Jim Petcoff
Analyst · Piper Sandler. Please go ahead
Thank you, Adam. Good morning, everyone. On the call with me today is Nick, Harold, Andy and Brian. I would like to provide a brief overview, Nick will discuss our underwriting in greater detail, and then Harold will cover the financials. Last night, Conifer issued the solid financial results for the second quarter. Despite the disruption due to the global pandemic, our gross written premiums increased by over 9% in the quarter. Due to a combination of improving underwriting results, coupled with the change in the value of equity investments, Conifer posted an earnings per share of $0.16 for the period. Our results reflect our ongoing commitment to underwriting discipline and are tangible evidence of us turning the corner in terms of profitability. Our business split remains largely commercial, with over 90% in specialty commercial and less than 10% in personal lines. Over the past several years, we have placed increasing emphasis on specialty commercial business, especially in the niche line, where our company can be profitable and a market leader. In addition, we have long believed in a balance in our business, commercial lines versus personal, long-tail versus short and within our underwriting the ability to evaluate and place risks between admitted business are accessing super clients. That ability to pivot between both is an advantage we have over our peers. This allows us to increase not only our account penetration in markets we serve, but also our geographic spread across the country. We consistently seek out agents and insured that specialized in our areas of expertise, which meet our specialty underwriting criteria. This strategy is starting to produce results we have anticipated. Our commercial lines premiums were up 9% during the quarter. At this point, I would like to take a step back and comment on the impacts of COVID-19. When we last spoke to the market in May, there was a great deal of uncertainty as to the insurance markets in general, new business potential and top line premium overall. We continue to reflect on the traumatic influences of the pandemic and the individual impacts felt by families across the globe. Our hearts go out to all affected by COVID-19 as we struggle to get through this together. Early on, we were proactive and shifting quickly to remote operations, leveraging our early investments in technology, thereby safely and securely sending our people to work from home. The result was that our agents and their insureds saw little to no disruption in service. In fact, we have heard that overall our service levels are generally higher than our peers and we are providing exceptional service during an incredibly difficult time. That makes me extremely proud of our employees and our ongoing commitment to meeting the needs of our insureds and the agents alike. Although we feel good about Conifer’s business plan and mix of business going forward, we believe that we are generally conservative in our estimation of the overall economy as we evaluate potential impact of the pandemic. To-date, while premium has been impacted by COVID in certain sectors of our business other sectors have filled the gap, such that overall we have not seen a material impact on our growth plans nor profitability today. In fact, overall claims volumes continue to be down significantly versus earlier in the year. Nick will talk about that more later. As we have shifted the majority of our premiums in our core commercial lines with favorable effects, the loss ratios are continuing to improve. This quarter, we saw those improvements reflected in our underwriting results with loss ratios in the mid-50s. Those of you who have followed Conifer from the beginning have heard us cite historical norms in our commercial and personal lines loss ratios at around this level consistently produced over time. Those loss ratios coupled with an improving expense ratio as we achieve operating scale should drive our combined ratios with low area as well. Coupled with reasonable investment returns, this will ultimately deliver consistently improved ROEs for our shareholders over time. The next phase will be to continue to drive selective growth and achieve appropriate operating scale, while continuing to streamline expenses where possible without any disruption in service. The growth we have seen today shows that we can achieve this but we will continue to emphasize underwriting profitability in each decision we make. Overall, this was a solid result during a very uncertain time. With that, let me turn it over to Nick for some color on our underwriting.