Day, welcome to the Q4 2022 Enact Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speaker 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 hear an automated message advising that your hand is raised. To withdraw your question, please press star one one again. Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to Mr. Daniel Kohl, Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Thank you. Good morning. Welcome to our fourth quarter earnings call. Joining me today are Rohit Gupta, President and Chief Executive Officer, and Dean Mitchell, Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer. Rohit will provide an overview of our business, our performance, and progress against our strategy. Dean will then discuss the details of our fourth quarter results before turning the call back to Rohit for closing remarks. We will take your questions. The earnings materials we issued after market close yesterday contain our financial results for the fourth quarter of 2022, along with a comprehensive set of financial and operational metrics. These are available on the investor relations section of the company's website at ir.enactmi.com under the section marked Quarterly Results. Today's call is being recorded. It will include the use of forward-looking statements.
These statements are based on current assumptions, estimates, expectations, and projections as of today's date and are subject to risks and uncertainties, which may cause actual results to be materially different. We undertake no obligation to update or revise any such statements as a result of new information. For a discussion of these risks and uncertainties, please review the cautionary language regarding forward-looking statements in today's press release, as well as in our filings with the SEC, which will be available on our website. Please keep in mind the earnings materials and management's prepared remarks today include certain non-GAAP measures. Reconciliations of these measures to the most relevant GAAP metrics can be found in the press release, our earnings presentation, and our upcoming SEC filings on our website. With that, I'll turn the call over to Rohit.
Thank you, Daniel. Good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us to discuss our fourth quarter and full year results. 2022 was an exceptional year for Enact in which we delivered record performance, achieved several new milestones, and generated a total shareholder return well ahead of the market. We ended the year with record insurance in force of $248 billion, driven by rising persistency that reached 86% in the fourth quarter and new insurance written of $66 billion for the full year. Net income for the full year was a record $704 million, or $4.31 per diluted share, up 28% from a year ago, and return on equity was 14%.
These results are the product of the continued execution of our cycle-tested growth and risk management strategy and reflect the commitment, hard work, and talent of Enact's employees. I'd like to thank all of them for their continued focus and dedication. As I mentioned, we achieved several significant milestones in 2022, reflecting progress against all aspects of our strategy. We strengthened our value proposition and ability to compete and win new business. Our investments in innovative technology-driven tools and solutions have further differentiated our platform while also driving efficiency and enhancing decision-making. We've seen several benefits from these investments across our business, including improved underwriting efficiency and deepened understanding of layered risk. One of our stated goals at our IPO was to expand and deepen our customer relationships, and I'm pleased to say that we made meaningful progress.
Supported by our investments in the business and our enhanced financial flexibility, we have either activated or increased our new business share with 80% of our target customers since our IPO. The team is committed to building on this momentum in the new year. We continue to take actions to maintain our financial strength, flexibility, and a strong balance sheet. We ended the year with PMIER sufficiency of 165%. We continue to execute against our credit risk transfer strategy and completed three excess of loss reinsurance transactions to manage our overall risk, demonstrating our ability to source cost-effective PMIER capital and loss protection in a period of capital markets volatility and widening spreads. In July, we received our second upgrade from Moody's since our IPO, recognizing our performance and the strength and flexibility of our balance sheet.
We believe that as of the end of 2022, Enact and Genworth have fully met all the conditions necessary to remove the restrictions placed on Enact by the GSE. As a result of this significant milestone, upon confirmation from the GSEs, we expect the GSE restrictions on Enact will be lifted, a step that will further enhance our financial flexibility and elevate our competitiveness by no longer making us subject to more stringent capital requirements than our peer group. In addition to investing in our growth, we remained focused on disciplined cost management, our expense levels for 2022 were below our target of $240 million.
As part of our disciplined focus and to ensure our operations are aligned with current market dynamics, during the fourth quarter, we affected a voluntary separation program and renegotiated our shared services agreement expenses with Genworth. We remain committed to cost discipline and operational excellence, particularly in response to a market environment that remains uncertain and are currently targeting expense levels in 2023 below what we achieved in 2022. Dean will have more to say on this during his comments. Let me turn to capital allocation, where our strong execution enabled us to achieve our capital return commitment for the year. Through the initiation of our regular quarterly dividend and our special cash dividend in December, we returned just over $250 million to shareholders over the course of 2022. In November, we also announced the board's approval of $75 million share repurchase program.
Taken together, these actions reflect the strength of our balance sheet, the sustainability of our cash flows, the confidence we have in our business, and our commitment to create value for our shareholders. I'd now like to touch on our solid fourth quarter, which capped a strong year for Enact. While we have seen a slowdown in housing activity, the fundamentals of our business remains resilient. As I mentioned earlier, insurance in force reached a new record, and we wrote $15 billion of NIW, inclusive of a one-time seasoned deal in the fourth quarter. Excluding this deal, NIW was marginally lower sequentially in a smaller market, suggesting Enact gained share in the fourth quarter. As we have previously commented on, market share across the industry fluctuates quarter to quarter, largely driven by rate engine variations.
We are pleased with our NIW performance, and it reflects the strength of our platform and our ability to win new business, expand relationships, and deliver value to our customers. The pricing environment also remained constructive. During the quarter, we saw an increase in industry pricing, and we implemented several price increases on new business, and we have continued these actions into the first quarter as well. We are confident in our ability to continue to write new insurance written that generates attractive risk-adjusted returns and value for shareholders. As I've discussed previously, persistency is a natural hedge in our business and tends to increase as interest rates rise and new mortgage originations fall. Persistency again improved during the fourth quarter, reaching 86%.
At the end of the quarter, 98% of mortgages in our portfolio had rates at least 50 basis points below current market rates. We expect this dynamic to continue to support persistency moving forward. Higher persistency and new insurance levels have driven record insurance in force, which has continued to be a tailwind as the business benefits from increased duration without a corresponding increase in cost. Our delinquency rate in the fourth quarter was stable and consistent with pre-pandemic levels. Importantly, 90% of delinquencies had an estimated 20% or more of mark-to-market equity. Ever to date home price appreciation, our approach to risk management and loss mitigation, and the favorable resolution of long-term forbearance plans resulted in the net release of an additional $42 million of reserves in the fourth quarter, leading to a loss ratio of 8%.
As we did last quarter, we continue to take a prudent view on loss reserves with careful consideration given to the uncertain macro environment and any other factors which may affect the future credit performance within the portfolio. I believe it is prudent for us to be well reserved in this uncertain environment. The credit quality of our portfolio remains healthy, and while the broader housing market has slowed, we believe overall underwriting quality remains favorable. On an insurance in force basis, the weighted average FICO score in our portfolio during the quarter was 743. The average loan-to-value ratio was 93%, and our layered risk was 1.4% of risk in force. I'd like to now speak about the economic environment and housing market and how we are thinking about these factors in relation to our business moving forward.
Overall, we believe we are well positioned for 2023 and beyond, though a smaller MI market is expected and uncertainty remains in the near term. While employment and household balance sheets are healthy, inflation, rising borrower costs, and the possibility of a recession pose risks. Households have started to draw down the buffers of savings that had accumulated during the pandemic, and revolving credit card balances have increased. That said, revolving balances and household savings are both still favorable to pre-pandemic levels, and the labor market is strong. As we look to the housing market, we see strong long-term demand driven by demographics surrounding first-time homebuyers and housing supply that remains tight, which is supportive to prices. These factors are constructive for the MI industry, and mortgage insurance is an important tool to help buyers qualify for a mortgage, especially in an environment of lower affordability.
While the near-term outlook is uncertain, we are confident in the long-term foundational strength of the MI industry. Against this backdrop, we will continue to execute on our cycle-tested strategy, prudently investing in our capabilities, taking the appropriate actions to align our costs and operations with the market environment, pursuing new business that appropriately balances risk and reward, and ensuring we maintain the financial strength and flexibility to both support our policyholders and create value for our shareholders. Our performance in 2022 is evidence that we have the right plan and people in place to achieve our goals. I'd like to now comment on the actions the FHFA has announced over the last few months pertaining to the elimination of upfront fees for certain borrowers and affordable mortgage products. These actions represent an important step in facilitating equitable and sustainable access to homeownership.
We continue to be encouraged by the FHFA's support of core mission borrowers and believe the spirit of these changes is consistent with our mission at Enact to help people responsibly achieve and maintain the dream of homeownership. Before I close, I would like to note that beyond our financial performance, we have been and will be committed to making a difference. We have spoken in the past of our mission to help those who might otherwise not be able to achieve the dream of homeownership. In 2022, we have helped 192,000 homebuyers qualify for a mortgage. In addition, this year we were awarded the Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Residential Leadership Award from the Mortgage Bankers Association, demonstrating our leadership in increasing diversity in the mortgage industry and making homeownership more accessible for underrepresented communities.
We also have formed new partnerships and created innovative recruiting programs that will help address the minority homeownership gap and bring diverse talent into mortgage finance. These examples are part of our longstanding commitment to strong ESG principles. We recently published our ESG roadmap, which lays out our priorities and approach to environmental, social, and governance issues. We will have more to say on this front as the year progresses with the publishing of our inaugural ESG report in the first half of 2023. In closing, our business fundamentals remain solid. While near-term dynamics are uncertain, we believe the long-term drivers of demand remain in place. Going forward, we will continue to execute and maintain the financial strength and flexibility needed to navigate and succeed in this environment. Overall, I believe we remain well positioned to achieve our goals and continue creating value for all our stakeholders.
I will now turn it over to Dean.
Thanks, Rohit. Good morning, everyone. We delivered another solid quarter and an exceptional year of performance. GAAP net income was $144 million, or $0.88 per diluted share, as compared to $0.94 per diluted share in the same period last year, and $1.17 per diluted share in the third quarter of 2022. Return on equity was approximately 14%. Adjusted operating income was $147 million, or $0.90 per diluted share, as compared to $0.94 per diluted share in the same period last year, and $1.17 per diluted share in the third quarter of 2022. Adjusted operating return on equity was approximately 14.4%.
For the full year, GAAP net income was $704 million, or $4.31 per diluted share, compared to $547 million, or $3.36 per diluted share in 2021. Adjusted operating income for 2022 totaled $708 million, or $4.34 per diluted share, compared to $551 million, or $3.38 per diluted share in 2021. Turning to key revenue drivers. New insurance written was $15 billion in the fourth quarter, compared to $15 billion in the third quarter as well, and $21 billion in the fourth quarter of 2021. NIW in the quarter included a one-time seasoned transaction totaling $620 million.
Excluding this opportunistic transaction, NIW decreased 4% sequentially and 32% versus the prior year, driven primarily by lower mortgage originations resulting from the recent increase in interest rates. New insurance written for purchase transactions made up 97% of our total NIW in the quarter, flat to last quarter. In addition, monthly payment policies made up 91% of our quarterly new insurance written, down from 94% last quarter, primarily driven by the one-time transaction. The overall credit risk profile of our new insurance written remains strong, with loans that are underwritten to prudent market standards. Rohit discussed the natural hedge that persistency provides in our business model. With rising interest rates, persistency increased again during the fourth quarter to 86%, up from 82% last quarter and 69% in the fourth quarter of 2021.
Persistency reached an annualized rate of 87% in December. Given the expectation that interest rates will remain elevated in the short term, we expect to see continued strength in persistency levels, which is a positive for the future profitability of our in-force insurance portfolio. Insurance in force increased 10% in 2022 and 3% sequentially to a new record of $248 billion, driven by the combination of $66 billion of new insurance written and increased persistency. Our base premium rate of 41 basis points was down 0.7 basis points sequentially and down 2.4 basis points year-over-year, which is favorable to the guidance we provided in 2022.
As we've noted before, changes to base premium rate are impacted by a variety of factors and can deviate from quarter to quarter, which makes precise estimation difficult, which is especially true in a period of heightened economic uncertainty. We will not be providing guidance yet on our base premium rate trajectory for 2023. We do expect the change to be less than the 2022 decrease of 2.4 basis points. In addition to changes in base premium rate, our net earned premium rate also reflected lower single premium cancellations sequentially and year-over-year. For the quarter, single premium cancellations contributed only $2 million of net earned premium, limiting its potential for meaningful future dilution. Over the past several quarters, our net earned premium rate has been the highest in the industry, driven partially by our efficient CRT program.
Total revenues were down 2% year-over-year in 2022, ending at approximately $1.1 billion. Revenues for the quarter were $277 million compared to $275 million last quarter and $273 million in the same period last year. Net premiums earned were $233 million, down 1% sequentially and down 2% year-over-year. The slight decline in net premiums earned reflected the lapse of older higher-priced policies and as compared to our new insurance written, as well as the decline in single premium cancellations and modestly higher ceded premiums year-over-year as we continue to prudently manage our risk through our credit risk transfer program. Investment income in the fourth quarter was $45 million, up 14% sequentially and 27% year-over-year.
For the year, investment income totaled $155 million, up 10% over 2021. The recent rise in interest rates and current rate environment is providing a tailwind for our investment portfolio as our new money yield for the quarter increased to above 6%. As of year-end, unrealized losses in our investment portfolio decreased by $56 million to $487 million. Unless we identify opportunities that create long-term value within the portfolio, we do not expect to realize these losses, as we can hold the securities to maturity where market values trend to par value. Turning to credit, losses in the quarter were $18 million as compared to a benefit of $40 million last quarter and a provision of $6 million in the fourth quarter of 2021.
Our loss ratio for the quarter was 8% as compared to -17% last quarter and 3% in the fourth quarter of 2021. Losses and loss ratio in the quarter were driven by favorable cure performance on 2021 and prior delinquencies, which were above our prior expectations and resulted in a $63 million reserve release in the quarter. This was partially offset by $21 million of reserve strengthening on 2022 delinquencies and incurred but not reported reserves as we take prudent action in response to the increased economic uncertainty. For the year, losses were a benefit of $94 million compared to $125 million in 2021. New delinquencies increased by approximately 1,200 sequentially to 10,300 from 9,100.
This increase was driven in part by the impact of approximately 750 new delinquencies from natural disasters in FEMA impacted areas in the current quarter. Seasonality, coupled with higher new delinquencies from recent large books that are aging and going through their normal loss development pattern also contributed. Excluding the impact of new delinquencies from natural disasters, our new delinquency rate for the quarter was 1%, consistent with pre-pandemic levels and reflective of the continuation of positive credit trends. Our claim rate estimate on new delinquencies is approximately 10% for the quarter. Absent new delinquencies related to natural disasters, all 2022 new delinquencies are booked at an approximate 10% claim rate, reflecting our prudent and measured approach to reserving as a result of the heightened economic uncertainty. Total delinquencies in the fourth quarter were approximately 19,900.
Excluding delinquencies from natural disasters, the associated delinquency rate was 2%, which is stabilizing near pre-pandemic levels. The embedded equity position of our delinquent policies remains substantial, with approximately 90% of our delinquencies at the end of the quarter having an estimated 20% or more mark-to-market equity using an index-based house price assessment. As I've noted in the past, this can help mitigate the frequency of claims and the potential future loss for delinquencies that ultimately progress to claims. Turning to expenses, operating expenses in the fourth quarter were $63 million, and the expense ratio was 27%, versus $58 million and 25% respectively in the third quarter of 2022, and $59 million and 25% respectively in the fourth quarter of 2021. For the full year, operating expenses totaled $239 million.
As Rohit stated, we initiated a voluntary separation program during the fourth quarter that resulted in a restructuring charge of $3 million, which is excluded from our adjusted operating income and represents a 1 percentage point impact in quarterly expense ratio. In addition, we renegotiated the existing shared services agreement with Genworth as we continue to migrate additional activities to Enact. By agreement, we paid $25 million to Genworth for services in 2022, and we were scheduled to pay $20 million and $15 million respectively in 2023 and 2024. These amounts have been revised to $15 million and twelve and a half million dollars respectively in 2023 and 2024.
While we are still operating in an inflationary environment, our initiatives and ongoing focus on operating efficiency and cost reduction position us to target 2023 operating expenses of $225 million, which represents a 6% annual cost reduction from 2022. Moving to capital and liquidity. Our PMIERs sufficiency remained very strong in the quarter at 165%, or approximately $2.1 billion above the published PMIERs requirements, compared to 174% or approximately $2.2 billion in the third quarter of 2022. At quarter end, we had approximately $1.6 billion of PMIERs capital credit and approximately $1.8 billion of loss coverage provided by our credit risk transfer program. Approximately 89% of our risk in force is covered by our credit risk transfer program.
As Rohit touched on earlier, Genworth and Enact believe we have satisfied the required financial conditions and ratings requirements for the elimination of the GSE restrictions first imposed on Enact with respect to capital after the issuance of our August 2020 senior notes. If confirmed by the GSEs, we will no longer be subject to GSE conditions and restrictions. While those restrictions were largely redundant to our current and prior PMIER sufficiency levels, elimination of these restrictions will allow for greater financial flexibility and further enhance our competitive position. This matter is detailed in our prior disclosures. We would direct you to the disclosure for additional information on the conditions and restrictions. Turning now to capital allocation. We continue to execute against our capital prioritization framework during the period, including our commitment to return capital to shareholders.
In the fourth quarter, we paid a special cash dividend of $183 million, along with our $23 million regular quarterly dividend. We also initiated a $75 million share repurchase program designed to balance the return of capital to shareholders with an overall program size that is tailored to Enact's float. As of January 31, 2023, repurchases under the program have totaled $8 million. During the quarter, EMICO, our primary mortgage insurance operating company, completed a distribution of $242 million to our holding company, Enact Holdings, Inc., to bolster its financial flexibility and support our ability to return capital to shareholders as planned. We returned over $250 million of capital to shareholders in 2022. Let me close by saying that I am very pleased with our performance in both the fourth quarter and the year.
We've executed against our strategy and generated strong results in an uncertain environment. Going forward, we remain focused on maintaining the financial and operational flexibility to adapt to market conditions as necessary and realize the opportunities we see ahead while prudently managing our risk. The strength of our business, strategy, and balance sheet position us to continue creating value for our shareholders. With that, I'll turn it back to Rohit.
Thanks, Dean. We are pleased with the performance we delivered in 2022 and are proud of the value we created for all our stakeholders. As we enter the first quarter of 2023, we remain confident in our business. With a more resilient portfolio, a strong balance sheet, and significant credit risk protection, we are well-positioned for both the near and long term. In an uncertain time, we and the MI industry more broadly continue to play a critical part in supporting families and the many other stakeholders in the housing sector. We are incredibly proud of this and will continue to seek opportunities to contribute to the safety and soundness of the industry going forward. Operator, we are now ready for Q&A.
Thank you. As a reminder to ask a question, please press star one one on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, please press star one one again. One moment while we compile the Q&A roster. Today's first question will come from the line of Douglas Harter with Credit Suisse. Your line is open.
Thanks. Hoping you could talk a little bit more about the relief from the PMIERs, you know, extra charge that you've been carrying. Does that change the way you think about capital return in 2023 or going forward?
Yeah, Doug, thanks for the question. Like we said in our prepared remarks, we believe, we, both Genworth and Enact believe we've fully met the conditions necessary to lift those restrictions. They do need to be validated by the GSE, GSEs as well as FHFA. Once that happens, you know, those... we expect those restrictions to be lifted. You know, I think we talked about about those restrictions largely being redundant to our PMIERs sufficiency levels when they went in place. So, you know, from our perspective, they were below any PMIERs sufficiency levels that we were gonna hold just naturally in managing the business from a prudent balance sheet perspective. I think that same, you know, approach or same perspective also exists in the elimination of the restrictions.
They're certainly not transformational in that they're not gonna provide some windfall of release of capital that we would otherwise hold. They are useful in creating additional financial flexibility. We would say that flexibility is probably enhanced in times of heightened economic uncertainty and certainly in times of economic stress. That's how I think, you know, that's how we're thinking about it. You know, I think that's the appropriate approach to take.
Yeah. That's the only thing I'll add to that. I think Dean covered it pretty well. From a competitive perspective, it also puts us on a level playing field, in terms of how other stakeholders look at us. This is a very good milestone for us. I'm glad to be at this point. Great. Thank you.
Thank you. One moment for our next question. That will come from the line of Mihir Bhatia with Bank of America. Your line is open.
Hi, good morning, and thank you for taking my questions. I wanted to start by asking about the seasoned NIW that you mentioned this quarter. Can you provide any more detail on it? Like, I think you mentioned it was like, you know, a one-time opportunistic deal, but like any more background or any color you can provide on it, was this a competitive process? How did it come about? Did you already know the NIW that you were taking over?
Yeah. Good morning, Mihir. Thanks for the question. I would say that NIW deal that we talked about, the one-time deal, was a portfolio transaction with the lender, and this lender had been holding these loans on their portfolio for a period of time. Two-thirds of the deal was more than 1 year seasoned, and we disclosed the magnitude of the deal in our disclosures. Essentially they were looking for loss coverage and capital coverage. To the best of our knowledge, there were several MI companies that were involved in the process. At the end of the day, our relationships, our value proposition as well as our capital strength, made us win the deal. We do expect that to be a one-time deal. These are not very frequent transactions in this current environment.
Most portfolio lenders actually insure their high LTV mortgages on a regular flow basis. We thought from a transparency perspective it was worthwhile to spike that out.
Right. Sorry, just one follow-up. These were still high, high LTV loans that they were looking to insure?
That's right. These were high LTV loans at origination, and we found attractive return and the portfolio itself basically was within our credit policy, so everything aligned for us.
Okay. If I can just ask one follow-up. You know, you're at a 14% ROE, right? Is that around where we should expect? Like, what are you underwriting to? Are you underwriting generally to higher or lower? What I'm trying to, I guess, get at is, was this like a typical quarter understanding that you're gonna have quarter-to-quarter variability going forward, and a lot of it depends on the economic environment, et cetera. Like, as we think about, you know, just the returns from the business, is this quarter more or less typical? Like, you had some reserve release, you had some reserve strengthening, you know, some parts moving around, but more or less, you know, run-of-the-mill, this is what Enact should be doing consistently. Are there some additional puts and takes we should consider?
Yes, Mihir, very good question. Let me start with kind of a macro perspective and then have Dean chime in. I would say there are a lot of things going on in this quarter, including our reserve release, obviously, impact of interest rates on our investment portfolio that flows through and comes to that ROE. I would say the way we think about running the business in this environment is much more aligned with what we see in market conditions. We have seen market conditions being more uncertain, and as a result of that, we have been talking about increasing our price for the last three quarters. You have seen us increase and stabilize our price from second quarter, third quarter and this quarter.
I mentioned in my remarks that we saw a higher frequency and a higher magnitude of those price increases. I think when it comes to the new insurance written that we are adding, we are making sure that we are building a resilient portfolio for different economic scenarios, and that drove our action. When you think about our pricing returns, we are not providing any specific guidance, but we do believe that we are writing business to create returns that are accretive to shareholder value. From a balance sheet ROE perspective, I'll have Dean chime in in terms of whether this was normal or had some sense of abnormality in it.
The only thing I'd say, Mihir, is, you know, you pointed out the loss reserves. I think any time we're booking loss reserves at the end of a period, it represents our best estimate of ultimate claims on those existing delinquencies. I would say, you know, that's our expectation isn't that we're releasing reserves through time. If cure activity continues to perform at elevated levels relative to those embedded in the establishment of our expectations, that certainly could happen prospectively. I think just our mindset, you know, when we set reserves in a very prudent and measured way, is thinking about, you know, how we expect those to develop over an ultimate time period on a best estimate basis.
Got it. Thank you for taking my questions. I'll get back in queue.
Thanks, Mihir.
Thank you. One moment for our next question. Will come from the line of Bose George with KBW. Your line is open.
Hey, everyone. Good morning. Can you discuss the sort of the cadence of dividends this year? Will it be kinda similar to last year with, you know, normal dividends and then kind of a special at the end?
Yeah, Bose, thanks for the question. So, you know, I think thinking about dividends in terms of tools, you know, that we have at our disposal may be the most appropriate place to start. So we've obviously initiated the quarterly dividend. Our expectation is those continue prospectively. We also initiated the share repurchase program. That gives us a tool that's very opportunistic, both opportunistic based on, you know, valuation as well as opportunistic through time to return capital to shareholders, and then we'll continue to evaluate a special dividend at the end of years based on, you know, a combination of, you know, business performance as well as the prevailing macroeconomic environment.
I think, you know, the cadence we have is probably the cadence you'll see, subject to those, you know, those dynamics playing out.
Yeah. Okay, great. Thanks. Then the new notices in the FEMA, you know, disaster areas, can you remind us how that the reserving for those works?
Sure. Bose is your question in the context of, PMIERs?
Um.
Question in the context of reserves?
It's in the context of reserves, actually, yeah.
Yeah. We apply our best estimate of ultimate claim on FEMA designated delinquencies in the same manner, same approach that we do with any other delinquency. We do rely on our storm-related experience. You know, think about Hurricane Harvey, Hurricane Irma, Superstorm Sandy, those types of storm-related activity and how delinquencies have performed historically based on our experience. Our experience suggests that those will cure at elevated rates, and our claim rates reflect that.
Okay, great. Thanks.
Thank you. One moment for our next question. That will come from the line of Eric Hagen with BTIG. Your line is open.
Hey, thanks. Thanks. Good morning. Just one on new delinquencies, which are so low to begin with, but would you say that there's any trends that you're spotting within those loans and that bucket of delinquencies? Like, is it unemployment? Is it some homeowners that could be underwater in some cases? How do you see that maybe developing from here?
Eric, thanks for the question. You know, I think consistent with our prepared remarks, you know, credit performance remains strong. There's a lot of factors, I think, that support good credit performance. Everything from the, you know, quality of the underwrite, the strong credit quality of our insured loans, and then even the macroeconomic landscape that despite the risks that Rohit referenced, remains pretty balanced in its current form with strong employment, cumulative home price appreciation, and then meaningful household savings. You know, all of that kind of goes into a mosaic that has been, you know, supportive of strong credit performance.
I do think the one thing that we have our eye on is we do have large new books that are aging through their normal loss development pattern, and that could increase new delinquencies heading into 2023. At the end of the day, I think 2023 credit performance is gonna largely be driven by the macroeconomic environment. You know, we have a keen eye towards that. And maybe more specifically, Eric, to your question, you know, we believe that future credit performance is gonna be, you know, more highly correlated with unemployment during this part of the cycle, and employment has remained strong to date.
If, you know, what we're gonna look at is the macro look at unemployment, and if recessionary pressures emerge that more significantly affect employment, you know, we'd expect some deterioration in the credit. You know, that would be ultimately impacted how those, you know, if delinquencies increase as a result of those recessionary pressures, then we'd see how they ultimately progress the claim being impacted by, you know, the cumulative home price appreciation and other loss mitigation activities that we employ during times of financial challenges.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Eric, the only thing I'll add to Dean's question or Dean's answer is, when you just think about the environment we are operating in, from a macro perspective, housing and consumer, I think we are in a very different place than where we used to be pre-global financial crisis. The impact of home price appreciation, home price decline on consumers is much lower. We are in an environment where the credit quality, as Dean said, is much higher. The cumulative equity accumulation for these consumers is pretty significant. Then you think about our portfolio being primarily primary occupants and also a low housing supply in the market. While home prices will fluctuate in this market, as we saw recently, we don't think that that's the primary driver for new delinquencies.
Yep. Yep, that's helpful. Thanks for that detail. You know, I want to follow up on the dividend too. I mean, how has your appetite to paying a dividend changed? Maybe how would you run the business any differently if your PMIERs ratio were either higher or lower than it is today?
Yeah. Eric, I think we're comfortable with our PMIERs sufficiency levels where they are today. We've talked about, certainly under more economic uncertainty, maintaining PMIERs levels above 150%. I think, you know, really our return of capital for 2023 is gonna be driven by, you know, the macroeconomic uncertainty itself and how that ultimately, those economic headwind, tailwind ultimately resolve are gonna influence kind of our perspective on the most appropriate amount of capital to return shareholders in 2023. You know, I think we're gonna follow the same capital prioritization framework that we've talked about in the past, and one of the key aspects of that is returning capital to shareholders. You know, we're gonna be thoughtful about that.
I think we provided a little bit of a roadmap at least to part of our capital return story in 2023 with our quarterly dividends that we expect to continue prospectively in our share repurchase program. You know, I think if you put those together, you can see your way to $160 million-$170 million of planned capital return in 2023, and then we'll continue to evaluate that, the economic landscape as well as business performance through the remainder of the year to figure out if there's incremental to that.
I think, Eric, just from a cycle perspective, in normal times and good times in the economy, PMIERs target might be something that is, kind of we've talked about a range of PMIERs target for our business. As we head into an uncertain environment, I think PMIERs might be more of an outcome. If we wanna buy more loss coverage on any part of our portfolio, it might drive a higher PMIERs ratio. That doesn't imply that we are trying to drive an explicit capital return out of that ratio. It's more of an outcome in that scenario. I think that links very nicely with what Dean said.
That's really helpful. Thank you guys very much.
Thank you.
Thanks, Eric.
Thank you all for participating in today's question and answer session. I would now like to turn the call back to Mr. Rohit Gupta for any closing remarks.
Thank you, Sheri. Thank you all. We appreciate your interest in Enact and look forward to sharing our story in future conversations. I also look forward to seeing many of you next week at the Bank of America Securities Insurance Conference. Thanks, everybody.
Thank you for participating. This concludes today's program. You may now disconnect.