Dale Thatcher
Analyst · Sandler O'Neill. Your line is now live
Thanks, Amanda, and thank you to everyone for joining us today on our year-end conference call. It was approximately a year ago that I took the position of President here at Kingstone, so this is a good time to stop and look back at results for the year. I have to say, it was a bit choppier than I expected as financial performance lagged for the year, but I still feel that we accomplished a lot. For the year, we recorded direct written premium of $146.7 million up almost 21%. We had our strongest growth in the fourth quarter, with direct written premium of $39.5 million, up 23%. Our core business, in New York, continued to show very healthy growth of 15% for the year. Expanding beyond New York, we added New Jersey and Rhode Island in 2017, and Massachusetts in 2018. We expect to add Connecticut and Maine in 2019, as well as a possible restart of Pennsylvania late in the year. Premium in our expansion states went from just under $2 million in 2017 to over $9 million in 2018. We've gotten off to our quickest start in New Jersey, which represents $7.7 million of the $9 million in expansion premium. We continue to attract high-quality agents who are looking for a quality A-rated carrier with a focus on service. We've found a particular affinity with our smaller suburban and rural agents who are often left behind by our larger competitors who demand ever increasing minimum premium volumes. Many carriers require a minimum premium of $1 million or more before an agent can quality for contingent commissions. Rural agents may not have a million dollars of premium that they are willing to give to a single carrier. That makes it difficult for them to have beneficial relationships with the big players, and forces them into the wholesale channel. Kingstone gladly takes quality business from agents with production as low as $50,000 per year. By providing our agents with a quality product and superior service in spite of their small size, we're able to build solid, loyal, and profitable relationships with our agents. We believe that profitable business comes in all sizes, and we're nimble enough and dedicated enough to take advantage of that. Our attention to servicing the small agent is building not only premium volume, but profitability way ahead of schedule. For 2018, the expansion states delivered a loss ratio of 49%, well ahead of where we thought they would perform at this point of their development, and dead even with the overall loss ratio for the company. Our combined ratio for the quarter was 96.4%, including 3.5 points of adverse development, and 0.4 points of cat losses. Overall, for the year, our combined ratio was a disappointing 94.8%. This included six points of catastrophe losses, and 1.1 points of adverse development related to unfavorable liability settlements from 2014 and '15. The industry as a whole has seen some deterioration in property losses, and we're not immune from that trend. We've taken steps to tighten certain underwriting criteria, we've increased both exterior and interior inspections, we've filed rate increases, and we've tightened restrictions on seasonal and secondary homes. Underwriting is a never ending balancing act between production and profitability where underwriting requirements are constantly adjusted to keep the trim just right. For the most part, we've been tremendously successful at balancing growth and profitability, but property trend this year ran a bit harder than we expected. We fully expect to make the necessary adjustments to continue our history of success. Now I would like to turn the call over to Barry for some commentary on our investment portfolio and an update on COSI, our general agent operations.