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Markel Earnings: Underwriting a Little Weak, but Investment Results Are Strong

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Markel MKL produced a solid overall second quarter. While the company appears to be lagging its peers on the underwriting side, a relatively aggressive investing approach paid off this quarter. Overall, though, we don’t see anything that materially alters our long-term view and will maintain our $1,310 fair value estimate for the no-moat company. We see shares as slightly overvalued.

Net written premiums were up only 5% year over year, with a slight decline on the reinsurance side. Given current industry pricing increases, this suggests to us that management is remaining cautious, although growth did pick up a bit from the first quarter.

Underwriting results remain a little weak relative to what we are seeing from peers. The combined ratio for the quarter came in at 92.8% compared with 91.0% last year. Management pointed to some issues in liability lines as the main culprit. Peers have generally recorded roughly flat year-over-year underwriting margins recently. Given that we’re fairly deep into the hard market and underwriting margins appear to have peaked at the industry level, it is disappointing to see Markel not fully capture the opportunity.

Results on the investment side were strong, with the company recording a $485 million realized gain in the quarter and seeing some uplift in investment income as interest rates rise. The gain appears to have come almost entirely from the equity portfolio, with the company benefiting from the rebound in the stock market. However, from a long-term perspective, we see Markel’s equity-heavy investing approach as more risk-tolerant than value-creative.

The author or authors do not own shares in any securities mentioned in this article. Find out about Morningstar’s editorial policies.

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Brett Horn

Senior Equity Analyst
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Brett Horn, CFA, is a senior equity analyst for Morningstar Research Services LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Morningstar, Inc. He covers insurers and credit bureaus. He also oversees the equity research team’s stewardship rating methodology.

Before joining Morningstar in 2006, Horn worked in the banking industry for about a decade, most recently as a commercial loan officer for First Bank, where he was responsible for underwriting loans and managing relationships with middle market clients. Before that, Horn worked for Mizuho Corporate Bank, where he managed loan portfolios and client relationships, primarily with Fortune 500 companies.

Horn holds a bachelor’s degree in business administration, with a concentration in finance, from the University of Wisconsin and a master’s degree in business administration from the University of Illinois. He also holds the Chartered Financial Analyst® designation. He ranked first in the business and industrial services industry in The Wall Street Journal’s annual “Best on the Street” analysts survey in 2013, the last year the survey was conducted.

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