ORI 2013 10-K
UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
FORM 10-K
X ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
(FEE REQUIRED)
For the fiscal year ended: December 31, 2013 OR
_ TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
(NO FEE REQUIRED)
For the transition period from _____________________________ to ______________________________
Commission File Number: 001-10607
OLD REPUBLIC INTERNATIONAL CORPORATION
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter) |
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Delaware | | No. 36-2678171 |
(State or other jurisdiction of | | (IRS Employer Identification No.) |
incorporation or organization) | | |
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307 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois | | 60601 |
(Address of principal executive office) | | (Zip Code) |
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Registrant's telephone number, including area code: 312‑346‑8100 |
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act: |
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Title of each class | Name of Each Exchange on Which Registered |
Common Stock/$1 par value | New York Stock Exchange |
Indicate by check mark if the registrant is a well-known seasoned issuer, as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act.
Yes: X/ No:
Indicate by check mark if the registrant is not required to file reports pursuant to Section 13 or Section 15(d) of the Act.
Yes: / No:X
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to file such reports) and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days. Yes: X/ No:
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has submitted electronically and posted on its corporate Web site, if any, every Interactive Data File required to be submitted and posted pursuant to Rule 405 of Regulation S-T during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to submit and post such files). Yes: X/No:
Indicate by check mark if disclosure of delinquent filers pursuant to Item 405 of Regulation S‑K is not contained herein, and will not be contained, to the best of registrant's knowledge, in definitive proxy or information statements incorporated by reference in Part III of this Form 10-K or any amendment to this Form 10-K. o
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, or a non-accelerated filer. See definition of "accelerated filer and large accelerated filer" in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act. (Check one).
Large accelerated filer x Accelerated filer o
Non-accelerated filer o Smaller reporting company o
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Exchange Act Rule 12b-2). Yes: / No:X
The aggregate fair value of the registrant's voting Common Stock held by non-affiliates of the registrant (assuming, for purposes of this calculation only, that the registrant's directors and executive officers, the registrant's various employee benefit plans and American Business & Personal Insurance Mutual, Inc. and its subsidiaries are all affiliates of the registrant), based on the closing sale price of the registrant's common stock on June 30, 2013, the last day of the registrant's most recently completed second fiscal quarter, was $3,046,777,352.
The registrant had 260,468,822 shares of Common Stock outstanding as of January 31, 2014.
Documents incorporated by reference:
The following documents are incorporated by reference into that part of this Form 10-K designated to the right of the document title.
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Title | Part |
Proxy statement for the 2014 Annual Meeting of Shareholders Exhibits as specified in exhibit index (page 114) | III, Items 10, 11, 12, 13 and 14 IV, Item 15 |
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There are 115 pages in this report
PART I
Item 1 - Business
(a) General Description of Business. Old Republic International Corporation is a Chicago based holding company engaged in the single business of insurance underwriting. It conducts its operations through a number of regulated insurance company subsidiaries organized into three major segments, namely, it's General Insurance Group (property and liability insurance), Title Insurance Group, and the Republic Financial Indemnity Group ("RFIG") (mortgage guaranty ("MI") and consumer credit indemnity ("CCI")) Run-off Business. References herein to such groups apply to the Company's subsidiaries engaged in these respective segments of business. The results of a small life and accident insurance business are included within the corporate and other caption of this report. "Old Republic" or "the Company" refers to Old Republic International Corporation and its subsidiaries as the context requires.
The insurance business is distinguished from most others in that the prices (premiums) charged for various insurance products are set without certainty of the ultimate benefit and claim costs that will emerge or be incurred, often many years after issuance and expiration of a policy. This basic fact casts Old Republic as a risk-taking enterprise managed for the long run. Management therefore conducts the business with a primary focus on achieving favorable underwriting results over cycles, and on the maintenance of financial soundness in support of its subsidiaries' long-term obligations to insurance beneficiaries. To achieve these objectives, adherence to certain basic insurance risk management principles is stressed, and asset diversification and quality are emphasized. The underwriting principles encompass:
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• | Disciplined risk selection, evaluation, and pricing to reduce uncertainty and adverse selection; |
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• | Augmenting the predictability of expected outcomes through insurance of the largest number of homogeneous risks as to each type of coverage; |
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• | Reducing the insurance portfolio risk profile through: |
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• | diversification and spread of insured risks; and |
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• | assimilation of uncorrelated asset and liability exposures across economic sectors that tend to offset or counterbalance one another; and |
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• | Effectively managing gross and net limits of liability through appropriate use of reinsurance. |
In addition to income arising from Old Republic's basic underwriting and related services functions, significant investment income is earned from invested funds generated by those functions and from shareholders' capital. Investment management aims for stability of income from interest and dividends, protection of capital, and sufficient liquidity to meet insurance underwriting and other obligations as they become payable in the future. Securities trading and the realization of capital gains are not objectives. The investment philosophy is therefore best characterized as emphasizing value, credit quality, and relatively long-term holding periods. The Company's ability to hold both fixed maturity and equity securities for long periods of time is in turn enabled by the scheduling of maturities in contemplation of an appropriate matching of assets and liabilities.
In light of the above factors, the Company's affairs are necessarily managed for the long-run and without significant regard to the arbitrary strictures of quarterly or even annual reporting periods that American industry must observe. In Old Republic's view, such short reporting time frames do not comport well with the long-term nature of much of its business. Management believes that the Company's operating results and financial condition can best be evaluated by observing underwriting and overall operating performance trends over succeeding five to ten year intervals. Such extended periods can encompass one or two economic and/or underwriting cycles, and thereby provide appropriate time frames for such cycles to run their course and for reserved claim costs to be quantified with greater finality and effect.
In late March of 2012, Old Republic combined its General Insurance Group's Consumer Credit Indemnity division with its mortgage guaranty line (RMIC Companies, Inc. or "RMICC") within a business denoted as the Republic Financial Indemnity Group, Inc. run-off segment. The two operations, which offer similar insurance coverages, have been in run-off operating mode since 2008 (CCI) and August 2011 (MI), and are inactive from new business production standpoints. The combination affects the manner in which segmented information is presented herein. Accordingly, the segmented results in this Annual Report show the combination of these coverages as a single run-off book of business within the Company's consolidated operations.
The contributions to consolidated net revenues and income before taxes, and the assets and shareholders' equity of each Old Republic segment are set forth in the following table. This information should be read in conjunction with the consolidated financial statements, the notes thereto, and the "Management Analysis of Financial Position and Results of Operations" appearing elsewhere in this report.
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Financial Information Relating to Segments of Business (a) |
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Net Revenues (b) | ($ in Millions) |
Years Ended December 31: | 2013 | | 2012 | | 2011 |
General | $ | 2,849.9 |
| | $ | 2,699.4 |
| | $ | 2,488.6 |
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Title | 2,025.6 |
| | 1,707.1 |
| | 1,391.8 |
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Corporate & Other - net (c) | 65.6 |
| | 68.3 |
| | 84.8 |
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Subtotal | 4,941.1 |
| | 4,474.9 |
| | 3,965.3 |
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RFIG Run-off | 353.4 |
| | 447.3 |
| | 564.6 |
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Subtotal | 5,294.5 |
| | 4,922.2 |
| | 4,529.9 |
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Consolidated realized investment gains (losses) | 148.1 |
| | 47.8 |
| | 115.5 |
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Consolidated | $ | 5,442.7 |
| | $ | 4,970.1 |
| | $ | 4,645.5 |
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Income (Loss) Before Taxes | | | | | |
Years Ended December 31: | 2013 | | 2012 | | 2011 |
General | $ | 288.3 |
| | $ | 261.0 |
| | $ | 353.9 |
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Title | 124.3 |
| | 73.8 |
| | 36.2 |
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Corporate & Other - net (c) | 2.1 |
| | (2.7 | ) | | (14.6 | ) |
Subtotal | 414.7 |
| | 332.1 |
| | 375.5 |
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RFIG Run-off | 110.0 |
| | (508.6 | ) | | (727.8 | ) |
Subtotal | 524.8 |
| | (176.4 | ) | | (352.2 | ) |
Consolidated realized investment gains (losses) | 148.1 |
| | 47.8 |
| | 115.5 |
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Consolidated | $ | 672.9 |
| | $ | (128.5 | ) | | $ | (236.7 | ) |
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Assets | | | | | |
As of December 31: | 2013 | | 2012 | | 2011 |
General | $ | 13,276.6 |
| | $ | 12,770.2 |
| | $ | 12,384.3 |
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Title | 1,185.5 |
| | 1,076.5 |
| | 956.2 |
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Corporate & Other - net (c) | 249.8 |
| | 328.9 |
| | 682.2 |
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Subtotal | 14,712.0 |
| | 14,175.6 |
| | 14,022.8 |
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RFIG Run-off | 1,822.3 |
| | 2,051.1 |
| | 2,027.6 |
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Consolidated | $ | 16,534.4 |
| | $ | 16,226.8 |
| | $ | 16,050.4 |
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Shareholders' Equity | | | | | |
As of December 31: | 2013 | | 2012 | | 2011 |
General (d) | $ | 2,986.3 |
| | $ | 2,992.3 |
| | $ | 2,952.9 |
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Title (d) | 445.2 |
| | 400.9 |
| | 323.0 |
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Corporate & Other - net (c) | 357.2 |
| | 259.6 |
| | 480.2 |
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Subtotal | 3,788.8 |
| | 3,652.9 |
| | 3,756.3 |
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RFIG Run-off (d) | (13.8 | ) | | (56.6 | ) | | 16.2 |
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Consolidated | $ | 3,775.0 |
| | $ | 3,596.2 |
| | $ | 3,772.5 |
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(a) | Reference is made to the table in Note 6 of the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements, incorporated herein by reference, which shows the contribution of each subcategory to the consolidated net revenues and income or loss before income taxes of Old Republic's insurance industry segments. |
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(b) | Revenues consist of net premiums, fees, net investment and other income earned. Realized investment gains (losses) are shown in total for all groups combined since the investment portfolio is managed as a whole. |
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(c) | Represents amounts for Old Republic's holding company parent, minor corporate services subsidiaries, a small life and accident insurance operation and consolidation elimination adjustments. |
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(d) | Shareholders' equity excludes intercompany financing arrangements for the following segments: General - $585.6, $489.4, and $469.4 as of December 31, 2013, 2012, and 2011, respectively; Title - $143.9, as of December 31, 2013, 2012, and 2011; RFIG Run-off - $- as of December 31, 2013 and 2012, and $175.0 as of December 31, 2011. |
Old Republic's General Insurance segment is best characterized as a commercial lines insurance business with a strong focus on liability insurance coverages. Most of these coverages are provided to businesses, government, and other institutions. The Company does not have a meaningful exposure to personal lines insurance such as homeowners and private automobile coverages, nor does it insure significant amounts of commercial or other real property. In continuance of its commercial lines orientation, Old Republic also focuses on specific sectors of the North American economy, most prominently the transportation (trucking and general aviation), commercial construction, healthcare, education, retail and wholesale, forest products, energy, general manufacturing, and financial services industries. In managing the insurance risks it undertakes, the Company employs various underwriting and loss mitigation techniques such as utilization of policy deductibles, captive insurance risk-sharing arrangements, and retrospective rating and policyholder dividend plans. These underwriting techniques are intended to better correlate premium charges with the ultimate claims experience pertaining to individual or groups of assureds.
Over the years, the General Insurance Group's operations have been developed steadily through a combination of internal growth, the establishment of additional subsidiaries focused on new types of coverages and/or industry sectors, and through several mergers of smaller companies. As a result, this segment has become widely diversified with a business base encompassing the following major coverages:
Automobile Extended Warranty Insurance (1992): Coverage is provided to the vehicle owner for certain mechanical or electrical repair or replacement costs after the manufacturer's warranty has expired.
Aviation (1983): Insurance policies protect the value of aircraft hulls and afford liability coverage for acts that result in injury, loss of life, and property damage to passengers and others on the ground or in the air. Old Republic's aviation business does not extend to commercial airlines.
Commercial Automobile Insurance (1930's): Covers vehicles (mostly trucks) used principally in commercial pursuits. Policies cover damage to insured vehicles and liabilities incurred by an assured for bodily injury and property damage sustained by third parties.
Commercial Multi-Peril ("CMP")(1920's): Policies afford liability coverage for claims arising from the acts of owners or employees, and protection for the physical assets of large businesses.
Financial Indemnity: Multiple types of specialty coverages, including most prominently the following four, are underwritten by Old Republic within this financial indemnity products classification.
Errors & Omissions("E&O")/Directors & Officers ("D&O")(1983): E&O liability policies are written for non-medical professional service providers such as lawyers, architects and consultants, and provides coverage for legal expenses, and indemnity settlements for claims alleging breaches of professional standards. D&O coverage provides for the payment of legal expenses, and indemnity settlements for claims made against the directors and officers of corporations from a variety of sources, most typically shareholders.
Fidelity (1981): Bonds cover the exposures of financial institutions and commercial and other enterprises for losses of monies or debt and equity securities due to acts of employee dishonesty.
Guaranteed Asset Protection ("GAP")(2003): This insurance covers an automobile loan borrower for the dollar value difference between an insurance company's liability for the total loss (remaining cash value) of an insured vehicle and the amount still owed on an automobile loan.
Surety (1981): Bonds are insurance company guarantees of performance by a corporate principal or individual such as for the completion of a building or road project, or payment on various types of contracts.
General Liability (1920's): Protects against liability of an assured which stems from carelessness, negligence, or failure to act, and results in property damage or personal injury to others.
Home Warranty Insurance (1981): This product provides repair and/or replacement coverage for home systems (e.g. plumbing, heating, and electrical) and designated appliances.
Inland Marine (1920's): Coverage pertains to the insurance of property in transit over land and of property which is mobile by nature.
Travel Accident (1970): Coverages provided under these policies, some of which are also underwritten by the Company's Canadian life insurance affiliate, cover monetary losses arising from trip delay and cancellation for individual insureds.
Workers' Compensation (1910's): This coverage is purchased by employers to provide insurance for employees' lost wages and medical benefits in the event of work-related injury, disability, or death.
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(Parenthetical dates refer to the year(s) when Old Republic's Companies began underwriting the coverages)
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Commercial automobile, general liability and workers' compensation insurance are typically produced in tandem for many assureds. For 2013, production of workers' compensation direct insurance premiums accounted for approximately 35.8% of consolidated General Insurance Group direct premiums written, while commercial automobile and general liability direct premium production amounted to approximately 27.9% and 11.6%, respectively, of such consolidated totals.
Approximately 91% of general insurance premiums are produced through independent agency or brokerage channels, while the remaining 9% is obtained through direct production facilities.
Old Republic's flagship title insurance company was founded in Minnesota in 1907. The Title Insurance Group's business consists primarily of the issuance of policies to real estate purchasers and investors based upon searches of the public records, which contain information concerning interests in real property. The policies insure against losses arising out of defects, liens and encumbrances affecting the insured title and not excluded or excepted from the coverage of the policy. For the year ended December 31, 2013, approximately 28% of the Company's consolidated title premium and related fee income stemmed from direct operations (which include branch offices of its title insurers and wholly owned agency and service subsidiaries of the Company), while the remaining 72% emanated from independent title agents and underwritten title companies.
There are two basic types of title insurance policies: lenders' policies and owners' policies. Both are issued for a one-time premium. Most mortgages made in the United States are extended by mortgage bankers, savings and commercial banks, state and federal agencies, and life insurance companies. The financial institutions secure title insurance policies to protect their mortgagees' interest in the real property. This protection remains in effect for as long as the mortgagee has an interest in the property. A separate title insurance policy may be issued to the owner of the real estate. An owner's policy of title insurance protects an owner's interest in the title to the property.
The premiums charged for the issuance of title insurance policies vary with the policy amount and the type of policy issued. The premium is collected in full when the real estate transaction is closed, there being no recurring fee thereafter. In many areas, premiums charged on subsequent policies on the same property may be reduced depending generally upon the time elapsed between issuance of the previous policies and the nature of the transactions for which the policies are issued. Most of the charge to the customer relates to title services rendered in conjunction with the issuance of a policy rather than to the possibility of loss due to risks insured against. Accordingly, the cost of service performed by a title insurer relates for the most part to the prevention of loss rather than to the assumption of the risk of loss. Claim losses that do occur result primarily from title search and examination mistakes, fraud, forgery, incapacity, missing heirs and escrow processing errors.
In connection with its title insurance operations, Old Republic also provides escrow closing and construction disbursement services, as well as real estate information products, national default management services, and services pertaining to real estate transfers and loan transactions.
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Republic Financial Indemnity Group (RFIG) Run-off Business |
Old Republic's RFIG run-off business consists of its mortgage guaranty and CCI operations.
Private mortgage insurance protects mortgage lenders and investors from default related losses on residential mortgage loans made primarily to homebuyers who make down payments of less than 20% of the home's purchase price. The mortgage guaranty operation insures only first mortgage loans, primarily on residential properties incorporating one-to-four family dwelling units. Old Republic's mortgage guaranty business was started in 1973.
There are two principal types of private mortgage insurance coverage: "primary" and "pool". Primary mortgage insurance provides mortgage default protection on individual loans and covers a stated percentage of the unpaid loan principal, delinquent interest, and certain expenses associated with the default and subsequent foreclosure. In lieu of paying the stated coverage percentage, the Company may pay the entire claim amount, take title to the mortgaged property, and subsequently sell the property to mitigate its loss. Pool insurance, which is written on a group of loans in negotiated transactions, provides coverage that ranges up to 100% of the net loss on each individual loan included in the pool, subject to provisions regarding deductibles, caps on individual exposures, and aggregate stop loss provisions which limit aggregate losses to a specified percentage of the total original balances of all loans in the pool.
Traditional primary insurance was issued on an individual loan basis to mortgage bankers, brokers, commercial banks and savings institutions through a network of Company-managed underwriting sites located throughout the country. Traditional primary loans were individually reviewed (except for loans insured under delegated approval programs) and priced according to filed premium rates. In underwriting traditional primary business, the Company generally adhered to the underwriting guidelines published by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, purchasers of many of the loans the Company insures. Delegated underwriting programs allowed approved lenders to commit the Company to insure loans provided they adhere to predetermined underwriting guidelines.
Bulk and other insurance was issued on groups of loans to mortgage banking customers through a centralized risk assessment and underwriting department. These groups of loans were priced in the aggregate, on a bid or negotiated basis. Coverage for insurance issued in this manner was provided through primary insurance policies (loan level coverage) or pool insurance policies (aggregate coverage). The Company considers transactions designated as bulk
insurance to be exposed to higher risk (as determined by characteristics such as origination channel, loan amount, credit quality, and extent of loan documentation) than those designated as other insurance.
Before insuring any loans, the Company issued to each approved customer a master policy outlining the terms and conditions under which coverage will be provided. Primary business was then executed via the issuance of a commitment/certificate for each loan submitted and approved for insurance. In the case of business providing pool coverage, a separate pool insurance policy was issued covering the particular loans applicable to each transaction.
As to all types of mortgage insurance products, the amount of premium charge depended on various underwriting criteria such as loan-to-value ratios, the level of coverage being provided, the borrower's credit history, the type of loan instrument (whether fixed rate/fixed payment or an adjustable rate/adjustable payment), documentation type, and whether or not the insured property is categorized as an investment or owner occupied property. Coverage is non-cancelable by the Company (except in the case of non-payment of premium or certain master policy violations) and premiums are paid under single, annual, or monthly payment plans. Single premiums are paid at the inception of coverage and provide coverage for the entire policy term. Annual and monthly premiums are renewable on their anniversary dates with the premium charge determined on the basis of the original or outstanding loan amount. The majority of the Company's direct premiums are written under monthly premium plans. Premiums may be paid by borrowers as part of their monthly mortgage payment and passed through to the Company by the servicer of the loan or they may be paid directly by the originator of, or investor in the mortgage loan.
As reported in earlier periods, the Company's flagship mortgage guaranty insurance carrier, Republic Mortgage Insurance Company ("RMIC"), had been operating pursuant to a waiver of minimum state regulatory capital requirements since late 2009. This waiver expired on August 31, 2011 and, as a consequence, the underwriting of new policies ceased and the existing book of business was placed in run-off operating mode.
During 2012 the North Carolina Department of Insurance ("NCDOI"), the flagship insurer's main regulator, issued several orders the ultimate effects of which were:
• To place RMIC and its affiliate, Republic Mortgage Insurance Company of North Carolina ("RMICNC") under NCDOI supervision which,among other considerations, requires written approval of the NCDOI Commissioner or its appointed representative for supervision of certain activities and transactions, including the incurrence of any debt or other liabilities, lending of its funds, and termination or entry into new contracts of insurance or reinsurance;
• To approve a Corrective Plan submitted by RMIC pursuant to which all settled claims are to be paid in cash for 60% of the settled amount, with the remaining 40% retained in claim reserves as a Deferred Payment Obligation ("DPO") until a future payment of all or a portion of this 40% is approved by the NCDOI; and
• To execute the DPO-based run-off plan under Old Republic's ownership and NCDOI supervision of RMIC and RMICNC to effect a most economically sound realization of ultimate benefits to policyholders during a sufficiently long future period.
RMIC's evaluation of the potential long-term performance of the run-off book of business is based on various modeling techniques. Of necessity the resulting models take into account actual premium and paid claim experience of prior periods, together with a large number of assumptions and judgments about future outcomes that are highly sensitive to a wide range of estimates. Many of these estimates and underlying assumptions relate to matters over which the Company has no control, including: 1) The conflicted interests, as well as the varying mortgage servicing and foreclosure practices of a large number of insured lending institutions; 2) General economic and industry-specific trends and events; and 3) The evolving or future social and economic policies of the U.S. Government vis-à-vis such critical sectors as the banking, mortgage lending, and housing industries, as well as its policies for resolving the insolvencies and assigning a possible future role to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. These matters notwithstanding, RMIC's standard model of forecasted results extending through 2022 continues to reflect ultimate profitability for the book of business.
The indicated positive outcome of the standard model notwithstanding, it is possible that MI operating results could nevertheless be negative in the near term. As long as the run-off under NCDOI supervision remains in place, however, the statutory DPO accounting treatment should mitigate the adverse effect of operating losses on the statutory capital balance. In these circumstances, RMIC's and RMICNC's statutory solvency would be retained and the risk of a regulatory receivership action would be averted. In management's opinion, the DPO Plan under NCDOI supervision should be continued for a sufficiently long period of time to achieve the objectives contemplated by the above referenced NCDOI orders. As of December 31, 2013, the total statutory capital, inclusive of accumulated DPO reserve funds of $551.5 million held in RFIG's mortgage insurance subsidiaries was approximately $518.2 million. As of the same date, RFIG's consolidated GAAP capitalization amounted to $(13.8) million (or a negative capital contribution of approximately 5 cents per Old Republic common share).
On October 24, 2013 the Company announced that its RMICC mortgage guaranty subsidiary expects to raise new funds in the capital markets. Substantially all of this capital would be added to the equity resources of RMICC's three mortgage insurance subsidiaries. The addition of capital should permit these carriers to at once support existing policies in-force, pay off heretofore deferred claim payment obligations with agreed-upon interest, exit their current state of supervision under North Carolina insurance regulations, and resume the underwriting of new business beginning in 2014. While the interest charge on outstanding deferred payment obligations has not been agreed upon, it could be material to the Company's results of operations when it is recorded following approval of the NCDOI and the successful completion of the capital raise. In connection with such a transaction, it is expected that Old Republic would contribute up to $50.0 million of this new capital. Upon the successful closing of this transaction, RMICC would be deconsolidated and Old Republic's continuing interest in RMICC and the mortgage guaranty business would consist of a non-controlling
equity interest in RMICC. Completion of the transaction cannot be assured and is subject to market conditions and other factors. Moreover, the addition of all new funds to RMICC and its subsidiaries will be contingent on the receipt of certain regulatory approvals. The most essential of these will be required from the North Carolina Department of Insurance, and from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac with any necessary assent of their FHFA Conservator. See Item 1A - Risk Factors - RFIG Run-off Business.
CCI policies provide limited indemnity coverage to lenders and other financial intermediaries. The coverage is for the risk of non-payment of loan balances by individual buyers and borrowers. Claim costs are typically affected by unemployment, bankruptcy, and other issues leading to failures to pay. During 2008, the Company ceased the underwriting of new policies and the existing book of business was placed in run-off operating mode.
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Corporate and Other Operations |
Corporate and other operations include the accounts of a small life and accident insurance business as well as those of the parent holding company and several minor corporate services subsidiaries that perform investment management, payroll, administrative and minor marketing services. The life and accident business registered net premium revenues of $59.6 million, $58.9 million, and $74.9 million in 2013, 2012 and 2011, respectively. This business is conducted in both the United States and Canada and consists mostly of limited product offerings sold through financial intermediaries such as automobile dealers, travel agents, and marketing channels that are also utilized in some of Old Republic's general insurance operations. Production of term life insurance, accounting for net premiums earned of $13.0 million, $13.3 million, and $15.1 million in 2013, 2012 and 2011, respectively, was terminated and placed in run off as of year end 2004.
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Consolidated Underwriting Statistics |
The following table reflects underwriting statistics covering premiums and related loss, expense, and policyholders' dividend ratios for the major coverages underwritten in the Company's insurance segments.
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| | | | | ($ in Millions) |
Years Ended December 31: | | 2013 |
| 2012 |
| 2011 |
General Insurance Group: | | | | | | |
| Overall Experience: (d) | | | | | | |
| | Net Premiums Earned | | $ | 2,513.7 |
| | $ | 2,324.4 |
| | $ | 2,109.4 |
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| | Benefits and Claim Ratio | | 73.6 | % | | 73.0 | % | | 69.2 | % |
| | Expense Ratio | | 23.7 |
| | 25.7 |
| | 25.2 |
|
| | Composite Ratio | | 97.3 | % | | 98.7 | % | | 94.4 | % |
| | | | | | | | | |
| Experience by Major Coverages: | | | | | | |
| Commercial Automobile (Principally Trucking): | | | | | | |
| | Net Premiums Earned | | $ | 824.2 |
| | $ | 767.0 |
| | $ | 709.0 |
|
| | Benefits and Claim Ratio | | 76.1 | % | | 75.3 | % | | 71.9 | % |
| | | | | | | | | |
| Workers' Compensation: | | | | | | |
| | Net Premiums Earned | | $ | 997.1 |
| | $ | 924.9 |
| | $ | 808.2 |
|
| | Benefits and Claim Ratio | | 79.6 | % | | 78.6 | % | | 72.3 | % |
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| General Liability: | | | | | | |
| | Net Premiums Earned | | $ | 158.4 |
| | $ | 145.2 |
| | $ | 125.0 |
|
| | Benefits and Claim Ratio | | 78.5 | % | | 63.8 | % | | 64.6 | % |
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| Three Above Coverages Combined: | | | | | | |
| | Net Premiums Earned | | $ | 1,979.9 |
| | $ | 1,837.2 |
| | $ | 1,642.4 |
|
| | Benefits and Claim Ratio | | 78.0 | % | | 76.1 | % | | 71.6 | % |
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| Financial Indemnity: (a)(d) | | | | | | |
| | Net Premiums Earned | | $ | 95.9 |
| | $ | 97.2 |
| | $ | 104.4 |
|
| | Benefits and Claim Ratio | | 21.4 | % | | 29.6 | % | | 39.2 | % |
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| Inland Marine and Commercial Multi-Peril: | | | | | | |
| | Net Premiums Earned | | $ | 193.5 |
| | $ | 177.2 |
| | $ | 163.9 |
|
| | Benefits and Claim Ratio | | 59.6 | % | | 71.6 | % | | 70.4 | % |
| | | | | | | | | |
| Home and Automobile Warranty: | | | | | | |
| | Net Premiums Earned | | $ | 187.8 |
| | $ | 161.1 |
| | $ | 150.7 |
|
| | Benefits and Claim Ratio | | 70.4 | % | | 68.8 | % | | 66.3 | % |
| | | | | | | | | |
| Other Coverages: (b) | | | | | | |
| | Net Premiums Earned | | $ | 59.2 |
| | $ | 54.6 |
| | $ | 49.5 |
|
| | Benefits and Claim Ratio | | 59.4 | % | | 56.1 | % | | 52.1 | % |
| | | | | | | | | |
Title Insurance Group: (c) | | | | | | |
| | Net Premiums Earned | | $ | 1,567.1 |
| | $ | 1,250.2 |
| | $ | 1,007.9 |
|
| | Combined Net Premiums & Fees Earned | | $ | 1,996.1 |
| | $ | 1,677.4 |
| | $ | 1,362.4 |
|
| | Claim Ratio | | 6.7 | % | | 7.2 | % | | 7.8 | % |
| | Expense Ratio | | 88.0 |
| | 89.6 |
| | 91.2 |
|
| | Composite Ratio | | 94.7 | % | | 96.8 | % | | 99.0 | % |
| | | | | | | | | |
RFIG Run-off Business: (d) | | | | | | |
| | Net Premiums Earned | | $ | 316.5 |
| | $ | 410.5 |
| | $ | 503.2 |
|
| | Claim Ratio | | 68.8 | % | | 221.8 | % | | 230.5 | % |
| | Expense Ratio | | 8.1 |
| | 10.4 |
| | 22.1 |
|
| | Composite Ratio | | 76.9 | % | | 232.2 | % | | 252.6 | % |
| | | | | | | | | |
All Coverages Consolidated: | | | | | | |
| | Net Premiums & Fees Earned | | $ | 4,885.6 |
| | $ | 4,471.0 |
| | $ | 4,050.1 |
|
| | Benefits and Claim Ratio | | 45.8 | % | | 61.9 | % | | 68.3 | % |
| | Expense Ratio | | 49.2 |
| | 48.5 |
| | 47.5 |
|
| | Composite Ratio | | 95.0 | % | | 110.4 | % | | 115.8 | % |
__________
Any necessary reclassifications of prior years' data are reflected in the above table to conform to current presentation.
| |
(a) | Consists principally of fidelity, surety, executive indemnity (directors & officers and errors & omissions), and guaranteed asset protection (GAP) coverages. |
| |
(b) | Consists principally of aviation and travel accident coverages. |
| |
(c) | Title claim, expense, and composite ratios are calculated on the basis of combined net premiums and fees earned. |
(d) Consumer credit indemnity coverages are reported within the RFIG Run-off segment and have been excluded from the General Insurance Group for all periods presented to conform with segment classifications adopted in 2012.
The effect of the reclassification of the CCI coverage from the General Insurance Group's overall and financial indemnity underwriting statistics to the RFIG Run-off Business were as follows:
|
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | ($ in Millions) |
Years Ended December 31: | | 2013 | | 2012 | | 2011 |
General insurance overall experience: | | | | | | |
| Increase (decrease) in net premiums earned | | $ | (29.8 | ) | | $ | (42.4 | ) | | $ | (58.3 | ) |
| Percentage point increase (decrease) in claim ratio | | (.9 | )% | | (3.4 | )% | | (2.9 | )% |
| Percentage point increase (decrease) in expense ratio | | .2 |
| | .2 |
| | .4 |
|
| Percentage point increase (decrease) in composite ratio | | (.7 | )% | | (3.2 | )% | | (2.5 | )% |
| | | | | | | | | |
Financial Indemnity coverages: | | | | | | |
| Increase (decrease) in net premiums earned | | $ | (29.8 | ) | | $ | (42.4 | ) | | $ | (58.3 | ) |
| Percentage point increase (decrease) in claim ratio | | (30.3 | )% | | (71.8 | )% | | (49.2 | )% |
| | | | | | | | | |
RFIG Run-off Business: | | | | | | |
| Increase (decrease) in net premiums earned | | $ | 29.8 |
| | $ | 42.4 |
| | $ | 58.3 |
|
| Percentage point increase (decrease) in claim ratio | | 8.4 | % | | 5.1 | % | | (7.1 | )% |
| Percentage point increase (decrease) in expense ratio | | (.1 | ) | | — |
| | (1.8 | ) |
| Percentage point increase (decrease) in composite ratio | | 8.3 | % | | 5.1 | % | | (8.9 | )% |
Net Premiums Earned
General insurance favorable premium trends in workers' compensation, general liability, and several other general insurance coverages were mainly responsible for 2013's revenue growth. The Company's targeted insurance underwriting services in such fields as aviation, construction, energy, home warranty, trucking, and large account risk management provided the main impetus to this growth. Similar trends for worker's compensation and liability insurance lines within the construction, trucking, and large account risk management business were experienced in 2012. The combination of a generally improving rate environment for most coverages and the slowly strengthening pace of U.S. economic activity were major contributing factors in this regard.
Title insurance premiums and fees increased in each of the past three years mostly due to market share gains, steadily improving housing sales and related financing transactions, and a relatively low mortgage interest rate environment.
RFIG Run-off earned premium reflected a further decline throughout 2013 and 2012 due to the natural outcome of a run-off book of business devoid of new premium production since at least 2011. Other adverse factors included the continuation of elevated levels of premium refunds related to claim rescissions and the termination of certain mortgage guaranty pool insurance contracts in 2010. Moreover, mortgage guaranty new business volume prior to August, 2011 was weakened by a downturn in overall mortgage originations, lower industry-wide penetration of the nation's mortgage market, and the continuing effects of more selective underwriting guidelines in place since late 2007.
Claim Ratios
Variations in claim ratios are typically caused by changes in the frequency and severity of claims incurred, changes in premium rates and the level of premium refunds, and periodic changes in claim and claim expense reserve estimates resulting from ongoing reevaluations of reported and incurred but not reported claims and claim expenses. As demonstrated in the above table, the Company can therefore experience period-to-period volatility in the underwriting results posted for individual coverages. In light of Old Republic's basic underwriting focus in managing its business, a long-term objective has been to dampen this volatility by diversifying the coverages it offers and the industries it serves.
The claim ratios include loss adjustment expenses where appropriate. Policyholders' dividends, which apply principally to workers' compensation insurance, are a reflection of changes in loss experience for individual or groups of policies, rather than overall results, and should be viewed in conjunction with loss ratio trends.
The overall general insurance 2013 claim ratio remained at relatively high levels as workers' compensation and general liability loss costs continued to reflect greater-than-expected severity. Aggregated commercial automobile (trucking), general liability, and workers' compensation coverages were mostly responsible for the 2012 increase though workers' compensation produced the greatest adverse impact. 2011 claim ratios reflect reasonably consistent trends. To a large extent, this major cost factor reflects pricing and risk selection improvements that have been applied since 2001, together with elements of reduced loss severity and frequency. Changes in commercial automobile claim ratios are primarily due to fluctuations in claim frequencies. Loss ratios for workers' compensation and liability insurance may reflect greater variability due to chance events in any one year, changes in loss costs emanating from participation in involuntary markets (i.e. insurance assigned risk pools and associations in which participation is basically mandatory), and added provisions for loss costs not recoverable from assuming reinsurers which may experience financial difficulties from time to time. Additionally, workers' compensation claim costs in particular are affected by a variety of underwriting techniques such as the use of captive reinsurance retentions, retrospective premium plans, and self-insured or deductible insurance programs that are intended to mitigate claim costs over time. Claim ratios for a relatively small book of general liability coverages tend to be highly volatile year to year due to the impact of changes in claim emergence and severity of legacy asbestos and environmental claims exposures.
The Company generally underwrites concurrently workers' compensation, commercial automobile (liability and physical damage), and general liability insurance coverages for a large number of customers. Given this concurrent underwriting approach, an evaluation of trends in premiums, claim and dividend ratios for these individual coverages is more appropriately considered in the aggregate.
Title insurance loss ratios have remained in the single digits for a number of years due to a continuation of favorable trends in claims frequency and severity. Claims ratios in the most recent years have trended lower towards more historical levels as the economic downturn and stresses in the housing and related mortgage lending industries, that began in mid-year 2007, continue to slowly subside.
RFIG Run-off - mortgage guaranty claim ratios were significantly lower in 2013, emanating from the combined effects of further drops in newly reported defaults and a rising rate at which previously reported defaults have cured or otherwise been resolved without payment. These factors led to highly favorable developments of year-end 2012 claim reserves during 2013. The (favorable) reserve developments accounted for (reductions) of (88.2) percentage points points in the reported claim ratio for the year ended December 31, 2013. By contrast, unfavorable developments of year-end 2011 reserves in 2012 raised the latter year's reported claim ratios by 31.6 percentage points. The disparate development patterns in previously established claim reserves are reflective of improving trends in home prices, foreclosure activity, and real estate markets generally.
2012 and prior years' reserve provisions have been impacted by the levels of reported delinquencies emanating from the downturn in the national economy, widespread stress in housing and mortgage finance markets, and high unemployment. Trends in expected and actual claim frequency and severity have been affected to varying degrees by several factors including, but not limited to, significant declines in home prices which limit a troubled borrower's ability to sell the mortgaged property in an amount sufficient to satisfy the remaining debt obligation; more restrictive mortgage lending standards which limit a borrower's ability to refinance the loan; increases in housing supply relative to recent demand; historically high levels of coverage rescissions and claim denials as a result of material misrepresentation in key underwriting information or non-compliance with prescribed underwriting guidelines; and changes in claim settlement costs. The latter are influenced by the amount of unpaid principal outstanding on delinquent loans as well as the rising expenses of settling claims due to higher investigation costs, legal fees, and accumulated interest expenses.
2013 CCI performance was most favorably affected by lower claim provisions resulting from improving delinquency trends and greater than anticipated claim salvage recoveries. 2012 operating performance was impacted by much greater claim costs driven by higher estimates of continuing claim litigation and reduced expectation of salvage recoveries on cumulative claims incurred.
The consolidated claim, expense, and composite ratios reflect all the above factors and the changing period-to-period contributions of each segment to consolidated results.
General Insurance Claim Reserves
The Company's property and liability insurance subsidiaries establish claim reserves which consist of estimates to settle: a) reported claims; b) claims which have been incurred as of each balance sheet date but have not as yet been reported ("IBNR") to the insurance subsidiaries; and c) the direct costs, (fees and costs which are allocable to individual claims) and indirect costs (such as salaries and rent applicable to the overall management of claim departments) to administer known and IBNR claims. Such claim reserves, except as to classification in the Consolidated Balance Sheets as to gross and reinsured portions and purchase accounting adjustments, are reported for financial and regulatory reporting purposes at amounts that are substantially the same.
The establishment of claim reserves by the Company's insurance subsidiaries is a reasonably complex and dynamic process influenced by a large variety of factors. These factors principally include past experience applicable to the anticipated costs of various types of claims, continually evolving and changing legal theories emanating from the judicial system, recurring accounting, statistical, and actuarial studies, the professional experience and expertise of the Company's claim departments' personnel or attorneys and independent claim adjusters, ongoing changes in claim frequency or severity patterns such as those caused by natural disasters, illnesses, accidents, work-related injuries, and changes in general and industry-specific economic conditions. Consequently, the reserves established are a reflection of the opinions of a large number of persons, of the application and interpretation of historical precedent and trends, of expectations as to future developments, and of management's judgment in interpreting all such factors. At any point in time, the Company is exposed to possibly higher or lower than anticipated claim costs due to all of these factors, and to the evolution, interpretation, and expansion of tort law, as well as the effects of unexpected jury verdicts.
In establishing claim reserves, the possible increase in future loss settlement costs caused by inflation is considered implicitly, along with the many other factors cited above. Reserves are generally set to provide for the ultimate cost of all claims. With regard to workers' compensation reserves, however, the ultimate cost of long-term disability or pension type claims is discounted to present value based on interest rates ranging from 3.5% to 4.0%. The Company, where applicable, uses only such discounted reserves in evaluating the results of its operations, in pricing its products and settling retrospective and reinsured accounts, in evaluating policy terms and experience, and for other general business purposes. Solely to comply with reporting rules mandated by the Securities and Exchange Commission, however, Old Republic has made statistical studies of applicable workers' compensation reserves to obtain estimates of the amounts by which claim and claim adjustment expense reserves, net of reinsurance, have been discounted. These studies have resulted in estimates of such amounts at $241.4 million, $230.8 million and $235.1 million, as of December 31, 2013, 2012 and 2011, respectively. It should be noted, however, that these differences between discounted and non-discounted
(terminal) reserves are fundamentally of an informational nature, and are not indicative of an effect on operating results for any one or series of years for the above noted reasons.
Early in 2001, the Federal Department of Labor revised the Federal Black Lung Program regulations. The revisions basically require a reevaluation of previously settled, denied, or new occupational disease claims in the context of newly devised, more lenient standards when such claims are resubmitted. Following a number of challenges and appeals by the insurance and coal mining industries, the revised regulations were, for the most part, upheld in June, 2002 and are to be applied prospectively. Since the final quarter of 2001, black lung claims filed or refiled pursuant to these revised regulations have increased, though the volume of new claim reports has abated in recent years. In March 2010, federal regulations were revised once again as part of the Patient Protection and Affordability Act that reinstates two provisions that potentially benefit claimants. In response to this most recent legislation and similar to the 2001 change, black lung claims filed or refiled have again increased. The vast majority of claims filed to date against Old Republic pertain to business underwritten through loss sensitive programs that permit the charge of additional or refund of return premiums to wholly or partially offset changes in estimated claim costs, or to business underwritten as a service carrier on behalf of various industry-wide involuntary market (i.e. assigned risk) pools. A much smaller portion pertains to business produced on a traditional risk transfer basis. The Company has established applicable reserves for claims as they have been reported and for claims not as yet reported on the basis of its historical experience as well as assumptions relative to the effect of the revised regulations. Inasmuch as a variety of challenges are likely as the revised regulations are implemented through the actual claim settlement process, the potential impact on reserves, gross and net of reinsurance or retrospective premium adjustments, resulting from such regulations cannot be estimated with reasonable certainty.
Old Republic's reserve estimates also include provisions for indemnity and settlement costs for various asbestosis and environmental impairment ("A&E") claims that have been filed in the normal course of business against a number of its insurance subsidiaries. Many such claims relate to policies issued prior to 1985, including many issued during a short period between 1981 and 1982 pursuant to an agency agreement canceled in 1982. Over the years, the Company's property and liability insurance subsidiaries have typically issued general liability insurance policies with face amounts ranging between $1.0 million and $2.0 million and rarely exceeding $10.0 million. Such policies have, in turn, been subject to reinsurance cessions which have typically reduced the subsidiaries' net retentions to $.5 million or less as to each claim. Old Republic's exposure to A&E claims cannot, however, be calculated by conventional insurance reserving methods for a variety of reasons, including: a) the absence of statistically valid data inasmuch as such claims typically involve long reporting delays and very often uncertainty as to the number and identity of insureds against whom such claims have arisen or will arise; and b) the litigation history of such or similar claims for insurance industry members which has produced inconsistent court decisions with regard to such questions as to when an alleged loss occurred, which policies provide coverage, how a loss is to be allocated among potentially responsible insureds and/or their insurance carriers, how policy coverage exclusions are to be interpreted, what types of environmental impairment or toxic tort claims are covered, when the insurer's duty to defend is triggered, how policy limits are to be calculated, and whether clean-up costs constitute property damage. Over time, the Executive Branch and/or the Congress of the United States have proposed or considered changes in the legislation and rules affecting the determination of liability for environmental and asbestosis claims. As of December 31, 2013, however, there is no solid evidence to suggest that possible future changes might mitigate or reduce some or all of these claim exposures. Because of the above issues and uncertainties, estimation of reserves for losses and allocated loss adjustment expenses for A&E claims in particular is much more difficult or impossible to quantify with a high degree of precision. Accordingly, no representation can be made that the Company's reserves for such claims and related costs will not prove to be overstated or understated in the future. At December 31, 2013 and 2012, Old Republic's aggregate indemnity and loss adjustment expense reserves specifically identified with A&E exposures amounted to approximately $159.7 million and $147.1 million gross, respectively, and $121.3 million and $119.4 million net of reinsurance, respectively. Based on average annual claims payments during the five most recent calendar years, such reserves represented 5.5 years (gross) and 7.8 years (net of reinsurance) as of December 31, 2013 and 4.7 years (gross) and 7.6 years (net of reinsurance) as of December 31, 2012. The survival ratios are presented on a pro forma basis (unaudited) as if PMA had been consolidated with ORI for all periods. Fluctuations in this ratio between years can be caused by the inconsistent pay out patterns associated with these types of claims. For the five years ended December 31, 2013, incurred A&E claim and related loss settlement costs have averaged .3% of average annual General Insurance Group claims and related settlement costs.
Over the years, the subject of property and liability insurance claim reserves has been written about and analyzed extensively by a large number of professionals and regulators. Accordingly, the above discussion summary should, of necessity, be regarded as a basic outline of the subject and not as a definitive presentation. The Company believes that its overall reserving practices have been consistently applied over many years, and that its aggregate reserves have generally resulted in reasonable approximations of the ultimate net costs of claims incurred. However, no representation is made nor is any guaranty given that ultimate net claim and related costs will not develop in future years to be greater or lower than currently established reserve estimates.
The following table shows the evolving redundancies or deficiencies for reserves established as of December 31, of each of the years 2003 through 2013.
|
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| ($ in Millions) |
(a) | As of December 31(6)(7): | 2013 | 2012 | 2011 | 2010 | 2009 | 2008 | 2007 | 2006 | 2005 | 2004 | 2003 |
(b) | Liability (1) for unpaid claims and claim adjustment expenses(2): | $ | 4,197 |
| $ | 3,936 |
| $ | 3,769 |
| $ | 3,779 |
| $ | 3,229 |
| $ | 3,222 |
| $ | 3,175 |
| $ | 2,924 |
| $ | 2,414 |
| $ | 2,182 |
| $ | 1,964 |
|
|
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
(c) | Paid (cumulative) as of (3): | | | | | | | | | | | |
| One year later | — | % | 23.3 | % | 25.3 | % | 25.1 | % | 26.5 | % | 27.9 | % | 28.9 | % | 25.5 | % | 15.8 | % | 25.8 | % | 24.8 | % |
| Two years later | — |
| — |
| 40.4 |
| 41.0 |
| 39.3 |
| 41.5 |
| 43.5 |
| 41.4 |
| 32.5 |
| 34.3 |
| 39.5 |
|
| Three years later | — |
| — |
| — |
| 50.8 |
| 48.4 |
| 50.4 |
| 51.9 |
| 51.4 |
| 44.2 |
| 45.2 |
| 44.7 |
|
| Four years later | — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| 55.5 |
| 56.4 |
| 57.9 |
| 57.0 |
| 51.9 |
| 52.4 |
| 51.2 |
|
| Five years later | — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| 62.2 |
| 62.5 |
| 61.5 |
| 55.9 |
| 57.8 |
| 56.2 |
|
| Six years later | — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| 66.6 |
| 65.3 |
| 59.7 |
| 60.5 |
| 60.5 |
|
| Seven years later | — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| 68.4 |
| 63.1 |
| 63.5 |
| 62.4 |
|
| Eight years later | — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| 65.7 |
| 66.3 |
| 65.3 |
|
| Nine years later | — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| 68.5 |
| 67.8 |
|
| Ten years later | — | % | — | % | — | % | — | % | — | % | — | % | — | % | — | % | — | % | — | % | 69.6 | % |
(d) | Liability reestimated (i.e., cumulative payments plus reestimated ending liability) | | | | | | | | | | | |
| As of (4): | | | | | | | | | | | |
| One year later | — | % | 99.0 | % | 99.5 | % | 96.1 | % | 97.6 | % | 98.2 | % | 97.4 | % | 96.2 | % | 95.2 | % | 97.6 | % | 97.2 | % |
| Two years later | — |
| — |
| 98.5 |
| 96.3 |
| 94.6 |
| 95.1 |
| 94.9 |
| 94.3 |
| 92.3 |
| 94.8 |
| 97.0 |
|
| Three years later | — |
| — |
| — |
| 95.5 |
| 93.3 |
| 93.1 |
| 92.5 |
| 92.4 |
| 90.4 |
| 93.3 |
| 95.6 |
|
| Four years later | — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| 91.8 |
| 91.8 |
| 90.9 |
| 90.2 |
| 88.4 |
| 92.2 |
| 95.7 |
|
| Five years later | — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| 91.1 |
| 89.9 |
| 89.0 |
| 87.3 |
| 91.6 |
| 95.6 |
|
| Six years later | — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| 89.3 |
| 87.7 |
| 86.6 |
| 91.1 |
| 95.5 |
|
| Seven years later | — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| 87.5 |
| 85.6 |
| 90.5 |
| 95.5 |
|
| Eight years later | — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| 85.3 |
| 89.9 |
| 95.6 |
|
| Nine years later | — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| — |
| 89.8 |
| 95.3 |
|
| Ten years later | — | % | — | % | — | % | — | % | — | % | — | % | — | % | — | % | — | % | — | % | 95.0 | % |
(e) | Redundancy (deficiency)(5) for each year-end | — | % | 1.0 | % | 1.5 | % | 4.5 | % | 8.2 | % | 8.9 | % | 10.7 | % | 12.5 | % | 14.7 | % | 10.2 | % | 5.0 | % |
| Average redundancy (deficiency) for all year-ends | 7.2 | % | | | | | | | | | | |
__________
| |
(1) | Amounts are reported net of reinsurance. |
| |
(2) | Excluding unallocated loss adjustment expense reserves. |
| |
(3) | Percent of most recent reestimated liability (line d). Decreases in paid loss percentages may at times reflect the reassumption by the Company of certain previously ceded loss reserves from assuming reinsurers through commutations of then existing reserves. |
| |
(4) | Percent of beginning liability (line b) for unpaid claims and claim adjustment expenses. |
| |
(5) | Beginning liability less the most current liability reestimated (line d) as a percent of beginning liability (line b). |
| |
(6) | Historical data in the above table excludes amounts pertaining to PMA whose merger with Old Republic became effective October 1, 2010. Such PMA reserves have therefore been reflected from December 31, 2010 forward. |
| |
(7) | Consumer credit indemnity coverages have been fully retained in this historical table for all years presented. In connection with the previously noted MI/CCI combination, certain General Insurance Group companies retain losses pursuant to various quota share and stop loss reinsurance agreements. |
In reviewing the preceding tabular data, it should be noted that prior periods' loss payment and development trends may not be repeated in the future due to the large variety of factors influencing the reserving and settlement processes outlined herein above. The reserve redundancies or deficiencies shown for all years are not necessarily indicative of the effect on reported results of any one or series of years since cumulative retrospective premium and commission adjustments employed in various parts of the Company's business may partially offset such effects. (See "Consolidated Underwriting Statistics" above, and "Reserves, Reinsurance, and Retrospective Adjustments" elsewhere herein).
The following table shows an analysis of changes in aggregate reserves for the Company's property and liability insurance claims and allocated claim adjustment expenses for each of the years shown:
|
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | | ($ in Millions) |
Years Ended December 31: (1) | 2013 | 2012 | 2011 | 2010 | | 2009 | 2008 | 2007 | 2006 | 2005 | 2004 | 2003 |
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
(a) | Beginning net reserves | $ | 3,936 |
| $ | 3,769 |
| $ | 3,779 |
| $ | 3,819 |
| * | $ | 3,222 |
| $ | 3,175 |
| $ | 2,924 |
| $ | 2,414 |
| $ | 2,182 |
| $ | 1,964 |
| $ | 1,802 |
|
Incurred claims and claim expenses: | | | | | | | | | | | | |
(b) | Current year provision | 1,762 |
| 1,652 |
| 1,582 |
| 1,351 |
| | 1,343 |
| 1,452 |
| 1,490 |
| 1,295 |
| 1,191 |
| 1,070 |
| 893 |
|
(c) | Change in prior years' provision | (40 | ) | (19 | ) | (149 | ) | (76 | ) | | (56 | ) | (83 | ) | (110 | ) | (116 | ) | (52 | ) | (55 | ) | (25 | ) |
(d) | Total incurred | 1,722 |
| 1,632 |
| 1,432 |
| 1,275 |
| | 1,287 |
| 1,369 |
| 1,379 |
| 1,179 |
| 1,138 |
| 1,014 |
| 868 |
|
Claim payments on: | | | | | | | | | | | | |
(e) | Current years' events | 552 |
| 524 |
| 537 |
| 529 |
| | 460 |
| 502 |
| 476 |
| 342 |
| 402 |
| 332 |
| 277 |
|
(f) | Prior years' events | 907 |
| 941 |
| 905 |
| 786 |
| | 818 |
| 820 |
| 652 |
| 326 |
| 504 |
| 463 |
| 428 |
|
(g) | Total payments | 1,460 |
| 1,465 |
| 1,442 |
| 1,315 |
| | 1,279 |
| 1,323 |
| 1,128 |
| 668 |
| 907 |
| 796 |
| 706 |
|
| |
| | | | | | | | | | | |
(h) | Ending net reserves (a + d - g) | 4,197 |
| 3,936 |
| 3,769 |
| 3,779 |
| | 3,229 |
| 3,222 |
| 3,175 |
| 2,924 |
| 2,414 |
| 2,182 |
| 1,964 |
|
(i) | Unallocated loss adjustment | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | expense reserves | 202 |
| 183 |
| 137 |
| 149 |
| | 104 |
| 104 |
| 103 |
| 97 |
| 92 |
| 87 |
| 83 |
|
(j) | Reinsurance recoverable on | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | claims reserves | 2,801 |
| 2,787 |
| 2,827 |
| 2,825 |
| | 2,046 |
| 2,020 |
| 1,976 |
| 1,929 |
| 1,894 |
| 1,632 |
| 1,515 |
|
(k) | Gross claims reserves (h + i + j) | $ | 7,201 |
| $ | 6,907 |
| $ | 6,733 |
| $ | 6,753 |
| | $ | 5,380 |
| $ | 5,346 |
| $ | 5,256 |
| $ | 4,951 |
| $ | 4,401 |
| $ | 3,902 |
| $ | 3,562 |
|
__________
(*) Includes reserves acquired through the PMA merger.
(1) Consumer credit indemnity coverages have been fully retained in this historical table for all years presented. For segment reporting purposes, $66.2 million, $70.2 million, and $31.2 million of ending net reserves reported in the above table are reported as part of the RFIG Run-off Business segment as of December 31, 2013, 2012, and 2011, respectively. In connection with the previously noted MI/CCI combination, certain General Insurance Group companies retain losses pursuant to various quota share and stop loss reinsurance agreements.
(b) Investments. In common with other insurance organizations, Old Republic invests most capital and operating funds in income producing securities. Investments must comply with applicable insurance laws and regulations which prescribe the nature, form, quality, and relative amounts of investments which may be made by insurance companies. Generally, these laws and regulations permit insurance companies to invest within varying limitations in state, municipal and federal government obligations, corporate debt, preferred and common stocks, certain types of real estate, and first mortgage loans. For many years, Old Republic's investment policy has therefore been to acquire and retain primarily investment grade, publicly traded, fixed maturity securities. The investment policy is also influenced by the terms of the insurance coverages written, by its expectations as to the timing of claim and benefit payments, and by income tax considerations. As a consequence of all these factors, the Company's invested assets are managed in consideration of enterprise-wide risk management objectives intended to assure solid funding of its subsidiaries' long-term obligations to insurance policyholders and other beneficiaries, as well as evaluations of their long-term effect on stability of capital accounts. Accordingly, the investment portfolio contains no significant insurance risk-correlated asset exposures to real estate, mortgage-backed securities, collateralized debt obligations ("CDO's"), derivatives, junk bonds, hybrid securities, or illiquid private equity investments. In a similar vein, the Company does not engage in hedging or securities lending transactions, nor does it invest in securities whose values are predicated on non-regulated financial instruments exhibiting amorphous or unfunded counter-party risk attributes.
Management considers investment grade securities to be those rated by major credit rating agencies that fall within the top four rating categories, or securities which are not rated but have characteristics similar to securities so rated. The Company had no bond or note investments in default as to principal and/or interest at December 31, 2013 and 2012. The status and fair value changes of each investment is reviewed on at least a quarterly basis, and estimates of other-than-temporary impairments in the portfolio's value are evaluated and established at each balance sheet date. Substantially all of the Company's invested assets as of December 31, 2013 have been classified as "available for sale" pursuant to the existing investment policy.
The Company's investment policies are not designed to maximize or emphasize the realization of investment gains. The combination of gains and losses from sales or impairments of securities are reflected as realized gains and losses in the income statement. Dispositions of securities result principally from scheduled maturities of bonds and notes and sales of fixed income and equity securities available for sale. Dispositions of securities at a realized gain or loss reflect such factors as ongoing assessments of issuers' business prospects, rotation among industry sectors, changes in credit quality, and tax planning considerations.
The following tables show invested assets at the end of the last two years, together with investment income for each of the last three years:
|
| | | | | | | | | | | |
Consolidated Investments |
($ in Millions) |
December 31: | | 2013 | | 2012 |
Available for Sale | | | | |
Fixed Maturity Securities: | | | | |
| U.S. & Canadian Governments | | $ | 1,161.1 |
| | $ | 1,216.8 |
|
| Tax-Exempt | | 171.3 |
| | 392.2 |
|
| Corporate | | 7,379.8 |
| | 6,957.1 |
|
| | | | | 8,712.3 |
| | 8,566.2 |
|
| | | | | | | |
Equity Securities | | 1,004.2 |
| | 739.7 |
|
Short-term Investments | | 1,124.8 |
| | 1,264.9 |
|
Miscellaneous Investments | | 21.6 |
| | 29.6 |
|
| Total available for sale | | 10,863.1 |
| | 10,600.5 |
|
| | | | | | | |
Other Investments | | 5.3 |
| | 8.2 |
|
Total Investments | | $ | 10,868.5 |
| | $ | 10,608.8 |
|
|
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
Sources of Consolidated Investment Income |
($ in Millions) |
Years Ended December 31: | | 2013 | | 2012 | | 2011 |
Fixed Maturity Securities: | | | | | | |
| Taxable Interest | | $ | 289.0 |
| | $ | 303.4 |
| | $ | 310.2 |
|
| Tax-Exempt Interest | | 9.6 |
| | 17.5 |
| | 43.0 |
|
| | | | | 298.7 |
| | 321.0 |
| | 353.2 |
|
| | | | | | | | | |
Equity Securities Dividends | | 21.2 |
| | 13.1 |
| | 11.3 |
|
| | | | | | | | | |
Other Investment Income: | | | | | | |
| Interest on Short-term Investments | | 1.1 |
| | 1.9 |
| | 1.5 |
|
| Sundry | | 2.6 |
| | 5.4 |
| | 4.7 |
|
| | | | | 3.7 |
| | 7.4 |
| | 6.3 |
|
Gross Investment Income | | 323.7 |
| | 341.6 |
| | 370.9 |
|
| Less: Investment Expenses (a) | | 4.9 |
| | 5.1 |
| | 6.2 |
|
Net Investment Income | | $ | 318.7 |
| | $ | 336.5 |
| | $ | 364.6 |
|
| | | | | | | | | |
__________
| |
(a) | Investment expenses consist of personnel costs and investment management and custody service fees, as well as interest incurred on funds held of $1.7 million, $2.0 million and $1.9 million for the years ended December 31, 2013, 2012 and 2011, respectively. |
The independent credit quality ratings and maturity distribution for Old Republic's consolidated fixed maturity investments, excluding short-term investments, at the end of the last two years are shown in the following tables. These investments, $8.7 billion and $8.5 billion at December 31, 2013 and 2012, respectively, represented approximately 53% of consolidated assets and 68% of consolidated liabilities as of both dates.
|
| | | | | | | | | |
Credit Quality Ratings of Fixed Maturity Securities (b) |
December 31: | | 2013 | | 2012 |
| | | | | (% of total portfolio) |
| Aaa | | 13.9 | % | | 15.2 | % |
| Aa | | 9.4 |
| | 11.5 |
|
| A | | 35.9 |
| | 34.2 |
|
| Baa | | 39.7 |
| | 38.4 |
|
| | Total investment grade | | 98.9 |
| | 99.3 |
|
| All other (c) | | 1.1 |
| | .7 |
|
| | Total | | 100.0 | % | | 100.0 | % |
__________
| |
(b) | Credit quality ratings referred to herein are a blend of those assigned by the major credit rating agencies for U.S. and Canadian Governments, Agencies, Corporates and Municipal issuers, which are converted to the above ratings classifications. |
| |
(c) | "All other" includes non-investment grade or non-rated issuers. |
|
| | | | | | | | | |
Age Distribution of Fixed Maturity Securities |
December 31: | | 2013 | | 2012 |
| | | | | (% of total portfolio) |
| Maturity Ranges: | | | | |
| Due in one year or less | | 9.3 | % | | 15.7 | % |
| Due after one year through five years | | 46.7 |
| | 41.6 |
|
| Due after five years through ten years | | 41.8 |
| | 40.1 |
|
| Due after ten years through fifteen years | | 1.2 |
| | 1.0 |
|
| Due after fifteen years | | 1.0 |
| | 1.6 |
|
| | | | | 100.0 | % | | 100.0 | % |
| | | | | | | |
| Average Maturity in Years | | 4.8 | | 4.7 |
|
(c) Marketing. Commercial automobile (trucking), workers' compensation and general liability insurance underwritten for business enterprises and public entities is marketed primarily through independent insurance agents and brokers with the assistance of Old Republic's trained sales, underwriting, actuarial, and loss control personnel. The remaining property and liability commercial insurance written by Old Republic is obtained through insurance agents or brokers who are independent contractors and generally represent other insurance companies, and by direct sales. No single source accounted for over 10% of Old Republic's premium volume in 2013.
A substantial portion of the Company's title insurance business is referred to it by title insurance agents, builders, lending institutions, real estate developers, realtors, and lawyers. Title insurance and related real estate settlement products are sold through 254 Company offices and through agencies and underwritten title companies in the District of Columbia and all 50 states. The issuing agents are authorized to issue commitments and title insurance policies based on their own search and examination, or on the basis of abstracts and opinions of approved attorneys. Policies are also issued through independent title companies (not themselves title insurers) pursuant to underwriting agreements. These agreements generally provide that the agency or underwritten company may cause title policies of the Company to be issued, and the latter is responsible under such policies for any payments to the insured. Typically, the agency or underwritten title company deducts the major portion of the title insurance charge to the customer as its commission for services. During 2013, approximately 72% of title insurance premiums and fees were accounted for by policies issued by agents and underwritten title companies.
Title insurance premium and fee revenue is closely related to the level of activity in the real estate market. The volume of real estate activity is affected by the availability and cost of financing, population growth, family movements and other factors. Also, the title insurance business is seasonal. During the winter months, new building activity is reduced and, accordingly, the Company produces less title insurance business relative to new construction during such months than during the rest of the year. The most important factors, insofar as Old Republic's title business is concerned, however, are the rates of activity in the resale and refinance markets for residential properties.
As previously noted, the Company's flagship mortgage guaranty insurance carrier had been operating pursuant to a waiver of minimum state regulatory capital requirements since late 2009. This waiver expired on August 31, 2011. As a consequence, underwriting of new policies ceased and the existing book of business was placed in run-off operating mode. Prior to August 31, 2011, traditional primary mortgage insurance was marketed principally through a direct sales force which called on mortgage bankers, brokers, commercial banks, savings institutions and other mortgage originators. No sales commissions or other forms of remuneration were paid to the lending institutions or others for the procurement or development of business.
The personal contacts, relationships, reputations, and intellectual capital of Old Republic's key executives are a vital element in obtaining and retaining much of its business. Many of the Company's customers produce large amounts of premiums and therefore warrant substantial levels of top executive attention and involvement. In this respect, Old Republic's mode of operation is similar to that of professional reinsurers and commercial insurance brokers, and relies on the marketing, underwriting, and management skills of relatively few key people for large parts of its business.
Historically, several types of insurance coverages underwritten by Old Republic, such as consumer credit indemnity, title, and mortgage guaranty insurance, are affected in varying degrees by changes in national economic conditions. During periods when housing activity or mortgage lending are constrained by any combination of rising interest rates, tighter mortgage underwriting guidelines, falling home prices, excess housing supply and/or economic recession, operating and/or claim costs pertaining to such coverages tend to rise disproportionately to revenues and can result in underwriting losses and reduced levels of profitability.
At least one Old Republic general insurance subsidiary is licensed to do business in each of the 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, Virgin Islands, Guam, and each of the Canadian provinces; title insurance operations are licensed to do business in 50 states, the District of Columbia and Guam; mortgage insurance subsidiaries are licensed in 50 states and the District of Columbia. Consolidated direct premium volume distributed among the various geographical regions shown was as follows for the past three years:
|
| | | | | | | | | | | |
Geographical Distribution of Consolidated Direct Premiums Written |
| | | | | | | | |
| | | | 2013 | | 2012 | | 2011 |
| United States: | | | | | |
| | Northeast | 12.4 | % | | 12.7 | % | | 11.9 | % |
| | Mid-Atlantic | 9.9 |
| | 10.7 |
| | 11.2 |
|
| | Southeast | 19.3 |
| | 18.8 |
| | 19.2 |
|
| | Southwest | 11.4 |
| | 11.1 |
| | 11.4 |
|
| | East North Central | 11.9 |
| | 12.0 |
| | 11.7 |
|
| | West North Central | 10.8 |
| | 10.6 |
| | 11.1 |
|
| | Mountain | 7.4 |
| | 7.0 |
| | 7.2 |
|
| | Western | 14.8 |
| | 14.8 |
| | 13.6 |
|
| Foreign (Principally Canada) | 2.1 |
| | 2.3 |
| | 2.7 |
|
| | Total | 100.0 | % | | 100.0 | % | | 100.0 | % |
(d) Reserves, Reinsurance, and Retrospective Adjustments. Old Republic's insurance subsidiaries establish reserves for unearned premiums, reported claims, claims incurred but not reported, and claim adjustment expenses, as required in the circumstances. Such reserves are based on regulatory accounting requirements and generally accepted accounting principles. In accordance with insurance industry practices, claim reserves are based on estimates of the amounts that will be paid over a period of time and changes in such estimates are reflected in the financial statements of the periods during which they occur. See "General Insurance Claim Reserves" herein.
To maintain premium production within its capacity and limit maximum losses and risks for which it might become liable under its policies, Old Republic, as is the practice in the insurance industry, may cede a portion or all of its premiums and liabilities on certain classes of insurance, individual policies, or blocks of business to other insurers and reinsurers. Although the ceding of insurance does not generally discharge an insurer from its direct liability to a policyholder, it is industry practice to establish the reinsured part of risks as the liability of the reinsurer. Old Republic also employs retrospective premium adjustments and risk sharing arrangements for parts of its business in order to minimize losses for which it might become liable under its insurance policies, and to afford its customers or producers a degree of participation in the risks and rewards associated with such business. Under retrospective arrangements, Old Republic collects additional premiums if losses are greater than originally anticipated and refunds a portion of original premiums if loss costs are lower. Pursuant to risk sharing arrangements, the Company adjusts production costs or premiums retroactively to likewise reflect deviations from originally expected loss costs. The amount of premium, production costs and other retrospective adjustments which may be made is either limited or unlimited depending on the Company's evaluation of risks and related contractual arrangements. To the extent that any reinsurance companies, retrospectively rated risks, or producers might be unable to meet their obligations under existing reinsurance, retrospective insurance and production agreements, Old Republic would be liable for the defaulted amounts. In these regards, however, the Company generally protects itself by withholding funds, by securing indemnity agreements, by obtaining surety bonds, or by otherwise collateralizing such obligations through irrevocable letters of credit, cash, or securities.
The following table displays the Company's General Insurance liabilities reinsured by its ten largest reinsurers as of December 31, 2013.
|
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
Major General Insurance Balances Due from Reinsurers |
|
| | | | | | | ($ in Millions) | | % of Total |
| | | | | A.M. | | Reinsurance Recoverable | | Total | | Consolidated |
| | | | | Best | | on Paid | | on Claim | | Exposure | | Reinsured |
Reinsurer | | Rating | | Claims | | Reserves | | to Reinsurer | | Liabilites |
| Munich Re America, Inc. | | A+ | | $ | 7.1 |
| | $ | 775.9 |
| | $ | 783.0 |
| | 27.7 | % |
| Swiss Reinsurance America Corporation | | A+ | | 5.2 |
| | 246.2 |
| | 251.4 |
| | 8.9 |
|
| Hannover Ruckversicherungs | | A+ | | — |
| | 112.0 |
| | 112.1 |
| | 4.0 |
|
| Trabaja Reinsurance Company | | Unrated | | 1.9 |
| | 102.5 |
| | 104.5 |
| | 3.7 |
|
| National WC Reinsurance Pool | | Unrated | | 2.0 |
| | 97.7 |
| | 99.8 |
| | 3.5 |
|
| General Reinsurance Corporation | | A++ | | 1.8 |
| | 94.9 |
| | 96.7 |
| | 3.4 |
|
| Westport Insurance Corporation | | A+ | | .7 |
| | 61.3 |
| | 62.0 |
| | 2.2 |
|
| Muenchener Ruckversicherungs | | A+ | | 1.3 |
| | 51.8 |
| | 53.1 |
| | 1.9 |
|
| School Boards Insurance Co of PA, Inc. | | B+ | | — |
| | 52.6 |
| | 52.6 |
| | 1.9 |
|
| Transatlantic Reinsurance Company | | A | | 2.4 |
| | 45.6 |
| | 48.0 |
| | 1.7 |
|
| | Total | | | | $ | 22.7 |
| | $ | 1,640.9 |
| | $ | 1,663.6 |
| | 58.8 | % |
The RFIG Run-off mortgage guaranty operation's total claim exposure to its largest reinsurer, AAMBG Reinsurance, Inc., was $10.5 million, which represented .4% of total consolidated reinsured liabilities as of December 31, 2013. Reinsured liabilities of the Title Insurance Group and small life and accident insurance operations are not material.
Reinsurance recoverable asset balances represent amounts due from or credited by assuming reinsurers for paid and unpaid claims and policy reserves. Such reinsurance balances that are recoverable from non-admitted foreign and certain other reinsurers such as captive insurance companies owned by assureds or business producers, as well as similar balances or credits arising from policies that are retrospectively rated or subject to assureds' high deductible retentions are substantially collateralized by letters of credit, securities, and other financial instruments. Old Republic evaluates on a regular basis the financial condition of its assuming reinsurers and assureds who purchase its retrospectively rated or high deductible policies. Estimates of unrecoverable amounts are included in the Company's net claim and claim expense reserves since reinsurance, retrospectively rated and self-insured deductible policies and contracts do not relieve Old Republic from its direct obligations to assureds or their beneficiaries.
Old Republic's reinsurance practices with respect to portions of its business also result from its desire to bring its sponsoring organizations and customers into some degree of joint venture or risk sharing relationship. The Company may, in exchange for a ceding commission, reinsure up to 100% of the underwriting risk, and the premium applicable to such risk, to insurers owned by or affiliated with lending institutions, financial and other intermediaries, and commercial institutions generally whose customers are insured by Old Republic, or individual customers who have formed captive insurance companies. The ceding commissions received compensate Old Republic for performing the direct insurer's functions of underwriting, actuarial, claim settlement, loss control, legal, reinsurance, and administrative services to comply with local and federal regulations, and for providing appropriate risk management services.
Remaining portions of Old Republic's business are reinsured in most instances with independent insurance or reinsurance companies pursuant to excess of loss agreements. Except as noted in the following paragraph, reinsurance protection on property and liability coverages generally limits the net loss on most individual claims to a maximum of: $5.2 million for workers' compensation; $3.5 million for commercial auto liability; $3.5 million for general liability; $8.0 million for executive protection (directors & officers and errors & omissions); $2.0 million for aviation; and $4.0 million for property coverages. Title insurance risk assumptions are generally limited to a maximum of $500.0 million as to any one policy. The vast majority of title policies issued, however, carry exposures of less than $1.0 million. Roughly 10% of the mortgage guaranty traditional primary insurance in force is subject to lender sponsored captive reinsurance arrangements structured primarily on an excess of loss basis. All bulk and other mortgage guaranty insurance risk in force is retained. Exclusive of reinsurance, the average direct primary mortgage guaranty exposure is (in whole dollars) $38,697 per insured loan.
Since January 1, 2005, the Company has had maximum reinsurance coverage of up to $200.0 million for its workers' compensation exposures. Pursuant to regulatory requirements, however, all workers' compensation primary insurers such as the Company remain liable for unlimited amounts in excess of reinsured limits. Other than the substantial concentration of workers' compensation losses caused by the September 11, 2001 terrorist attack on America, to the best of the Company's knowledge there had not been a similar accumulation of claims in a single location from a single occurrence prior to that event. Nevertheless, the possibility continues to exist that non-reinsured losses could, depending on a wide range of severity and frequency assumptions, aggregate several hundred million dollars to an insurer such as the Company. Such aggregation of losses could occur in the event of a catastrophe such as an earthquake that could lead to the death or injury of a large number of persons concentrated in a single facility such as a high rise building.
As a result of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attack on America, the reinsurance industry eliminated coverage from substantially all contracts for claims arising from acts of terrorism. Primary insurers like the Company thus became fully exposed to such claims. Late in 2002, the Terrorism Risk Insurance Act of 2002 (the "TRIA") was signed into law, immediately establishing a temporary federal reinsurance program administered by the Secretary of the Treasury. The program applied to insured commercial property and casualty losses resulting from an act of terrorism, as defined in the TRIA. Congress extended and modified the program in late 2005 through the Terrorism Risk Insurance Revision and Extension Act of 2005 (the "TRIREA"). TRIREA expired on December 31, 2007. Congress enacted a revised program in December 2007 through the Terrorism Risk Insurance Program Reauthorization Act of 2007 (the "TRIPRA"), a seven year extension through December 31, 2014. The TRIA automatically voided all policy exclusions which were in effect for terrorism related losses and obligated insurers to offer terrorism coverage with most commercial property and casualty insurance lines. The TRIREA revised the definition of "property and casualty insurance" to exclude commercial automobile, burglary and theft, surety, professional liability and farm owner's multi-peril insurance. TRIPRA did not make any further changes to the definition of property and casualty insurance, however, it does include domestic acts of terrorism within the scope of the program. Although insurers are permitted to charge an additional premium for terrorism coverage, insureds may reject the coverage. Under TRIPRA, the program's protection is not triggered for losses arising from an act of terrorism until the industry first suffers losses of $100 billion in the aggregate during any one year. Once the program trigger is met, the program will pay 85% of an insurer's terrorism losses that exceed that individual insurer's deductible. The insurer's deductible is 20% of direct earned premium on property and casualty insurance. Insurers may reinsure that portion of the risk they retain under the program. Effective January 1, 2008, the Company reinsured limits of $198.0 million excess of $2.0 million for claims arising from certain acts of terrorism for casualty clash coverage and catastrophe workers' compensation liability insurance coverage.
(e) Competition. The insurance business is highly competitive and Old Republic competes with many stock and mutual insurance companies. Many of these competitors offer more insurance coverages and have substantially greater financial resources than the Company. The rates charged for many of the insurance coverages in which the Company specializes, such as workers' compensation insurance, other property and liability insurance and title insurance, are primarily regulated by the states and are also subject to extensive competition among major insurance organizations. The basic methods of competition available to Old Republic, aside from rates, are service to customers, expertise in tailoring insurance programs to the specific needs of its clients, efficiency and flexibility of operations, personal involvement by its key executives, and, as to title insurance, accuracy and timely delivery of evidences of title issued.
For certain types of coverages, including loan credit indemnity and mortgage guaranty insurance, the Company has historically competed in varying degrees with the Federal Housing Administration ("FHA") and the Veterans Administration ("VA"). In recent years, the FHA's market share of insured mortgages has increased significantly, mostly due to the more restrictive underwriting guidelines and premium rate increases imposed by private mortgage insurers. Mortgage insurance companies also compete by providing contract underwriting services to lenders, enabling the latter to improve the efficiency of their operations by outsourcing all or part of their mortgage loan underwriting processes. As already noted, the Company ceased underwriting new mortgage guaranty insurance effective August 31, 2011.
The Company believes its experience and expertise have enabled it to develop a variety of specialized insurance programs and related services for its customers, and to secure state insurance departments' approval of these programs.
(f) Government Regulation. In common with all insurance companies, Old Republic's insurance subsidiaries are subject to the regulation and supervision of the jurisdictions in which they do business. The method of such regulation varies, but, generally, regulation has been delegated to state insurance commissioners who are granted broad administrative powers relating to: the licensing of insurers and their agents; the nature of and limitations on investments; approval of policy forms; reserve requirements; and trade practices. In addition to these types of regulation, many classes of insurance, including most of the Company's insurance coverages, are subject to rate regulations which require that rates be reasonable, adequate, and not unfairly discriminatory.
The majority of states have also enacted insurance holding company laws which require registration and periodic reporting by insurance companies controlled by other corporations licensed to transact business within their respective jurisdictions. Old Republic's insurance subsidiaries are subject to such legislation and are registered as controlled insurers in those jurisdictions in which such registration is required. Such legislation varies from state to state but typically requires periodic disclosure concerning the corporation which controls the registered insurers, or ultimate holding company, and all subsidiaries of the ultimate holding company, and prior approval of certain intercorporate transfers of assets (including payments of dividends in excess of specified amounts by the insurance subsidiary) within the holding company system. Each state has established minimum capital and surplus requirements to conduct an insurance business. All of the Company's subsidiaries, except its mortgage guaranty insurance subsidiaries as described above, meet or exceed these requirements, which vary from state to state.
(g) Employees. As of December 31, 2013, Old Republic and its subsidiaries employed approximately 7,900 persons on a full time basis. A majority of eligible full time employees participate in various pension plans (which are in run-off status) or other plans which provide benefits payable upon retirement. Eligible employees are also covered by hospitalization and major medical insurance, group life insurance, and various savings, profit sharing, and deferred compensation plans. The Company considers its employee relations to be good.
(h) Website access. The Company files various reports with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC"), including its annual report on Form 10-K, quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, current reports on Form 8-K, proxy statements, and amendments to those reports filed or furnished pursuant to Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Exchange Act. The Company's filings are available for viewing and/or copying at the SEC's Public Reference Room located at 450 Fifth Street, NW., Washington, DC 20549. Information regarding the operation of the Public Reference Room can be obtained by calling 1-800-SEC-0330. The Company's reports are also available by visiting the SEC's internet website (http://www.sec.gov) and accessing its EDGAR database to view or print copies of the electronic versions of the Company's reports. Additionally, the Company's reports can be obtained, free of charge, by visiting its internet website (http://www.oldrepublic.com), selecting Investors then SEC Filings to view or print copies of the electronic versions of the Company's reports. The contents of the Company's internet website are not intended to be, nor should they be considered incorporated by reference in any of the reports the Company files with the SEC.
Item 1A - Risk Factors
Risk factors are uncertainties and events over which the Company has limited or no control, and which can have a materially adverse effect on its business, results of operations or financial condition. The Company and its business segments are subject to a variety of risk factors and, within individual segments, each type of insurance coverage may be exposed to varying risk factors. The following sections set forth management's evaluation of the most prevalent material risk factors for the Company as a whole and for each business segment. There may be risks which management does not presently consider to be material that may later prove to be material risk factors as well.
Dividend Dependence and Liquidity
The Company is an insurance holding company with no operations of its own. Substantially all of its assets consist of the business conducted by its insurance subsidiaries. It relies upon dividends from such subsidiaries in order to pay the interest and principal on its debt obligations, dividends to its shareholders, and corporate expenses. The extent to which the insurance subsidiaries are able to declare and pay dividends is subject to regulations under the laws of their states or foreign jurisdictions of domicile. The regulations limit dividends based on the amount of statutory adjusted unassigned surplus or statutory earnings, and require the insurance subsidiaries to maintain minimum amounts of capital, surplus and reserves. Dividends in excess of the ordinary limitations can only be declared and paid with prior regulatory approval, of which there can be no assurance. The inability of the insurance subsidiaries to pay dividends in an amount sufficient to meet the Company's debt service and cash dividends on stock, as well as other cash requirements could result in liquidity issues.
Capitalization
Apart from dividends and interest on intercompany financing arrangements from its subsidiaries, the Company has access to various capital and liquidity resources including holding company investments and the debt and equity capital markets. At December 31, 2013, the Company's consolidated debt to equity ratio was 15.1%. Management believes that this level of financial leverage is sufficiently conservative that the Company would have additional borrowing capacity to meet some possible future capital or liquidity needs. The availability of all such capital sources cannot, however, be assured and its cost could be significant at the time capital is raised.
Convertible Senior Notes
Old Republic's 3.75% Convertible Senior Notes ("the Notes") contain provisions defining certain events of default, among them a court ordered proceeding due to the insolvency of a Significant Subsidiary. The Notes define Significant Subsidiary in accordance with paragraph (w) of Rule 1-02 of the SEC's Regulation S-X. The Company's flagship mortgage guaranty insurance carrier, Republic Mortgage Insurance Company, ("RMIC") qualifies as a Significant Subsidiary for purposes of the Notes. If RMIC were to become statutorily impaired, its insolvency could trigger a receivership proceeding which, in turn could ultimately result in an event of default. If this were to occur, the outstanding principal of the Notes could become immediately due and payable. Management believes the Final Order by the North Carolina Department of Insurance to RMIC has precluded such an event of default from occurring in the foreseeable future. Moreover, RMIC is expected to be increasingly less significant as its run-off book extinguishes itself. While Old Republic believes that it will have access to the capital markets to recapitalize RMICC's subsidiaries or otherwise mitigate an event of default under the Notes, there is no assurance that it would be able to do so under stressful capital market conditions.
|
|
Risk Factors Common to the Company and its Insurance Subsidiaries |
Investment Risks
The Company’s investment portfolio consists primarily of highly rated debt obligations. Its investments are subject to market-wide risks and fluctuations, as well as to risks inherent in particular securities. Changing and unprecedented market conditions could materially impact the future valuation of securities in its investment portfolio, which may cause the Company to impair, in the future, some portion of those securities. Volatility or illiquidity in the markets in which the Company holds positions may cause certain other-than-temporary impairments within its portfolio, which could have a significant adverse effect on the Company’s liquidity, financial condition and operating results.
Income from the Company’s investment portfolio is one of its primary sources of cash flow to support the Company’s operations and claim payments. If the Company improperly structures its investments to meet those future liabilities or has unexpected losses, including losses resulting from the forced liquidation of investments before their maturity the Company may be unable to meet those obligations. The Company’s investments and investment policies are subject to state insurance laws, which results in its portfolio being predominantly limited to highly rated fixed income securities. Interest rates on its fixed income securities are near historical lows. If interest rates rise above the rates on the Company’s fixed income securities, the market value of the Company’s investment portfolio would decrease. Any significant decrease in the value of the Company’s investment portfolio would adversely impact its financial condition.
In addition, compared to historical averages, interest rates and investment yields on highly rated investments have generally declined, which has the effect of limiting the investment income the Company can generate. The Company
depends on its investments as a source of revenue, and a prolonged period of low investment yields would have an adverse impact on its revenues and could potentially adversely affect its operating results.
The Company may be forced to change its investments or investment policies depending upon regulatory, economic and market conditions, and its existing or anticipated financial condition and operating requirements, including the tax position, of its business. The Company’s investment objectives may not be achieved. Although the Company’s portfolio consists mostly of highly-rated investments and complies with applicable regulatory requirements, the success of its investment activity is affected by general economic conditions, which may adversely affect the markets for credit and interest-rate-sensitive securities, including the extent and timing of investor participation in these markets, the level and volatility of interest rates and, consequently, the value of fixed-income securities.
Excessive Losses and Loss Expenses
Although the Company's business segments encompass different types of insurance, the greatest risk factor common to all insurance coverages is excessive losses due to unanticipated claims frequency, severity or a combination of both. Many of the factors affecting the frequency and severity of claims depend upon the type of insurance coverage, but others are shared in common. Severity and frequency can be affected by changes in national economic conditions, unexpectedly adverse outcomes in claims litigation, often as a result of unanticipated jury verdicts, changes in court made law, adverse court interpretations of insurance policy provisions resulting in increased liability or new judicial theories of liability, together with unexpectedly high costs of defending claims.
Inadequate Reserves
Reserves are the amounts that an insurance company sets aside for its anticipated policy liabilities. Claim reserves are an estimate of liability for unpaid claims and claims defense and adjustment expenses, and cover both reported as well as IBNR claims. It is not possible to calculate precisely what these liabilities will amount to in advance and, therefore, the reserves represent a best estimate at any point in time. Such estimates are based upon known historical loss data, certain assumptions and expectations of future trends in claim frequency and severity, interest rates and other economic considerations. The latter are affected by a variety of factors over which insurers have little or no control and which can be quite volatile.
Reserve estimates are periodically reviewed in light of known developments and, where necessary, they are adjusted and refined as circumstances may warrant. Nevertheless, the reserve setting process is inherently uncertain. If for any of these reasons reserve estimates prove to be inadequate, the Company's subsidiaries can be forced to increase their reported liabilities; such an occurrence could result in a materially adverse impact on their results of operations and financial condition.
Inadequate Pricing
Premium rates are generally determined on the basis of historical data for claim frequency and severity as well as related production and other expense patterns. In the event ultimate claims and expenses exceed historically projected levels, premium rates are likely to prove insufficient. Premium rate inadequacy may not become evident quickly, may require time to correct, and, much like excessive losses can affect adversely the Company's business, operating results and financial condition.
Liquidity Risk
As indicated above, the Company manages its fixed-maturity investments with a view toward matching the maturities of those investments with the anticipated liquidity needs of its subsidiaries for the payment of claims and expenses. If a subsidiary suddenly experienced greater-than-anticipated liquidity needs for any reason, it could require an injection of funds that might not necessarily be available to meet its obligations at a point in time. Alternatively, invested securities may need to be sold at a loss and thus impact adversely both financial condition and operating results.
Regulatory Environment
The Company's insurance businesses are subject to extensive governmental regulation under state laws in the U.S. and the laws of each of the few other jurisdictions outside the U.S. in which they operate. These regulations relate to such matters as licensing requirements, types of insurance products that may be sold, premium rates, marketing practices, capital and surplus requirements, investment limitations, underwriting limitations, dividend payment limitations, transactions with affiliates, accounting practices, taxation and other matters. While most of the regulation is at the state level in the U.S., the federal government has increasingly expressed an interest in regulating the insurance business and has injected itself through the Graham-Leach-Bliley Act, the Patriot Act, the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2009. Moreover, changes in the Internal Revenue Code and other regulations bear directly on the costs of conducting an insurance business through increased compliance expenses.
Apart from the rising costs of compliance, as existing regulations evolve through administrative and court interpretations, and as new regulations are adopted, there is no basis for predicting the impact that changes could have on the Company's businesses in the future. The impact could have a material adverse effect on the manner in which the company's subsidiaries do business, and or their ability to compete, to continue offering their existing products, or to pursue acquisitions and growth opportunities.
Competition
Each of the Company's lines of continuing insurance business is highly competitive and is likely to remain so for the foreseeable future. Moreover, existing competitors and the capital markets have from time to time brought an influx of capital and newly-organized entrants into the industry, and changes in laws have enabled financial institutions, like banks and savings and loans, to sell insurance products. Increases in competition threaten to reduce demand for the Company's insurance products, reduce its market share and growth prospects, and potentially reduce its profitability.
Exposure to Independent Rating Downgrades
The competitive positions of insurance companies in general have come to depend increasingly on independent ratings of their financial strength and claims-paying ability. The rating agencies base their ratings on criteria they establish regarding an insurer's financial strength, operating performance, strategic position and ability to meet its obligations to policyholders. A significant downgrade in the ratings of any of the Company's major policy-issuing subsidiaries could have a materially adverse effect on their ability to compete for new business and retain existing business and, as a result, their operating results and financial condition.
Financial Institutions Risk
The Company's subsidiaries have significant business relationships with financial institutions, particularly national banks. The subsidiaries are the beneficiaries of a considerable amount of security in the form of letters of credit which they hold as collateral securing the obligations of insureds and certain reinsurers. Some of the banks themselves have subsidiaries that reinsure the Company's business. Other banks are depositories holding large sums of money in escrow accounts established by the Company's title subsidiaries. There is thus a risk of concentrated financial exposures in one or more such banking institutions. If any of these institutions fail or are unable to honor their credit obligations, or if escrowed funds become lost or tied up due to the failure of a bank, the result could have a materially adverse effect on the Company's business, results of operations and financial condition.
Risk Management
The Company has established processes and procedures designed to identify, measure, analyze, monitor and report the types of risk the Company and its subsidiaries are subject to, including operational risk, market risk, credit risk, liquidity risk, investment risk, interest rate risk, legal risk and reputational risk, among others. There are inherent limitations in such processes and procedures, and as a result, there is always the possibility that the Company has not adequately identified or anticipated risks. Such inadequacies could lead to future unexpected losses or expenses.
Legal Risks
The Company and certain of its subsidiaries are from time to time named defendants or otherwise involved in various legal proceedings, including class actions and other litigation or arbitration proceedings with third parties, as well as proceedings by regulatory agencies. Any of these actions could result in judgments, settlements, fines or penalties which could materially adversely affect the Company's or its subsidiaries' business, financial condition or results of operations.
Acquisition Integration Risk
The Company has from time to time grown its business by acquisition and is likely to consider acquisitions in the future. There can never be any assurance that such acquisitions will have positive accretive results. Integration of an acquired business can be costly and complex. The integration of acquisitions already completed, as well as any that may be completed in the future could result in significant unanticipated costs or losses of one sort or another.
Attracting and Retaining Qualified Employees
The Company's and its subsidiaries' employees at all levels are among their most important assets. Should the Company and its subsidiaries for any reason be unable to attract and retain qualified employees, their performance could be materially adversely affected.
In addition to the foregoing, the following are risk factors that are particular to each of the Company's three major business segments.
Catastrophic Losses
While the Company limits the property exposures it assumes, the casualty or liability insurance it underwrites creates an exposure to claims arising out of catastrophes. The two principal catastrophe exposures are earthquakes and acts of terrorism in areas where there are large concentrations of employees of an insured employer or other individuals who could potentially be injured and assert claims against an insured under workers' compensation policies. Collateral damage to property or persons from acts of terrorism and other calamities could also expose general liability policies.
Following the September 11, 2001 terrorist attack, the reinsurance industry eliminated coverage from substantially all reinsurance contracts for claims arising from acts of terrorism. As discussed elsewhere in this report, the U.S. Congress subsequently passed TRIA, TRIREA, and TRIPRA legislation that required primary insurers to offer coverage for certified acts of terrorism under most commercial property and casualty insurance policies. Although these programs established a temporary federal reinsurance program through December 31, 2014, primary insurers like the Company's general insurance subsidiaries retain significant exposure for terrorist act-related losses.
Long-Tailed Losses
Coverage for general liability is considered long-tailed coverage. Written in most cases on an "occurrence" basis, it often takes longer for covered claims to be reported and become known, adjusted and settled than it does for property claims, for example, which are generally considered short-tailed. The extremely long-tailed aspect of such claims as pollution, asbestos, silicosis, manganism (welding rod fume exposure), black lung, lead paint and other toxic tort claims, coupled with uncertain and sometimes variable judicial rulings on coverage and policy allocation issues and the possibility of legislative actions, makes reserving for these exposures highly uncertain. While the Company believes that it has reasonably estimated its liabilities for such exposures to date, and that its exposures are relatively modest, there is a risk of materially adverse developments in both known and as-yet-unknown claims.
Workers' Compensation Coverage
Workers' compensation coverage is the largest line of insurance written within the Company. The frequency and severity of claims, and the adequacy of reserves for workers' compensation claims and expenses can all be significantly influenced by such risk factors as future wage inflation in states that index benefits, the speed with which injured employees are able to return to work in some capacity, the cost and rate of inflation in medical treatments, the types of medical procedures and treatments, the cost of prescription medications, the frequency with which closed claims reopen for additional or related medical issues, the mortality of injured workers with lifetime benefits and medical treatments, the use of health insurance to cover some of the expenses, the assumption of some of the expenses by states' second injury funds, the use of cost containment practices like preferred provider networks, and the opportunities to recover against third parties through subrogation. Adverse developments in any of these factors, if significant, could have a materially adverse effect on the Company's operating results and financial condition.
Reinsurance
Reinsurance is a contractual arrangement whereby one insurer (the reinsurer) assumes some or all of the risk exposure written by another insurer (the reinsured). The Company depends on reinsurance to manage its risks both in terms of the amount of coverage it is able to write, the amount it is able to retain for its own account, and the price at which it is able to write it. The availability of reinsurance and its price, however, are determined in the reinsurance market by conditions beyond the Company's control.
Reinsurance does not relieve the reinsured company of its primary liability to its insureds in the event of a loss. It merely reimburses the reinsured company. The ability and willingness of reinsurers to honor their counterparty obligations to the Company represent credit risks. Old Republic has no practical basis for evaluating the risks assumed by a reinsurer from sources other than its own. Those risks could result in a significant deterioration of the reinsurer's ability to honor its obligations to the Company, thereby exacerbating credit risk exposure.
Old Republic addresses these risks by limiting its reinsurance placements to those reinsurers it considers the best credit risks. In recent years, however, there has been an ever decreasing number of reinsurers so considered. There can be no assurance that the Company will be able to find the desired or even adequate amounts of reinsurance at favorable rates from acceptable reinsurers in the future. If unable to do so, the Company would be forced to reduce the volume of business it writes or retain increased amounts of liability exposure. Because of the declining number of acceptable reinsurers, there is a risk that too much reinsurance risk may become concentrated in too few reinsurers. These concentrations of risk could adversely affect the Company's business, results of operations, and financial condition.
Insureds as Credit Risks
A significant amount of Old Republic's liability and workers' compensation business, particularly for large commercial insureds, is written on the basis of risk sharing underwriting methods utilizing large deductibles, captive insurance risk retentions, or other arrangements whereby the insureds effectively retain and fund varying and at times significant amounts of their losses. Their financial strength and ability to pay are carefully evaluated as part of the underwriting process and monitored periodically thereafter, and their retained exposures are estimated and collateralized based on pertinent credit analysis and evaluation. Because the Company is primarily liable for losses incurred under its policies, the possible failure or inability of insureds to honor their retained liability represents a credit risk. Any subsequently developing shortage in the amount of collateral held would also be a risk, as would the failure or inability of a bank to honor a letter of credit issued as collateral. These risk factors could have a materially adverse impact on the Company's results of operations and financial condition.
Guaranty Funds and Residual Markets
In nearly all states, licensed property and casualty insurers are required to participate in guaranty funds through assessments covering a portion of insurance claims against impaired or insolvent property and casualty insurers. Any increase in the number or size of impaired companies would likely result in an increase in the Company's share of such assessments.
Many states have established second injury funds that compensate injured employees for aggravation of prior injuries or conditions. These second injury funds are funded by assessments or premium surcharges.
Residual market or pooling arrangements exist in many states to provide various types of insurance coverage to those that are otherwise unable to find private insurers willing to insure them. All licensed property and casualty insurers writing such coverage voluntarily are required to participate in these residual market or pooling mechanisms.
A material increase in any of these assessments or charges could adversely affect the Company's results of operations and financial condition.
Prior Approval of Rates
Most of the lines of insurance underwritten by the Company are subject to prior regulatory approval of premium rates in a majority of the states. The process of securing regulatory approval can be time consuming and can impair the Company's ability to effect necessary rate increases in an expeditious manner. Furthermore, there is a risk that the regulators will not approve a requested increase, particularly in regard to workers' compensation insurance with respect to which rate increases often confront strong opposition from local business, organized labor, and political interests.
Housing and Mortgage Lending Markets
The tightening and collapse of credit markets, the collapse of the housing market, the general decline in the value of real property, the rise in unemployment, and the uncertainty and negative trends in general economic conditions that began in 2006 created a difficult operating environment for the Company's title insurance subsidiaries. While these conditions have since improved to varying degrees, any return of these recessionary conditions could have a materially adverse effect on these subsidiaries' financial condition and results of operation over the near and longer terms. The impact of these conditions was somewhat mitigated both by lower mortgage interest rates, which lead to an increase in mortgage refinancings and by a rise in the number of agents producing business for the Companies' title insurance subsidiaries. The more recent increases in mortgage interest rates, however, have resulted in a decrease in refinancing activity which, in turn, results in a decrease in title insurance business.
Competition
Business comes to title insurers primarily by referral from real estate agents, lenders, developers and other settlement providers. The sources of business lead to a great deal of competition among title insurers. Although the top four title insurance companies during 2013 accounted for about 86% of industry-wide premium volume, there are numerous smaller companies representing the remainder at the regional and local levels. The smaller companies are an ever-present competitive risk in the regional and local markets where their business connections can give them a competitive edge. Moreover, there is always competition among the major companies for key employees, especially those engaged in business production. Among the four largest national title insurers, the Company’s title insurance subsidiaries rely upon independent agencies to produce most of their business, whereas the other title insurers rely more on owned agencies. Independent agencies can direct business to any title insurer, whereas owned agencies will only direct business to their parent or affiliated title insurers. The Company’s title subsidiaries are therefore more vulnerable to a loss of business than are the other largest title companies.
Regulation and Litigation
Regulation is also a risk factor for title insurers. The title insurance industry has recently been, and continues to be, under regulatory scrutiny in a number of states with respect to pricing practices, and alleged RESPA violations and unlawful rebating practices. The regulatory investigations could lead to industry-wide reductions in premium rates and escrow fees, the inability to get rate increases when necessary, as well as to changes that could adversely affect the Company's ability to compete for or retain business or raise the costs of additional regulatory compliance.
From time to time the Company's title insurance subsidiaries are named as defendants or are otherwise involved in various legal proceedings, including class actions and other litigation,disputes with third parties, and proceedings or civil investigations brought by regulatory agencies. Any resulting adverse judgments, settlements, fines, penalties or other rulings could have, directly or indirectly, a material adverse effect on the Company's financial condition, results of operations or business reputation. Litigation or other disputes between the Company’s mortgage insurance subsidiaries and insured mortgage lenders could also have an adverse effect on the Company’s title insurance subsidiaries if, as a result, the lenders threatened to or discontinued accepting title insurance or title related services from the Company’s title insurers.
Other Risks
Inadequate title searches are among the risk factors faced by the entire industry. If a title search is conducted thoroughly and accurately, there should theoretically never be a claim. When the search is less than thorough or complete, title defects can go undetected and claims result.
To a lesser extent, fraud is also a risk factor for all title companies -- sometimes in the form of an agent's or an employee's defalcation of escrowed funds, sometimes in the form of fraudulently issued title insurance policies.
In late March of 2012, the Company combined its General Insurance Group's Consumer Credit Indemnity (CCI) division with its Mortgage Guaranty (MI) line within a business denoted as the RFIG run-off segment. The two operations, which offer similar insurance coverages, have been in run-off operating mode since 2008 (CCI) and August 2011 (MI), and are inactive from new business production standpoints.The combination affects the manner in which segmented information is now presented. The operating results of the combined coverages are therefore shown as a single run-off book of business within ORI's consolidated operations.
Mortgage Guaranty Business in Run-off; Possible Material Losses, Statutory Capital Impairment, and Receivership
The material increases in mortgage guaranty insurance claims and loss payments that began in 2007 gradually depleted RMIC's statutory capital base and forced it to discontinue writing new business. The insurance laws of 16 jurisdictions, including RMIC and RMICNC’s domiciliary state of North Carolina, require a mortgage insurer to maintain a minimum amount of statutory capital relative to risk in force (or a similar measure) in order to continue to write new business. The formulations currently allow for a maximum risk-to-capital ratio of 25 to 1, or alternatively stated, a “minimum policyholder position” (“MPP”) of one-twenty-fifth of the total risk in force. The failure to maintain the prescribed minimum capital level in a particular state generally requires a mortgage insurer to immediately stop writing new business until it reestablishes the required level of capital or receives a waiver of the requirement from a state's insurance regulatory authority. RMIC breached the minimum capital requirement during the third quarter of 2010. RMIC had previously requested and, subsequently received waivers or forbearance of the minimum policyholder position requirements from the regulatory authorities in substantially all affected states. Following several brief extensions, the waiver from its domiciliary state of North Carolina expired on August 31, 2011, and RMIC and its sister company, RMICNC, discontinued writing new business in all states and limited themselves to servicing the run-off of their existing business.
During 2012 the North Carolina Department of Insurance ("NCDOI") issued several orders the ultimate effects of which were:
• To place RMIC and RMICNC under NCDOI supervision which, among other considerations, requires written approval of the NCDOI Commissioner or its appointed representative for supervision of certain activities and transactions, including the incurrence of any debt or other liabilities, lending of its funds, and termination or entry into new contracts of insurance or reinsurance;
• To approve a Corrective Plan submitted by RMIC pursuant to which all settled claims are to be paid in cash for 60% of the settled amount, with the remaining 40% retained in claim reserves as a Deferred Payment Obligation ("DPO") until a future payment of all or a portion of this 40% is approved by the NCDOI; and
• To execute the DPO-based run-off plan under Old Republic's ownership and NCDOI supervision of RMIC and RMICNC to effect a most economically sound realization of ultimate benefits to policyholders during a sufficiently long future period.
RMIC's evaluation of the potential long-term performance of the run-off book of business is based on various modeling techniques. Of necessity the resulting models take into account actual premium and paid claim experience of prior periods, together with a large number of assumptions and judgments about future outcomes that are highly sensitive to a wide range of estimates. Many of these estimates and underlying assumptions relate to matters over which the Company has no control, including: 1) The conflicted interests, as well as the varying mortgage servicing and foreclosure practices of a large number of insured lending institutions; 2) General economic and industry-specific trends and events; and 3) The evolving or future social and economic policies of the U.S. Government vis-à-vis such critical sectors as the banking, mortgage lending, and housing industries, as well as its policies for resolving the insolvencies and assigning a possible future role to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
As long as the run-off under NCDOI supervision remains in place, however, the statutory DPO accounting treatment should mitigate the adverse effect of operating losses on the statutory capital balance. In these circumstances, RMIC's and RMICNC's statutory solvency would be retained and the risk of a regulatory receivership action would be averted.
There can be no assurance that RMIC and RMICNC will emerge from the run-off as solvent companies or that, even if they do, they will be re-approved to write mortgage guaranty insurance on loans purchased by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac. There can be no assurance that the conditions or the duration of the run-off of their business will remain unchanged or that they will remain under supervision rather than receivership.
On October 24, 2013 the Company announced that its RMIC Companies, Inc. ("RMICC") mortgage guaranty subsidiary expects to raise new funds in the capital markets. Substantially all of this capital would be added to the equity resources of RMICC's three mortgage insurance subsidiaries. The addition of capital should permit these carriers to at once support existing policies in-force, pay off heretofore deferred claim payment obligations with agreed-upon interest, exit their current state of supervision under North Carolina insurance regulations, and resume the underwriting of new business beginning in 2014. While the interest charge on outstanding deferred payment obligations has not been agreed upon, it could be material to the Company's results of operations when it is recorded following approval of the NCDOI and the successful completion of the capital raise. In connection with such a transaction, it is expected that Old Republic would contribute up to $50.0 million of this new capital. Upon the successful closing of this transaction, RMICC would
be deconsolidated and Old Republic's continuing interest in RMICC and the mortgage guaranty business would consist of a non-controlling equity interest in RMICC. Completion of the transaction cannot be assured and is subject to market conditions and other factors. Moreover, the addition of all new funds to RMICC and its subsidiaries will be contingent on the receipt of certain regulatory approvals. The most essential of these will be required from the North Carolina Department of Insurance, and from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac with any necessary assent of their FHFA Conservator.
At the state insurance regulatory level, the recapitalization plan represents a proposed change in control of the mortgage insurance subsidiaries under the insurance laws of their respective states of domicile -- North Carolina, Florida and Vermont. As such, it will require the prior approval of the subsidiaries' insurance regulatory authorities in those states. Obtaining their approval will require filing detailed statements disclosing, among other matters, the identity and backgrounds of the proposed new shareholders, the nature and source of consideration for their stock purchases, future plans and financial projections for the insurance subsidiaries, and may also require a formal hearing in each of the states open to the subsidiaries' insureds and other interested parties. The NCDOI will need to review RMIC's and RMICNC's recapitalization, release them from supervision and reinstate their authority to write new business. The other states' insurance regulatory authorities that suspended RMIC's and RMICNC's licenses to write new business will likewise have to approve reinstatement of their authority. There can be no assurance that all of the required state insurance regulatory approvals will be obtained promptly or at all.
The GSEs have advised the Company that RMIC and RMICNC will need to file the same applications as new entrants and will be subject to review with respect to their corporate structure, executive management teams, their financial statements, capital and future access to capital, their risk management culture, their policy forms, rescission practices and their operating procedures, among other matters. In the case of RMIC and RMICNC, the GSEs have advised that they will impose additional conditions for applicants seeking to re-establish their eligibility. Those conditions will include paying off all of the DPO’s with interest, settling all future valid claims entirely in cash, and maintaining a risk-to-capital ratio of no more than 15:1 on the combined legacy business and newly written business. The GSEs and the FHFA have also advised that they are in the process of revising their eligibility standards for all mortgage insurers. There can be no assurance beforehand that the capital raised and contributed to RMIC and RMICNC will be sufficient to meet the necessary financial strength eligibility requirements of the GSEs, or how long afterwards it might take to receive the necessary approvals.
RMICC’s modeled forecasts of future losses could prove to be insufficient before RMIC and RMICNC receive the necessary approvals, resulting in greater DPOs than anticipated.The incurred and paid loss forecasts are dependent on factors that make prediction of their amounts difficult and subject to significant volatility. It is also possible that some of the states or the GSEs could increase their capital requirements before their approvals are received.
Premium Income and Long-Term Claim Exposures
Mortgage insurers such as the Company issue long duration, guaranteed renewable policies covering multi-year periods during which exposure to loss exists. Loss exposures typically manifest themselves as recurring losses usually concentrated between the second and fifth year following issuance of any one year's new policies. Additionally, the policies cover catastrophic aggregations of claims such as those that have been occurring during the current recession engendered by substantial market dislocations in the housing and mortgage lending industries.
The Company's mortgage guaranty premiums stem principally from monthly installment policies. Substantially all such premiums are generally written and earned in the month coverage is effective. Recognition of claim costs, however, occurs only after an insured mortgage loan has missed two or more consecutive monthly payments. Accordingly, GAAP revenue recognition is not appropriately matched to the risk exposure and the consequent recognition of both normal and, most significantly, future catastrophic loss occurrences. As a result, mortgage guaranty GAAP earnings for any individual year or series of years may be materially adversely affected, particularly by cyclical catastrophic loss events such as the mortgage insurance industry has experienced since mid-year 2007. Reported GAAP earnings and financial condition form, in part, the basis for significant judgments and strategic evaluations made by management, analysts, investors, and other users of the financial statements issued by mortgage guaranty companies. The risk exists that such judgments and evaluations are at least partially based on GAAP financial information that does not match revenues and expenses and is not reflective of the long-term normal and catastrophic risk exposures assumed by mortgage guaranty insurers at any point in time. This risk is inherent in the models on which the run-off of RMIC's and RMICNC's business is based.
Inadequate Loss Reserves
The Company establishes reserves for losses and loss adjustment expenses for its mortgage and consumer credit indemnity insurance coverages based upon loans reported to be in default, as well as estimates of those in default but not yet reported. Of necessity, the reserves are best estimates by management and take into consideration its judgments and assumptions regarding the housing and mortgage markets, unemployment rates and economic trends in general. During the ongoing sustained economic downturn, loss reserve estimates become subject to even greater uncertainty and volatility. The rate and severity of actual losses could prove to be greater than expected and require the Company to effect substantial increases in its loss reserves. Depending upon the magnitude, such increases could have a materially adverse impact on the Company's mortgage insurance and consumer credit indemnity insurance run-off business and the Company's consolidated results of operations and financial condition. There can be no assurance that the actual losses for the mortgage insurance and consumer credit indemnity coverages, will not be materially greater than previously established loss reserves.
Fewer Coverage Rescissions
The Company may rescind its mortgage guaranty and consumer credit indemnity coverages whenever it finds evidence that a loan did not qualify for insurance coverage in the first instance, or that a material misrepresentation had been made in the loan application by the borrower, the lender, and/or its agent. During the past several years, the rate of rescissions rose dramatically. As a result, rescissions reduced materially the percentage of approved claims, and loss reserving estimates have reflected assumptions about the levels of rescission activity.
A few policyholders who have experienced high rates of coverage rescission have instituted litigation or arbitration proceedings challenging the Company's position on rescissions. Whether the current rescission rates continue or decrease, it is possible that further litigation or arbitral challenges to the Company's rescissions of coverage could arise. If any of the challenges are successful, they could have a materially adverse effect on the Company's mortgage guaranty and/or consumer credit indemnity run-off insurance business and consolidated operating results and financial position. Even if such challenges should prove unsuccessful, the costs of addressing them through litigation could be substantial.
Item 1B - Unresolved Staff Comments
None
Item 2 - Properties
The principal executive offices of the Company are located in the Old Republic Building in Chicago, Illinois. This Company-owned building contains 151,000 square feet of floor space of which approximately 52% is occupied by Old Republic, and the remainder is leased to others. In addition to its Chicago building, the Company owns two other major office buildings. A subsidiary of the Title Insurance Group partially occupies its owned headquarters building in Minneapolis, Minnesota. This building contains 110,000 square feet of floor space of which approximately 80% is occupied by the Old Republic National Title Insurance Company, and the remainder is leased to others. A subsidiary of the General Insurance Group, PMA, owns its building in Blue Bell, Pennsylvania. This building contains 110,000 square feet of floor space and is entirely owner-occupied. Eight smaller buildings are owned by Old Republic and its subsidiaries in various parts of the nation and are primarily used for its business. The carrying value of all owned buildings and related land at December 31, 2013 was $60.8 million.
Certain other operations of the Company and its subsidiaries are directed from leased premises. See Note 4(b) of the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements for a summary of all material lease obligations.
Item 3 - Legal Proceedings
Legal proceedings against the Company and its subsidiaries routinely arise in the normal course of business and usually pertain to claim matters related to insurance policies and contracts issued by its insurance subsidiaries. Other, non-routine legal proceedings which may prove to be material to the Company or a subsidiary are discussed below.
A purported class action lawsuit is pending against the Company's principal title insurance subsidiary, Old Republic National Title Insurance Company ("ORNTIC"), in a federal district court in Pennsylvania (Markocki et al. v. ORNTIC, U.S. District Court, Eastern District, Pennsylvania, filed June 8, 2006). The plaintiffs allege that ORNTIC failed to give consumers reissue and/or refinance credits on the premiums charged for title insurance covering mortgage refinancing transactions, as required by filed rate schedules. The suit also alleges violations of the federal Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act ("RESPA"). A class has been certified in the suit. ORNTIC is challenging the certification based on more recent case precedents.
On December 19, 2008, Old Republic Insurance Company and Republic Insured Credit Services, Inc., ("Old Republic") filed suit against Countrywide Bank FSB, Countrywide Home Loans, Inc. ("Countrywide") and Bank of New York Mellon, BNY Mellon Trust of Delaware ("BNYM") in the Circuit Court, Cook County, Illinois (Old Republic Insurance Company, et al. v. Countrywide Bank FSB, et al.) seeking rescission of various credit indemnity policies issued to insure home equity loans and home equity lines of credit which Countrywide had securitized or held for its own account, a declaratory judgment and money damages based upon material misrepresentations either by Countrywide as to the credit characteristics of the loans or by the borrowers in their loan applications. Countrywide filed a counterclaim alleging a breach of contract, bad faith and seeking a declaratory judgment challenging the factual and procedural bases that Old Republic had relied upon to deny or rescind coverage for individual defaulted loans under those policies, as well as unspecified compensatory and punitive damages. The Court ruled that Countrywide does not have standing to counterclaim with respect to the policies insuring the securitized loans because those policies were issued to BNYM. In response, Countrywide and BNYM jointly filed a motion asking the Court to allow an amended counterclaim in which BNYM would raise substantially similar allegations as those raised by Countrywide and make substantially similar requests but with respect to the policies issued to BNYM. The Court dismissed their motion.
On November 3, 2010, Bank of America, N.A. ("B of A") filed suit against Old Republic Insurance Company ("ORIC") in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of North Carolina (Bank of America, N.A. v. Old Republic Insurance Company) alleging breach of contract, breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing and bad faith with respect to ORIC's handling of certain claims under a policy of credit indemnity insurance issued to B of A. The policy is not related to those issued to Countrywide, which are the subject of the above-noted separate litigation. The B of A suit seeks a declaratory judgment with respect to the interpretation of certain policy terms, B of A's compliance with certain terms and
conditions of the policy, and the propriety of certain positions and procedures taken by ORIC in response to claims filed by B of A. The suit also seeks unspecified money damages, pre and post judgment interest and punitive damages. On January 23, 2012, ORIC filed a counterclaim seeking damages based on B of A's alleged interference with ORIC's subrogation rights.
On December 31, 2009, two of the Company's mortgage insurance subsidiaries, Republic Mortgage Insurance Company and Republic Mortgage Insurance Company of North Carolina (together "RMIC") filed a Complaint for Declaratory Judgment in the Supreme Court of the State of New York, County of New York, against Countrywide Financial Corporation, Countrywide Home Loans, Inc., The Bank of New York Mellon Trust Company, N.A., BAC Home Loans Servicing, LP, and Bank of America N.A. as successor in interest to Countrywide Bank, N.A. (together "Countrywide")(Republic Mortgage Insurance Company, et al. v. Countrywide Financial Corporation, et al.). The suit relates to five mortgage insurance master policies (the "Policies") issued by RMIC to Countrywide or to the Bank of New York Mellon Trust Company as co-trustee for trusts containing securitized mortgage loans that were originated or purchased by Countrywide. RMIC has rescinded its mortgage insurance coverage on over 1,500 of the loans originally covered under the Policies based upon material misrepresentations of the borrowers in their loan applications or the negligence of Countrywide in its loan underwriting practices or procedures. Each of the coverage rescissions occurred after a borrower had defaulted and RMIC reviewed the claim and loan file submitted by Countrywide. The suit seeks the Court's review and interpretation of the Policies' incontestability provisions and its validation of RMIC's investigation procedures with respect to the claims and underlying loan files.
On January 29, 2010, in response to RMIC's suit, Countrywide served RMIC with a demand for arbitration under the arbitration clauses of the same Policies. The demand raises largely the same issues as those raised in RMIC's suit against Countrywide, but from Countrywide's perspective, as well as Countrywide's and RMIC's compliance with the terms, provisions and conditions of the Policies. The demand includes a prayer for punitive, compensatory and consequential damages. RMIC filed a motion to stay the arbitration, and Countrywide filed a motion to dismiss RMIC's lawsuit and to compel the arbitration. On July 26, 2010, the Court granted Countrywide's motion, ordering the matters be submitted to arbitration and dismissing the lawsuit. The arbitration is proceeding.
On December 30, 2011 and on January 4, 2013, purported class action suits alleging RESPA violations were filed in the Federal District Court, for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania targeting RMIC, other mortgage guaranty insurance companies, PNC Financial Services Group (as successor to National City Bank) and HSBC Bank USA, N.A., and their wholly-owned captive insurance subsidiaries. (White, Hightower, et al. v. PNC Financial Services Group (as successor to National City Bank) et al.), (Ba, Chip, et al. v. HSBC Bank USA, N.A., et al.). The lawsuits are two of twelve against various lenders, their captive reinsurers and the mortgage insurers, filed by the same law firms, all of which were substantially identical in alleging that the mortgage guaranty insurers had reinsurance arrangements with the defendant banks' captive insurance subsidiaries under which payments were made in violation of the anti-kickback and fee splitting prohibitions of Sections 8(a) and 8(b) of RESPA. Ten of the twelve suits have been dismissed. The remaining suits seek unspecified damages, costs, fees and the return of the allegedly improper payments. A class has not been certified in either suit and RMIC has filed motions to dismiss the cases.
On September 26, 2012 a purported national class action suit was filed against Old Republic Home Protection Company in the Superior Court of California for Riverside County. (Friedman v. Old Republic Home Protection Company, Inc.). The suit alleged that the Company operates in breach of its home warranty contracts, in breach of implied covenants of good faith and fair dealing, in violation of various provisions of the California Civil Code and Business and Professions Code and is guilty of false advertising. The stated class period was from November 24, 2004 through the present. The suit sought declaratory relief, injunctive relief, restitution, damages, costs and attorneys' fees in unspecified amounts. The firm representing the plaintiff had previously filed similar suits against the Company, which were unsuccessful. The Company succeeded in having the case removed to the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California on October 24, 2012, and on December 2, 2013 the Court granted the Company's motions to dismiss the Complaint. The plaintiff was allowed to prepare a third amended complaint on one remaining claim.
PNC Bank, N.A., in its own right and as successor-in-interest to National City Corporation, filed suit against RMIC on October 10, 2012 in the United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania disputing RMIC's denials and rescissions of its mortgage guaranty insurance coverage on an unspecified number of mortgage loans. It filed an amended complaint on January 30, 2013 identifying 248 disputed coverage denials or rescissions (PNC Bank, N.A. v. Republic Mortgage Insurance Company). The suit sought certain declaratory relief, actual money damages and unspecified compensatory, consequential and punitive damages. In late December, 2013 the suit was settled with RMIC's reinstatement of coverage on certain loans and PNC Bank's payment of the corresponding premiums due.
On May 16, 2013, Bank of America, N.A. ("B of A") filed a demand for arbitration with the American Arbitration Association against both Republic Mortgage Insurance Company and Republic Mortgage Insurance Company of North Carolina (together, "RMIC") under the arbitration provisions of the RMIC Master Policy of mortgage guaranty insurance issued to B of A. The demand relates to RMIC's denials of certain claims and rescissions of coverage as to other claims. B of A alleges RMIC's actions were in breach of contract, in breach of RMIC's duty of good faith and fair dealing and in bad faith. The allegations are substantially similar to those raised by B of A's affiliates, Countrywide Financial Corporation and Countrywide Home Loans, Inc. in their arbitration demand against RMIC. B of A is a plaintiff in that proceeding as well, in its capacity as successor in interest to Countrywide Bank, N.A. B of A's demand requests a declaratory judgment with respect to the interpretation of certain policy provisions, B of A's compliance with certain terms and conditions of the policy, and the propriety of certain coverage positions and claims administration procedures of RMIC. The demand also seeks unspecified money damages, punitive, compensatory and consequential damages, interest, attorneys' fees and costs.
Under GAAP, an estimated loss is accrued only if the loss is probable and reasonably estimable. The Company and its subsidiaries have defended and intend to continue defending vigorously against each of the aforementioned actions. The Company does not believe it probable that any of these actions will have a material adverse effect on its consolidated financial position, results of operations or cash flows, though there can be no assurance in those regards. The Company is unable to make a reasonable estimate or range of estimates of any potential liability under these lawsuits, the counterclaim and the arbitration, all of which seek unquantified damages, attorneys' fees and expenses. It is also unclear what effect, if any, the run-off of RMIC and depletion of its capital will have in the actions against it.
Item 4 - Mine Safety Disclosures
Not applicable.
PART II
Item 5 - Market for the Registrant's Common Equity, Related Security Holder Matters and Issuer Purchases of Equity Securities
The Company's common stock is traded on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol "ORI". The high and low sales prices as reported on the New York Stock Exchange and cash dividends declared for each quarterly period during the past two years were as follows:
|
| | | | | | | | | | | | |
| | Sales Price | | Cash |
| | High | | Low | | Dividends |
1st quarter | 2012 | $ | 11.21 |
| | $ | 8.86 |
| | $ | .1775 |
|
2nd quarter | 2012 | 10.88 |
| | 8.02 |
| | .1775 |
|
3rd quarter | 2012 | 9.81 |
| | 7.76 |
| | .1775 |
|
4th quarter | 2012 | $ | 11.05 |
| | $ | 9.20 |
| | $ | .1775 |
|
| | | | | | |
1st quarter | 2013 | $ | 12.77 |
| | $ | 10.74 |
| | $ | .1800 |
|
2nd quarter | 2013 | 14.49 |
| | 12.02 |
| | .1800 |
|
3rd quarter | 2013 | 15.40 |
| | 12.82 |
| | .1800 |
|
4th quarter | 2013 | $ | 17.45 |
| | $ | 14.40 |
| | $ | .1800 |
|
As of January 31, 2014, there were 2,292 registered holders of the Company's Common Stock. See Note 3(c) of the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements for a description of certain regulatory restrictions on the payment of dividends by Old Republic's insurance subsidiaries.
Comparative Five Year Performance Graphs for Common Stock
The following tables, prepared on the basis of market and related data furnished by Standard & Poor's Total Return Service, reflect total market return data for the most recent five calendar years ended December 31, 2013. For purposes of the presentation, the information is shown in terms of $100 invested at the close of trading on the last trading day preceding the first day of the fifth preceding year. The $100 investment is deemed to have been made either in Old Republic Common Stock, in the S&P 500 Index of common stocks, or in an aggregate of the common shares of the Peer Group of publicly held insurance businesses selected by Old Republic. The cumulative total return assumes reinvestment of cash dividends on a pretax basis. The information utilized to prepare the following tables has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but no representation is made that it is accurate or complete in all respects.
Total return data is shown in two tables. The table for Peer Group 1 consists of the following publicly held corporations selected by the Company for its 2008 to 2013 comparison: Ace Limited, American Financial Group, Inc., The Chubb Corporation, Cincinnati Financial Corporation, Fidelity National Financial, Inc., First American Financial Corporation, Markel Corporation, Stewart Information Services Corporation, Travelers Companies, Inc., and XL Group Plc.
The Peer Group 2 table is included for comparative purposes. It consists of the following publicly held corporations selected by the Company for its 2007 to 2012 comparison as included in its 2012 Annual Report on Form 10-K: Ace Limited, American Financial Group, Inc., The Chubb Corporation, Cincinnati Financial Corporation, First American Financial Corporation, Markel Corporation, MGIC Investment Corporation, Stewart Information Services Corporation, Travelers Companies, Inc., and XL Group Plc. Peer Group 2 is comprised of the same companies as in Peer Group 1 except that MGIC Investment Corporation was removed and Fidelity National Financial, Inc. was added to Peer Group 1 for all years presented.
The composition of the Peer Group companies has been approved by the Compensation Committee.
Comparison of Five Year Total Market Return
OLD REPUBLIC INTERNATIONAL CORPORATION vs. S&P 500 vs. Peer Group 1
(For the five years ended December 31, 2013)
|
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| Dec 08 | | Dec 09 | | Dec 10 | | Dec 11 | | Dec 12 | | Dec 13 |
ORI | $ | 100.00 |
| | $ | 89.74 |
| | $ | 128.40 |
| | $ | 93.34 |
| | $ | 115.59 |
| | $ | 196.90 |
|
S&P 500 | 100.00 |
| | 126.46 |
| | 145.51 |
| | 148.59 |
| | 172.37 |
| | 228.19 |
|
Peer Group 1 | 100.00 |
| | 110.20 |
| | 131.75 |
| | 146.18 |
| | 177.85 |
| | 234.79 |
|
Comparison of Five Year Total Market Return
OLD REPUBLIC INTERNATIONAL CORPORATION vs. S&P 500 vs. Peer Group 2
(For the five years ended December 31, 2013)
|
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| Dec 08 | | Dec 09 | | Dec 10 | | Dec 11 | | Dec 12 | | Dec 13 |
ORI | $ | 100.00 |
| | $ | 89.74 |
| | $ | 128.40 |
| | $ | 93.34 |
| | $ | 115.59 |
| | $ | 196.90 |
|
S&P 500 | 100.00 |
| | 126.46 |
| | 145.51 |
| | 148.59 |
| | 172.37 |
| | 228.19 |
|
Peer Group 2 | 100.00 |
| | 112.03 |
| | 135.03 |
| | 147.06 |
| | 176.53 |
| | 233.95 |
|
|
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
Item 6 - Selected Financial Data ($ in millions, except share data) |
| | | | | | |
December 31: | | 2013 | | 2012 | | 2011 | | 2010 | | 2009 |
FINANCIAL POSITION: | | | | | | | | | | |
| Cash and Invested Assets (a) | | $ | 11,109.1 |
| | $ | 10,800.6 |
| | $ | 10,685.2 |
| | $ | 10,490.7 |
| | $ | 9,879.0 |
|
| Other Assets | | 5,425.2 |
| | 5,426.2 |
| | 5,365.2 |
| | 5,391.9 |
| | |