Assurant, Inc. (NYSE:AIZ) Q3 2024 Earnings Call Transcript

Assurant, Inc. (NYSE:AIZ) Q3 2024 Earnings Call Transcript November 6, 2024

Operator: Welcome to Assurant’s Third Quarter 2024 Conference Call and Webcast. [Operator Instructions] It is now my pleasure to turn the floor over to Sean Moshier, Vice President of Investor Relations. You may begin.

Sean Moshier: Thank you, operator, and good morning, everyone. We look-forward to discussing our third quarter 2024 results with you today. Joining me for Assurant’s conference call are Keith Demmings, our President and Chief Executive Officer; and Keith Meier, our Chief Financial Officer. Yesterday, after the market closed, we issued a news release, announcing our results for the third quarter 2024. The release and corresponding financial supplement are available on assurant.com. Also, on our website is a slide presentation for our webcast participants. Some of the statements made today are forward-looking. Forward-looking statements are based upon our historical performance and current expectations and subject to risks, uncertainties, and other factors that may cause actual results to differ materially from those contemplated by those statements.

Additional information regarding these factors can be found in the earnings release, presentation, and financial supplement on our website, as well as in our SEC reports. During today’s call, we will refer to non-GAAP financial measures, which we believe are important in evaluating the company’s performance. For more details on these measures, the most comparable GAAP measures and a reconciliation of the two, please refer to the news release and supporting materials. We’ll start today’s call with remarks before moving into Q&A. I will now turn the call over to Keith Demmings.

Keith Demmings: Thanks, Sean, and good morning, everyone. Our third quarter results further supported our strong year-to-date performance. Through the first nine months of the year, adjusted EBITDA increased by 15% and adjusted EPS grew by 21%, both excluding catastrophes. Results were led by sustained outperformance within Global Housing, as well as underlying growth within our Connected Living business, which was muted by incremental investments in new partnerships and programs and unfavorable foreign-exchange. Our year-to-date momentum has positioned us to exceed our previous expectations. Excluding catastrophes, we now expect adjusted EBITDA to increase low-double-digits for the second consecutive year and adjusted earnings per share to increase mid to high teens, led by business growth and strong share repurchases.

Once again, we’ve outperformed the broader P&C industry, both short and long-term, reflecting the unique and differentiated nature of our combined housing and lifestyle business model. Let’s begin with our year-to-date business highlights. In Global Lifestyle, year-to-date performance was relatively flat versus the prior-period, reflecting elevated claims experience in global automotive as well as impacts from unfavorable foreign exchange of 2% or $10 million, above our expectations from earlier in the year. Within Connected Living, year-to-date adjusted EBITDA increased 3% or 5% on a constant-currency basis as we continue to invest in new partnerships and programs to support future growth. Excluding investments of approximately $21 million for the first-nine months of the year, Connected Living adjusted EBITDA growth was strong at 11% on a constant-currency basis.

One prime example of those investments includes our new innovation and device care center located just outside of Nashville, supporting our mobile business. In addition to repurposing millions of devices per year, the new state of the art facility employs innovative ways to leverage automation, robotics and AI. This will create greater value within our global supply-chain while driving growth in the secondary device market. The Nashville facility demonstrates our investments in innovation, allowing us to continuously improve our customer experience as we operate through end-to-end partnerships with our mobile clients, a critical competitive advantage for Assurant. Within financial services, on October 1, we launched a new program with Chase Card Services in our growing card benefits business.

Beginning at program launch, we’re providing end-to-end delivery for approximately 15 travel and purchase protection benefits, including underwriting, claims processing and benefit servicing to millions of Chase Card holders. We’re excited about several new clients and programs targeted for 2025, adding to our growing portfolio. Similar to ’24, these new opportunities may require incremental investments. Moving to Global Automotive. Our Auto business has experienced elevated claims costs in both our vehicle service contract business and our GAAP product throughout 2024. Over the past two quarters, we’ve started to see some positive early signs with the stabilization of underlying claims severity trends in our vehicle service contract business.

Claims inflation impacts have begun to moderate and our loss ratio is beginning to benefit from rate increases we’ve taken over the past two years. Within our GAAP product, elevated losses have continued as anticipated, but we continue to expect higher claims to be short-term in nature in comparison to the vehicle service contract business. In addition, our proactive partnership with several clients to enable us to transition most of the risk and reduce a large portion of our claims exposure over-time. We remain focused on driving actions to improve Auto results while benefiting from moderating inflation impacts in 2025 and beyond. We’re excited about the long-term trajectory of this business. Now let’s turn to Global Housing. I want to begin by thanking all of our employees who supported policyholders impacted by recent weather events over the last several months, including multiple major hurricanes.

We play an important role in safeguarding our policyholders as we processed approximately 35,000 claims to date associated with these events. It’s an important reminder of the critical role our lender-placed product plays in the U.S. mortgage industry, removing the risk of uninsured loss for lenders, investors and homeowners. It’s crucial to provide all homeowners with access to insurance. For that reason, we continue to work closely with each state to offer coverage and protection to homeowners at appropriate rates. Looking at Global Housing’s year-to-date results, we’ve demonstrated continued strong performance, particularly within our homeowners’ business. Over the first-nine months of the year, earnings increased 34% excluding reportable catastrophes.

In our lender-placed business, we continue to benefit from key competitive advantages, utilizing various growth levers over the past two years to sustain results, including meaningful expense leverage, scale from new partners and product safeguards to address macroeconomic factors like inflation. Results were driven primarily by continued policy growth as the placement rate increased to 1.92%, a 12 basis-point improvement since year end and a 6 basis-point improvement sequentially. Policy growth has been led by several new partnerships and portfolios as well as from states where it’s become more difficult to secure voluntary homeowners coverage. Within renters, adjusted EBITDA has also shown year-to-date growth, supported by continued expansion in our Property Management Company or PMC channel.

Growth in our PMC channel has been supported by technology innovation aimed at enhancing our digital customer experience. This has included the rollouts of Assurant TechPro and our Cover360 platform, leading to higher penetration with a simplified resident enrollment process. Overall, the housing business has benefited from our unique competitive advantages throughout lender-placed and renters, showcasing its resiliency and outperformance over various macroeconomic environments. Turning to our enterprise outlook. As I mentioned earlier, given the strength of our year-to-date results, we now expect full-year adjusted EBITDA to grow low-double-digits and adjusted earnings per share to increase mid to high teens, both excluding catastrophes. This represents an increase to both metrics above our expectations, demonstrating the continued strength of our financial performance.

For the year, we continue to anticipate strong growth within Global Housing with modest growth expected in Global Lifestyle as we fund incremental investments in Connected Living. Our ability to sustain profitable growth year-after-year is a true reflection of our unique and advantaged business model. Assurant’s performance is the result of a multi-year transformation, which has significantly enhanced our business mix, risk profile and market positioning. We’ve simplified and optimized Assurant to focus on specialized attractive markets with long-term secular tailwinds within lifestyle and housing, while selling pre-need and employee benefits and exiting health and other non-core businesses. In the markets we operate in, we have leadership positions and competitive advantages through our protection solutions across devices, automobiles and homes.

A close-up of a homeowner signing a mortgage contract.

We are well-positioned to win due to our highly scaled and deeply integrated B2B2C partnerships where we work with our clients to innovate and create flexible solutions for their end consumers. At the same time, we’ve enhanced Assurant’s risk profile by focusing on capital-efficient businesses within lifestyle and housing. Through purposeful transformation, we’ve enhanced our ability to drive long-term performance and cash generation, attracting growth partnerships with large sophisticated clients and become increasingly more capital-efficient. I’m proud of the long-term outperformance we’ve achieved against the broader P&C market. Slide 10 demonstrates our historical outperformance, including a five-year history of double-digit growth. Based on our current outlook for 2024, annual growth rates since 2019 are expected to average 11% for adjusted EBITDA and 17% for adjusted EPS, both excluding catastrophes.

Given our historical performance and our unique and differentiated business model, we believe we have meaningful valuation upside, in particular, as compared to the S&P 1500 P&C Index, a broad index of 32 members now including Assurant. Overall, we see a compelling path for growth ahead and believe Assurant represents an attractive investment. I’ll now turn it over to Keith Meier to review our third quarter results and business trends impacting our 2024 outlook.

Keith Meier: Thanks, Keith, and good morning, everyone. This November marks the conclusion of my first year as CFO of Assurant. When I began this role, I outlined my key priorities, including driving growth and strong financial performance with a focus on innovation and product differentiation. These priorities have been supported by our continuous efforts to drive expense efficiencies through automation, digital and AI technologies, while improving overall customer experience as well as ensuring our capital position remains strong, providing us with the flexibility to create value and support long-term growth. Over the past year, we have made significant progress. First, looking at growth and financial performance, our B2B2C partnerships are the lifeblood of our business model and the primary driver behind our growth story.

Over the past 12 months, we’ve spotlighted several notable client announcements, such as renewing all major U.S. mobile clients, including three of the top-five largest mobile carriers in the U.S., launching new programs and capabilities with existing clients like Spectrum Mobile and winning new partnerships with Chase, Telstra in Australia and another leading U.S. bank within our lender-placed business. Second, we have focused on expense discipline as we’ve continued to drive efficiencies across the organization by utilizing automation, digital and AI technologies. This has enabled us to deliver a better customer experience and invest in new capabilities while driving profitable growth. As an example, we believe our new device care center in Nashville, combined with the numerous investments we’ve made across the end-to-end mobile device lifecycle, will continue to support new growth opportunities in Global Lifestyle.

In Global Housing, the scale we’ve achieved through growth and ongoing investing in our technology and compliance solutions have resulted in meaningful operational efficiencies and expense leverage as seen in the compelling expense ratios we’ve achieved. Global Housing’s expense ratio is at a sustainable level in the high 30s, improving by approximately 3 percentage points year-to-date compared to full-year 2023 and nearly 9 percentage points since 2022, all while we improved the customer experience. And lastly, amidst a fast-changing macroeconomic environment as well as a year with multiple catastrophes, our capital position has remained very strong. Despite higher-than-average cat losses, we expect to return $300 million to shareholders through share repurchases in 2024.

This is the top end of our anticipated range from the beginning of the year. The combination of our strong capital position, investments to support growth and robust shareholder returns is a testament to our balanced capital management focus and the strong cash flows of our advantaged businesses. As we look ahead, my focus will be to continue to execute against these priorities to drive growth. Turning to our third quarter results. Adjusted EBITDA grew 8% to $385 million and adjusted earnings per share increased by 9% to $5.08, both excluding reportable catastrophes. From a capital perspective, we generated over $160 million of segment dividends in the third quarter, ending the quarter with $636 million of holding company liquidity. Our strong capital position allowed us to return $138 million to shareholders in the quarter, including $100 million of share repurchases.

In addition, we repurchased $20 million of shares during the month of October. This amounts to $200 million of share repurchases year-to-date. Looking at Global Lifestyle, adjusted EBITDA decreased 4%. In Connected Living, we saw another quarter of growth in global mobile protection programs, increasing devices protected by over 2 million subscribers from growth in U.S. cable operators and new Asia-Pacific clients. This was offset by investments in the quarter of approximately $8 million in new capabilities and client partnerships that are expected to drive future growth. International results were impacted by unfavorable foreign-exchange, but remained stable on a constant-currency basis as we focus on driving results across all regions. Trading results were largely flat as declines in carrier volumes and lower promotional activity were offset by volumes from newer programs.

Turning to Global Auto. Earnings were down modestly year-over-year, mainly from elevated losses within our ancillary GAAP products, which was partially offset by higher investment income. Claims experienced from inflation in our vehicle service contract business was stable as previously implemented rate increases across our client base have begun to moderate the impacts of higher auto repair costs. Moving to net earned premiums, fees and other income. Global Lifestyle grew by $144 million or 7%. Growth was primarily driven by Connected Living, which was up 13%, benefiting from new trading programs and additional mobile subscribers, including the rollout of new clients. We continue to expect Global Lifestyles adjusted EBITDA to grow modestly for the year, driven by Connected Living.

Growth will be offset by lower results within Global Auto and unfavorable foreign-exchange rates. For the fourth quarter, we expect a sequential increase in Connected Living from favorable seasonal trends, including higher mobile trade-in volumes from new device introductions and carrier promotions. In addition, we anticipate higher contributions from new Connected Living partners and programs as they begin to earn. Global Auto earnings are expected to remain stable sequentially. Now let’s move to Global Housing’s third quarter performance. Third quarter adjusted EBITDA, including $137 million of reportable catastrophes, was $92 million. Excluding reportable cats, adjusted EBITDA increased 20% to $229 million, growing $38 million. Global Housing performance was mainly driven by policy growth due to higher placement rates from the net impacts of ongoing client and portfolio transitions and increased voluntary insurance market pressure.

In addition, average premiums increased from higher insured values year-over-year and filed rates. Lastly, results benefited from $30 million of favorable year-over-year prior-period reserve development. This was comprised of a $45 million reserve reduction in the current quarter compared to a $15 million reserve reduction in the third quarter of 2023. The increase in Global Housing was partially offset by a $28 million unfavorable non-run rate adjustment related to a change in earnings pattern assumptions. Within our renters business, we benefited from continued strong results in our PMC channel, where we drove double-digit gross written premium growth. We continue to expect strong adjusted EBITDA growth in Global Housing for full-year 2024, excluding catastrophes.

We anticipate growth will be driven by continued top-line momentum in homeowners, expense leverage, favorable non-cat loss experience and lower catastrophe reinsurance costs. Lastly, as we look-ahead to our fourth quarter results, we continue to settle claims and serve policyholders associated with Hurricane Milton. Early estimates indicate that impacts will range between $75 million to $110 million. For Corporate, the adjusted EBITDA loss in the third quarter was $30 million, an increase of $4 million year-over-year, driven by higher third-party and employee-related expenses. For the full-year 2024, we now expect the corporate adjusted EBITDA loss to be approximately $115 million. We generated significant deployable capital year-to-date, upstreaming $556 million in segment dividends.

Looking forward to the remainder of the year, we remain focused on maintaining balance and flexibility as we support new business growth and return excess capital to shareholders. Overall, we’re very pleased with our strong year-to-date performance in 2024 and feel well-positioned as we exit the year and move into 2025. With that, operator, please open the call for questions.

Q&A Session

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Operator: [Operator Instructions] Thank you. Our first question will come from Brian Meredith with UBS.

Brian Meredith: Yes, thank you.

Keith Demmings: Good morning. Brian.

Keith Meier: Good morning.

Brian Meredith: A couple — good morning. A couple of questions here for you. First one, perhaps on Global Housing, all the catastrophe losses that we’ve been seeing, how are you thinking about pricing for that business when you head into 2025. And I’m assuming your cat reinsurance program since it doesn’t appear you’re going to have any kind of retention get into the program should be beneficial, should be good in 2025? So maybe you can give us a little color on that?

Keith Demmings: Yes. Maybe I’ll start and then Keith Meier can chip in. But obviously, we feel really good about the reinsurance program that we have in place. And you’re right, as we look at the effect of Milton and the other storms we’ve had through the year, it’s been an active season, but we’ve not touched the reinsurance tower to this point. So I think that sets us up well in terms of favorability with our reinsurance partners. We’ve talked about having a panel of 40 reinsurers that have been very stable over-time. So I think we feel good heading into next year as we think about reinsurance costs. And then as we think about the rate process, obviously, we’ll look at all of our losses over the course of the year, cat and non-cat, expense levels, reinsurance costs. So we look at the pricing heading into next year being relatively stable to what we’ve seen this year. So don’t think that there’ll be a big shift in premium as we head into ’25.

Keith Meier: Yes. And I think we’re certainly continuing to evaluate our program structure for our reinsurance cat tower. We’ll share more of the details of that in February with our 2025 outlook. But in general, we expect to continue to approach our one in five probable maximum loss point for retention, which is $150 million this year. And we — the good news is we haven’t touched that tower this year. So, we certainly think with it not hitting the tower that that should be a positive as we look-forward to rates in 2025. And just as a reminder, we’ve moved to an effective date of April 1 for our one-time placement for our reinsurance programs as well.

Brian Meredith: Got you. That makes sense. And then, Keith and Keith, I was wondering if you could give me — give us maybe a little bit of a preview of what you’re thinking about for 2025 and Global Lifestyles. You’ve got a bunch of these new programs hitting and I’m assuming they’ll have a nice tailwind from a growth and margin perspective as we look at 2025. Maybe a little big picture what we may be able to expect.

Keith Demmings: Sure. Yes, I’ll give you a few highlights as we think about ’25. Obviously, we need to close out Q4 and see where the underlying performance comes in, look at the trends et-cetera and then what we will obviously provide detailed guidance in February. But stepping back at the high-level, certainly we expect to accelerate Global Lifestyle growth in ’25. I would say growth will certainly come in Connected Living. We’ve made a lot of investments in ’24. Those investments won’t continue in ’25 and obviously we’ll start to generate revenue and EBITDA from those client launches and the efficiency that we’re driving. And then we’ve got good underlying strong momentum in the business overall. And then as I think about Auto, we definitely expect growth in Auto in ’25 as well.

We expect the business will benefit from higher earnings from the rate increases that we’ve implemented over the last couple of years and then stabilizing inflation levels. One thing I would mention, we do expect some additional incremental investments in ’25. There are a number of things that we’re actively working on similar to ’24, net-new clients, net-new program launches, things that have not yet been disclosed to the market. So we’ll preview that as well in ’25. So think about the ’24 investments really sunsetting the revenue and EBITDA flowing through. And then hopefully, if we have continued great momentum with clients, we’ll have some other big exciting things that we’ll be bringing to market in ’25 as well. And then maybe I’ll just touch on housing since we’ll close out the ’25 thoughts.

I mean, it’s been an incredible 2024, really the last couple of years in housing. As we think about ’25, probably the simplest way to say it is net of the prior year development that we’ve seen, we do expect solid underlying growth in-housing in ’25. And I’d say driven from the growth we’ve seen in terms of our policy counts, continued increases in average insured values and then momentum around expense leverage in the business. So more to come in February, but those are a few of the high-level thoughts.

Brian Meredith: Okay, thank you.

Keith Demmings: You bet. Thank you.

Operator: Our next question comes from Mark Hughes with Truist.

Keith Demmings: Hi, Mark. Good morning.

Mark Hughes: Yes, thank you very much. Good morning. The voluntary business that you’re picking-up, can you talk about that is the momentum still building in voluntary, the markets that you’re seeing success are still dislocated, how do you see that trend?

Keith Demmings: Yes, I think when we look at – yes, and really we’re highlighting the impact around the placement rate. So we look at the placement rate is up 6 basis-points sequentially, it’s up 18 basis-points year-over-year. So we’ve seen a lot of momentum with respect to that. And I would say it’s probably equal parts growth in the underlying business. We obviously onboarded a major new client earlier this year. We’ve seen growth within our existing client bases of acquired loans, acquired portfolios. And then the other half of that growth is a result of additional policies being placed because homeowners are being more challenged to find traditional voluntary coverage. So we’ve talked about that hard market factor being part of the drivers for the placement rate growth, less so challenges more broadly in the economy, challenges in terms of delinquency and those types of things, those are really not factoring in at least at this point.

So that’s what we’ve tried to highlight is it’s a function of the hard market that we’re seeing around the country.

Mark Hughes: In the device counts, you had a nice acceleration this quarter. I think you talked about the new Asia-Pacific clients. Did they come over kind of in math or will this growth continue?

Keith Demmings: The step-change we saw earlier in the year, at this point in Q3, this is a more natural evolution. So we’ve seen continued steady growth both in our domestic business. We rolled-out some new products earlier this year with one of our major cable partners, that’s generated a significant momentum. And then, of course, building as well in Asia-Pacific. But that was more of a natural evolution from the finish point at Q2 and those blocks had already sort of step changed earlier in the year.

Mark Hughes: Yes. And then on the GAAP, higher-than-expected, the GAAP losses. When does that run-through? When do you either reinsure that away or get enough price to offset the claims experience?

Keith Meier: Yes. So we mentioned before that the impact from GAAP is shorter-term in nature versus the vehicle service contracts. Those claims are usually heavier in the first 24 months or so. And we’ve been partnering with our clients to eliminate or reduce the risk on those businesses. And just as an example, from a written premium perspective, in 2022, 40% of the business, we had some risk participation. And then in 2024, it’s down to just 12%. So overall, as we look into 2025, with all the actions that we’ve taken across our vehicle service contracts and GAAP, we expect Auto to improve as we as we move forward. And I think overall, I think we get a sense that the pressure is declining, certainly for Auto.

Keith Demmings: Yes. And maybe I’ll just amplify. I think we talked about starting this process of looking at reshaping the risk that we hold relative to GAAP going back two years ago. So we started this process early. And as Keith highlighted, a pretty big reduction in the amount of risk that we’re writing today. So really it’s just a question of running off the unearned part of the business. But as Keith said, it’s much shorter-term in nature. So it shouldn’t be a headwind as we think about ’25.

Mark Hughes: Thank you.

Keith Demmings: Thank you.

Operator: Our next question comes from Tommy McJoynt with KBW.

Keith Demmings: Hi, Tommy.

Keith Meier: Hello.

Tommy McJoynt: Hi, good morning, guys. Thanks for taking my questions. When we think about the subscribers that you guys are adding, I think largely calling out the cable operators in the Asia-Pacific region, is the sort of monetization opportunity of those customers any different than the traditional sort of carrier customer that represented your in force for a long-time?

Keith Demmings: No, I think it’s pretty well-aligned. I mean, obviously, every deal with clients work differently. But no, I’d say it’s very much aligned with the standard operating model. Obviously, we’re pleased to see the subscriber growth pretty material year-over-year and then continuing to build certainly in the quarter. But no, I wouldn’t say it’s dramatically different than sort of the average of the total, Tommy.

Tommy McJoynt: Okay, got it. And then to clarify your comments around the investment spend in Connected Living, I think you called out $21 million of spend year-to-date. And it sounds like that investment spend is sunsetting this year, but then it’s going to be replaced by sort of additional or new investment spend next year for new programs. Can you just clarify the comments around that?

Keith Demmings: Yes, that’s exactly right. So we’ve got, to your point, $21 million year-to-date. We had about $8 million that we called out in the third quarter. We’ll see a little bit more in the fourth quarter, probably moderating a little bit from kind of where we sit today. As I think about ’24, two-thirds of that investment spend I’m simplifying is related to new client launches. Think about the launches with Telstra, Spectrum, Chase, some other things that we probably haven’t highlighted. And then a third of it is the work that we’ve done to really automate and invest in our new device care center. So all of those programs are sort of delivered this year. Those don’t recur and then we get all the benefit in terms of revenue, EBITDA and efficiency.

And then to your point, we will have additional new investments, which I think is a really good thing, right. If we’re making — and we’re only calling out investments that are meaningful and that are designed to launch net-new things in the marketplace that have strong payback and that are going to generate EBITDA and revenue once they launch. So we’ll size that again in February, Tommy, to give everyone a sense of how we think about that, but there’s a lot of things in our pipeline. Our commercial momentum, particularly in Connected Living is incredibly strong. So, this would be a really good thing if we’ve got another bucket of investment similar to what we did this year.

Tommy McJoynt: Thanks. And then just lastly in Connected Living, the fourth quarter guide seems to imply some pretty good strength there. What’s sort of contemplated around trade-in volumes and perhaps the sensitivity around this iPhone upgrade cycle? Should we think of this as an unusually strong fourth quarter or is this some — is this something I can repeat in kind of future years?

Keith Demmings: Yes, I’d probably say that when we look at the sequential growth in Connected Living going into Q4, trade-in seasonality and Keith can speak to it in a second, we definitely would expect to see that. We’ve got benefit from the new clients that we’ve launched, a little bit moderating expenses, but revenues flowing through. We also see seasonal loss improvements in the retail service contract business as well. So there’s a few drivers that will create a sequential improvement in Connected Living, but maybe Keith talk a little bit about trading.

Keith Meier: Yes. And I think as you think about trade-in, we — I think we saw a little bit of softness in trade-in and promotional activity, offset by some newer programs in this quarter. If you think about it, the iPhone 16 launched on September 20th, but the first set of Apple Intelligence features were rolled out on October 28. So we certainly expect more promotional activity as we come into the fourth quarter. I think it was muted a little bit in the third quarter, but we expect that to pick up here in the fourth quarter.

Tommy McJoynt: Thanks.

Keith Demmings: Great, thank you.

Operator: [Operator Instructions] We have no one else in the queue.

Keith Demmings: Alright, wonderful. Well, thanks, everyone…

Operator: Apologies, we do. John Barnidge from Piper Sandler just raised his hand.

Keith Demmings: Oh, John, just in time. Good morning.

John Barnidge: Yes, good morning. Sorry. Yes, must not have captured the first star nine, but got a couple questions. Appreciate you fitting me in. Given we’ve got past experience of improving profitability meaningfully in Global Housing, I’m wondering if there are some lessons here that can be transferred to Global Auto? With rate increases having an impact on profitability, should we expect there to be a period of favorable reserve development in that business over-time at all?

Keith Demmings: Yes, I mean, I think — I’d probably say a couple of things where we’ve been through these cycles before for a variety of different reasons where maybe losses are elevated in different periods. I think our track-record of working through this with clients is exceptionally strong. The alignment of interest, the contracting got in place. So, Auto is a little different because of the nature of the product. It’s longer-term in nature. So it takes a longer effort to kind of get it back to profitability where housing is an annual policy, but there’s no doubt the lessons learned through housing. If you think back to a couple of years ago, simplified the business, drove a tremendous amount of focus on the core, didn’t just attack the issue from a rate perspective, but look to drive operational efficiency, expense efficiency.

And I think we’re doing those same things on the auto side. So we’re addressing it multiple ways. We’re strengthening the business at a fundamental level as a result of some of the changes we’re making. And we feel confident that we’ll create some longer-term tailwinds. I don’t think there’ll be major step changes in terms of reserving releases over-time, but I’ll let Keith speak to that.

Keith Meier: Yes. And I would say just in general, these types of challenges just make us stronger in terms of the rigor and the — and the actions that we take in that business. So I think that always does provide us some positive impacts as you look-forward. Just if you think about for Auto, we implemented 16 now total rate changes with our clients. So we’ve been working with our clients to do that. And then we also redesign products to make them more effective for the consumer and as well. So I think being able to pull all the levers that we have, I think our examples of there’s different levers, as Keith mentioned in housing versus Auto, but I think it’s a lot of that similar element. And so it’s not so much the reserves for auto, it’s more of the earnings of those rates that will be coming through over the next few years that provides us the little bit of tailwind there for Auto business.

John Barnidge: And then my other question, you’ve had quite a lot of success taking wins in one business and winning in another business. I think Chase was a good example of that this year. Is there an opportunity to offer mobile coverage or other coverage to clients where you’ve won that global housing business? I know I get Hulu, Netflix and Apple TV with my mobile device. Wondering if there can be a bundling in the card and housing in mobile?

Keith Demmings: Yes. I mean, it’s definitely an interesting thought and we always think about how do we leverage the relationships that we’ve got and you think about the strength of Assurant, certainly it’s the B2B to see nature of the business. But the fact that we operate across a wide number of distribution channels with major brands. So as clients are looking to reinvent how they bring services to market, I think we’re well-positioned to capitalize on that. So I think the logic of your question makes perfect sense. Obviously, a dramatic amount of the scale has come through partnerships with mobile operators. If we look at the U.K. market, for example, though we work with major banks in the U.K. that offer mobile protection as part of their packaged bank account. So we definitely look for those opportunities where we think we’re best positioned and we can deliver at scale.

Keith Meier: Yes. And I think it’s definitely a positive opportunity for us to leverage these relationships that we have with these large institutions like Chase. A good example is, I was meeting with some of their executives when we — when they were launching the program last month and they said they did check with their Chase counterparts and basically we’re doing reference checks on Assurant. They came back very positive. And so those types of things certainly can go a long way and are very positive for us to expand relationships.

John Barnidge: Thanks for the answers.

Keith Demmings: Thank you, John.

John Barnidge: Thank you.

Operator: There is no one else in the queue. I will pass it back to Keith for closing remarks.

Keith Demmings: Okay, wonderful. Well, thanks everybody for joining and we will certainly look-forward to another discussion in February. We’ll share how we closed out the year and provide some guidance for 2025. So, thanks very much and have a great holiday season.

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