speaker
Operator

Good morning and welcome to the FNF's second quarter 2025 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.

speaker
Lisa Foxworthy Parker
SVP Investor and External Relations

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. FNG's management team, including Chris Blunt and Connor Murphy, 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, 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-GAP measures, which management believes are relevant in assessing the financial performance of the business. Non-GAP measures have been reconciled to GAP where required 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. And with that, I'll hand the call over to Mike Nolan.

speaker
Mike Nolan
CEO

Thank you, Lisa, and good morning. Overall, our businesses generated strong results for the second quarter. Starting with title, we delivered adjusted pre-tax title earnings of $337 million, a $13 million or 4% increase over the second quarter of 2024. We achieved an industry-leading adjusted pre-tax title margin of .5% for the second quarter, up 380 basis points from .7% in the first quarter of 2025. Compared to the second quarter of 2024 adjusted pre-tax title margin of 16.2%, we saw a decline of 70 basis points, primarily due to higher expenses, including 60 basis points or $12 million of elevated health claims. We also had higher strategic investments in security, technology, and recruiting to position the business for long-term growth. Importantly, these expense items did not impact the direct title and agency title businesses, which performed well and generated healthy incremental margins. Tony will provide further details later on the call. Looking at our title results more closely, starting with purchase, we were encouraged to see a 5% increase in daily purchase orders opened over the first quarter of 2025, although lower than the more typical increase of 10% that we have seen in recent years. This reflects market volatility and higher rates, which continued to impact the residential purchase market. Our daily purchase orders opened were in line with the second quarter of 2024, up 5% over the first quarter of 2025, and in line for the month of July with the prior year. For refinance, we were pleased to see a 28% increase in refinance orders opened over the second quarter of 2024 with just a modest movement in mortgage rates. Daily refinance orders opened were $1,300 in the second quarter and remained at that level in the month of July. Our refinance orders opened per day were up 28% over the second quarter of 2024, up 2% over the first quarter of 2025, and up 20% for the month of July versus the prior year. Commercial volumes continue to be a bright spot, with direct commercial revenue of $626 million in the first six months, up 23% over $511 million in the first half of 2024. We had a very strong quarter for commercial revenue, driven by national and local revenues which were both up more than 22% versus the prior year quarter. In particular, national daily orders opened were up 11% over the second quarter of 2024 and held steady for the month of June as compared to June of 2024. Notably, we now have five consecutive quarters with double-digit increases in national daily orders opened. Local market daily orders opened were up 4% over the second quarter of 2024 and up 9% for the month of June over June of 2024. On the whole, our total commercial orders opened were 858 per day, up 7% over the second quarter of 2024, in line with the first quarter of 2025, and up 14% for the month of July versus the prior year. Bringing it all together, total orders opened averaged 5,800 per day in the second quarter, with April at 5,800, May at 5,700, and June at 5,900. For the month of July, total orders opened were 5,500 per day, up 5% versus the prior year. Looking ahead, our title segment remains poised for a rebound in transaction volumes, and we continue to invest in the business for the long term. Over time, we see opportunities to gain efficiencies across our operations and further enhance profitability. We continue to generate strong free cash flows, enabling our dynamic capital allocation strategy, which Tony will speak to in a few minutes. I'd like to take a moment to recognize our employees for all that they do to provide innovative title insurance solutions that protect consumers and lenders, while ensuring secure and efficient real estate transactions. Turning now to our F&G segment, F&G has profitably grown assets under management before flow reinsurance to $69.2 billion at June 30th, up 13% over the prior year quarter. We remain pleased with F&G's performance and foresee plenty of opportunities to grow and value of the business. On a standalone basis, F&G reported gap equity excluding AOCI of $5.9 billion at June 30th. Since the 2020 acquisition by FNF, F&G has generated a 58% increase in its cumulative book value per share, excluding AOCI, to $43.39 at the end of the second quarter. With that, let me now turn the call over to Tony to review F&F's second quarter financial performance and provide additional insights.

speaker
Tony Park
CFO

Thank you, Mike. Starting with our consolidated results, we generated $3.6 billion in total revenue in the second quarter. Excluding net recognized gains and losses, our total revenue was $3.5 billion, as compared with $3.2 billion in the second quarter of 2024. The net recognized gains and losses in each period are primarily due to -to-market accounting treatment of equity and preferred stock securities, whether the securities were disposed of in the quarter or continue to be held in our investment portfolio. We reported second quarter net earnings of $278 million, including net recognized gains of $98 million, versus net earnings of $306 million, including $88 million of net recognized losses in the second quarter of 2024. Adjusted net earnings were $318 million, or $1.16 per diluted share, compared with $338 million, or $1.24 per share for the second quarter of 2024. The title segment contributed $260 million. The F&G segment contributed $89 million. And the corporate segment had a net loss of $3 million before eliminating $28 million of dividend income from F&G in the consolidated financial statements. Turning to second quarter financial highlights specific to the title segment, our title revenue in the second quarter, excluding net recognized gains of $43 million, compared with $2 billion in the second quarter of 2024. Direct premiums increased 12% over the prior year. Agency premiums increased 7%, and escrow, title-related, and other fees increased 7%. Personnel costs increased 10%, and other operating expenses increased 10%. All in, the title business generated adjusted pre-tax title earnings of $337 million, compared with $324 million for the second quarter of 2024. And a .5% adjusted pre-tax title margin for the quarter, versus .2% in the prior year quarter. As Mike mentioned, the second quarter margin was impacted by higher expenses with three primary drivers. First, we had 60 basis points, or $12 million, of elevated health claims, which we expect to remain elevated for the remainder of the year before likely normalizing in 2026. Next, we had higher strategic investment in security and technology relative to the second quarter of 2024, although this spend is in line with the sequential quarter and reflects our current run rate. Finally, we saw higher personnel expense as a result of an active recruiting quarter, as we continue to build the business for the long term. Importantly, we don't expect these incremental expenses to impact our ability to deliver a -20% pre-tax title margin once we rebound to a normalized market, although transactional volumes remain low at this time. Our title and corporate investment portfolio totaled $4.8 billion at June 30. Interest and investment income in the title and corporate segments was $95 million, down 4% versus the prior year quarter, and excluding income from F&G dividends to the holding company. For the remainder of 2025, we expect to generate quarterly interest and investment income of $90 million to $95 million in each quarter, assuming two Fed funds rate cuts later in the year. 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 were $66 million and in line with our provision for the second quarter. The carried reserve for title claim losses is approximately $54 million or .3% above the actuary central estimate. We continue to provide for title claims at .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 flow reinsurance increased to a record $69.2 billion at June 30. This includes retained assets under management of $55.6 billion. F&G's gross sales were $4.1 billion, one of its best sales quarters in history. F&G had significant growth in core sales of $2.2 billion, which includes indexed annuities, indexed life, and pension risk transfer. And $1.9 billion of MIGA and funding agreements, two products we view as opportunistic. Second quarter of 2024 was the all-time record with $4.4 billion of gross sales. Net sales retained were $2.7 billion compared to $3.4 billion in the second quarter of 2024. This reflects third-party flow reinsurance at varying seated amounts in line with capital targets. Adjusted net earnings for the F&G segment were $89 million in the second quarter, compared with $122 million for the second quarter of 2024. F&G's operating performance from their underlying spread-based and fee-based businesses continues to be strong. F&G continues to provide a complement to the title business. In the first six months, the F&G segment contributed 32% of F&F's adjusted net earnings, down from 40% in the first half of 2024. Yesterday, F&G announced the launch of a new reinsurance vehicle in partnership with Blackstone Managed Funds, with approximately $1 billion in capital commitments. The reinsurance sidecar provides long-term, on-demand capital to F&G through a forward flow reinsurance agreement of certain fixed indexed annuity products, effective August 1st. The reinsurance sidecar is another source of growth capital and will move F&G further toward a more fee-based, higher margin, and less capital-intensive business model. From a capital and liquidity perspective, F&F continues to maintain a strong balance sheet and balanced capital allocation strategy. Our consolidated -to-capitalization ratio, excluding AOCI, remains in line with our long-term range of 20-30%, and we expect that our balance sheet will naturally de-lever as equity grows. F&F continues to return excess cash to shareholders through share repurchases and has remained active throughout the second quarter and into the third quarter. During the second quarter, we repurchased 2.9 million shares, for a total of $159 million at an average price of $55.20 per share. For the second quarter, we have returned nearly $300 million of capital to our shareholders through common dividends and share repurchases. -to-date, we have returned over $450 million through common dividends and share repurchases. From a capital allocation perspective, we entered 2025 with $687 million in cash and short-term liquid investments at the holding company. During the first six months, the business-generated cash to fund our $271 million quarterly common dividend paid, $37 million of holding company interest expense, $150 million investment in the F&G common equity raise, and the $184 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 half of 2025 with $583 million in cash and short-term liquid investments at the holding company. This concludes our prepared remarks and let me now turn the call back to our operator for questions.

speaker
Operator

Thank you. 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 for questions. Our first question comes from Mark Devries with Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead.

speaker
Mark Devries
Analyst, Deutsche Bank

Thanks. You know, having hit the five-year anniversary on the investment in FG, I'd be remiss if I didn't ask for some updated thoughts on kind of how you guys in the board are thinking about the appeal of continuing to kind of hold these very separate businesses under the same company.

speaker
Tony Park
CFO

Thanks, Mark. It's Tony. I'll start. Others could weigh in. I would say kind of the same commentary that we've shared previously, which is the board's been very pleased with F&G's performance and really the validation of the thesis behind the acquisition. You know, F&G has contributed 32% of our adjusted earnings through the first half of the year. We're getting about $120 million almost million dollars of cash from F&G to holding. And so that's been helpful. And we're really excited, and you probably heard with the launch of the Sidecar and some other strategy around, you know, core sales versus opportunistic sales. We're excited about more fee-based, you know, higher margin, less capital intensive business model that F&G is pursuing. And so at this point, it's, you know, continue to run the business, operate the business as they have. And that's kind of the update. I don't know. Did you guys want to weigh in at all? All

speaker
Mark Devries
Analyst, Deutsche Bank

right. Okay, understood. And then second question just on the personal expenses. It was a pretty big step up and well above kind of consensus expectations. Tony, I know you called out, you know, I think you said an active recruiting quarter, but I can't, all my time covering the company remember, you know, such a big step up, particularly in a relatively static environment. Anything else to kind of call out there that they kind of drove that personnel expense? Any incremental detail you can provide?

speaker
Mike Nolan
CEO

Well, Mark, it's Mike. Yeah, on the recruiting, I would say that that was about a 20 basis point impact. And it really was one of our best recruiting quarters in a long time and significantly stronger than the second quarter. So, you know, we were trying to bridge the second quarter of last year to this quarter. And, you know, when you think about recruiting, it's ultimately great for the company. And we've always been very strong in that realm. But you do front load the expenses. And so as you board people that are going to bring you revenue, they're bringing that, you know, 60, 90 days after. And then I think, you know, we had more spend in the shared service areas, some of which is personnel, because we've added staff with, you know, the risk and security areas, we're doing more in technology. So I think it was a combination of those factors. And then I'll see if Tony had anything to add on that.

speaker
Tony Park
CFO

Yeah, I'll just weigh in on the medical claims, which we called out as a $12 million delta relative to the Q2 of last year. And, you know, it's one of those things where it's obviously unfortunate when your employees and dependents have, you know, higher medical claims, most large companies, as you probably know, are self-insured. And we've been real consistent in our run rate in terms of all in medical, you know, in 2023, it was about $175 million annual spend and the same number in 2024. And frankly, the year started out pretty similarly. But really, in May, we started to see high cost claimants and not a big number, but expensive claims come through. And those are anywhere from call it $100,000 to $1 million in a particular, you know, case. And we had a number of those. And so it drove up our estimate of medical claims, what we think will incur through the year. So we added $12 million this quarter and would likely, will likely add some more in Q3 and Q4, probably not to that level, but maybe a total of $12 million over the balance of the year. And then we'll take actions next year, you know, in terms of maybe plan design and, you know, looking at, you know, vendors to assist us with various programs to reduce our spend as we look forward. You can't really make those changes in the middle of the year because you don't go through an open enrollment. But that was just sort of a blip that we don't expect to continue as we move into 2026.

speaker
Mike Nolan
CEO

And Mark, I want to emphasize something on to Tony's comments that, you know, fundamentally it was really a strong quarter for our title operations. We had growth across all of our core business segments in both revenue and profit. Industry leading title margins generated $260 million in adjusted earnings up from the second quarter of last year by about $20 million. And really feel like the business performed very well, but we did have some variances to call out relative to the second quarter margin of last year.

speaker
Mark Devries
Analyst, Deutsche Bank

Okay, got it. Just a couple of clarifications. Did those health care claim expenses flow through the personal cost line?

speaker
Tony Park
CFO

Yes, they did.

speaker
Mark Devries
Analyst, Deutsche Bank

Okay, got it. And then just on the recruiting activity, what kind of led to the big quarter? Were there any kind of dislocations with competitors that created a unique opportunity or was it just trying to be opportunistic for, you know, the opportunity you think was ahead for the business?

speaker
Mike Nolan
CEO

I would say it's opportunistic. You know, we have a large footprint and we have a lot of people, a lot of operations that are actively recruiting. You know, we've just got more than everyone else, so we've got more firepower on it. I think the fact that we're doing so well in that category points to that we're a company of choice and we want to be a company of choice for talented title professionals. And so I don't know that it was any major dislocation anybody else's part, but it was just more, we're very focused on it and we had a particularly good quarter, particularly as it related to the second quarter of last year.

speaker
Mark Hughes
Analyst, Trust Securities

Got it. All right. Thank you. Thanks, Mark.

speaker
Operator

Thank you. We have a next question from the line of Terry Ma with Barclays. Please go ahead.

speaker
Terry Ma
Analyst, Barclays

Hey, thank you. Good morning. Good morning. Just wanted to follow up on kind of margin and expense commentary. I guess, I know it sounds like the impact margin from the healthcare claims of 60 basis points would kind of be the same as the one that you were talking about earlier. Is that the right interpretation? And then, you know, when you kind of put everything together with the elevated house claims, recruiting, security and tech investments, I guess, do you have confidence in staying within that 15 to 20 percent margin for this year?

speaker
Mike Nolan
CEO

Absolutely, Terry. You know, we're right in line really with where we were last year. And, you know, the early view of July is that we had a good, strong July. And, you know, we said our base case has always been, as we've gone into the year, that 25 is going to be a lot like 24. And as we look at the second half of 25, we think it's going to look a lot like the second half of 24, with the wild cards really being more what happens with mortgage rates, you know, up or down. We've seen some optimism there as the daily rates come off a bit. I think it's maybe six, six or something like that. Every little bit helps. And then, you know, commercial activities, probably the other wild card. You know, I'm encouraged that July resale orders, you know, we're kind of in line with last July and that we're still seeing some uplift on refi. So, yeah, we've got a little higher run rate on shared services that we also had in Q1. The health claims, we think they'll moderate, but they're still going to be probably elevated to last year. And then we think that'll normalize in 26. And then the recruiting, it varies. And, you know, second quarters are typically sort of peak recruiting quarters. So we might see that less than a bit in the second half. But again, it's opportunistic. And we will take advantage of getting talented people when that's available, because we're building the business for the long term.

speaker
Terry Ma
Analyst, Barclays

Got it. That's helpful. And then maybe on commercial, it looks like the momentum's continuing with particular strengths on the national side, which I think you called out was up 22% year over year for closed orders. Yes, any color on both national and local as you kind of look into the back half of the year? How sustainable do you think this momentum is? And kind of where you do I

speaker
Mike Nolan
CEO

do want to clarify one thing was 22% on opens not closed. But, yeah, it's been fantastic. And, you know, we're through the first seven months of the year, we're averaging 860 open orders per day in the total book, which is a nice lift from really where we've been even going back, if you look at 2015 through 2020 and 23 and 24, you know, kind of carve out the peak years of 21 and 22, we seem to have jumped up to a new level. As we look at the back half, the pipeline in national is quite strong. I mean, we've had five consecutive quarters of double digit growth in national commercial open orders. And as you know, there's a bit more of a tail as to when those close. So, you know, we would expect to have a strong a strong closing pipeline there. Local orders are still up. It's not like they're they're off. They're just not up as much. And interestingly, we've seen a nice pickup in commercial refinance orders. Our total mix in opens has shifted from about 75% in January, now just below 72% in July. So that doesn't sound like a lot. But in the first half, our commercial opens on refi were up 21%. And in July, they were up 35%. So it's nice to see that financing of commercial properties seems to be picking up. And I think that also could bode well for not only the back half of the year, but probably as we go into

speaker
spk05

26.

speaker
Tony

Great, thank you.

speaker
spk05

Thanks.

speaker
Operator

Thank you. The next question comes from BOS George with KBW. Please go ahead. Hey, guys, morning.

speaker
Bos George
Analyst, KBW

I wanted to just ask about the, you know, the buybacks obviously has increased in the quarterly run rate, you know, similar to what we see back in 22 and 21. Can we can you just discuss, you know, the potential cadence of the buybacks going forward?

speaker
Tony Park
CFO

Sure, both. Thanks. It's Tony. Yeah, we don't give guidance in terms of our expectations other than to say that we do expect to be in the market every day where we're not being, you know, where we're not blacked out. And I would also say that, you know, we feel any weakness in our share price at these levels is a great use of excess capital. And you saw that activity in Q2 with $159 million in buybacks and 2.9 million shares. And so I would expect, you know, that we'll, you know, monitor the market, be active. And again, if there's weakness there, we'll probably be

speaker
Tony

more active.

speaker
Operator

Does that answer your question, BOS?

speaker
Tony

Yeah, I got, I have another question, though. Please go ahead. Hey, guys, sorry.

speaker
Bos George
Analyst, KBW

And just to follow up on that, in terms of does the buyback signal anything in terms of, you know, sort of incremental capital into FNG? Does it suggest that that's kind of done and you have more sort of flexibility in terms of that?

speaker
Tony Park
CFO

Yeah, I would say that I don't know that it signals anything directly other than, you know, we don't expect to need incremental capital for FNG. I know that we did participate in the common equity raise of FNG earlier this year. And I think it was very early in 2024 when we acquired the preferred stock investment. But yeah, no, I think that FNG with their capital-like strategy is well positioned to take advantage of capital sources that they have unrelated to FNF. And so I would say that kind of our uses are, you know, our common dividend, M&A to the extent there's available to us and share buybacks. And, you know, we're sitting on $600 million of cash at the holding company level and we're generating strong cash flow.

speaker
Bos George
Analyst, KBW

Okay, great. Actually, one quick follow up on that. Did you give me a number or how much did you repurchase in July?

speaker
Tony Park
CFO

We did not provide a number. It was, and it'll be in the queue, which will be filed tomorrow. And I think it was just one day's worth or something like that. I think it was $5 million and that's because our blackout kicks in almost right after the end of the quarter.

speaker
Bos George
Analyst, KBW

Okay, great.

speaker
Operator

Thanks. Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, if you would like to ask a question, please press star and one on your telephone keypad. Our next question comes from the line of Mark Hughes with Trust Securities. Please go ahead. The

speaker
Tony

participant

speaker
Operator

has dropped from the question queue. We will move on to the next participant. That is Jeffrey Dunn with Dowling and Partners. Please go ahead. Thanks. Good morning.

speaker
Tony

Hey, Jeff.

speaker
Jeffrey Dunn
Analyst, Dowling & Partners

Tony, can you share the remaining dividend capacity from the regulated entities for the second half and also your expectation for non-regulated divs?

speaker
Tony Park
CFO

Yeah, I think we have about $250 million available from the regulated companies over the second half and then we have about $60 million coming from F&G in the second half. The other subs, the non-regulated, it's a little more difficult because I would then need to forecast what their earnings are going to be because that's real-time cash flow. It's probably, I mean, we had $120 million in Q2 from unregulated. It'll be a little less than the second half. On a quarterly basis, only because of tax payments tend to ramp in the second half, but it could be a couple hundred million dollars. So add that back, add that together. It's $400,

speaker
spk05

$400 to $500.

speaker
Tony

Okay.

speaker
Jeffrey Dunn
Analyst, Dowling & Partners

And then I know how the refibers purchase pricing works on the direct revenue business, but how does it work on commercial? Should we be expecting a deceleration on the commercial fee per file with the pickup and refi?

speaker
Mike Nolan
CEO

Yeah, Jeff, it's Mike. I don't really think so. The fee per file is pretty consistent and our average total commercial fee per file of $11,300 in the second quarter, you know, I think if you wanted to use a number going forward, something in that range would probably be the number to model. You know, with the national overall pickup in orders, you know, they just inherently have higher fee profiles, as you know, and we think that could be a bit stronger mix as we go in the back half of the year just because of those strong opens that I talked about. So I would probably use that number, you know, $11,000 ish.

speaker
Tony

Okay.

speaker
Operator

Great.

speaker
Tony

Thank you.

speaker
Operator

Thanks. Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Mark Hughes with Trust Securities. Please go ahead.

speaker
Mark Hughes
Analyst, Trust Securities

Yeah, thank you. Good morning. Morning. Update, any update on the regulatory fronts from FHFA or anything that you're seeing that actually suggests any momentum in Washington that might be impactful to the title industry?

speaker
Mike Nolan
CEO

Mark, it's Mike. Not really. I think that the pilot is intended to be limited scope. It runs through May of 26. I think the anticipation is about 15,000 loans going through that pilot. And I don't think there's any change to that. And then we'll see where it goes. As you might know, I had a very nice call with the director of FHFA. He's good to talk to, very willing to listen. And they did add Westcorps as a second provider of the program. With a kind of a new, I don't know if it's new yet, but a limited title option. So it's not the waiver. It's kind of a different product approach. We're still waiting to see what that looks like. And I told the director that we believe strongly that the waiver is not a good idea, but that we've always worked collaboratively with the FHFA and with the GSEs, and we want to continue to do that. So we remain engaged, but still view it as a limited scope pilot.

speaker
Mark Hughes
Analyst, Trust Securities

Very good. And the recruiting you're doing, are these, would we characterize them as revenue attached people that bring relationships and low of activity?

speaker
Mike Nolan
CEO

100%. The ads that we've had, if you look at our staff, we're up in our direct title footprint about 3% over this time last year. And it's virtually all revenue attached recruits. We haven't been hiring for sort of production capacity. So they bring revenue and you can kind of think of them as like mini acquisitions really. The acquisition activity has been down just because the opportunities haven't been there. But when you're hiring good people that bring revenue, you're sort of accomplishing the same thing as you do when you buy a company.

speaker
Mark Hughes
Analyst, Trust Securities

Yeah, yeah, very good. Did you give July the kind of the growth in national versus local commercial?

speaker
Mike Nolan
CEO

Yeah, I don't know if I did or I didn't. It might have been in the script, but I'm looking at the numbers. So on the open side, national open orders were up 22% over July last year, and local open orders were up 8%. So really good both in growth, but really strong growth on the national side.

speaker
Mark Hughes
Analyst, Trust Securities

Yeah, very good. Thank you. Thanks, Mark.

speaker
Operator

Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, this will conclude our question and answer session. I will now turn the conference back over to CEO Mike Nolan for closing remarks.

speaker
Mike Nolan
CEO

Thanks for joining our call this morning. Together, the combined business delivered strong second quarter results. The title segment is delivering industry leading margins and remains poised for a rebound in transactional levels as we continue to invest in the business for the long term. F&G's new reinsurance sidecar is another source of growth capital and will help move F&G further toward a more fee-based, higher margin and capital-intensive business model to help deliver on its investor day targets. We appreciate your interest in F&F and look forward to updating you on our third

speaker
Operator

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

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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