Craig Smiddy
Analyst · Raymond James
All right, Frank. Thanks. So General Insurance net written premiums were up 16% in the quarter with strong renewal retentions, rate increases on most lines of coverage, new business growth and increasing premium production in our new specialty underwriting subsidiaries, whereas a reminder, most of that business is written on E&S paper. Our E&S premiums were up 21% in the quarter and are running at $585 million on a trailing 12-month basis. As I mentioned in my opening remarks, in the third quarter, General Insurance pretax operating income was $197 million and the combined ratio was 94%, while on a year-to-date basis, pretax operating income is at $620 million and the combined ratio is at 92.3%, which is exactly in the middle of the target range we give of between 90% and 95%. So this demonstrates that we continue to grow at a strong clip at a very profitable level. The loss ratio for the quarter was 65.2%, which includes 1.7 points of favorable prior-year loss reserve development. And that compares to 60.4% for last year, which included 61 -- excuse me, 6.1 points of favorable development. Absent the impact of favorable reserve development, the accident year loss ratio was relatively stable as compared to last year on both a quarterly and year-to-date basis. The expense ratio held relatively steady at 28.8% compared to 28.6% last year and is running at 28.2% for the year, which again is right in line with our expectations. Now turning to property catastrophic losses that impacted the industry in the third and fourth quarters. But first, let me express that our thoughts still remain with those that are recovering in the disaster areas, which includes about 1,000 of our associates. As most of you on the call know, we write less catastrophic exposed business than most of our peers. So with that said, we expect ultimate losses for Helene to be between $8 million and $10 million and ultimate losses for Milton to be between $18 million and $23 million. As Frank mentioned, we experienced unfavorable prior year loss reserve development in the financial indemnity line of coverage, stemming primarily from transactional risks written in our professional liability unit, which writes mostly D&O and E&O and other management liability covers. The unfavorable development drove the high 83% loss ratio that you can all see in the financial supplement for the financial indemnity line of coverage. Now providing you with some more details on commercial auto and workers' compensation, two of our largest lines. Commercial auto net premiums written grew 14% in the quarter, while the loss ratio came in at 67.1% compared to 66.3% last year due to slightly lower levels of favorable prior year loss reserve development, although, as Frank said, still strong. And rate increases were approximately 10% and that remains commensurate with the loss trends that we observe in that line. Workers' compensation net premiums written held relatively steady quarter-to-quarter while the loss ratio came in at 58.8% compared to 33.2% last year due to much lower levels of favorable prior year loss reserve development this year when compared to the historically high levels of favorable development we experienced this quarter in 2023. So loss frequency trend continues to decline and loss severity trend remains relatively stable. So given the higher wage trend within the payroll, which is our rating base, the declining loss frequency trend, the stable severity trend and our rate decreases of approximately 4% on this line, we continue to remain of the belief that our rate levels remain adequate for workers' compensation. We expect solid growth and profitability in General Insurance to continue for the remainder of '24, reflecting the success of our specialty strategy, our operational excellence initiatives, and our new specialty underwriting subsidiaries. So with that said for General Insurance, I will now turn the discussion over to Carolyn to report on Title Insurance. Carolyn?