Reinsurance Group of America (RGA)

Underperform
We’re wary of Reinsurance Group of America. Its underwhelming returns on capital show it struggled to generate meaningful profits for shareholders. StockStory Analyst Team
Anthony Lee, Lead Equity Analyst
Kayode Omotosho, Equity Analyst

2. Summary

Underperform

Why We Think Reinsurance Group of America Will Underperform

Operating behind the scenes of the insurance industry since 1973, Reinsurance Group of America (NYSE:RGA) provides life and health reinsurance services to insurance companies, helping them manage risk and meet regulatory requirements.

  • Estimated book value per share decline of 13.7% for the next 12 months implies a challenging profitability environment
  • Book value per share stagnated over the last five years, limiting its ability to leverage its balance sheet to make additional investments
  • On the bright side, its revenue outlook for the upcoming 12 months is outstanding and shows it’s on track to gain market share
Reinsurance Group of America’s quality doesn’t meet our bar. There are more profitable opportunities elsewhere.
StockStory Analyst Team

Why There Are Better Opportunities Than Reinsurance Group of America

Reinsurance Group of America is trading at $189.31 per share, or 1x forward P/B. Yes, this valuation multiple is lower than that of other insurance peers, but we’ll remind you that you often get what you pay for.

It’s better to pay up for high-quality businesses with higher long-term earnings potential rather than to buy lower-quality stocks because they appear cheap. These challenged businesses often don’t re-rate, a phenomenon known as a “value trap”.

3. Reinsurance Group of America (RGA) Research Report: Q3 CY2025 Update

Global life reinsurance provider Reinsurance Group of America (NYSE:RGA) beat Wall Street’s revenue expectations in Q3 CY2025, with sales up 8.7% year on year to $6.20 billion. Its non-GAAP profit of $6.37 per share was 10.4% above analysts’ consensus estimates.

Reinsurance Group of America (RGA) Q3 CY2025 Highlights:

  • Net Premiums Earned: $4.28 billion vs analyst estimates of $4.66 billion (2.5% year-on-year decline, 8.1% miss)
  • Revenue: $6.20 billion vs analyst estimates of $6.06 billion (8.7% year-on-year growth, 2.4% beat)
  • Pre-tax Profit: $320 million (5.2% margin, 49.5% year-on-year growth)
  • Adjusted EPS: $6.37 vs analyst estimates of $5.77 (10.4% beat)
  • Book Value per Share: $197.52 vs analyst estimates of $157.58 (16.9% year-on-year growth, 25.3% beat)
  • Market Capitalization: $12.53 billion

Company Overview

Operating behind the scenes of the insurance industry since 1973, Reinsurance Group of America (NYSE:RGA) provides life and health reinsurance services to insurance companies, helping them manage risk and meet regulatory requirements.

RGA operates as a middleman in the insurance industry, assuming portions of risk from primary insurers through various reinsurance arrangements. The company specializes in traditional life and health reinsurance, where it takes on mortality and morbidity risks, as well as financial solutions that help insurers manage their capital and investment risks.

RGA's traditional reinsurance covers a wide range of products including term life, whole life, universal life, group life, disability, long-term care, and critical illness insurance. For example, when a life insurance company issues a $1 million policy to a customer with complex health conditions, it might reinsure a portion with RGA to reduce its exposure.

The company's financial solutions business includes asset-intensive reinsurance, where RGA assumes investment risks associated with annuities and other investment-oriented products. It also provides longevity reinsurance, protecting pension providers against the risk of retirees living longer than expected, and capital solutions that help insurers meet regulatory requirements.

RGA generates revenue primarily through reinsurance premiums and investment income. Its clients are insurance companies rather than individual consumers, with the company serving most major life insurers globally. The business is organized into geographic segments covering the U.S. and Latin America, Canada, Europe, Middle East and Africa (EMEA), and Asia Pacific, allowing RGA to tailor its offerings to regional market needs and regulations.

The company employs specialized underwriters, actuaries, and investment professionals who assess risks, price contracts, and manage the complex financial aspects of the reinsurance business.

4. Reinsurance

This is a cyclical industry, and the sector benefits when there is 'hard market', characterized by strong premium rate increases that outpace loss and cost inflation, resulting in robust underwriting margins. The opposite is true in a 'soft market'. Interest rates also matter, as they determine the yields earned on fixed-income portfolios. The primary headwind remains the immense and concentrated exposure to large-scale catastrophe losses, as the growing impact of climate change challenges traditional risk models and creates significant earnings volatility. Additionally, they face the risk of adverse prior-year reserve development, where claims prove more costly than anticipated, while the eventual influx of new capital from alternative sources threatens to soften the market and compress future returns.

RGA's main competitors include other global reinsurance providers such as Swiss Re (SWX:SREN), Munich Re (ETR:MUV2), SCOR (EPA:SCR), and Hannover Re (ETR:HNR1), as well as life insurance companies that offer reinsurance services like MetLife (NYSE:MET) and Prudential Financial (NYSE:PRU).

5. Revenue Growth

Insurers earn revenue three ways. The core insurance business itself, often called underwriting and represented in the income statement as premiums earned, is one way. Investment income from investing the “float” (premiums collected upfront not yet paid out as claims) in assets such as fixed-income assets and equities is the second way. Fees from various sources such as policy administration, annuities, or other value-added services is the third. Thankfully, Reinsurance Group of America’s 9.6% annualized revenue growth over the last five years was solid. Its growth beat the average insurance company and shows its offerings resonate with customers.

Reinsurance Group of America Quarterly Revenue

Long-term growth is the most important, but within financials, a half-decade historical view may miss recent interest rate changes and market returns. Reinsurance Group of America’s annualized revenue growth of 11.4% over the last two years is above its five-year trend, suggesting its demand was strong and recently accelerated. Reinsurance Group of America Year-On-Year Revenue GrowthNote: Quarters not shown were determined to be outliers, impacted by outsized investment gains/losses that are not indicative of the recurring fundamentals of the business.

This quarter, Reinsurance Group of America reported year-on-year revenue growth of 8.7%, and its $6.20 billion of revenue exceeded Wall Street’s estimates by 2.4%.

Net premiums earned made up 77.3% of the company’s total revenue during the last five years, meaning insurance operations are Reinsurance Group of America’s largest source of revenue.

Reinsurance Group of America Quarterly Net Premiums Earned as % of Revenue

While insurers generate revenue from multiple sources, investors view net premiums earned as the cornerstone - its direct link to core operations stands in sharp contrast to the unpredictability of investment returns and fees.

6. Net Premiums Earned

When insurers sell policies, they protect themselves from extremely large losses or an outsized accumulation of losses with reinsurance (insurance for insurance companies). Net premiums earned are:

  • Gross premiums - what’s ceded to reinsurers as a risk mitigation and transfer strategy

Reinsurance Group of America’s net premiums earned has grown at a 8.1% annualized rate over the last five years, slightly better than the broader insurance industry but slower than its total revenue.

When analyzing Reinsurance Group of America’s net premiums earned over the last two years, we can paint a similar picture as it recorded an annual growth rate of 7.3%. Since two-year net premiums earned grew slower than total revenue over this period, it’s implied that other line items such as investment income grew at a faster rate. While these additional streams certainly contribute to the bottom line, their impact can vary. Some firms have shown greater success and long-term consistency in investing their float compared to peers. However, sharp fluctuations in the fixed income and equity markets can significantly affect short-term performance.

Reinsurance Group of America Trailing 12-Month Net Premiums Earned

Reinsurance Group of America’s net premiums earned came in at $4.28 billion this quarter, down 2.5% year on year and short of Wall Street Consensus estimates.

7. Pre-Tax Profit Margin

Revenue growth is one major determinant of business quality, and the efficiency of operations is another. For insurance companies, we look at pre-tax profit rather than the operating margin that defines sectors such as consumer, tech, and industrials.

This is because insurers are balance sheet businesses, where assets and liabilities define the core economics. This means that interest income and expense should be factored into the definition of profit but taxes - which are largely out of a company’s control - should not.

Over the last four years, Reinsurance Group of America’s pre-tax profit margin couldn’t build momentum, hanging around 5.5%. It has also declined by 2 percentage points on a two-year basis, showing its expenses have recently increased at a faster rate than revenue. This usually raises questions unless the company is in high-growth mode and reinvesting its profits into attractive ventures.

Reinsurance Group of America Trailing 12-Month Pre-Tax Profit Margin

Reinsurance Group of America’s pre-tax profit margin came in at 5.2% this quarter. This result was 1.4 percentage points better than the same quarter last year.

8. Earnings Per Share

We track the long-term change in earnings per share (EPS) for the same reason as long-term revenue growth. Compared to revenue, however, EPS highlights whether a company’s growth is profitable.

Reinsurance Group of America’s EPS grew at a remarkable 17.5% compounded annual growth rate over the last five years, higher than its 9.6% annualized revenue growth. However, this alone doesn’t tell us much about its business quality because its pre-tax profit margin didn’t improve.

Reinsurance Group of America Trailing 12-Month EPS (Non-GAAP)

Like with revenue, we analyze EPS over a shorter period to see if we are missing a change in the business.

For Reinsurance Group of America, its two-year annual EPS growth of 9.5% was lower than its five-year trend. We hope its growth can accelerate in the future.

In Q3, Reinsurance Group of America reported adjusted EPS of $6.37, up from $6.13 in the same quarter last year. This print easily cleared analysts’ estimates, and shareholders should be content with the results. Over the next 12 months, Wall Street expects Reinsurance Group of America’s full-year EPS of $21.74 to grow 14.4%.

9. Book Value Per Share (BVPS)

Insurance companies are balance sheet businesses, collecting premiums upfront and paying out claims over time. The float – premiums collected but not yet paid out – are invested, creating an asset base supported by a liability structure. Book value captures this dynamic by measuring:

  • Assets (investment portfolio, cash, reinsurance recoverables) - liabilities (claim reserves, debt, future policy benefits)

BVPS is essentially the residual value for shareholders.

We therefore consider BVPS very important to track for insurers and a metric that sheds light on business quality because it reflects long-term capital growth and is harder to manipulate than more commonly-used metrics like EPS.

Reinsurance Group of America’s BVPS was flat over the last five years. However, BVPS growth has accelerated recently, growing by 27% annually over the last two years from $122.40 to $197.52 per share.

Reinsurance Group of America Quarterly Book Value per Share

Over the next 12 months, Consensus estimates call for Reinsurance Group of America’s BVPS to shrink by 12.3% to $157.58, a sour projection.

10. Balance Sheet Assessment

The debt-to-equity ratio is a widely used measure to assess a company's balance sheet health. A higher ratio means that a business aggressively financed its growth with debt. This can result in higher earnings (if the borrowed funds are invested profitably) but also increases risk.

If debt levels are too high, there could be difficulties in meeting obligations, especially during economic downturns or periods of rising interest rates if the debt has variable-rate payments.

Reinsurance Group of America has no debt, so leverage is not an issue here.

11. Return on Equity

Return on equity (ROE) is a crucial yardstick for insurance companies, measuring their ability to generate returns on the capital provided by shareholders. Insurers that consistently deliver superior ROE tend to create more value for their investors over time through strategic capital allocation and shareholder-friendly policies.

Over the last five years, Reinsurance Group of America has averaged an ROE of 7.5%, uninspiring for a company operating in a sector where the average shakes out around 12.5%.

Reinsurance Group of America Return on Equity

12. Key Takeaways from Reinsurance Group of America’s Q3 Results

We were impressed by how significantly Reinsurance Group of America blew past analysts’ book value per share expectations this quarter. We were also glad its revenue outperformed Wall Street’s estimates. On the other hand, its net premiums earned missed. Overall, we think this was a decent quarter with some key metrics above expectations. The stock remained flat at $189 immediately following the results.

13. Is Now The Time To Buy Reinsurance Group of America?

Updated: December 3, 2025 at 11:49 PM EST

Before deciding whether to buy Reinsurance Group of America or pass, we urge investors to consider business quality, valuation, and the latest quarterly results.

Reinsurance Group of America isn’t a terrible business, but it doesn’t pass our quality test. Although its revenue growth was solid over the last five years and is expected to accelerate over the next 12 months, its estimated sales for the next 12 months are weak. And while the company’s projected EPS for the next year implies the company’s fundamentals will improve, the downside is its BVPS growth was weak over the last five years.

Reinsurance Group of America’s P/B ratio based on the next 12 months is 1x. While this valuation is reasonable, we don’t really see a big opportunity at the moment. We're pretty confident there are more exciting stocks to buy at the moment.

Wall Street analysts have a consensus one-year price target of $238.30 on the company (compared to the current share price of $189.31).

Although the price target is bullish, readers should exercise caution because analysts tend to be overly optimistic. The firms they work for, often big banks, have relationships with companies that extend into fundraising, M&A advisory, and other rewarding business lines. As a result, they typically hesitate to say bad things for fear they will lose out. We at StockStory do not suffer from such conflicts of interest, so we’ll always tell it like it is.