Mark Seaton
Analyst · Stephens Incorporated. Please state your question
Thank you, Dennis. I'll begin by discussing the impact of tax reform on First American, followed by a more detailed review of our financial results. This quarter's results included next tax benefit of $114 million or $1.01 per share, primarily due to the remeasurement of net deferred tax liabilities as a result of recent tax reform legislation. Moving forward, we expect that our normalized effective tax rate will fall from 34% to 24%. The new rate is higher than the 21% federal rate, primarily due to state taxes and our international operations. In addition, the shift to a territorial tax system will reduce the cost to repatriate cash from our foreign jurisdictions, enhancing our financial flexibility. In the title insurance and services segment, direct premium and escrow fees were down 1% compared with last year. This decrease was driven by a 19% decrease in the number of orders closed offset by a 23% increase in the average revenue per order. The average revenue per order increased to $2,411 due to a shift in the mix to higher premium purchase and commercial transactions. The average revenue per order from both purchase and commercial transactions increased 8%. Agent premiums were down 5% reflecting the normal reporting lag of agent revenues of approximately one quarter. The income split was 78.9% of agent premiums. Information and other revenues totaled $187 million, down 1% compared with last year. Higher revenues from recent acquisitions were offset by lower revenues from the company's centralized lender businesses, largely due to the decline in refinance activity. Investment income within the title insurance and services segment was $38 million, up $9 million or 30% from the fourth quarter of last year. Our investment income continues to benefit from higher short-term interest rates, including in our tax deferred property exchange business, our adjustable rate agency mortgage-backed securities portfolio, as well as interest on cash and escrow balances. Net realized investment losses totaled $2.7 million for the quarter. Personnel costs were $414 million, down 2% from the prior year. This decrease was primarily driven by lower temporary labor overtime and incentive compensation expenses. Other operating expenses were $209 million, up 2% from last year. The increase was due to an $8.5 million write-off of uncollectible balances this quarter. The provision for title policy losses and other claims was $45 million, or 4.0% of title premiums and escrow fees compared with a loss provision rate of 5.5% in the same quarter of the prior year. The current quarter rate reflects an ultimate loss rate of 4.0% for the current policy year, with no change in loss reserve estimates for prior policy years. Pretax income for the title insurance and services segment was $166 million compared with $150 million in the fourth quarter of 2016. Pretax margin was 12.2% compared with 10.8% last year. Turning to the specialty insurance segment, total revenues were $121 million, up 2% compared with last year. The loss ratio in the specialty insurance segment this quarter was 63%, up from 55% in the prior year. Our property and casualty business experienced high claim losses in the quarter due to two separate California wildfires, with losses exceeding our $5 million reinsurance retention limit for each event. Pretax margin for this segment was 9.2% compared with 18% in the fourth quarter of last year. Net expenses in the corporate segment were $17 million. This is the first quarter that we are benefiting from the full run rate savings in the corporate segment from our recent pension termination. The effective tax rate for the quarter was negative 38.5%. As I noted earlier, we posted a $114 million benefit relating to tax reform this quarter, driving the tax rate well below our normalized rate of 34%. Debt in our balance sheet totaled $733 million as of December 31st. Our debt consists of $546 million of senior notes, $160 million on our credit facility, $23 million of trustee notes, and $4 million of other notes and obligations. Our debt to capital ratio as of December 31st was 17.4%. We have $540 million remaining on our $700 million revolving credit facility. In terms of cash flow, cash provided by operations was $177 million, a decline of $61 million relative to last year, primarily due to a $72 million increase in cash taxes paid as a result of low tax payments in the fourth quarter of 2016. I would now like to turn the call back over to the operator to take your questions.