NASDAQ:NMIH NMI Q3 2025 Earnings Report $37.56 0.00 (0.00%) Closing price 05/15/2026 04:00 PM EasternExtended Trading$37.57 +0.01 (+0.03%) As of 05/15/2026 04:10 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Massive. Learn more. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast NMI EPS ResultsActual EPS$1.21Consensus EPS $1.21Beat/MissMet ExpectationsOne Year Ago EPS$1.15NMI Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$171.56 millionExpected Revenue$177.01 millionBeat/MissMissed by -$5.46 millionYoY Revenue Growth+7.60%NMI Announcement DetailsQuarterQ3 2025Date11/4/2025TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateTuesday, November 4, 2025Conference Call Time5:00PM ETUpcoming EarningsNMI's Q2 2026 earnings is estimated for Tuesday, August 4, 2026, based on past reporting schedules, with a conference call scheduled on Tuesday, July 28, 2026 at 5:00 PM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfilePowered by NMI Q3 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrNovember 4, 2025 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Positive Sentiment: Record results: Q3 revenue was a record $178.7 million with GAAP net income of $96 million (EPS $1.22) and ROE of 15.6%, driven by $13 billion of new insurance written and a record $218.4 billion of primary insurance in force. Positive Sentiment: Strong portfolio and credit metrics — 12-month persistency was 83.9%, core yield remained stable at 34.2 bps, and reported default rate was 1.05%, which management says reflects high-quality, well-performing book and muted seasonality this quarter. Positive Sentiment: Solid capital and risk-transfer position — $3.4 billion of available PMIERs assets vs $2.0 billion required (excess $1.4 billion), active reinsurance placements with locked-in forward capacity, and $319 million of share repurchases to date with $256 million remaining capacity. Negative Sentiment: Ongoing risks — claims expense rose to $18.6 million (seasonality and portfolio growth), defaults increased quarter-over-quarter, and management cautioned about macro risks and the potential for seasonal upticks in Q4, prompting conservative pricing and reinsurance decisions. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallNMI Q3 202500:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xThere are 9 speakers on the call. Speaker 500:00:00Good afternoon, and welcome to the NMI Holdings Inc. Q3 2025 earnings conference call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing the star key followed by zero. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press star, then one on your telephone keypad. To withdraw your question, please press star, then two. Please note, this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Jon Swenson of Management. Please go ahead. Speaker 300:00:42Thank you, Gary. Good afternoon, and welcome to the 2025 Q3 conference call for NMI. I'm Jon Swenson, Vice President of Investor Relations and Treasury. Joining us on the call today are Brad Shuster, Executive Chairman; Adam Pollitzer, President and Chief Executive Officer; and Aurora Swithenbank, our Chief Financial Officer. Financial results for the quarter were released after the close today. The press release may be accessed on NMI's website located at nationalmi.com under the Investors tab. During the course of this call, we may make comments about our expectations for the future. Actual results could differ materially from those contained in these forward-looking statements. Additional information about the factors that could cause actual results or trends to differ materially from those discussed on the call can be found on our website or through our filings with the SEC. Speaker 300:01:38If and to the extent the company makes forward-looking statements, we do not undertake any obligation to update those statements in the future in light of subsequent developments. Further, no one should rely on the fact that the guidance of such statements is current at any time other than the time of this call. Also note that on this call, we may refer to certain non-GAAP measures. In today's press release and on our website, we provided a reconciliation of these measures to the most comparable measures under GAAP. Now I'll turn the call over to Brad. Speaker 800:02:10Thank you, Jon, and good afternoon, everyone. I'm pleased to report that in the Q3, NMI again delivered standout operating performance. Continued growth in our insured portfolio, and strong financial results. Our lenders and their borrowers continued to turn to us for critical down payment support. And in the Q3, we generated $13 billion of NIW volume, ending the period with a record $218.4 billion of high-quality, high-performing primary insurance in force. In Washington, our conversations remain active and constructive, and there continues to be broad recognition in D.C. of the unique and valuable role that the private mortgage insurance industry plays. Offering borrowers low-cost down payment support and access to mortgage credit, while also placing private capital in front of the taxpayer to absorb risk and loss in a downturn. And ultimately ensure the safety and soundness of the conventional mortgage market. Speaker 800:03:29NMI and the broader private mortgage insurance industry have never been stronger or better positioned to provide this critical down payment support than we are today. And we're excited to continue working with Director Polty, other members of the administration, and the leadership teams of Fannie and Freddie to advance their important goal of helping more Americans than ever unlock the dream of homeownership. With that, let me turn it over to Adam. Speaker 400:04:01Thank you, Brad, and good afternoon, everyone. NMI continued to outperform in the Q3, delivering significant new business production, consistent growth in our insured portfolio, and strong financial results. We generated $13 billion of NIW volume and ended the period with a record $218.4 billion of high-quality, high-performing primary insurance in force. Total revenue in the Q3 was a record $178.7 million, and we delivered GAAP net income of $96 million, or $1.22 per diluted share, and a 15.6% return on equity. Overall, we had a terrific quarter and are confident as we look ahead. The macro environment and housing market have remained resilient through an extended period of headline volatility. Speaker 400:04:51Our lender customers and their borrowers continue to rely on us in size for critical down payment support, and we see an attractive and sustained new business opportunity fueled by long-term secular trends and furthered by the recent improvement in mortgage rates. We have an exceptionally high-quality insured portfolio covered by a comprehensive set of risk transfer solutions, and our credit performance continues to stand ahead. We're delivering consistent growth and embedded value gains in our insured book, and we continue to manage our expenses and capital position with discipline and efficiency, building a robust balance sheet that's supported by the significant earnings power of our platform. Taken together, we see a clear opportunity for continued outperformance. Notwithstanding these strong positives, however, macro risks do remain, and we've maintained a proactive stance with respect to our pricing, risk selection, and reinsurance decisioning. Speaker 400:05:50It's an approach that has served us well and continues to be the prudent and appropriate course. More broadly, we remain encouraged by the continued discipline that we see across the private MI market. Overall, we had a terrific quarter, delivering strong operating performance, consistent growth in our insured portfolio, and strong financial results. We're in the market every day with a clear mandate and purpose, offering a low-cost, high-value solution that helps borrowers bridge the down payment gap and meaningfully reduces the cash required at the closing table. In the process, we help to make homeownership more affordable and achievable for millions of Americans and communities across the country, with coverage that works to insulate the GSEs and taxpayers from risk and loss in a downturn. Looking ahead, we're well-positioned to continue to serve our customers and their borrowers, invest in our employees and their success. Speaker 400:06:45Drive growth in our high-quality insured portfolio, and deliver through the cycle growth, returns, and value for our shareholders. With that, I'll turn it over to Aurora. Operator00:06:55Thank you, Adam. We again delivered standout financial results in the Q3. Total revenue was a record $178.7 million, GAAP net income was $96 million, or $1.22 per diluted share, and return on equity was 15.6%. We generated $13 billion of NIW, and our primary insurance in force grew to $218.4 billion, up 2% from the end of the Q2 and 5% compared to the Q3 of 2024. 12-month persistency was 83.9% in the Q3, compared to 84.1% in the Q2. Net premiums earned in the Q3 were a record $151.3 million, compared to $149.1 million in the Q2 and $143.3 million in the Q3 of 2024. Net yield for the quarter was 28 basis points, consistent with the Q2. Core yield, which excludes the cost of our reinsurance coverage and the contribution from cancellation earnings, was 34.2 basis points, also unchanged from the Q2. Operator00:08:06Investment income was $26.8 million in the Q3, compared to $24.9 million in the Q2 and $22.5 million in the Q3 of 2024. Total revenue was a record $178.7 million in the Q3, compared to $173.8 million in the Q2 and $166.1 million in the Q3 of 2024. Underwriting and operating expenses were $29.2 million in the Q3, compared to $29.5 million in the Q2. Our expense ratio was a record low, 19.3% in the quarter, highlighting the significant operating leverage embedded in our business and the success we have achieved in efficiently managing our cost base. We have a uniquely high-quality insured portfolio, and our credit performance continues to stand out. We had 7,093 defaults at September 30, compared to 6,709 at June 30, and our default rate was 1.05% at quarter end. Operator00:09:10Claims expense in the Q3 was $18.6 million, compared to $13.4 million in the Q2, reflecting normal seasonal activity and the continued growth and seasoning of our portfolio. GAAP net income for the quarter was $96 million, and diluted earnings per share was $1.22. Adjusted net income was $95.7 million, and adjusted diluted EPS was $1.21. Total cash and investments were $3.1 billion at quarter end, including $148 million of cash and investments at the holding company. Shareholders' equity at September 30 was $2.5 billion, and book value per share was $32.62. Book value per share, excluding the impact of net unrealized gains and losses in the investment portfolio, was $33.32. Up 4% compared to the Q2 and 16% compared to the Q3 of last year. In the Q3, we repurchased $24.6 million of common stock, retiring 628,000 shares at an average price of $39.13. Operator00:10:23Through quarter end, we've repurchased a total of $319 million of common stock, retiring 11.3 million shares at an average price of $28.25. We have $256 million of repurchase capacity remaining under our existing program. At quarter end, we reported $3.4 billion of total available assets under PMIERs and $2 billion of risk-based required assets. Excess available assets were $1.4 billion. Overall, we achieved standout financial results during the quarter, delivering consistent growth in our high-quality insured portfolio, record top-line performance and expense efficiency, and strong bottom-line profitability and returns. With that, let me turn it back to Adam. Speaker 400:11:10Thank you, Aurora. We had a terrific quarter, once again delivering significant new business production, consistent growth in our high-quality insured portfolio, and standout financial results. We have a strong customer franchise, a talented team driving us forward every day, an exceptionally high-quality book covered by a comprehensive set of risk transfer solutions, and a robust balance sheet supported by the significant earnings power of our platform. Taken together, we are well-positioned to continue to serve our customers and their borrowers, invest in our employees and their success, drive growth in our high-quality insured portfolio, and deliver through the cycle growth, returns, and value for our shareholders. Thank you for joining us today. I'll now ask the operator to come back on so we can take your questions. Speaker 500:11:58We will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question, you may press star, then one on your telephone keypad. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. To withdraw your question, please press star, then two. At this time, we will pause momentarily to assemble our roster. Our first question today is from Terry Ma with Barclays. Please go ahead. Speaker 200:12:30Hey, thank you. Good evening. Just wanted to start off with credit. As I look at new defaults in the quarter, it was up only about 5% year over year. That's a noticeable step down from the pace of year-over-year increases that you've seen the last kind of 10 quarters. So maybe just any color on kind of what happened in the quarter. And as we kind of look forward. How should we expect kind of new defaults to kind of emerge, like when we factor in kind of seasoning and everything? Thank you. Speaker 400:13:00Yeah, Terry, it's a good question. Look, I'd say broadly speaking, we're still greatly encouraged by the performance of our portfolio overall, including the trends, obviously, in the default population. The impact of seasonality coming through this year was a bit more muted, which is encouraging. I think we trace that to a few things, right? We've got broad resiliency that we've seen in the macro environment, and so that continues to set a favorable backdrop. We have an incredibly high-quality insured book, and our existing borrowers, broadly speaking, remain well-situated, and we're seeing that continue to translate through to our credit experience. The increase in our default experience that you noted, some amount of that traces to seasonality, right? Speaker 400:13:45We tend to see a seasonal uptick in default experience as we roll through the second half of the year, and some portion of it traces to what we've talked about for a while now, the seasoning, just the natural growth and seasoning of our book. As we look forward, we do expect that seasonality will continue to come through, and so we'll see an additional impact seasonally in Q4, and we do also expect that as we roll forward over the longer term, we'll continue to see that normalization in our credit experience, but overall, we're delighted with how our portfolio is performing. It's exceptionally high quality, and we're encouraged by the trends that we saw in the Q3 and really year to date. Speaker 200:14:30Got it. That's helpful. And then maybe just any color on the competitive environment. There has been some rumblings about a potential new entrant, so any color on kind of how to think about how the dynamic may or may not change, like if there was a new entrant into the NMI market? Thank you. Speaker 400:14:51Yeah, yeah. I'd say, look, it's not necessarily new. I think there's been periodic chatter about new market entrants over the years, and we're aware of the latest effort that's out there. But I'd say we, perhaps more than anybody else, know the challenges and difficulties that come with building a private NMI business. It is not easy at all, right? It's really hard to raise the capital. It's really hard to build an NMI-specific operating platform. It's really hard to hire the right team, to sign up customers, earn their trust, and also manage through an extended J-curve to get to a point of profitability. When we look at things, say, today versus when we got our start back in 2011, the market's at a very different point today. So today there is no clear need in the market, right? Speaker 400:15:42At this point, the six incumbent NMI players are all serving the market incredibly well. We're showing up every day for lenders and their borrowers. We've got ample capacity to support their origination volume. We've got their trust. We're offering, I think, broadly speaking, fair and valuable solutions for every borrower that comes through our market. So it's difficult to know, obviously, exactly where things land. We don't know what'll happen with the latest rumors, but it's a very high bar, right? It takes a lot of capital, a very large amount of capital, to fund a PMIERs-compliant business. If we were controlling purse strings and thinking about making an investment in a new entrant ourselves, I'd say we'd be highly skeptical that now was the right time to do that, given all the challenges that we would see for anybody who came into the market today. Speaker 400:16:31That's not because the market itself is challenged. It's because the market is doing so well, and the six companies that are there today are performing so well. We'll see. We'll see. Ultimately, if somebody new came in, everybody, the market will adapt around it. But I think going from discussions to actually having a fully funded, capitalized, approved entity, that's a pretty wide gulf. Speaker 200:16:59Got it. Super helpful. Thank you. Speaker 500:17:03The next question is from Bose George with KBW. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:17:08Hey, guys. Good afternoon. Can you give us an update on what you're seeing in terms of the strength of the consumer? Also, just any housing markets that you're keeping an eye on. Where in terms of home prices or other signs of potential weakness? Thanks. Speaker 400:17:24Sure. Yeah, good question. Look, I'd say broadly speaking, I noted in our prepared remarks, but we've been encouraged by the broad resiliency that we're seeing in the economy and the housing market for a while now. Headline unemployment remains low. Inflation's cooled. Consumers, broadly speaking, are still spending. Businesses are continuing to make significant investments. The equity market is continuing to set new highs, and so the overall picture today is an encouraging one, but for us, obviously, it's not just about today. It's also what comes tomorrow, and so we always think about risks that might be on the horizon, and so when we parse through the data, I think we can all see it. On the macro side, there are signs in the labor market of some degree of strain emerging. Speaker 400:18:08We're not seeing unemployment increase, and we don't have government data for the last little while, but there are certain private data points that we could look at, so we don't see unemployment increasing, but certainly the pace of new hiring activity has slowed. I think consumer confidence is down, particularly amongst certain borrower cohorts, and there's broad talks of, I think we're terming it a K-shaped recovery, so we'll see. What I'd say from our vantage point, it's still a really encouraging and resilient backdrop, both macro and housing market, but we're always focused on what might come, and then, Bose, I think you asked a question about geos, and so yeah. Speaker 400:18:56We've talked for a while now that there are certain geographies, Florida, Texas, the Sunbelt and Mountain West, where we're seeing either a declining pace of house price appreciation or a turn in prices with inventory building, and that's still the case. Those same markets, there's nothing new, the pressure isn't new, but we're still seeing, when we look at the world, those markets that have been soft for a little while now continue to show signs that they're soft, and we see continued strength, though, in the Northeast and the Midwest. Speaker 600:19:30Okay. Great. That's helpful. Thanks. And then, actually, just in terms of the reinsurance markets, can you just talk about what you're seeing there? Also, just. I guess you guys are more active on the XOL side, just in terms of execution, like why there versus more on the ILM side? Thanks. Operator00:19:50Sure. In terms of what we're seeing in the reinsurance markets, reinsurance markets remain very robust. And we look at the pricing achieved by some of our competitors in the marketplace year to date. It's the best pricing that's ever been achieved. If we wind the clock back to 2024, we placed full XOL and quota share coverage for 2025, 2026, and a portion of the 2027 year with respect to the quota share. So we have a really nice runway in terms of our locked-in capacity in the traditional reinsurance market. So you may recall that in the third and fourth quarter of the year, the back part of the year, we typically engage with our reinsurance partners and talk about the opportunity to lock in further coverage for forward years or to optimize the coverage that we have in place. Operator00:20:46And so you may imagine we're engaged in those discussions currently. But again, it's a very strong reinsurance market backdrop leading into those conversations. And with regards to ILM versus XOL, we like both of those markets. Both of them have been very good sources of capital for us as a company. Recently, we have been more biased towards the traditional reinsurance market. In particular, because it offers that forward coverage, which isn't available in the debt capital markets. And so that's been our recent preference just from a cost, flexibility, and speed of execution perspective. But we like both of those markets, and I think you should expect us in the fullness of time to be active across all different markets. Speaker 600:21:33Okay. Great. Thank you. Speaker 500:21:36The next question is from Mark Hughes with Truist. Please go ahead. Speaker 700:21:41Yeah. Thank you very much. The core yield, it's been holding pretty steady at 34 basis points. Is that a good run rate here? What moves that one way or the other in kind of the near to medium term? Operator00:21:59Sure. I'm happy to start out here. It has been very stable, and that's obviously been supported by the tremendous persistency that we've had in the book and continue to have in the third quarter. So again, we don't give forward guidance, but given the strength of the in-force book, we would expect that plus-minus that kind of number for the core yield will be good. Obviously, the net yield is influenced by claims expense in the quarter and how that runs through our reinsurance contract. Speaker 700:22:37And then, any thoughts about the impact on persistency? If we do see interest rates drop, that would be great from a new business perspective. A lot of purchase activity would ramp up, presumably, but you get a lot of refi. How would you see the puts and takes if kind of you get a refi market and then if you can get multiple rounds of it, given the where recent borrowers have been borrowing at? Speaker 400:23:18Yeah. So I think, as you termed it, there's both puts and takes. Our persistency was 83.9% in the third quarter, and as we've noted, again, helped to drive continued growth and embedded value gains in our insured portfolio. Overall, our portfolio is broadly well-situated because we've got a 5.2% weighted average note rate underpinning our exposure at quarter end. But it's not even, obviously, across the entirety of our book. There are vintages, parts of our in force that have greater degrees of refi sensitivity and where we will likely see an uptick. In some prepayment speeds given the recent moves in rates. That's going to be natural, right? So that's the put. The take, as you noted, though, is. Speaker 400:24:03One, some portion of the borrowers in our portfolio who will benefit from refinancing today are very likely to still need MI coverage because while HPA has generally trended higher, it's trended higher at a normal, not record pace. And so there's an opportunity to see penetration of refinancing origination activity grow if there were, if we saw an uptick in overall refi activity. As you noted, look, if rates leg down. To the point where we see a more pronounced pressure on persistency, we'd also expect to see a benefit in new business activity, NIW volume, bringing prospective buyers' purchase demand. Off the sidelines. And the one other one to note is there's a potential knock-on benefit from a credit experience standpoint. To a refinancing cycle, right? Speaker 400:24:58If we see refinancings accelerate, it's most likely just because of where the underlying note rates are, that that will come from our more recent vintages. And those are the vintages that we're looking at for that normalizing credit experience. If those vintages begin to turn over, it'll extend that normalization cycle from a credit performance standpoint. Speaker 700:25:21Appreciate that. And then were there any one-timers in the expense ratio? It's obviously, as you say, a record number. Anything non-recurring there, or is that a good run rate? Operator00:25:34I'd say with regard to the expense ratio, there was nothing in particular that I'd point out in the quarter, and if you look at the raw dollars, it's within $200,000 of what we spent last quarter, and so there were a few positives and negatives, but again, nothing of note. I would say if you're looking forward, typically, the second and third quarter are lightest in terms of expenses, and the fourth and then the first quarter tend to be heavier just in terms of both dollars of expense, and also the ratio goes up during those quarters, and in the fourth quarter, that typically results from the accrual of some of our people-related expenses. So. That's the only thing that I would note with regard to the fourth quarter. Speaker 700:26:24Appreciate it. Thank you. Speaker 500:26:26The next question is from Rick Shane with JPMorgan. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:26:33Hey, this is AJ on for Rick. So if rates fall and refis do start to take up, is there anything kind of proactive you can do to recapture MI on more of those loans? Could you maybe just walk through your playbook, sharing your early experience you've had there? Speaker 400:26:50Yeah, so I'd say on the margin, there are things that you might try to do, but more broadly, the most important piece of the playbook is to be everywhere in the market and be offering valuable solutions for our customers to be plugged in with as many lenders as possible and so that we could serve their borrowers. We've noted for a while that one of the unique attributes that we have to our benefit is that our share of the new business environment is larger than our share of industry insurance in force, so to the extent that there is some amount of industry insurance in force that's in motion because it's refinancing but still needs MI coverage, we have an opportunity, we think, to capture a little bit more of that than we will necessarily lose, and so that's not a strategy per se. Speaker 400:27:34It's just where the numbers are, but the real strategy behind it is make sure that we are connected to our customers, that we're offering them valuable solutions, that we're present for their borrowers across all markets so that that business that is potentially in motion is business that we can capture. Speaker 100:27:52Thank you. Speaker 500:27:55This concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to management for any closing remarks. Speaker 400:28:02Thank you again for joining us. We look forward to speaking with you again soon. Speaker 500:28:07The conference is now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.Read morePowered by Earnings DocumentsEarnings Release(8-K)Quarterly Report(10-Q) NMI Earnings HeadlinesNMI Holdings Shareholders Back Board, Pay and AuditorMay 17 at 2:46 PM | theglobeandmail.comHead to Head Contrast: United Fire Group (NASDAQ:UFCS) & NMI (NASDAQ:NMIH)May 15 at 3:30 AM | americanbankingnews.comThe chokepoint supplier behind SpaceX's $1.75 trillion empireWhen Musk laughed and said 'you need transformers to run transformers,' it wasn't a joke - it was a confession. The world's largest supercomputer requires power equipment that takes 120 weeks to build, and Musk built Colossus in just 122 days. One small American company is positioned to close that gap faster than anyone else, yet Wall Street still prices it like an afterthought. Dylan Jovine has the full story and the ticker. | Behind the Markets (Ad)NMI Holdings, Inc. to Participate in Upcoming Investor ConferencesMay 12, 2026 | globenewswire.comDo options traders know something about NMI Holdings stock we don't?May 11, 2026 | msn.comDoes NMI Holdings (NMIH) Q1 Record Revenue Mask a Shift in Profitability Priorities?May 8, 2026 | finance.yahoo.comSee More NMI Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like NMI? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on NMI and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About NMINMI (NASDAQ:NMIH) Holdings, Inc. (NASDAQ: NMIH) is a publicly traded mortgage insurance company that provides private mortgage insurance to lenders across the United States and Canada. Through its principal subsidiary, National Mortgage Insurance Corporation, NMI underwrites and issues policies that protect originators and investors against losses arising from borrower default on residential mortgage loans. By mitigating credit risk on higher‐loan‐to‐value mortgages, the company supports homebuyers’ access to financing and contributes to overall market liquidity. Beyond its core mortgage insurance products, NMI offers credit risk‐sharing and reinsurance solutions designed to help clients optimize capital utilization and manage portfolio exposure. Utilizing proprietary analytics and underwriting tools, the company delivers tailored risk management services—including policy administration, claims handling, and performance monitoring—to a network of banks, independent mortgage companies, and national brokers. This integrated platform streamlines operational workflows and provides transparent insights into risk trends. Serving lenders in all 50 U.S. states and select Canadian provinces, NMI leverages a broad geographic footprint combined with centralized risk management capabilities. Its flexible product offerings support a range of homebuyer segments, from first‐time purchasers to seasoned borrowers, while aligning with evolving regulatory requirements. By fostering strong relationships with both private‐sector partners and regulatory bodies, NMI positions itself as a key contributor to the stability and growth of the residential mortgage finance industry.View NMI ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Latest Articles Peloton Stock Gives Back Gains After Upbeat Earnings ReportDatavalut Gains Traction: 5 Reasons to Sell NowTMC Stock: Why This Pre-Revenue Miner Is Worth WatchingRobinhood, SoFi, and Webull Are Telling Very Different StoriesViking Sails to All-Time Highs—Fundamentals Signal More to ComeYETI Rallies After Earnings Beat and Raised OutlookAeluma's Post-Earnings Dip Creates a Buying Opportunity Upcoming Earnings Palo Alto Networks (5/19/2026)Home Depot (5/19/2026)Keysight Technologies (5/19/2026)Analog Devices (5/20/2026)Intuit (5/20/2026)NVIDIA (5/20/2026)Lowe's Companies (5/20/2026)Medtronic (5/20/2026)Target (5/20/2026)TJX Companies (5/20/2026) Get 30 Days of MarketBeat All Access for Free Sign up for MarketBeat All Access to gain access to MarketBeat's full suite of research tools. Start Your 30-Day Trial MarketBeat All Access Features Best-in-Class Portfolio Monitoring Get personalized stock ideas. Compare portfolio to indices. Check stock news, ratings, SEC filings, and more. Stock Ideas and Recommendations See daily stock ideas from top analysts. Receive short-term trading ideas from MarketBeat. Identify trending stocks on social media. Advanced Stock Screeners and Research Tools Use our seven stock screeners to find suitable stocks. Stay informed with MarketBeat's real-time news. Export data to Excel for personal analysis. Sign in to your free account to enjoy these benefits In-depth profiles and analysis for 20,000 public companies. Real-time analyst ratings, insider transactions, earnings data, and more. Our daily ratings and market update email newsletter. Sign in to your free account to enjoy all that MarketBeat has to offer. Sign In Create Account Your Email Address: Email Address Required Your Password: Password Required Log In Email Me a Login Link or Sign in with Facebook Sign in with Google Forgot your password? Your Email Address: Please enter your email address. Please enter a valid email address Choose a Password: Please enter your password. Your password must be at least 8 characters long and contain at least 1 number, 1 letter, and 1 special character. Create My Account (Free) or Sign in with Facebook Sign in with Google By creating a free account, you agree to our terms of service. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
There are 9 speakers on the call. Speaker 500:00:00Good afternoon, and welcome to the NMI Holdings Inc. Q3 2025 earnings conference call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing the star key followed by zero. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press star, then one on your telephone keypad. To withdraw your question, please press star, then two. Please note, this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Jon Swenson of Management. Please go ahead. Speaker 300:00:42Thank you, Gary. Good afternoon, and welcome to the 2025 Q3 conference call for NMI. I'm Jon Swenson, Vice President of Investor Relations and Treasury. Joining us on the call today are Brad Shuster, Executive Chairman; Adam Pollitzer, President and Chief Executive Officer; and Aurora Swithenbank, our Chief Financial Officer. Financial results for the quarter were released after the close today. The press release may be accessed on NMI's website located at nationalmi.com under the Investors tab. During the course of this call, we may make comments about our expectations for the future. Actual results could differ materially from those contained in these forward-looking statements. Additional information about the factors that could cause actual results or trends to differ materially from those discussed on the call can be found on our website or through our filings with the SEC. Speaker 300:01:38If and to the extent the company makes forward-looking statements, we do not undertake any obligation to update those statements in the future in light of subsequent developments. Further, no one should rely on the fact that the guidance of such statements is current at any time other than the time of this call. Also note that on this call, we may refer to certain non-GAAP measures. In today's press release and on our website, we provided a reconciliation of these measures to the most comparable measures under GAAP. Now I'll turn the call over to Brad. Speaker 800:02:10Thank you, Jon, and good afternoon, everyone. I'm pleased to report that in the Q3, NMI again delivered standout operating performance. Continued growth in our insured portfolio, and strong financial results. Our lenders and their borrowers continued to turn to us for critical down payment support. And in the Q3, we generated $13 billion of NIW volume, ending the period with a record $218.4 billion of high-quality, high-performing primary insurance in force. In Washington, our conversations remain active and constructive, and there continues to be broad recognition in D.C. of the unique and valuable role that the private mortgage insurance industry plays. Offering borrowers low-cost down payment support and access to mortgage credit, while also placing private capital in front of the taxpayer to absorb risk and loss in a downturn. And ultimately ensure the safety and soundness of the conventional mortgage market. Speaker 800:03:29NMI and the broader private mortgage insurance industry have never been stronger or better positioned to provide this critical down payment support than we are today. And we're excited to continue working with Director Polty, other members of the administration, and the leadership teams of Fannie and Freddie to advance their important goal of helping more Americans than ever unlock the dream of homeownership. With that, let me turn it over to Adam. Speaker 400:04:01Thank you, Brad, and good afternoon, everyone. NMI continued to outperform in the Q3, delivering significant new business production, consistent growth in our insured portfolio, and strong financial results. We generated $13 billion of NIW volume and ended the period with a record $218.4 billion of high-quality, high-performing primary insurance in force. Total revenue in the Q3 was a record $178.7 million, and we delivered GAAP net income of $96 million, or $1.22 per diluted share, and a 15.6% return on equity. Overall, we had a terrific quarter and are confident as we look ahead. The macro environment and housing market have remained resilient through an extended period of headline volatility. Speaker 400:04:51Our lender customers and their borrowers continue to rely on us in size for critical down payment support, and we see an attractive and sustained new business opportunity fueled by long-term secular trends and furthered by the recent improvement in mortgage rates. We have an exceptionally high-quality insured portfolio covered by a comprehensive set of risk transfer solutions, and our credit performance continues to stand ahead. We're delivering consistent growth and embedded value gains in our insured book, and we continue to manage our expenses and capital position with discipline and efficiency, building a robust balance sheet that's supported by the significant earnings power of our platform. Taken together, we see a clear opportunity for continued outperformance. Notwithstanding these strong positives, however, macro risks do remain, and we've maintained a proactive stance with respect to our pricing, risk selection, and reinsurance decisioning. Speaker 400:05:50It's an approach that has served us well and continues to be the prudent and appropriate course. More broadly, we remain encouraged by the continued discipline that we see across the private MI market. Overall, we had a terrific quarter, delivering strong operating performance, consistent growth in our insured portfolio, and strong financial results. We're in the market every day with a clear mandate and purpose, offering a low-cost, high-value solution that helps borrowers bridge the down payment gap and meaningfully reduces the cash required at the closing table. In the process, we help to make homeownership more affordable and achievable for millions of Americans and communities across the country, with coverage that works to insulate the GSEs and taxpayers from risk and loss in a downturn. Looking ahead, we're well-positioned to continue to serve our customers and their borrowers, invest in our employees and their success. Speaker 400:06:45Drive growth in our high-quality insured portfolio, and deliver through the cycle growth, returns, and value for our shareholders. With that, I'll turn it over to Aurora. Operator00:06:55Thank you, Adam. We again delivered standout financial results in the Q3. Total revenue was a record $178.7 million, GAAP net income was $96 million, or $1.22 per diluted share, and return on equity was 15.6%. We generated $13 billion of NIW, and our primary insurance in force grew to $218.4 billion, up 2% from the end of the Q2 and 5% compared to the Q3 of 2024. 12-month persistency was 83.9% in the Q3, compared to 84.1% in the Q2. Net premiums earned in the Q3 were a record $151.3 million, compared to $149.1 million in the Q2 and $143.3 million in the Q3 of 2024. Net yield for the quarter was 28 basis points, consistent with the Q2. Core yield, which excludes the cost of our reinsurance coverage and the contribution from cancellation earnings, was 34.2 basis points, also unchanged from the Q2. Operator00:08:06Investment income was $26.8 million in the Q3, compared to $24.9 million in the Q2 and $22.5 million in the Q3 of 2024. Total revenue was a record $178.7 million in the Q3, compared to $173.8 million in the Q2 and $166.1 million in the Q3 of 2024. Underwriting and operating expenses were $29.2 million in the Q3, compared to $29.5 million in the Q2. Our expense ratio was a record low, 19.3% in the quarter, highlighting the significant operating leverage embedded in our business and the success we have achieved in efficiently managing our cost base. We have a uniquely high-quality insured portfolio, and our credit performance continues to stand out. We had 7,093 defaults at September 30, compared to 6,709 at June 30, and our default rate was 1.05% at quarter end. Operator00:09:10Claims expense in the Q3 was $18.6 million, compared to $13.4 million in the Q2, reflecting normal seasonal activity and the continued growth and seasoning of our portfolio. GAAP net income for the quarter was $96 million, and diluted earnings per share was $1.22. Adjusted net income was $95.7 million, and adjusted diluted EPS was $1.21. Total cash and investments were $3.1 billion at quarter end, including $148 million of cash and investments at the holding company. Shareholders' equity at September 30 was $2.5 billion, and book value per share was $32.62. Book value per share, excluding the impact of net unrealized gains and losses in the investment portfolio, was $33.32. Up 4% compared to the Q2 and 16% compared to the Q3 of last year. In the Q3, we repurchased $24.6 million of common stock, retiring 628,000 shares at an average price of $39.13. Operator00:10:23Through quarter end, we've repurchased a total of $319 million of common stock, retiring 11.3 million shares at an average price of $28.25. We have $256 million of repurchase capacity remaining under our existing program. At quarter end, we reported $3.4 billion of total available assets under PMIERs and $2 billion of risk-based required assets. Excess available assets were $1.4 billion. Overall, we achieved standout financial results during the quarter, delivering consistent growth in our high-quality insured portfolio, record top-line performance and expense efficiency, and strong bottom-line profitability and returns. With that, let me turn it back to Adam. Speaker 400:11:10Thank you, Aurora. We had a terrific quarter, once again delivering significant new business production, consistent growth in our high-quality insured portfolio, and standout financial results. We have a strong customer franchise, a talented team driving us forward every day, an exceptionally high-quality book covered by a comprehensive set of risk transfer solutions, and a robust balance sheet supported by the significant earnings power of our platform. Taken together, we are well-positioned to continue to serve our customers and their borrowers, invest in our employees and their success, drive growth in our high-quality insured portfolio, and deliver through the cycle growth, returns, and value for our shareholders. Thank you for joining us today. I'll now ask the operator to come back on so we can take your questions. Speaker 500:11:58We will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question, you may press star, then one on your telephone keypad. If you are using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. To withdraw your question, please press star, then two. At this time, we will pause momentarily to assemble our roster. Our first question today is from Terry Ma with Barclays. Please go ahead. Speaker 200:12:30Hey, thank you. Good evening. Just wanted to start off with credit. As I look at new defaults in the quarter, it was up only about 5% year over year. That's a noticeable step down from the pace of year-over-year increases that you've seen the last kind of 10 quarters. So maybe just any color on kind of what happened in the quarter. And as we kind of look forward. How should we expect kind of new defaults to kind of emerge, like when we factor in kind of seasoning and everything? Thank you. Speaker 400:13:00Yeah, Terry, it's a good question. Look, I'd say broadly speaking, we're still greatly encouraged by the performance of our portfolio overall, including the trends, obviously, in the default population. The impact of seasonality coming through this year was a bit more muted, which is encouraging. I think we trace that to a few things, right? We've got broad resiliency that we've seen in the macro environment, and so that continues to set a favorable backdrop. We have an incredibly high-quality insured book, and our existing borrowers, broadly speaking, remain well-situated, and we're seeing that continue to translate through to our credit experience. The increase in our default experience that you noted, some amount of that traces to seasonality, right? Speaker 400:13:45We tend to see a seasonal uptick in default experience as we roll through the second half of the year, and some portion of it traces to what we've talked about for a while now, the seasoning, just the natural growth and seasoning of our book. As we look forward, we do expect that seasonality will continue to come through, and so we'll see an additional impact seasonally in Q4, and we do also expect that as we roll forward over the longer term, we'll continue to see that normalization in our credit experience, but overall, we're delighted with how our portfolio is performing. It's exceptionally high quality, and we're encouraged by the trends that we saw in the Q3 and really year to date. Speaker 200:14:30Got it. That's helpful. And then maybe just any color on the competitive environment. There has been some rumblings about a potential new entrant, so any color on kind of how to think about how the dynamic may or may not change, like if there was a new entrant into the NMI market? Thank you. Speaker 400:14:51Yeah, yeah. I'd say, look, it's not necessarily new. I think there's been periodic chatter about new market entrants over the years, and we're aware of the latest effort that's out there. But I'd say we, perhaps more than anybody else, know the challenges and difficulties that come with building a private NMI business. It is not easy at all, right? It's really hard to raise the capital. It's really hard to build an NMI-specific operating platform. It's really hard to hire the right team, to sign up customers, earn their trust, and also manage through an extended J-curve to get to a point of profitability. When we look at things, say, today versus when we got our start back in 2011, the market's at a very different point today. So today there is no clear need in the market, right? Speaker 400:15:42At this point, the six incumbent NMI players are all serving the market incredibly well. We're showing up every day for lenders and their borrowers. We've got ample capacity to support their origination volume. We've got their trust. We're offering, I think, broadly speaking, fair and valuable solutions for every borrower that comes through our market. So it's difficult to know, obviously, exactly where things land. We don't know what'll happen with the latest rumors, but it's a very high bar, right? It takes a lot of capital, a very large amount of capital, to fund a PMIERs-compliant business. If we were controlling purse strings and thinking about making an investment in a new entrant ourselves, I'd say we'd be highly skeptical that now was the right time to do that, given all the challenges that we would see for anybody who came into the market today. Speaker 400:16:31That's not because the market itself is challenged. It's because the market is doing so well, and the six companies that are there today are performing so well. We'll see. We'll see. Ultimately, if somebody new came in, everybody, the market will adapt around it. But I think going from discussions to actually having a fully funded, capitalized, approved entity, that's a pretty wide gulf. Speaker 200:16:59Got it. Super helpful. Thank you. Speaker 500:17:03The next question is from Bose George with KBW. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:17:08Hey, guys. Good afternoon. Can you give us an update on what you're seeing in terms of the strength of the consumer? Also, just any housing markets that you're keeping an eye on. Where in terms of home prices or other signs of potential weakness? Thanks. Speaker 400:17:24Sure. Yeah, good question. Look, I'd say broadly speaking, I noted in our prepared remarks, but we've been encouraged by the broad resiliency that we're seeing in the economy and the housing market for a while now. Headline unemployment remains low. Inflation's cooled. Consumers, broadly speaking, are still spending. Businesses are continuing to make significant investments. The equity market is continuing to set new highs, and so the overall picture today is an encouraging one, but for us, obviously, it's not just about today. It's also what comes tomorrow, and so we always think about risks that might be on the horizon, and so when we parse through the data, I think we can all see it. On the macro side, there are signs in the labor market of some degree of strain emerging. Speaker 400:18:08We're not seeing unemployment increase, and we don't have government data for the last little while, but there are certain private data points that we could look at, so we don't see unemployment increasing, but certainly the pace of new hiring activity has slowed. I think consumer confidence is down, particularly amongst certain borrower cohorts, and there's broad talks of, I think we're terming it a K-shaped recovery, so we'll see. What I'd say from our vantage point, it's still a really encouraging and resilient backdrop, both macro and housing market, but we're always focused on what might come, and then, Bose, I think you asked a question about geos, and so yeah. Speaker 400:18:56We've talked for a while now that there are certain geographies, Florida, Texas, the Sunbelt and Mountain West, where we're seeing either a declining pace of house price appreciation or a turn in prices with inventory building, and that's still the case. Those same markets, there's nothing new, the pressure isn't new, but we're still seeing, when we look at the world, those markets that have been soft for a little while now continue to show signs that they're soft, and we see continued strength, though, in the Northeast and the Midwest. Speaker 600:19:30Okay. Great. That's helpful. Thanks. And then, actually, just in terms of the reinsurance markets, can you just talk about what you're seeing there? Also, just. I guess you guys are more active on the XOL side, just in terms of execution, like why there versus more on the ILM side? Thanks. Operator00:19:50Sure. In terms of what we're seeing in the reinsurance markets, reinsurance markets remain very robust. And we look at the pricing achieved by some of our competitors in the marketplace year to date. It's the best pricing that's ever been achieved. If we wind the clock back to 2024, we placed full XOL and quota share coverage for 2025, 2026, and a portion of the 2027 year with respect to the quota share. So we have a really nice runway in terms of our locked-in capacity in the traditional reinsurance market. So you may recall that in the third and fourth quarter of the year, the back part of the year, we typically engage with our reinsurance partners and talk about the opportunity to lock in further coverage for forward years or to optimize the coverage that we have in place. Operator00:20:46And so you may imagine we're engaged in those discussions currently. But again, it's a very strong reinsurance market backdrop leading into those conversations. And with regards to ILM versus XOL, we like both of those markets. Both of them have been very good sources of capital for us as a company. Recently, we have been more biased towards the traditional reinsurance market. In particular, because it offers that forward coverage, which isn't available in the debt capital markets. And so that's been our recent preference just from a cost, flexibility, and speed of execution perspective. But we like both of those markets, and I think you should expect us in the fullness of time to be active across all different markets. Speaker 600:21:33Okay. Great. Thank you. Speaker 500:21:36The next question is from Mark Hughes with Truist. Please go ahead. Speaker 700:21:41Yeah. Thank you very much. The core yield, it's been holding pretty steady at 34 basis points. Is that a good run rate here? What moves that one way or the other in kind of the near to medium term? Operator00:21:59Sure. I'm happy to start out here. It has been very stable, and that's obviously been supported by the tremendous persistency that we've had in the book and continue to have in the third quarter. So again, we don't give forward guidance, but given the strength of the in-force book, we would expect that plus-minus that kind of number for the core yield will be good. Obviously, the net yield is influenced by claims expense in the quarter and how that runs through our reinsurance contract. Speaker 700:22:37And then, any thoughts about the impact on persistency? If we do see interest rates drop, that would be great from a new business perspective. A lot of purchase activity would ramp up, presumably, but you get a lot of refi. How would you see the puts and takes if kind of you get a refi market and then if you can get multiple rounds of it, given the where recent borrowers have been borrowing at? Speaker 400:23:18Yeah. So I think, as you termed it, there's both puts and takes. Our persistency was 83.9% in the third quarter, and as we've noted, again, helped to drive continued growth and embedded value gains in our insured portfolio. Overall, our portfolio is broadly well-situated because we've got a 5.2% weighted average note rate underpinning our exposure at quarter end. But it's not even, obviously, across the entirety of our book. There are vintages, parts of our in force that have greater degrees of refi sensitivity and where we will likely see an uptick. In some prepayment speeds given the recent moves in rates. That's going to be natural, right? So that's the put. The take, as you noted, though, is. Speaker 400:24:03One, some portion of the borrowers in our portfolio who will benefit from refinancing today are very likely to still need MI coverage because while HPA has generally trended higher, it's trended higher at a normal, not record pace. And so there's an opportunity to see penetration of refinancing origination activity grow if there were, if we saw an uptick in overall refi activity. As you noted, look, if rates leg down. To the point where we see a more pronounced pressure on persistency, we'd also expect to see a benefit in new business activity, NIW volume, bringing prospective buyers' purchase demand. Off the sidelines. And the one other one to note is there's a potential knock-on benefit from a credit experience standpoint. To a refinancing cycle, right? Speaker 400:24:58If we see refinancings accelerate, it's most likely just because of where the underlying note rates are, that that will come from our more recent vintages. And those are the vintages that we're looking at for that normalizing credit experience. If those vintages begin to turn over, it'll extend that normalization cycle from a credit performance standpoint. Speaker 700:25:21Appreciate that. And then were there any one-timers in the expense ratio? It's obviously, as you say, a record number. Anything non-recurring there, or is that a good run rate? Operator00:25:34I'd say with regard to the expense ratio, there was nothing in particular that I'd point out in the quarter, and if you look at the raw dollars, it's within $200,000 of what we spent last quarter, and so there were a few positives and negatives, but again, nothing of note. I would say if you're looking forward, typically, the second and third quarter are lightest in terms of expenses, and the fourth and then the first quarter tend to be heavier just in terms of both dollars of expense, and also the ratio goes up during those quarters, and in the fourth quarter, that typically results from the accrual of some of our people-related expenses. So. That's the only thing that I would note with regard to the fourth quarter. Speaker 700:26:24Appreciate it. Thank you. Speaker 500:26:26The next question is from Rick Shane with JPMorgan. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:26:33Hey, this is AJ on for Rick. So if rates fall and refis do start to take up, is there anything kind of proactive you can do to recapture MI on more of those loans? Could you maybe just walk through your playbook, sharing your early experience you've had there? Speaker 400:26:50Yeah, so I'd say on the margin, there are things that you might try to do, but more broadly, the most important piece of the playbook is to be everywhere in the market and be offering valuable solutions for our customers to be plugged in with as many lenders as possible and so that we could serve their borrowers. We've noted for a while that one of the unique attributes that we have to our benefit is that our share of the new business environment is larger than our share of industry insurance in force, so to the extent that there is some amount of industry insurance in force that's in motion because it's refinancing but still needs MI coverage, we have an opportunity, we think, to capture a little bit more of that than we will necessarily lose, and so that's not a strategy per se. Speaker 400:27:34It's just where the numbers are, but the real strategy behind it is make sure that we are connected to our customers, that we're offering them valuable solutions, that we're present for their borrowers across all markets so that that business that is potentially in motion is business that we can capture. Speaker 100:27:52Thank you. Speaker 500:27:55This concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to management for any closing remarks. Speaker 400:28:02Thank you again for joining us. We look forward to speaking with you again soon. Speaker 500:28:07The conference is now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.Read morePowered by