Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Coface SA first half 2025 results call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speaker's presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. To ask a question during the session, you will need to press star one one on your telephone. You will then hear an automated message advising your hand is raised. Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Xavier Durand. Please go ahead.
Thank you, and thanks to all of you for logging in. We're happy to report our first half 2025 results. You've seen from the headline EUR 124 million net profit for the first half. I would qualify this as strong results. You'll see through the pitch some of the same themes that we've highlighted over the prior quarters, but I'm just going to go through the key points here. Turnover is up 2.3% at all things equal, with insurance growing 1.7%, a little bit of positive client activity, even though there's no clear trend there. The client retention remains at a near-record level. Pricing continues to be, I would say, within the average trend line of history. Good growth on business information, growing almost 15%. Debt collection, strong growth at 35% for the first half. Factoring remains, I'd say, the slow point here.
As you know, we are a factor in Germany and in Poland, and that's the heart of industrial Europe, which is the toughest place probably at this point in Europe. The loss ratio is up five points at 40%, which brings the net combined ratio for the first half to 71%. We will go through the risk numbers later on the slides as we usually do, but pretty much the risk, I would say, is under control in an environment which is obviously more uncertain and more difficult than it was in the last four years. We have a net cost ratio which has increased by 2.8%, which has both contained both the effect of the slowing inflation and also a deliberate investment, dynamic investments by ourselves, which are very much in line with the strategy that we've highlighted for Power of the Core a year ago.
We are building on data. We're building on technology. We're strengthening our core expertise in credit insurance. We've announced a leadership change here Jörg Diewald joining Coface with a long history of both working in financial services in large groups and leading a startup fintech environment in Germany. He is joining to lead the business information and the partnerships areas, which are two growth areas for Coface . Thibault Suré, who has been with us for more than nine years, is going to lead and focus on technology, leading a newly created technology hub that's really taking stock of the importance of technology, of data for us, both in the business information, but also in the core insurance business.
We've announced the creation of a Lloyd's Syndicate that's going to give us two notches of improvement capability in our solutions to clients, and that's particularly important for our financial institutions clients. We've acquired Cedar Rose. We announced that last quarter, and we've closed that transaction. We've also signed and now closed as of today the acquisition of a small company in Switzerland called Novature International. A total of EUR 124 million for the first half, with EUR 62 million in the second quarter, brings the return on tangible equity to 12.6%. Strong balance sheet as well. We estimate the solvency ratio at 195%, which is just almost the same as at the end of 2024, and clearly above our target range of 155% to 175%. On the next page, we provide a little bit of a background on the environments. I mean, you see on the top left, global GDP growth.
As you know, we're pretty much a reflection of the global economy. We provide services in 200 countries in all sectors of activities. What you see here is that 2025 so far is shaping up as being the slowest growth year in the last 10 on a global basis, barring, of course, the COVID 2020 event. It's this sluggish growth environment, I would say. You see the corollary of that on the bottom left, which is the global insolvencies. Not only is it higher than where we were in 2019 pre-COVID by something like 25%, but it's also the highest level of insolvencies we've seen in the last 10 years. I think we can say we're clearly in a tougher part of the cycle. As a result of this, we are managing risk actively. We're taking action.
You can see on the top right hand, the level of limit actions we've taken is 16% higher than it was at the same time last year and 50% higher than what we did in 2019. Our actions take into account the environment. I think we've got the risks. Our policies have not changed. We have been, I think, through the past few years, quite rigorous in the way we approach risk, and we continue to do so in this part of the cycle. We're also investing, and you'll see that in the numbers. We are adding salespeople in trade credit insurance, where we see market opportunities that are both profitable and less tapped. We are above 800 people now in business information and data. This includes the two businesses we've bought. We've added 30 salespeople in two years in the debt collection teams.
We have created a tech hub and staffed it with about 30 engineers in AI. We have realigned the management structure. All of these are clear investments that we're making, betting on the future. The good news is we're starting to see some numbers move. The new business for trade credit insurance in Q2 is up 21%. That's the best that we've had in five years. Business information continues to grow double digits, and new business year to date is up 38%. Debt collection revenues are up 56% in Q2. We see the impact and actually the market appetite for the solutions that we're able to provide. We are introducing AI-generated credit scores for our information clients, which are progressively replacing the older versions of scores. Clearly, it's providing both better accuracy and better productivity and better efficiency. Clearly, investments in that space.
In terms of the level of companies that we are able to get data on, we continue to increase our patrimony. We have an index now that reaches 240 million companies around the world. Clearly, investments going in. We are continuing to do the hard things in this business to invest in the future, and that's going to help going forward. The next page really talks about CSR, and I've had the opportunity to present this page or an update to this page several times already. I'll go quickly through the key pillars. As a responsible insurer, we are committed to reducing the carbon consumption of our portfolio. We had set for ourselves a target of 30% reduction by 2025 and 40% by 2030. The good news is we are ahead of this ambition.
Through the selection of where we invest our money, we have been able to reduce the carbon consumption of our portfolio to the tune of 48% by the end of 2024. Clearly, good progress there. As a responsible employer, we want to make sure we get top-notch engagement from our employees. The latest survey results we get position us clearly in the top quartile of our industry benchmark, if not in the top 10% and on a number of those criteria. We're continuing to work hard on diversity and inclusion. We're focused on disabilities, and we're focused on achieving a 40% target of women in the top 200 managers by 2030. We started out with 34% in 2022, and we achieved 38% by the end of 2024. Good progress being made.
We do not want to compromise in any way on the quality, which means that we have to continue to build female talent pipelines throughout the entire organization. As a responsible enterprise, we wanted to reduce the consumption, the emissions of carbon by our business by 11% by 2025 from 2019. We've actually achieved 27% in absolute numbers. If you take into account the fact that we've added staff in the business, it's actually a 37% reduction per person. A good chunk of this is linked to reduction of travel, fewer or smaller offices, less commute, work-from-home policies, etc., which have been allowing us to reduce quite significantly our carbon emissions. We're driving the culture. I think this has been a multi-year effort. We have achieved a silver rating from EcoVadis last year. We are expecting soon a new rating on their behalf.
We hope that's going to recognize the efforts that we're making. Clearly, this is now an initiative which is embraced, I would say, throughout the company and serves as actually a common theme that we can all refer to. Going to the next pages, which you're very familiar now with because we pretty much keep the same format every quarter. Turnover, as I said, up 2.3%. Services are up 8.2%. Now it's been a few quarters that we see that services are actually helping the top line growth numbers. Within that, you see trade credit up 1.7%, business information 14.7%, third-party debt collection. These are debt collection services sold to non-insured clients, up 35%. Factoring is down 1.5%. Not much there. That's news. I think it's the heart of industrial Germany. The insurance fees are continuing to grow in line with the premiums at 2.5%.
That's something that contributes really nicely to our bottom line. On the next page, we describe the split by region, as we usually do. What you see, plus and minus some one-offs, is a reflection of the global economy. I'll start with Northern Europe, which includes mainly Germany and Northern Europe. It's actually up slightly 0.1%, reflecting, I think, the slow economy in that part of the world. Central Europe is negative. There's been a couple of points of that negative, which is due to the transfer of large clients to Asia-Pacific. Pretty much evolves as does Northern Europe. Western Europe is slightly better. That includes France and the U.K. and Switzerland. Slightly better numbers there. Even better numbers when it comes to the Mid and Africa region with 3% growth. That includes Spain, Italy, and the Middle East. North America, a little bit lower than that 2%.
Asia-Pacific doing pretty well. Got to take a couple of % out of this for transfer from Central Europe. Latin America continues to see good growth on the back of local inflation and soft commodity prices, which they make a lot of. On the next page, continued growth story on new production. You see that this is the best year we've had in many, with new business up actually 21% in Q2. That's a reflection both of a continued demand in the market, as there is a lot of uncertainty out there. People are interested in the solutions we have to provide. Clearly, also the investments that we're making in sales and trying to tap lesser segments, I think that's paying off. Retention rate is actually very good at 94%, close to our record level.
We're staying very close to our clients, very consistent in the way we manage risk and servicing. Very, very focused on servicing our clients well. In terms of price, we are - 1.4. That's pretty much the average of the last 10 years. The market remains extremely competitive. I think we continue to see actors that are willing to take a high level of risk and/or maybe a level of returns that are not awesome. We stay very consistent to our strategy of delivering value through the cycle. Finally, client activity, client volume is slightly up. No clear trend here. It's up one month and down the next month. It varies by region. I think there's been a lot of posturing in anticipation of the tariff policies by different actors in different industries. Some have tried to stock ahead of the imposition of tariffs and things like this.
It's a little bit murky. No very clear trend at this stage. If we go to the next page, we are on losses. The gross loss ratio, as you can see, Q2 2025 stands at 36.9%. It's clearly higher than where we were in 2024, but it's better than actually in Q1. I would say claims activity is back to pretty much historic levels. We are seeing higher amounts. There's been some inflation, and we are seeing severity continuing to increase slowly but surely. Bigger and bigger companies in all sorts of sectors and countries are being impacted than was the case before. We haven't changed our reserving policy. We still open the new vintage, as you can see, to 78 point something %, similar to prior years. We are getting good bonus from the prior vintages.
It's actually 41%, albeit a little bit less than last year, which reflects the slight slow, but certain increase in risk that we're seeing in the market. On the next page, we describe, as usual, the risk for the total year for the last four years. I don't think there's much news here, so I'd rather focus on the next page, which describes the risk by quarter. I think the story here is that there is not much actually to see. You can see the four largest and most stable regions of our organization at the bottom. Pretty much all of them are at very good levels in the 40% or lower. There are little spikes here and there tied to one file or another, but pretty much not much to say or not much to report.
Same thing on the three smaller, more volatile markets on the top of the chart. There are variations. These are small regions, so they'll be more volatile and they're inherently more risky of being faraway places. We've got that, I would say, pretty much under control so far. There isn't much to say again. I think we've got risk well under control, even though the market is not in the best part of the cycle. If we go to the next page, we talk about costs. As you can see, which was pretty much the case also last quarter, our costs are up 8.2% from Q2 2024. The cost ratio is up, and you've got a walk on the top right hand of the chart here that shows how we go from 32.6 in the first half to 2024 to 34.6, so a 2% increase in 2025.
0.6% is really, I would say, the aftermath of the inflation surge and recession that we've seen in the last few years. We have embarked cost inflation that is not now reflected in the activity of our clients. That's about 0.6 points. We are getting better contribution from services because they are growing, so they're contributing to lower our cost ratio. Finally, we are investing to the tune of 2.3 points. Within that, about 0.6 is tied to investments we're making in the insurance sector, mainly sales and distribution. 1.7 points are linked to business information and debt collection. We are investing deliberately in that area because we think there's potential there. We are seeing progress in a number of markets. I think it's worth it, even though it means that we are slightly below the line in terms of the contribution of that business.
I think it's the right thing to do for the future. That's pretty much the story for cost. With that, I'm going to turn it over to Phalla for the reinsurance page.
Yes, indeed. We are now on page 16 on the reinsurance side. You can see that the premium cession rate is pretty similar to half year 2024, while the claim cession rate has increased from 22% to 23%. This leads us to a reinsurance result of - 52 compared to last year. Last year was exceptional for us, so exceptional also for our external reinsurers. Let's move to page 17. The net combined ratio at 71.3% with a net cost ratio, if you compare half year to half year, moving up by 2.8 points. This is pretty similar to what Sally said in terms of increase of the cost ratio, gross cost ratio. When it goes to the net loss ratio, increased from 35% to 40%, so 5 points. Again, if we don't compare to last year, it was pretty much a very excellent year for us.
It's now much more comparable to the half year 2023 level, but in a much tougher economic environment. If we look at the Q2 only, I would not compare that with the Q2 2024, because Q2 2024 benefited from much higher reserve, so bonus from prior years. If we look at it and compare to Q1 2025, which is much more the same environment, the increase is about 5 points. I just want to highlight also the fact that in Q2 2025, given the internal reinsurance structure that we have and the drop of the U.S. dollars compared to euro, this has created a negative impact on net loss ratio. Part of that is basically offset. You see in the following page in the IFE line, it's just a geography of booking of the FX impact. Now we're moving to page 18.
The financial portfolio started with the market value at EUR 3.2 billion after the payment of EUR 200 million of dividend at the end of May. You can see that we're still maintaining more or less the same asset allocation with a very high level in terms of liquid assets. This is the 13% bucket that you can see on the left-hand side. When it comes to the investment income, I will start with the recurring income, which is moving from 48 to 52, and the accounting yield, which is now slightly improving, but more or less at 1.7 for half year. When it comes to the FX lines, I would provide you with the same comments that we had in Q1.
Actually, the - 23.7 is made of - 6.7 million euros of hyperinflation accounting on Turkey mainly, and then FX loss, which is - 17 million euros due to the U.S. dollars dropped compared to euros. This is really the loss on our investment assets. On the other side, you can see the offset in the investment finance expense line, 6.7. This is a positive amount, out of which actually you have an FX gain of EUR 23 million. Of course, part of that is offsetting what I just said before on the asset side, the - 17. Part of that is offsetting the negative impacts on the net loss ratio. Really, geography of booking. This leads us to a net income of 124 and operating income of 186 compared to 217, back to actually the first half 2023 level. Return on average tangible equity at 12.6%.
If we look at the average equity moving from EUR 2,194 million to almost EUR 2,100 million. Of course, we pay the full year dividend - 209, and we only account for the half-year result. Return on average tangible equity moving from 13.9% to 12.6%. This is really similar to what we got in Q1. I think Q1 return on average tangible equity stood at 12.7%. No change, not much change. This quarter, we also have the solvency ratio and the balance sheet position. Total balance sheet at EUR 8,070 million. We talk about insurance investment, EUR 3.2 billion. Factoring assets totally backed by factoring liabilities. Nothing much to say here. You know today we're trading above the book value, of course, and above the tangible book value. Solvency ratio, a robust one. We're moving from 196% to 195%. 196% at the end of last year.
You can see that I think the operating results, which is the on-fund valuations, is more than offsetting the SCR increase, which is, of course, sustaining the growth of our business. On the right-hand side, you can see the two series of shocks, the usual ones. The market shocks, again, we would be above the upper range of our comfort zone. The 1 in 50 and 1 in 20 events, again, we will be on the upper range of our comfort zone. If we move to page 24, this is how our 195% of solvency ratio is made of. You can see the capital requirement of EUR 1,370 million to be compared with our solvency to eligible on funds of EUR 2,673 million. Xavier, I give the floor back to you for the outlook.
Yeah. This is pretty much the summary of the first half. We consider it to be a good first half. Net profit EUR 124 million, 12.6% annualized ROATE. Clearly, a tougher insolvency cycle. The economic environment is complicated. There's a lot of uncertainty out there. We're delivering a combined ratio of 71.3%, which is below what we had ambition as mid-cycle. The Q2 is close to our mid-cycle levels while we continue to invest. We're not betting on our investments. We're doing the hard things, investing for the future. It's hard to predict where the environment goes. I mean, tariffs are slowly falling in place. It's not as bad as some feared, but it's clearly much higher than it used to be. There is to be seen what impacts this will have. Europe is still a slow place in general. We are investing. We created a new tech hub.
We are creating a Lloyd's Syndicate. We acquired Cedar Rose. We acquired Novature International. We are investing in trade credit insurance sales. We are innovating, I think. I think our strategy is right. I think we are very consistent with everything we've said about the company in the last few years, about the Power of the Core strategy that we've laid out a year ago. We're starting to see tangible results materialize in some of the metrics I mentioned earlier. I think that's a positive. With that, I would like to turn it back to the audience for questions.
Thank you. As a reminder, to ask a question, you will need to press star one and one on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press star one and one again. Please stand by as we compile a Q&A roster. Our first question comes from the line of Benoît Vallot of Oddo BHF. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Yes. Hi. Good afternoon. Thank you for taking my questions. I have two questions. In fact, the first one is related to your new captive at Lloyd's offering a AA-rated solution to clients. Can you just, I don't know, quantify or give us any view on what is the potential level of premiums or revenue coming from this new entity? The second question is related to BI. I think that you mentioned the fact when you comment on cost evolution that you made an investment which has a negative impact of 1.7% on BI on your gross cost expense ratio. At the opposite, you have some slight positive effect due to product mix. Net-net, it's a drag on your expense ratio. You managed this business to be breakeven in the past. Can you just also quantify what has been the earnings from this business in Q2?
What is the amount of investment, let's say, net losses from this business? Do you still expect BI to be EPS accretive on your ROATE for 0.5% in 2027? The third question, if I may, is related to solvency margin. Do you have any view on what could be the potential impact from you from the solvency 2 review? Thank you.
I'll leave the last one for Phalla to think about. In terms of the Lloyd's Syndicate, what it does is it gives us a two-notch improvement in our rating. We go through a AA. We were at a disadvantage in the market, let's be fair, given our rating, which is good, but not as good as at least one of the other participants. This puts us back right on par. It will help us address a piece of the financial institutions market, which is very sensitive to ratings. This is the part of the market where you see limited losses. Clearly, rating matters because it enhances the RWE relief that the banks who are our clients get. This is something like half of our financial institutions. It's a few percent of our total premiums that are going to go through this.
In terms of business information, we've run it at a 0% profit, I would say, by and large. As you can see, this quarter, we're investing a little bit more. It's creating a little bit of a drag. There's no reason for us to change the guidance. This is all timing stuff. We're not changing our strategy. We're not doing anything different than what we thought we would do. It's just, I think, timing. The earlier you invest, the sooner you will be able to get the results. We feel that in some of these areas, there's an opportunity for us to do that. That's how we think about it. In terms of solvency, Phalla?
Yeah. We don't expect a major impact. I think it's really on the interest to occur, but it's also what we already take into account. It's not for us.
Okay, thank you very much.
Not for our profile of business.
Okay, thank you.
Thank you. We will now take our next question. Please stand by. Our next question comes from the line of Michael Huttner of Berenberg. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Fantastic. Thank you. I had lots of little questions, if I may. One is a strategic one. Is the aim with the business information to become the kind of European equivalent of Dun & Bradstreet? How can we measure that if that's the kind of implicit ambition? It's difficult. I don't know the business very well. I can see some of the growth numbers are fantastic. The investment in people is huge, 800. It sounds like it's like 20% of Coface is now here. You've got this new guy from this new two guys, I guess, from Germany. That'd be one question. The second is the debt collection, which actually seems to be, in the short term, even more attractive, I guess, because it's closer to what people associate with it. I just wondered whether you could give us a few metrics like maybe, well, basically, the profit.
Here's what I'd like to know. Even if you just have sales, because I can figure out the profit margin must be huge on this. The third question is on the combined ratio. We're clearly well above 70 now. I was always hoping that we'd stay below 70, but clearly, I'm wrong. We're above 70 both in Q2 and also in H1. Given your experience, and I know you're going to say it's a forward-looking statement, maybe you can help me in some way. Given where we are in the cycle, clearly, we must be close to the worst point in the cycle in terms of the insolvency chart you showed at the beginning. Is this number going to, in your experience, does it get much worse, or are we beginning to stabilize at these levels?
I know you're going to say, but maybe you can help out on a bit. I had another question. You mentioned the new business sales are + 56%, I heard one, and + 21%. Can you explain a little bit more what they are? They sound fantastic numbers, but I don't know how to gauge them. I know it's lots of silly questions, and I apologize. Thank you.
They're not silly questions. In business information, this is a market. You mentioned some competitors here. This is a market which is covered today by a number of actors. We think we have something quite unique to bring because of the track record and the experience that we bring to this using the data for underwriting. We don't just make data for the sake of selling data. We make or we buy or we improve data, and we score data for the sake of underwriting a EUR 720 billion book of business, which is performing extremely well. It brings an advantage, and it brings a differentiation to this market where you have a number of actors which are more or less local or associated between each other to try to cover the world. We are agnostic in the source of data. It could be private. It could be public.
We could make it ourselves. We could buy it. It doesn't matter. We get the best data that we believe is out there. We try to negotiate the best terms. We bring it all into one umbrella. We use technology and expertise based on our own underwriting to come up with scores that are, we believe, very, very good. We provide that seamlessly to our clients through technology tools, which make it easy for them to access. They get the Coface brand, the Coface expertise, and they get the best of whatever data is out there all in one shot. That's what we do. It's slightly different, but it is competing with some of these guys that you are mentioning who tend to be both providers, competitors, partners. For us, we're very flexible. In terms of the size, yes, it is meaningful for us.
It's a small piece of our turnover, but it is inherently a profitable business that, as you know, is valued differently by the markets than the traditional insurance business, which carries a lot of capital. In terms of debt collection, we just happen to have made the technology investments over several years. It was hard. We're able to track and perform collections throughout the world using one system. I think that's a very unique feature. As we're able to go to the market with something a little bit different, and the cycle is where it is, there is demand. It's growing nicely. It's small, but it's significant in terms of growth. It is a profitable business. We just basically get a cut on anything we can collect. I would say our brand name and the fact that we're an insurer also helps in collecting. It's a good business.
In terms of the combined ratio, I think you've been following us for a decade or more, probably, Michael. I think you can probably refer to where we were and where we are today. What I'm trying to say here is we are not in the best part of the cycle. It's hard to say where this goes. Frankly, if you know, let me know because we're all interested. Clearly, it's not as good as it was five years ago. We're still performing in just slightly above 70%, which by all measures, I think, is a pretty strong level in the insurance industry and in the trade credit insurance industry. We still probably are at the best level in the industry. That's what I would say. I'm not going to make forward-looking statements. You're right.
Clearly, we're not in the best part of the cycle, and we are still performing extremely well. In terms of new sales metrics, as you know, new sales for us is a few % of our book because our book tends to renew, as I mentioned, 94% year-on-year. We keep 94% of our clients. We acquire below 10% new ones, and then we grow typically single digits. That's the way this industry works. That puts the numbers in perspective. Still, we are seeing new sales grow, and I think it's the result of the investments and the focus we have on this. I take it as a good sign for the future.
Very helpful. Thank you.
Thank you. As a reminder, to ask a question, you will need to press star one and one on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. Our next question comes from the line of Benoît Vallot of Oddo BHF. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Yes. I'm sorry. Just a very quick follow-up question on my side. Phalla, you just mentioned the negative impact from the weakness of the U.S. dollar on the Q2 net loss ratio. Can you please just quantify this impact?
I think if we look at this impact plus the gain that we have on the, I would say, IFE line, because this is how we have a look at it, right? We're talking about year-to-date probably less than two points.
Okay, thanks very much.
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Pierre Chédeville of CIC. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Good evening. It seems to work now. First question, I was wondering if you see in this new context, I would say, a change in the behavior of your main competitors or if you feel that all of us or all of you are becoming more and more restrictive in terms of insurance policy. I was also wondering if in that context of, I would say, a much more difficult environment, I would say, a ramp-up opportunity for business information or if that environment is neutral considering this type of activity. Last question, but maybe it has been asked, maybe a follow-up regarding the FX impact on combined ratio. We have seen that the dollar is skipping a bit more in July. Do you think that it could a little bit improve your combined ratio in Q3 or Q4? Thank you.
Okay. In terms of the market, clearly, we cannot be the only ones feeling increased levels of risk in the market. I don't know. I haven't seen any results from anyone else. What we see is still a competitive market. I think the market's taking a view that the efforts to underwrite some business is worth it, which I'm not always in of that view. I think we are probably ourselves more conservative than most, and we've been for years, so there's nothing here that is new, frankly. Some are slowing. Others are picking up the slack, if I may say. Unfortunately, this industry remains very competitive at this stage. In terms of the demand for business information, it's there. There is demand for business information. There are two things.
There's a lot of interest. There are also companies that have more pressure on their cost base, so they're trying to get data cheaper. There's a lot of interest for data. Are we taking this as an opportunity for ramp-up? Yes, we are investing deliberately. We're making acquisitions. We clearly are taking a view that this is going to be a market that's going to grow or where we can take a piece of business here. That's nice. We are making the investments because we think it's the right time, and we are well positioned. On the combined ratio, I'll let Phalla take that question.
Yeah. Of the FX, honestly, we don't know where Q3 and Q4 in terms of U.S. dollars FX will end up. If I look at the FX today, I think it has moved back, but very, I think, very slight movement. It's not, I would not say that at this stage, all being a cause, if we stay at the same level, it would not be significant. The drop that we see, we saw in H1 was much more significant than the improvement that we've seen in a couple of days.
Yeah, because we didn't see it.
I would not comment about Q3 and Q4.
We immediately went from quasi-parity to 1.18, right?
Yeah, exactly. As of today, it is 114, I think, yeah.
That's been quite a movement in a quite short amount of time following the Liberation Day or anticipating the Liberation Day announcements, right?
Correct.
Thank you.
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Michael Huttner of Berenberg. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Thank you very much for this opportunity. I just had two. One is on the Lloyd's Syndicate. I think I heard a couple of percent, but I don't know what this relates to. I suppose I don't know how to ask it. What's the addressable client base or market relative to what you have or within what you have, which you can now do, which you couldn't before? I don't know if or some idea of the growth potential. Just going back to the FX and the combined ratio, I'm really sorry. I wasn't paying attention here. Was it 2% at the half year? Thank you.
It's less than 2%.
Sorry. Go ahead, Phalla. Sorry.
Yeah, it's less than 2% for half year. That's right.
Okay. On the Lloyd's Syndicate, what I said, Michael, is this concerns a few % of our full existing client base. You know, you can't compete in that space if you don't have the right rating. Obviously, it'll put us in a much better position going forward to, first of all, retain that business and remain completely competitive and pertinent in the space and also hopefully to get some more. It's as much a defensive as an offensive move here.
Makes perfect sense. Brilliant. Thank you.
Thank you. There are no further questions. Speakers, please continue.
We on our side don't have much more to say. Is there any other question out there, or should we?
We have one more question in the queue.
Yep, go ahead.
Our next question comes from the line of Pierre Chédeville of CIC. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Oh, sorry to interrupt the conclusion. Just a last question because we talked about the cost ratio, but I wanted to ask regarding the evolution year-on-year on the cost, as we used to do for most companies. We see that the evolution is +8%, as far as I remember. I wanted to know if this is a mid to long-term trend that we have to consider or not.
I mean, the way I understand.
You mean a cost ratio is a ratio.
I understand. For those of you who followed the company for quite a while, you've seen that actually our cost ratio went down all the way until this year, pretty much, right? Or the end or the middle of last year. We've been driving costs out or cost efficiency consistently day in, day out. We don't change that stance. What's changed is two things. One, the inflation burst that we had in 2021, 2022, 2023 has helped lower the cost ratio because you've had turnover from clients that has grown in line with inflation. Since we bill them a percentage of their turnover, we were lifted, I would say, naturally by that burst of inflation.
At the same time, the cost that we incurred took some time before it started to reflect that inflation because, as you know, salary increases or purchases are not done on an instantaneous basis, but with several months of delay. We had a benefit for some time. Now we're seeing the reverse, which is inflation has slowed. We're not getting the benefit from clients. At the same time, we still incur the salary increases and the hike in prices that we've seen in the past. That's not something that is forever. This is something that is tied to where we are in the cycle. The second thing that is in these numbers is the investments that we are making, which are deliberate choices to invest in sales, distribution, data, technology, AI, etc.
These are things that we are doing with a view towards the future because we think it's the right time and there's a business opportunity that needs to be grabbed and that we need to make the effort to go get. Again, these are investments that we know exactly what we're doing. We monitor the outcomes of these investments. We will always have the opportunity to decide whether to continue or whether to stop them or whether to curtail them in one way or another based on the outcome and the market changes here.
Thank you.
Thank you. There are no further questions at this time. Speakers, please continue.
All right. If there's no further questions, we don't have much more to ask or to talk about. Clearly, I think the company is in good shape. The cycle is where it is. We'll know more as things develop. We haven't changed strategy. We haven't changed our posture in the market. We haven't changed our goals. We continue to execute. We will meet again for Q3 earnings. Do we have the dates, Thomas, on this?
Yes, it's early November on the 3rd.
3rd of November.
Early November. Thank you for joining, and we will speak soon. Thank you all.
This concludes today's call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.
Thank you.