Sign in

You're signed outSign in or to get full access.

EH

Enact Holdings, Inc. (ACT)·Q1 2025 Earnings Summary

Executive Summary

  • Q1 2025 delivered stable results: GAAP diluted EPS $1.08 and adjusted diluted EPS $1.10 on total revenues of $306.8M; net premiums earned were $245M and ROE was 13.1% (adjusted ROE 13.4%) .
  • Capital return accelerated: dividend raised 14% to $0.21 and new $350M buyback authorization; PMIERs sufficiency at 165% (~$2.0B above requirements) supports flexibility .
  • Credit quality remained sound but reserve releases moderated ($47M vs $56M in Q4), pushing the loss ratio up to 12% (from 10%); delinquency rate improved sequentially to 2.34% .
  • NIW of ~$10B fell 26% QoQ on seasonality and was down 7% YoY on lower estimated market share; persistency increased to 84% aiding IIF stability at $268B .
  • Management reiterated 2025 expense guidance ($220–$225M) and expects 2025 capital returns similar to 2024 (~$350M), with pricing “constructive” and Rate360 underwriting technology cited as an advantage .

What Went Well and What Went Wrong

What Went Well

  • Strong capital actions: new $350M buyback and dividend hike to $0.21 per share underscore confidence and balance sheet strength .
  • Pricing/underwriting discipline supported portfolio quality; Rate360 leverages proprietary data and machine learning for competitive, risk‑adjusted pricing .
  • Investment income resilient: $63M, supported by rising portfolio book yield (4.1%); management selectively rotated assets to recoup realized losses via higher future income .

Selected quote:

  • “We had a strong start to 2025… well positioned to navigate an uncertain economic backdrop…” — Rohit Gupta, CEO .

What Went Wrong

  • Reserve releases moderated to $47M (vs $56M in Q4), lifting loss ratio to 12% and losses incurred to $31M; YoY increase driven by lower release and incremental new delinquencies .
  • NIW down 26% QoQ due to seasonality and 7% YoY on lower estimated market share; sequential slowdown in origination limited IIF growth .
  • Expense ratio improvement, though solid at 21%, reflects ongoing inflationary pressures and reorganization costs (~$1M) noted in the quarter .

Financial Results

MetricQ3 2024Q4 2024Q1 2025
Total Revenues ($USD Millions)$309.6 $301.8 $306.8
Net Premiums Earned ($USD Millions)$249 $246 $245
Net Investment Income ($USD Millions)$61 $63 $63
GAAP Diluted EPS ($USD)$1.15 $1.05 $1.08
Adjusted Diluted EPS ($USD)$1.16 $1.09 $1.10
Loss Ratio (%)5% 10% 12%
Expense Ratio (%)22% 24% 21%
NIW ($USD Billions)$14 $13 $10
Primary IIF ($USD Billions)$268 $269 $268
Persistency (%)83% 82% 84%
PMIERs Sufficiency ($USD Millions)$2,190 $2,052 $1,966
PMIERs Sufficiency (%)173% 167% 165%

Segment/KPI Mix:

KPIQ3 2024Q4 2024Q1 2025
NIW mix – Purchase (%)96% 86% 93%
NIW mix – Monthly (%)95% 96% 94%
Primary Delinquency Rate (%)2.01% 2.45% 2.34%
Reserve Release ($USD Millions)$65 $56 $47
Base Premium Rate (bps)40.2 40.0 40.1
Net Earned Premium Rate (bps)36.3 35.5 35.3
Investment Portfolio Book Yield (%)3.9% 4.0% 4.1%

Estimate vs Actual (Wall Street consensus – S&P Global):

MetricConsensus (Q1 2025)Actual (Q1 2025)Result
Revenue ($USD Millions)$302.2*$306.8 Beat
Primary EPS ($USD)$1.090*$1.08 GAAP / $1.10 Adj Slight beat vs S&P “Primary EPS”*

Values marked with * retrieved from S&P Global. Note: S&P “Primary EPS” conventions may differ from GAAP diluted EPS reported in the 8‑K .

Guidance Changes

MetricPeriodPrevious GuidanceCurrent GuidanceChange
Operating Expenses ($USD Millions)FY 2025$220–$225 $220–$225 (reaffirmed) Maintained
Total Capital Return ($USD Millions)FY 2025~$350 ~$350 (reaffirmed) Maintained
Dividend per Share ($USD)Quarterly$0.185 $0.21 starting Q2 payable Jun 11 Raised
Share Repurchase Authorization ($USD Millions)Ongoing$250 (remaining $6 as of Apr 25) New $350 (total $356 incl. $6 remaining) Raised
Base Premium Rate2025Stabilize around 2024 levels Stabilize around 2024 levels Maintained

Earnings Call Themes & Trends

TopicPrevious Mentions (Q3 2024)Previous Mentions (Q4 2024)Current Period (Q1 2025)Trend
AI/Tech (Rate360)Pricing engine delivering risk‑adjusted pricing Pricing constructive; disciplined underwriting Rate360 branded; ML‑driven pricing agility Continued emphasis, more branding/ML detail
Pricing & Market ShareCompetitive yet constructive pricing; happy with $13.5B NIW Base rate ~40 bps; net earned rate down on ceded premiums Pricing strengthened amid macro uncertainty; net earned rate 35.3 bps Slight tightening posture
Tariffs/MacroMonitoring macro; hurricanes expected in Q4 Seasonality/hurricane impacts on delinquencies Monitoring tariff impacts; adjusted pricing posture Heightened macro vigilance
Credit Performance/ReservesStrong cures; $65M reserve release; delinquency rate 2.2% $56M reserve release; delinquency rate 2.4% $47M reserve release; delinquency rate 2.3% Moderating reserve release; still strong cures
Regulatory/PolicyIndustry resilience, relationships across administrations GSE CRT participation via Enact Re Constructive FHFA engagement; strong GSE loss mitigation Positive/constructive stance
Capital Return$100M returned in Q3; guidance upper half $300–$350M $354M returned in 2024; 2025 ~$350M New $350M buyback; dividend up 14% Accelerated, supportive

Management Commentary

  • Strategy and positioning: “We continue to operate from a position of strength… Rate360 enables competitive risk‑adjusted pricing… we are reaffirming our 2025 expense guidance range of $220M–$225M.” — Rohit Gupta; Hardin Mitchell .
  • Capital allocation: “Our Board… authorized a new $350M share repurchase program and approved a 14% increase to our dividend…” — Hardin Mitchell ; press release confirmation .
  • Credit performance: “This strong cure rate drove a reserve release of $47M… resulting loss ratio was 12%.” — Rohit Gupta .

Q&A Highlights

  • Pricing posture under uncertainty: Enact strengthened pricing using Rate360 amid rising macro uncertainty; too early to assess peer actions .
  • Policy engagement and loss mitigation: Constructive FHFA dialogue; strong GSE loss mitigation programs continue to support cures post‑COVID .
  • Market share dynamics: Market participation stable; share movements can reflect lender mix and segment composition beyond pricing .
  • Portfolio seasoning/HPA assumptions: Aging should slow new delinquency increases; forward pricing incorporates a more conservative HPA view relative to prior years .
  • Expense/other income: Other income includes contract services; Q1 run‑rate may be inflated by ~$1M related to reinsurance arrangements .

Estimates Context

  • Revenue beat: Actual $306.8M vs S&P Global consensus $302.2M — modest top‑line beat $302.2M*.
  • EPS: S&P “Primary EPS” consensus $1.090 vs “Primary” actual 1.10*; GAAP diluted EPS reported at $1.08; adjusted diluted EPS $1.10. Expect small model reconciliation given S&P conventions 1.090*.
  • Where estimates may adjust: Lower reserve release and higher loss ratio may prompt modest increases to loss expectations; capital return cadence and higher dividend could lift total shareholder yield assumptions .

Values marked with * retrieved from S&P Global.

Key Takeaways for Investors

  • Capital return is a clear catalyst: $350M new buyback plus 14% dividend increase signal confidence and support total yield; expect continued repurchases alongside dividend flows .
  • Core underwriting remains disciplined with technology leverage (Rate360), enabling responsive pricing in a complex macro backdrop; this supports margin stability despite ceded premiums .
  • Credit metrics remain strong; delinquency rate improved sequentially and cures remain elevated, but reserve releases are normalizing — watch loss ratio trajectory as book seasons .
  • Earnings quality supported by rising investment yields (4.1% book yield) and stable net premiums; incremental upside from income optimization within portfolio .
  • NIW softness largely seasonal; persistency strength sustains IIF; monitor market share trends and lender mix impacts on production .
  • Regulatory/policy engagement looks constructive; strong PMIERs sufficiency and CRT coverage provide capital resilience across scenarios .
  • Near‑term: Favor buyback/dividend themes; Medium‑term: Focus on reserve release normalization, pricing discipline, and macro/tariff developments’ impact on origination and claims .