.com/investor. Please note that this call is being recorded and will be available for replay from the company investors’ website for a short time, by dialing 877-660-6853 or 201-612-7415, and enter a conference ID 1681408.

We will now turn the call over to Craig Barberio, Vice President Investor Relations, to make an introductory statement..

Craig Barberio Vice President of Investor Relations

Good morning, everyone, and welcome to First American second quarter 2018 earnings conference call. Joining us today will be our Chief Executive Officer, Dennis Gilmore; and Mark Seaton, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer.

Some of the statements made today may contain forward-looking statements that do not relate strictly to historical or current fact.

These forward-looking statements speak only as of the date they are made and the company does not undertake to update forward-looking statements to reflect circumstance or events that occur after the date the forward-looking statements are made.

Risk and uncertainties exist that may cause these results to differ materially from those set forth in these forward-looking statements. For more information on these risk and uncertainties, please refer to today’s earning release and the risk factor discussed in our Form 10-K and subsequent SEC filings.

Our presentation today contains certain non-GAAP financial measures that we believe provide additional insight into the operational efficiency and performance of the company, relative to earlier periods and relative to the company’s competitors.

For more details on these non-GAAP financial measures including presentation with and reconciliation to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures, please refer to today’s earnings release which is available on our website at www.firstam.com. I will now turn the call over to Dennis Gilmore..

Dennis Gilmore

Good morning, and thank you for joining our call. Today, I’ll review our second quarter results and then discuss our outlook for the remainder of 2018. We are pleased with our second quarter results, our earnings per share increased 26% to $1.37. The spring selling season continues to align with our expectations.

Purchase revenues were up 7% this quarter, driven by higher fees profile as we continue to benefit from rising home prices. Revenues were up 4% this quarter in our commercial business, where we continue to experience healthy demand across most geographic markets. Refinance revenues dropped 13% during the quarter as mortgage rates moved higher.

However, profit building in our central lender business has significantly improved as a result of previously implemented cost reductions. Overall, our title segment posted a pretax margin of 15.3%.

Favorable market conditions combined with prudent management of our investment portfolio and our bank, discipline in our underwriting processes and efficient management of our cost structure drove our strong results this quarter. In the Specialty Insurance segment, total revenues increased 4% and we earned a pretax margin of 8.4%.

Our home warranty business continues to perform well with operating revenues increasing 7% during the quarter. We continue to see positive results from our ongoing improvements to our contracted network and service operations. Our property and casualty business had a higher loss ratio, due to higher severity.

However, the loss ratio for the segment improved modestly to 61%. During the quarter, we acquired four companies for $53 million. The most significant acquisition is PCN, which has a software platform known as Safe Escrow, that enables a more efficient, secure closing process.

PCN expands our product offerings to title agents and we anticipate will drive additional deposits to our bank. We also acquired FirstFunding, a small specialized warehouse lender that facilitates financing for correspondent mortgage lenders. Due to this acquisition, we will explore ways to further enhance the closing experience for our customers.

Lastly, we acquired two small title agencies in Florida and New York. Our outlook for the remainder of 2018 remains positive. Given the ongoing economic expansion, current trends in the housing market, we expect continued revenue growth in our purchase business. Our commercial business has a healthy pipeline with open orders up 11% in the quarter.

The company will also continue to benefit from strong investment income. First American is well positioned in the industry and remains committed to deploying capital in a manner that delivers long-term value to our shareholders. I’ll now turn the call over to Mark for a more detailed review of our financial results..

Mark Seaton Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

Thank you, Dennis. In the Title Insurance and Services segment, direct premium and escrow fees were up 3% compared with last year. This increase was driven by a 13% increase in the average revenue per order that was largely offset by an 8% decrease in the number of direct title orders closed.

The average revenue per order increased to $2,599, primarily due to higher residential real estate values, an increase in the average revenue per commercial owner and a shift in the order mix to higher premium commercial transactions.

The average revenue per order for purchase transactions increased 7%, while the average revenue per order for commercial transactions increased 8%. Agent premiums, which are recorded on approximately a one-quarter lag, relative to direct premiums increased 1%. The agent split was 78.6% of agent premiums.

Information and other revenues totaled $206 million, up 3% compared with last year. Higher revenues from recent acquisitions were partly offset by the impact of lower refinance activity. Investment income within the Title Insurance and Services segment was $52 million, up 49% from the second quarter of last year.

Our investment income continues to benefit from higher short-term interest rates, including in our cash and investments portfolio, tax-deferred property exchange business and escrow balances. We expect investment income to continue to grow in the third quarter, given the Fed’s June rate increase.

Personnel cost were $427 million, up 3% from the prior year. This increase is primarily driven by the impact of recent acquisitions. Other operating expenses were $202 million, up 1% from last year. The increase was primarily driven by the impact of recent acquisitions, largely offset by a decline in production-related expenses.

The provision for title policy, losses and other claims was $44 million, or 4.0% of title premiums and escrow fees, unchanged relative to the prior year. The current quarter rate reflects an ultimate loss rate of 4.0% for the current policy year, with no change in the loss reserve estimates for prior policy years.

Pretax income for the Title Insurance and Services segment was $210 million in the second quarter compared with $197 million in the second quarter of 2017. Pretax margin was 15.3% compared with 14.8% last year. Net expenses in the corporate segment were $18 million, a decline of $5 million due to savings related to the pension termination.

The effective tax rate for the quarter was 23.2%, in-line with our normalized tax rate of 24%. Cash provided by operations was $211 million compared with $229 million last year.

Notes in contracts payable on our balance sheet totaled $736 million as of June 30, which consists of $547 million of senior notes, $160 million on our credit facility, $21 million of trustee notes and $8 million of other notes and obligations.

In addition to these notes and contracts payable, we also have $96 million of secured financings payable, related to our FirstFunding acquisition. These liabilities are offset by $96 million of secured financings receivable, which are loans to correspondent mortgage lenders that are secured by mortgages.

These new offsetting line items on our balance sheet will be reflected in our 10-Q. As Dennis mentioned, we acquired four companies this quarter for an initial cash consideration of $53 million. In 2017, the aggregate revenues for these businesses were $39 million, and the aggregate pretax earnings were $8 million.

I would now like to turn the call back over to the operator to take your questions..

Operator

Thank you. We will now be conducting a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] Our first question is from Mark Hughes with SunTrust. Please proceed with your question..

Mark Hughes

Thank you very much. Good morning..

Dennis Gilmore

Good morning, Mark..

Mark Hughes

Can you talk a little bit more about that commercial order growth, up 11%.

Is – was that fairly even throughout the quarter and has that persisted into July?.

Mark Seaton Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

Yes. Mark, this is Mark. In commercial, we’re seeing a big pickup in order to – just 11%. I would say it’s pretty evenly distributed throughout the quarter. So far in July, our commercial orders are actually down, about 5% year-over-year. But as you know, commercial orders are lumpy.

And – but we see a pretty good pipeline heading into the second half of the year here..

Mark Hughes

And since you touched on it on purchase orders, how do they look in July?.

Mark Seaton Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

July purchase orders. In terms of year-over-year, down about 1.5% so far, this month..

Mark Hughes

And then refi?.

Mark Seaton Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

That’s relative to last year. And then refi is – so far in July, it’s down about 13% versus last year, about 13% versus last month..

Dennis Gilmore

Mark, this is Dennis. I would only add on the purchase season is that we’re running down about 1% so far in July. But our resale is about flat and our new homes are down a little more, and new homes are always lumpy too. So we’re pretty optimistic going into the second half on the purchase business right now..

Mark Hughes

Then final question.

The impact on investment income from the June rate hike, what is the – how should we look at that?.

Dennis Gilmore

Well, we’ve talked about the fact that we get about $12 million annualized every time the Fed raises 25 basis points, so they raised in June. We should get a little bit better than that here in the third quarter in terms of an annual benefit and so that should be flowing through in Q3 here.

So we’re pretty pleased with how our investment income has been progressing, we’ve been talking for quite some time now about how – you know, when rates rise, we’re going to do better in that environment.

And one of the reasons is because we have a bank and it’s a very strategic asset for us, and we’re seeing the benefits of the bank and we think it will continue into the third quarter..

Mark Hughes

Thank you..

Dennis Gilmore

Thanks, Mark..

Operator

Our next question is from Mackenzie Aron with Zelman & Associates. Please proceed..

Mackenzie Aron

Thanks. Good morning.

Just on the investment income, can you just remind us, Mark, was there anything that changed with the accounting change that happened last quarter that flowed through this quarter?.

Mark Seaton Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

There’s nothing – everything that happened with the accounting change was sort of the mark-to-market on equities, that all flows through net realized gains. And so when you look at the title segment, the $52 million of investment income we have in the title segment is – I would say, there’s nothing really onetime in there at all.

Everything that is one time goes through net gains. The only exception I would say to that is that we did – as Dennis mentioned, we did an acquisition called FirstFunding, that closed this quarter. We had about $1 million of investment income that flowed through Q2, that wasn’t there in Q1. So that was the only thing I would point out..

Mackenzie Aron

Okay, perfect. And then just on the acquisitions this quarter, the $39 million revenue.

Rough split between how that all flowed through on direct versus information and other, can you give us some sense of how that all breakout?.

Mark Seaton Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

So roughly, it will be about 12% or so in investment income. And the other 88% is basically half in info and other, and half in direct premiums and escrow fees. That’s the rough breakout..

Mackenzie Aron

Okay, perfect.

And then just as you look out rest of the year and into next year for the M&A pipeline, is there – are there further opportunities that you guys would be looking at?.

Mark Seaton Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

Yes. Our pipeline is pretty full right now. We’re looking, as we always do, adding in title opportunities in our key states. So there are opportunities, some more of those in the second half of the year..

Mackenzie Aron

Okay, great. Well, congrats on the quarter..

Mark Seaton Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

Thank you..

Dennis Gilmore

Thanks, Mackenzie..

Operator

Our next question is from Bose George with KBW. Please proceed..

Bose George

Hey, good morning.

Just in – on the commercial side, just given the strength of the fee profile growth, were there any large deals this quarter that kind of pushed those numbers up?.

Mark Seaton Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

No. Just an overall strong quarter for us..

Bose George

Okay, great.

And then in terms of the margin expectation, just given the strength this quarter, do you think 2018, you could come in above that 11% to 13% that you guys have guided to?.

Mark Seaton Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

Well, I think that the guidance we gave at the Investor Day is still accurate, 11% to 13%. Year-to-date, we’re running at 12%, so clearly, I think we’ll be at the higher end of that range for the rest of the year..

Bose George

Okay, great.

And then actually, the – in terms of the acquisition that you did, I think it was $9 million of earnings, is that an after-tax earnings number?.

Mark Seaton Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

It’s a pretax number, Bose. Pretax..

Bose George

Pretax. Okay. Thanks, Mark. And then just one last one.

When you think about capital use, clearly you’re generating a lot of free cash, the – apart from the dividend, is – should we think about most of that cash being used not towards these acquisitions since buybacks are, at the moment, I guess, not on the table?.

Mark Seaton Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

I think our strategy is going to be the same. We’re going to continue to invest in the business through CapEx like we have been. But we’re probably at about the level we want to be right now. We’ll continue to look for the acquisition opportunities.

On that front, we’ll only deploy if we think, we can get the returns we expect and then we’ll continue to look at the dividends and we’ll consider share buybacks too, if appropriate, going forward. So our strategy really hasn’t changed going forward..

Bose George

Okay, great. Thanks..

Mark Seaton Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Bose..

Operator

Our next question is from John Campbell with Stephens Incorporated. Please proceed..

John Campbell

Hey, guys.

Just on the acquisitions, can you provide just a little more color on the kind of margins that you guys are expecting from each and kind of the timeline of when you expect contributions from those acquisitions?.

Dennis Gilmore

Yes. Sure. So we talked about how – at least last year, when you look at the acquisitions that we did, on a aggregate basis, they did about $39 million of revenue and $8 million of pretax earnings. So that’s about a 20% margin, collectively.

It’s not going to change our overall margin materially, but they are somewhat accretive to our title segment margins. And I would just say that with these – there’s not a whole lot of cost synergies, these are just more very strategic acquisitions that are going to allow us to improve the closing experience for our customers and do some other things.

So we’re really excited about..

Mark Seaton Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

Minimum integrations. We’ll see the benefits by the fourth quarter..

John Campbell

Okay, perfect. That makes sense..

Operator

Our next question is from Geoffrey Dunn with Dowling & Partners. Please proceed..

Geoffrey Dunn

Thanks, good morning. Mark, you’ve been very clear about the benefit you get on investment income from rate increases. But I certainly didn’t foresee the jump that you had this quarter.

Is there any way you can breakout or break apart your NII a little bit to give a little bit more clarity into the biggest moving parts? So I don’t know if you can some sort of breakdown and how it compares year-over-year to show us what the biggest moving components are?.

Mark Seaton Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

Yes. I can do – I can give you some more information on that, Geoff. So the first thing I’d say – a couple of things. The investment income that we had this quarter surprised us a little bit, it was higher than our expectations. It’s very broad based.

So we’re getting higher investment income from our investment portfolio, from our bank, from our escrow deposits, from 1031 Exchange, from operating cash. It’s really broad-based. When you break out the $10 million change sequentially. Again, $1 million of it came from the FirstFunding acquisition.

About $5 million of it was because of rates, just the fact that when the Fed rates in April, we’re going to make $5 million more based off of our deposits. And then the other $4 million, sequentially, is just because we’ve had higher balances. And I think that’s where we’re probably exceeding our expectations.

We’ve had higher balances because commercial has done better and we have higher commercial deposits. We’ve put a little bit more cash in our investment portfolio, so our balances are also higher. And that’s, I think one of the reasons why we’re sort of exceeding our expectations there, on the investment income this quarter..

Geoffrey Dunn

How about….

Dennis Gilmore

But I would say that we think it’s sustainable, though. We expect it to continue to grow in the back half of the year..

Geoffrey Dunn

What about specifically in 1031? Is that showing a big jump as well over the last couple of quarters?.

Mark Seaton Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

I would say that the jump in 1031 is consistent with the jump that we’re getting in cash and escrow. So I wouldn’t say it’s outside. I mean, it’s certainly up. When you look at investment income in our 1031 business, this quarter was about $8 million. And in Q1, it was about $6.2 million.

So we’re getting about $1.8 million sequential benefit but that’s out of $10 million, right? So that’s just one bucket out of several. So again, it’s real broad-based..

Geoffrey Dunn

Okay. And then – so I guess when you look at the third quarter, you’re seeing the rate increase in June that you saw in April. I guess everything else held equal, it seems like it’s more than a $12 million annualized bump here.

Given everything you discuss, what’s the prospect of this being $60 million next quarter, versus $55 million? I’m not sure I quite understand the full driver here?.

Mark Seaton Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

Yes. $60 million seems like a stretch. I think when we look at next quarter, we’re fully going to get the benefit from the rate increase. It’s unfair, what’s going to happen with the level of deposits. I would say that we’re sort of exceeding our expectations in terms of the economics that we’re getting for every time the Fed does increase rates.

So we might do a little bit better than $12 million, but not – I think that the sequential change we got this quarter is not to be expected going forward. It’s going to be closer to $12 million than we got this quarter..

Geoffrey Dunn

Okay, thanks..

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Our next question is from Jason Deleeuw with Piper Jaffray. Please proceed..

Eric Robinson

Thanks. You’ve got Eric Robinson on the line.

I just wanted to dive into the purchase orders a little more, the ARPO there, the revenue – do you guys think that the 7% increase there is sustainable relative to home price appreciation trends right now? Or how do you guys feel about that?.

Dennis Gilmore

Yes. If the home price appreciation continues at the click it’s been, I think it is sustainable. But we’re starting to see, for the first time in probably two, three years, increases in some key markets on inventory increases.

So if we start to see the inventory out there start to normalize, I think that what we’ll end up seeing, maybe early 2019, we’ll see more transaction volumes a little less price appreciation. But again that’s our view on the market. But it really would be driven by the inventory issues, sequentially..

Eric Robinson

What’s – could you dive into some of those markets a little more? Where is it?.

Dennis Gilmore

It’s actually some of the hotter markets right now. So we’re seeing some inventory increases in Seattle and Portland, in Denver, except – but they’re small. So this is just the very first beginning signs of some of the inventory increases. So – obviously we’re watching it closely.

I mean overall though, we would prefer a market with a little less price appreciation and more transaction. I think that would be a more normalized market, which would be – and actually a healthier, better market for us. So again we don’t control that but we’ll see how it plays out..

Eric Robinson

Got you, thanks.

And then just in terms of some of the acquisitions that you made this past quarter and the ones related to improving the closing exp, what pain points do you see your customer see there, that you think FAF can help improve on that closing exp?.

Dennis Gilmore

Yes. Overall we’re very focused on advancing the closing experience, driving the [indiscernible] closing experience. But specifically, the largest acquisition we did was PCN and PCN provides a number of products and services to agents to improve closing experience. One specific product is called Safe Escrow.

It really aligns with our strategy we talked about at the Investor Day and that is, our key strategy is to help do disbursements for our agents which allows our agents to have fewer wire fraud risks, allows us to be more efficient, operating with the agent drives additional deposits for the bank.

And that software platform, Safe Escrow aligns with that strategy, so we’re excited about that opportunity..

Eric Robinson

Got you. And then just on the commercial side, I think. I know you mentioned that strength has been broad-based. I guess just in terms of regions and then from size of deal, is there – are you seeing stronger deals like saying the $5 million category? Or where do you think the strength in [indiscernible].

Dennis Gilmore

Really seeing strength across – pretty much the whole market and so it’s not driven by large deals, there’s nothing unique about the deals right now. As Mark mentioned earlier, we’re encouraged by our orders being up 11% in the quarter. Starting the third quarter, a little soft on orders. But again, lumpy always.

The other thing I’d say is, the only markets we’re seeing – only significant slowdown is going in New York, and that’s been ongoing now for a number of quarters. So again, we’re optimistic going in the second half on commercial..

Eric Robinson

All right. Thank you very much..

Dennis Gilmore

Thank you..

Operator

Our next question is from Mark DeVries with Barclays. Please proceed..

Mark DeVries

Thanks. First question for Dennis.

Dennis, how much more room do you see to improve the margins in home warranty?.

Dennis Gilmore

Specifically, home warranty. I think business will continue to get better, we continue to invest in that business pretty aggressively around technology front to just improve our clients’ handling experience and our customer experience, so a lot of investment going on there. I do think that the margins will continue to improve in that.

But again, just everybody is aware that, that business can be a little lumpy depending on weather, environments during the summer. So has a little different cyclically than our title business. Optimistic about the business, so we like its trends, we like its growth curve and we like its performance..

Mark DeVries

Okay.

But any sense of just like range of magnitude of how much more upside you see in the margin?.

Dennis Gilmore

We typically don’t break that out. But I do think there’s upside in that business..

Mark DeVries

Okay, got it. And then finally for Mark.

Could you just discuss your expected IRRs on these acquisitions you’ve been doing and how those compared to buy backs here?.

Mark Seaton Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

Yes. I mean every time we’re looking at an acquisition, we want at least a 12% to 15% IRR. I would say with these, we think we can get that. And that’s assuming really no revenue synergies at all. So we feel like they’re going to be really good investments on a stand-alone basis, they’re immediately accretive to the P&L.

And there’s also optionality on the upside. So we feel like they’re going to be definitely a good use of capital and very aligned with our strategic vision..

Mark DeVries

Okay.

And how does that compare to how you evaluate buybacks here in terms of the IRR?.

Mark Seaton Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

I would say, they are more attractive just because we can enhance the products that we offer our customers which obviously we can’t in the buyback. These are very strategic, it’s going to allow us to take more deposits in the bank, derisk the transaction.

So we’d always rather invest to grow our business, assuming the IRRs are the same and that’s kind of what we did here..

Mark DeVries

Got it. Thank you..

Mark Seaton Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

Thank you..

Dennis Gilmore

Thanks, Mark..

Operator

We have a follow-up question by Bose George with KBW. Please proceed..

Bose George

Hey, thanks. Just wanted to ask about the regulatory front. Has there been anything that you’ve heard from state regulators? Just anything on the pricing front that’s different? Thanks..

Mark Seaton Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

No. No change, no issues..

Bose George

Okay. Great thanks..

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, there are no additional questions at this time. That concludes this morning’s call. We would like to remind listeners that today’s call will be available for replay on the company’s website or by dialing 877-660-6853, or 201-612-7415, and enter a conference ID 1368-1408. The company would like to thank you for your participation.

This concludes today’s conference call. You may now disconnect..

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