Everest Group’s fourth quarter was marked by a negative market reaction, as the company’s revenue and non-GAAP profit missed Wall Street expectations. Management attributed the underperformance primarily to the impact of the commercial retail business divestiture and deliberate reductions in U.S. casualty lines. CEO James Williamson noted, “Gross written premiums were down year-over-year, driven primarily by the sale of the commercial retail business and deliberate underwriting actions in both businesses, particularly in U.S. casualty lines.” Elevated catastrophe losses and costs associated with adverse development cover also weighed on results, though net investment income provided some offset.
Is now the time to buy EG? Find out in our full research report (it’s free for active Edge members).
Everest Group (EG) Q4 CY2025 Highlights:
- Revenue: $4.42 billion vs analyst estimates of $4.50 billion (4.6% year-on-year decline, 1.6% miss)
- Adjusted EPS: $13.26 vs analyst expectations of $13.83 (4.1% miss)
- Adjusted Operating Income: $555 million (12.5% margin, 174% year-on-year growth)
- Market Capitalization: $13.45 billion
While we enjoy listening to the management's commentary, our favorite part of earnings calls are the analyst questions. Those are unscripted and can often highlight topics that management teams would rather avoid or topics where the answer is complicated. Here is what has caught our attention.
Our Top 5 Analyst Questions From Everest Group’s Q4 Earnings Call
- Charles Peters (Raymond James): Asked about the long-term expense ratio target for the Global Wholesale and Specialty segment. CFO Mark Kociancic replied that it should settle in the lower double-digit range as restructuring efforts are completed and the business scales.
- Taylor Scott (Barclays): Questioned Everest’s approach to reinsurance pricing amid market softening. CEO James Williamson explained the company is maintaining rate adequacy and selectively reducing capacity where returns are less attractive, emphasizing profitability over market share.
- Meyer Shields (KBW): Inquired about future use of retroactive reinsurance transactions to manage reserves. Williamson said future transactions would focus on optimizing capital for the runoff segment, with no immediate plans for additional adverse development covers.
- Joshua Shanker (Bank of America): Asked if the expected reduction in property premiums in Q1 signals a shift in risk appetite. Williamson noted the company is taking “chips off the table around the margins” but remains confident in the profitability of retained business.
- Elyse Greenspan (Wells Fargo): Requested clarification on specialty and wholesale segment performance metrics. Williamson distinguished between the specialty reinsurance book’s attritional combined ratio in the mid-80s and the Global Wholesale and Specialty insurance segment’s expected all-in combined ratio in the mid-90s.
Catalysts in Upcoming Quarters
Looking ahead, our team will monitor (1) the pace at which Everest’s expense ratios decline as retail insurance divestiture charges subside, (2) the company’s ability to sustain underwriting profitability in a softening property catastrophe market, and (3) further capital releases from runoff and restructuring that could fund additional share repurchases. Execution on segment resegmentation and the expansion of specialty lines will also be key signposts.
Everest Group currently trades at $330.35, in line with $333.42 just before the earnings. Is the company at an inflection point that warrants a buy or sell? The answer lies in our full research report (it’s free).
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