LON:SBRE Sabre Insurance Group H2 2024 Earnings Report GBX 126.95 -1.05 (-0.82%) As of 04/25/2025 11:57 AM Eastern Earnings HistoryForecast Sabre Insurance Group EPS ResultsActual EPSGBX 14.48Consensus EPS N/ABeat/MissN/AOne Year Ago EPSN/ASabre Insurance Group Revenue ResultsActual RevenueN/AExpected RevenueN/ABeat/MissN/AYoY Revenue GrowthN/ASabre Insurance Group Announcement DetailsQuarterH2 2024Date3/18/2025TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateTuesday, March 18, 2025Conference Call Time5:30AM ETConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckInterim ReportEarnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Sabre Insurance Group H2 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrMarch 18, 2025 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 9 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00and thank you for joining us on the webcast. Speaker 100:00:03I'm pleased to say we have the usual faces here. I think we worked out it's our fifteenth one of these presentations now for most of us. Not sure what that says, but it says something. As usual, me and Adam will do the presentation, and then we'll pass all the difficult questions to Matt and Trevor, who can deal with those at the end. On the agenda, we will, as usual, look back on last year and give you our thoughts on our results from last year. Speaker 100:00:32We'll give you quite a lot of our thoughts on claims inflation. We will once again nerd out in terms of the detail of what we think is driving inflation and how we see that going forward. And then we'll leave plenty of time for Q and A at the end as well. If you're on the webcast, feel free to type the questions in. And while they don't look too difficult, I'll answer those at the end. Speaker 100:00:52So on our highlights. I think if you open lines before we almost certainly get dragged down into the weeds on some of the KPIs. Overall, the Sabre team have had a cracking year, I think, in 2024. The highest ever premium doubled profit generated a ton of capital, which has allowed us to both pay a good dividend and a share buyback for the first time. And I think as importantly, we've laid the foundations for future growth through to 02/1930. Speaker 100:01:21That includes launching bike, which is going live almost as we speak and being rolled out over the next week or two. I think stopping there would be good, but even more pleasingly, we've also been able to keep a tight focus on the long term health of the business. We've kept an eye on how claims inflation impacts the back reserves. We've taken a relatively cautious pick for 2024 to ensure we've not overreached Operator00:01:43for Speaker 100:01:44the result. We priced really strongly in 2024 at good margins. That's given us a bit of headroom and gives us a bit of comfort against an uncertain inflationary environment as well. We've stuck very strongly to our focus on profitability and short term volume as an output. Profitability is our target. Speaker 100:02:05Short term volume is very definitely the output. And we've done our utmost look after staff and customers as we've done that. We've got really good customer responses. We've continued to roll out staff initiatives in terms of added benefits and creating jobs as we've gone through last year. On the detail, we're very much on track for the ambition 02/1930. Speaker 100:02:28We don't see any hiccups on the path of that at this stage. Very strong capital position, as I mentioned, 44% increase in the dividend. Our first share buyback, which reflects the amount of excess capital we generated. Sabre Direct going live this month on Motorbike. And the testing of the new car pricing will, as planned, go on the second half of this year. Speaker 100:02:51So I think a really strong overall result and really good developments for the future as well. At that point, I think I know better to head us into the weeds than Adam. So that's exactly what he's going to do. Speaker 200:03:07Thanks, Geoff. Hello, everyone. So I'll take us through the key numbers behind our 2024 results. So as ever, our reporting is straightforward and transparent with the results centered on the performance of our three flavors of motor insurance. So that will be motorcycle, taxi and core motor vehicle, which is everything that is in the motorcycle or a taxi. Speaker 200:03:31To enhance transparency going forward, all of our headline results such as loss ratio, net insurance margin, we stated on an undiscounted basis as promised in our recent capital markets event. At that time, we also discussed our new KPI, which is net insurance margin. So onto the story for this year. Another record year for premium, albeit one of two halves where the top line is concerned. We continue to grow strongly when market conditions were sufficiently robust and allow volumes to dip later in the year when low market pricing meant it was sensible to do so. Speaker 200:04:07Entirely in line with the strategy we outlined in December. Our net insurance margin has improved by seven percentage points year on year to within touching distance of our 18% to 22% target. More on that in the next few slides. Similarly, our undiscounted combined operating ratio has improved by more than seven percentage points. This, along with the higher premium in 2023 and 2024 earning through has delivered a doubling of profit year on year to million. Speaker 200:04:39Thanks to this growth in earnings, we've been able to increase the total dividend for the year by 44% to 13 p. That's around 90% of earnings. And that was well covered by the capital generation in the period and leaves a very healthy post dividend capital ratio of 171%. And given the level of excess capital post dividend, we're able to today announce our intention to kick off our first share buyback that will return an additional million of capital. So this slide shows the progression of our net insurance margin over time, and the journey towards our target is clearly demonstrated. Speaker 200:05:16A bit like combined ratio, net insurance margin is a function of claims experience and expenses incurred as a proportion of income. And that income is insurance revenue, which includes net insurance premium and installment income as well. So on this chart, the orange bar shrinking shows improving claims experience. And what I'm assured are dark blue or gray shrinking lines show improving expenses as a proportion of insurance revenue. And for clarity, net insurance margin does not include any benefit from discounting. Speaker 200:05:54As you can see, the improvement in margin has been a function of both improving claims, which I'll talk about in terms of loss ratio in the next few slides, and improving expense leverage. So this next chart shows the relative loss ratio performance across our whole book in 2024 and 2023. There's been a significant improvement in current year loss ratio, primarily on our core motor vehicle book and the motorcycle, reflecting the strong pricing throughout 2024. We are of course cautious when making current year loss picks reflecting the relative uncertainty in undeveloped years. The current year will also carry a risk adjustment which means that the current year loss ratio recorded here is likely to be above the expected actual loss ratio achieved for that business. Speaker 200:06:39In 2024, the prior years didn't yield a normal level of positive runoff with the loss picks moving out a little during the year. That's reflective of experience and development of some older years and we've got no reason to expect that the prior years do not return to normal levels of runoff in future periods. And we've made no changes to our reserving philosophy in 2024. This slide highlights the relative contribution to profit from our core Motor Vehicle business and from the supplementary products. Performance in motor vehicle remains in line with our target, although this was the area most affected by the slightly adverse prior year reserve movement. Speaker 200:07:17So the strong improvement in current year doesn't fully show through in the overall motor performance for the year. The motorcycle book is being cleared up and is performing well and it sets a great basis for expanding the product through ambition 02/1930. And taxis improved a little but remains only marginally profitable on a written basis Speaker 100:07:35at the moment. Speaker 200:07:38We chose to allow policy volumes to reduce across the core motor vehicle book in the second half of the year, as I've mentioned. As market conditions softened, it made more sense to focus on maximizing absolute profit rather than chase the market down. Motorcycle income is now fully through our current distributor with the prior year comparison including some premium from MCE which went into administration in 2023 as we previously discussed. So the volume of motorcycle business written now is well in line with our plan. Taxi business has been maintained at a relatively low level as we continue to monitor the book's profitability. Speaker 200:08:14So on this chart, I've shown a snapshot of our capital generated during the year and how we've deployed any surplus capital. Overall, the increase in solvency capital requirement has been relatively small, which has allowed us to distribute healthy ordinary and special dividends and left enough excess capital above the top of our preferred operating range to announce our intention to execute a share buyback during the year, which will be initiated as soon as practical once we've received the usual regulatory approvals. Excluding the capital required to fund the dividend and the share buyback, our solvency capital ratio would be around 163%. We've taken a fresh look at our dividend policy. While we think the policy works well overall, which effectively returns all excess capital to shareholders, we wanted to make sure the ordinary dividend properly reflected our expected sustainable level of distribution. Speaker 200:09:03So So we've tricked the policy to allow us to pay a bit more up to 80% of profit after tax as an ordinary dividend. We've also made explicit reference to our option to use share buybacks when appropriate to do so, either alongside or in place of a special dividend taking into account the potential for the larger ordinary dividend. And with that, thanks very much. And back to you. Speaker 100:09:31Thank you, Adam. Okay. So we will, as usual, give you our views on the market. Who says we can't do PowerPoint? Look. Speaker 100:09:43So we think the pendulum has been swinging about on pricing for the last couple of years. If you look, as we all know, rates went up a lot in early twenty twenty four. We think the pendulum probably swung a bit too far and probably people were relatively overpricing for the risk by the end of that sort of first half of the year. We think that's probably generated higher profits from that year, earning through into this year. Combined with a drive for growth by some competitors, we think that probably means the pendulum has now swung back. Speaker 100:10:14And we firmly believe the market is materially underpriced for new business. What could be driving that? The higher profits we've mentioned, there is a drop in low value frequency of drop in frequency for low value claims that we'll talk about later. And things like Ogden and reinsurance benefits may have given some one off benefits, which means this financial year might look absolutely fine for people, but it does potentially mean business is not being written at a profitable margin for some competitors. Our view is this is now characteristic of a normal insurance market. Speaker 100:10:49If you think where we've been since sort of 2021, '20 '20 '2, we've had COVID, we've had Brexit, we've had all sorts of inflationary impacts. That meant the pension has been swinging much more widely than normal. We think we're back now to a normal rate, a normal cyclical business. This is an environment where savers thrived for fifteen years. This is exactly what we're used to managing through. Speaker 100:11:11We think there's a reasonable chance the market in some places may get a poor financial result for 'twenty five and certainly for 'twenty six if prices don't start to increase later this year. I guess it will be impacted at different times depending on the rating strength coming out of twenty early twenty twenty four. It may impact people at different times and people will feel the pain at different times over the next twelve months or so. Other market factors. I think we all know there's quite a lot of significant M and A anticipated over the next twelve to eighteen months. Speaker 100:11:47I think there's always a risk. This drives overly optimistic assumptions in people's business plans. I guess it's much harder to sell yourself when you're shrinking than when you're growing. So I wouldn't be surprised if there's a bit of optimism being held on to in some places in the market. The FCA overview of premium finance and ancillary sales, it could be a bit of a push to get some business on the books before life becomes slightly more difficult. Speaker 100:12:10This is also possibly the first year the GIP rules have a real impact in terms of premiums are more stable, therefore, renewals should go up and the business might be slightly harder to come by. We know there's a government task force looking at insurance pricing. I don't think anyone really knows where that's going. We can talk in a minute about our regulatory starts. We think we're pretty safe from anything that might come out of that review. Speaker 100:12:34And I think there was a risk of overreaction to some of the recent positive low value claims frequency. By popular demand, by sort of me, if no one else, the inflation scales have returned. So let's look at deflationary factors. Lower accident frequency. I think a really important point here is the only frequency decline we see is in low value bent metal claims. Speaker 100:12:58That's due damage to the vehicle itself. We don't see any real reduction in personal injury frequency, and we certainly don't see any decrease in cost. And Trevor can tell that much more later of interest. The Ogden rate is a one off. We should also probably bear in mind large claims that are being incurred today will not settle under this Ogden discount rate potentially. Speaker 100:13:19So what will the next Ogden rate look like? It needs to be in our minds as well and a decrease in interest rate environment. On the inflation side, cost inflation is very high. We'll talk about that in the next couple of slides. There's pressure on non premium income and operational cost inflation is absolutely going to come through. Speaker 100:13:37So overall, we would see claims inflation at mid to high single digits. That's a slight softening from where we were, but it's still substantially above the long term historic position. So let's look at a bit of the detail. Now this is on the bent metal stuff where there are some positives and negatives. On windscreen, technology is driving a lot more cost in windscreen. Speaker 100:14:02If you've had the misfortune to need a windscreen replaced in the modern tech enabled car recently, it's a painful process. They don't come to you, you go to them. It's a good two or three hours of waiting for your windscreen to be placed in a service station on the M23 from bitter personal experience. So it's expensive and it's slow and it's not great for customers generally. Repair, there is now more capacity in the repair network, but the complexity of cars is requiring longer lead times. Speaker 100:14:32And we're also seeing on some of the EVs coming in from perhaps China, they don't have the repair methods. They're not easy to fix. So parts are being produced in large modules, either the whole back end of a car. That's great for production, but it's not very easy to fix. If one part of that back end of a car gets damaged, you've got to replace the whole lot. Speaker 100:14:53So it's difficult to fix because you don't know how to fix it, and it's not being built with your payer methods in mind, and you've got to replace a lot of material, not just one part of the panel. So that is offset by some of the frequency reduction. Total loss is an interesting one. As you know, the move to EVs continues. Very strong residual values for older petrol powered cars. Speaker 100:15:15A very large part of the car, the car mark, car park is aging as we go. We think that could lead to more disputes on value. If you've got a car that's done relatively few miles and is old and you can't replace it cheaply, that's going to make put pressure on total loss valuations would be our guess. And on theft, no matter how quickly manufacturers come up with new repair or new security measures, people find ways around it. Vehicles are being acquired to parts. Speaker 100:15:44Ford Fiesta is still one of the but Ford Fiesta is the most stolen car in The U. K. Alongside the Ford Transit. That's because there's more of them on the road, but they're not being produced anymore. So are we going to see a part shortage, which means cars will be stolen for parts as much as for the car itself? Speaker 100:15:59And theft of specific components, I'm reliably informed if you wanted to set up a drugs farm in your loft, the Porsche headlight is an ideal way of getting heat and light onto that drug. So we're seeing some of that sort of stuff come through as well. I told you I would say that, Adam. Let me get to injury claims. We don't see too many upsides on this one. Speaker 100:16:19We think this is mainly amber and downside risks. On the minor injury, you've got general damages are linked to RPI. Private treatment is becoming more expensive and more common. We've got inflation in the cost of NHS service. There's a big potential increase coming through to the claims tariff, and we're not seeing the small claims track limits increasing. Speaker 100:16:41So more things fall outside the cheap legal claims and fall into the more expensive legal claims. On the major injury side, again, damage is linked to RPI. Availability of carers is still difficult. Minimum wages are going up a lot. Things like prosthetics are becoming more expensive and more of them. Speaker 100:17:02So overall, we see a lot of cost increase coming through on large claims as well. We think that more than offsets any minor the frequency benefit on the cheaper low value owned damage claims. On top of that, we've got the unknowable impact of tariffs and trade wars and what might go on there. I would stress we don't see any of this as bad news. Providing you see it coming and you price for it properly, this is entirely fine. Speaker 100:17:26It's if you don't see it coming and you don't allow fit in pricing, that's when you get in trouble. So we don't see claims inflation as bad news. We just see it as a factor we need to take into account. Okay. A brief reminder of our ambition 02/1930 that we set out end of last year. Speaker 100:17:44Key points, significant growth in profit by 02/1930 is our aim on this one. We expected there to be hard and soft market conditions across that planning period. So the fact we're currently in a relatively soft pricing market doesn't cause us any concern in that delivery of that long term target. And it's capital light. And I think part of the reason for the buyback today demonstrates our confidence we can deliver this growth agenda without the need for additional capital. Speaker 100:18:14Three key pillars: expand our core car market and efficiency of our direct brands on core expand motorcycle and control expenses while we do that. First initiative, Sabre Direct bike is going live pretty much as we speak. The team are back in Dorkin, busy making live the website and rolling the product out. In the next few next week or so, you should really go on to the website and see how that works. It's starting low and slow, I would say. Speaker 100:18:44Relatively small quotability. We're not going to go in too fast into this. We'll ramp it up as we go through this year and into next year. The second initiative, and I guess the main driver of our growth is expanding the core motor book. As you know, that's really saying we're going to continue to deliver our current margin for the current relatively high risk that we write. Speaker 100:19:07We'll target a slightly lower margin for the less risky business in an appropriate way. Overall loss ratio should increase slightly, but insurance margin should be protected as expense ratio should come down a little bit. As a reminder where we are, this is our current premium, somewhere over GBP 1,000 average premium. The market's on about GBP 500 there and thereabouts. So we are well above the market in terms of our average premium at the moment. Speaker 100:19:36This is my slightly more simplistic way of describing what we're doing and perhaps some of the slides we use at the Capital Market Day. Broadly, on the right hand side of that graph, as you look at it, is the more risky policies with the higher margin requirement to reflect the risk. The further left you come, the lower the margin and the less risky. There's a lot more policies obviously in the mid market than there is at the extremes. So we are taking a small jump to the left at a slightly lower margin, which allows us to compete for more policies slightly nearer the mass market. Speaker 100:20:09We already quote for these policies already, so this is not an unknown territory for us. Importantly, we don't think this is going to be a straight line development. Is sort of reflecting the hard and soft market that we see. This line is purely illustrative. It's not trying to give a profit forecast for each of those years, but we expect the profit to sort of move up gradually towards million weighted towards the back end of this period. Speaker 100:20:44I guess just to restate, all the foundations of these initiatives are already in place. This doesn't rely we're not on a sort of wish list here to make these happen. We've already got the steps being put in place or being put in place. '25, a year of testing and transition. '26, almost, we're going to start to see some benefit on premium and then obviously, profit follows that naturally. Speaker 100:21:09So outlook and summary. We're really excited by the next few years. We've worked our way through and managed our way through some pretty turbulent times in the last few years. In fact, all the way since IPO, we've had pretty turbulent times, one or the other. I think '24 has demonstrated the benefit of long term discipline underwriting, hold your nerve and position in soft market conditions and intake growth opportunities when they arise. Speaker 100:21:35That's exactly what we intend to carry on doing all the time developing the business to drive long, stronger underlying growth. So we delivered, we think, great customer outcomes, good growth in premium, great growth in profit. Ambition 02/1930 is on track. And the net insurance margin, we're confident for next year, this year, will be within our target margin range. Okay. Speaker 100:21:59At that point, we will pause and go to Q and A. Again, if you're on the webcast, feel free to type your questions in and we'll answer them. A bit only because you're nearest to me. There's some mics on their way around with our very unglamorous assistance. Speaker 300:22:20It's Abi Dessein from Panwall Ibrahim. I think I've got three questions, please. The first one is the soft market. Do you think it's still possible to expand your addressable market even in a soft market? And if you could provide any more color in terms of sort of does the price elasticity reduce or increase in the soft part of the cycle? Speaker 300:22:42And actually, it was interesting to note in R and S, you said that you think we are already in the softest part of the cycle or we've just come through the softest part of the cycle. So interesting to hear your thoughts on that. And then the second one, just on margins. Just looking beyond the headline net insurance margin, can you confirm that the motor vehicle net insurance margin is within the sort of 18% to 20%, twenty two % target range. I didn't see Speaker 200:23:13it there. Speaker 300:23:13So just if you could just sort of give us any thoughts on that. And the final one is investing in the business. Do you need to invest in any part of your business to deliver on that ambition 02/1930? Do you need to invest in people, hiring people, in IT or both? Speaker 100:23:28Sure. Okay. Thanks. I'll start and then maybe hand a couple of these around. On the soft market, yes, we can definitely still grow in a soft market. Speaker 100:23:37We're still becoming more competitive. Clearly, we won't grow as quickly as we will do in a hard market. Matt, do Operator00:23:42you want to say Speaker 100:23:43anything on that? I think Speaker 400:23:45what you said there is correct. We can still roll out Ambition 02/1930 during the soft market and test the change we want to make and we'll still see the impact of that come through. Speaker 100:23:58Yes. Trevor, perhaps I mean, you can talk about the people we're investing in. On the softest part of the market question, I do think we're probably at the softest part of the market, although we're near it. I become even more buoyant than normal sort of functions and events around this time of year, sort of testing people's views on claims inflation. I'm not hearing many people disagree with us on claims inflation and not many people saying that prices don't need to start increasing in the second half of the year. Speaker 100:24:23If they should start going up at the half year, it could take a bit longer, but I think people wind themselves into life in doing it. But I'm pretty certain we're looking at prices going up from here, not too much further down. Boat Motor Vehicle net margin, Adam, Patrick, you can add that one. Speaker 200:24:37Yes. So obviously, we don't disclose margins per se per product. But to give you some sort of relatively imperfect maths on that, if you look at the motor vehicle performance on a loss ratio basis for the year versus the overall book, it's a couple of points better. So given that we're at a 17.6% margin across the book, then Motor Vehicle will be meaningfully better than that than the GM. So the Motor Book itself is performing in line with the margin. Speaker 200:25:00I guess the other way of looking at it is the current years didn't move as they normally would. As I said in the presentation, they went out a tiny bit. They would normally roll off a few percent of risk adjustment. If the prior years had performed as we had normally would have expected, we would have been well within the margin range. So in terms of what we're writing now and in terms of what Motor did, we're very comfortable about that margin achievement. Speaker 100:25:22Trevor, do you have anything about investment in people? Speaker 200:25:24So on Speaker 500:25:25the people side, we're in a good position. We've actually got a lot of bench strength at the moment around both on policy side and on the claims side where we've taken the opportunity to invest in training and recruiting people. So we're absolutely there. We also, as you may recall, outsourced some of our services. So where there'd be initial demand, say, in first notification and or servicing our customers on our direct car products, that's outsourced. Speaker 500:25:52On technology side, we've already made the investments to deliver for Sabre Bike. We're continually evaluating our own systems in terms of the insurance administration systems, and we'll continue to do that. Speaker 100:26:07And I think on bike, it's an interesting one as well that I think we're going to be the only U. K. Non phone support based bike policy. Everything's going to be online based. That involves some new skills for your team, Trevor, in terms of dealing with web chat rather than phone? Speaker 100:26:21Yes. Speaker 500:26:21So we're going to in house that, which has been part of the recruitment drive in terms of the ability to service those, Sabre Direct bike customers from out of docking. Speaker 100:26:34Yes. Thanks, David. Darius, just because you were first in my online. Speaker 600:26:39Thank you. Couple of questions. So thank you for the buyback. Couple of questions on that. So is the buyback now a new tool in your toolbox that we should think about every year? Speaker 600:26:50Or is this really sort of a one off? And I've noticed in your sort of capital generation slide, how you started the year with roughly 40,000,000 of excess capital. You ended the year with roughly 40,000,000 of excess capital as well. Now you do say that you're not going to use capital to achieve your ambition twenty twenty two thousand and thirty. And you also talk about how your business is cash generative and we're sort of heading into the soft market, I suppose, or in the soft market. Speaker 600:27:22Why do you need this $40,000,000 of assessed capital? And why you have not given a bit more in terms of the buyback? So that's the second question. And my last question is, the prior year development was a bit of a surprise, I suppose. We had a little bit of strengthening on discounted basis in the first half and I suppose a little bit more in the second half now. Speaker 600:27:45What's going on there? Thank you. Speaker 100:27:47Okay. I'll take the first one, Adam, the second and Matt, and talk about the third. Okay. On the buyback, yes, that's definitely part of our toolbox. Now we've been discussing this with some of our larger shareholders for the last year or two. Speaker 100:27:59And we've really said that should we find ourselves in a position where we have the share price we think is undervalued, a lot of excess capital and we can still meet the dividend requirements because we're conscious we have shareholders split across income and share back interested clients. We'll always look to meet the dividend first to meet our dividend expectation. Should we then think we've got excess capital over that and a low share price, then we'll absolutely think about buybacks going forward. Adam, do you want to talk about the capital gen fit? Speaker 200:28:29Yes. I mean, I think it comes down to what you think of as genuinely excess capital. So if you look at what we presented on that slide, that's effectively all the capital. We've got over 100% of our capital requirement. But the reality is we prefer to hold 140% to 160. Speaker 200:28:44So we've paid down to just over 160% if you take the buyback into account as well, which left us with maybe $1,000,000 or so capital above that. We've always said we're very happy to pay down to within that range. Our floor is 140% or 160%, and we'll use that as we see fit. And it's really just a case of sort of taking every year by year thinking about what might we need this capital for, what are the risks in the next year and really holding enough to mean that in all reasonably foreseeable circumstances, capital is not going to be a problem. That's the main thing. Speaker 200:29:14So we can just continue to grow, execute ambition 02/1930. We've given back everything we really don't think we'll need to be able to do that. But we'll make sure we've got enough capital in the tank to make sure that process runs smoothly, and that's why we haven't paid out everything we potentially could have Speaker 100:29:26done. Thanks. Matt? Speaker 400:29:29So on prior years, as Adam mentioned during his presentation, we have seen some deterioration prior years. We've seen some late adverse movements in claims, and we continue to see an inflation come through. So whilst it has deteriorated, we've now accounted for that. We don't expect that to continue. Generally, we will see prior years release rather than deteriorate from the risk adjustment runoff, and that's what we expect to be long term. Speaker 400:29:55Ever so often, you'll see that prior year deterioration, but we don't foresee that happening again this year. Speaker 100:30:01Yes. Thanks, Matt. Ivan? Speaker 700:30:05Hi, it's Ivan Bokken from Barclays. First of all, I wanted to follow-up on the capital point that we just raised. I mean, maybe we could talk about 2025 as we think about the capital that you would generate versus the capital that you would need to retain. I think we're talking about margins probably improving from the level where they're slightly below the range at the moment and probably not a lot of growth in solvency capital requirement. So from that perspective, should the capital generation also increase on a net basis in 2025? Speaker 200:30:38And I think Speaker 700:30:40the other question I've had, a little bit technical, but as we think about the FCA premium finance study, which presumably is going to be out within the next few months, what do you think the focus points would be? I mean, how can you be affected? Any broader color in the market that you could flag in this? Thank you. Speaker 100:30:56Okay. I'll take a second one. You can have a second guide to capital one in a minute. On the FCA premium finance, I think there's a couple of bits. There's some concerns that maybe some people increase prices for monthly players and then hit a higher APR. Speaker 100:31:10So you're basically charging for a credit risk price. We for clarity don't do that. We never have and never will. I think there's been a concern that the APR looked high compared to the underlying interest rate. And I think you've seen in the market interest rates coming down. Speaker 100:31:25I think perhaps the FCA have achieved their objective just by shining the spotlight that people are gradually softening the margin or the margins on those products. We took a view about a year and a half ago. We should earn the same margin on all of our ancillary products, which we include premium finance as we do on our core product, and that's exactly what we moved to. So we think we're in a very sustainable position there. Our margin is pretty much the same across the core product and all the ancillaries. Speaker 100:31:50So we generally don't think we're too exposed there. We keep an eye on it all the time. And if we think we're over earning them, we'll reduce the price on that. I mean, there is a genuine risk to premium finance in that. If a person claims, they can just stop paying the rest of their premium. Speaker 100:32:06There's not a lot we can do about it. So there's a genuine cost dividing premium finance as well as just the credit piece, which I think gets missed sometimes in the debate around this. Adam, do you want to talk about? Speaker 200:32:16Okay. Yes, I think I'll take it in a couple of parts. So in terms of the capital generation during 2025, obviously, linked to earnings quite heavily and the level of growth that comes through in the year, etcetera. But we do expect to generate a pretty good level of capital and the solvency capital requirement will grow. Solvency capital requirement, as I'm sure you guys will be well aware, is pretty hard to predict in terms of exactly where it's going to go. Speaker 200:32:38We know it will go up probably. We don't know exactly by how much, and then that will limit the amount that we can distribute for the year. And we've actually been very fortunate over the past few years that it hasn't really increased by all that much. And we've been able to distribute quite a lot, which I think takes me to our second point when you look at the dividend policy and what we've done there. And the issue with the previous dividend policy really was the ordinary wasn't ordinary and the special wasn't special. Speaker 200:32:59In some respects, we all knew that we were going to generate more capital than the ordinary dividend would allow us to distribute, and therefore, there would be a special every year. The normal run rate of dividends when you take normal levels of capital requirement increase into the future isn't 100% of earnings. It sort of can't be as it has been for the last years. It will have to come down more towards that ordinary dividend level. So what we're saying is that we think capital generation should be good. Speaker 200:33:22It could be ordinary plus, and there'll be an opportunity for a special next year and or a buyback. But at the moment, that's the way we're trying to get people to sort of think about it. So yes, I think capital generation should be pretty healthy next year, but we'll see how the capital requirement develops, I think, over the next twelve months. Speaker 700:33:39I just have to follow-up, Speaker 100:33:41Geoff, to Speaker 700:33:41what you were talking about, the premium finance. I think if we look at the range of what the APRs people charge, I think it starts from like mid teens, 16% all the way up to 50% with some brokers charge. And you guys are a little over 20%, I think mid-20s, if I'm not wrong. I mean, would the FCA just wants for you to show to share the economics of what the input costs are? And is that the way how you defend the APR? Speaker 100:34:05Well, I think we have done some work on that in the past in terms of market studies around how APR, but I'm sure we have, because of how APR works and how we get to it. So I think there is a bit that gets missed. There is a genuine risk of running a premium finance scheme in terms of, if you have a big claim and you just stop paying your premium, we have to pay the claim regardless of the fact you've only paid onetwelve of your premium. So that's definitely an issue that's out there. There's also once you've got someone on the books, you're on the hook for claims until you got them off the books again if they don't pay their premium. Speaker 100:34:38So I think this does get missed. And I don't know exactly what they got. I think the FCA were clearly unhappy at the level of APR and that has been naturally coming down the market. You say, when you look at where people were and where they are now, you can see that softening gently. Who knows? Speaker 100:34:53I don't know exactly what's in their mind, but I think we're well set whatever way that goes. We're not very dependent on proven finance anyway. So if it all got banned tomorrow, it wouldn't destroy our business anyway. Operator00:35:08It's Daryl Goh from RBC. So my first question is just on the reserve strengthening in 2024. Could you maybe give a sense of how much of it was adverse experience and the other part being a buffer build, if you like? I think to your point about not overreaching given how strong 2024 earnings were. I guess a different way to answer that is what might also be a normal level of reserve leases from 'twenty five onwards? Operator00:35:35The second question is just in terms of your core TAM. Do you feel as though mass market insurers are being a bit more aggressive there? And I guess how reliant are you on your new pricing platform to grow? And when can we expect a return to growth in your core policy book? And then the third one, you spoke about your central assumption for market pricing to increase later this year. Operator00:36:05How has that assumption changed from what you assumed in December? And I guess if that fails, what confidence can you give that your bottom line will still grow in 'twenty five and 'twenty six? Or maybe more explicitly, what is a minimum level of earnings growth we can expect in 'twenty five and 'twenty six in a so called bad case? Thank you. Speaker 100:36:26Yes. Okay. There's some big questions in there, aren't there? Adam, do you want to say anything about the reserve strength in your perspective? And then maybe, Matt, you can just add anything to that. Speaker 200:36:35Yes, I will. I mean, in some cases, it's pretty difficult to answer sort of what's going to happen in reserves going forward. So we know that we in the current year, we always think about relative uncertainties around that. We prefer for the current year to develop positively rather than negatively into the future and therefore, that we'll book it accordingly. And also, there will be an explicit risk adjustment on top of that as well. Speaker 200:37:04So it's very hard for me to say exactly how much that risk adjustment is relatively clear. Anything else, let's assume we put it at the best estimate basis and see how it develops is probably the way to think about it. In terms of what the normal level of runoff might be, which is potentially more useful, again, quite difficult because it's nice to point to a sort of period of past years and say that's what normal development looks like. But of course, there haven't really been any normal past years for a relatively long time, so I can't do that. What I can do is point back to 2023, where the prior year development was sort of in the region of 2% to 3%. Speaker 200:37:36That seems like a relatively sensible amount of sort of risk adjustment runoff. I'm on the record for a few years ago of saying I think the prior year risk margin runoff should be around sort of 4%. Under IFRS 17, the risk adjustment may be sort of a little bit less than that. But so in that sort of region, so that's an order of magnitude, I think you can sort of think somewhere sort of 2%, four %. But obviously, there's a lot of water to pass on the bridge between before we actually still see that runoff coming through. Speaker 100:38:02Thanks. And I guess just to add, we've been clear that we've taken a relatively cautious current year pick because of the uncertainty around inflation. But, Matt, you've not changed your approach to reserving? Speaker 400:38:12The approach remains the same. Speaker 100:38:14We're going for a best estimate, which generally we would hope to run off positively, but can on occasions go the other way. We're not expecting that to happen, as Matt said, going forward. Correct. I think you then asked about the mass market. And I think it's very aggressive. Speaker 100:38:26There's a bit of a feeding frenzy going on, I think, in the mass market. We're not planning on going into the mass market. We're not planning on rising £400 or £500 premiums. That's not where we're at. If you think of those slides, we're about £1,200 at the moment. Speaker 100:38:38Coming down a few hundred pounds still leads us very much towards the upper end of the mass market. So I don't think we're planning on going to compete completely in the heart of the mass market. The assumption what's changed in terms of pricing? I guess there were two things happened at the end of last year. One was the Ogden discount rate changed. Speaker 100:38:58So that would have given a bit of tailwind to financial results this year. And I think probably for the first time in living recent memory, reinsurance rates came down. First, we had a $31.12 renewal. So that would have been another saving for this year. So there were two new things that probably elongated the soft part of the cycle beyond the level we might have thought of in early December last year. Speaker 100:39:20So you had a slight follow-up on your face at one point there. Operator00:39:24Sorry, just my question earlier wasn't so much about you guys getting to mass market, but rather the mass market insurers like your Avivas and Admirals of the world sort of knocking on your doors and eating your lunch for the Arista? Speaker 100:39:38I mean, we already compete with Aviva and Admiral. We view the world as a series of Venn diagrams where we overlap with different people at different times. We've seen different people come into the market at different times. Some of them are more painful than others when they do that. This has happened regularly over the last, how many years you've been here, Trevor? Speaker 100:39:54Fifteen. No, There's always been coming in and out of our part of the market and Saba strategy is designed just to drive straight to the middle of that and be consistent. What will growth look like this year? No, I think it depends on the market. We're right in a very comfortable level of premium at the moment. Speaker 100:40:09We're not concerned about our premium levels for this year. Whether that results in flat, little bit of growth, more growth will depend on the market conditions in the second half. But we're certainly not sitting here concerned that we're not writing enough volume at the moment. Anything to add to that? Okay. Speaker 100:40:27Andreas? Speaker 800:40:31Yes. Andreas from Lambda Peel Hunt. Just wanted to add a question about inflation risk. When you go to slide 25 and you're writing average premium policy between 2,200. When you move out to the right of that chart, when you go to the higher premium policy, does that carry more inflation risk than if you go to the left and go more to the near standard market? Speaker 800:40:57Is there less inflation risk there? Or is it the other way around? And just a question about second half of twenty twenty four. The you lost some policy volumes in a more competitive market again. Obviously, that's the way you underwrite. Speaker 800:41:12I just want to check whether that loss, whether that was more in that core boater book, like the real core nonstandard book, whether you're again sort of losing policy volumes in that sort of near standard segment of the market. And if that's the case going into the sort of 2025, would you have in your underwriting strategy, would you want to retrench in that sort of real core motor book and wait for the market to turn again to go out into the accelerating growth in the year standard, I. E, will you take some sort of your foot off the gas in the second half of the year if the market doesn't recover? Thank you. Speaker 100:41:48Sure. Okay. More inflation risk. If I start, maybe, Madam, you can say. I guess, in some ways, it's who you hit that matters on a lot of this stuff. Speaker 100:41:57And you can hit someone expensively sure in a highly rated vehicle or a low rated vehicle. Yes. I was going Speaker 500:42:04to make that very point. Higher risk premiums also tend to be higher frequency rather than necessarily higher severity. There is higher severity there. But of course, as Jeff's just said, they're hitting the same things and the same people. So it's more likely the premium is more likely to reflect a frequency risk rather than a severity risk. Speaker 500:42:31So if we take taxi, for example, where average premium is significantly above our core, those vehicles are on the road map. Speaker 100:42:40Yes. And so the lack of taxis, the issue is it's a taxi in a town center with drunk people. That's not a great combination. So you expect to see relatively more higher value claims on that book. For the general stuff we do, I don't think it's much more of an inflation risk, Matt. Speaker 100:42:56I think we see it Speaker 400:42:57it's going to be driven by the components of the risk. So you could have a high premium driven by first party or theft risk, for example. We could have it driven by high injury risk. So when inflation varies by petrol, that's where the inflation risk will come. So if we think injury is a higher inflation risk, that tends to drive a higher premium. Speaker 400:43:16Therefore, if it's a high injury component, it could be higher inflationary risk. But if it's something which is quite certain, it'd be a lot of inflation risk. Speaker 100:43:24Yeah. So that question was, is it distributed evenly on high or low premiums? Speaker 400:43:34I would say it varies depending on the components. So it's hard to say exactly. Speaker 100:43:38So you're looking at rating by the individual part of the risk? Yes. I think the second question was around were we losing policies? Is it our core book or the mass market? I think it traditionally is we lose stuff from the fringe of the mass market where we sort of see the tide coming in and out. Speaker 100:43:57In a hard market, the tide comes in a bit and we can write more of that lower premium stuff at the right margin. So I think we're seeing no difference to a normal market cycle. As I mentioned earlier, this was like a completely normal market cycle that Sabre used to managing through. When we retrench, I don't think we really think about our world as retrenching or growing. We just charge the right price and we see what sticks to it. Speaker 100:44:20What I think we're reflecting in the new strategy is that right price is a slightly lower margin for low risk policies, so so we'd expect more policies to stick to us by putting those prices out there. So we're not targeting, we don't have an aggressive volume. I was reading the Berkshire shareholder, I'm not sure if you've seen that recently, but there's a phrase in there which is exactly in line with our thinking, which is if prices aren't priced correctly, chasing volume is corporate suicide. Well, paraphrasing slightly, that's exactly how we see it. We're in a fortunate position. Speaker 100:44:48We can still write plenty of business at our current margins in our current target market. So we're feeling relatively okay with life. Karl Lofthagen from Berenberg. Just one on distribution. Given 90% of the new business is sold by a price comparison, as you're growing and expanding your addressable market, do you expect to kind of tailor your distribution strategy a little bit towards that channel given I guess it should offer lower commission expenses? Speaker 100:45:21Thank you. Okay. I would say probably 90% of our business starts life on a price comparison website now. Whether it eventually comes to us via broker or via our direct brand, it's still probably starting life on a price comparison website. We already have our brands. Speaker 100:45:36We have GoGirl and Insureto Drive on the comparison websites. Now they're on all the Mojo comparison websites. I don't view that change. We don't just do anything different. The product's already there, built works well. Speaker 100:45:50We just need to put slightly different prices behind it for different segments of the market. So no real change needed on that one. Anything else in the room? Or anything on the I thought you're going to say no then, but there you have it. Okay. Speaker 100:46:09Right. Right, Adam, the first one's heading your way. Investment portfolio income yield was around 2.5% in 2024. Can you give a feel for what level you see this topping out at given recent reinvestment yields? Speaker 200:46:21Yes, it will be higher than that. I would have thought unless something spectacular happens in the markets, and obviously, you can't bank that we're going to be able to reinvest at the same yield forever. But yes, we're looking at the sort of normal pre investment yield for a medium term set of gilts and a bit of corporate bonds in there. So that should be at least 1% or so higher as we continue to reinvest that through. Speaker 100:46:47Thank you. Second question, Adam is also heading your way. GWC decreased 21% year on year in Q4. Is this a reasonable run rate? What we should expect to see in the early part of 'twenty five? Speaker 200:46:57Yes. I mean, it's fair to assume that nothing spectacular happened between the December 31 and the January 1 this year. So the income run rate is very similar to the exit run rate from last year, for sure. January and February are always unusual months when it comes to premium. You never quite know what's going to happen as insurers enter the new year. Speaker 200:47:15But in this case, yes, we can take sort of Q4's premium run rate as informative as to where we came into 2025. Speaker 100:47:23I should say those last two questions came from Nick Johnson at Deutsche. Thank you for that, Nick. Next one is from Barry Korns. Congratulations on a good set of numbers. I'm going to stop there. Speaker 100:47:32I think sadly, he carries on. Two questions. You mentioned you want to grow further in motorcycle. What are the specific areas you like to target to grow premiums? I'll let you give a few seconds to think about that. Speaker 100:47:43And how do you think other insurers will react to you entering their space as you expand your addressable market? On the second bit, the motorcycle market is not huge, but already a reasonable chunk of it. You might recall back to our earlier presentations in previous results sessions. There's only probably five or six insurers out there and five or six key brokers. We will look to deal with most of those brokers over time. Speaker 100:48:07We're rolling out a very different product, Matt. It's IHP. It's a much more complicated product than most in the market. Do you want to say anything about it? Yes. Speaker 400:48:14So the motorcycle product we're rolling out is going to be quite a slow rollout. The rating is more complex, and we're using all the data we have to build as accurate models as possible. It'll be fully enriched, and we'll have the same technology as our core motor portfolio as well on IHP, but we see it as a slow grow over the twenty, twenty five year. Speaker 100:48:37Yes. I would say most bike is distributed by brokers. The specialist brands on brokers and those brokers are very keen to deal with us. So we see it as being welcomed into the market, not having to fight our way in. Next question, two from Simon Young at Foresight Group here. Speaker 100:48:54Do you have information on what percentage of the motor insurance market now bundles its policy into multi car and increasing multi car plus travel plus home? How has this changed over time? Can you compete here via your distribution partners? I'll ask that in a second. Adam, the second one is heading for you. Speaker 100:49:08Can you clarify how you calculate the expense ratio? In the release, you state the expense ratio is 25,500,000.0 and total expenses of $28,300,000 assuming the $400,000,000 total operating expenses divided by net earned premium. I'm going to let you read that because there's no chance Speaker 200:49:24you're going to I'll just explain what it is I think, Geoff. You stop. Speaker 100:49:27I'm getting Speaker 200:49:28into the weeds of it. Well, first answer to expense ratio is there are reconciliations in the back of the R and S. I would go there and it should reconcile it all back to the IFRS income statement for you. So that's probably the easiest answer. The other answer is that we take all of our expenses across the group. Speaker 200:49:43Anything we reallocate into claims, we take out and put into expenses and we divide that by net earned premium to get our expense ratio. Speaker 100:49:53On multicar, it's a really interesting one. We don't think multicar in and of itself is right for us in that we have a margin requirement that we expect charge. We're not going to undercut that margin to pick up additional vehicles on the policy. Some of our broker partners do do multi car and that might be an interesting way. And if they're bundling at the distribution end, we can provide the premiums and the rates for our part of that product, that could work well. Speaker 100:50:17So, yes, I don't think we're competing people directly in that multi car market. We're a slightly different target market to that. Matt, do you have anything you want to say on that one? No, it's not a place we see we lose business or we don't see it as a massive growth area either in the medium term. That, I think, is all the questions that we had. Speaker 100:50:39Anything else in the room? If not, thank you very much for your time. I look forward to seeing you again for the half year results. Hopefully, we can report more great progress. Thanks so much.Read morePowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallSabre Insurance Group H2 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2x Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckInterim report Sabre Insurance Group Earnings HeadlinesSabre Insur Regulatory NewsMarch 30, 2025 | lse.co.ukSabre Insurance hikes dividend and plans buyback as profit doublesMarch 18, 2025 | lse.co.ukAltucher: Turn $900 into $108,000 in just 12 months?We are entering the final Trump Bump of our lives. But the biggest returns will not be in the stock market.April 26, 2025 | Paradigm Press (Ad)SMALL-CAP WINNERS & LOSERS: Sabre Insurance announces first buybackMarch 18, 2025 | lse.co.ukSabre Insurance's annual profit more than doubles on competitive pricingMarch 18, 2025 | msn.comSabre Insurance hikes dividend as turnaround gathers speedMarch 18, 2025 | msn.comSee More Sabre Insurance Group Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Sabre Insurance Group? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Sabre Insurance Group and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Sabre Insurance GroupSabre Insurance Group (LON:SBRE), through its subsidiaries, engages in the writing of general insurance for motor vehicles in the United Kingdom. It offers taxi, private car, and motorcycle insurance through a network of insurance brokers, as well as through its Go Girl and Insure 2 Drive brands. 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There are 9 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00and thank you for joining us on the webcast. Speaker 100:00:03I'm pleased to say we have the usual faces here. I think we worked out it's our fifteenth one of these presentations now for most of us. Not sure what that says, but it says something. As usual, me and Adam will do the presentation, and then we'll pass all the difficult questions to Matt and Trevor, who can deal with those at the end. On the agenda, we will, as usual, look back on last year and give you our thoughts on our results from last year. Speaker 100:00:32We'll give you quite a lot of our thoughts on claims inflation. We will once again nerd out in terms of the detail of what we think is driving inflation and how we see that going forward. And then we'll leave plenty of time for Q and A at the end as well. If you're on the webcast, feel free to type the questions in. And while they don't look too difficult, I'll answer those at the end. Speaker 100:00:52So on our highlights. I think if you open lines before we almost certainly get dragged down into the weeds on some of the KPIs. Overall, the Sabre team have had a cracking year, I think, in 2024. The highest ever premium doubled profit generated a ton of capital, which has allowed us to both pay a good dividend and a share buyback for the first time. And I think as importantly, we've laid the foundations for future growth through to 02/1930. Speaker 100:01:21That includes launching bike, which is going live almost as we speak and being rolled out over the next week or two. I think stopping there would be good, but even more pleasingly, we've also been able to keep a tight focus on the long term health of the business. We've kept an eye on how claims inflation impacts the back reserves. We've taken a relatively cautious pick for 2024 to ensure we've not overreached Operator00:01:43for Speaker 100:01:44the result. We priced really strongly in 2024 at good margins. That's given us a bit of headroom and gives us a bit of comfort against an uncertain inflationary environment as well. We've stuck very strongly to our focus on profitability and short term volume as an output. Profitability is our target. Speaker 100:02:05Short term volume is very definitely the output. And we've done our utmost look after staff and customers as we've done that. We've got really good customer responses. We've continued to roll out staff initiatives in terms of added benefits and creating jobs as we've gone through last year. On the detail, we're very much on track for the ambition 02/1930. Speaker 100:02:28We don't see any hiccups on the path of that at this stage. Very strong capital position, as I mentioned, 44% increase in the dividend. Our first share buyback, which reflects the amount of excess capital we generated. Sabre Direct going live this month on Motorbike. And the testing of the new car pricing will, as planned, go on the second half of this year. Speaker 100:02:51So I think a really strong overall result and really good developments for the future as well. At that point, I think I know better to head us into the weeds than Adam. So that's exactly what he's going to do. Speaker 200:03:07Thanks, Geoff. Hello, everyone. So I'll take us through the key numbers behind our 2024 results. So as ever, our reporting is straightforward and transparent with the results centered on the performance of our three flavors of motor insurance. So that will be motorcycle, taxi and core motor vehicle, which is everything that is in the motorcycle or a taxi. Speaker 200:03:31To enhance transparency going forward, all of our headline results such as loss ratio, net insurance margin, we stated on an undiscounted basis as promised in our recent capital markets event. At that time, we also discussed our new KPI, which is net insurance margin. So onto the story for this year. Another record year for premium, albeit one of two halves where the top line is concerned. We continue to grow strongly when market conditions were sufficiently robust and allow volumes to dip later in the year when low market pricing meant it was sensible to do so. Speaker 200:04:07Entirely in line with the strategy we outlined in December. Our net insurance margin has improved by seven percentage points year on year to within touching distance of our 18% to 22% target. More on that in the next few slides. Similarly, our undiscounted combined operating ratio has improved by more than seven percentage points. This, along with the higher premium in 2023 and 2024 earning through has delivered a doubling of profit year on year to million. Speaker 200:04:39Thanks to this growth in earnings, we've been able to increase the total dividend for the year by 44% to 13 p. That's around 90% of earnings. And that was well covered by the capital generation in the period and leaves a very healthy post dividend capital ratio of 171%. And given the level of excess capital post dividend, we're able to today announce our intention to kick off our first share buyback that will return an additional million of capital. So this slide shows the progression of our net insurance margin over time, and the journey towards our target is clearly demonstrated. Speaker 200:05:16A bit like combined ratio, net insurance margin is a function of claims experience and expenses incurred as a proportion of income. And that income is insurance revenue, which includes net insurance premium and installment income as well. So on this chart, the orange bar shrinking shows improving claims experience. And what I'm assured are dark blue or gray shrinking lines show improving expenses as a proportion of insurance revenue. And for clarity, net insurance margin does not include any benefit from discounting. Speaker 200:05:54As you can see, the improvement in margin has been a function of both improving claims, which I'll talk about in terms of loss ratio in the next few slides, and improving expense leverage. So this next chart shows the relative loss ratio performance across our whole book in 2024 and 2023. There's been a significant improvement in current year loss ratio, primarily on our core motor vehicle book and the motorcycle, reflecting the strong pricing throughout 2024. We are of course cautious when making current year loss picks reflecting the relative uncertainty in undeveloped years. The current year will also carry a risk adjustment which means that the current year loss ratio recorded here is likely to be above the expected actual loss ratio achieved for that business. Speaker 200:06:39In 2024, the prior years didn't yield a normal level of positive runoff with the loss picks moving out a little during the year. That's reflective of experience and development of some older years and we've got no reason to expect that the prior years do not return to normal levels of runoff in future periods. And we've made no changes to our reserving philosophy in 2024. This slide highlights the relative contribution to profit from our core Motor Vehicle business and from the supplementary products. Performance in motor vehicle remains in line with our target, although this was the area most affected by the slightly adverse prior year reserve movement. Speaker 200:07:17So the strong improvement in current year doesn't fully show through in the overall motor performance for the year. The motorcycle book is being cleared up and is performing well and it sets a great basis for expanding the product through ambition 02/1930. And taxis improved a little but remains only marginally profitable on a written basis Speaker 100:07:35at the moment. Speaker 200:07:38We chose to allow policy volumes to reduce across the core motor vehicle book in the second half of the year, as I've mentioned. As market conditions softened, it made more sense to focus on maximizing absolute profit rather than chase the market down. Motorcycle income is now fully through our current distributor with the prior year comparison including some premium from MCE which went into administration in 2023 as we previously discussed. So the volume of motorcycle business written now is well in line with our plan. Taxi business has been maintained at a relatively low level as we continue to monitor the book's profitability. Speaker 200:08:14So on this chart, I've shown a snapshot of our capital generated during the year and how we've deployed any surplus capital. Overall, the increase in solvency capital requirement has been relatively small, which has allowed us to distribute healthy ordinary and special dividends and left enough excess capital above the top of our preferred operating range to announce our intention to execute a share buyback during the year, which will be initiated as soon as practical once we've received the usual regulatory approvals. Excluding the capital required to fund the dividend and the share buyback, our solvency capital ratio would be around 163%. We've taken a fresh look at our dividend policy. While we think the policy works well overall, which effectively returns all excess capital to shareholders, we wanted to make sure the ordinary dividend properly reflected our expected sustainable level of distribution. Speaker 200:09:03So So we've tricked the policy to allow us to pay a bit more up to 80% of profit after tax as an ordinary dividend. We've also made explicit reference to our option to use share buybacks when appropriate to do so, either alongside or in place of a special dividend taking into account the potential for the larger ordinary dividend. And with that, thanks very much. And back to you. Speaker 100:09:31Thank you, Adam. Okay. So we will, as usual, give you our views on the market. Who says we can't do PowerPoint? Look. Speaker 100:09:43So we think the pendulum has been swinging about on pricing for the last couple of years. If you look, as we all know, rates went up a lot in early twenty twenty four. We think the pendulum probably swung a bit too far and probably people were relatively overpricing for the risk by the end of that sort of first half of the year. We think that's probably generated higher profits from that year, earning through into this year. Combined with a drive for growth by some competitors, we think that probably means the pendulum has now swung back. Speaker 100:10:14And we firmly believe the market is materially underpriced for new business. What could be driving that? The higher profits we've mentioned, there is a drop in low value frequency of drop in frequency for low value claims that we'll talk about later. And things like Ogden and reinsurance benefits may have given some one off benefits, which means this financial year might look absolutely fine for people, but it does potentially mean business is not being written at a profitable margin for some competitors. Our view is this is now characteristic of a normal insurance market. Speaker 100:10:49If you think where we've been since sort of 2021, '20 '20 '2, we've had COVID, we've had Brexit, we've had all sorts of inflationary impacts. That meant the pension has been swinging much more widely than normal. We think we're back now to a normal rate, a normal cyclical business. This is an environment where savers thrived for fifteen years. This is exactly what we're used to managing through. Speaker 100:11:11We think there's a reasonable chance the market in some places may get a poor financial result for 'twenty five and certainly for 'twenty six if prices don't start to increase later this year. I guess it will be impacted at different times depending on the rating strength coming out of twenty early twenty twenty four. It may impact people at different times and people will feel the pain at different times over the next twelve months or so. Other market factors. I think we all know there's quite a lot of significant M and A anticipated over the next twelve to eighteen months. Speaker 100:11:47I think there's always a risk. This drives overly optimistic assumptions in people's business plans. I guess it's much harder to sell yourself when you're shrinking than when you're growing. So I wouldn't be surprised if there's a bit of optimism being held on to in some places in the market. The FCA overview of premium finance and ancillary sales, it could be a bit of a push to get some business on the books before life becomes slightly more difficult. Speaker 100:12:10This is also possibly the first year the GIP rules have a real impact in terms of premiums are more stable, therefore, renewals should go up and the business might be slightly harder to come by. We know there's a government task force looking at insurance pricing. I don't think anyone really knows where that's going. We can talk in a minute about our regulatory starts. We think we're pretty safe from anything that might come out of that review. Speaker 100:12:34And I think there was a risk of overreaction to some of the recent positive low value claims frequency. By popular demand, by sort of me, if no one else, the inflation scales have returned. So let's look at deflationary factors. Lower accident frequency. I think a really important point here is the only frequency decline we see is in low value bent metal claims. Speaker 100:12:58That's due damage to the vehicle itself. We don't see any real reduction in personal injury frequency, and we certainly don't see any decrease in cost. And Trevor can tell that much more later of interest. The Ogden rate is a one off. We should also probably bear in mind large claims that are being incurred today will not settle under this Ogden discount rate potentially. Speaker 100:13:19So what will the next Ogden rate look like? It needs to be in our minds as well and a decrease in interest rate environment. On the inflation side, cost inflation is very high. We'll talk about that in the next couple of slides. There's pressure on non premium income and operational cost inflation is absolutely going to come through. Speaker 100:13:37So overall, we would see claims inflation at mid to high single digits. That's a slight softening from where we were, but it's still substantially above the long term historic position. So let's look at a bit of the detail. Now this is on the bent metal stuff where there are some positives and negatives. On windscreen, technology is driving a lot more cost in windscreen. Speaker 100:14:02If you've had the misfortune to need a windscreen replaced in the modern tech enabled car recently, it's a painful process. They don't come to you, you go to them. It's a good two or three hours of waiting for your windscreen to be placed in a service station on the M23 from bitter personal experience. So it's expensive and it's slow and it's not great for customers generally. Repair, there is now more capacity in the repair network, but the complexity of cars is requiring longer lead times. Speaker 100:14:32And we're also seeing on some of the EVs coming in from perhaps China, they don't have the repair methods. They're not easy to fix. So parts are being produced in large modules, either the whole back end of a car. That's great for production, but it's not very easy to fix. If one part of that back end of a car gets damaged, you've got to replace the whole lot. Speaker 100:14:53So it's difficult to fix because you don't know how to fix it, and it's not being built with your payer methods in mind, and you've got to replace a lot of material, not just one part of the panel. So that is offset by some of the frequency reduction. Total loss is an interesting one. As you know, the move to EVs continues. Very strong residual values for older petrol powered cars. Speaker 100:15:15A very large part of the car, the car mark, car park is aging as we go. We think that could lead to more disputes on value. If you've got a car that's done relatively few miles and is old and you can't replace it cheaply, that's going to make put pressure on total loss valuations would be our guess. And on theft, no matter how quickly manufacturers come up with new repair or new security measures, people find ways around it. Vehicles are being acquired to parts. Speaker 100:15:44Ford Fiesta is still one of the but Ford Fiesta is the most stolen car in The U. K. Alongside the Ford Transit. That's because there's more of them on the road, but they're not being produced anymore. So are we going to see a part shortage, which means cars will be stolen for parts as much as for the car itself? Speaker 100:15:59And theft of specific components, I'm reliably informed if you wanted to set up a drugs farm in your loft, the Porsche headlight is an ideal way of getting heat and light onto that drug. So we're seeing some of that sort of stuff come through as well. I told you I would say that, Adam. Let me get to injury claims. We don't see too many upsides on this one. Speaker 100:16:19We think this is mainly amber and downside risks. On the minor injury, you've got general damages are linked to RPI. Private treatment is becoming more expensive and more common. We've got inflation in the cost of NHS service. There's a big potential increase coming through to the claims tariff, and we're not seeing the small claims track limits increasing. Speaker 100:16:41So more things fall outside the cheap legal claims and fall into the more expensive legal claims. On the major injury side, again, damage is linked to RPI. Availability of carers is still difficult. Minimum wages are going up a lot. Things like prosthetics are becoming more expensive and more of them. Speaker 100:17:02So overall, we see a lot of cost increase coming through on large claims as well. We think that more than offsets any minor the frequency benefit on the cheaper low value owned damage claims. On top of that, we've got the unknowable impact of tariffs and trade wars and what might go on there. I would stress we don't see any of this as bad news. Providing you see it coming and you price for it properly, this is entirely fine. Speaker 100:17:26It's if you don't see it coming and you don't allow fit in pricing, that's when you get in trouble. So we don't see claims inflation as bad news. We just see it as a factor we need to take into account. Okay. A brief reminder of our ambition 02/1930 that we set out end of last year. Speaker 100:17:44Key points, significant growth in profit by 02/1930 is our aim on this one. We expected there to be hard and soft market conditions across that planning period. So the fact we're currently in a relatively soft pricing market doesn't cause us any concern in that delivery of that long term target. And it's capital light. And I think part of the reason for the buyback today demonstrates our confidence we can deliver this growth agenda without the need for additional capital. Speaker 100:18:14Three key pillars: expand our core car market and efficiency of our direct brands on core expand motorcycle and control expenses while we do that. First initiative, Sabre Direct bike is going live pretty much as we speak. The team are back in Dorkin, busy making live the website and rolling the product out. In the next few next week or so, you should really go on to the website and see how that works. It's starting low and slow, I would say. Speaker 100:18:44Relatively small quotability. We're not going to go in too fast into this. We'll ramp it up as we go through this year and into next year. The second initiative, and I guess the main driver of our growth is expanding the core motor book. As you know, that's really saying we're going to continue to deliver our current margin for the current relatively high risk that we write. Speaker 100:19:07We'll target a slightly lower margin for the less risky business in an appropriate way. Overall loss ratio should increase slightly, but insurance margin should be protected as expense ratio should come down a little bit. As a reminder where we are, this is our current premium, somewhere over GBP 1,000 average premium. The market's on about GBP 500 there and thereabouts. So we are well above the market in terms of our average premium at the moment. Speaker 100:19:36This is my slightly more simplistic way of describing what we're doing and perhaps some of the slides we use at the Capital Market Day. Broadly, on the right hand side of that graph, as you look at it, is the more risky policies with the higher margin requirement to reflect the risk. The further left you come, the lower the margin and the less risky. There's a lot more policies obviously in the mid market than there is at the extremes. So we are taking a small jump to the left at a slightly lower margin, which allows us to compete for more policies slightly nearer the mass market. Speaker 100:20:09We already quote for these policies already, so this is not an unknown territory for us. Importantly, we don't think this is going to be a straight line development. Is sort of reflecting the hard and soft market that we see. This line is purely illustrative. It's not trying to give a profit forecast for each of those years, but we expect the profit to sort of move up gradually towards million weighted towards the back end of this period. Speaker 100:20:44I guess just to restate, all the foundations of these initiatives are already in place. This doesn't rely we're not on a sort of wish list here to make these happen. We've already got the steps being put in place or being put in place. '25, a year of testing and transition. '26, almost, we're going to start to see some benefit on premium and then obviously, profit follows that naturally. Speaker 100:21:09So outlook and summary. We're really excited by the next few years. We've worked our way through and managed our way through some pretty turbulent times in the last few years. In fact, all the way since IPO, we've had pretty turbulent times, one or the other. I think '24 has demonstrated the benefit of long term discipline underwriting, hold your nerve and position in soft market conditions and intake growth opportunities when they arise. Speaker 100:21:35That's exactly what we intend to carry on doing all the time developing the business to drive long, stronger underlying growth. So we delivered, we think, great customer outcomes, good growth in premium, great growth in profit. Ambition 02/1930 is on track. And the net insurance margin, we're confident for next year, this year, will be within our target margin range. Okay. Speaker 100:21:59At that point, we will pause and go to Q and A. Again, if you're on the webcast, feel free to type your questions in and we'll answer them. A bit only because you're nearest to me. There's some mics on their way around with our very unglamorous assistance. Speaker 300:22:20It's Abi Dessein from Panwall Ibrahim. I think I've got three questions, please. The first one is the soft market. Do you think it's still possible to expand your addressable market even in a soft market? And if you could provide any more color in terms of sort of does the price elasticity reduce or increase in the soft part of the cycle? Speaker 300:22:42And actually, it was interesting to note in R and S, you said that you think we are already in the softest part of the cycle or we've just come through the softest part of the cycle. So interesting to hear your thoughts on that. And then the second one, just on margins. Just looking beyond the headline net insurance margin, can you confirm that the motor vehicle net insurance margin is within the sort of 18% to 20%, twenty two % target range. I didn't see Speaker 200:23:13it there. Speaker 300:23:13So just if you could just sort of give us any thoughts on that. And the final one is investing in the business. Do you need to invest in any part of your business to deliver on that ambition 02/1930? Do you need to invest in people, hiring people, in IT or both? Speaker 100:23:28Sure. Okay. Thanks. I'll start and then maybe hand a couple of these around. On the soft market, yes, we can definitely still grow in a soft market. Speaker 100:23:37We're still becoming more competitive. Clearly, we won't grow as quickly as we will do in a hard market. Matt, do Operator00:23:42you want to say Speaker 100:23:43anything on that? I think Speaker 400:23:45what you said there is correct. We can still roll out Ambition 02/1930 during the soft market and test the change we want to make and we'll still see the impact of that come through. Speaker 100:23:58Yes. Trevor, perhaps I mean, you can talk about the people we're investing in. On the softest part of the market question, I do think we're probably at the softest part of the market, although we're near it. I become even more buoyant than normal sort of functions and events around this time of year, sort of testing people's views on claims inflation. I'm not hearing many people disagree with us on claims inflation and not many people saying that prices don't need to start increasing in the second half of the year. Speaker 100:24:23If they should start going up at the half year, it could take a bit longer, but I think people wind themselves into life in doing it. But I'm pretty certain we're looking at prices going up from here, not too much further down. Boat Motor Vehicle net margin, Adam, Patrick, you can add that one. Speaker 200:24:37Yes. So obviously, we don't disclose margins per se per product. But to give you some sort of relatively imperfect maths on that, if you look at the motor vehicle performance on a loss ratio basis for the year versus the overall book, it's a couple of points better. So given that we're at a 17.6% margin across the book, then Motor Vehicle will be meaningfully better than that than the GM. So the Motor Book itself is performing in line with the margin. Speaker 200:25:00I guess the other way of looking at it is the current years didn't move as they normally would. As I said in the presentation, they went out a tiny bit. They would normally roll off a few percent of risk adjustment. If the prior years had performed as we had normally would have expected, we would have been well within the margin range. So in terms of what we're writing now and in terms of what Motor did, we're very comfortable about that margin achievement. Speaker 100:25:22Trevor, do you have anything about investment in people? Speaker 200:25:24So on Speaker 500:25:25the people side, we're in a good position. We've actually got a lot of bench strength at the moment around both on policy side and on the claims side where we've taken the opportunity to invest in training and recruiting people. So we're absolutely there. We also, as you may recall, outsourced some of our services. So where there'd be initial demand, say, in first notification and or servicing our customers on our direct car products, that's outsourced. Speaker 500:25:52On technology side, we've already made the investments to deliver for Sabre Bike. We're continually evaluating our own systems in terms of the insurance administration systems, and we'll continue to do that. Speaker 100:26:07And I think on bike, it's an interesting one as well that I think we're going to be the only U. K. Non phone support based bike policy. Everything's going to be online based. That involves some new skills for your team, Trevor, in terms of dealing with web chat rather than phone? Speaker 100:26:21Yes. Speaker 500:26:21So we're going to in house that, which has been part of the recruitment drive in terms of the ability to service those, Sabre Direct bike customers from out of docking. Speaker 100:26:34Yes. Thanks, David. Darius, just because you were first in my online. Speaker 600:26:39Thank you. Couple of questions. So thank you for the buyback. Couple of questions on that. So is the buyback now a new tool in your toolbox that we should think about every year? Speaker 600:26:50Or is this really sort of a one off? And I've noticed in your sort of capital generation slide, how you started the year with roughly 40,000,000 of excess capital. You ended the year with roughly 40,000,000 of excess capital as well. Now you do say that you're not going to use capital to achieve your ambition twenty twenty two thousand and thirty. And you also talk about how your business is cash generative and we're sort of heading into the soft market, I suppose, or in the soft market. Speaker 600:27:22Why do you need this $40,000,000 of assessed capital? And why you have not given a bit more in terms of the buyback? So that's the second question. And my last question is, the prior year development was a bit of a surprise, I suppose. We had a little bit of strengthening on discounted basis in the first half and I suppose a little bit more in the second half now. Speaker 600:27:45What's going on there? Thank you. Speaker 100:27:47Okay. I'll take the first one, Adam, the second and Matt, and talk about the third. Okay. On the buyback, yes, that's definitely part of our toolbox. Now we've been discussing this with some of our larger shareholders for the last year or two. Speaker 100:27:59And we've really said that should we find ourselves in a position where we have the share price we think is undervalued, a lot of excess capital and we can still meet the dividend requirements because we're conscious we have shareholders split across income and share back interested clients. We'll always look to meet the dividend first to meet our dividend expectation. Should we then think we've got excess capital over that and a low share price, then we'll absolutely think about buybacks going forward. Adam, do you want to talk about the capital gen fit? Speaker 200:28:29Yes. I mean, I think it comes down to what you think of as genuinely excess capital. So if you look at what we presented on that slide, that's effectively all the capital. We've got over 100% of our capital requirement. But the reality is we prefer to hold 140% to 160. Speaker 200:28:44So we've paid down to just over 160% if you take the buyback into account as well, which left us with maybe $1,000,000 or so capital above that. We've always said we're very happy to pay down to within that range. Our floor is 140% or 160%, and we'll use that as we see fit. And it's really just a case of sort of taking every year by year thinking about what might we need this capital for, what are the risks in the next year and really holding enough to mean that in all reasonably foreseeable circumstances, capital is not going to be a problem. That's the main thing. Speaker 200:29:14So we can just continue to grow, execute ambition 02/1930. We've given back everything we really don't think we'll need to be able to do that. But we'll make sure we've got enough capital in the tank to make sure that process runs smoothly, and that's why we haven't paid out everything we potentially could have Speaker 100:29:26done. Thanks. Matt? Speaker 400:29:29So on prior years, as Adam mentioned during his presentation, we have seen some deterioration prior years. We've seen some late adverse movements in claims, and we continue to see an inflation come through. So whilst it has deteriorated, we've now accounted for that. We don't expect that to continue. Generally, we will see prior years release rather than deteriorate from the risk adjustment runoff, and that's what we expect to be long term. Speaker 400:29:55Ever so often, you'll see that prior year deterioration, but we don't foresee that happening again this year. Speaker 100:30:01Yes. Thanks, Matt. Ivan? Speaker 700:30:05Hi, it's Ivan Bokken from Barclays. First of all, I wanted to follow-up on the capital point that we just raised. I mean, maybe we could talk about 2025 as we think about the capital that you would generate versus the capital that you would need to retain. I think we're talking about margins probably improving from the level where they're slightly below the range at the moment and probably not a lot of growth in solvency capital requirement. So from that perspective, should the capital generation also increase on a net basis in 2025? Speaker 200:30:38And I think Speaker 700:30:40the other question I've had, a little bit technical, but as we think about the FCA premium finance study, which presumably is going to be out within the next few months, what do you think the focus points would be? I mean, how can you be affected? Any broader color in the market that you could flag in this? Thank you. Speaker 100:30:56Okay. I'll take a second one. You can have a second guide to capital one in a minute. On the FCA premium finance, I think there's a couple of bits. There's some concerns that maybe some people increase prices for monthly players and then hit a higher APR. Speaker 100:31:10So you're basically charging for a credit risk price. We for clarity don't do that. We never have and never will. I think there's been a concern that the APR looked high compared to the underlying interest rate. And I think you've seen in the market interest rates coming down. Speaker 100:31:25I think perhaps the FCA have achieved their objective just by shining the spotlight that people are gradually softening the margin or the margins on those products. We took a view about a year and a half ago. We should earn the same margin on all of our ancillary products, which we include premium finance as we do on our core product, and that's exactly what we moved to. So we think we're in a very sustainable position there. Our margin is pretty much the same across the core product and all the ancillaries. Speaker 100:31:50So we generally don't think we're too exposed there. We keep an eye on it all the time. And if we think we're over earning them, we'll reduce the price on that. I mean, there is a genuine risk to premium finance in that. If a person claims, they can just stop paying the rest of their premium. Speaker 100:32:06There's not a lot we can do about it. So there's a genuine cost dividing premium finance as well as just the credit piece, which I think gets missed sometimes in the debate around this. Adam, do you want to talk about? Speaker 200:32:16Okay. Yes, I think I'll take it in a couple of parts. So in terms of the capital generation during 2025, obviously, linked to earnings quite heavily and the level of growth that comes through in the year, etcetera. But we do expect to generate a pretty good level of capital and the solvency capital requirement will grow. Solvency capital requirement, as I'm sure you guys will be well aware, is pretty hard to predict in terms of exactly where it's going to go. Speaker 200:32:38We know it will go up probably. We don't know exactly by how much, and then that will limit the amount that we can distribute for the year. And we've actually been very fortunate over the past few years that it hasn't really increased by all that much. And we've been able to distribute quite a lot, which I think takes me to our second point when you look at the dividend policy and what we've done there. And the issue with the previous dividend policy really was the ordinary wasn't ordinary and the special wasn't special. Speaker 200:32:59In some respects, we all knew that we were going to generate more capital than the ordinary dividend would allow us to distribute, and therefore, there would be a special every year. The normal run rate of dividends when you take normal levels of capital requirement increase into the future isn't 100% of earnings. It sort of can't be as it has been for the last years. It will have to come down more towards that ordinary dividend level. So what we're saying is that we think capital generation should be good. Speaker 200:33:22It could be ordinary plus, and there'll be an opportunity for a special next year and or a buyback. But at the moment, that's the way we're trying to get people to sort of think about it. So yes, I think capital generation should be pretty healthy next year, but we'll see how the capital requirement develops, I think, over the next twelve months. Speaker 700:33:39I just have to follow-up, Speaker 100:33:41Geoff, to Speaker 700:33:41what you were talking about, the premium finance. I think if we look at the range of what the APRs people charge, I think it starts from like mid teens, 16% all the way up to 50% with some brokers charge. And you guys are a little over 20%, I think mid-20s, if I'm not wrong. I mean, would the FCA just wants for you to show to share the economics of what the input costs are? And is that the way how you defend the APR? Speaker 100:34:05Well, I think we have done some work on that in the past in terms of market studies around how APR, but I'm sure we have, because of how APR works and how we get to it. So I think there is a bit that gets missed. There is a genuine risk of running a premium finance scheme in terms of, if you have a big claim and you just stop paying your premium, we have to pay the claim regardless of the fact you've only paid onetwelve of your premium. So that's definitely an issue that's out there. There's also once you've got someone on the books, you're on the hook for claims until you got them off the books again if they don't pay their premium. Speaker 100:34:38So I think this does get missed. And I don't know exactly what they got. I think the FCA were clearly unhappy at the level of APR and that has been naturally coming down the market. You say, when you look at where people were and where they are now, you can see that softening gently. Who knows? Speaker 100:34:53I don't know exactly what's in their mind, but I think we're well set whatever way that goes. We're not very dependent on proven finance anyway. So if it all got banned tomorrow, it wouldn't destroy our business anyway. Operator00:35:08It's Daryl Goh from RBC. So my first question is just on the reserve strengthening in 2024. Could you maybe give a sense of how much of it was adverse experience and the other part being a buffer build, if you like? I think to your point about not overreaching given how strong 2024 earnings were. I guess a different way to answer that is what might also be a normal level of reserve leases from 'twenty five onwards? Operator00:35:35The second question is just in terms of your core TAM. Do you feel as though mass market insurers are being a bit more aggressive there? And I guess how reliant are you on your new pricing platform to grow? And when can we expect a return to growth in your core policy book? And then the third one, you spoke about your central assumption for market pricing to increase later this year. Operator00:36:05How has that assumption changed from what you assumed in December? And I guess if that fails, what confidence can you give that your bottom line will still grow in 'twenty five and 'twenty six? Or maybe more explicitly, what is a minimum level of earnings growth we can expect in 'twenty five and 'twenty six in a so called bad case? Thank you. Speaker 100:36:26Yes. Okay. There's some big questions in there, aren't there? Adam, do you want to say anything about the reserve strength in your perspective? And then maybe, Matt, you can just add anything to that. Speaker 200:36:35Yes, I will. I mean, in some cases, it's pretty difficult to answer sort of what's going to happen in reserves going forward. So we know that we in the current year, we always think about relative uncertainties around that. We prefer for the current year to develop positively rather than negatively into the future and therefore, that we'll book it accordingly. And also, there will be an explicit risk adjustment on top of that as well. Speaker 200:37:04So it's very hard for me to say exactly how much that risk adjustment is relatively clear. Anything else, let's assume we put it at the best estimate basis and see how it develops is probably the way to think about it. In terms of what the normal level of runoff might be, which is potentially more useful, again, quite difficult because it's nice to point to a sort of period of past years and say that's what normal development looks like. But of course, there haven't really been any normal past years for a relatively long time, so I can't do that. What I can do is point back to 2023, where the prior year development was sort of in the region of 2% to 3%. Speaker 200:37:36That seems like a relatively sensible amount of sort of risk adjustment runoff. I'm on the record for a few years ago of saying I think the prior year risk margin runoff should be around sort of 4%. Under IFRS 17, the risk adjustment may be sort of a little bit less than that. But so in that sort of region, so that's an order of magnitude, I think you can sort of think somewhere sort of 2%, four %. But obviously, there's a lot of water to pass on the bridge between before we actually still see that runoff coming through. Speaker 100:38:02Thanks. And I guess just to add, we've been clear that we've taken a relatively cautious current year pick because of the uncertainty around inflation. But, Matt, you've not changed your approach to reserving? Speaker 400:38:12The approach remains the same. Speaker 100:38:14We're going for a best estimate, which generally we would hope to run off positively, but can on occasions go the other way. We're not expecting that to happen, as Matt said, going forward. Correct. I think you then asked about the mass market. And I think it's very aggressive. Speaker 100:38:26There's a bit of a feeding frenzy going on, I think, in the mass market. We're not planning on going into the mass market. We're not planning on rising £400 or £500 premiums. That's not where we're at. If you think of those slides, we're about £1,200 at the moment. Speaker 100:38:38Coming down a few hundred pounds still leads us very much towards the upper end of the mass market. So I don't think we're planning on going to compete completely in the heart of the mass market. The assumption what's changed in terms of pricing? I guess there were two things happened at the end of last year. One was the Ogden discount rate changed. Speaker 100:38:58So that would have given a bit of tailwind to financial results this year. And I think probably for the first time in living recent memory, reinsurance rates came down. First, we had a $31.12 renewal. So that would have been another saving for this year. So there were two new things that probably elongated the soft part of the cycle beyond the level we might have thought of in early December last year. Speaker 100:39:20So you had a slight follow-up on your face at one point there. Operator00:39:24Sorry, just my question earlier wasn't so much about you guys getting to mass market, but rather the mass market insurers like your Avivas and Admirals of the world sort of knocking on your doors and eating your lunch for the Arista? Speaker 100:39:38I mean, we already compete with Aviva and Admiral. We view the world as a series of Venn diagrams where we overlap with different people at different times. We've seen different people come into the market at different times. Some of them are more painful than others when they do that. This has happened regularly over the last, how many years you've been here, Trevor? Speaker 100:39:54Fifteen. No, There's always been coming in and out of our part of the market and Saba strategy is designed just to drive straight to the middle of that and be consistent. What will growth look like this year? No, I think it depends on the market. We're right in a very comfortable level of premium at the moment. Speaker 100:40:09We're not concerned about our premium levels for this year. Whether that results in flat, little bit of growth, more growth will depend on the market conditions in the second half. But we're certainly not sitting here concerned that we're not writing enough volume at the moment. Anything to add to that? Okay. Speaker 100:40:27Andreas? Speaker 800:40:31Yes. Andreas from Lambda Peel Hunt. Just wanted to add a question about inflation risk. When you go to slide 25 and you're writing average premium policy between 2,200. When you move out to the right of that chart, when you go to the higher premium policy, does that carry more inflation risk than if you go to the left and go more to the near standard market? Speaker 800:40:57Is there less inflation risk there? Or is it the other way around? And just a question about second half of twenty twenty four. The you lost some policy volumes in a more competitive market again. Obviously, that's the way you underwrite. Speaker 800:41:12I just want to check whether that loss, whether that was more in that core boater book, like the real core nonstandard book, whether you're again sort of losing policy volumes in that sort of near standard segment of the market. And if that's the case going into the sort of 2025, would you have in your underwriting strategy, would you want to retrench in that sort of real core motor book and wait for the market to turn again to go out into the accelerating growth in the year standard, I. E, will you take some sort of your foot off the gas in the second half of the year if the market doesn't recover? Thank you. Speaker 100:41:48Sure. Okay. More inflation risk. If I start, maybe, Madam, you can say. I guess, in some ways, it's who you hit that matters on a lot of this stuff. Speaker 100:41:57And you can hit someone expensively sure in a highly rated vehicle or a low rated vehicle. Yes. I was going Speaker 500:42:04to make that very point. Higher risk premiums also tend to be higher frequency rather than necessarily higher severity. There is higher severity there. But of course, as Jeff's just said, they're hitting the same things and the same people. So it's more likely the premium is more likely to reflect a frequency risk rather than a severity risk. Speaker 500:42:31So if we take taxi, for example, where average premium is significantly above our core, those vehicles are on the road map. Speaker 100:42:40Yes. And so the lack of taxis, the issue is it's a taxi in a town center with drunk people. That's not a great combination. So you expect to see relatively more higher value claims on that book. For the general stuff we do, I don't think it's much more of an inflation risk, Matt. Speaker 100:42:56I think we see it Speaker 400:42:57it's going to be driven by the components of the risk. So you could have a high premium driven by first party or theft risk, for example. We could have it driven by high injury risk. So when inflation varies by petrol, that's where the inflation risk will come. So if we think injury is a higher inflation risk, that tends to drive a higher premium. Speaker 400:43:16Therefore, if it's a high injury component, it could be higher inflationary risk. But if it's something which is quite certain, it'd be a lot of inflation risk. Speaker 100:43:24Yeah. So that question was, is it distributed evenly on high or low premiums? Speaker 400:43:34I would say it varies depending on the components. So it's hard to say exactly. Speaker 100:43:38So you're looking at rating by the individual part of the risk? Yes. I think the second question was around were we losing policies? Is it our core book or the mass market? I think it traditionally is we lose stuff from the fringe of the mass market where we sort of see the tide coming in and out. Speaker 100:43:57In a hard market, the tide comes in a bit and we can write more of that lower premium stuff at the right margin. So I think we're seeing no difference to a normal market cycle. As I mentioned earlier, this was like a completely normal market cycle that Sabre used to managing through. When we retrench, I don't think we really think about our world as retrenching or growing. We just charge the right price and we see what sticks to it. Speaker 100:44:20What I think we're reflecting in the new strategy is that right price is a slightly lower margin for low risk policies, so so we'd expect more policies to stick to us by putting those prices out there. So we're not targeting, we don't have an aggressive volume. I was reading the Berkshire shareholder, I'm not sure if you've seen that recently, but there's a phrase in there which is exactly in line with our thinking, which is if prices aren't priced correctly, chasing volume is corporate suicide. Well, paraphrasing slightly, that's exactly how we see it. We're in a fortunate position. Speaker 100:44:48We can still write plenty of business at our current margins in our current target market. So we're feeling relatively okay with life. Karl Lofthagen from Berenberg. Just one on distribution. Given 90% of the new business is sold by a price comparison, as you're growing and expanding your addressable market, do you expect to kind of tailor your distribution strategy a little bit towards that channel given I guess it should offer lower commission expenses? Speaker 100:45:21Thank you. Okay. I would say probably 90% of our business starts life on a price comparison website now. Whether it eventually comes to us via broker or via our direct brand, it's still probably starting life on a price comparison website. We already have our brands. Speaker 100:45:36We have GoGirl and Insureto Drive on the comparison websites. Now they're on all the Mojo comparison websites. I don't view that change. We don't just do anything different. The product's already there, built works well. Speaker 100:45:50We just need to put slightly different prices behind it for different segments of the market. So no real change needed on that one. Anything else in the room? Or anything on the I thought you're going to say no then, but there you have it. Okay. Speaker 100:46:09Right. Right, Adam, the first one's heading your way. Investment portfolio income yield was around 2.5% in 2024. Can you give a feel for what level you see this topping out at given recent reinvestment yields? Speaker 200:46:21Yes, it will be higher than that. I would have thought unless something spectacular happens in the markets, and obviously, you can't bank that we're going to be able to reinvest at the same yield forever. But yes, we're looking at the sort of normal pre investment yield for a medium term set of gilts and a bit of corporate bonds in there. So that should be at least 1% or so higher as we continue to reinvest that through. Speaker 100:46:47Thank you. Second question, Adam is also heading your way. GWC decreased 21% year on year in Q4. Is this a reasonable run rate? What we should expect to see in the early part of 'twenty five? Speaker 200:46:57Yes. I mean, it's fair to assume that nothing spectacular happened between the December 31 and the January 1 this year. So the income run rate is very similar to the exit run rate from last year, for sure. January and February are always unusual months when it comes to premium. You never quite know what's going to happen as insurers enter the new year. Speaker 200:47:15But in this case, yes, we can take sort of Q4's premium run rate as informative as to where we came into 2025. Speaker 100:47:23I should say those last two questions came from Nick Johnson at Deutsche. Thank you for that, Nick. Next one is from Barry Korns. Congratulations on a good set of numbers. I'm going to stop there. Speaker 100:47:32I think sadly, he carries on. Two questions. You mentioned you want to grow further in motorcycle. What are the specific areas you like to target to grow premiums? I'll let you give a few seconds to think about that. Speaker 100:47:43And how do you think other insurers will react to you entering their space as you expand your addressable market? On the second bit, the motorcycle market is not huge, but already a reasonable chunk of it. You might recall back to our earlier presentations in previous results sessions. There's only probably five or six insurers out there and five or six key brokers. We will look to deal with most of those brokers over time. Speaker 100:48:07We're rolling out a very different product, Matt. It's IHP. It's a much more complicated product than most in the market. Do you want to say anything about it? Yes. Speaker 400:48:14So the motorcycle product we're rolling out is going to be quite a slow rollout. The rating is more complex, and we're using all the data we have to build as accurate models as possible. It'll be fully enriched, and we'll have the same technology as our core motor portfolio as well on IHP, but we see it as a slow grow over the twenty, twenty five year. Speaker 100:48:37Yes. I would say most bike is distributed by brokers. The specialist brands on brokers and those brokers are very keen to deal with us. So we see it as being welcomed into the market, not having to fight our way in. Next question, two from Simon Young at Foresight Group here. Speaker 100:48:54Do you have information on what percentage of the motor insurance market now bundles its policy into multi car and increasing multi car plus travel plus home? How has this changed over time? Can you compete here via your distribution partners? I'll ask that in a second. Adam, the second one is heading for you. Speaker 100:49:08Can you clarify how you calculate the expense ratio? In the release, you state the expense ratio is 25,500,000.0 and total expenses of $28,300,000 assuming the $400,000,000 total operating expenses divided by net earned premium. I'm going to let you read that because there's no chance Speaker 200:49:24you're going to I'll just explain what it is I think, Geoff. You stop. Speaker 100:49:27I'm getting Speaker 200:49:28into the weeds of it. Well, first answer to expense ratio is there are reconciliations in the back of the R and S. I would go there and it should reconcile it all back to the IFRS income statement for you. So that's probably the easiest answer. The other answer is that we take all of our expenses across the group. Speaker 200:49:43Anything we reallocate into claims, we take out and put into expenses and we divide that by net earned premium to get our expense ratio. Speaker 100:49:53On multicar, it's a really interesting one. We don't think multicar in and of itself is right for us in that we have a margin requirement that we expect charge. We're not going to undercut that margin to pick up additional vehicles on the policy. Some of our broker partners do do multi car and that might be an interesting way. And if they're bundling at the distribution end, we can provide the premiums and the rates for our part of that product, that could work well. Speaker 100:50:17So, yes, I don't think we're competing people directly in that multi car market. We're a slightly different target market to that. Matt, do you have anything you want to say on that one? No, it's not a place we see we lose business or we don't see it as a massive growth area either in the medium term. That, I think, is all the questions that we had. Speaker 100:50:39Anything else in the room? If not, thank you very much for your time. I look forward to seeing you again for the half year results. Hopefully, we can report more great progress. Thanks so much.Read morePowered by