Release Date: January 30, 2025
For the complete transcript of the earnings call, please refer to the full earnings call transcript.
Q: Can you explain your reserving methods and any embedded extra margin in your GL book for the current calendar year? A: John Marchioni, CEO, explained that while the fundamentals of reserving haven't changed, the level of detail and insight has improved. The company consistently carries a risk margin above the actuarial best estimate, determined by observed risk factors. This margin has remained consistent over time.
Q: Regarding the casualty loss ratio for 2025, is it lower than previously stated, and what is the reasoning behind this? A: John Marchioni clarified that the 9% trend is specific to general liability (GL), while the overall casualty trend includes workers' comp and commercial auto. The GL trend remains slightly above 9% for severity, which is embedded in the 2025 expected loss ratios.
Q: How much of the GL calendar 2024 charge was primary versus excess and umbrella on commercial lines? A: The charge was predominantly in general liability (GL), with some movement in umbrella, mainly affecting the 2022 and 2023 accident years. The umbrella book is entirely written on a supported basis, providing earlier frequency indications.
Q: Can you provide more insight into the potential for higher accident year loss ratio picks going forward? A: John Marchioni noted that the 2024 current year movements impacted the combined ratio, with casualty expected loss ratios moving higher despite strong rates. Property trends are improving, with rates outpacing trends. The 2025 guidance assumes continued severity increases, which are considered prudent.
Q: Are there specific states contributing to the GL commercial reserve charge, and what trends are you observing? A: Social inflation is broad-based, impacting all jurisdictions, particularly in bodily injury cases. Certain states, like Georgia, have exacerbated impacts due to case law and statutes. Some states, like Texas, have recently become hotspots, but major states like Texas, Florida, and California are not in Selective's commercial footprint.
Q: How are you addressing the E&S reserve charge of $20 million, and what are your plans for this segment? A: The E&S segment has seen favorable frequency trends and strong pricing. The company has embedded higher severity assumptions in recent accident years and continues to react quickly to emerging data. The segment is generating a combined ratio slightly under 90%.
Q: Is there a structural reason for the quarterly reserve reviews leading to small adjustments rather than a one-time charge? A: John Marchioni emphasized the importance of a quarterly ground-up reserve review process, which allows for timely reactions to emerging data and supports pricing and underwriting actions. This approach has historically held up well against industry trends.
Q: What is your view on commercial auto reserves, given its link to social inflation, and how does it differ from GL? A: Patrick Brennan, CFO, expressed confidence in the company's reserving process. Commercial auto was the first to show social inflation impacts, with assumed loss trends adjusted earlier than GL. The company has maintained strong pricing above trend levels, supporting the view that commercial auto was the first, not the next, shoe to drop.
For the complete transcript of the earnings call, please refer to the full earnings call transcript.
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