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American International Group Inc

Exchange: NYSESector: Financial ServicesIndustry: Insurance - Diversified

American International Group, Inc. (AIG) is a global insurance company. The Company provides a range of property casualty insurance, life insurance, retirement products, mortgage insurance and other financial services to customers in more than 130 countries. It diverse offerings include products and services that help businesses and individuals protect their assets, manage risks and provide for retirement security. It earns revenues primarily from insurance premiums, policy fees from universal life insurance and investment products, and income from investments. Its segments include AIG Property Casualty and AIG Life and Retirement. During the year ended December 31, 2012, the Chartis segment was renamed AIG Property Casualty and the SunAmerica segment was renamed AIG Life and Retirement.

Current Price

$78.03

+0.64%

GoodMoat Value

$180.32

131.1% undervalued
Profile
Valuation (TTM)
Market Cap$41.87B
P/E13.25
EV$48.43B
P/B1.02
Shares Out536.56M
P/Sales1.57
Revenue$26.64B
EV/EBITDA6.40

American International Group Inc (AIG) — Q1 2025 Transcript

Apr 4, 202611 speakers8,307 words46 segments

AI Call Summary AI-generated

The 30-second take

AIG had a very strong start to the year, growing its insurance business and managing costs well despite facing large losses from California wildfires. The company is excited about its future plans, including using advanced AI and expanding in fast-growing markets like India, and it is returning a lot of cash to shareholders through buybacks and a higher dividend.

Key numbers mentioned

  • Adjusted after-tax income was $702 million.
  • Net premiums written were $4.5 billion, an increase of 8% year-over-year.
  • General Insurance expense ratio decreased to 30.5%.
  • Catastrophe losses were $520 million, driven by $460 million from California wildfires.
  • Capital returned to shareholders was $2.5 billion in the first quarter.
  • Parent liquidity was $4.9 billion at quarter-end.

What management is worried about

  • Tariffs create uncertainty which may lead to lower levels of transactional activity in the near term, impacting certain commercial businesses.
  • If there's another major catastrophe in 2025, we could see demand surge, supply constraints and further inflation, which may also lead to extended business interruption.
  • The greatest challenge for companies is understanding the real impact of tariffs and how they are changing and their implications.
  • Financial Lines and Property are experiencing pricing pressure in certain segments.

What management is excited about

  • We expect this business (Tata AIG in India) to continue to scale faster than any other geography in our portfolio.
  • We're actually going live on a couple of our lines of business with GenAI, which we think is the best-in-class way of doing it.
  • Lexington submission growth continued in the first quarter, increasing 30% year-over-year.
  • We expect to meet our 2025 objective of a 10%-plus core operating ROE.
  • We announced our intent at Investor Day to grow the dividend per share by 10%-plus in 2025 and 2026.

Analyst questions that hit hardest

  1. Mike Zaremski, BMO: Adoption of GenAI. Management gave a long answer detailing their multi-year foundational work and strategic partnerships, emphasizing they are past the pilot phase.
  2. Meyer Shields, KBW: Underwriting adjustments for tariff uncertainty. Management provided a detailed example of adding risk margin to loss ratios and described a cautious, proactive approach to pricing.
  3. Alex Scott, Barclays: Impact of business mix shift on combined ratio. Management's response was lengthy, covering reinsurance strategy, market conditions in property, and how growth in casualty will naturally alter loss ratios.

The quote that matters

If I had to choose just one key takeaway from our Investor Day, it is that AIG is in every way a different company.

Peter Zaffino — CEO

Sentiment vs. last quarter

Omitted as no previous quarter context was provided in the transcript.

Original transcript

Operator

Good day, and welcome to AIG's First Quarter 2025 Financial Results Conference Call. This conference is being recorded. Now, at this time, I would like to turn the conference over to Quentin McMillan. Please go ahead.

O
QM
Quentin McMillanExecutive

Thanks very much, and good morning. Today's remarks may include forward-looking statements which are subject to risks and uncertainties. These statements are not guarantees of future performance or events and are based on management's current expectations. AIG's filings with the SEC provide details on important factors that could cause actual results or events to differ materially. Except as required by applicable securities laws, AIG is under no obligation to update any forward-looking statements if circumstances or management's estimates or opinions should change. Today's remarks may also refer to non-GAAP financial measures. The reconciliation of such measures to the most comparable GAAP figures is included in our earnings release, financial supplement and earnings presentation, all of which are available on our website at aig.com. Following the deconsolidation of Corebridge Financial on June 9, 2024, the historical results of Corebridge for all periods presented are reflected in AIG's consolidated financial statements as discontinued operations in accordance with US GAAP. Finally, today's remarks related to net premiums written and net premiums earned are presented on a comparable basis, which reflects year-over-year comparison on a constant dollar basis and adjusted for the sale of the global personal travel and assistance business as applicable. We believe this presentation provides the most useful view of our results and the go-forward business in light of the substantial changes to the portfolio since 2023. Please refer to Page 26 of the earnings presentation for reconciliations of such metrics on a comparable basis. With that, I'd now like to turn the call over to our Chairman and CEO, Peter Zaffino.

PZ
Peter ZaffinoCEO

Good morning, and thank you for joining us today to review our first quarter 2025 financial results. AIG's overall performance in the quarter was exceptional and we continued to make significant progress on our strategic, operational and financial objectives. We had a very busy start to the year. And while it's hard to believe, just 30 days ago, we hosted our Investor Day. We're incredibly grateful for the positive engagement and support from our colleagues and many stakeholders and appreciated the opportunity to share our journey with them. For my prepared remarks, I will start with an overview of our Investor Day, including what we intend to achieve, some observations from the meeting, and what we've learned since. Second, I will highlight our first quarter financial results. Third, I want to provide a spotlight on our business strategy and long-term view of India, a business that we briefly touched on at our Investor Day. Fourth, given the widespread interest, I will offer a few observations on the impact of tariffs. And last, I'll provide an update on our progress toward our financial targets that we outlined at our Investor Day. Keith will then provide more detail on our financial results, and Don Bailey and Jon Hancock will join us for the Q&A portion of the call. Beginning with Investor Day, our objective was to demonstrate the incredible progress the company has made over the last seven years and why we believe we’re so well-positioned for the future. We shared how we established an underwriting culture of excellence, substantially reduced underwriting exposure, controlled volatility, structured the company for the future, refreshed our purpose and values, developed a world-class end-to-end operating structure, digitized end-to-end processes, developed a robust data hierarchy, and retired over 1,200 applications while migrating to the cloud. We discussed how we created a lean parent company and strengthened our balance sheet while executing a disciplined capital management strategy, which will enable AIG to have maximum strategic and financial flexibility for the future. We provided detail on our strategy to deploy GenAI end-to-end, and to demonstrate how the advancement in adoption is making a difference across our business to drive future growth, and that was on full display. I'm very grateful to our world-class partners, Alex Karp of Palantir and Dario Amodei of Anthropic, for joining Sara Eisen and me on stage to showcase and validate our strategy. And while they are very entertaining guests and have better things to do with their time than show up at AIG's Investor Day, they felt compelled to speak to our stakeholders about how they fully endorse AIG's strategy. It was a very important moment for our company. We demonstrated the breadth and depth of our global portfolio with $24 billion of net premiums written, which enables us to leverage both our diverse geographic footprint and strong product offerings to solve our clients' risk needs. We highlighted what a thoughtful and carefully planned reinsurance strategy can do for a company over time, showcasing key structures of our portfolio and providing an introduction to our special purpose vehicle backed by Blackstone, which is an important part of our strategic evolution. Our stakeholders came away from the event with a much clearer understanding of our strategic direction, the deep expertise within our company, our differentiated approach to GenAI and our ambitious yet achievable financial targets and global growth opportunities. Inside the company, there's a sense of confidence and pride. Our Investor Day gave our colleagues the opportunity to see their hard work recognized in an impactful way, which has generated energy and engagement across the organization and we're excited to take this momentum forward. If I had to choose just one key takeaway from our Investor Day, it is that AIG is in every way a different company. Turning to our financial results, against the challenging geopolitical and macroeconomic environment, we made excellent progress towards our long-term strategic and financial goals, while delivering exceptional underwriting results, effectively managing volatility, while reducing expenses. In the first quarter, adjusted after-tax income was $702 million or $1.17 per diluted share. Building on our momentum, we had another quarter of strong premium growth. Net premiums written were $4.5 billion, an increase of 8% year-over-year on a comparable basis, led by 10% growth in Global Commercial. North America Commercial Insurance net premiums written grew 14% year-over-year. Lexington grew 23%, led by Lexington Casualty, which grew 27%. It's worth noting that Lexington submission growth continued in the first quarter, increasing 30% year-over-year, and that is following an increase of over 50% in the first quarter of 2024 when compared to 2023. Simply an outstanding result. This increase in submission activity was primarily driven by middle market casualty and property, which together represent two-thirds of the total submissions received. Glatfelter contributed 16% growth and Retail Property grew over 40%, almost entirely driven by the significant enhancements to our reinsurance structures. International Commercial Insurance net premiums written grew 8% year-over-year on an FX-adjusted basis, driven by property at 35%, largely as a result of enhanced reinsurance structures. And Marine grew an impressive 17%. Turning to expenses, our general insurance expense ratio decreased to 30.5% in the first quarter compared to 31.8% in the prior year quarter. The divestiture of our travel business was the largest contributor to this improvement, accounting for 110 basis points. The remaining 20 basis points of improvement came from AIG Next initiatives. This is very impressive when you consider that General Insurance absorbed $78 million of additional expenses that were booked in Other Operations in 2024. Other Operations general operating expenses were $85 million in the quarter. The accident year combined ratio, as adjusted, was 87.8%, the best first quarter result for AIG since the financial crisis. The prior year quarter was 88.4%. The calendar year combined ratio was 95.8% for the quarter, which included $520 million in catastrophe losses, driven by the California wildfires, which came in at $460 million. The combined ratio represented 9.1 loss ratio points and is a testament to our strategy for managing volatility. While industry losses from natural catastrophes are the second highest for the first quarter of the year on record, we expect our net retained catastrophe losses to be within expectations for 2025, largely based on our reinsurance structures. If you apply our current loss projections for the wildfire catastrophe to our aggregate cover, we will have approximately $35 million net of annual aggregate deductible remaining for all other perils in North America, excluding wind and earthquake, and approximately $385 million net left for all perils, both subject to a $50 million each and every loss deductible for the rest of this calendar year. We also continue to have significant property catastrophe occurrence limit available. Overall, the market remained favorable in the first quarter, particularly in segments with very good underlying fundamentals. Keith is going to cover rate in more detail in his remarks, but I wanted to provide some perspective. For North America, the rate increases in the quarter were led by excess casualty at 16%. In the last five calendar years, excess casualty has had double-digit rate increases each year with cumulative rate above loss trend. Gladfelter had a 6% rate increase. These increases were offset by Financial Lines, which decreased 5%, Retail Property, which decreased 7%, and Lexington Property, which decreased 10%. In Financial Lines, we have the benefit of a highly diversified business by product and segment. This enables us to position the portfolio for the best risk-adjusted returns even in a competitive market. To further outline, we have meaningfully reduced our excess capacity, where pricing is increasingly commoditized. We're focused on our primary business where we have a differentiated offering and a leadership position. Our Financial Lines portfolio has gone from representing 30% of North America Commercial net premiums written in 2021 to representing 19% of the portfolio today. Next, let me give some context on property rate. Over the past five years, we have had cumulative rate increases of 113% in Retail Property and 96% in Wholesale Property. Pricing continues to be above our technical view, nonetheless, we continue to be very disciplined and we'll monitor market conditions throughout the year. In International, the environment was more balanced. Casualty had a 7% rate increase, Property had a 2% rate increase, offset by Global Specialty and Talbot, which decreased 1% and 4%, respectively, and Financial Lines, which decreased by 3%. And please recall that we report rate on gross premiums written. And because many of our lines are heavily impacted by reinsurance in the first quarter, there's not a direct correlation to net premiums written, which are lower in certain businesses, such as our Global Specialty business. Turning to capital management, we returned $2.5 billion of capital to shareholders in the first quarter. This included $2.2 billion of share repurchases and $234 million of dividends. We ended the quarter with a debt to total capital ratio of 17.1% and parent liquidity of $4.9 billion. As I announced on Investor Day, as of April 1, the AIG Board of Directors increased our share repurchase authorization to $7.5 billion, inclusive of the outstanding authorization amount, of which approximately $7.1 billion remains available. Additionally, the Board approved a 12.5% increase in our quarterly dividend of $0.45 per share yesterday. We expect to repurchase a total of $5 billion to $6 billion of shares in 2025, subject to share price and market conditions, which should bring us to a range of 500 million to 550 million shares outstanding over time. Now, I'd like to transition to discuss one of our strategic partnerships. While we covered a lot of content on Investor Day, one part of our business that we did not address in any detail is Tata AIG. With this in mind, I'd like to share some observations on the rapidly growing market in India and insights about our joint venture with the Tata Group. India as a country has made remarkable progress over the last decade. Over that time, the economy has grown from the 10th largest to the 5th largest economy in the world and is likely to become the third largest economy after the United States and China by 2030. Real GDP is estimated to grow approximately 7% over the next two years with nominal GDP growing nearly two times higher. The changing demographics in India are well known, but worth highlighting. In a country of nearly 1.5 billion people, half of the population is below the age of 30. The middle-class is projected to more than double by 2030 with some of the fastest growth happening in Tier-3 and Tier-4 cities. Pivoting to the insurance industry, the general insurance market in India is over $35 billion in gross premiums written as of 2023 and had a compound annual growth rate of around 11% over the last five years. We expect the market will sustain this type of growth through 2030. And there's a massive opportunity for growth, given the changing dynamics. In India, non-life insurance penetration is still relatively low at 1% of GDP. In contrast, the United States is at 9% of GDP. Our presence in India began 25 years ago when we partnered with Tata Group to establish a joint venture, Tata AIG. The India insurance market opened to private insurance companies and direct foreign investment in 2000. At the time, the maximum allowable foreign investment was 26%, which is what we currently hold today. Prior to 2000, India's insurance market was dominated by public sector insurance companies, which had 100% market share. Opening up the market to private insurance and foreign direct investment dramatically shifted India's insurance landscape. Today, private sector insurance companies represent 60% of the non-life market. While India offers tremendous opportunity, it's a complex and highly competitive market. For foreign companies, it's important to choose the right partner, a company with deep and broad knowledge of India and one with a strong reputation. For AIG, there is no better choice than Tata Group, one of the highest quality global companies. Tata Group operates 30 companies in over 100 countries across diverse industries. Its 26 publicly listed enterprises have a combined market cap of $365 billion with over 1 million employees. Over the last decade, Tata Group has been consistently ranked as one of India's most valuable brands. Tata AIG is highly respected and is ranked as the #2 private insurer in the commercial insurance and motor insurance sectors. It serves 27 million customers with 8,500 employees and leverages 85,000 captive agents operating across the country. Tata AIG had $2.1 billion of gross premiums written in 2024 and its mix of business is approximately 75% personal insurance and 25% commercial insurance. Tata AIG is a high-growth business. From 2020 to 2025, we had a compound annual growth rate of 20%, outpacing the market. Through 2030, we expect to continue to grow at the same compound annual growth rate, fueled by India's accelerating economy, rising insurance adoption and Tata AIG's market-leading brand and reputation. The business has exceptional technology and data capabilities that enabled it to scale rapidly and support the continued ambition for accelerated growth. Tata AIG's products and services are digital-first with clients and agents enabled by technology at every stage of the value chain, providing a complete digital customer experience, which is what clients in India expect. Additionally, Tata AIG benefits from access to AIG's multinational network with AIG supporting the joint venture's domestic multinational corporate clients. In close partnership with Tata Group, we're prepared to significantly invest in growth organically and possibly inorganically, should opportunities present themselves. And I expect this business to continue to scale faster than any other geography in our portfolio. There's been a lot of discussion about tariffs and I'd like to share a perspective, understanding that there is still significant uncertainty around the topic of tariffs. To start, let me provide some relevant facts. First, there are only seven countries worldwide that export more than $100 billion to the United States. And China, Canada and Mexico are the only countries that export over $250 billion. When looking at a country's level of exports to the United States as a percentage of their total exports, Mexico is 79%, Canada is 74% and China is less than 20%. Altogether, tariffs create uncertainty, which may lead to lower levels of transactional activity in the near term, impacting certain commercial businesses, but it's premature to predict any specific outcomes related to these emerging macro trends. The greatest challenge for companies is understanding the real impact of tariffs and how they are changing and their implications. There is a complexity not only with tariff policies evolving, but also with the potential impact on supply chains. It's also important to consider the implications to loss costs and inflation. To help parse through this complexity, let me share a property example. Typically, in a high net worth claim and, of course, it's subject to the particular type of loss, approximately 60% of the loss would be for rebuilding costs, 30% for content and 10% or thereabouts for allocated loss adjustment expense. When considering materials, such as lumber, floor coverings, windows, steel, marble or granite, you need to take into account increased inflation rates. Then, you should consider which of these items are imported. For example, Canada represents roughly 85% of all US softwood lumber imports. This added dimension further complicates the calculation of future loss costs. Additionally, if there's another major catastrophe in 2025 beyond the January wildfires, we could see demand surge, supply constraints and further inflation, which may also lead to extended business interruption. Lastly, insurance companies need to monitor the effects of sales, payroll and other factors to calculate the potential impact on future premiums, if any. We will continue to monitor the implications for our business as more information becomes available. Before I close, I want to touch on the financial targets that we announced on Investor Day. These are multi-year goals, so I'm not going to give updates every quarter, but I did want to provide some insight. Operating EPS is on track, and the key drivers for earnings growth remain favorable. We produced strong top-line growth and managed volatility in a very heavy catastrophe quarter. We are on our way to fully replacing Corebridge earnings by 2026 and we expect to achieve a 20%-plus earnings per share compound annual growth rate over the next three years. We continue to make progress towards our goal of achieving 10% to 13% core operating ROE. Our first quarter core operating ROE was 7.7%, which was impacted by catastrophe losses. We expect to meet our 2025 objective of a 10%-plus core operating ROE as we outlined on Investor Day. We've made terrific progress towards our goal of achieving an expense ratio below 30% for General Insurance with the first quarter coming in at 30.5%. We will continue our significant focus to maintain an expense structure that aligns with the size of the company that we are while investing in our data and digital strategies. And finally, turning to our dividend, we announced our intent at Investor Day to grow the dividend per share by 10%-plus in 2025 and 2026. Yesterday, the AIG Board of Directors approved a 12.5% increase in our quarterly dividend of $0.45 per share starting in the second quarter of 2025. In summary, we've entered an exciting new chapter for AIG and we're executing on all aspects of our strategy. With that, I'll turn the call over to Keith.

KW
Keith WalshCFO

Thank you, Peter, and good morning. Starting with General Insurance, overall results were strong and reflected excellent underwriting and disciplined expense management. Adjusted pre-tax income, or APTI, was $979 million, a decrease of $379 million from the prior year quarter, due to higher catastrophe losses, primarily related to the California wildfires. Underwriting income was $243 million, down $353 million from the prior year quarter. Results reflect higher catastrophe losses, partially offset by favorable prior year development and continued improvement in accident year underwriting. First quarter General Insurance gross premiums written were $9 billion, an increase of 3% from the prior year, and net premiums written were $4.5 billion, an 8% increase. General Insurance combined ratio was 95.8% compared to 89.8% in the prior year quarter and included 9.1 points of CAT losses versus 1.9 points in the first quarter of 2024. Prior year development net of reinsurance was $64 million favorable, up from $22 million favorable in the prior year. This quarter included $31 million of ADC amortization and $33 million of favorable development, largely related to favorable actual versus expected loss experience in the US Property and Global Specialty lines. Looking ahead to the rest of 2025, the ADC amortization is expected to be approximately $31 million each quarter compared to $34 million a quarter in 2024. Our Global Commercial business had a terrific start to the year. Net premiums written grew 10%. We produced a combined ratio of 91.2% despite elevated CAT activity, and our expense ratio improved 40 basis points from the prior year quarter, an excellent result. North America commercial calendar year combined ratio was 93.9%, which included 12 points of CATs. The accident year combined ratio, as adjusted, was 84.3%, an improvement of 160 basis points from the first quarter of 2024. The expense ratio declined a full 2 points, driven by a combination of AIG Next benefits and increased operating leverage, partially offset by higher corporate expense allocations, as the company implemented its lean parent structure. The accident year loss ratio was 62.2% for the quarter, a 40 basis point increase year-over-year due to changes in business mix. Turning to International Commercial. The calendar year combined ratio was 88.2%. This is the eighth consecutive quarter of a sub-90% combined ratio, an outstanding result. The accident year combined ratio, as adjusted, was 85.4%, which increased 240 basis points year-over-year. This was primarily driven by a 130 basis point increase in the expense ratio as a result of lean parent allocations. The accident year loss ratio was 54.6%, a 110 basis point increase year-over-year, reflecting business mix and increased operating costs from lean parent implementation. Turning to Global Personal. The combined ratio was 107.9%, while the accident year combined ratio, as adjusted, improved 140 basis points year-over-year to 95.6%. Excluding the divested travel business, the accident year combined ratio improved 110 basis points, owing to a 190 basis point improvement in the accident year loss ratio. This was driven by underlying improvement in our US high-net-worth book, benefiting from a combination of rate over trend, business mix and underwriting actions. This was partially offset by a 70 basis point increase in our acquisition ratio, which we expect to unwind and improve over the course of 2025 as reinsurance and improved commission terms with PCS earn through. As we outlined at Investor Day, we expect to drive financial performance in Global Personal by improving the combined ratio by 500 basis points over the next three years towards our 94% target. Moving to rates, where Peter already provided some perspective. For the first quarter, excluding workers' compensation and Financial Lines, Global Commercial line's pricing, which includes rate and exposure, increased 4%. In North America Commercial, renewal rate increased 1% year-over-year. If you exclude workers' compensation and Financial Lines, renewal rate was up 2% with overall pricing up 4% year-over-year. In International Commercial, overall pricing was up 2% or up 4% excluding Financial Lines. This is an improvement versus the fourth quarter, where pricing was flat. While International Commercial overall pricing is slightly below loss cost trend, excluding Financial Lines, pricing and loss cost trend are roughly in line. Moving to Other Operations. First quarter adjusted pre-tax loss was $70 million, a significant improvement versus the prior year quarter of $205 million, reflecting substantially lower general operating expense, higher net investment income and lower interest expense. As Peter mentioned, we have achieved our Other Operations run-rate GOE target at $85 million in the first quarter and are on track for $350 million of annual expenses in 2025. We are now a much simpler company with a lean parent corporate structure that supports our three operating segments. Turning now to investment income. Our investment portfolio is high-quality and well-diversified with durations that are closely matched to our liability profile. It's predominantly comprised of investment grade fixed maturity securities, helping to minimize exposure to short-term market swings. First quarter net investment income on an APTI basis was $845 million, an increase of $4 million year-over-year. Net investment income is comprised of two categories: our core portfolio, which sits in General Insurance and income from parent liquidity and Corebridge dividends, which sits in Other Operations. First, on General Insurance. Net investment income was $736 million, down $26 million or 3% year-over-year, owing to lower income from other invested assets and alternative investments, partially offset by higher income from the fixed maturity portfolio, as we benefit from improved reinvestment rates. Other invested assets had a loss of $18 million compared to income of $38 million in the first quarter 2024. One variable worth noting is how we account for our joint venture with Tata Group. We include 26% of Tata AIG's net income in other invested assets, which also includes mark-to-market changes in their investment portfolio, which reflects capital market movements in India. It is reported under the equity accounting method with a one quarter lag. Based on our current view, we expect General Insurance total net investment income to be up modestly in the second quarter versus the $736 million in the first quarter. The gains in the fixed maturity and loan portfolio are likely to be offset by lower income from other invested assets and alternative investments. During the first quarter, the average new money yield on the fixed maturity and loan portfolio was 4.56%, roughly 135 basis points higher than sales and maturities in the quarter. The annualized yield excluding calls and prepayments was 4.11%, a 24 basis point increase year-over-year or 19 basis points sequentially. Turning to Other Operations. Net investment income was $108 million, consisting of income from our parent liquidity portfolio of $77 million and Corebridge dividend income of $31 million. Considering current interest rates and lower liquidity balances as we repurchase shares, we expect income from our parent liquidity portfolio to be around $50 million in the second quarter, subject to market conditions. Turning to tax. The adjusted effective tax rate for the first quarter was 22.8%, which included a net benefit from discrete items. As we stated on our fourth quarter earnings call, we expect the adjusted tax rate for the full year 2025 to be in line with the full year 2024 level with slight variations quarter to quarter. Moving on to the balance sheet. We continue to have strong financial flexibility. We believe this positions us well to execute on our strategic priorities while navigating evolving market conditions. Book value per share was $71.38 at quarter-end, up 10% from March 31, 2024, mainly due to the favorable impact of lower interest rates on investment AOCI. Adjusted tangible book value per share was $67.96, down 8% from March 31, 2024, primarily due to the impact of the Corebridge deconsolidation. At the end of the first quarter, we had a debt to total capital ratio of 17.1%. In conclusion, we had a strong first quarter. We expect to deliver on our target of 10%-plus core operating ROE in 2025, while making steady progress on the financial targets we outlined at our Investor Day.

PZ
Peter ZaffinoCEO

Thank you, Keith. Michelle, we're ready for questions. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our first question comes from Mike Zaremski with BMO. Your line is open.

O
MZ
Mike ZaremskiAnalyst

Good morning. Thank you. I have a high-level question regarding the transition to using GenAI. I have several questions following Investor Day that I hope you can assist with. I'm curious about the process for an insurer to adopt AI. Is there a significant cost to get started? Does it take a long time to prepare the data for adoption? Additionally, could you discuss whether your efforts are standard practice or if you consider yourselves a first-mover or fast follower? It's challenging for us to fully understand what it takes to accomplish what you're doing, which seems quite complex.

PZ
Peter ZaffinoCEO

Sure, Mike. Thanks for the question. A few things. One is, we've been working on this for a couple of years and it all started with a foundation of what we did with AIG 200 of having terrific end-to-end process, starting to digitize all of our workflows, getting data quality and data integrity, which enabled us to start to adopt an end-to-end process that was going to enable GenAI to accelerate underwriting and how we were going to be able to assess risks. And so, we began this process, as I said, with pilots. They are no longer pilots. I think that's something I want to be very clear. We're actually going live on a couple of our lines of business. And we continue to evolve with some of the partners that we brought to Investor Day, whether it's Palantir in terms of data ingestion, of accelerating not only the quality of data but the quantity and the speed and being able to utilize large language models to recognize data patterns and recognize risk selection criteria, and our underwriters are enabled to get more information. And so, this has been something that has been highly strategic for us. We're highly committed to it. I don't know where other insurance companies are. My understanding is this is a little bit of a different way of doing it. We think it's the best-in-class way of doing it. I think it was validated by Alex and Dario, and it takes an entire organization to really buy into the way in which we're going to do this end-to-end and believe that we are going to have the impact that we outlined on Investor Day over time, which is just to decrease cycle time, have higher-quality data and information and empower the underwriters to make decisions.

MZ
Mike ZaremskiAnalyst

That's helpful. My quick follow-up is, thanks for the market commentary. I wasn't sure if you gave us North America Commercial pricing metrics. Some of the competitors have talked about kind of seeing a decline in property, which has caused pricing to move down a bit as well. Is that accurate for AIG as well?

PZ
Peter ZaffinoCEO

I'm going to have Don and Jon provide some insights because this is an important question. Regarding pricing, it's important to note that the overall index doesn’t always reflect the complete situation. In North America, particularly in property, we experienced some challenges, which I mentioned earlier, but we still believe that the technical pricing remains strong and yields very good returns, which we demonstrated in this quarter globally. We’ve achieved significant cumulative rate increases. Additionally, we are major purchasers of reinsurance because we favor a cost of goods sold approach; we have embedded pricing in our products, which allows us to anticipate catastrophe costs and risk expenses. Our risk-adjusted reductions in property reinsurance are stronger than what we’re observing on the retail side, which is a key point. The submission count, indicating a flight to quality, is also crucial. Based on my experience, brokers discuss the overall market, which encompasses many insurance firms and various segments, resulting in a generalized index. However, not all insurance companies are the same. Those who lead in setting terms and pricing typically have better results. We see this with AIG, reflected in our retention, new business, and the trend toward quality. Now, I will hand it over to Don, but I want to highlight that our casualty performance has been very robust, continuing strong after several years of rate increases. We observed stronger rate increases in large accounts compared to mid-market but all casualty on an excess basis showed rates above loss costs. Positive trends in casualty indicate growth opportunities, which we noticed in Lexington. International markets are somewhat more orderly, and Jon can elaborate on that. We experienced a slight pricing headwind in specialty, yet that business is performing exceptionally well. Don, do you want to add more context for North America?

DB
Don BaileyExecutive

Sure, Peter. Absolutely. As you mentioned, we experienced strong rates in certain parts of the North American Commercial segment while facing pressure in others. You've addressed much of that already in your comments. Specifically, Mike, I can tell you that the rate remains robust and surpasses loss trends. We believe it may be gaining momentum as well. We're observing better rates in large accounts compared to the middle market and small accounts, which Peter just noted. We have data that confirms this. The programs in Glatfelter are also worth mentioning as they continue to show positive rates. Both of our program businesses, which are affinity-driven, generally face less rate volatility than other parts of our portfolio. We have highly engaged distribution partners in this area, presenting significant growth opportunities. Financial Lines are down in the mid-single digits, but the good news is we're achieving adequate returns on our book. On the public D&O rate trends, if you're looking for positive news, January was the weakest month from a rate perspective, but March showed improvement, and early signs from April suggest further enhancements. Lastly, regarding property, we have had cumulative rate increases over the years, but we are experiencing some pressure in both retail and wholesale. We will continue to assess this as the year progresses, and while pricing remains above technical levels, we need to see how the remainder of the year unfolds. Overall, we are pleased with the long tail lines, Peter.

PZ
Peter ZaffinoCEO

That's great, Don. Thanks. Jon, do you want to make some comments on international rate?

JH
Jon HancockExecutive

Yeah. Well, you and Keith have covered a lot of this. Well, I'll repeat some of what I've said at Investor Day. We have a huge advantage on the diversity of our portfolio products, distribution, geography across the whole of international. So, we have a huge hunting ground and opportunity to divert time, resource and capital into the most attractive areas and away from the others. And that's what we're doing right now and always do, and especially as market dynamics are not the same everywhere at the same time. Now, I'd also say, Peter, you and Keith have both said this, we've got total confidence in the portfolio, the quality, the price, the loss picks, the reserves. We've got that cumulative rate rise you've been talking about with more than price adequate in every portfolio. And you can see that in the results every quarter. And our standards haven't changed, so this market is very orderly for us. Similar trends to Don and different nuances, property rate is still positive, and it's about loss trend. And our retentions are high, and we're growing. I don't think we're giving away margin and we watch that relentlessly. But the combined ratios that we deliver in International Property, that's some of the best I've seen in my career. So, we start from a very, very strong place. Like with Don here, Financial Lines is under pressure, less pressure than it was, but still under pricing pressure, but that's mainly on D&O in certain markets, not on everything, anywhere. So, our fin lines book has shrunk a bit, and our D&O book has shrunk more. But other parts of the portfolio under much less pressure, so we've got stronger retention there. Casualty varies by region, overall, very rate positive and high retention. And I will call out, and I know you've mentioned Global Specialty and Talbot, there is some rate pressure in some places, but we talked about this on Investor Day and we put some slides up on Investor Day. Those businesses are producing exceptional results quarter in, quarter out, year in, year out. Yes, Marine is still getting really good rate. We're seeing strong growth. The other class, say, there's some pressure, but we're leaders on a lot of that business in the subscription markets in specialty and Talbot. So, we work with clients to achieve sensible and sustainable terms. And where we do follow in that subscription market, much as we won't leave the market down, we won't follow it down there either.

PZ
Peter ZaffinoCEO

Yeah. That's great, Jon. Thank you very much. Next question?

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Meyer Shields with KBW. Your line is open. Meyer, your line may be muted.

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MS
Meyer ShieldsAnalyst

Sorry. Am I coming through?

PZ
Peter ZaffinoCEO

Yes.

Operator

Yes.

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MS
Meyer ShieldsAnalyst

Okay, great. Sorry about that. Okay. So, Peter, you talked about monitoring the uncertainty associated with tariffs. In the interim, what, I guess, underwriting pricing policy administration efforts need to happen just to reflect that uncertainty as you sort of sign contracts that are going to expose you to this risk over the next 12 months?

PZ
Peter ZaffinoCEO

Thanks for the question, Meyer. There's a couple of things. One is looking at the inflation factors within lines of business that we think will be impacted, certainly, property, we tried to outline that in my prepared remarks, you could have catastrophe losses that have been modeled that will be significantly more depending on what happens with supply and also density and also sort of size of loss. So, there's so many different variables. I think looking at each of the loss cost inputs is going to be really important. An example, if I could just expand a little bit, which is what you saw really in the international loss ratio this quarter is that we're cautious and we saw the loss ratio published increase a little bit, but none of the underlying loss ratios deteriorated. We saw one side fact was that we, part of AIG Next, had unallocated loss adjustment expense that found its way into the International business that used to sit in Other Operations. But we also looked at our best estimates, no underlying loss ratio deterioration happened in the International portfolio, but we built a little bit of risk margin in International to deal with the uncertainty that could be in front of us with sort of different lines of business. And so, we are cautious. We've done this in the past where we feel very good about loss ratios, very good about margin, but we may put a little bit more margin for lines of business that we think could be potentially impacted. So, this is something that is evolving daily. What lines of business, what part of the world changes quite a bit, and we're going to be on our front foot in terms of being proactive and making sure that we have the appropriate loss cost and margin built into our pricing.

MS
Meyer ShieldsAnalyst

Okay, fantastic. That's very helpful. Second question, from a modeling perspective, should the remaining quarters in 2025 have the same impact of expenses moving from other operations to the GI segments?

PZ
Peter ZaffinoCEO

So, here's how I view it. AIG Next was about simplifying a complex company and integrating the organization and culture, which we successfully achieved. Additionally, we provided clear guidance on the expenses we needed to eliminate to maintain a lean operating model. We refer to it as a lean parent, but essentially, the goal is to operate as a streamlined company. Our approach to overall expenses is crucial, and I believe we exceeded our expectations because we indicated that we would complete AIG Next by the end of 2025, and we made significant progress in Other Operations; we've accelerated our advancements and are quite satisfied with our performance. I did expect to see some increase in expense ratios as the businesses absorbed costs but they effectively reduced expenses and managed to control their costs even as more allocations increased. North America benefited more from AIG Next compared to international due to our presence in multiple countries, which meant that IT, legal, and other expenses needed for a global company were allocated more to international operations. Consequently, international had two challenges that impacted its GOE ratio. However, to answer your question more directly, while I wouldn’t expect expenses to be consistent throughout, I anticipate that the expenses reflected in the first quarter will be representative of the overall GOE expenses for the rest of the year.

MS
Meyer ShieldsAnalyst

Okay. That is perfectly helpful, and I really appreciate that context. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Alex Scott with Barclays. Your line is open.

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AS
Alex ScottAnalyst

Hi, good morning. First one I had is on the broader environment that you described and the uncertainty that it brings. And just does it change the way you'd approach the M&A environment and just the deployment of all this capital that you have available to you?

PZ
Peter ZaffinoCEO

I don't think it changes anything, Alex. Thanks for the question. We remain very disciplined and are looking at acquisitions with a medium to long-term perspective. We evaluate whether potential acquisitions would add value to AIG or the company being considered. We also consider various geographies and product lines. Additionally, our investments in areas like GenAI and the ability to scale our operations provide us with great opportunities to identify acquisitions that could be beneficial for AIG. While we are aware of the current world of uncertainty, we have done significant work over the past three years on our capital structure, resulting in low leverage and ample cash reserves, as well as some excess capital in our subsidiaries. We still have ownership of Corebridge, which can provide additional liquidity if an acquisition opportunity arises. However, we will proceed with caution and ensure that any decisions made are not urgent. As I mentioned at Investor Day, if there comes a time when we do not see acquisition opportunities that we believe benefit AIG and our shareholders, we will return capital to shareholders. Nevertheless, I believe some of this uncertainty might actually present opportunities.

AS
Alex ScottAnalyst

Got it. That's helpful. The second question I had for you is just on the mix shift. From the outside, it's difficult at times to model things like mix shifts. And I think the catastrophe budget, in particular, has come down massively and I guess we'll continue to as you do this mix shift in North America Commercial in particular. So, I know you already gave us some help by quantifying some of these things. I think, based on some of the disclosures you gave earlier, we might even be able to back into a cap budget. But I was hoping maybe you could just help us understand that mix shift, how should we think about the impact on underlying versus all-in combined ratio.

PZ
Peter ZaffinoCEO

The first quarter is challenging due to property issues and is the time we experience catastrophes, which affects our net premium written. Historically, it’s possible to see a negative net premium if we’re seeding out more on an NPW basis than what we’re writing in that quarter. However, I believe that will begin to stabilize. We have limited catastrophe purchases planned for the second, third, or fourth quarters, and this relates to our business mix. Currently, the property environment in North America is tough, while international operations are performing well with strong combined ratios and modest growth. If the trends from the first quarter continue, we plan to lower our gross writings in property, anticipating the market will return to us. Additionally, we haven’t even approached catastrophe season yet, so I prefer to make definitive statements about property at the year’s end rather than before that season. What’s evident in reinsurance is that AIG previously faced higher costs due to data quality and portfolio integrity, but we’ve been improving that over the years, which contributed to the results for 2025. In terms of business mix, property is experiencing slight underlying growth, and we are increasing casualty business within our net premium written. Although combined and loss ratios are higher in that sector, we’re signaling significant growth in Lexington’s mid-market casualty, which will lead to a higher loss ratio than we’d anticipate for typical property losses. As this mix shifts, the loss ratios will reflect those changes, which is the point we are trying to convey.

AS
Alex ScottAnalyst

Got it. Helpful. Thank you.

PZ
Peter ZaffinoCEO

Thanks.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Andrew Anderson with Jefferies. Your line is open.

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AA
Andrew AndersonAnalyst

Hey, good morning. Just looking at the underlying results in North America Commercial, they seem pretty strong. Is there an opportunity to take more business net here?

PZ
Peter ZaffinoCEO

Yes, there is. I don't think we would want to, though, because how we look at Property CAT, it is a global risk appetite volatility that we're willing to take. And I think what I referenced, and when the script comes out, like we should read it again, how low nets we have going forward in North America Property, because we buy occurrence in aggregate and the volatility is massively reduced for AIG over the course of four quarters. And so, we like that volatility reduction. We like it priced into the business. And then on Casualty, I know it was probably a massive eye chart at Investor Day with the amount of reinstatements we have and what does the vertical limits do. We don't buy a lot of proportional reinsurance in North America on Casualty. We buy excess of loss. And I think in this environment with large jury verdicts, vertical exposures, I don't think it's prudent to take any more net there. And so, I think we feel really comfortable with the reinsurance structure that we have in North America. And as you pointed out, the combined ratios have improved dramatically and really like the core fundamentals of the business the way it is today.

AA
Andrew AndersonAnalyst

Thank you. And then just on North America Commercial, ex comp, ex Financial Lines pricing, 4% RPC. I guess that's on a gross basis, perhaps a little bit better net. I guess, where I'm going with this is, I would think that's below loss trend, but perhaps with terms and conditions and maybe some mix shift, it sounds like in your commentary you're not really thinking of underlying loss ratio deterioration here.

PZ
Peter ZaffinoCEO

No, I'm not. As I mentioned, the main factor here is property, which had a significant negative impact on the weighted average. However, in terms of our other business lines, we will keep an eye on financial lines, which Don provided positive insights on. Casualties are trending above losses. Looking at the portfolio, it was primarily property that fell below loss trends, and we will monitor how that develops. We are confident that it is above our technical expectations and believe that such rate decreases cannot be sustained over a long duration. If that trend persists, we would consider pulling back. On a positive note, submission counts are strong, and we see numerous opportunities. Retention rates are solid, and we still expect property to perform well. Additionally, it's worth noting that in the first quarter, our international property business is as significant as our North America property. We want to keep in mind that if North America becomes more aggressive, we have numerous entry points in property, and the risk-adjusted returns internationally are excellent, allowing us to continue our growth there.

AA
Andrew AndersonAnalyst

Thank you.

PZ
Peter ZaffinoCEO

Thanks. We have one more question.

Operator

Our next question comes from Brian Meredith with UBS. Your line is open.

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BM
Brian MeredithAnalyst

Yeah. Thanks for fitting me in. Peter, just curious on North American Commercial growth, just wanted to unpack it a little bit. Is it possible to get maybe what gross written premiums growth was there? Just try to understand the impact of the ceded reinsurance on the growth rate. Just kind of thinking about how sustainable is that growth in the near term that you saw in North America Commercial?

PZ
Peter ZaffinoCEO

The first quarter benefited from reinsurance on property, and the growth primarily reflects the net results, excluding property. The casualty figures for Lexington are nearly aligned with the net outcomes. Regarding Glatfelter, it also saw some advantages from reinsurance but still experienced significant growth, similar to our program business. Don elaborated on the programs extensively during Investor Day. We’re engaging in fewer programs now, having adopted the best practices from Glatfelter. Overall, the gross and net figures are quite comparable, with property being the main area of benefit. It's important to note that while there is growth in property, the gross figures do not show similar growth, as we've actually contracted in Lexington Property. There was a slight increase in retail gross, but the net figures were primarily influenced by reinsurance in property. Would you like to add anything, Don?

DB
Don BaileyExecutive

I would just validate that, yeah, the underlying portfolio is strong, it's double-digits on a net basis.

BM
Brian MeredithAnalyst

Great. So, nothing unusual in the first quarter? I mean, this is good solid growth you're seeing is sustainable here for at least in the near term, unless, of course, some other property competitor or something else comes up?

PZ
Peter ZaffinoCEO

Yeah. I think, look, you probably won't see the same property effect in the future because we're not going to have as much reinsurance. So, I think those nets will come down. But the rest of the portfolio should reflect, as Don said, really strong new business, strong retention. We'll watch each line of business and make sure we're growing where we want to grow, but still think there's growth opportunities.

BM
Brian MeredithAnalyst

Got you. And then, one last one, Peter. Any updated thoughts on what casualty loss trend is looking like here? A couple of positive developments, I think in Georgia and some areas as far as legislation goes. Maybe thoughts on that?

PZ
Peter ZaffinoCEO

We'll watch it, Brian. We have not adjusted any of our loss costs and inflation factors on casualty, and we'll probably look at it in the sort of mid-year, but so far, we're keeping it where it was. Okay. Thanks everybody for joining us today. Really appreciate it. Have a great day and great weekend.

Operator

Thank you for your participation. This does conclude the program and you may now disconnect. Everyone, have a great day.

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