Good morning. Welcome to the RLI Corp. First Quarter Earnings Teleconference. After management's prepared remarks, we will open the conference up for questions and answers. Before we get started, let me remind everyone that through the course of the teleconference, at RLI management may make comments that reflect their intentions, beliefs, and expectations for the future. As always, these forward-looking statements are subject to certain factors and uncertainties, which could cause actual results to differ materially. Please refer to the risk factors described in the company's various SEC filings, including the annual report on Form 10-K, as supplemented in Forms 10-Q, all of which should be reviewed carefully. The company has filed a Form 8-K with the Securities and Exchange Commission that contains the press release announcing third quarter results.
During the call, RLI management may refer to operating earnings and earnings per share from operations which are non-GAAP measures of financial results. RLI's operating earnings and earnings per share from operations consist of net earnings after the elimination of after-tax realized gains or losses and after-tax unrealized gains and loss or losses on equity securities. Additionally, equity and earnings of Maui Jim and the related taxes are excluded from the operating earnings and operating EPS for 2022 due to the sale of RLI's investment in the third quarter of 2022. RLI's management believes these measures are useful in gauging core operating performances across reporting periods but may not be comparable to other company's definitions of operating earnings. The Form 8-K contains a reconciliation between operating earnings and net earnings. The Form 8-K and press release are available at the company's website at www.rlicorp.com.
I will now turn the conference over to RLI's Chief Investment Officer and Treasurer, Mr. Aaron Diefenthaler. Please go ahead.
Thank you, Megan. Good morning, and welcome to RLI's first quarter earnings call for 2023. Joining us today are Craig Kliethermes, President and CEO, Jen Klobnak, Chief Operating Officer, and Todd Bryant, Chief Financial Officer. As usual, Todd will lead off with a summary of our financial performance in the quarter. Craig and Jen will offer detail on current market conditions related to our product portfolio. We will then take your questions, and Craig will close with some final thoughts. Todd?
Thanks, Aaron. Good morning, everyone. Yesterday, we reported first quarter operating earnings of $1.63 per share. The quarter's results reflect strong underwriting performance and continued growth in investment income. All in, we posted a combined ratio of 77.9% for the quarter and experienced continued top-line growth, which was up 16% as property and surety led the way. Investment income advanced 51% as we realized elevated income on improved reinvestment rates and a larger invested asset base. Operating cash flow was $69 million, up nicely for the quarter and is supportive of asset growth. Realized gains were $15 million in the quarter. A majority of these gains were from a payout of the working capital escrow from the Maui Jim sale and represent substantially all of the escrowed amounts from this transaction.
In the quarter, the equity portfolio posted $15 million of unrealized gains. As mentioned on numerous occasions, large movements in equity prices between periods can have a significant impact on net earnings, which you can again see in the comparative results this quarter. From an underwriting income perspective, the quarter's combined ratio was 77.9 and was in line with last year's result. Our loss ratio declined two points as underlying results improved for both property and casualty. While storm losses added four points to the property segment's loss ratio versus three points last year, attritional losses remained low and were spread across a much higher revenue base. For casualty, the underlying loss ratio improved by half a point due largely to mix shifts as initial current accident year loss ratios are not materially different from a year ago.
From a prior year's reserves perspective, all three segments benefited from favorable development. Casualty posted $36 million of favorable loss emergence across a majority of product lines and over multiple accident years. Property experienced $13 million in favorable development as Marine, E&S, and admitted property lines posted loss reductions. For surety, favorable reserve development was $3 million, modestly below last year's level, which explained the majority of the increase in the segment's loss ratio between periods. Our approach to reserving remains the same, and the quarter's results are reflective of a consistent process. Moving to expenses, compared to last year, our quarterly expense ratio increased two points to 40.7. Elevated incentive-related amounts account for nearly 1.5 points of this increase.
Most notably, amounts influenced by operating return on equity and growth in Book Value were up significantly compared to the first quarter of last year. We have increased investments in both our people and technology to support growth, improve customer experience, and to drive efficiencies. Despite some market volatility, quarterly investment returns were positive at 2.8%, with both stocks and bonds contributing to comprehensive earnings of $137 million. The retreat in bond yields was significant in March, we still found accretive opportunities in fixed income and purchase yields averaged more than 4.5% for the quarter. There has been little change to our investment strategy over the last year, with a focus on putting meaningful amounts of cash flow to work in high quality bonds.
Incorporating comprehensive earnings and adjusting for dividends, Book Value per Share increased 12% in the quarter to $28.62 per share. Away from the traditional investment portfolio, investee earnings were down, but that comparison is largely influenced by our sale of Maui Jim, which contributed over $6 million to last year's result. As noted last year and highlighted in the press release for comparative purposes, we have excluded earnings from Maui Jim in our calculation of operating earnings for 2022. All in all, a very good operating quarter and strong start to the year. With that, I'll turn the call over to Craig.
Thank you, Todd and Aaron, and good morning, everyone. I'm very pleased with our start to 2023, with continued double-digit top line growth and a sub 80 combined ratio, very similar to last year. Our continued ability to deliver is a testament to the quality of our people, the diversity of our product portfolio, and our disciplined underwriting culture. These attributes allow our associate owners to make the best long-term decisions for the benefit of our customers and shareholders. RLI believes in the marshmallow test. We have the resolve to be a stable market with a consistent risk appetite through all market cycles. There remains a fair amount of dislocation, economic uncertainty, and capital shortfalls in much of the industry, particularly in Wheels and catastrophe-exposed lines of businesses. Rates continue to be up with even greater momentum for wind and earthquake exposures.
We are finding that although competition is tougher in many of our liability and surety businesses, there seems to be some reluctance for the markets to behave too irrationally as reinsurers are doing a better job passing along their costs to the primary market and creating general concern over the availability and price tag of their capacity. We appreciate smart competitors and discerning capacity. We prefer to compete in markets where measured risk-taking and discipline are more pervasive. We think our portfolio is very healthy and our talented underwriters are poised to grow where rates adequately cover the risk. I'm going to turn it over to Jen, who can provide a lot more color on our portfolio and talk about where we're seeing the best opportunities. Jen.
Thank you, Craig. The property segment once again drove the top-line results and produced a 68 combined ratio for the quarter. Rate change for the segment was positive 24%, while claim activity was fairly quiet. The headline continues to be the Southeast property market. Hurricane rates were up 47% for the quarter, which continues a string of quarterly double-digit rate increases going back to the fourth quarter of 2019. With rate a primary driver of premium, exposure growth has been limited. We have not seen new capacity in the Florida market in quite some time, and competitors continue to manage their limits closely, which creates space for multiple carriers to participate on a risk, including RLI. Submission counts have remained strong as property risk shifts from the admitted to the E&S market.
At the end of the day, we are in the claim resolution business and are happy to report that two-thirds of our Hurricane Ian claims are now closed. Our claim examiners continue to visit our insurers in Florida to reinspect locations and address any issues. While E&S property grabbed the headline again, Marine and our Hawaii Homeowners books are quietly thriving as well. We successfully grew Marine by 16% and Hawaii by 18% by being responsive to our producers and providing superior service and tailored solutions. Marine continues to deliver steady rate increases, totaling 7% for the quarter. With their solid results, Marine is proving to be a go-to partner in a dynamic market. Our Hawaii Homeowners product experienced some losses during the quarter, but continues to perform well overall. We believe our property segment is healthy and we expect to see continued growth opportunities going forward.
The casualty segment's premium grew 1% while it produced an 83 combined ratio. Growth was flat as we continue to demonstrate underwriting discipline in several areas of this portfolio. Effective January 1st, we exited the energy excess liability market and reduced our participation on Prime's quota share reinsurance treaty. The combined impact of these changes was about a $10 million decrease to premium in the first quarter. Producing consistent, profitable results stems from a willingness to pare back underperforming portions of our portfolio when needed or rebalance products to better align with our appetite. Conversely, disrupted markets are ripe with opportunities to grow, as demonstrated by Personal Umbrella, where competitors are changing their risk appetite or leaving the market.
Here, we have refreshed our policy form, target regular rate increases, and work with our producer partners to manage growth by region. PUP premium was up 23%, and we are monitoring this growth closely. Steady growth was also achieved by our Professional Services Group, which focuses on architects' and engineers' professional liability and package coverages, as well as small commercial packages for contractors. This group ramped up marketing efforts in the first quarter and produced 8% growth in gross premiums written. Our Executive Products Group is in a tougher market where the Public D&O sector remains under pressure. One of our brokers said that 20 new competitors have entered this market in the last 18 months. We believe these new entrants are late to the party and are providing brokers with more mouths to feed. Our EPG premium was down 14% in the quarter.
We experienced 5% rate decreases, but were able to achieve growth outside of Public D&O. Finally, we saw delays in the start of private construction projects in our E&S casualty primary and excess liability business in the first quarter. Project owners are having to exert more effort to obtain financing, permits, and needed project supplies. These issues vary by geographic region, with the Northeast being the most impacted. New competition, who generally provide broader coverage, has entered the space as well. Premiums for the group was down 9%, although we were able to obtain 5% rate increases on the primary business and 6% on the excess. One quarter is too early to call it a trend, but we are monitoring construction industry information closely and continuing to work with our producers to monitor submission flow.
The Surety segment grew premium by 14% and produced a 77 combined ratio. While building materials inflation continues to support growth in contract surety, we are also winning new accounts in our contract and commercial surety businesses through increased marketing efforts and a focus on excellent service. While we are off to a solid start for 2023, we are watching economic conditions and the financial health of our principals closely and have gotten off several accounts whose financial results deteriorated. With robust competition in the market, we believe growth opportunities within this segment may be more moderate in the year ahead. Now I'll turn the call back over to Craig.
Thanks, Jen. A very good start to the year, giving us good momentum going into the more catastrophe-exposed spring and fall quarters. We will continue to remain vigilant around opportunities and risks as we navigate the uncertainty and disruptions in the market. We can be patient when required, but like the boxer Archie Moore, we also have the proven ability to adapt and counterpunch with speed and skill. The speed is derived from our consistent underwriting approach and strong balance sheet, which gives us the confidence to execute amid market uncertainty. The skill comes from our associates' narrow and deep knowledge that bring added value to our customer and better risk selection. RLI will continue to invest in its people, customer relationships, and technology to grow underwriting profits over time.
I want to thank all our RLI associate owners for the results they generated this quarter. Keep up the great work. At RLI, it is okay to be different because different works. I'll now turn the call back over to the operator for any questions.
Thank you. The question-and-answer session will begin at this time. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up the handset before pressing any numbers. Should you have a question, please press star one on your telephone. If you wish to withdraw your question, please press star two. Your question will be taken in the order that it is received. Please stand by for your first question. Our first question comes from Greg Peters.
Hey, good morning. This is Sid on for Greg. Just wanted to talk about the casualty segment. Jen, you provided great detail there on the growth. We're just trying to get a sense, I guess, on where we are in the timing with the previously exited lines, and then it sounds like there's additional lines that have been exited. Just, I guess, trying to set our outlook for growth in the casualty segment.
Yeah. Thanks for the question. In terms of the excess energy liability business, that's not a bond. That was a liability product that we exited last year. We still write primary business. We exited it effective January 1st. I think last year we wrote between $15 million and $20 million of excess liability premium. About $5 million of that was in the first quarter, roughly. You'll see the rest of that throughout the year. It did slow down towards the end of last year, so that's probably weighted towards the first three quarters of the year. Another part was just our Prime reinsurance that we assumed. We took half of our participation that we used to do in 2022, so that impacted our premium as well.
We would see that throughout the year. It's more evenly spread.
All right. Got it. Thanks.
Thank you. Our next question comes from the line, Meyer Shields.
Great. I'm sorry. Am I coming through?
Yeah, we can hear you now.
There you're good to go, Meyer.
Okay. Fantastic. Thank you. Sorry about that. Jen, you mentioned 20 carriers entering the space, up until now, we've heard that their focus has been fairly limited to Public D&O. I'm wondering, does that match what you're seeing, or are they now looking for other lines of business to attack or to soften?
Yeah, thanks for the question, Meyer Shields. I think we are seeing them mostly participate in public P&L, so the 20 new competitors are a mix of carriers and a lot of MGAs. Some of those folks also play in other parts of that general space, such as the reps and warranties business, which we're no longer in. They haven't been focused as much on the private yet, but we're ready for competition to come anywhere. For now, you're right, it's been mostly focused on the public P&L.
Okay, that's helpful. I know we've talked about this in the past, but how are you thinking about loss trends in property as that book grows? I'm wondering specifically, is there an annual increase that we should expect from climate change in addition to the impact of inflation?
Well, I would say that, you know, in terms of climate change, we have seen some increased activity in the last few years, which we've been adjusting for over time through rate increases and form changes. You know, we don't provide a lot of coverage for some of the perils that are connected to climate change, such as floods, so we don't have a lot of that in our portfolio. Wildfire would be another example where we do have fire risk, but we are very aware of wildfires, so we try to, you know, really underwrite to that risk and charge for that. I would say. Now I've forgotten your question. I think.
About the rate of loss trend associated with that.
Oh, yes. Thank you. In terms of loss trends, you know, this is impossible to measure. We have, you know, put in some loads for various perils and other factors within our benchmark pricing tool, but there's no precision or, you know, a lot of calculations around that because, as you know, that's a topic that is evolving. I'm gonna give you a large, a kind of a high-level answer on that one.
The only thing I'd add, Meyer Shields, is we do spend a lot of time on the front end making sure we get the correct valuations. There's been an increase that we've always had a focus on that, but really an increased effort recently because of material costs and things like that. We've kind of reevaluated our entire portfolio at renewal and look at accounts, have conversations with our insureds and our brokers about making sure we get the right valuations on a property.
All right, perfect. Thank you so much. That really helped.
Thank you. Our next question comes from Mark Dwelle.
Yeah, good morning. I'm gonna kind of build on what Meyer just asked about. With all the additional property that you've been writing, is it safe to say that the Southeast now would be your kind of peak risk zone for property exposures? Would it still be, I don't know, Hawaii or California quake or whatever it might have been previously?
Well, that's a good question. It depends on how you measure it. As you know, when it comes to catastrophe risk, there's a lot of ways to measure it, whether using a model or using exposed limits. You know, you can answer that question in a lot of ways. I would overall say that our exposure is fairly balanced between the Southeast and California earthquake, with Hawaii falling behind as far as that ranking. I would say that we've brought up our hurricane exposure to be more in line with earthquakes. Although, I would say in the last few months, in particular, the growth of our exposure has slowed tremendously as we manage, you know, all of these various metrics that we use.
To the extent you're writing, where you've been adding property exposures, what sort of limits are you typically writing? Or maybe there's not a typical.
Well, there can be a typical. We look at $5 million or even down to $2.5 million limit in the highest concentrated areas like Florida and the Houston area. You know, we're trying to stay open for new business with our producers so that they at least can get a quote. To do that, we really have to limit the dollar amount of capacity that we can provide so that we can continue to see some new business throughout the cycle.
Are you primarily participating as a primary writer or are you part of an excess tower?
Historically, we've been very focused on the primary. The excess portion of our portfolio has grown a bit just with the change in other carriers' limits where they're providing less, and so a lot more of that business is in towers now, you know, with a lot of carriers participating. We've seen that area of our book grow as far as excess, but we still prefer and enjoy a lot of primary business in the portfolio.
Still predominantly primary-
Mm-hmm
...only excess is probably 15%-20% maybe.
Okay.
Okay.
That's very helpful. Thank you for all the answers on that. One other question. Craig, in your comments you mentioned the Wheels businesses and CAT as being the areas where there's the most dislocation. I've just quizzed you extensively on the CAT portion I suppose. Could you share any thoughts you might have on what you're seeing in the Wheels business collectively, kind of where the, you know, dislocations are most acute and maybe some sense of what the rate increase environments are like in some of those areas?
Yeah, I'll actually jump in. If you look at our auto exposure, you know, the main business unit that Craig Kliethermes said is our RLI Transportation Division. I would say the auto space is pretty diverse. There are parts of it that are still very healthy and other parts where there's a lot of competition. The most challenging section of that market is actually the trucking market, both on an admitted and non-admitted basis. I don't understand why, but people don't appreciate that 2020 was a lull. You know, losses were down for insureds that year, but they incorporate that into the pricing and assume that losses will be down going forward. In reality, there are accidents every day. There are more markets entering trucking.
We heard about a new one yesterday. It's frustrating because, you know, you need to charge enough to cover. You're gonna have claims, so you need to charge enough to cover that. That market is experiencing some issues. I'd say the other areas of the market are a little healthier. You know, we have a public portfolio, we have some, especially commercial auto, and those are a little bit healthier from that standpoint. Overall, in the first quarter, we were able to achieve an 8% rate change on the transportation portfolio. The other area where we have some auto exposure would be in our Personal Umbrella product. More primary focused. You know, in there we fight with the various, state insurance departments to get a little more rate on the portfolio.
Again, with losses being down a couple years ago, people, you know, are trying to assume that losses aren't happening, but they are. We do see other carriers, co-competitors struggling in that market, again, with the social inflation and other factors that we've talked about previously. That's a disruptive market we've been growing in for a bit, and we continue to see opportunity, but with new growth at RLI, we always watch it very closely.
I appreciate all the color. Thank you. That's all my questions.
Thank you. Our next question comes from Casey Alexander.
Hi. Good morning. I was wondering if you could give us an overview of what you're seeing in reinsurance markets relative to the increase in your property exposure and how you're managing the obvious change in prices in reinsurance markets? Just kind of an overview of how you're dealing with the whole situation?
Sure. Thank you. You know, obviously, January first was challenging for us. We were able to renew our reinsurance, we did get coverage, but it was at a higher cost. We're able to cover that cost by, you know, passing that along to some extent with our rate change. We see the reinsurance market is continuing to be firm, we do have renewals that happen from January through July on various parts of our portfolio. Recently, April first, we renewed on our surety treaty and our Professional Services Group, which is that architects and engineers book. Those renewals were better. They're not as property focused, you know, the rate change was pretty manageable there.
We know, from talking to our brokers and from hearing about what's going on in the market, that property will continue to be a challenging area. As we move throughout the year, we are contemplating that as we think about our exposure because you put a, you know, you put a risk on the books today, it's gonna be in force for 12 months, which means it will be subject to next year's catastrophe treaty. Just like last year in 2022, we knew that rates were gonna be going up, and we started around April, May timeframe, increasing our benchmark pricing to consider that, you know, the next year we will be paying more for that exposure. We do the similar process this year as we try to forecast, which forecasting is kind of impossible.
We think there's the potential for rates to go up again to some extent. I'm hoping it's a lot more manageable and organized process this time. We stay in touch with our reinsurers. We have some visits coming up, in fact. In fact, we have a team actually right now meeting with some reinsurers in our New York office. We stay in contact to monitor what's going on and we'll accommodate that as we go forward as we can.
Right. Great. Thank you for taking my question.
Thank you, Casey.
Thank you. Our next question comes from Jamie Inglis.
Good morning, guys.
Good morning.
If you look at, I wanna swing back to the property area. you know, other companies have reported and/or signaled big catastrophe losses. The industry has as well, and you guys really haven't. I'm wondering, I'm guessing part of it is geographic focus, but you guys have in the past talked about changing terms and conditions, limits, deductibles, et cetera. I'm wondering is there a way to quantify what changes you've made and what, you know, what would your loss ratio have been if you hadn't made those changes? Is there some way to get a sense of what's changed in your book or how you structured the book?
Yeah, that's a good question. I asked that question myself in the last week because I keep seeing these pre-announcements, and I am saying, "What," you know, "what is our impact?" I would say that a couple of things go into play there. About 10 years ago or so, you know, we were a little larger in the habitational space in our E&S property portfolio. We experienced a fair amount of tornado losses back in the day, hail losses. If you look back at our history, we have some losses from that. We reduced our participation there because frankly, we couldn't get the terms and conditions we needed. We have a lot less exposure to that, to those perils. I would say our books concentration really is in Florida, Texas, California, those kind of areas. ...
and it's really peril specific in a lot of ways. When you see these different events come through, depending on the region, depending on the coverage, we just don't have concentration. Now, when events like this happen, we expect one-off losses to occur. We have received a few claims, hail damage, some roof issues, but nothing that is, you know, headline news.
Okay. That's all I had. Great results, guys. Thanks.
Thanks.
Thank you.
Thank you. If there are no further questions, I will now turn the conference over to Mr. Craig Kliethermes for closing remarks.
Well, thank you all for joining us. We're glad we could continue to deliver and look forward to talking with you all again. Thanks.
Ladies and gentlemen, if you wish to access the replay for this call, you may do so by dialing 1-866-813-9403 with an ID number of 890292. This concludes our conference today. Thank you for all your participation and have a nice day. All parties may now disconnect.