Fidelity National Financial, Inc. (FNF)
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Earnings Call: Q1 2026

May 7, 2026

Operator

Good morning, and welcome to FNF's first quarter 2026 earnings call. During today's presentation, all callers will be placed in listen-only mode. Following management's prepared remarks, the conference will be opened for questions with instructions to follow at that time. I would now like to turn the call over to Lisa Foxworthy-Parker, SVP, Investor and External Relations. Please go ahead.

Lisa Foxworthy-Parker
SVP of Investor and External Relations, Fidelity National Financial

Thanks, operator, and welcome everyone. I'm joined today by Mike Nolan, CEO, and Tony Park, CFO. We look forward to addressing your questions following our prepared remarks. F&G's management team, including Chris Blunt, CEO, and Conor Murphy, President and CFO, will also be available for Q&A. Today's earnings call may include forward-looking statements and projections under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, which do not guarantee future events or performance.

We do not undertake any duty to revise or update such statements to reflect new information, subsequent events, or changes in strategy. Please refer to our most recent quarterly and annual reports and other SEC filings for details on important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied. This morning's discussion also includes non-GAAP measures, which management believes are relevant in assessing the financial performance of the business.

Non-GAAP measures have been reconciled to GAAP where required and in accordance with SEC rules within our earnings materials available on the company's investor website. Please note that today's call is being recorded and will be available for webcast replay. With that, I'll hand the call over to Mike Nolan.

Mike Nolan
CEO, Fidelity National Financial

Thank you, Lisa, and good morning. Our combined business continued to deliver outstanding financial results through the first quarter. Starting with title, we delivered adjusted pre-tax title earnings of $268 million, up 27% over the first quarter of 2025. This generated an industry-leading adjusted pre-tax title margin of 13.1% for the first quarter, an increase of 140 basis points over 11.7% in the first quarter of 2025.

Our first quarter results reflect continued strong performance across the business, highlighted by strength in our direct commercial, refinance, and agency businesses. Additionally, our disciplined expense management drove strong incremental margins. Looking at our title results more closely, on the purchase front, we saw typical first quarter seasonality with sequential improvement coming off the fourth quarter, while existing home sales remained well below the historical average.

Our daily purchase orders opened were up 2% over the first quarter of 2025, up 25% over the fourth quarter of 2025, and up 4% for the month of April versus the prior year. Our refinance volumes continue to be responsive to 30-year mortgage rates. This boosted refinance orders open to 2,000 per day in the first quarter as mortgage rates moved into the low 6% level.

Volumes subsequently moderated to 1,600 per day in the month of April as mortgage rates moved higher. Our refinance orders open per day were up 52% over the first quarter of 2025, up 16% over the fourth quarter of 2025, and up 13% for the month of April versus the prior year.

For commercial, volumes continued to be strong with direct commercial revenue of $338 million in the first quarter, up 15% over $293 million in the first quarter of 2025. This was driven by a 22% increase in national revenues and an 8% increase in local revenues. We continue to see growth in both national and local market daily orders opened, with each up 5% over the first quarter of 2025. Total commercial orders opened were 906 per day, up 5% over the first quarter of 2025, up 11% over the fourth quarter of 2025, and up 9% for the month of April versus the prior year.

We also have a strong inventory of commercial deals slated to close, diversified across a broad set of asset classes, including industrial, data centers, multifamily, affordable housing, retail, and energy. To bring it all together, total orders opened averaged 6,400 per day in the first quarter, with January at 5,900, February at 6,500, and March at 6,600.

For the month of April, total orders opened were 6,200 per day, which was up 7% over the prior year. As we enter the second quarter, I want to address a question we hear frequently: How do we think about our 15%-20% targeted annual range for adjusted pre-tax title margin? Let me start with what we've already demonstrated.

Existing home sales have been near 4 million units for more than three consecutive years, among the lowest levels in three decades, while mortgage rates have remained elevated. Yet, we've delivered an industry-leading full year 2025 adjusted pre-tax title margin of 15.9%. That is the direct result of our scale, decades of investment in technology and automation, and our disciplined operating model that have continued to strengthen the earnings power of this business.

We are confident that we can continue to deliver within our 15%-20% annual range, even if total residential volumes remain at current levels over the near term. Once mortgage rates improve, we believe residential purchase and refinance activity will accelerate and trend toward historical levels. This recovery represents additional earnings power given the operational leverage that we have built into our model.

Beyond a residential volume recovery, the benefits of our continuous investments in technology and AI have the potential to further enhance our business. I want to spend a few minutes on AI, what we are doing and what it means for our business. FNF in the title industry hold a unique position in real estate transactions. We do not sit next to the real estate transaction.

We sit inside the transactions, orchestrating complex multi-party settlements, safeguarding the movement of funds, and mitigating fraud in every transaction. By embedding AI tools into these workflows, we can drive significant value by enhancing efficiency and our customer's experience, reducing risk, and strengthening fraud prevention across real estate transactions. These gains come from having highly curated deep sets of transactional data to augment AI. We have built our proprietary data by closing and ensuring millions of transactions.

It cannot be replicated by simply digitizing public records, regardless of how sophisticated technology becomes. As we build out our AI capabilities, we are leveraging this proprietary data alongside our deep experience and historical knowledge, and this is what sets FNF apart. Usage of AI tools by our employees is growing, with more than half of our workforce using AI tools regularly, and we are deploying customized solutions across our title and escrow operations, as well as within ServiceLink, LoanCare, our real estate technology companies, agency operations, and software development.

Importantly, we are focused on implementing AI responsibly and compliantly with appropriate governance, human oversight, and risk and regulatory controls in place. We have deliberately avoided a concentrated bet on any single model or platform. Instead, we are deploying AI directly with the data and workflows each team already owns inside or alongside the technology they already use.

While we already have a highly automated process for searching county records, we believe AI will have a meaningful benefit to other significant areas of real estate transactions as we integrate AI capabilities end-to-end throughout the entire title and settlement process. We are confident that our scale, our proprietary data, our fully deployed technology, and our financial strength will continue to position FNF as an industry leader and place us at the forefront of shaping changes in our industry in a way that continues to bring value to our customers, shareholders, and employees.

Turning now to our F&G segment. F&G's assets under management before reinsurance have grown to nearly $75 billion at March 31st, up 11% over the prior year. On a standalone basis, F&G reported GAAP equity, excluding AOCI, of $6.2 billion at quarter end, and has grown its book value per share, excluding AOCI, to $46.51, up 70% since the 2020 acquisition. F&G's diversified self-funding capital model is supported by its annual in-force capital generation and third-party capital through their reinsurance sidecar and strategic flow reinsurance partnerships.

Together, these sources of capital provide financial strength and flexibility to invest for growth and return capital to F&G shareholders through dividends and opportunistic share repurchases. We are very pleased with F&G as they continue to execute on their strategy toward a more fee-based, higher margin, and less capital-intensive business model, with a focus on growing the core business and creating long-term shareholder value. Before I turn the call over to Tony, I want to take a moment to recognize our employees.

I'd like to extend my sincere thanks for their continued dedication to our customers, their focus on execution, and their embrace of the innovation and technology that is driving this business forward. They are the foundation of everything we are building. With that, let me now turn the call over to Tony to review FNF's first quarter financial performance and provide additional insights.

Tony Park
CFO, Fidelity National Financial

Thank you, Mike. Starting with our consolidated results, we generated first quarter total revenue of $3.2 billion. Excluding net recognized gains and losses, our total revenue was $3.3 billion as compared with $3 billion in the first quarter of 2025. We reported first quarter net earnings of $243 million, including net recognized losses of $78 million. Compared with net earnings of $83 million, including net recognized losses of $287 million in the first quarter of 2025.

Adjusted net earnings were $249 million or $0.93 per diluted share, compared with $213 million or $0.78 per share in the first quarter of 2025. The Title segment contributed $197 million. The F&G segment contributed $80 million, and the Corporate segment adjusted net earnings were $0 before eliminating $28 million of dividend income from F&G in the consolidated financial statements. Turning to first quarter financial highlights specific to the Title segment.

Our Title segment generated $2.1 billion in total revenue in the first quarter, excluding net recognized losses of $46 million compared with $1.8 billion in the first quarter of 2025. Direct premiums increased 14% over the prior year. Agency premiums increased 16% and escrow title related and other fees increased 12%. Personnel costs increased 11% and other operating expenses increased 9%.

All in, the Title business generated adjusted pre-tax Title earnings of $268 million, up 27% over $211 million in the first quarter of 2025, and a 13.1% adjusted pre-tax Title margin in the quarter versus 11.7% in the prior-year quarter. Our Title and Corporate investment portfolio totaled $4.8 billion at March 31. Interest and investment income in the Title and Corporate segments was $99 million, excluding income from F&G dividends to the holding company.

For the remainder of 2026, we expect a range of $90 million-$95 million in interest and investment income per quarter during 2026, assuming no Fed rate cuts in the remainder of the year and stable cash balances. In addition, we expect approximately $28 million per quarter of common and preferred dividend income from F&G to the Corporate Segment. Our Title claims paid of $57 million were $5 million lower than our provision of $62 million for the first quarter.

The carried reserve for Title claim losses is approximately $31 million, or 2% above the actuary's central estimate. We continue to provide for Title claims at 4.5% of total Title premiums. Next, turning to financial highlights specific to the F&G Segment. Since F&G hosted its earnings call earlier this morning and provided a thorough update, I will provide a few key highlights. F&G's AUM before reinsurance increased to $74.5 billion at March 31, up 11% over the prior year.

This includes retained assets under management of $56.4 billion, up 3% over the prior year. F&G reported gross sales of $3.2 billion for the first quarter as compared with $2.9 billion in the first quarter of 2025. This reflects core sales of $2 billion for the first quarter, which includes indexed annuities, indexed life, and pension risk transfer, as well as $1.2 billion of funding agreements and multi-year guaranteed annuities.

Two products we view as opportunistic depending on economics and market opportunity. F&G's net sales were $2.2 billion in the first quarter. This reflects flow reinsurance in line with capital targets for multi-year guaranteed annuities and fixed indexed annuities. Adjusted net earnings for the F&G segment were $80 million for the first quarter, reflecting our approximate 70% ownership stake, compared with $80 million in the first quarter of 2025, which reflected our approximate 84% ownership stake.

F&G's operating performance from their underlying spread-based and fee-based businesses continues to be strong. F&G continues to provide an important complement to our Title business. The F&G segment contributed 32% of FNF's adjusted net earnings for the first quarter as compared with 38% in the first quarter of 2025. From a capital and liquidity perspective, FNF continues to maintain a strong balance sheet and balanced capital allocation strategy.

Our track record has generated a steady level of free cash flow, allowing us to continue to invest in our business through attractive acquisitions and technology as we manage the business and continue to build for the long term. FNF has returned approximately $222 million of capital to our shareholders in the first quarter as compared with $161 million in the first quarter of 2025.

This reflects $140 million of common stock dividends and $82 million of share repurchases in the current period. We have remained active with share repurchases in the second quarter. From a capital allocation perspective, we ended 2025 with $659 million in cash and short-term liquid investments at the holding company.

During the first quarter, our cash position and cash generation funded $140 million of common dividends paid, $25 million of holding company interest expense, and $82 million in share repurchases, all while keeping pace with wage inflation and funding the continued higher spend in risk and technology required in today's landscape. We ended the first quarter with $495 million in cash and short-term liquid investments at the holding company. This concludes our prepared remarks, let me now turn the call back to our operator for questions.

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, we will now begin the question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star and one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star and two if you would like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. Ladies and gentlemen, we will wait for a moment while we poll for questions. Our first question comes from Mark DeVries with Deutsche Bank. Please state your question.

Speaker 7

Yeah, thank you. Good morning. First question maybe for Tony. How are F&G's earnings kind of tracking to your expectations? Are there any disconnects that you guys observed kind of between your expectations and where, you know, kind of we in the analyst community have been modeling F&G's earnings?

Tony Park
CFO, Fidelity National Financial

Yeah, thanks for the question. I'm probably gonna turn that over to the F&G guys because, yes, it's been a bit of a frustration that the analyst expectations seem to assume a return on alternative investments. Yet, when we report, they're maybe not picking up that piece. There seems to be a larger delta than what we see, which is actually earnings that were pretty close to in line with what we thought the consensus was. You know, maybe Chris and Conor, you can weigh in a little bit here.

Chris Blunt
CEO, F&G Annuities & Life

Yeah, this is Chris. I'd say Tony hit it. Other than there's usually a little bit of first quarter seasonality, we were actually pleased with the results. I think they were on expectation as far as what we were expecting. I do think the disconnect is around alternatives, which have obviously underperformed industry standard is to normalize for that. I think in some cases, it's either being normalized too high or not normalized at all.

I think our outlook there has been fairly consistent. We have redefined ALTS to be focused on what people actually think of with alternatives. You know, private equity interest, anything equity related, that's about $4 billion. It's really not that hard to model. You know, if you look at your long-term expectation, I think we gave a range of 12%-14% of what you think over time that should kick in from an earnings perspective.

In terms of base spread, own distribution, reinsurance, operating leverage of driving down expenses, it's been consistent and growing. We had a little bit of noise this quarter of fixed income yield was down. Probably 2/3 of that was more timing and one-offs as opposed to anything, any permanent degradation there.

Speaker 7

Okay, got it. Maybe a question for Mike. Yeah, Mike, technology. I know you're kind of optimistic this could kind of longer term. Kind of how often do you see some margin lift over the next couple of years, even if the market size holds at current levels?

Mike Nolan
CEO, Fidelity National Financial

Yeah, Mark, you did cut out a little bit, but I think the question is, benefits we expect to see from AI on the margin side, even if the market stays flat. Was that it?

Speaker 7

Yes.

Mike Nolan
CEO, Fidelity National Financial

Yeah. Thank you. I can't cite a number, but we absolutely expect margin improvement in the same size environment over time with technology tooling like AI. Just like we've seen that with title automation that we've implemented over the last couple of decades. That's been a big driver behind our margin improvement and the fact that we can get the kind of margins we're getting now in low transactional environments.

I can't give you a number. I think that'll become more apparent as we go through the balance of the year and probably see smaller wins with AI investments and AI tooling, then bigger wins as we move into 2027 and get more advantage out of really embedded tooling in the more full settlement process.

Speaker 7

Okay. Are there specific tools that you're building on that you have more optimistic, you know, you're more optimistic about that can more meaningfully kind of move the needle that are worth calling out?

Mike Nolan
CEO, Fidelity National Financial

I don't know that I'll get into specific tools, but maybe as I think of parts of the business. We said from the beginning kind of a four-part relative to AI. It first begins with really building out a risk and governance framework, which we've done and worked on for the past really year and a half. I think that's very important to have in place given both the opportunities for AI, but the risks that come with AI tooling.

Second is building literacy and diffusing the tools across the entire company. As we talked about, more than half of our employees are now using these tools regularly. Third are individual solutions inside ServiceLink, LoanCare, et cetera, as we talked about on the call. The fourth is really the area that I think will have the biggest impact, that's when you embed tools into workflows like SoftPro and inHere that we have built at scale that no one else has. We'll get more benefit on the settlement side where you really have more of your labor and your cost in terms of the process inside the business.

Speaker 7

Got it. Thank you.

Mike Nolan
CEO, Fidelity National Financial

Thanks.

Operator

Our next question comes from Bose George with KBW. Please state your que-

Speaker 8

Actually, just sticking to the margin discussion, can you go through margins by segment? Just curious how the commercial margins look, especially compared to, like, previous weeks?

Tony Park
CFO, Fidelity National Financial

Yeah. Thanks, Bose. This is Tony. As you know, we reported 13.1%, pretax title margin up against 11.7%. If you break that down into our various, what I'll call operations or divisions, our direct ops had roughly a 20% margin, up about 100 basis points. Agency, about a 7% margin on gross, up about 100 basis points. Our national commercial unit, so this is just, you know, the 20 or so large operations that handle exclusively commercial transactions. A 27% margin in the quarter, up against 24% in the prior year.

Our loan subservicing was down a little bit, but still at a 20% margin in that business. Our home warranty business had a 16% margin versus 14% in the prior year. Our ServiceLink business, which is centralized refinance and default, had a 23% margin up against 18% in the prior year quarter. Really almost to a unit, a positive improvement over the prior year quarter.

Mike Nolan
CEO, Fidelity National Financial

If I just add one thing to that, Bose. In our centralized refi business inside ServiceLink, the margin lift with it just shows the power we have in the model. We had a 23% first quarter margin up against 9% last year. A little bit of extra volume can go a long way inside the efficient model that we've built for the centralized platform.

Speaker 8

Yeah. Okay, great. That's great color. Thanks. Actually wanted to just ask about the buybacks. It was, you know, that, I guess, in April it remained strong. Yeah, just curious how you should, you know, think about that, you know, maybe relative to what you guys did last year or just, yeah, ways to kind of think about a range this year.

Tony Park
CFO, Fidelity National Financial

Yeah. Thanks, Bose. It's hard to know exactly where we'll land in terms of buybacks. I did say that we remain active, we will remain active. I firmly believe that. We bought $82 million of shares back in the first quarter, almost 2 million shares. Certainly if we see signs of weakness, we're more active. I would expect that, you know, once blackout windows lift, we'll be back in the market on a regular cadence. Last year's second quarter, we came in really strong. I wouldn't necessarily expect that. That might have been to the tune of about $250 million. Having said that, I do expect that we're going to be active throughout the year.

Speaker 8

Okay, great. Thanks.

Operator

Our next question comes from Mark Hughes with Truist Securities. Please state your question.

Speaker 9

Yeah, thank you. Good morning.

Mike Nolan
CEO, Fidelity National Financial

Mark, morning.

Speaker 9

On on F&G, the question about returns and we had chatted about this on the conference call earlier, but just wanted to make sure I'm kind of on the right track. The return on asset in the quarter, return on asset 76 basis points. If you take into account the unusual items or the underperformance on the alts, you get up to about 110 basis points.

When we model that on a go-forward basis, would it just make more sense at this point to model it more at the 80 basis point level and factor that into the FNF earnings rather than, I think, kind of the longer term target, which was 110, but, you know, has been dampened here recently? Just wanted to get your sense on the best approach.

Chris Blunt
CEO, F&G Annuities & Life

Mark, this is Chris. I think that would be a very conservative way to model it, but I don't know an appropriate way to model it. I think 80 basis points, probably a little low as a jumping-off point, but if you said that's a jumping-off point for just pure spread income at current alts levels, then you're more likely to have tailwind coming from alts as opposed to, you know, we've been normalizing.

It's been five years since we've seen meaningful realizations, and every year we come in expectant that it's gonna be the year of the IPO, and then, you know, something happens externally. I think we're still confident that we will see that when normalize. Yeah, I don't think that's an unreasonable way to think about it. It would just be a conservative way, I believe, to model it. I don't know, Conor, if you agree with that.

Conor Murphy
President and CFO, F&G Annuities & Life

Yeah, I think that's fair. As we talked about some of the things that happened this quarter, there were some temporary elements this quarter that's probably about 10 basis points that we don't expect to continue, but aside from the ALTS differential.

Speaker 9

Just to be clear, it's been kind of that difference between, you know, the 34 basis points this quarter is kind of the difference in what leads to some misinterpretation or volatility, perhaps, you know, thinking back to the earlier question.

Chris Blunt
CEO, F&G Annuities & Life

Yeah.

Speaker 9

All right.

Chris Blunt
CEO, F&G Annuities & Life

I think what Conor is saying is there was probably 10 basis point of some other one-time effects. If you look at it, over time, quarter- by- quarter, ALTS is the big that's sort of the disconnect of how do you think about that normalization. You know, my guess is neither stock gets a whole lot of credit for it, given how long it's been since we've had realizations. Again, still optimistic that if we do start to see transaction activity pick up, that should actually become a tailwind for us.

Speaker 9

Yeah. When we think about the purchase business, moving on to title, the growth in open orders in Q1 and 4% for April, if I heard properly. Sounds like FNF, at least relative to the public peers, is doing a little bit better. Is that a geographic issue, a execution issue? It may just be a few points here and there, but I'm curious if there's any driver to that a little better.

Mike Nolan
CEO, Fidelity National Financial

Yeah, Mark. It's Mike. You know, it's hard to know, but we were very pleased to see a 25% sequential improvement in the first quarter. That's above historical averages, even though we're still in an overall low environment, you know, the 4% up in April. I, you know, I don't know if it's a geographic issue or not. I do know that our recruiting has been incredibly strong, and it was very strong last year.

We just had a phenomenal first quarter re-recruiting effort, maybe our best ever, a nd, you know, we're attracting a lot of talented people to the company and they bring volume with them. Whether that's playing into those numbers, I can't say for sure, but I'm very pleased with what the field's doing in terms of, you know, just building more talent inside this organization.

Speaker 9

Is there a kind of a structural reason for that? Maybe in a softer market, people want to be in a bigger organization? Is there any or is it just more company specific? Curious on that.

Mike Nolan
CEO, Fidelity National Financial

Yeah. Again, it's hard to know. I would say our recruiting is broad-based. It's across a lot of other players in the industry. Perhaps, you know, people see that we continue to invest in the business consistently, regardless of the macro environment, building technology, creating good marketing tools, the inherent digital transaction platform. I think we're doing a lot of things that lead this industry. Hopefully people at other organizations see that and want to be a part of it.

Speaker 9

If I could just squeeze in one more. There was a discussion about the, maybe a process to look at a way to optimize value in the owned distribution within F&G. I was curious if there was any sense of timing on the process, when we might hear more about that.

Chris Blunt
CEO, F&G Annuities & Life

This is Chris. It's probably premature to comment on the exact timing. Again, to just go back to the rationale, we've invested about $700 million in owned distribution. We see substantial opportunity to grow what we already have and make more investments. Yeah, really just an exercise of what's the best way to fund that growth opportunity. You know, is it still underneath F&G? Is it consolidated, deconsolidated? That's just sort of the exercise we're going through. Yeah, I'd imagine in the next couple of quarters, we would probably have a, you know, a bit of an update for you there.

Speaker 9

Thank you very much.

Chris Blunt
CEO, F&G Annuities & Life

Thanks, Mark.

Operator

A reminder to all participants, to ask a question, please press star and one on your telephone keypad. Our next question comes from Oscar Nieves with Stephens Inc. Please state your question.

Speaker 10

Hey, good morning. My first one is on F&G. In mid-March, F&G announced the $100 million buyback program, which was right after, sorry, December distribution of F&G shares to FNF shareholders. I think, during the F&G earnings call today, it was mentioned that $29 million of the program was deployed in 1Q. One would think that if FNF has no plans to sell shares in the open market, the buyback could increase FNF's ownership stake in F&G. How should we be thinking about this?

Tony Park
CFO, Fidelity National Financial

Yeah. It's a good question, Oscar. I mean, clearly the reason for the distribution back in December was to get more float out into the marketplace. We went from an 82% roughly ownership down to a 70% ownership. F&G shares were under pressure and the float wasn't really helping at least in the early phases of having those shares out there.

I think F&G saw an opportunity to buy back their shares at a discount, a real significant discount, almost a silly discount. FNF doesn't take a position that we need to own X number of shares. We're just trying to really have value out there for the respective shareholder bases. If that means that we close that gap from 70 - 80 or wherever it might be, that's very possible. Again, there's no target necessarily for where FNF might end up in that ownership percentage.

Speaker 10

Yeah. All right. That's very helpful. Then, turning to title, starting with the fee per file, what can you share on what you're seeing in terms of the trajectory of fee per file for both residential and commercial?

Mike Nolan
CEO, Fidelity National Financial

Yeah, Oscar, it's Mike. Thanks for the question. I would say that the residential fee per file has been pretty consistent year-over-year, almost Well, it's actually flat with the first quarter of last year. I think we've seen, you know, pricing moderate to the most extent over the past few years. We're seeing a little bit more stability there. Saw, you know, again, a strong, particularly national commercial fee per file in the first quarter, up almost $1,000 over the first quarter of last year. Local was up a bit as well, maybe about $500 on a fee per file basis. I would say, you know, fairly stable in residential and still upside in commercial.

Speaker 10

Thank you. Just one last one on the outlook. Looking at the residential outlook, since the last earnings call, the MBA and Fannie Mae have revised their forecast down, and they're now calling for existing home sales to be between $4.1 million and $4.2 million seasonally adjusted for the year in 2026 and around $4.5 million in 2027. What's your take on that? Do you view those assumptions as conservative or are they too aggressive?

Mike Nolan
CEO, Fidelity National Financial

Yeah. I don't think they're aggressive. You know, our base case as we came into the year for residential was really upside in purchase and refi with the fact that we had lower, more stable rates to start to the year. The macro environment, as we got into March and into April, kind of upset the apple cart a little bit. That's probably when Fannie and MBA revised theirs down because, you know, their 27 forecast now, Oscar, as you pointed out, looks a lot like their 26 forecast that they had 60 days ago, you know?

Yeah. It's just hard to say. What we do see, though, is, I've commented on this before, just more sensitivity to lower rate movements than we probably have seen in prior vintages. I think if it really comes down to if rates, if things stabilize, the macro environment gets a little calmer and rates stabilize maybe into that lower six environment, we're gonna have upside in the back half of the year in residential. If they don't, you know, we'll probably continue on this current re-trajectory.

I'm very pleased we had a 4% increase in purchase opens in April. We're still driving, we think, really strong margins. I mean, our first quarter margin, absent the 3% mortgage yields, is really one of the best first quarters we've ever had. We'll perform well regardless of the environment, and we'll manage the business to kind of whatever order environment we have, but we're very confident in our position.

Speaker 10

Thank you. If I can squeeze just one last one on capital allocation. What are you seeing in the M&A pipeline, and has there been any notable shifts in activity since last quarter?

Tony Park
CFO, Fidelity National Financial

Thanks, Oscar. I'll turn it over to Mike. My, my impression is even though we haven't made many acquisitions really over the course of the last, you know, 15 months or so, I get the sense there's more opportunity, especially on the title agent side. I just feel like we're hearing a lot more about it. We're having more discussions. I would expect that we have more activity this year and next than we've seen in the last two years. I don't know.

Mike Nolan
CEO, Fidelity National Financial

I would agree with that, Tony. I think there's more conversations. I think there's more opportunities. You never know if you're gonna strike a deal. I would say just kinda stay tuned on how that plays out over the next couple of quarters.

Speaker 10

Great. Thank you so much.

Mike Nolan
CEO, Fidelity National Financial

Thanks.

Operator

This will conclude our question and answer session. I will now turn the conference over to CEO, Mike Nolan, for closing remarks.

Mike Nolan
CEO, Fidelity National Financial

Thanks for joining our call this morning. We delivered strong first quarter results with our complimentary businesses executing well in a dynamic environment. The title segment is performing well in what remains a low transactional environment and is capitalizing on stronger commercial activity. We are delivering industry-leading margins and remain well-positioned to benefit from a recovery in residential volumes should mortgage rates move lower.

Our focus on technology and AI is contributing to our performance today, and we see potential to further enhance our business. Likewise, F&G is executing on its strategy that is focused on balancing continued growth in its spread-based business alongside the fee-based flow reinsurance, middle market life insurance, and owned distribution strategies as they focus on delivering long-term shareholder value. Thanks for your time this morning. We appreciate your interest in FNF and look forward to updating you on our second quarter earnings call.

Operator

Thank you for attending today's presentation, and the conference call has concluded. You may now disconnect.

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