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RADIAN GROUP INC (RDN)·Q4 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q4 2024 delivered solid results: total revenues $316M, diluted EPS $0.98, adjusted diluted net operating EPS $1.09, ROE 12.7% .
- Mortgage insurance KPIs remained resilient: NIW $13.19B, primary IIF a record $275.13B; loss ratio 0%, premium yields stable (MI portfolio 38.0 bps; total net MI 34.2 bps) .
- Capital returns and balance sheet strength continued: $75M buybacks in Q4; $675M ordinary dividends from Radian Guaranty in FY24; PMIERs excess assets $2.16B; available holdco liquidity $885M; Fitch upgraded Radian Guaranty IFS to A and Radian Group debt to BBB (stable outlook) .
- Operating expense trajectory: Q4 included $13M impairment (software/leases); excluding impairments, OpEx ~$75M with management reiterating 2025 run-rate OpEx reduction of $20–$25M vs 2023 .
- Estimates context: S&P Global consensus data was unavailable; therefore, we cannot provide vs-consensus comparisons for Q4 (Wall Street consensus retrieval failed).
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Record primary insurance in force ($275.13B) and strong persistency (84% TTM); NIW up 24% YoY in Q4 (to $13.19B) supported by stable pricing and high-quality originations .
- Credit trends favorable: loss ratio 0% with $56M favorable reserve development on prior-period defaults; cure rates remain robust, leading management to lower default-to-claim roll rate assumption to 7.5% for new defaults .
- Capital strength and shareholder returns: $111M returned in Q4 via dividends ($0.245/share) and buybacks ($75M); PMIERs excess $2.16B; Fitch upgrades underscore balance sheet quality and liquidity .
Management quote: “Our primary mortgage insurance in force… reached a record level of $275 billion dollars.” — CEO Rick Thornberry .
What Went Wrong
- Sequential revenue and investment income softness vs Q3: total revenues down to $316M (from $334M) and net investment income declined to $71M, partly reflecting lower cash after debt redemption .
- Seasonal uptick in delinquencies: primary delinquent loans rose to 24,055, default rate to 2.44%, including hurricane-related areas (though management expects elevated cures) .
- Impairments weighed on OpEx: $13M impairment (software/leases) in Q4; All Other segment continued to post an adjusted operating loss of ~$6M in Q4 .
Financial Results
Segment breakdown (selected line items):
Key KPIs
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- CEO Rick Thornberry: “We reported another successful year… net income of $604 million, and delivering a return on equity of 13.4%. Our primary mortgage insurance in force… reached a record level of $275 billion” .
- CFO Sumita Pandit: “Total revenues during the quarter [were] $316 million… net premiums earned $235 million… investment portfolio yield was 3.9% in the fourth quarter… lowering both investment income and interest expense by ~$7 million q/q following our note redemption” .
- On credit: “Our loss ratio was 0% this quarter… incurred loss for new defaults [was] $56 million, fully offset by positive reserve development… we reduced the initial default-to-claim roll rate assumptions for new defaults in the fourth quarter to 7.5%” .
- On expenses: “Q4 operating expenses included $13 million related to impairments… excluding impairments, remaining operating expenses totaled $75 million… positioned to achieve [a] reduction in run-rate operating expenses in 2025 by $20–$25 million vs 2023” .
Q&A Highlights
- Credit/default outlook: Management expects default rate to remain “sub 3%” absent macro dislocation; hurricane-related defaults expected to cure at higher rates; embedded equity remains strong .
- Reserving assumption: 7.5% default-to-claim roll rate applied across new defaults in Q4; not split between hurricane/non-hurricane areas .
- Leverage and capital allocation: Comfortable with current leverage after $350M net debt reduction; capital returns ($376M in 2024) likely to continue with significant liquidity and authorization remaining .
- Regulatory/GSE reform: Expect administrative actions over comprehensive legislation; core MI role viewed favorably across parties; charter MI requirements unchanged in potential FHFA-led paths .
- “All Other” segment and Homegenius: Restructuring largely done; expense base significantly reduced with enterprise FTE down ~30% since 2023; aim to improve margins in 2025 .
- Mortgage conduit scaling: Plan to increase regularity of issuance; medium-term opportunity for measurable impact on the group .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global consensus estimates for Q4 2024 EPS and revenue were unavailable due to SPGI API limits at the time of retrieval. As a result, we cannot provide vs-consensus comparisons for this quarter.
- Given favorable credit trends (0% loss ratio; lower roll-rate), stable premium yields, and strong capital returns, sell-side models may need to reflect: sustained low claims, steady MI yields, slightly lower investment income vs Q3 due to reduced holdco cash, and expense run-rate reductions in 2025 .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- MI franchise durability: Stable premium yields, record IIF, and high persistency underpin earnings visibility despite seasonal delinquency upticks; 0% loss ratio with lowered roll-rate suggests benign credit normalization .
- Expense discipline is a tangible 2025 catalyst: With impairments behind and an $80M quarterly OpEx run-rate target, the $20–$25M 2025 OpEx reduction vs 2023 should support margins and ROE .
- Capital return capacity intact: PMIERs excess of $2.16B and ~$885M holdco liquidity provide ample flexibility for continued buybacks/dividends; dividend per share raised to $0.255 in Feb 2025 .
- Rate/share dynamics: Reduced leverage and Fitch upgrades may broaden investor appeal and lower funding costs; monitor investment income normalization post debt redemption .
- Conduit optionality: RMC is scaling with rated deals (KBRA prelim on 2025-J1); near-term earnings impact modest, but medium-term potential adds diversification and fee/investment income streams .
- Macro sensitivities: Watch refinance activity (refi NIW rose to ~10%) and unemployment trends; management sees positive housing backdrop but acknowledges seasonal/market variability .
- Trading implications: Near-term narrative favors stability and capital returns; absence of claims pressure and expense cuts could support multiple expansion; monitor any consensus revisions once sell-side updates models.
Note: S&P Global consensus estimates for Q4 2024 were unavailable at time of analysis; vs-consensus comparisons are therefore omitted.