Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to Mount Logan Capital's first quarter 2025 results conference call. Before we begin, I would like to remind listeners that, except for historical information, the matters discussed during this call may include forward-looking statements within the meaning of the applicable Canadian securities legislation. Forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks and uncertainties and other factors that may cause actual financial results, performance, or achievements to be materially different from estimated future results, performance, or achievements expressed or implied by those forward-looking statements. All forward-looking statements reflect the company's current views with respect to future events and are subject to risks and uncertainties and assumptions we have made in drawing the conclusions included in such forward-looking statements. The company is not obligated to update or revise any forward-looking statements, and we do not assume any obligation to do so.
For a description of the risks associated with Mount Logan Capital's business, as well as information about the material factors and assumptions that could cause results to differ from any forward-looking statements and other relevant factors, please refer to the company's public disclosure record, particularly the company's MD&A and annual information form for the year ended December 31, 2024, which are available on SEDAR. I would now like to introduce your host for today's conference, Mr. Ted Goldthorpe, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Mount Logan Capital. Mr. Goldthorpe, you may begin.
Thank you. Good morning, everyone. We appreciate you joining us for our first quarter 2025 results call. During the call, we will refer to information provided in the first quarter 2025 press release, MD&A, and interim consolidated financial statements, all of which were released Thursday evening and are available on our website and SEDAR. Joining me this morning to discuss the results and outlook for the business are Chief Financial Officer Nikita Klassen, our President Henry Wang, and our Head of Investor Relations, Scott Chan. As a reminder, all references to dollar amounts in this call are in U.S. dollars unless otherwise stated. Overall, we are pleased with the strong financial performance we saw across our key business segments, and we are looking forward to sharing more about that with you today.
We also are pleased to announce that we'll be paying our 23rd consecutive quarterly dividend, which would consist of a CAD 0.02 per share distribution for shareholders of record as of May 27th, 2025. As a reminder, during our first quarter, we announced a transformative all-stock combination with 180 Degree Capital Corp., which remains subject to regulatory and shareholder approvals. We filed a joint proxy statement and preliminary Form S-4 with the SEC on May 6th. We anticipate the transaction closing in the second half of 2025, currently estimated for late Q3. Following the combination, the company will operate under the Mount Logan banner and is expected to be listed on the NASDAQ, transitioning from its current listing on the CBO in Canada. Year to date, our team has been incredibly hard at work on several key initiatives. We completed the conversion of our IFRS financial statements to U.S.
GAAP, which was a step to progress our announced business combination with 180 Degree Capital. We also closed our minority investment in Runway Growth, a $1.3 billion AUM venture lending platform, through the issuance of $5 million in common equity. On the asset management side, we entered into a new investment management agreement that has increased our insurance capital AUM. We also remained active in our evaluation of new investment opportunities and management of our portfolios and spent significant time on the road meeting with new and prospective investors in our managed funds and vehicles amongst the volatile market backdrop.
On the insurance side, we are seeing and executing on new opportunities to grow our business and remaining focused on the performance of our managed assets, achieving a 1.3% spread earnings margin on a trailing 12-month basis, which remains in excess of our stated 1% target, which we believe provides ample protection for our policyholders and will help contribute to sustained organic growth within Ability and Mount Logan. Before we provide a more detailed discussion of our first quarter results, I did want to touch on the market volatility and overall macro conditions that are shaping our business through the first and second quarter, driven by shifting trade dynamics, inflationary pressures, and evolving monetary policy. These conditions underscore the importance of maintaining a consistent credit investment approach across all cycles and taking a long-term perspective rooted in disciplined credit selection and prudent risk management.
The funds we manage are supported by permanent and semi-permanent capital, which enables us to take advantage of opportunities in these times of volatility where others are less able, which will be able to accrue the benefits of all Mount Logan stakeholders. With respect to the financial results for the last 12 months, Mount Logan delivered fee-related earnings, or FRE, of $8.1 million, representing a 25% year-over-year increase. Spread-related earnings, SRE, totaled $7.8 million for the period, down slightly from $9.5 million in the prior year due to actuarial adjustments. The 1.3% spread earnings margin for the trailing 12-month period remains well in excess of our stated target of 1%.
For the quarter, asset management and incentive fees were $2.9 million compared to $3.5 million in the prior year, primarily reflecting an incentive fee reduction in Ovation's Alternative Income Fund, which has been wind down since the third quarter of 2024. We expect performance to return to normalized levels next quarter. On the retail front, we see a significant opportunity to capture market share given the relatively low allocation to prized alternatives industry-wide and the large total addressable market. We remain committed to the retail distribution channel and view it as a key catalyst for future growth. SOFIX, our opportunistic and diversified credit interval fund, delivered another quarter of growth, with net assets increasing to $155 million as of March 31st. Year to date, through May 14th, SOFIX has achieved 3.9% returns in year-to-date performance and demonstrated resiliency amid the period of market disruption.
We believe the solid performance thus far in 2025, combined with its approximately 9% annualized dividend yield, positions SOFIX well for fundraising momentum as a differentiated private credit offering. Meanwhile, AltCIF, our other credit-focused interval fund, reported total net assets of approximately $207 million at quarter end. On the institutional side, our BDC and CLO funds collectively represented $1.1 billion in assets as of quarter end. These vehicles continue to provide strong visibility into Mount Logan's top line, driven by stable fees income generated from permanent and semi-permanent capital bases. As of quarter end, Logan Ridge has a total asset base of approximately $181 million and remains focused on transitioning the portfolio away from the legacy equity positions, with only 10.8% of the portfolio in equity securities as of the end of Q1, down from 13.8% in the prior quarter.
Mount Logan maintains exposure to its second BDC, Portman Ridge, through its minority ownership in Sierra Crest, Portman Ridge's investment advisor. As of quarter end, Portman Ridge reported approximately $450 million in total assets. The advisory relationship continues to generate consistent quarterly cash distributions for Mount Logan, contributing to a stable recurring income. We remain excited about the proposed combination of Logan Ridge and Portman Ridge and believe the transaction offers the benefit of increased scale, improved liquidity, and enhanced operational efficiencies, all of which will strengthen our ability to deliver greater value to shareholders of those respective vehicles. On the CLO side, AUM for the quarter was $540 million. We continue to evaluate opportunities to scale our CLO platform following the successes realized managing the CLOs, which we took over through the Garrison transaction.
Mount Logan Management's specialty finance-focused vehicle, the Alternative Income Fund, ended Q1 with approximately $157 million in assets under management. In the third quarter of 2024, we made the strategic decision to initiate an orderly liquidation of the fund. During this process, we remained focused on maximizing value for investors and currently expect the majority of assets to be sold over the next few years. We remain confident in the long-term potential of our specialty finance platform, which we view as an attractive segment within private credit, given its yield profile, structural protections, and ability to serve credit-worthy yet underserved market segments that are underbanked. We continue to explore new opportunities to leverage our team's expertise and drive long-term value for our shareholders. On the insurance side, first quarter investment assets were $1.02 billion and down slightly year-over-year.
During the first quarter, Mount Logan invested $2.5 million proceeds into Ability to support a new multi-year guaranteed annuity block of approximately $40 million and also secured a $40 million investment management mandate with Vista Re, Ability's reinsurance counterparty, which will support asset growth and increase in management fees, demonstrating the powerful flywheel effect of owning insurance and managing a large portion of the assets in-house. Ability's total assets managed by Mount Logan were $646 million, representing more than 60% of Ability's total investment assets. The insurance business remains highly strategic to Mount Logan and is a priority for our team and a key source of growth looking ahead. We're actively deploying capital and managing investments with attractive risk-adjusted returns across the credit spectrum.
As we reinsure more annuities, we believe the overall risk profile of our liability base improves as our legacy insurance portfolio becomes a smaller piece of our overall business. Before I turn the call over to Nikita Klassen, I want to take a moment to emphasize our continued excitement about the future of Mount Logan. We built a business defined by stability in both fee and spread earnings across our two core segments, with visibility into near-term organic growth within our asset management and insurance segments. The acquisition and investment into Ability remains the best example of how Mount Logan can drive growth organically. Since acquiring Ability, Mount Logan contributed approximately $40 million in capital to support MYGA reinsurance agreements and increased our managed AUM to $646 million.
Today, Ability generates approximately $6.2 million in annual gross run rate management fees and contributed $7.8 million in spread-related earnings for the last 12 months and is a centerpiece of our four-booking business strategy. While our near-term focus remains on the announced 180 Degree Capital transaction, we remain committed to driving organic growth across our key business segments, achieving excellent returns for investors and shareholders in our managed vehicles, and continuing to evaluate accretive and complementary M&A opportunities. With that, I will hand the call over to Nikita to walk through our financial results for the quarter.
Good morning, everyone. I will now summarize our key highlights for the first quarter of 2025. As a reminder, all figures referenced on today's call will be in U.S. dollars, Mount Logan's functional and presentation currency. For our asset management segment in the first quarter of 2025, we generated $3.2 million of revenue.
Breaking down our asset management revenue further, our CLOs generated approximately $750,000 in management for the quarter, while SOFIX, our interval fund, generated $1.1 million in management and incentives. The net loss related to AltCIF recorded within administration and servicing fees was approximately $290,000 for the quarter. With regards to our BDCs, Logan Ridge generated $805,000 in management fees, and we recognized a $282,000 gain on our minority interest in Sierra Crest, which manages Portman Ridge. Overall, these results contributed to revenues increasing by 28% quarter over quarter. We incurred approximately $12.6 million in operating expenses in the asset management segment in the first quarter. This figure includes $7.1 million of corporate overhead expenses, of which $4.5 million is attributable to transaction costs related to the strategic initiative mentioned by Ted.
Excluding these corporate overhead costs, asset management operating expenses decreased 6% quarter over quarter as the fourth quarter of 2024 included two one-time expenses relating to the impairment recognized on the Ovation's fund investment management agreement and costs associated with the corporate credit facility upside. For the quarter ended March 31, Mount Logan incurred $1.9 million in interest and credit facility expenses, which primarily relate to our corporate credit facility and debenture unit. Our interest expense increased quarter over quarter due to the increase in borrowings and increased paid-in-kind interest on the debenture unit. Fee-related earnings was $8.1 million for the trailing 12 months ended March 31, 2025, an increase of $1.6 million compared to the trailing 12 months ended March 31, 2024. SRE increased year-over-year due to the growth in fees across managed vehicles, partially offset by higher expenses associated with the operations of a retailer.
Moving on to our insurance business, insurance service results decreased by $700,000 quarter over quarter due to the unfavorable impact of in-force updates related to the Guardian block within our run-off long-term care book of business, while total revenues for the insurance business in the current quarter increased by $19.6 million compared to the prior quarter as the net gains from investment activities increased due to lower treasury yields. This growth increase in net gains from investment activities was offset by a $6.4 million increase in net gains relating to the collateral held under the funds withheld arrangement with Front Street Re , which is referred to as the realized and unrealized loss on embedded derivatives within the statement of comprehensive income. Total expenses for the insurance business in the current quarter increased by $39.4 million compared to the prior quarter.
The increase in expenses was driven by lower treasury yields this quarter, which resulted in significantly higher insurance finance expenses of $41.6 million compared to the prior quarter. Additionally, general admin and other expenses increased by $600,000 due to the higher credit loss provision on investment assets and IFRS U.S. GAAP conversion costs for actuarial work. These increases were partially offset by unrealized losses of $2 million on assets held by the company under its modified coinsurance agreement with Vista , which is recorded as a decrease in reinsurance assets. There also was a $700,000 reduction in investment contract liabilities due to higher-than-average MYGA policy surrenders. These surrender charges generate fee income to the company, which offsets the interest accretion on the policies.
Spread-related earnings was $7.8 million for the trailing 12 months ended March 31, 2025, a slight decrease of $1.7 million compared to the trailing 12 months ended March 31, 2024. SRE decreased year-over-year due to higher cost of funds, partially offset by increased investment income and lower operating expenses. Cost of funds increased due to the unfavorable impact of in-force updates to our Guardian block of long-term care business, whereas the trailing 12 months of 2024, there was a favorable in-force impact of $4.8 million to the Medico block of business. Investment income increased due to an increase in total insurance investment assets and improvement in yields across the portfolio. Mount Logan reported basic and diluted loss per share of $0.48 for the first quarter of 2025. This is compared to basic and diluted earnings per share of $0.25 and $0.23 respectively for the three months ended December 31, 2024.
The decrease in earnings per share resulted from an increase in net insurance finance expense, decrease in net investment income, and the increase in insurance service results quarter over quarter. As of March 31, 2025, Mount Logan's balance sheet reflected total assets of $1.7 billion, total liabilities of $1.65 billion, and shareholders' equity of $48.9 million. The decrease in shareholders' equity from the fourth quarter of 2024 was due to net loss during the current quarter. On the asset management side of the balance sheet, total assets decreased by 4.3% quarter over quarter to $60.9 million. This is primarily caused by injecting an additional $2.5 million of capital into Ability, which eliminates unconsolidation and decrease in working capital accounts. The decrease in assets was partially offset by an increase in investments in other assets.
Investments increased $3.9 million due to the minority investment in Runway, partially offset by a redemption in SOFIX shares. Other assets increased primarily due to the increase in deferred tax assets. Asset management total liabilities increased 3.6% to $97.9 million, primarily driven by the increase in accrued acquisition-related transaction costs. This increase was partially offset by a decrease in amounts due to affiliates as operating expenses owed to external providers were settled during the quarter. On the insurance side of the balance sheet, total assets increased quarter over quarter by $17.1 million to $1.7 billion. The increase in assets was attributable to an increase in cash and cash equivalents as some of the investment portfolio was liquidated and an increase in reinsurance contract assets. Reinsurance contract assets increased as lower discount rates were applied to these balances due to lower treasury yields.
Our insurance segment reported total liabilities of $1.6 billion, representing an increase of $19.2 million from December 31, 2024. The increase in liabilities was attributable to an increase in insurance contract liabilities of $21.2 million as lower treasury yields led to the higher present values of liabilities. Accrued expenses and other liabilities also increased by $4.9 million, driven by incentives payable to a third party on Vista assets held under the Modco agreement. Additionally, debt obligations of the insurance company grew in the first quarter as a new surplus note for $3 million was issued. These increases were partially offset by a $5 million decrease in investment contract liabilities as a result of the increased surrenders, as well as claim payments, partially offset by interest accretion on the remaining MYGA liabilities. The interest swap derivative also decreased by $3.3 million due to lower yields.
Further, the funds withheld liability also decreased by $1.5 million due to recovery from Front Reef Re . Overall, the company has experienced strong SRE and FRE into the first quarter of 2025, and we look forward to the transformational year ahead for Mount Logan. I will now turn the call back to Ted for some closing remarks.
Thanks, Nikita. In closing, we are excited about the prospects of our business and believe we have built a foundation for future success. Despite the challenging macro backdrop, our portfolios are well-positioned, and we continue to actively deploy capital to take advantage of the attractive opportunities we see in a volatile market. We remain incredibly excited about our announced business combination with 180 Degree Capital, which will be key in helping us achieve our growth of the ambitions, and we expect to provide further updates as the transaction progresses.
This concludes the prepared remarks, and we'll now transition the call to a Q&A session if the operator completes coordinating.
Thank you. If you would like to ask a question, please press star and then one on your telephone keypad. You will be advised when to ask your question. The first question today comes from Matthew Lee with Canaccord. Please go ahead, Matthew.
Hi, good morning. Nice to hear my question. I maybe wanted to drill down a bit on the SRE, which was a bit lower than we were expecting for the quarter. You know, lots of moving parts there, but just maybe talk about what key items impacted the number, and more importantly, how confident you are in the ability to kind of be, you know, $10 million plus SRE in 2025, like we chatted about before.
Sure, thanks, Matt.
I would say that I would look at SRE more on a trailing 12-month basis than a discrete quarter, recognizing that it went from $0.4 million in Q1 to $3.1 million in Q4. The way we look at it is more on an annualized basis because of when we received the actuarial updates on the run-off long-term care block. These will get muted over time as that book continues to run off, but we've seen generally favorable updates overall between Medico and Guardian block, but we did see the dip in Q1. In terms of adjusted SRE, if we were to normalize for these types of updates, it would show that SRE actually increased significantly more to $9.6 million versus $4.7 million in the prior year.
I think we're decently confident that we'll see favorable trending towards the $10 million that you mentioned into this year, especially bolstered by the new MYGA flow agreement that we have. The MYGA portfolio isn't impacted by these types of updates, and as long as we're able to guarantee that the crediting rate and what we're deploying that capital into can this spread, and we keep a meaningful sort of mindful approach to how our expenses are doing, we're fairly confident that that $10 million is doable.
All right, that's helpful. Maybe on AUM, it feels like the Ovation wind down is going as planned, and, you know, Ability started to be a bit flat. I think the net impact was slightly lower quarter over quarter AUM, but, you know, how should we think about growth in the book this year?
I guess it would be mainly, you know, Ability and still fixing the driver, right?
Yeah, I think that's a good question. I think, you know, we kind of break our business into two. One is our growth areas, and one is our, you know, stable and, you know, I would say like cash flowing AUM, which has kind of been wind down. AIF's been wind down, so that'll definitely shrink, but it'll be more than offset by AUM growth in Ability. We also expect our opportunistic fund, SOFIX, the one you mentioned, to grow as well. We actually forecast, we actually feel very confident that our AUM should increase this year. Okay, that's very helpful. I'll pass the mic. Thank you. We'll provide, just for everybody, we'll provide additional disclosure on that in the subsequent quarters.
Thank you.
Our next question comes from Matt Shadbolt with Canaccord. Please go ahead.
Hey, guys. In terms of market volatility, how do you guys characterize the yield flow that you guys are seeing, and how do you characterize the quality of that in today's market?
Yeah, so I'd say, it's a good question. Yields in particular peaked straight into, that's really incredible. A lot of uncertainty, companies are very inward-focused, and private equity activity has really slowed down. That being said, because of where we play in the market, we actually have a pretty decent pipeline, and we can't really tell if that's like, it's that, and that's very inconsistent with macro.
I think the reason for that is, one is I think our hit rate has gone up, and quite frankly, we just won some deals that our hit rate has been higher than normal. I do not think that is indicative of a trend. Number two is, you know, again, our market is consolidating so fast that a lot of our previous peers have either sold themselves or have moved way up market. We feel like where we are now, as an overall platform, we really do not feel like there is as much competition as there has been because the people raising the money have moved way up, and there are a number of players who can do things smaller than us. Kind of where we play, we are feeling that there is less competition.
The second thing I'd say is, for the first time in 25 years, we are seeing decent relative value in Europe versus the U.S. Our deployment in Europe actually is higher than normal because, for a whole bunch of reasons, but, you know, spreads are a little bit wider. Again, banks seem to be cooling down competition-wise there, and I think a number of people are seeing kind of better relative value in Europe as well.
Okay, thanks.
Thank you. The next question comes from Greg Chan with Empire Life Investments. Please go ahead.
Hi, good morning. I have a couple of questions. First off, is the timeline for the 180 Degree Capital transaction still expected for mid-2025?
Yes, that's our intent. We filed the amended S-4 early last week, and that starts the clock with the SEC for the comment letter process.
It should take, we anticipate, a few rounds of comments, largely dependent on just going through regular regulatory process with the staff at what point, at which point we'll start the proxy solicitation. That is just going through the timeline. A conservative estimate puts us at the end of Q3 to close. Ideally, I think, to speak for everyone, that we'd like that to be significantly sooner. We're eager to hit the ground running as a NASDAQ-listed entity. However, just the regulatory due process that we have to go through.
Okay, thank you. What is the MLC stock implied conversion value after Q1 2025?
Yeah, I can take this. It's Scott takes the question, Greg. Yeah, post Q1, the estimated MLC stock implied conversion price is about $3.40 per share in dollars. That would be about flat quarter over quarter from year-end results.
Just to kind of take a step back, you know, the transactional return, the proposed transactional return, our conversion price is based on Q2 2024 IFRS book value of $67.4 million in U.S. dollars, and that includes select adjustments as well. The big adjustment in Q1 is that we closed Runway for $5 million, $5 million U.S. dollars, and we issued equity to support that as well. $3.40 per share, $67.4 million, and then we did file the S-4 that Nikita was talking about, and under U.S. GAAP, you know, we do want to note that our book value does increase to $104 million, $57 million under IFRS as of Q4 2024, and a lot of that increase is just on the different accounting and lower reserves, reducing the liabilities and increasing equity on U.S. GAAP.
Okay, great. Thank you.
Thank you.
The next question comes from Nick Argona with Manulife Wealth. Please go ahead.
Thank you. Yes, I actually, I've got two questions as well. First, regarding insurance, it looks like you guys had some good momentum within that segment. What are the key insurance initiatives going forward?
Yeah, good question. I would say, you know, our goal is twofold. One is to grow the overall size of the business. We just entered into a new, we're in the process of entering some new contracts there to grow the business. That's just organic growth. The second thing is, you know, I had to mention in my script, you know, we're managing today around 60% of the assets, and obviously the goal is to manage more of that over time.
We can grow not only by growing the insurance company, but we can also grow by managing more of the assets.
Awesome. Okay, thank you. And just in regards to SOFIX performance, do you believe that, you know, better performance could lead to improved growth flows?
Yeah, good question. I mean, we, you know, we market our business based on franchise and differentiation. We try not to focus on returns. The inception to date, returns for SOFIX are less, and it's had a really good year to date. One thing that's happened is during the tariff volatility, performance was strongly positive. That's really helping us from a, that's really, really helping us from a marketing perspective, and so it should lead to better growth flows.
Awesome. Okay, thanks so much.
Thank you.
Thank you. Our next question comes from Matt Shadbolt with Canaccord. Please go ahead.
From a sector basis, how are you guys positioned within the tariff?
Yeah, our venture is really focused on B2B. We really focus on enterprise. We're big in software, healthcare, industrials, sports media, financials, places like that. We have a very, very, very low consumer sector presence. We really only have one company that has tariff pressures, and that company is an unbelievable business, low levered, and has incredibly high market share, and they're going to be able to pass on price increases. The big thing we're pushing on our companies is second and third order effects. What happens if there's a recession, you know, what happens with supply chain disruptions, things like that. We have very, very little in the way of direct tariff exposure.
Okay, thanks .
Thank you. There are currently no questions in the queue.
Please be reminded if you would like to ask a question, press star or dial one on your telephone keypad now. There are no further questions, so I will hand you back to your host to conclude today's conference. Thank you.
Thank you, everyone, for your time today. As always, we are happy to make ourselves available for any questions you may have on the business. We look forward to speaking with you to recap Q2 2025 results in August. We hope you all have a great weekend, and thank you so much.
Thank you, everyone, for joining us today. This concludes our call, and you may now disconnect your line.