AGO May 8, 2026

Assured Guaranty Q1 2026 Earnings Call - New Business PVP Nearly Doubles as AI Accelerates Secondary Market Flow

Summary

Assured Guaranty delivered a strong first quarter of 2026, with adjusted operating income of $115 million or $2.50 per share. The standout driver was new business production, which surged to $73 million of PVP, almost double the prior year’s pace. US Public Finance led the charge with a 92% year-over-year increase, while structured finance more than doubled its PVP. The company’s pivot toward alternative investments is paying off, with an inception-to-date IRR of 12% on a $965 million portfolio that generated $35 million in pre-tax income this quarter. Management emphasized that large deals remain the profit engine, citing multiple transactions over $100 million in the quarter and a robust pipeline for the second quarter.

On the capital front, Assured Guaranty announced a temporary slowdown in share repurchases to $30 million over the next three months to fund growth in its core financial guarantee business and its new annuity reinsurance platform. CEO Dominic Frederico stressed that the company is evaluating a shift toward more “soft capital” facilities to support expansion while maintaining the flexibility to return cash to shareholders. The call also highlighted the integration of AI across credit surveillance and secondary market execution, with management noting that AI is accelerating transaction velocity without sacrificing underwriting discipline. Loss development remained contained, with Brightline and PREPA accounting for the $44 million economic loss, though management expressed confidence in the structural strength of its railroad exposure.

Key Takeaways

  • Adjusted operating income of $115 million ($2.50 per share) fell from $162 million ($3.18 per share) in Q1 2025, primarily due to the absence of an $82 million one-time benefit from the resolution of the LBIE litigation.
  • New business production surged to $73 million of PVP, nearly doubling the $39 million produced in Q1 2025, with US Public Finance PVP up 92% year-over-year to $48 million.
  • The asset management segment produced $44 million of adjusted operating income, nearly four times the prior year’s pace, driven by a strategic pivot toward alternative investments that now carry an inception-to-date IRR of 12%.
  • Alternative investments totaled $965 million in fair value as of March 31, 2026, generating $35 million in pre-tax adjusted operating income this quarter, compared to a 4.2% average yield in the fixed maturity portfolio over the past three years.
  • The company insured $4 billion of par in the primary and secondary markets, maintaining its dominant 53% share of insured municipal par issuance, with 227 policies issued in the secondary market, up from 144 in Q1 2025.
  • Loss development of $44 million was primarily driven by Brightline and PREPA; however, Brightline losses are fully covered by the unearned premium reserve, and management emphasized the structural strength of the $2.4 billion capital stack in its railroad exposure.
  • Management announced a temporary reduction in share repurchases to a target of $30 million over the next three months to allocate capital toward growth in its core financial guarantee business and its new annuity reinsurance platform.
  • CEO Dominic Frederico signaled a potential strategic shift toward “soft capital” facilities to support balance sheet growth, reduce ROE drag, and maintain the flexibility to continue aggressive capital returns to shareholders.
  • The company is aggressively deploying AI across credit surveillance, secondary market execution, and operational workflows, with management noting that AI is accelerating transaction velocity and analyst productivity while retaining human oversight for final underwriting decisions.
  • The annuity reinsurance platform, Assured Life Re, has secured positive feedback from potential partners in the U.S. MICRA and U.K. PRT markets, with management projecting $50 million to $150 million in capital requirements over the next 18 months to scale the new business line.

Full Transcript

Operator: Good morning, and welcome to the Assured Guaranty Ltd. First Quarter 2026 Earnings Conference Call. My name is Ed, and I’ll be the operator for today’s call. All participants are currently in a listen-only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing star 0 on your telephone keypad. After the presentation, there’ll be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press star 1 to raise your hand. To withdraw your question, press star 1 again. Please note that this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to our host, Robert Tucker, Senior Managing Director, Investor Relations and Corporate Communications. Please go ahead.

Robert Tucker, Senior Managing Director, Investor Relations and Corporate Communications, Assured Guaranty Ltd.: Thank you, operator. Thank you all for joining Assured Guaranty for our first quarter 2026 financial results conference call. Today’s presentation is made pursuant to the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. The presentation may contain forward-looking statements about our new business and credit outlooks, market conditions, credit spreads, financial ratings, loss reserves, financial results, or other items that may affect our future results. These statements are subject to change due to new information or future events. Therefore, you should not place undue reliance on them as we do not undertake any obligation to publicly update or revise them except as required by law. If you are listening to a replay of this call or if you are reading the transcript of the call, please note that our statements made today may have been updated since this call.

Please refer to the investor information section of our website for our most recent presentations and SEC filings, most current financial filings, and for the risk factors. This presentation also includes references to non-GAAP financial measures. We present the GAAP financial measures most directly comparable to the non-GAAP financial measures referenced in this presentation, along with a reconciliation between such GAAP and non-GAAP financial measures in our current financial supplement and equity investor presentation, which are on our website at assuredguaranty.com. Turning to the presentation, our speakers today are Dominic Frederico, President and Chief Executive Officer of Assured Guaranty Ltd., Rob Bailenson, our Chief Operating Officer, and Ben Rosenblum, our Chief Financial Officer. After their remarks, we’ll open the call to your questions. As the webcast is not enabled for Q&A, please dial into the call if you’d like to ask a question.

I will now turn the call over to Dominic.

Dominic Frederico, President and Chief Executive Officer, Assured Guaranty Ltd.: Thank you, Robert, and welcome to everyone joining today’s call. Assured Guaranty began 2026 with a strong first quarter. The quarter’s adjusted operating income per share came in at $2.50. Our new business production generated $73 million of PVP, almost twice the PVP of last year’s first quarter as we saw increases for each of our three financial guarantee underwriting groups. Rob will fill in the production details in a few minutes. We also produced $44 million of adjusted operating income in our asset management segment during the first quarter of 2026, nearly four times the amount produced in the first quarter of 2025. Our pivot to increasing the proportion of alternative investments in our overall investment portfolio over the past few years has increased the all-in return of the investment portfolio.

The inception to date annualized internal rate of return for all of our alternative investments was 12% at the end of the first quarter 2026. The Assured Life Re team has received positive feedback from potential customers with clear interest in our double A insurance for MAG growth, as well as general market desire for fresh reinsurance capacity. Currently, we’ve had positive discussions with potential partners in the U.S. MICRA market and in the U.K. PRT market, in addition to interest from other non-U.S. potential partners. We made good progress integrating our staff with experienced employees already employed by Assured Life Re. Annuity reinsurance exemplifies the type of business opportunities we look for, those which will further diversify the company, create synergies with our existing business lines, generate attractive returns, have risk profiles in line with ours, and benefit from our core competencies.

Economic uncertainty, political and geopolitical discord, and war permeate the news investors have been seeing recently. Investors understandably find high-quality municipal bonds attractive. Assured Guaranty can expand the supply of high-quality bonds and, in certain cases, reduce the borrowing costs and support the market value of even naturally double A-rated municipal bonds. We believe municipal bond issuance will have another strong year. We’re off to a good start for 2026. I believe our financial guaranty business will provide us with many insurance opportunities as we continue to expand our business in US Public Finance, global infrastructure, and structured finance. We are also focused on building out our new annuity reinsurance business and on managing our capital prudently and profitably to support the growth in these businesses while protecting our policyholders and rewarding our shareholders.

I will now turn the call over to Rob to provide more details about our production results.

Rob Bailenson, Chief Operating Officer, Assured Guaranty Ltd.: Thank you, Dominic, and good morning to everyone on the call. Assured Guaranty closed $73 million of PVP in the first quarter of 2026, compared with $39 million of PVP in the first quarter of last year. Year-over-year, total PVP and US Public Finance PVP each nearly doubled their first quarter results, and structured finance more than doubled its PVP result. US Public Finance led the way in PVP production, with a 92% year-over-year increase to $48 million of PVP. In non-US public finance and global structured finance contributed $8 million and $17 million of PVP respectively. For the first quarter of 2026, Assured Guaranty continued to guarantee the majority of insured municipal par issued at 53%. We insured $4 billion of par in the primary and secondary markets on a close date basis.

Market conditions and our mix of business allowed us to produce significantly more PVP than in first quarter 2025 while taking on less nominal exposure. In the secondary market, during the first quarter of 2026, we issued 227 policies compared to 144 policies in the first quarter of last year. Our guarantee has been instrumental in supporting large transactions within the municipal bond market, highlighting the institutional demand for our guarantee. This interest demonstrates that institutions are increasingly acknowledging the benefits our insurance provides, including greater price stability and improved market liquidity. Our guarantee also allows issuers to attract a broader, often more diversified base of investors, reduce borrowing costs, or raise more proceeds without increasing interest rate costs.

The first quarter of 2026 included 9 large transactions within short par over $100 million, including $444 million of a taxable military housing bond for Fort Carson, where over 70% of the bonds had an underlying rating of double A, and the balance was rated single A. $243 million of Hartford HealthCare revenue bonds issued by Connecticut Health and Educational Facilities Authority. $201 million for the Western Maricopa Education Center in Arizona, and $102 million in taxable bonds for Brown University Health. Among double A municipal credits, during the first quarter of 2026, we insured 20 primary and 5 secondary market transactions on a closed date basis, amounting to a total of nearly $900 million in insured par.

This activity highlights the value our guarantee provides as a backstop against headline risk and unexpected fiscal stress, whether from broad economic or financial developments, natural events, or other causes. For non-US public finance, new business in the first quarter of 2026 included a secondary local authority transaction in the U.K., annual extensions of liquidity facilities, and a primary social housing transaction in France, marking our inaugural primary market guarantee in the social housing sector within the European Union. Our global structured finance results were produced primarily by fund finance and financial guarantees for life insurance capital management purposes. Fund finance continues to be a strong area of focus for us. This business is typically repeatable flow business, and since the transactions have relatively short lives, we earn the premiums much more rapidly and can recycle the capital more quickly, often within 1-2 years.

For example, the fund finance transactions we insured in the first quarter of 2026 have maturities that range from a few months to a little over two years. As we said, we expect the majority of these transactions will be renewed at maturity. As we have discussed in the past, both non-US public and structured finance have expanded the application of our products into various new sectors and geographic markets, and we look to continue to develop additional product applications and new counterparty relationships in line with our strategic objective to accelerate our business growth. For instance, in first quarter 2026, we closed a significant capital relief transaction with a major financial institution in the Asia-Pacific region, guaranteeing a portfolio of fund finance exposures for a counterparty that we had previously done a modest amount of business with.

In closing, we expect demand to continue for our core products and believe we have abundant opportunities for further growth and greater diversification. We are off to a promising start in the second quarter of 2026 with a good pipeline ahead. Already in the second quarter, for instance, we have insured or issued commitments for $636 million for the City of Houston’s Convention and Entertainment Facilities Department, approximately $130 million of senior student housing revenue bonds for Morgan State University in Maryland, approximately $300 million for the Burbank-Glendale-Pasadena Airport Authority in California, and several large global structured finance deals.

We continue to maintain that at times when challenges or uncertainty arise in the economy and financial markets, when the cost of borrowing goes up, when market execution becomes less certain, when entities are trying to better manage their capital utilization, our products can help optimize a wide variety of transactions, so our clients can accomplish more with lower financing costs and obtain capital more efficiently. I will now turn the call over to Ben to discuss our financial results.

Ben Rosenblum, Chief Financial Officer, Assured Guaranty Ltd.: Thank you, Dominic and Rob, and good morning. I am pleased to report first quarter 2026 adjusted operating income of $115 million or $2.50 per share. This quarter’s results include two noteworthy items. First, a $21 million after-tax benefit attributable to the recognition of carried interest from a Sound Point fund that sold its single underlying asset. Second, a $33 million one-time tax benefit due to changes in the U.K.’s Pillar Two global minimum tax legislation enacted in the first quarter that reduced the company’s global minimum tax accrual. This compares to adjusted operating income of $162 million or $3.18 per share in the first quarter of 2025, which included an $82 million after-tax benefit related to the resolution of the LBIE litigation.

Recent new business production has contributed to a steady stream of scheduled net earned premiums and credit derivative revenues, which were $90 million in the first quarter of 2026, compared with $89 million in the first quarter of 2025. Our deferred premium revenue held steady compared to last quarter at $3.8 billion. In addition, alternative investments remain an important part of our overall investment strategy. We have an inception to date IRR of approximately 12% on the alternative investment portfolio, which compares to an average yield of 4.2% over the past three years in our fixed maturity portfolio. As of March thirty-first, 2026, our alternative investment had a fair value of $965 million.

This portfolio generated $35 million in pre-tax adjusted operating income in the first quarter of 2026, compared with $53 million in the first quarter of 2025. Other than the CLO investments, which experienced a decline in value quarter-over-quarter, our remaining alternative investments performed well and delivered relatively consistent results. The remainder of the available for sale and short-term investment portfolio also performed well, generating $82 million of net investment income in the first quarter of 2026, up from $75 million in the first quarter of 2025 as we shifted that portfolio towards higher yielding corporate securities. Turning to our below investment grade exposures, economic loss development was $44 million in the first quarter of 2026, primarily attributable to Brightline and PREPA.

However, loss expense included an adjusted operating income was primarily related to PREPA, as the Brightline losses are well within our unearned premium reserve and therefore have not yet been recognized. In terms of capital management, in the first quarter of 2026, we repurchased 882,000 shares for $75 million at an average price of $85.58 per share, and also returned $18 million in dividends to our shareholders. After over 13 years of consistent share repurchases, we have now bought back 81% of the shares that are outstanding at the start of the program, and in that time, we have returned $6 billion to the shareholders under the program.

During that same period, we increased our quarterly dividends per share from $0.10 per share to $0.38 per share, which amounted to $929 million of additional distributions to shareholders. As always, we actively assess the various opportunities to deploy our capital effectively and aim to invest in those that we believe provide the most attractive returns. At this time, we have decided to reduce our share repurchases over the next three months to a target of $30 million in order to use a portion of available capital to support our growth opportunities in our financial guarantee insurance and our new annuity reinsurance businesses, in addition to other strategic considerations. We are excited to grow this platform, and we are advancing several promising opportunities for new business.

Our holding company liquidity as of today is approximately $153 million, of which $56 million is at AGL. As of the end of the first quarter of 2026, we had reached record per share valuations of $128.61 for adjusted operating shareholders equity and $188.74 for adjusted book value, reflecting the successful execution of our key strategic initiatives. I will now turn the call over to our operator to give you instructions for the Q&A period.

Operator: The first question comes from the line of Marissa Lobo at UBS.

Marissa Lobo, Analyst, UBS: Thank you, and good morning.

Operator: Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Marissa Lobo, Analyst, UBS: Thank you. Good morning. with about $600 billion Hi, I’m sorry. Could you hear me?

Ben Rosenblum, Chief Financial Officer, Assured Guaranty Ltd.: Yes.

Marissa Lobo, Analyst, UBS: Okay, great. With about $600 billion of projected muni supply in 2026 and if penetration rates hold, what is your target for 2026 new issue in short par and is the pricing environment supportive to translate into higher gross premiums?

Dominic Frederico, President and Chief Executive Officer, Assured Guaranty Ltd.: Well, if the market issuance up, we would project our penetration would probably remain consistent because of the current conditions that exist in terms of spreads and rates. We think the volume alone will give us a growth opportunity.

As well as we have some large deals that we know are there in the pipeline that will also help the year. We expect a strong year, apples to apples. In terms of return, obviously now we have a very sophisticated ROE model. We calculate on every risk that we write. We have a review function now over the whole process to make sure the ROEs are in line with our cost of capital so that we’re not leaving at all the value of the company or the opportunities that we see, but we’re being selective in terms of our underwriting choices as well as the pricing that we’re looking for in terms of spreads and return. Like I said, volume will help our volume this year.

Rob Bailenson, Chief Operating Officer, Assured Guaranty Ltd.: We’re seeing more triple B issuance as well as, more infrastructure transactions and also in healthcare, which is giving us significantly amount more premium on those transactions.

Dominic Frederico, President and Chief Executive Officer, Assured Guaranty Ltd.: Remember, we’re the slave to large deals, and large deals have their own timeframe in terms of closing. We’ve met many quarters where we expected a number of X, and because 2 deals didn’t close at the end of the quarter and fell into the next quarter, they had a very different volume structure. As I said, if we look at it over the year, you know, apples to apples, we expect the year to be a strong year relative to Public Finance as well as meet our return hurdles from the standpoint of profitability.

Marissa Lobo, Analyst, UBS: Okay, great. How are you incorporating AI into your, into your processes? Where do you see the biggest opportunity for it to improve your, you know, credit selections?

Dominic Frederico, President and Chief Executive Officer, Assured Guaranty Ltd.: That probably has the most discussion we’re having in the organization. Obviously AI represents a great opportunity for us in terms of being able to do the work we do, which is you appreciate fairly repetitive on a credit-by-credit basis, on a surveillance basis, on a review of the portfolio basis. A lot of those functions can be machine learned, and we’re obviously applying it in every facet of our business. Most importantly, you’ve seen the activity in the secondary market, where we continue to push those numbers up significantly utilizing artificial intelligence as part of the process. Remember, a human being still has to look at it to approve it.

At the end of the day, the compilation, the accessibility of the data, the molding the data into a format that would fit our process for credit and surveillance is critical to us. We think as a company that does a lot of repeat functionality, we should be most benefited by the use of AI. We’ve got literally an AI committee that looks at everything. We’re applying applications kind of across the board in areas you wouldn’t even think of, like financial reporting, surveys, actually. There’s a lot of other implications or applications that we’re applying it to, and we think it’s a critical tool for us to use in the future, both with how we want to manage the company and the business.

Rob Bailenson, Chief Operating Officer, Assured Guaranty Ltd.: Marissa, we’re actually, that’s why you see the velocity of our secondary market transactions go much more quickly because we’re actually using AI to interact with our clients much more quickly as well. In addition, our credit reports are being done using AI, but an individual actually reviews it, but it takes less time for an analyst to actually write them.

Marissa Lobo, Analyst, UBS: That’s great. Thank you. Just moving if I could to the loss development. On Brightline with the going concern audit opinion that was just issued and the interest payment grace period expiring, you know, can you talk to us, is there any, has AGO been approached for any forbearance or restructuring or, you know, what scenario might it move to the category 3 here?

Dominic Frederico, President and Chief Executive Officer, Assured Guaranty Ltd.: Well, there’s a lot of activity on Brightline, as you can appreciate, and a lot of words in the marketplace in terms of the operations of the organization. However, if you look at our structure in terms of capital, the capital stack is roughly $7 billion. We’re half of the top $2.4 billion. You say to yourself, is the company worth at least $2.4 billion? The answer resoundingly comes back absolutely. We don’t see this as a loss situation, but obviously we have to compare ourselves to what the rating agencies think in terms of what their capital they’re going to access, how the regulators view it.

As you know, our accounting model requires us to consider all possible scenarios and probability weight them, so you got to put a scenario out there that’s got some loss content in it. At the end of the day, we believe in the structure. We believe in our credit underwriting. We stand back on our historical results. Time is on our side. Remember, in our portfolio, there’s not any loss that would be significant to us in terms of principal and interest only when due. There’s no acceleration. This, I think, has a $58 million payment annually to about 2042. At the end of the day, it’s not free cash flow. As I said, I don’t mind owning a railroad for $2.4 billion.

Marissa Lobo, Analyst, UBS: Okay. Thank you very much.

Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Tommy McJoynt at KBW. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Tommy McJoynt, Analyst, KBW: Hi, good morning.

Dominic Frederico, President and Chief Executive Officer, Assured Guaranty Ltd.: Morning, Tommy.

Tommy McJoynt, Analyst, KBW: Question here. For investors that have become accustomed to AGO buying back roughly $500 million in stock in 10 of the last 12 years, what was the slower pace of buybacks year to date and the message of a slowdown in buybacks for the next three months? Was that meant to signal just a temporary slowdown here, or is this a true change in the way you guys think about capital distribution?

Dominic Frederico, President and Chief Executive Officer, Assured Guaranty Ltd.: Well, when you say temporary, Tommy, that’s a good question. I would say we look at the capital management as still a critical issue, still a critical strategic objective in the company. It’s what we pay the most attention to. At the end of the day, we front the company significantly. We’ve got to look at how we manage that remaining capital, where the opportunities lie.

As we talked about in the life business, for instance, theoretically based on its growth pattern, it could absorb or need somewhere between $50 million and $150 million of capital to continue to exercise its growth program over the next 18 months. We want to make sure we have plenty of capital for that, as well as still have enough cushion to protect ourselves from some myopic views of loss activity, such as Brightline in terms of what the capital charges are coming out of the rating agencies for that. You know, we have to protect the company relative to its ratings. We got to provide the opportunity to grow the business. We’ve done a tremendous job, and I think we are gonna have the credit we deserve for the capital management we’ve done. As Ben talked about, $6 billion, 81% of the outstanding.

Well, that’s liquidating the company. We want to grow the company, and we think we’ve got great opportunities to grow the company. The same token, if we can’t use the capital, if we see the excess capital continue to build as it has in the past, we will be aggressive in our capital management and, of course, we’ll protect our stock as well.

Tommy McJoynt, Analyst, KBW: Got it. Thanks for that. I think we’ve talked about this in the past, but I just want to confirm that when you think about your sort of first order or second order exposure to the Middle East crisis, I assume you think it’s pretty minimal. Perhaps, you know, thinking of second order impacts around just the level of heightened risk globally, have you guys seen an uptick, in terms of, like, the pipeline or demand for sort of risk mitigation strategies from AGS specifically over, you know, the past few months that you can pinpoint to the crisis in the Middle East?

Dominic Frederico, President and Chief Executive Officer, Assured Guaranty Ltd.: No, we haven’t, Tommy, thank God. If you notice, I’ve been in this business, in this position for a long time, I’ve seen probably 4 or 5 recessions, maybe 3 or 4 more global crises. At the end of the day, look at the results that Assured Guaranty put up. Never had a loss. In order to buy back the amount of stock and pay the dividends we had, we had to be usually profitable. I see nothing affects that going forward. We haven’t seen the demand, as you’re saying, in terms of people running for the exits. Our basic policy today, where our growth engine is fund finance, which is a very safe, highly rated book of business. We do capital arbitrage, but the volatility in the market does allow us to open up more portals of business opportunity because of spread widening.

Spread is increasing, which gives us more opportunity to make money than be looking more deals. We don’t see the panic at all. As I said, in our life history, it really has never had an effect because the portfolio is so well-written and so well-protected from a credit point of view.

Rob Bailenson, Chief Operating Officer, Assured Guaranty Ltd.: Tommy, we’re seeing the increase in structured finance globally and international infrastructure due to regulatory requirements on banks. You know, we’re part of their solution when it comes to capital management and capital efficiency and risk management. That’s where we’re opening up. They’re looking at our financial guarantee as a solution to helping their regulatory capital.

Dominic Frederico, President and Chief Executive Officer, Assured Guaranty Ltd.: Yeah. I think what that says to you about the company, right? We’re opening up more counterparty relationships against banks across the world globe by providing us significant lines of credit capacity that they’re willing to absorb in terms of Assured credit risk. Why would that be? They realize that the strength of the company, the strength of its financial ratings, the ability to provide this capital arbitrage in spite of the market and the results that we’ve been able to generate in the past. I think that alone would indicate the confidence that the market has in us and continues to provide us those opportunities.

Rob Bailenson, Chief Operating Officer, Assured Guaranty Ltd.: I also just want to add that it’s in these banks’ core lending portfolios. It’s not anything that risks that they’re concerned about. It’s the core lending. They want to service their clients even further.

Tommy McJoynt, Analyst, KBW: Thanks. If I could just sneak one last modeling one in. Looking at the investment portfolio and excluding the alternative investments, what was your new money yield in the quarter relative to the effective yield on the portfolio?

Ben Rosenblum, Chief Financial Officer, Assured Guaranty Ltd.: I don’t have the number right in front of me, but I’m gonna say we’re probably the new money yield’s probably somewhere a little north of 4%. It’s probably 4.4% or so. You know, I might be off by, you know, 10 or 15 basis points there.

Tommy McJoynt, Analyst, KBW: Thanks.

Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Jeffrey Dunn at Dowling & Partners. Your line is open. Please go ahead.

Jeffrey Dunn, Analyst, Dowling & Partners: Thanks. Good morning, guys.

Dominic Frederico, President and Chief Executive Officer, Assured Guaranty Ltd.: Morning, Jeff.

Jeffrey Dunn, Analyst, Dowling & Partners: Dominic, I know you don’t put hard numbers on this, but can you talk about how you think about the level of excess capital in the company or, you know, alternatively, the ROE drag from the excess capital in the company? You know, last time I heard a number, it was north of $2 billion. Outside looking in, it seems like you have enough money for all the above to keep an aggressive buyback plan in place, as well as consider new alternatives. Can you maybe flush that out a little bit more? You know, as you pointed out, you bought back over 80% of the company over the last 12 years. How much is the float of the stock coming in as a factor with your buyback appetite going forward?

Dominic Frederico, President and Chief Executive Officer, Assured Guaranty Ltd.: Yeah, I don’t think float’s the problem to date. That could be a problem down the road, but today it’s not been a problem. Let’s talk about capital. Right now our capital is predominantly equity capital. As we look to the future and see growth opportunities, that mix of capital has to be looked at and examined. Can we bring in more soft capital facilities to let the hard equity capital be aggressively managed from a standpoint of shareholder buybacks or other opportunities? The soft capital also would provide us opportunities to allocate some of that for growth. Right now we’re saying to ourselves, we shrank the company significantly. Some of the triggers that now exist on the overall balance sheet or portfolio have to be examined more closely, and therefore soft capital could be a definite wave of the future.

As well as when we look at the capital, we have rating agency, we have regulatory. When companies come to us for large deals, they look at our balance sheet, and the size of that balance sheet also gives them the confidence to write a $2 billion deal, a $2.5 billion deal. We need to maintain certain size of asset as well, or certain size of balance sheet to make sure that the issuer has full confidence in our ability to execute on the transaction, and obviously provide the value that we expect in terms of loss cost, liquidity, you know, protection for the ultimate investor. I think we’re going to look at all aspects of the capital and say, are we still a capital management company? Absolutely. Are we still gonna use buybacks as a capital management tool? Absolutely.

As we look to the composition of capital, are we gonna change the composition? Absolutely. Do we think we have tremendous amount of growth opportunities? Absolutely. We’re trying to balance all those balls in the air, and I think we’re doing a pretty good job, and you’ll see it by the end of the year whether we’ve been able to meet the promise or not.

Ben Rosenblum, Chief Financial Officer, Assured Guaranty Ltd.: I think it’s important, Jeff, that, you know, the large deals are where we really get paid. We get paid both on an absolute premium dollar basis typically, and we get paid on a high return basis. Those are the deals we really need to capture to really grow our ROEs. We, you know, Rob ticked off, you know, we had a bunch of deals in the first quarter that were over $100 million a pop. These are the deals we’re obviously going after. We need big deals. Those are the ones that are really going to drive the higher returns that we’re looking forward to.

Rob Bailenson, Chief Operating Officer, Assured Guaranty Ltd.: Don’t forget, Jeff, those significantly large fund finance deals earn very, very quickly. That PVP that comes in structured finance will earn over the next year to 2.

Dominic Frederico, President and Chief Executive Officer, Assured Guaranty Ltd.: It also releases the capital over the next year or 2.

Rob Bailenson, Chief Operating Officer, Assured Guaranty Ltd.: The capital to release. Exactly.

Dominic Frederico, President and Chief Executive Officer, Assured Guaranty Ltd.: We’ve got a lot of things to consider, Jeff. As you can appreciate, there’s kind of a new wave of opportunity, new wave of businesses that we are looking at, all that needs some capital. As I said, we’ve got to look at the mix of our capital and move to more soft facilities as opposed to hard cash equity in terms of how we meet some of these requirements and still provide ourselves the ability and the capability to do capital management through share repurchasing.

Jeffrey Dunn, Analyst, Dowling & Partners: The magic number has been $500 million for buyback. When you think about the business plans for this year, do you anticipate deploying $500+ million into non-AG, whether it be buyback or annuity re or anything like that? I’m just curious in terms of the excess capital deployment. Is it just where it’s going changes, but your target amounts don’t?

Dominic Frederico, President and Chief Executive Officer, Assured Guaranty Ltd.: We have to balance is what’s running off in the portfolio from the standpoint of capital requirements, what are we putting on in terms of new business? That delta can go anywhere from flat to maybe +$200 million, depending on the type of business and where you write the business. You got that issue. We also make money, so that increases the capital. We look at the balance of the two and then look at the new business I talked about in the life business. We think, and we’re pretty optimistic in terms of what we see in activity, that that could also require us to put up maybe anywhere between $50 million and $100 million capital for that growth for the next 2 years.

Ben Rosenblum, Chief Financial Officer, Assured Guaranty Ltd.: I think, you know, we told you know, we told you guys when we joined the life business, if we’re looking at, you know, the life business, we think, you know, roughly, you know, 2, 3 years, you know, we’ll get to some kind of steady state equilibrium. We could, you know, probably be printing, you know, 10%-12% returns. Again, we are very focused, as Dominic mentioned earlier, on ROE. This is an area we’re 100% focused on. We know we can do better, we are doing better, and we’re seeing that, but we do need the capital to use to grow that ROE.

Jeffrey Dunn, Analyst, Dowling & Partners: Gotcha. Okay. Thank you.

Operator: This concludes the question and answer session. I would now like to turn the conference back over to our host, Robert Tucker, for closing remarks.

Robert Tucker, Senior Managing Director, Investor Relations and Corporate Communications, Assured Guaranty Ltd.: Thank you, operator. I’d like to thank everyone for joining today’s call. If you have additional questions, please feel free to give us a call. Thank you very much.

Operator: This concludes today’s call. Thank you for attending. You may now disconnect.