First American Financial Corporation (NYSE:FAF) Q4 2022 Earnings Call Transcript

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First American Financial Corporation (NYSE:FAF) Q4 2022 Earnings Call Transcript February 9, 2023

Operator: Greetings and welcome to the First American Financial Corporation Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2022 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A brief question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. A copy of today’s press release is available on First American’s website at www.firstam.com/investor. Please note that this call is being recorded and will be available for replay from the company’s investor website and for a short time by dialing 877-660-6853 or 201-612-7415 and entering the conference ID 13735364. We will now turn the call over to Craig Barberio, Vice President, Investor Relations, to make an introductory statement.

Craig Barberio: Good morning, everyone, and welcome to First American’s fourth quarter and full year 2022 earnings conference call. Joining us today on the call will be our Chief Executive Officer, Ken DeGiorgio and Mark Seaton, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. Some of the statements made today may contain forward-looking statements that do not relate strictly to historical or current fact. These forward-looking statements speak only as of the date they are made and the company does not undertake to update forward-looking statements to reflect circumstances or events that occur after the date the forward-looking statements are made. Risks and uncertainties exist that may cause results to differ materially from those set forth in these forward-looking statements.

For more information on these risks and uncertainties, please refer to this morning’s earnings release and the risk factors discussed in our Form 10-K and subsequent SEC filings. Our presentation today contains certain non-GAAP financial measures that we believe provide additional insight into the operational efficiency and performance of the company, relative to earlier periods and relative to the company’s competitors. For more details on these non-GAAP financial measures, including presentation with and reconciliation to the most directly comparable GAAP financials, please refer to this morning’s earnings release, which is available at our website at www.firstam.com. I will now turn the call over to our CEO, Ken DeGiorgio.

Ken DeGiorgio: Thank you, Craig. At the very beginning of 2022 many expected the strength of 2021 to continue into the year. Early on, however, we saw that the cycle was turning. As a result, we began to sharpen our focus on expense management. Due in part to these early expense management efforts, the benefit of growth in net investment income and a record-setting year in our commercial business, First American achieved a full year title segment pretax margin of 10%, or nearly 12% excluding net investment losses on total revenue, that declined 9% to $7.5 billion. Continuing challenging market conditions weighed on our fourth quarter financial results. In the quarter, we generated revenue of $1.7 billion and earnings per diluted share of $0.52 or $1.35 per share, excluding net investment losses.

In our title segment, we delivered a pretax margin of 7%, or 10% excluding net investment losses. The key drivers of these results were our ongoing focus on expense management and continued growth in investment income. Our Specialty Insurance segment also contributed with a pretax margin of 14%, or 18% excluding net investment losses. Turning to our key title businesses. Refinance has been declining for the past two years, so it’s now at trough levels. In January, we opened 324 refinance orders per day, down from over 1,100 per day a year ago. Our open purchase orders were down 37% this quarter. Based on our order trends, we are seeing early signs of stabilization, with open purchase orders improving from down 40% in November to down 37% in December, and down 31% in January.

The recent decline in mortgage rates, combined with lower home prices has led to some improvement in affordability and therefore, demand which makes us cautiously optimistic that the purchase market is in the early stages of recovery. Our commercial business had a record year in 2022, with revenues up 2%. However, open orders have been meaningfully declining over recent months. Open orders were down 27% in the fourth quarter, and this downward trend has continued in January with open orders down 20% compared with last year. While uncertainty remains high, our expectation for our commercial business in 2023, is that it will be another good year, but below 2022’s record level. Despite the challenging environment ahead of us, we believe the company is well positioned to emerge even stronger when the current down cycle ends.

Our healthy balance sheet allows us to continue to actively pursue capital deployment opportunities including, investing in key strategic initiatives, and acquisitions as well as returning capital to shareholders. We continue to make good progress at Endpoint, our digital title and settlement company and our instant title decisioning initiative, for purchase transactions. These investments today will pay out over time by adding efficiency, improving the way customers interact with us and importantly, freeing up our people from process-oriented tasks, to further enhance their ability to focus on delivering superior customer service. On the M&A front, we continue to have the financial flexibility to pursue attractive opportunities that may arise.

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And during 2022, we returned $658 million to shareholders through share repurchases and dividends. In closing, I want to thank our employees for all their hard work and accomplishments in 2022, and for their dedication as we navigated through the sharp downturn in the real estate market. It is their professionalism, talent and customer focus that drives our company’s continued success. Now, I’d like to turn the call over to Mark, for a more detailed discussion of our financial results.

Mark Seaton: Thank you, Ken. This quarter we earned $0.52 per diluted share. Included in this quarter’s results, were $0.83 of net investment losses. Excluding these losses, we earned $1.35 per diluted share. Two items contributed to our net investment losses this quarter. First, we realized $79 million of losses on our fixed income portfolio in connection with our tax planning strategies. Second, we incurred $46 million of unrealized losses, related to our venture portfolio. Revenue in our title segment was $1.6 billion, down 29% compared with the same quarter of 2021. The Commercial revenue was $251 million, a 34% decline over last year. Our escrow balances, which are largely driven by commercial activity, totaled $10 billion at the end of the quarter, down from $11 billion in the fourth quarter of last year.

Purchase revenue was down 30% during the quarter driven by a 36% decrease in the number of orders closed, partially offset by a 9% increase in the average revenue per order. Our revenue per order for purchase transactions continue 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 been up 1%. Refinance revenue declined 74% relative to last year due to the increase in mortgage rates. In the Agency business revenue was $753 million, down 25% from last year. Given the reporting lag in agent revenues of approximately one quarter, these results reflect remits related to Q3 economic activity.

Our information and other revenues were $241 million, down 25% relative to last year. The decline was the 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 $132 million, a 169% increase relative to the prior year. Rising short-term rates are benefiting the interest income we receive on our cash and investment portfolio, escrow balances and tax-deferred property exchange balances. As short-term rates have risen, we expect investment income to continue to be a tailwind for earnings in 2023. On the expense side, we continue to manage expenses given the decline in transaction activity.

Excluding acquisitions, our success ratio was 46%, meaning that our personnel and other operating expenses declined $232 million and our net operating revenue declined $503 million. Though below our long-term target of 60%, we believe our success ratio was a good outcome, given the sharp decline in transaction activity and our commitment to continue to fund strategic initiatives. In addition we recorded $17 million of severance expense this quarter. 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 the 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 pre-tax loss of $21 million this quarter, impacting our pre-tax title margin by 150 basis points.

Notably ServiceMac turned EBITDA positive this quarter. Pre-tax margin in the Title segment was 7.1% or 10.4%, excluding net investment losses. Turning to the Specialty Insurance segment. Total revenue in our home warranty business totaled $108 million, up 4% compared with last year. Pre-tax income in home warranty was $15 million, down from $17 million in the prior year. Excluding net investment gains and losses, pre-tax income was $21 million, up from $15 million last year. The loss ratio in home warranty was 47%, down from 52% in 2021, driven in part by a lower frequency of claims. The financial results of our Property and Casualty business are no longer material. The effective tax rate for the quarter was 6.9%. Excluding the impact of our net investment losses, our tax rate would have been 18.0%, less than our normalized tax rate of 24%, due primarily to a shift in the mix of earnings to insurance businesses, which generally premium tax and real estate income tax.

In the fourth quarter, we repurchased 687,850 shares for a total of $34 million at an average price of $49.47. For the full year of 2022, we repurchased 7.5 million shares for a total of $441 million at an average price of $58.65. Our debt-to-capital ratio as of December 31st was 30.0%. 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 22.9%. On February 1st, we repaid $250 million of senior unsecured notes that matured, using cash on hand at the holding company. Later in the year, we expect to either draw on our line or issue new senior unsecured notes to replace this debt depending on capital market conditions and other factors.

As of December 31st, we recorded accumulated other comprehensive loss of $868 million. This quarter we elected to sell fixed income securities which produced $79 million of capital loss, in connection with our tax planning strategy to offset capital gains we recognized in 2019, 2020 and 2021. We expect this strategy to ultimately generate $24 million of cash benefit. Finally, in order to provide additional transparency to investors we are making two enhancements to our disclosures. First, in addition to disclosing purchase and refinance orders we will break out commercial orders and our monthly disclosures beginning with our January report. Second, in the first quarter we will move our property and casualty results to our corporate segment and disclose home warranty as a stand-alone reporting segment.

Now, I would like to turn the call back over to the operator, to take your questions.

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Q&A Session

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Operator: Thank you. We’ll now be conducting a question-and-answer session. Our first question comes from the line of Bose George with KBW. Please proceed with your question.

Bose George: Hey, guys. Good morning. Mark can you repeat what you said about the severance expense this quarter? And then, going forward, do you think we could see more of that, or do you feel like you’ve kind of right-sized to the current environment?

Mark Seaton: Hi. Good morning Bose. So we had $17 million of severance expense, in the fourth quarter. I think heading into the first quarter, we’ll have a little bit more severance but not quite to the extent that we had in the fourth quarter.

Bose George: Okay. Great. Thanks. And then, on the tax rate going forward, should we just use kind of the normalized rate, or did anything kind of change?

Mark Seaton: No, we look at that, because if you look over the last couple of years, normalized tax rate has actually been less than 24%, because we’ve gotten discrete benefits here and there. But I think for 2023 and moving forward, somewhere between 23.5% and 24% is our normalized tax rate.

Bose George: Okay. Great. Thanks.

Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Mark DeVries with Barclays. Please proceed with your question.

Mark DeVries: Yeah, thanks. I was hoping to get some color on just the mix of the commercial business in the quarter. You still seem to be benefiting from a pretty large ARPO, kind of what’s your expectation for that as we get into 2023?

Mark Seaton: I would say, we’re going to — we’ve had obviously a lot of momentum in commercial throughout most of 2022. Fourth quarter was a little bit more challenging for us. Revenue was down 34%. It was still good relative to historical standards. It just wasn’t as good as the prior year which was a record. Looking at 2023, I’d say, orders are definitely softer now, closing to softer, I think, in first and second quarter. And we actually think that things will pick up in the second half of the year based off of conversations we’re having with our customers. But I think in terms of ARPO, certainly for the next six months we would expect to see a decline in ARPO in commercial just because we’re not seeing the same level of larger transactions that we have historically including last year.

Mark DeVries : Okay. Got it. And then just a related question on the investment income. I know there’s probably still a little bit more tailwind from a few more Fed hikes. But as the commercial orders trend down, is there a headwind there on investment income from just having kind of lower 1031 exchange balances?

Mark Seaton : There is a headwind. I would say, just on investment income, the good news is that when we look at the Fed forward curve, it’s actually more favorable now than it was a year ago — or sorry last quarter. And so the Fed rate 75 basis points in November and 50 basis points in December, we still haven’t gotten the full effect of that which we will get here in the first quarter. That’s the good news. The bad news is balances are falling and balances are falling for two reasons. One is, there’s just natural seasonality in January commercial, we typically close a lot of deals at the end of the month and then our escrow balances fall heading into January. So we’re seeing a normal seasonal impact to our balances. But we’re also, of course, seeing more of a cyclical impact or balances to with commercial down and the purchase market down.

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