In This Article:
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After-Tax Operating Income: $587 million.
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Operating Earnings Per Share: $1.54.
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Annualized Operating Return on Equity: 11.5%.
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Catastrophe Losses: $547 million, primarily from California wildfires.
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Combined Ratio (Reinsurance): 91.8, inclusive of 18 points of catastrophic losses.
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Net Premium Written (Insurance Segment): $1.9 billion, a 25% increase from Q1 2024.
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Underwriting Income (Mortgage Segment): $252 million.
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Invested Assets: Increased by 4% to $43.1 billion.
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Ex-Cat Accident Year Combined Ratio: 81%.
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Favorable Prior Year Development: $167 million pre-tax, or 4 points on the combined ratio.
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Net Premiums Written (Reinsurance Segment): Growth of 2.2%.
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Delinquency Rate (US MI Business): 1.96%.
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Net Investment Income and Income from Funds: $431 million pre-tax, or $1.13 per share pre-tax.
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Cash Flow from Operations: Approximately $1.5 billion for the quarter.
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Effective Tax Rate on Pretax Operating Income: 11.7%.
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Common Shareholders' Equity: $20.7 billion.
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Debt Plus Preferred to Capital Ratio: 14.7%.
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Share Repurchases: $196 million in Q1, additional $100 million in April.
Release Date: April 30, 2025
For the complete transcript of the earnings call, please refer to the full earnings call transcript.
Positive Points
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Arch Capital Group Ltd (NASDAQ:ACGL) reported solid first-quarter results with $587 million of after-tax operating income and an annualized operating return on equity of 11.5%.
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The company achieved a 91.8 combined ratio in its Reinsurance segment, demonstrating strong underlying profitability despite substantial catastrophe losses.
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The Insurance segment saw a 25% increase in net premium written, driven by the integration of the Middle Market Commercial and Entertainment businesses.
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The Mortgage segment contributed $252 million of underwriting income, maintaining a low delinquency rate below 2%.
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Invested assets increased by 4% to $43.1 billion, providing a sustainable contributor to group earnings.
Negative Points
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Arch Capital Group Ltd (NASDAQ:ACGL) faced $547 million in catastrophe losses, primarily from California wildfires, impacting the property and casualty segment.
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The PNC market has become increasingly competitive, posing challenges for premium growth.
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Specialty premium writings declined due to non-renewing a large structural transaction and weaker margins in Cyber and parts of the International treaty business.
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Economic uncertainty, including potential impacts of tariffs and inflationary risks, poses challenges for some business segments.
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The company experienced modest growth in net premium written in the Reinsurance segment due to increased competition and more risk retention by ceding companies.