Assured Guaranty Ltd. (NYSE:AGO) Q3 2023 Earnings Call Transcript

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Assured Guaranty Ltd. (NYSE:AGO) Q3 2023 Earnings Call Transcript November 8, 2023

Operator: Good morning, and welcome to the Assured Guaranty Limited Third Quarter 2023 Earnings Conference Call. My name is Elliot, and I will be your operator for today’s call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. [Operator Instructions]. Please note that this event is being recorded. And I would now like to turn the conference over to our host, Robert Tucker, Senior Managing Director, Investor Relations and Corporate Communications. Please go ahead.

Robert Tucker: Thank you, operator, and thank you all for joining Assured Guaranty for our third quarter 2023 financial results conference call. Today’s presentation is made pursuant to the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. The presentation may contain forward-looking statements about our new business and credit outlooks, market conditions, credit spreads, financial ratings, loss reserves, financial results or other items that may affect our future results. These statements are subject to change due to new information or future events. Therefore, you should not place undue reliance on them as we do not undertake any obligation to publicly update or revise them, except as required by law.

If you are listening to a replay of this call or if you’re reading the transcript of the call, please note that the statements made today may have been updated since this call. Please refer to the Investor Information section of our website for our most recent presentations and SEC filings, most current financial filings and for the risk factors. This presentation also includes references to non-GAAP financial measures. We present the GAAP financial measures most directly comparable to the non-GAAP financial measures referenced in this presentation, along with a reconciliation between such GAAP and non-GAAP financial measures and our current financial supplement and equity investor presentation, which are on our website at assuredguaranty.com.

Turning to the presentation. Our speakers today are Dominic Frederico, President and Chief Executive Officer of Assured Guaranty Limited; and Rob Bailenson, our Chief Financial Officer. After their remarks, we will open the call to your questions. As the webcast is not enabled for Q&A, please dial into the call if you’d like to ask a question. I will now turn the call over to Dominic.

Dominic Frederico: Thank you, Robert, and welcome to everyone joining today’s call. We continue to build value for Assured Guaranty shareholders and policyholders during the third quarter and first nine months of 2023. Adjusted book value per share of $148.3 and adjusted operating shareholders’ equity per share of $99.18, both reached record highs at the end of the third quarter. New business production has been strong this year with significant contributions from U.S. public finance, international infrastructure finance and global structured finance. For the fourth consecutive year, our PVP for the first three quarters reached or exceeded $240 million, coming in at $249 million for 2023. In July, we completed our transaction with Sound Point Capital Management and Assured Healthcare Partners, which resulted in a $241 million pretax gain net of expenses.

We now continue our asset management diversification strategy to our 30% ownership interest in Sound Point. The earnings from that stake will be reflected for the first time in our fourth quarter reporting, furthering our strategy of generating fee-based earnings to complement our risk-based financial guarantee earnings. We also expect enhanced returns on our investment portfolio based on a broader range of alternative investment options with Sound Point. More generally, these changes will also result in a streamlining some of our financial disclosures. Rob will expand on this in a few minutes. In capital management, during the third quarter, we completed our current debt restructuring efforts by refinancing $330 million of our senior obligations due next year.

We also picked up the pace of our share repurchases, buying $64 million worth of shares in the quarter. And last week, our Board of Directors increased our repurchase authorization by $300 million. Before I go into greater detail about the quarter and year-to-date results, I want to tell you about two important management promotions. I’m pleased to announce that CFO, Rob Bailenson, will become Assured Guaranty’s Chief Operating Officer as of January 1, 2024. Rob will assume responsibility of our financial guarantee underwriting and origination strategies worldwide as well as other initiatives to grow our financial guarantee business and increase returns. We will also be working with me on setting the company’s strategic direction and in assisting and executing other corporate priorities.

Additionally, we are fortunate to have an outstanding person of fill Rob’s role as CFO, Ben Rosenblum. Ben is currently our Chief Actuary. Ben has managed under Rob many critical financial functions, including accounting and financial reporting. As CFO, he will add treasury tech and investment management to his portfolio of responsibilities. Ben’s quantitative and management skills have helped us accomplish many business objectives since he joined us in 2004. Most recently, he was instrumental in completing the Sound Point transaction. Rob and Ben have running these promotions by making numerous significant contributions over their many years at Assured Guaranty. With their extensive understanding of our strategies, markets, business practices, and unique characteristics of the financial guarantee business, I’m confident they will provide great leadership in the years to come.

Turning to U.S. public finance. Our total year-to-date municipal bond par insurance was down 9% year-over-year. We nonetheless achieved a nearly 10% increase in the par amount of bonds sold with our insurance, guaranteeing $14.1 billion or 62% insured market share. This includes $7.2 billion of par from 27 large transactions at each involved at least $100 million of insured par, up from $4.8 billion of par from 21 such transactions in the first three quarters of 2022. Importantly, the industry has maintained relatively steady high insured penetration rates this year with a rate of 8.5% of new issue par sold for the first nine months of 2023 compared with 7.8% for the first nine months of 2022. The nine-month 2023 penetration rate is the highest in the decade.

And in the third quarter of 2023, with overall par volume issued up only 3% year-over-year. We ensured almost 50% more primary market par sold than we did in the third quarter last year. Our ensured par sold in the primary and guaranteed in the secondary markets totaled $4.4 billion, up from $3.4 billion in the third quarter of 2022. We are also pleased with the increased activity we are seeing on bonds with underlying AA ratings from S&P or Moody’s. In that category, we insured approximately $2.8 billion of par during the first nine months of 2023, up from $2.3 billion of par for the first nine months of last year. We wrote 64 policies on such AA transactions during the nine month period, 55 which were for new issues. We believe investors see our guarantee on high-quality credits as a mitigant to downgrade market value risks.

And looking forward to the fourth quarter activity, we’re off to a strong start. In the month of October, through U.S. public finance transactions between $350 million and $750 million sold are closed with our insurance. Two airport transactions and the green bond transaction in the power sector. Outside of U.S. public finance, our international public finance business produced $38 million of PVP year-to-date. We also have a promising pipeline of additional infrastructure business closing five transactions in the airport, water utility, higher education, and student accommodation sectors with par totaling almost $600 million. In Global Structured Finance, we produced $82 million of PVP year-to-date assuring that 2023 will be our best year for direct structure finance production since 2009.

A close up of a worker signing a document, illustrating the company's commitment to credit protection products.

We have another number of future mandates expected to close this year. The growth of our structured finance business further validates the three-pronged approach we take to writing financial guarantee business by diversifying across U.S. public finance, global structured finance, and international infrastructure markets, we can reduce production volatility over time as viewer [ph] conditions in one market can be offset by a more favorable environment in another. Our last remaining nonpaying Puerto Rico exposure is the Power Authority PREPA, for which we continue our loss mitigation efforts. After mediation reach and pass proposed PREPA plan of adjustment appears set towards a contested plan confirmation hearing. We remain committed to resolving PREPA consensually if possible, but we’ll protect our bond claims and, of course, our creditor legal rights to litigation in Tier 3 plan confirmation and appeals processes necessary.

Meanwhile, our outstanding PREPA insured exposure continues to reduce. Overall the strength of our insured portfolio has improved significantly in the last several years largely because of our loss mitigation efforts. We now classified only 2.1% of our $242 billion insured portfolio as below investment grade compared with 4.6% of the portfolio in 2017. As I mentioned on our last call, during the third quarter, S&P reaffirmed its AA financial strength rating with stable outlooks of our insurance companies, setting both our very strong financial risk profile and very strong business risk profile in its annual review of us. This report describes [indiscernible] supporting our AA rating, including S&P’s view that we have excellent capital and earnings with a meaningful capital adequacy buffer.

Additionally, in October, KBRA reaffirmed its AA+ insurance financial strength rating with stable outlook of our financial guarantee operating subsidiaries and its annual surveillance reports on AGM and AGC. It also commented that investor demand for our product may be further enhanced by economic conditions such as tightening credit cycle, an economic environment of higher interest rates, volatile widening credit spreads and economic uncertainty. Our product is designed to provide value in a matter of the market environment, including when credit or market conditions are particularly uncertain. We believe the market disruptions during the pandemic and more recently volatility in the markets and global economies geopolitical unpredictability and climate-related natural disasters have resulted in a broader [indiscernible] of the protection and value our guarantee provides against unforeseen circumstance and incredibly appreciation for the capital and liquidity supporting our insurance policies.

We believe that concerns in the market can increase the demand for financial guarantee insurance, because it cannot support price stability and provide greater certainty of execution for new issues in the volatile pricing environments. Our outlook is positive as we continue to focus on our core principles of prudent capital management that is optimized for the benefit of our policyholders and shareholders, disciplined risk management, and clear and well-executed strategies for new business production. I will now turn the call over to Rob.

Robert Bailenson: Thank you, Dominic, and good morning to everyone on the call. I am pleased to report third quarter 2023 adjusted operating income increased to $206 million or $3.42 per share. This represents an increase of 55% and 62% respectively, compared with the third quarter of last year. The increase was primarily driven by the gain on the Sound Point and AHP transactions of $190 million, which is net of transaction expenses and deferred taxes. The Sound Point and AHP transactions were strategic milestones towards our goal of increasing fee-based and alternative investment earnings in order to grow the returns of the company, while diversifying sources of income. With the Sound Point transaction, we will own a 30% interest in an asset manager with historically strong AUM growth that provides an array of alternative investment options.

In keeping with our commitment to invest a total of $1 billion in Sound Point managed alternative investments within two years, we committed $150 million to two Sound Point funds in the third quarter and another $100 million since the end of the third quarter. Including funds managed by Sound Point, AHP, and others, as of September 30th, 2023, we had $630 million in alternative investments. Our inception to date annualized returns across all alternative investments is 12%. Before I get into a discussion of the third quarter, I wanted to highlight a few financial reporting changes resulting from the Sound Point and AHP transactions. First, while we are still reporting an asset management segment, it now primarily consists of our 30% share of Sound Point earnings net of any amortization of intangible assets associated with the Sound Point investment, because all Sound Point reporting is on a one quarter lag.

Our share of Sound Point results will be first reported in the fourth quarter. And second, the Sound Point and AHP transactions triggered the deconsolidation of all Assured IM CLOs and CLO warehouses as well as the AHP funds. However, due to the significant ownership interest and other control rights that we maintain in certain funds, we continue to consolidate three Assured IM funds that are now being managed by Sound Point, a CLO fund and two asset-based funds with a total net asset value of $272 million. The net impact of CIBs to adjusted operating income was a loss of $10 million which primarily consists of a loss on deconsolidation of the CLOs and AHP funds. In the Insurance segment, adjusted operating income was $59 million in the third quarter of 2023 compared with $159 million in the third quarter of 2022.

The decline was primarily attributable to increase reserves on PREPA exposures and a lower benefit on RMBS transactions compared with the third quarter of 2022. Economic loss development in the third quarter of 2023, for RMBS transactions, was a benefit of $48 million, primarily due to higher recoveries for charged-off loans. Higher earnings generated by the investment portfolio partially offset increases in loss expense. Net investment income on available-for-sale fixed maturity securities increased by $32 million due to the acceleration of accretion on loss mitigation securities and higher short-term interest rates and average investment balances. Equity and earnings on alternative investments was a gain of $25 million in the third quarter of 2023 compared with losses of $11 million in the third quarter of 2022.

In addition, fair value gains on Puerto Rico contingent value instruments were $4 million in the third quarter of 2023 compared with losses of $8 million in the prior year period. Net earned premiums and credit derivative revenues increased to $99 million in the third quarter of 2023 from $92 million in the third quarter of last year. Accelerations were $15 million in the third quarter of 2023 compared with $12 million in the third quarter of last year. Deferred premium revenue remained steady at approximately $3.6 billion as new business production replenished the amortization of deferred premium revenue. Total operating and compensation expenses across all segments were $91 million in the third quarter of 2023 down from $94 million in the third quarter of last year.

The third quarter of this year includes $14 million in Sound Point and in AHP transaction expenses and no longer includes asset management segment expenses, which were $24 million in the third quarter of last year. As you know, our effective tax rate fluctuates from period to period based on the proportion of income in different tax jurisdictions. On a year-to-date basis, the effective tax rate was 18.4% for 2023 compared with 8.1% for 2022. In addition to advancing our key objectives in asset management, alternative investments and new business production, we continue to focus on capital management. In the third quarter, we increased the pace of share repurchases to $64 million or 1.1 million shares. Last week, the Board of Directors increased the share repurchase authorization by $300 million.

We also achieved a great execution on the refinancing of $330 million of debt that was scheduled to mature in mid-2024. Our next debt maturity is now in September of 2028. The refinancing provides us the flexibility to pursue other capital management strategies, including share repurchases. At the holding company level, we currently have cash and investments of approximately $146 million of which $67 million resides in AGL. These funds are available for debt service and corporate operating expenses as well as share repurchases and other strategic initiatives. The transformation of our Asset Management segment, the efficiency of our capital management activities and focus on new business origination and earnings growth continue to drive adjusted operating shareholders’ equity and adjusted book value per share to new records of over $99 to $148 respectively.

I’ll now turn the call over to our operator to give you the instructions for the Q&A period. Thank you.

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Q&A Session

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Operator: Thank you. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions]. First question comes from Tommy McJoynt with KBW. Your line is open.

Thomas Mcjoynt-Griffith: Hey, good morning guys. Thanks for taking my questions.

Dominic Frederico: Good morning.

Robert Bailenson: Good morning.

Thomas Mcjoynt-Griffith: Looking at the gross written premium and the PVP in the quarter, there was a sizable decline. And while I understand the structured finance side can be lumpy. Should we read anything into this such as a pullback or a tightening of credit from your underwriting standpoint? Or is this simply a function of what the market gave you and you’re really trying to write as much new business as you can?

Dominic Frederico: It’s really a function of mix of business in the quarter. There was a rapid start decline in the BBB issuance in the quarter, which obviously is where we — most of our put in. So that affected what we were able to write. So we wrote a lot of what I’ll call, down the middle of the road, flow business, highly rated. Now the rates that are available to us in the marketplace.

Thomas Mcjoynt-Griffith: Okay, got it.

Robert Bailenson: And Tommy, as we said, as Dominic said in the fourth quarter, we’re seeing a strong flow in public finance.

Thomas Mcjoynt-Griffith: Got it. Okay. And then switching gears on the capital standpoint, is your leverage position, your debt-to-capital, a constraining factor that could inhibit you from doing more buybacks at some point? And when you and perhaps your regulators look at the opportunity for buybacks and what that could mean for your debt-to-capital ratios. Do you look at a capital number that includes or excludes the other comprehensive income, given the swings that we’ve seen there?

Robert Bailenson: Well, the regulator would look at excluding other comprehensive income looking on a statutory basis. And we look — we generally look at our debt-to-capital ratios with respect to the rating agency constraints. And yes, it’s true that as you — if, in fact, you somehow shrink your capital that you also have to de-lever. But with our refinancing that we did this year and that we’re able to push our maturity of five years, we have flexibility going forward of what we can do in capital management.

Dominic Frederico: Yes. At this point of time, it’s not a constraint.

Robert Bailenson: But it’s always something that we look at.

Thomas Mcjoynt-Griffith: Okay. Got it. And then just last question. What’s your initial understanding of the potential tax regime changes in Bermuda and how that could impact your business? And to the extent that the effective tax rates do increase there, do you think that your business could pass through those rate increases in order to maintain returns?

Robert Bailenson: Yes. And at the end of the day, as you know, the global minimum tax is going to be effective in 2024. So because Bermuda had a no tax jurisdiction, we would have had to pay whatever income that Bermuda makes 15% would go to the U.K. because we’re a U.K. tax resident. So if Bermuda initiates tax, and we just would not have to pay that tax to the U.K., we would just pay that tax to Bermuda. And yes, we believe that, obviously, would be profitable. And also, just remember, it’s still significantly lower whatever tax significantly lower than the U.S. And there’s a significant amount of capital here in Bermuda that earns at a lower tax rate, and we constantly evaluate and do tax planning based on that.

Thomas Mcjoynt-Griffith: Got it. Thank you.

Operator: We now turn to Giuliano Bologna with Compass Point. Your line is open.

Giuliano Bologna: Good morning and congratulations on another successful quarter. It’s great to see the continued strong performance.

Robert Bailenson: Thank you, Giuliano.

Giuliano Bologna: One thing, I was curious I ask and I may have missed this during prepared remarks. I’m curious if there’s any commentary about special dividends or how do you think about your ability to [indiscernible] at this point or and then also how do you think about topping off capital holding company on kind of a go-forward basis that way?

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