8/8/2025

speaker
Ezra
Operator

Good morning and welcome to the Assured Guarantee Limited Second Quarter 2025 Earnings Conference Call. My name is Ezra and I will be the operator for today's call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing star then zero on your telephone keypad. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your telephone keypad. To withdraw your question, please press star then two. Please note that this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to our host, Robert Tucker, Senior Managing Director, Investor Relations and Corporate Communications. Please go ahead.

speaker
Robert Tucker
Senior Managing Director, Investor Relations and Corporate Communications

Thank you, operator, and thank you all for joining Assured Guarantee for our second quarter 2025 financial results conference call. Today's presentation is made pursuant to the safe harbor provision of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. The presentation may contain forward-looking statements about our new business and credit outlooks, market conditions, credit spreads, financial ratings, loss reserves, financial results, or other items that may affect our future results. These statements are subject to change due to new information or future events. Therefore, you should not place undue reliance on them, as we do not undertake any obligation to publicly update or revise them, except as required by law. If you are listening to a replay of this call, or if you're reading the transcript of the call, please note that our statements made today may have been updated since this call. Please refer to the investor information section of our website for our most recent presentations and SEC filings, both current financial filings and for the risk factors. This presentation also includes references to non gap financial measures we present the gap financial measures most directly comparable to the non gap financial measures referenced in this presentation. Along with a reconciliation between such gap and non gap financial measures and our current financial supplement and equity investor presentation, which are on our website at assured guaranteed COM. Turning to the presentation, our speakers today are Dominic Frederico, President and Chief Executive Officer of Assured Guarantee Limited, Rob Bailenson, our Chief Operating Officer, and Ben Rosenblum, our Chief Financial Officer. After their remarks, we will open the call to your questions. As the webcast is not enabled for Q&A, please dial into the call if you'd like to ask a question. I will now turn the call over to Dominic.

speaker
Dominic Frederico
President and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Robert, and welcome to everyone joining today's call. We continue to build value for assured guarantee shareholders and policyholders during the second quarter and first six months of 2025. Adjusted book value per share of $176.95 and adjusted operating shareholders' equity per share of $120.11 both reached record highs at the end of the second quarter. Adjusted operating income per share was $4.21 and $1.01 for the first half and second quarter respectively. Then we'll provide more details later about our financial results. U.S. municipal issuance remained strong in the first half of 2025. Through June 30th, the par amount of U.S. municipal issuance was 17% ahead of last year's record pace. We insured 64% of the insured par sold in the primary market during the first half of 2025. This indicates that the market recognizes the strength of our guarantee and value proposition. One of our strategic priorities in 2025 was to increase our production in ensuring U.S. municipal bonds in the secondary market. We wrote nearly $900 million of secondary market policies in the first half, including over $500 million in the second quarter. Our first half secondary PAR was 150% of the total amount of secondary power we insured in all of 2024. And, as I've mentioned in the past, we received significantly higher premiums on our secondary market policies. Overall, our U.S. public finance originations in the first two quarters were of unusually high credit quality and produced $74 million of PVP. Rob will provide more details on our high-quality business mix in a few minutes. With the addition of non-U.S. public finance and global structured finance, six-month PVP totaled $103 million. In capital management, we remain committed to our share repurchase program with a target of this year of $500 million. So far this year, as of August 6, 2025, the company had repurchased $296 million of common shares, representing 6.8% of the shares that were outstanding on December 31, 2024. And in August, our board authorized the repurchasing of additional $300 million of its common shares. We were also pleased to announce that in July, a $250 million stock redemption or special dividend by our U.S. insurance subsidiary was approved by our Maryland regulator. Over the years, we have repeatedly proven the strength and resilience of our business model. Reflecting this, on June 30th, S&P Global Ratings affirmed Assured Guarantee's AA financial strength rating with a stable outlook, citing our very strong competitive position, excellent capital and earnings, well-diversified global under-earnings strategy, and exceptional liquidity. Additionally, last week, KBRA affirmed the Shared Guarantee's AA-plus financial strength rating with a stable outlook, citing substantial claims-paying resources, strong risk management, leadership position in the financial guarantee market, high-quality insured portfolio, and conservative investment approach, among other factors. We believe we are now on a growth trajectory in both U.S. and non-U.S. markets. In 2022, after a long period of reducing our insurance exposure, the amount of our new business each year began to exceed what was amortizing in our insurance portfolio. That began the current trend of increasing the size of the insured portfolio. We intend to continue our leadership position in the U.S. municipal bond insurance while further expanding and diversifying our global infrastructure and structure finance reach. I will now turn the call over to Rob to discuss in detail our production results.

speaker
Rob Bailenson
Chief Operating Officer

Thank you, Dominic. Assured Guarantee led the municipal bond insurance industry in par insured during the first half of 2025, capturing 64% of the insured parts sold. We insured $14.1 billion of new issued PAR sold, 30% more than during the same period last year. As Dominic discussed, in the secondary market, we insured an additional $900 million of PAR at much higher premium rates. In aggregate, during the first half of 2025, our primary and secondary insured municipal PAR totaled approximately $15 billion. We also significantly increased the number of primary market transactions we executed. guaranteeing 474 new issues during the first half, 44% more than in the period last year. For the second quarter of 2025, our new issue insured PAR sold of $9.5 billion was up 32% year over year, while the total insured portion of the market was up by 21%. Our deal count for the quarter was up 41%. First half results reflected an unusual operating environment. the ratings of new issues in the first half of this year were more weighted toward higher quality and therefore lower average premium rates than has typically been the case. These higher quality credits also tend to moderate our overall risk profile and result in lower rating agency capital charges. Our guarantee adds value to the high quality bonds because it can further enhance credit quality, reduce borrowing costs, mitigate the impact of downgrade and headline risk, improve market liquidity, and potentially stabilize market value. During the first half of 2025, we issued over 100 policies totaling $5 billion of AA PAR, some of which were in the secondary market. These are issues with underlying ratings in the AA category by S&P or Moody's. For municipal transactions to be closed in the first half of 2025, such AA credits represented 32% of our insured PAR. This represents a 50% increase over the percentage of AA business reinsured in each of the previous three years. During the second quarter, we issued 54 primary and secondary market policies totaling $3.3 billion of AA credits. The composition of our business mix in the second quarter of 2025 was more heavily weighted toward AA credits than last year's second quarter, where we also had two large high premium transactions that significantly boosted that quarter's PVP. This year, we have also insured a number of transactions with insured PAR amounts of $100 million or more. Institutional investors are large buyers of these transactions, and they continue to value our guarantee on them. In the first half of 2025, we guarantee PAR of at least $100 million on 27 transactions for a total of $6.7 billion of insured PAR sold. Of that, During the second quarter, we guaranteed 19 transactions totaling 5.2 billion dollars of insured parcel insured par amounts of some of these largest transactions, including 1 billion dollars for the dormitory authority of the state of New York. 844 million dollars in aggregate for 2 issues for the downtown revitalization, public infrastructure district in Utah. $411 million for Allegheny County Airport in Pennsylvania, and $361 million for Meritus Health issued by the Maryland Health and Higher Education Facilities Authority. In our other markets, non-U.S. public finance contributed $14 million in PVP for the first half of 2025. Second quarter 2025 transactions included one primary and several secondary infrastructure transactions in the UK. Additionally, in Europe, we issued a guarantee for Spain's A127 Aragon Regional Roadway, our first post-financial crisis P3 transaction in Spain, and a guarantee for XP Fiber, the largest independent fiber-to-home operator in France, which is our first primary transaction in French infrastructure since we opened our Paris office. The nature of this business which includes large transactions, significant lead times, result in less predictable quarterly production results. Structured finance contributed $15 million in PVP for the first half of 2025. Within structured finance, results were primarily attributable to subscription finance and pooled corporate transactions. Subscription finance transactions are typically short duration, so that PVP earns significantly faster than the PVP generated by our other business segments. Further, based on our experience with these deals, there's an expectation that many of these transactions will extend or renew immaturity, generating additional PVP that was not recognized at the time of closing. Since 2021, we have seen growth in this product line year over year, and we expect this growth to continue in the coming years. Looking at the third quarter, we are off to a good start, ensuring approximately $2.8 billion in par close in the month of July. This includes $600 million a par for the new Terminal 1 at New York's JFK Airport with over $10 million in claims paying resources. We are well equipped to support projects of this scale. We're also in the process of closing another substantial transaction in Australia as a follow up to the transaction we insured in 2024. In closing, We believe we are well positioned for the second half of the year. As Dominic indicated earlier, the U.S. municipal market is seeing high issuance with some forecasts projecting that municipal issuance in 2025 could surpass 2024's record of $500 billion. Total market volume had already reached $278 billion by June 30th. We see many attractive opportunities in global infrastructure and structured finance. We have confidence in our strategy and a commitment to succeed. I will now turn the call over to Ben to discuss our financial results further.

speaker
Ben Rosenblum
Chief Financial Officer

Thank you, Dominic and Rob, and good morning. Second quarter 2025 adjusted operating income was $50 million or $1.01 per share, which compares with adjusted operating income of $80 million or $1.44 per share in the second quarter of 2024. The key revenue drivers net earned premiums and net investment income on the available for sale portfolio were both up in the second quarter of 2025 compared with the second quarter of 2024, which reflects the earnings power of each of these predictable streams of core earnings. net earned premiums and credit derivative revenues increased by $5 million, primarily due to earnings on new large transactions and supplemental premiums written in 2024. Our deferred premium revenue, which is our future store of earnings, was $3.9 billion. Net investment income on the Available for Sale fixed maturity and short-term investment portfolio increased $8 million in the second quarter of 2025. There were a few notable changes in the composition of the Available for Sale investment portfolio compared with the second quarter of 2024 that contributed to the increase in net investment income. First, certain CELO equity tranche investments were reclassified to the available for sale fixed maturity portfolio from a CLO fund whose change in net asset value, or NAV, was previously reported in adjusted operating income. Net investment income in second quarter of 2025 included $9 million related to the CLO equity tranches, whereas in the prior year, the change in the NAV of the CLO fund was $3 million. And second, net investment income on the externally managed portfolio increased by $6 million as our managers reinvested into higher yielding assets. However, the average balance of our short-term investment portfolio declined, as did the short-term interest rates, resulting in an offsetting decrease of $10 million in net investment income. In addition to the CLO equity tranches, In the available for sale portfolio, we also have other alternative investments whose changes in NAV are reported in adjusted operating income. Earnings from this portfolio tend to be more volatile than the fixed maturity portfolio. In the second quarter of 2025, the change in NAV from these alternative investments was $5 million, compared with $15 million in the second quarter of 2024. On an inception-to-date basis, as of June 30, 2025, our aggregate alternative investments have generated an annualized internal rate return of 13%, substantially greater than the returns on the fixed maturity portfolio. Changes in the fair value of trading securities, which mainly consists of Puerto Rico contingent value instruments, also tends to be volatile. In the second quarter of 2025, the change in fair value of trading securities was a $2 million gain compared with a $17 million gain in the second quarter of 2024. The changes in fair value of alternative investment and trading securities are two of the three primary drivers of the decrease in adjusted operating income in second quarter 2025 compared with second quarter 2024. The last notable component of the variance is an increase of $27 million in the insurance segment loss expense. In the second quarter of 2025, loss expense was primarily attributable to additional reserves on certain UK regulated utility and US municipal revenue exposures. Loss expense is a function of both economic loss development and the amortization of deferred premium revenue. In the second quarter of 2025 economic loss development was $36 million, mainly due to certain healthcare UK regulated utility and municipal revenue exposures. Breaking down the main contributors of our second quarter results, the insurance segment contributed $76 million and the asset management segment contributed $4 million. These segment earnings were offset in part by the corporate division's adjusted operating loss of $29 million in the second quarter of 2025, which is down from a $35 million loss in the prior year. On the capital management front, we repurchased 1.5 million shares for $131 million at an average price of $85.03 per share. and also returned $19 million in dividends to our shareholders in the second quarter of 2025. Including our board's most recent $300 million share repurchase authorization, our current remaining authorization is $356 million. In terms of our current holding company liquidity position, we have cash and investments of $157 million, of which $60 million resides in AGL. Share repurchases, along with adjusted operating income and new business production, collectively contributed to new records for adjusted operating shareholders' equity per share of over $120 and adjusted book value per share of almost $177. While adjusted operating income varies from period to period, the consistent quarterly increases in these book value metrics reflect the value of our key strategic initiatives which builds shareholder value over the long term. Since the end of the quarter, we had two very positive developments, which demonstrate the successful execution of several of our key strategic initiatives. First, After many years of negotiation and hard work, our largest loss mitigation security, with a carrying value of $408 million as of June 30, 2025, was paid down using the proceeds from the liquidation of the trust assets. This outcome showcases our multifaceted approach to loss mitigation, combining a vigorous legal defense and financial flexibility. We reached a positive resolution after pursuing our legal rights, allocating capital to repurchase most of the outstanding exposure at discount and remaining patient while the collateral value recovered. There will be little impact on the third quarter income for this final resolution. However, on an inception to date basis, we received over $100 million more in recoveries than we paid out, which resulted in a positive lifetime internal return of 2.7% for this troubled exposure. The second development, as Dominic mentioned, was that the Maryland Insurance Administration approved the redemption by the company's US insurance subsidiary, Assured Guarantee Inc., of $250 million of its shares of common stock. Assured Guarantee, Inc. expects to redeem such shares in exchange for cash and alternative investments in the third quarter of 2025. Proceeds from the stock redemption will flow into our U.S. holding companies and will be available for strategic initiatives, including share repurchases. I'll now turn the call over to our operator to give you the instructions for the Q&A period.

speaker
Ezra
Operator

Thank you very much, we will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your telephone keypad. To withdraw your question, please press star then two. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. At this time, we will pause momentarily to assemble our roster. Our first question comes from Marissa Lobo with UBS. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.

speaker
Marissa Lobo
Analyst, UBS

Thank you. Good morning. Thanks for taking my question. First, I was just looking for more color on the pub. Hi, can you hear me okay?

speaker
Dominic Frederico
President and Chief Executive Officer

Sorry, we missed the question. You guys interrupted. Please repeat.

speaker
Marissa Lobo
Analyst, UBS

I was hoping for more color on how a lower interest rate environment impacts the opportunity set for for both in primary and secondary public finance.

speaker
Dominic Frederico
President and Chief Executive Officer

The lower interest rate environment, as we said, we get paid on principle and interest, so lower interest rate environment, but obviously depressed premium volume. In terms of what we would calculate is already gets so the basis of the premium calculation would go down would affect our insurance portfolio, which is obviously made of. mostly fixed income securities. So it would also affect book value of that. And in terms of the secondary market, I don't think it has any impact whatsoever. And as we've said, strategically, we've looked at the secondary market as kind of the balance in today's marketplace where there are low rates and tight spreads. The secondary market gives us an opportunity to balance that out with higher rated, higher performance or higher ROE business. So as I said, I think it'll affect the portfolio. It'll affect the premium calculation going forward, depending on the size of the decrease in the interest rates.

speaker
Rob Bailenson
Chief Operating Officer

Yeah, but if rates, remember also, Rebecca, if spreads widen out, even if rates go down, then you're still going to get, you're going to calculate a higher premium rate.

speaker
Dominic Frederico
President and Chief Executive Officer

Well, on the positive side, if rates go down, you're going to probably have more issuers in the market as well, because people will take advantage of the low interest rates to, in effect, accomplish some borrowings that they've probably been holding off of because of the volatility in the market because of tax, no tax, you know, political, no political. So we've got to make sure that that strains out as well. But if they're low enough, you'll see a lot more issuers come to market as well.

speaker
Rob Bailenson
Chief Operating Officer

You'll also see more BBB and single A rated issuers come to market with lower interest rates.

speaker
Dominic Frederico
President and Chief Executive Officer

And it could affect our earned premium in a positive way because of refunding. So there's some good news and some bad news with a lower interest rate environment.

speaker
Marissa Lobo
Analyst, UBS

That's helpful. Thank you. And just moving on to the loss expense and increasing big exposures. Could you speak a little bit about the increase in the big exposure for the non-U.S. and also how you see the process timeline playing out for Gaines Water here?

speaker
Dominic Frederico
President and Chief Executive Officer

So this is something we've discussed at length in the company and also to you over the quarter. So what we're responsible to do from the standpoint of evaluating the credits is do an independent evaluation of what we would rate the credit the rating is kind of severe so if you look at a bright line where the top tier are they basically capital stack the ability to get to us in terms of a law situation is pretty remote but once the underlying credit has trouble making cash flow or making operating expenses, you downgrade the stack. But the stack is protected at the top very, very well. So you're looking at the low investment grade credit that, quite honestly, if you're the top $2 billion of $7 billion, you really have no exposure. But that's not the way the rules work. When it comes time to the loss reserves, you've got the same problem. Low investment grade credit is going to track the loss reserve. Loss reserves are calculated based on a scenario analysis and a probability weighting. The majority, and I mean the significant majority of our credits that goes into our calculation of either reserves or below investment grade do not pay losses. So it's an accounting concept. We actually try to get a statistic for you that how many lower reserves that we put up that we've never paid a loss on, and it's the majority of the cases, the strong majority of the cases. Ben, you want to add anything to that?

speaker
Ben Rosenblum
Chief Financial Officer

I think that sums it up. I think in many cases we put up losses, you know, and this is true certainly in the healthcare sector in the U.S. where we put up many losses over the years and we downgraded the credit this quarter in Westchester Medical Center, but I can't even think of the last time we paid out a loss in the U.S. healthcare sector. It was probably the Bayonne Hospital, you know, 20 some odd years ago. Your insurance, I think. Well, FSA didn't, but

speaker
Dominic Frederico
President and Chief Executive Officer

the end of the day we do have a very strong surveillance team that works on the healthcare front they're very good at their job they get in there and work out the credit downgrade and then we work through the problem and your question was on time so let's go back to that for a second so remember as we said we're in the opco not the holdco the problem there is capital expenditure is not operating expenses or operating ability to cover that service we're very well protected in terms of the legal structure and as you've seen in the current environment, we've put up a plan with the rest of the creditors relative to refinancing, which is the only plan available. We're very comfortable with our position in the plan. One of the main sources is the company. So hopefully that'll continue at its pace, get approved, and then put into effect. We'll be able to cure the credit. You know, the joke I make internally, and I'll put it out here over some criticism, is that even in Puerto Rico's case, they paid the water bill. So I'm assuming the UK government will do the same.

speaker
Marissa Lobo
Analyst, UBS

Thanks for that. That's it for me.

speaker
Ezra
Operator

Just as a reminder, to ask a question, you may press star, then 1 on your telephone keypad. And if you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. Our next question comes from Tommy with Joint with KBW. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.

speaker
Tommy
Analyst, KBW

Hey, good morning, guys. um a timely this is a timely call you know following the announcement just a few days ago that five of the seven members of the puerto rico oversight board uh were dismissed by the president um can you walk through your understanding of what happens from here in terms of nominations or new appointments to that board if they have to go through approval process And then if this in any way delays the overall restructuring procedures, just as new members get up to speed.

speaker
Dominic Frederico
President and Chief Executive Officer

Well, let's look at the facts from the rear. So, number 1, nothing could delay a restructuring or a kind of consensual deal. And the existing board was doing in terms of their execution. Remember, we had signed 3 previous deals, which they reneged on every time. So it couldn't go any slower. So any change of that's got to be an improvement, Tommy. So at the end of the day, I'm optimistic that this road turns out to be a positive, not a negative. Number two, what ultimately happens, I think, is still up for discussion relative to who's got legal rights to do what. Remember how the original board was constituted. Each side got to put a couple on. The president got to put somebody on. Will they follow that path? I have no idea. So it's still up in the open. It's still whether they're going to contest the dismissals. But as I said, to me, it can only improve, it can't go, you know, in an adverse way. Okay. So I think it needs to reveal potential.

speaker
Tommy
Analyst, KBW

Yeah. Yeah. We'll stay tuned on that. How much contingent value instruments from earlier Puerto Rico restructuring do you guys still hold? And as I understand it, those have been performing very well. And that's just reflective of sales tax receipts coming in above budget. As we see that happen, can we think of PREPA's ability to repay and the ultimate recovery there? as also potentially coming in better, just thinking about, you know, economic activity, driving sales tax receipts, and that also potentially leading to more electric utilization. Is there a correlation there that we can think of?

speaker
Dominic Frederico
President and Chief Executive Officer

Let me answer your first question. So, we have about $117 million remaining from the previous contingent value securities, and as you said, they've performed very well. That's why we held back. Unless it doesn't meet our internal return thresholds, we would sell, but they do, so we hold. We expect them to continue to improve. So as the market presents opportunity, we'll execute accordingly. We don't have a liquidity situation or position, so we don't have to worry about holding the securities. So at the end of the day, it's positive for the company. Number two, depending on what we ultimately resolve, prep it with, will there be contingent securities? I don't know, but like you said, since they tend to undervalue them, they're not a bad investment to take as part of a settlement because they typically outperform. We believe prep has the ability to repay its debt. And as you can see, the growth in the administrative expense claim continues to significantly increase, which represents a significant portion of the debt that was owed, which is kind of funny. In this case, we thought we'd have to prove that there's money there. Now we have to prove to us that there isn't money there. So I think it's a very different situation than it was in the past with the change in the board members potentially and this administrative claim. I think things are getting very positive from the standpoint of the ability to settle our dispute and get to a consensual agreement.

speaker
Tommy
Analyst, KBW

Thanks, Donald.

speaker
Dominic Frederico
President and Chief Executive Officer

You're welcome, Tommy.

speaker
Ezra
Operator

Our next question comes from Jeffrey Dunn with Dowling and Partners. Your line is now open. Please go ahead.

speaker
Jeffrey Dunn
Analyst, Dowling & Partners

Thanks. Good morning. Good morning, Jeff. I saw Westchester Medical was added to your BIG list. I know it's only one notch below investment grade, but can you talk a little bit about what occurred there, you know, relative to first quarter and second quarter that brought it down to the DIG level?

speaker
Ben Rosenblum
Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, I think, you know, we're constantly evaluating our credits. As I mentioned, we have a really good surveillance team led by Holly Horne, and she looked at it, we looked at it, and we saw the liquidity was not where we like our standards. Additionally, you know, when you look at what's coming out of Washington, there may be some headwinds for Medicaid and Medicare patients out there, and as a result, as a forward-looking basis, we decided we would downgrade it. We do not believe this is going to be a big problem. We generally, as I mentioned, work out our health care credits, but you've got to take prudent measures and put up the ratings that you think make sense at the time.

speaker
Dominic Frederico
President and Chief Executive Officer

This is a critical facility, very important to the state, very important to the local environment. But as Ben points out, we have a process where we look at credits, we look at the future, we look at the cash flow situation, the available management team, margins that are being pressurized, and take the decisions we think are necessary relative to managing the credits.

speaker
Ben Rosenblum
Chief Financial Officer

We generally have a very positive view on the turnaround possibilities there, and we're looking forward to working with them to turn it around.

speaker
Dominic Frederico
President and Chief Executive Officer

I think as Ben talks about, in our history of healthcare credits, they perform very, very well because they are an operating exposure that can easily be amended versus political situations that are a little tougher to handle. This is not one of those. We are recognizing the facts of what it means relative to Medicare and Medicaid and cash flows and the demand. Remember, they're bringing on a new facility, which always has its problems in terms of operations. But just being forewarned is forearmed. That's kind of our process in surveillance. Okay, thank you. You're welcome.

speaker
Rob Bailenson
Chief Operating Officer

Thanks. Welcome, Jim.

speaker
Ezra
Operator

This concludes the question and answer session. I would now like to turn the conference back over to our host, Robert Tucker, for closing remarks.

speaker
Robert Tucker
Senior Managing Director, Investor Relations and Corporate Communications

Thank you, operator. I'd like to thank everyone for joining us on today's call. If you have additional questions, please feel free to give us a call. Thank you very much.

speaker
Ezra
Operator

This concludes today's conference call. Thank you all for attending. You may now disconnect your lines. Have a great day.

Disclaimer

This conference call transcript was computer generated and almost certianly contains errors. This transcript is provided for information purposes only.EarningsCall, LLC makes no representation about the accuracy of the aforementioned transcript, and you are cautioned not to place undue reliance on the information provided by the transcript.

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