Accelerant Q4 2025 Earnings Call - AI-powered Risk Exchange fuels fee-based margin surge as third-party capital climbs to 40%
Summary
Accelerant closed 2025 with clear momentum, driven by its AI-first Risk Exchange that turns proprietary specialty insurance data into fast, fee-rich economics. Q4 results beat guidance across the board: $1.1 billion of Exchange Written Premium, $248 million of revenue, and $71 million of Adjusted EBITDA, while third-party direct written premium reached 40% of exchange volume. Management frames this as a structural shift toward capital-light, high-margin fee revenue as algorithmic underwriting and real-time portfolio management scale.
Guidance and corporate moves underscore confidence. Management expects at least $5.1 billion Exchange Written Premium and $275 million Adjusted EBITDA for 2026, with a medium-term goal of two-thirds of premium from third-party insurers. The board authorized up to $200 million in buybacks, the CFO is transitioning to Linda Huber, and the company signals it will not need material capital injections into its underwriting entities in 2026. The story is execution plus a deepening data moat, but investors should watch net retention, underwriting mix, and concentration dynamics as third-party migration accelerates.
Key Takeaways
- Exchange Written Premium (EWP) of $1.1 billion in Q4 2025, up 24% year-over-year, or 32% YoY excluding a large terminated member.
- Full year 2025 EWP $4.2 billion, up 35% YoY, or 41% YoY excluding the terminated member.
- Revenue of $248 million in Q4, up 30% YoY, and Adjusted EBITDA of $71 million, up 52% YoY (approximately $68 million ex a $2M nonrecurring investment gain).
- Exchange Services revenue $93 million in Q4, up 46% YoY, with take rate expanding to 8.4% from 7.2% in 2024; Exchange Services Adj. EBITDA $63 million, 67% margin.
- Third-party direct written premium rose to 40% of EWP in Q4 (19% in Q1, 27% in Q2, 32% in Q3), on a path toward a medium-term goal of ~66% third-party share.
- Net Retention was 9% (trailing twelve months), consistent with management targeting roughly 10% net retention while shifting premium to third-party insurers; underwriting segment margin expected to be single-digit over the medium term.
- Gross Loss Ratio remained attractive at 51% for Q4, supporting risk capital returns and underwriting stability.
- Company reported $524 million cash outside underwriting, $121 million debt, and $157 million of unrestricted, unlevered free cash flow in 2025; adjusted free cash flow conversion of ~87% (IPO adjustments).
- 2026 guidance: EWP at least $5.1 billion, third-party direct written premium at least $2.2 billion (with $2.1 billion already under contract and $100 million starting soon), and Adjusted EBITDA at least $275 million.
- Board authorized up to $200 million share repurchase program through December 2028, signaling confidence in cash generation and valuation.
- Captured proprietary data advantage: 134 million rows of specialty insurance data across 58,000 attributes, plus closed feedback loop linking submissions to claim outcomes, and a 34% workforce of engineers, data scientists, product managers and designers.
- Platform automation example: uploaded 1,679 risks, engine triaged them in ~1 minute, classifying 84% in appetite, 9% review, 7% out of appetite; members see a 2-3 point average improvement in gross loss ratio post-modeling.
- Member growth and pipeline: 280 members at year-end 2025, 63 additions in 2025 (29% YoY member growth), and an annualized member pipeline exceeding $4 billion of premium.
- Risk capital partner base expanded to 95, with 18 Risk Exchange insurers (up from 13 at end of 2024); largest partner Hadron’s share of third-party premium fell to 47% in Q4 from 67% in Q1 2025, improving concentration risk.
- Captives progress: added over $40 million of captive premium in 2025, company expects captives to contribute >$100 million in 2026 and sees captives as a multi-billion-dollar opportunity over time.
- MGA Operations: revenue $59 million in Q4 ($57 million ex nonrecurring gain), Adj. EBITDA $23 million ($21M ex gain), 36% margin; Mission incubation strategy driving equity ownership and alignment.
- Underwriting capital: $633 million of equity capital in underwriting entities at quarter end, management expects no material additional capital for underwriting in 2026.
- Leadership and governance: CFO Jay Green stepping down, Linda Huber joined as CFO effective March 31, new General Counsel and Head of Investor Relations named.
- Operational efficiency claims: initial underwriting productivity uplift ~25% for onboarded members, due diligence time cut to 20% of manual effort, onboarding time halved.
- Investor cautions: net retention will fluctuate with regulatory minimums and mix shifts, terminated large member removed ~ $50 million of quarterly premium and affected Q1/Q2 patterns; continue to monitor reserve movements though management called them immaterial.
Full Transcript
Operator: Hello everyone, and welcome to Accelerant fourth quarter and full year 2025 earnings call. Please note that this call is being recorded. After the prepared remarks, there will be a question and answer session. If you’d like to ask a question during that time, please press Star and then one on your telephone keypad. Thank you. I’d now like to hand the call over to Ahmed Alyakubi, Investor Relations at The Blueshirt Group. Please go ahead.
Ahmed Alyakubi, Investor Relations, The Blueshirt Group: Good morning, everyone. Welcome to Accelerant’s fourth quarter 2025 earnings conference call. Joining me today to share our results are Jeff Radke, Accelerant’s Co-founder and CEO, Jay Green, Accelerant’s CFO, and Ryan Schiller, Accelerant’s Head of Strategy. Their remarks will be followed by a Q&A session. We issued a press release and presentation concerning our financial results for the fourth quarter of 2025 yesterday, and they are available on our investor relations website. Before we get started, I would like to remind you that our remarks today will include forward-looking statements, including those regarding our future plans, objectives, expected performance, and in particular, our guidance for 2026. Actual results may vary materially from today’s statements. Information concerning risks, uncertainties, and other factors that could cause these results to differ is included in our SEC filings, including those stated in the risk factor section of our filings with the SEC.
These forward-looking statements represent our outlook only as of the date of this call. We undertake no obligation to revise or update any forward-looking statements. Additionally, the matters we will discuss today will include both GAAP and non-GAAP financial measures related to both our consolidated results as well as our operating segments. Reconciliation of any non-GAAP financial measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures is set forth in our earnings release. Non-GAAP financial measures should be considered in addition to, not as a substitute for GAAP measures. Finally, today’s conference call is being recorded and webcast. Now, I’ll turn the call over to Jeff.
Jeff Radke, Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer, Accelerant: Good morning. Thank you for joining us to discuss our fourth quarter results. We had a fantastic quarter, beating our expectations on Exchange Written Premium, third-party premium, and Adjusted EBITDA. All of these figures were in line with our pre-released results. Like last quarter, in addition to our earnings press release, we provided a presentation with more detail on our company. We also filed our first Form 10-K last night. All of these materials can be found on our investor relations website. Let me start with the topic that is on many of your minds, artificial intelligence. AI is the architecture of our business. It is embedded in how we operate and how we win. From our founding, we designed our platform to capture, structure, and continuously learn from specialty risk data at scale. I’ll be direct.
The more AI transforms the insurance industry, the more it plays to our strengths. We’ve built what we believe is the largest proprietary decision-ready data set in specialty commercial insurance. We use that data to power algorithmic underwriting at scale, and we distribute that advantage through the most technologically adaptive segment of the market, MGAs. Everything we are about to describe flows from three structural advantages. First, our proprietary usable data. Next, algorithm-supported underwriting. Last, technologically adaptive distribution. Let’s start with the first. Our moat is our proprietary decision-ready data. We have assembled 134 million rows of specialty insurance data across 58,000 unique attributes. All of it is proprietary. Data alone is not the differentiator. Usable is the critical word. Our position in the value chain allows us to stitch together upfront underwriting submission data with the claims outcomes on the back end.
That seems obvious, but it is rare for one entity to have this ability. That closed feedback loop, submission to binding to loss emergence, is what transforms raw information into decision-grade intelligence. We don’t think anyone else can do that across a multitude of independent MGAs and 600+ different specialty products. We then augment this proprietary data with third-party data to further enhance our understanding of risks. The combination is powerful. Internal performance-linked data layered with external enrichment. No large language model or AI startup is going to have that kind of data, and we’re adding more and more each day. The difficulty of building this kind of infrastructure should not be underestimated. Industry modernization efforts have struggled to connect and synthesize data across multiple different systems. Our platform was architected from inception to do exactly that.
In fact, 34% of our workforce consists of engineers, data scientists, product managers, and designers. Experts that are focused on building and honing our platform. As AI capabilities increase, the value of our data set compounds. In a world where models will be increasingly commoditized, differentiated data is the durable competitive advantage. Every submission, every underwriting decision, every claim flowing through the Risk Exchange deepens that advantage. Our second structural advantage is our engine. Data alone does not create value. It must inform decisions. The set of tools that we have developed mutually support one another to form an end-to-end engine. We deploy risk scoring models, AI risk ingestion, and real-time portfolio monitoring to optimize underwriting performance. As an example, just last month, we uploaded a portfolio of 1,679 new risks.
In just over a minute, our engine told us that 84% of those risks were in appetite. 9% needed underwriting review given specific concerns identified by the tool, and 7% were simply out of appetite. The engine then went on to draft exclusions and coverage specifications to optimize underwriting performance. That achievement is monumental. That would have taken a team of people at least a week, and that’s how we continue to win in the market at increasing scale. Our engine provides tangible advantages for Accelerant and its members in three ways. Upfront underwriting precision, real-time portfolio management, and claims optimization. Let’s dive into specific examples of each. Upfront underwriting precision. We identify complex, non-obvious relationships across variables like financial health, industry stresses, crime indices, prior loss patterns, and we integrate all those insights directly into the member underwriting workflows.
That enables more precise risk selection and pricing. It also helps us to systematically avoid loss-driving outliers. That is a powerful combination. Proprietary, data-driven, AI-enabled tools pushing profitable growth while avoiding poorly performing microsegments. That is how, based on our onboarding data, after the risk scoring models have done their work, members see a 2-3-point average improvement in their gross loss ratio while growing at a rate over 35% since inception. The second advantage is real-time portfolio management. We ingest member data as it is created and monitor performance continuously. That allows us to detect deterioration earlier, protect underwriting margin, and identify attractive growth opportunities. That’s how we maintain a loss ratio in the low 50s. Finally, claims cost optimization. Our predictive analytics prioritize claims handling and surface subrogation opportunities, reducing loss creep and preserving profitability.
Since inception, we saved our risk capital partners at least $100 million of loss using this capability. In total, the trajectory is clear. Underwriting is becoming increasingly autonomous. We’ve been building towards that shift for years. Whether underwriting is executed by members using our tools or, as is happening increasingly, automated within the platform itself, the Risk Exchange remains the infrastructure that evaluates, prices, and aligns capital. Strategically, that means that Accelerant wins regardless of who originates the business. Every policy bound and every claim resolved strengthens the model and improves the next decision. Our third structural advantage is our technologically adaptive, decentralized MGAs. From the very beginning, we have focused exclusively on MGAs because they are more agile and faster at adopting technology than traditional insurance company incumbents, and AI enhances that advantage.
Members on our platform gain access to capabilities that would be difficult and expensive for them to build independently. With our help, they achieve faster submission triage and quoting, AI-driven coverage recommendations, enhanced risk selection tools, real-time portfolio insights, and lifecycle management, policy to claim. Today, our members can ask Accelerant AI, "What’s driving my loss ratio?" They can track the tool’s reasoning to identify key performance drivers and unlock unseen opportunities. MGAs are entrepreneurial specialists operating in defined niches. That means that when Accelerant empowers its members with improvements in underwriting precision and faster response time, it translates directly into market share gains. Anything we can do to make our members better makes us better. What does this all mean practically for our business? First, we can due diligence potential new members more quickly and completely.
Our tools enable us to analyze their books of business and design underwriting guidelines in 20% of the time that it would take us to do so manually. The move from prospect to producing member takes half the time. When we onboard over 50 members a year, that makes a big difference. Second, once onboarded, those members grow more quickly, with 25% underwriter productivity uplift emerging in our initial efforts. Third, we can lower loss ratios for our risk capital partners, delivering more predictable underwriting performance as we grow. That is highlighted by our attractive loss ratio track record. The future of specialty insurance will be data-rich, near autonomous and capital efficient. AI enables Accelerant specialized underwriters to win even more in their markets and moves capital closer to origination. What’s the impact of all this?
When data, underwriting intelligence, and capital alignment are integrated into a single infrastructure layer, that layer becomes disproportionately valuable. Our exchange services segment already reflects the operating leverage of that architecture with near 70% EBITDA margins, driven by near zero marginal cost on incremental data and recurring revenue economics. As automation increases, those structural advantages become more pronounced. Before leaving the topic of artificial intelligence, let’s take a step back. At Accelerant, we set out to make the specialty insurance market work better for everyone. We believe the Risk Exchange is fulfilling that mission more quickly and completely because of the three structural advantages AI gives us. Turning back to the quarter, for those newer to our story, the Risk Exchange is a two-sided platform, the supply side and the demand side. The supply side is driven by the specialty underwriters, our members, who underwrite specialty insurance policies.
These policies fuel our exchange. The demand side consists of our risk capital partners, comprised of insurance companies, reinsurance companies, and institutional investors. Those risk capital partners pay us a fee for access to our portfolio of policies. We sit in the middle, sourcing members, monitoring them, and helping them to grow profitably by leveraging our AI advantages I just described. We leverage the scale of our Accelerant platform to deliver technology to our members that they would struggle to develop on their own. As discussed, our engineers and data scientists are developing agentic solutions for our members and for internal use in the Risk Exchange. These solutions help members grow more quickly, reduce their loss ratios, and thus increase their profits. Our members value these tools and services, which is why we’ve consistently had an industry-leading 80+ Net Promoter Score.
Accelerant’s reputation as the preferred partner for the best MGAs in the world is what drives the growth in new member MGAs joining quarter after quarter. For the demand side, we create value by sourcing, managing, and monitoring a high-quality portfolio of insurance policies. Why is our portfolio business so valuable to our risk capital partners? Well, it’s stable, diversified, and highly profitable. You can best measure that using gross loss ratio, which has been in the low fifties. That attractive loss ratio leads to consistent and attractive returns for our risk capital partners. With that overview complete, let’s talk about the KPIs that we saw this quarter. Now, last quarter, I set out the six key metrics that track the health of our business. During the fourth quarter, all six of those metrics were better than we forecasted.
On the supply side, the first KPI is Exchange Written Premium. Exchange Written Premium was $1.1 billion for the quarter. That’s 24% year-over-year growth. Recall, we had a large premium, low-margin member that we terminated in Q3. Excluding that one member, the year-over-year growth would have been 32%. The second KPI is our member count, and we continue to attract the best MGAs in the world, with 15 additions in the fourth quarter, bringing the total to 280 as of year-end 2025. The third KPI for the supply side is Net Revenue Retention. For us, Net Revenue Retention is the trailing twelve-month Exchange Written Premium growth of our pre-existing members year-over-year. That includes terminated members.
Net Revenue Retention was 126% for the quarter and 131% excluding the large premium, low-margin member we terminated. Our members continue to benefit from the advantages our proprietary data and tools give them. On the demand side of the platform, our first KPI is Gross Loss Ratio. That measures how profitable our portfolio is for our risk capital partners. We target a low 50s loss ratio over time, and for the fourth quarter of 2025, the Gross Loss Ratio was 51%. The second demand side KPI is the amount of third-party direct written premium. That measures our ability to attract insurers to participate on our Risk Exchange. Over the medium term, we expect this measure to reach two-thirds of total Exchange Written Premium. We have made stellar progress on this measure in 2025.
For the first quarter, the measure was 19%. In the second, 27%. Third quarter, 32%, and for the fourth quarter, 40% of Exchange Written Premium. We are well on our way to our medium-term goal and have demonstrated our ability to attract a growing and diverse stable of insurance company partners. The third KPI on the demand side is our Net Retention. That’s defined as a trailing twelve-month ratio of premiums retained on Accelerant’s balance sheet to the total Exchange Written Premium. One important reminder here, by lowering our Net Retention, we also lower the revenue and EBITDA we book in our underwriting segment. Now, we welcome reducing the revenue in our underwriting segment, as it means we have placed more risk with our risk capital partners and generated relatively more fee-based revenue. For the fourth quarter, our Net Retention was 9%.
That’s in line with our expectations. In total, those six metrics, three on the supply side and three on the demand side, capture the health of our business. Short answer, we’re executing extremely well. Because we are executing so well, we exceeded our guidance on all metrics. Ryan and Jay will share more details. Ryan?
Ryan Schiller, Head of Strategy, Accelerant: Thank you, Jeff. Starting on the supply side, as Jeff said, in Q4 we delivered $1.1 billion of exchange written premium, a 24% increase from last year. That number was 32%, excluding the terminated low-margin Canadian member we mentioned last quarter. For the full year, we produced $4.2 billion of exchange written premium, representing 35% year-over-year growth, or 41% excluding that same member. Either way, really strong growth. That expansion came from existing members boosting new volume on existing products, new products written with us, and to a lesser extent, rate. Existing members represented 75% of our growth in 2025, and more than 80% of that comes from volume. While rate continues to be additive to our top line, it was just 3 percentage points of our 35% growth in 2025.
Volume has always been the core driver of our growth. As a reminder, our book of business is 95% policies that are under $10,000 in annual premium. On these small premium policies, you don’t typically see large rate acceleration or deceleration. Accelerant’s results are not as meaningfully impacted by the insurance pricing cycle. As a side note, we are very comfortable our rate is keeping up with loss trends. The balance of our expansion comes from new members we add. In 2025, our number of members grew from 217 last year to 280. 63 additions, which is our best annual result ever and represents 29% year-over-year growth. We believe our member count is a good leading indicator for future Exchange Written Premium.
At the end of Q4, we had over $4 billion of annualized premium in our member pipeline, another record amount, giving us confidence in our future growth. In 2025, we made great strides on the captives front. We added over $40 million of captives premium to the Risk Exchange, which is a testament to the team building out an entirely new high-quality offering. We are just scratching the surface there and believe over time captives could be a multi-billion-dollar opportunity. Over the long term, what we’re focused on being is a predictable organic growth machine as we expand into a really big market. Moving to the demand side, we ended the quarter with 95 risk capital partners, up 3 from last quarter. All 3 are Risk Exchange Insurer. That brings our Risk Exchange insurer count to 18 versus 13 at the end of 2024.
Our goal is to maintain a diverse group of risk capital partners to maximize the stability and efficiency of our platform in the long run. We seek to use third-party insurance companies for a growing proportion of the portfolio over time, which in turn improves Accelerant’s capital lightness. Our medium-term expectation is that third-party insurance companies will represent approximately two-thirds of Exchange Written Premiums. As you heard from Jeff, we have made great progress here, with 40% of our fourth quarter Exchange Written Premium coming from third-party insurance companies. We’ve also made great progress in diversifying our portfolio of third-party Risk Exchange Insurers. The largest, Hadron, has been declining steadily throughout 2025, from 67% in Q1 to 58% in Q2 to 54% in Q3, and finally 47% in Q4.
When we do use Accelerant-owned insurance companies to issue policies, we transfer the vast majority of the underwriting economics to our reinsurer and institutional investor risk capital partners. In 2025, 9% of the premium written was retained by Accelerant insurance companies, driven by regulatory minimum retention. We continue to expect net retention to approximate 10% in calendar year 2026. To summarize, our goal is to preserve a diverse group of risk capital partners to maximize the stability and efficiency of the platform for the long run. Now I’ll pass the baton to Jay, our CFO, to address our financial performance.
Jeff Radke, Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer, Accelerant: Thanks, Ryan. Hello, everyone. I’m excited to share our fourth quarter performance and guidance for the first quarter and full year 2026. As you heard this morning, we had a great fourth quarter with continued strong profitable growth and expanding margins. We placed $1.1 billion of exchange written premium, an increase of 24% year-over-year, and 32% excluding the one member that Ryan and Jeff both mentioned. That resulted in revenue of $248 million, which grew 30% year-over-year. As you have consistently heard from us, our goal is to maximize the revenue associated with our exchange services and MGA operations segments, while continuing to keep our underwriting net retention near our 10% target. You will see from our segment results for the quarter that we are successfully executing on that strategy.
Jay Green, Chief Financial Officer, Accelerant: Adjusted EBITDA was $71 million, growing 52% year-over-year. Adjusted EBITDA margin rose to 28%, up from 24% last year. Included in adjusted EBITDA was more than $2 million of non-recurring investment gains from our stake in the same owned member that concluded a third-party capital raise last quarter. Excluding that investment gain this quarter, we generated EBITDA of approximately $68 million with excellent performance in each of our operating segments. This represents an increase of 132% over last year when you exclude $17 million of investment gains from fourth quarter 2024 results. This momentum is driven by strong top-line premium growth and consistent operating leverage improvement. Adjusted net income for the fourth quarter 2025 grew nicely to $51 million compared to $39 million last year, resulting in $0.23 of adjusted net income per share.
We measure adjusted net income as GAAP income, less profit interest distribution expenses, share-based compensation expenses, and other non-operating expenses, net of tax. In the fourth quarter, you will also see $19 million of profit-sharing expenses related to Mission. That represents management incentive awards of $4 million, a non-cash expense, and $15 million elective cash acquisition of incremental equity stakes with several Mission members to buy back interest from the heads of those members. These management equity awards and equity buybacks are part of our strategy of long-term alignment with both the managers of the Mission business as well as the member series through performance-based equity incentives. The Mission business continues to perform well beyond our expectations. Both the management incentivization and equity acquisitions represent significant long-term value for Accelerant.
Over time, we expect to increase our ownership stake in many of the well-performing Mission members beyond our initial investment of 70%-80% ownership. On a segmental basis, we also outperformed our expectations across the board. Exchange Services is the core of our business, flowing from the 8%+ fee we make on all the premium running through our exchange. In Q4, we had revenue of $93 million, growing 46% year-over-year, well ahead of the premium growth over the same period because our take rate expanded to 8.4% from 7.2% in 2024. Exchange Services adjusted EBITDA was $63 million at a 67% margin. MGA Operations is the host of MGAs we have ownership stakes in, consisting mostly of our Mission MGA incubation business.
In Q4, we had revenue of $59 million, with $2 million of that coming from the aforementioned non-recurring investment gain. Excluding that gain, revenue was $57 million, growing 23% year-over-year. Adjusted EBITDA was $23 million or $21 million excluding the gain, resulting in a margin of 36%. Our healthy operating cash flow and IPO proceeds have enabled us to maintain a strong balance sheet. At the end of the quarter, we held $524 million of cash in the entities outside of our underwriting segment, including Exchange Services and MGA Operations, and $121 million of outstanding debt. As included in the appendix of our investor presentation, these segments generated 87% free cash flow conversion, adjusting for IPO-related expenses and non-operating cash flow investment gains.
That added $157 million of unrestricted, unlevered free cash flow in 2025. Our business produces really high free cash flow conversion, even considering the investment we continue to make in the platform. We expect our free cash flow to grow nicely in 2026 as a result of growth across these two segments and the absence of IPO-related costs. Our underwriting segment houses our own insurance and reinsurance companies, and as we have consistently stated, our goal is to limit the use of these entities and write more business directly with third-party insurers. The largest driver of underwriting revenue is how much business we retain as net earned premium. In Q4, we had revenue of $111 million as our net retention of Exchange Written Premium was 9% in the last twelve months. This resulted in Adjusted EBITDA of $13 million.
Our margin in the quarter was consistent with results in prior quarters, in part driven by good performance in the Gross Loss Ratio at 51%. Our overall expectation of single-digit margin generation in the underwriting segment has not changed in the medium term. We also expect in the near term that our Net Retention of Exchange Written Premium will trend at similar levels, sub-10%, that we have talked about previously. Within our underwriting entities, we had $633 million of equity capital at the end of Q4. As we continue to accelerate the shift of premium to third-party insurers, we do not expect to need to put much, if any, additional capital into our underwriting segment in 2026 and would expect to be in a surplus capital position over the long term.
In summary, Q4 was another step forward with strong growth and meaningful acceleration of Adjusted EBITDA and Adjusted Net Income, just like in Q3. As we look ahead, we have a lot of organic growth embedded in our pipeline. In Q1 2026, we expect Exchange Written Premium of $1.07 billion-$1.13 billion, third-party direct written premium of $450 million-$470 million, and Adjusted EBITDA of $64 million-$66 million. For the full year 2026, we expect Exchange Written Premium of at least $5.1 billion and third-party direct written premium of at least $2.2 billion.
To build the $2.2 billion of third-party direct written premium, we have $2.1 billion under contract and flowing today, another $100 million under contract that will start flowing in the coming. We also expect Adjusted EBITDA of at least $275 million, which does not assume any non-recurring investment gains will recur during the year. It’s important to highlight that we are expecting a greater proportion of third-party premium in the first quarter and full year 2026. As I mentioned before, this reduces the use of our risk-taking entities and increases EBITDA from our fee-based segment. Slide 13 of our investor presentation shows the expected EBITDA shift to more fee-based segments during 2026.
Remember, when you think about 2060 and beyond, our EBITDA growth engine is and will be the high-quality fee generation of the Risk Exchange, accelerated and enabled by the AI-first strategy that is core to our DNA. We are not providing a GAAP reconciliation for this guidance, including net income, due to the inherent difficulty in forecasting and quantifying items such as tax rate variations, foreign currency fluctuations, or non-recurring adjustments that may occur prior to quarter close. Lastly, our board authorized a share repurchase program of up to $200 million, effective through December of 2028. This authorization reflects our confidence in the strength of our balance sheet, the durability of our cash flows, and the long-term value of our business.
Consistent with our disciplined capital allocation, we believe share repurchases at today’s trading levels are compelling and should be highly accretive as we continue to invest in our growth. With that, we’ll turn things back to Jeff for closing remarks.
Jeff Radke, Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer, Accelerant: To take a step back and remind us all of the bigger picture, what matters in the long run is that Accelerant becomes the rails on which specialty insurance runs. We’re making the best MGAs better with our data and analytics and connecting them to deep, high-quality risk capital. We’re doing more and more of that each year. The momentum is building in the market. The flywheel is accelerating. The future of specialty insurance is data-driven, increasingly autonomous, and capital efficient. That future favors platforms built on proprietary data and architected for automation from the outset. We believe Accelerant sits squarely at that intersection. AI is a force multiplier for the model we’ve been building for years, and it’s why I believe we’re going to be the leading specialty insurance platform. 2025 was another exceptional year.
We grew exchange premiums 35%, revenues 51%, and adjusted EBITDA 149%. I want to thank our members, our risk capital partners, and our world-class team of experts that made it all possible. Before we move to your questions, let me welcome Cliff Jenks, our soon-to-be new General Counsel, and Ray Iardella, our new Head of Investor Relations. Our team keeps getting better and better, and we couldn’t be more excited to have them both on our side. Additionally, I would like to personally thank Jay Green for serving as Accelerant’s Chief Financial Officer since 2022. He has been an invaluable partner, helping grow the business and successfully leading us through the IPO process. He recently informed the board of his desire to step away from the business to pursue personal interests.
On behalf of the board and the entire team, thank you. We wish you all the best in the future, Jay. I’m excited to announce that Linda Huber has joined Accelerant and will be named CFO effective March 31st. Linda is a very accomplished and seasoned executive. In fact, some of you likely know Linda from her previous CFO positions at leading business services firms, including FactSet, MSCI, and Moody’s. We are extremely pleased that a finance executive of Linda’s caliber has joined the team and believe she will play a key role in our next chapter of growth. I know she is very much looking forward to engaging with the investment community in the future. I think we’ll now open it up to questions.
Operator: We are now opening the floor for question and answer session. If you’d like to ask a question, please press star followed by one on your telephone keypad. That’s star followed by one on your telephone keypad. Kindly limit your questions to one question and one follow-up. We will pause for a brief moment to wait for the questions to come in. Your first question comes from the line of Jay Richard Wenger of RBC Capital Markets. Your line is now open.
Jay Richard Wenger, Analyst, RBC Capital Markets: Hey, guys. I just wanted to ask on the actual Q4 Adjusted EBITDA, it came in almost 15% above the high end of guidance range. I just wanted to understand kind of what the upside was in the quarter.
Jeff Radke, Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer, Accelerant: Great. Jay, do you wanna take that, please?
Jay Green, Chief Financial Officer, Accelerant: Sure. Yeah, happy to. Hey, Roland. Yeah. I think, you know, upside, we really saw contribution from all three segments. You know, if you look at performance in exchange services, right, we beat on volume, right? And with the take rate going up, that contributed to the increase in the EBITDA there. MGA operations, again, we saw outperformance, you know, relative to expectations going in. Of course, you know, greater contribution.
Contribution coming from underwriting, even with, you know, lower net earned premium due to the retention being lower over time, the loss ratio coming in at 51%, you know, produced higher earnings there. I wouldn’t point to just one thing. I think we saw really strong performance across the board.
Jay Richard Wenger, Analyst, RBC Capital Markets: Okay, perfect. Thank you. I wanted to ask on the quarterly and annual guidance for the written premiums. I think it implies the second, third and fourth quarter have much higher growth than first quarter. Is that the MGA cancellation? Can you remind me when that occurred and kind of what the size was on the premiums through Canada?
Jeff Radke, Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer, Accelerant: That’s right. It is higher. Ryan, do you want to give some of the details?
Ryan Schiller, Head of Strategy, Accelerant: The size of the member generally, Roland, was around $50 million of premium per quarter. That is impacting Q1 and should also impact Q2 of this year. I think that’s baked into our guidance and our expectations, but you’re exactly right on Q1 growth.
Jay Richard Wenger, Analyst, RBC Capital Markets: Okay, perfect. Thank you so much.
Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Elyse Greenspan of Wells Fargo. Your line is now open.
Elyse Greenspan, Analyst, Wells Fargo: Hi, thanks. Good morning. My first question was on Hadron. I think I have in my notes that you guys had said it would be around 35%-40% of third-party premium in 2026, and I think going to below 33% in the fourth quarter, and then drifting down over the longer term. Is that still, you know, the guidance when you laid out for everything for 2026 today?
Jeff Radke, Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer, Accelerant: Morning, Elyse. Yeah, we still feel very comfortable with those numbers. As you can see, we’re making terrific progress there.
Elyse Greenspan, Analyst, Wells Fargo: Okay, thanks. My second question, I guess, is just, you know, on member count. Can you just give us a sense, you know, for 2026, just how you’re thinking about member count increasing, you know, throughout the year?
Jeff Radke, Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer, Accelerant: Ryan, you want to take that?
Ryan Schiller, Head of Strategy, Accelerant: Of course. Elise, generally, I would say, you know, the last, call it, 9 to 12 quarters, we’ve added, roughly speaking, 15 new members a year. As you know, we try to sort of set expectations low and not perform. But our pipeline, as we flagged, is the largest we’ve ever seen. I think we’re feeling good about our go-forward ability to add new members and grow.
Jeff Radke, Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer, Accelerant: Just one thing, Ryan. I think the context made it obvious, but if I heard it right, you said over the last 9-12 quarters, we’ve added 15 members per quarter.
Ryan Schiller, Head of Strategy, Accelerant: That’s correct.
Jeff Radke, Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer, Accelerant: Yeah.
Ryan Schiller, Head of Strategy, Accelerant: Sorry. Thank you. Yeah.
Elyse Greenspan, Analyst, Wells Fargo: Thank you.
Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Michael Zaremski of BMO Capital Markets. Your line is now open.
Michael Zaremski, Analyst, BMO Capital Markets: Hey, good morning. First question on cash flow. Thanks for the slide and disclosure there. I heard in the prepared remarks about your commentary about not seeking to put a material amount of capital into the subs in 2026, and you can correct me if that’s incorrect. But my question is regarding how to think about cash flow on a forward basis. You know, do you guys expect kind of the trajectory to be similar to EBITDA growth or any context you can provide? I don’t know if you think about it maybe as a percentage of revenues, et cetera. Thanks.
Jeff Radke, Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer, Accelerant: Thanks. Before I ask Ryan to address those expectations, can I just highlight that it’s an important turning point, at least in our mind, that we no longer will be putting material amounts of capital into those insurance company balance sheets. I think it should be noted. Forgive me, Mike. Go ahead, Ryan.
Ryan Schiller, Head of Strategy, Accelerant: Yeah. Thank you, Charlie. I think, from a cash flow perspective, especially if you looked at 2024 versus 2025, and I know we hadn’t fully shared 2024, but our cash flow conversion continues to improve. Obviously, we also expect not to have IPO-related costs next year, or, this year rather. I actually expect, free cash flow conversion will continue to mix up and therefore grow slightly faster than Adjusted EBITDA, but we’ll look forward to sharing those results in the future. The other thing I would point out, Charlie, and Jay mentioned this in the prepared remarks, but on page 13 of the investor presentation, we pointed out, I think, how we expect 2026 Adjusted EBITDA to come together. What you’ll see is, right, 45% year-over-year growth within the fee-based segments.
Michael Zaremski, Analyst, BMO Capital Markets: Got it. That’s helpful and definitely noted that we would have thought there would have been some capital being put into this sub, so it’s good news there. In terms of thinking about then the buyback program, would there be potential not putting you guys you know not making you guys give us guidance, but would there be potential or the ability to upsize that based on free cash flow generation levels that to the extent valuation remained attractive in terms of the share purchase program?
Jeff Radke, Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer, Accelerant: Yeah. The question has two parts. We feel really good, as Ryan said, about the cash generation. As that free cash gets generated, we and the board will have to make a decision about what’s the best place to put that to work. With the shares at anywhere even approximately near these levels, it’s pretty hard to beat from our perspective and the board’s perspective. It’s early days, right? We announced the buyback obviously last night. It seems a little premature to be talking about what happens after that, but that would be our thinking.
Michael Zaremski, Analyst, BMO Capital Markets: Excellent. Lastly, you know, the Gross Loss Ratio, you know, remains excellent. You know, just from an industry-wide perspective, the entire industry continues to add a bit of reserves to other liability occurrence especially. My question just kind of around the reserve addition, the small reserve addition, if you can give any context on how, you know, whether the gross and net impact were similar or just context about what took place there. Thanks.
Jeff Radke, Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer, Accelerant: Yeah. We feel really good about the Gross Loss Ratios on each underwriting or accident year. Those numbers are terrific. The small adjustments between underwriting or accident years I don’t think are as meaningful at all, most importantly to our risk capital, right? They’re still receiving spectacular returns. Their enthusiasm to participate in the book continues to grow. So in all the ways that matter, we’re doing great, as you said, on that Loss Ratio. I think the shifting around of reserves on the underwriting years I don’t think is all that important.
Michael Zaremski, Analyst, BMO Capital Markets: Thank you.
Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Robert Cox. Robert Cox, your line is now open.
Robert Cox, Analyst: Hey, thanks. Good morning. Thanks for all the helpful commentary on AI. You know, just to follow up, given 95% of the accounts are sub 10K in premium, I just wanted you guys to maybe talk to us about what are the hurdles of this business, you know, going direct or through a more digital process than through a broker, and how can Accelerant members make sure they’re still in line to win new business if that happens?
Jeff Radke, Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer, Accelerant: Well, first of all, good morning, Rob. Sorry. Rob, while we don’t anticipate a wholesale shift of business, this commercial specialty business to go from a brokered transaction to a completely online transaction, whether that’s AI enabled or not, while we don’t anticipate that to be the case, were it to be the case, that would be great news for Accelerant and its members. The reason it would be great news is the production would be highly efficient, right? The data, which is the lifeblood of Accelerant’s risk exchange, would become that much cleaner and that much easier to process.
I think given the fact that we are consistently the fastest response, so the first quote. I also think that given that our members consistently have the most specialized products, I think we and our members have a lot to gain, if there were to be a shift away from retail brokers in this commercial space and towards some sort of automated AI driven distribution.
Robert Cox, Analyst: Okay, awesome. Thanks for that. You know, just on the new third-party insurer that was added since we all last spoke on a call like this, can you just give us a little more color around what role you would expect that insurer to play over time in the context of the portfolio and maybe also like just the pipeline of third-party insurers?
Jeff Radke, Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer, Accelerant: Sure. Rob, one of the things that I’d point out is, as we add third-party insurers that are of really, really material size, we do our best to identify them clearly. We’ve talked about Lloyd’s and we’ve talked about others in the past, as you know. This one that we’ve added, we’re delighted to add them. We don’t have their consent to use their name. They are gonna participate on a couple of really interesting but specialty books of business that we’ll see how big they grow. The important thing though is I think this story of adding this one that’s highly specialized sort of talks about how we expect this to develop, I’m sorry.
We have all the third-party insurer relationships we need to achieve our long-term guidance of two-thirds of the business going to third-party insurers. We don’t need to make new relationships. Will we? Of course. Of course, we will. Some of them will be much more significant and much more across the board, and some of them will be more specialized, like the latest one this quarter. So that’s sort of how we think about what the likely progression is. Then you asked about the pipeline. As the Risk Exchange continues to prove out its ability to produce this low volatility, very high profitability book of business, it’s no surprise that interest levels increase. The sales cycle is not short, I guess is the best way to say it.
We will methodically add partners where we think that they’re really additive and can improve the Risk Exchange. I wouldn’t want people to think that achieving our long-term goals requires us to create new relationships. It does not. We have sufficient relationships now. Ryan?
Ryan Schiller, Head of Strategy, Accelerant: Just to be clear, Jeff kept saying long-term goals. Just to be clear on the two-thirds, that’s a medium-term goal. I think you know that, Rob.
Jay Richard Wenger, Analyst, RBC Capital Markets: Yep. Thanks for all the color, guys.
Jeff Radke, Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer, Accelerant: You got the earnings call hieroglyphics wrong. Sorry, medium-term.
Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Paul Newsome of Piper Sandler. Your line is now open.
Paul Newsome, Analyst, Piper Sandler: Good morning. I was hoping you could give us a little bit more commentary around the expansion in the captive businesses. Just to sort of maybe give us a better sense of how the risks and, you know, trade-offs of that business compare with, you know, sort of a traditional MGA kind of source premium stuff.
Jeff Radke, Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer, Accelerant: Sure. Good morning. We’re pleased with the development we’ve seen on the captive book. I think we’ve said in the past that we expect in 2026 the captive book to contribute over $100 million of premium. That’s growing to what we think over the medium-term can be a really significant contributor to the overall portfolio. Now, in the context of your question is the fact that if you did a market analysis of where does most captive premium dollars come from, they come from very large companies retaining very large portions of their significant, complicated, sophisticated risks. That’s not where we try to play. Where we try to play is in the, again, small to medium-sized companies trying to be more efficient in how they buy their insurance.
Keep in mind, the real driver here is when the insured or the sponsor of the captive feels like the market insurance rate is mispricing them, obviously too high. We get really excited about opportunities to go after self-selected outperforming books of business. I would say that the lines of business are the same as our overall portfolio. I would say the limits issued are very, very similar. We avoid the same things that we avoid in our traditional MGA book, being coastal catastrophe exposures and anything that aggregates with the industry portfolio at large. I would say, while not perfectly homogeneous, they’re really, really close. The key there is we’re avoiding the big giant companies captives.
Paul Newsome, Analyst, Piper Sandler: No, that’s helpful. That’s all for me. Appreciate the help as always.
Jeff Radke, Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer, Accelerant: Thank you.
Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Craig Moyer of FT Partners. Your line is now open.
Elyse Greenspan, Analyst, Wells Fargo0: Yeah. Hi, thanks for taking the question. Most of my question’s been asked and answered, but I wanted to ask about the Net Retention ratio. It’s bounced around a little bit in recent quarters, but below the 10% target. I was wondering if there’s a natural limit to how low that can go as you continue to shift to fee-based segments. Thanks.
Jeff Radke, Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer, Accelerant: Good morning. As we described, the vast majority of our Net Retention is now driven by different jurisdictions’ regulatory minimums. Obviously, there’s not much we can do about those. What we’ve said is we’ll be around, but slightly below 10%, and it does jump, and there’s nothing we can do about that ’cause of mix. But you’re quite right that as the business more and more goes to third-party insurers, what I anticipate saying someday is it’s gonna jump around 5%, you know, as the overall share of Exchange Written Premium goes down for the Accelerant-owned carriers. Does that make sense?
Elyse Greenspan, Analyst, Wells Fargo0: Yeah. Thank you.
Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Craig. Oh, hi. If you’d like to ask a question, please press star followed by one on your telephone pad. That’s star followed by one on your telephone keypad. We will pause for a brief moment to wait for the questions to come in. We don’t have any pending questions. I’d now like to hand the call back to Mr. Jeff Radke for final remarks.
Jeff Radke, Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer, Accelerant: Great. Thank you very much. Thank you all for being with us this morning. We have significant momentum, a world-class team, and are executing our strategy to grow the Accelerant Risk Exchange. We look forward to updating you on our progress throughout the year. Thank you again. Thanks, operator.
Operator: Thank you for attending today’s call. You may now disconnect. Goodbye.