Mark Seaton
Analyst · Stephens Inc. Please proceed with your question
Thank you, Ken. I'll begin with commentary on this quarter's results, followed by a discussion of a few key topics, including our venture portfolio, our outlook for investment income and the financial impact of a few of our strategic initiatives. This quarter, we earned $0.02 per diluted share. Included in this quarter's results, were $1.60 of net investment losses. Excluding these losses, we earned $1.62 per diluted share. Three items contributed to our net investment losses this quarter: first, we incurred $126 million of unrealized losses related to our venture portfolio; second, we recognized $50 million of losses related to mark-to-market adjustments in our public equity portfolio. Finally, we realized $50 million of losses on our fixed income portfolio in connection with our tax planning strategies. In terms of our Venture portfolio, we booked $126 million of net unrealized losses this quarter. This compares to $276 million of net unrealized gains in the third quarter of last year. As of September 30, including our investment in Offerpad, which is now publicly traded, we have invested $398 million in our venture strategy, which has a carrying value of $448 million. Revenue in our Title segment was $1.9 billion, down 12% compared with the same quarter of 2021. Commercial revenue was $260 million, a 1% decline over last year. Our escrow balances totaled $12 billion at the end of the quarter, up from $11 billion at year-end, which indicates a healthy pipeline for commercial activity as we approach the seasonally strong fourth quarter. Purchase revenue was down 15% during the quarter, driven by a 23% decrease in the number of orders closed, partially offset by an 11% increase in the average revenue per order. Our average revenue per order for purchase transactions continued to benefit from recent acquisitions of escrow companies in Southern California. We include escrow revenue from these transactions in the numerator without a corresponding Title order in the denominator. Excluding acquisitions, average revenue per order would have up 1%. Refinance revenue declined 68% relative to last year due to the increase in mortgage rates. In the agency business, revenue was $910 million, down 9% from last year. Given the reporting lag in agent revenues of approximately one quarter, these results reflect remittances related to Q2 economic activity. Our information and other revenues were $279 million, down 9% relative to last year. The decline was a result of lower transaction levels across several business units, driven by the decline in residential mortgage originations, including the company's data, property information and post-close services. Investment income within the Title Insurance and Services segment was $105 million, a 114% increase relative to the prior year. I want to take a minute to discuss how to think about our investment income for 2023. As we've stated previously, we expect to generate $15 million to $20 million of annualized investment income in the Title segment, for each 25 basis point increase in the federal funds rate. In the third quarter, we generated $105 million of investment income. That result didn't reflect the full quarter of the Fed's 75 basis point increase in July, or the 75 basis point increase in September. In addition, according to the forward curve, the market is projecting another seven rate hikes in the middle of next year. We believe our investment income in the title segment could be $600 million in 2023, assuming our escrow deposits remain at current levels. This excludes any growth in third-party banking deposits as well as the benefit from reinvesting paydowns and principal maturities into higher yielding securities. If our book yield on our investment portfolio was reset to the market yield, it would increase our investment income by an additional, $185 million annually. Investors often ask what the Street is missing about our company, and our answer is that the market doesn't appreciate the benefit we receive from investment income as a result of higher interest rates. And because we own a bank, we are better positioned to capitalize on a higher rate environment. On the expense side, we are reducing expenses in areas of the company that are being impacted by the slowdown in residential activity. Excluding acquisitions, our success ratio was 39%, meaning that our net operating revenue declined 22% relative to last year, and our personnel and other operating expenses declined 13%. Pre-tax margin in the title segment was 9.9% or 13.0%, excluding net investment losses. As Ken highlighted, we continue to invest in businesses and innovation initiatives that we believe will positively contribute to our profitability in the long-term. But at this point in our life cycle, adversely impact our financial results. Last quarter, we discussed three initiatives; ServiceMac, Endpoint and instant decisioning for purchase transactions, which together generated a pretax loss of $16 million this quarter, impacting our pretax title margin by 100 basis points. However, the drag on margin improved by 50 basis points since the second quarter, primarily related to improvements at ServiceMac. Turning to the Specialty Insurance segment, total revenue in our home warranty business totaled $105 million, down 3% compared with last year. Pre-tax income in home warranty was $4 million, down from $9 million in the prior year. Excluding net investment gains and losses, pre-tax income was $6 million, down from $9 million last year. The loss ratio in home warranty was 59%, up from 57% in 2021, driven by a higher severity of claims. In our property and casualty business, we had no revenue in the third quarter and only six policies remain. We incurred $10 million of losses mostly related to adverse claims development. The effective tax rate for the quarter was 174%. Excluding the impact of our net investment losses, our tax rate would have been 23.1%, slightly less than our normalized tax rate of 24%. In the third quarter, we repurchased 1.3 million shares for a total of $72 million at an average price of $53.31. So far in Q4, we repurchased an additional 339,000 shares for a total of $16 million at an average price of $46.46. Our debt-to-capital ratio as of September 30 was 30.5%. This ratio is impacted by both our accumulated other comprehensive loss and our secured financings payable. Excluding these two items, which is more in line with how our banks view the ratio, our debt-to-capital ratio was 22.8%. As of September 30th, we recorded an accumulated other comprehensive loss of $1 billion. This quarter, we elected to sell fixed income securities, which produced a $59 million capital loss in connection with our tax planning strategy, which will offset capital gains we recognized in 2019, 2020 and 2021. When combined with further actions we will take in the fourth quarter, we expect to generate $24 million of cash to the holding company as a result of the strategy. Our remaining unrealized losses in our investment portfolio are split between our bank and our insurance companies. We don't need to liquidate the portfolio for liquidity purposes and the average credit rating of the portfolio is AA-. So we expect to recapture the amount of accumulated other comprehensive loss into equity borrowing any additional tax planning strategy strategies we may exercise. Now, I would like to turn the call back over to the operator to take your questions.