Slide Insurance Incorporated Q1 2026 Earnings Call - Record Profitability and Aggressive Share Buybacks Signal Capital Discipline
Summary
Slide Insurance delivered a blistering first quarter of 2026, growing gross written premiums by 49% year-over-year to $414.8 million and net income by 51% to $139.5 million. The company's disciplined underwriting model drove a best-in-class combined ratio of 55.5%, down 3.4 percentage points from the prior year, while Return on Equity hit 50% on an annualized basis. Management is capitalizing on Citizens depopulation efforts and expanding voluntary sales into new states, with South Carolina already showing strong momentum and California poised for an imminent launch. The growth is organic and highly profitable, not reliant on Citizens takeouts, which now represent a smaller, selective portion of new business.
Capital management has become a defining feature of Slide's narrative. The company returned $239 million to shareholders through share repurchases, reducing IPO dilution from 13% to 3%, and authorized a new $125 million program. With a $1.2 billion cash balance and reinsurance costs falling in a softening market, management is aggressively buying back stock at a significant discount to fair value. The reinsurance tower was oversubscribed, and the company increased first-event coverage by $1 billion while maintaining a disciplined retention policy capped at 25% of pre-tax earnings. Analysts noted the lack of new competitive entry, citing high barriers to scale and capital requirements, which reinforces Slide's entrenched position in a hard-to-enter specialty market.
Key Takeaways
- Gross written premiums surged 49% year-over-year to $414.8 million, driven by a 46% increase in policies in force to 508,928, fueled by voluntary sales, renewals, and selective Citizens acquisitions.
- Net income jumped 51% year-over-year to $139.5 million, marking another quarterly record and demonstrating strong operating leverage as the company scales post-IPO.
- Combined ratio improved to 55.5% from 58.9% in the prior year quarter, reflecting a disciplined underwriting model and an accident year loss ratio of 28.4%, down from 34.2% year-over-year.
- Return on Equity reached 12.5% for the quarter and 50% on an annualized basis, underscoring the company's ability to generate robust profitability despite market headwinds.
- Slide acquired an additional $92.3 million in annualized gross premiums from Citizens, but management emphasized that voluntary growth in new states will be the primary driver of expansion in 2026.
- Reinsurance tower was oversubscribed on favorable terms despite a softening market with prevalent rate decreases; first-event coverage increased by $1 billion to approximately $3.5 billion.
- The company repurchased 7.7 million shares in Q1 at a weighted average price of $17.75, completing a $120 million program and authorizing a new $125 million buyback to return capital at attractive valuations.
- Cash and cash equivalents stood at $1.2 billion as of March 31, 2026, with total invested assets of $720 million, providing ample flexibility to support growth and continue share repurchases.
- New state expansion is imminent, with California launch expected within weeks and strong voluntary sales already in South Carolina; New York and New Jersey are viewed as accretive due to capacity shortfalls and reinsurance synergies.
- Management capped first-event retention at no more than 25% of pre-tax earnings, with a co-par structure that spreads risk across multiple layers, minimizing the impact of major catastrophe events on earnings.
Full Transcript
Operator: Greetings. Welcome to Slide Insurance Incorporated First Quarter 2026 Earnings Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A brief question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. If anyone should require operator assistance during the conference, please press star zero on your telephone keypad. Please note this conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to your moderator today, Garrett Edson with ICR. Thank you, sir. You may proceed.
Garrett Edson, Moderator, ICR: Thank you, and good morning. With us today are your hosts, Bruce Lucas, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Slide, and Andy Omiridis, Chief Financial Officer. By now, everyone should have access to our earnings release, which was published yesterday after the market closed and can be found on our website at ir.slideinsurance.com. Before we begin our formal remarks, I need to remind everyone that part of our discussion today may include forward-looking statements, which are based on the expectations, estimates, and projections of management regarding the company’s future performance, anticipated events or trends, and other matters that are not historical facts. The forward-looking statements in our discussion are subject to various assumptions, risks, uncertainties and other factors that are difficult to predict and which could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied in the forward-looking statements.
These statements are not guarantees of future performance, and therefore, undue reliance should not be placed upon them. We refer all of you to our earnings release and recent filings with the SEC for a more detailed discussion of the risks and uncertainties that could impact the future operating results and financial condition of Slide. Our statements are as of today, April 29, 2026, and we undertake no obligation to update any forward-looking statements we may make except as required by law. In addition, this call is being webcast, and an archived version will be available shortly after the call ends on the investor relations portion of the company’s website at www.slideinsurance.com. With that, I’d now like to turn the call over to our Founder, Chairman, and CEO, Bruce Lucas. Please go ahead.
Bruce Lucas, Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer, Slide Insurance Incorporated: Thank you. Welcome to our first quarter of 2026 earnings call. We appreciate your continued interest in Slide and are excited to be speaking with you today. We started off 2026 by delivering another quarter of strong execution across our business and reinforcing the ability of our tech-enabled coastal specialty focus to produce what we believe to be the best top and bottom line performance in our sector. Our performance was once again based on strong renewal rates on our existing book, expansion of our voluntary sales, and the continued acquisition of Citizens policies. For the quarter, we meaningfully grew our gross written premiums by 49% year-over-year to $414.8 million. In the quarter, we continued to strategically capitalize on Citizens’ ongoing depopulation efforts.
As a reminder, our extensive data capabilities and technology-driven underwriting process enables us to identify Citizens policies that offer compelling return profiles. While we plan to remain selective in pursuing Citizens assumptions this year, we expect to continue to grow our gross written premiums in 2026 year-over-year as a result of higher policy retentions, higher voluntary sales, and the launch of new states. In addition to our strong top-line results, Slide grew net income by 51% year-over-year to $139.5 million, which is another new quarterly record for the company. Along with net income, first quarter Return on Equity was once again strong at 12.5% and 50% on an annualized basis, reflecting the continued strength of our business.
Meanwhile, our disciplined underwriting model continues to deliver industry-leading results, with our combined ratio improving to 55.5% compared to 58.9% in the prior year quarter. Our first quarter performance continues to deliver robust profitability and attractive equity returns that create meaningful value for our shareholders. This strong start to the year positions us well to achieve our full-year objectives. We have deliberately built a dynamic coastal specialty insurance platform with the strongest balance sheet in the sector, providing us with the financial flexibility to accelerate our geographic expansion throughout 2026. While we’ve established a strong market position in Florida, we’re now strategically extending our proven capabilities into additional catastrophe-exposed markets. For example, South Carolina continued to deliver robust voluntary sales in the first quarter, and we’re confident we will be able to build on this momentum moving forward.
As we continue to progress through 2026, we remain committed to thoughtful geographic diversification in multiple states. Our geographic expansion will bolster our foundation for sustainable growth and long-term shareholder value. We are in the final process of completing our 2026 reinsurance program, and I anticipate completion of the reinsurance tower in the next one to two weeks. Year-over-year, risk-adjusted rate decreases are prevalent in the Florida market, and the decreases have been substantial. I will not disclose the extent of the decreases in pricing at this time out of respect for our reinsurance partners who are still negotiating with our peers. However, I will note that we increased our first event reinsurance tower by roughly $1 billion versus 2025. Despite this increase, reinsurance capacity significantly outpaced our demand as every layer of the reinsurance tower was oversubscribed on favorable terms.
I’d like to thank our reinsurance partners for their unwavering commitment to Slide through hard and soft market conditions, and your partnership is greatly appreciated. During the quarter, we completed our $120 million stock repurchase program, and our board authorized a new $125 million repurchase program in late March. In the first quarter, we repurchased approximately 7.7 million shares at a weighted average price of $17.75 per share. Since initiating our buybacks, we have repurchased approximately 13.3 million shares at an average share price of $17.30. Through our repurchase program, we have returned $239 million to shareholders and reduced our IPO dilution from 13% to 3%.
This reflects our business model’s ability to generate strong free cash flow, our willingness to opportunistically repurchase shares when we believe there is a dislocation in our valuation, and our ability to successfully return capital to our shareholders in a highly value-accretive way. It is unusual for a recent IPO issuer to return IPO proceeds less than one year after going public, and there are a couple of reasons for our decision to aggressively pursue share buybacks. First, since our IPO was priced in June at $17 per share, we have significantly outperformed our expectations each of the last four quarters while providing strong guidance for 2026. Despite our consistently strong results, our share price remained close to the IPO price, which does not reflect our fair value. Second, our strong financial performance has meaningfully increased our free cash position, which continues to build.
This growth in unencumbered cash has exceeded our near-term deployment needs. We believe we have ample capital flexibility to support our growth initiatives even after repurchasing $230 million of common stock. Given our current earnings profile and outlook, we believe repurchasing shares at attractive valuations is a prudent use of capital that can enhance earnings per share and Return on Equity over time. We remain highly confident in our business plan and expected financial performance and believe our share repurchase program further supports our objective of delivering best-in-class returns on Equity. Accordingly, the board of directors has authorized an additional $100 million share repurchase program. We will continue to evaluate repurchase opportunities in a disciplined manner and will act when we believe doing so is in the best interest of shareholders.
We expect to strengthen Slide’s earning profile and balance sheet throughout 2026, and we remain committed to deploying our excess capital in ways that maximize shareholder value. Finally, our success is built on the efforts of our exceptional team. I want to thank all our employees for their dedication and the critical role they play in Slide’s performance. I’m proud of what we are accomplishing together, and I appreciate all of you. Thank you for your continued support of Slide. With that, I’ll now turn the call over to Andy Omiridis to provide some color on our excellent first quarter.
Andy Omiridis, Chief Financial Officer, Slide Insurance Incorporated: Thank you, Bruce, and good morning, everyone. In the first quarter, net income rose 50.8% to $139.5 million from $92.5 million in the prior year period, resulting in Diluted Earnings Per Share of $1.02. Our earnings profile continues to strengthen with growth in both top and bottom line driven by increased scale achieved following our IPO in June 2025. Gross Written Premiums reached $414.8 million, up 49.1% from $278.2 million in the first quarter of 2025. This growth was driven by a 46% year-over-year increase in policies in force, which now stand at 508,928, driven by growth of voluntary new business, renewals of previously acquired Citizens policies, and further Citizens acquisitions.
During the quarter, we also acquired an additional $92.3 million in annualized gross premiums or 28,783 policies from Citizens, capitalizing on selective attractive takeout opportunities. Net losses and loss adjustments expenses totaled $111.1 million in the quarter as compared to $83.8 million in the prior year period. As a result, our accident year loss ratio improved to 28.4% from 34.2%, reflecting the continued strong performance of our book. Policy acquisition and other underwriting expenses rose to $44.1 million from $28.6 million in the prior year period, driven by increased renewal policies from prior year assumed Citizens policies, resulting in increased policy acquisition costs in 2026.
General and administrative expenses increased to $46.2 million from $41.4 million, primarily due to higher staffing levels to support our growth. These trends produced an overall expense ratio of 25.1%, down from 27.4% in the prior period, and a combined ratio of 55.5%, an improvement of 3.4 percentage points year-over-year. The gains reflect the operating leverage we continue to build as we scale the business. Turning to capital management. As Bruce mentioned, we completed our $120 million share repurchase program during the quarter. Our board authorized a new $125 million program in late March. In total, we have repurchased 7.7 million shares at a weighted average price of $17.75 per share during the quarter.
As of the date of this earnings call, we have repurchased an additional 3 million shares for $53.8 million at an average price of $17.95.
Since inception, we have repurchased 13.3 million shares for $230.9 million at an average price of $17.30. As of March 31, 2026, we had cash and cash equivalents of $1.2 billion and total invested assets of $720 million, consisting of 33.5% corporate bonds, 31.3% municipal bonds, 24.1% U.S. government bonds, and 11.1% asset-backed securities and other. As a relatively new public company, I’d like to take a moment to outline our capital priorities. We have demonstrated our ability to generate strong free cash flow and have deployed that capital both to support attractive growth opportunities and to repurchase shares when we believe it is accretive over the long term.
We expect to continue managing capital in this disciplined manner, always prioritizing the actions that create the greatest long-term value for our shareholders. I’m pleased to reaffirm that the full year 2026 guidance we provided on our February earnings call. We continue to expect gross written premiums between $1.85 billion and $1.95 billion, and net income between $455 million and $470 million. Topline growth is expected to come primarily from sustained organic expansion, including double-digit increases in policies in force and premium outside of Florida, supplemented by selective opportunities in Florida that meet our targeted returns. Finally, we expect to file our Form 10-Q after the market closes on April 30, 2026. Thank you for your time. Operator, we are now ready to open the line for questions.
Operator: The first question comes from Alex Scott with Barclays. Please proceed.
Alex Scott, Analyst, Barclays: Hey, good morning. First one I had for you is just to follow up on the reinsurance commentary you gave. Sounded like a fair amount of limit you added. I wanted to check to see if you could give us an update on, you know, how much higher the, you know, modeled PML loss would be that would, you know, still be covered by your reinsurance tower. Has that meaningfully changed sort of the risk profile of your company?
Bruce Lucas, Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer, Slide Insurance Incorporated: Yeah, everything scales in tandem. We’ve had obviously tremendous growth year-over-year at, you know, plus almost 50%. As you add more policies, your probable maximum loss on your reinsurance tower gets higher. Apples to apples compared to last year, it’s the same. In total, we did increase our first event reinsurance tower by $1 billion. The tower is at approximately $3.5 billion of first event coverage. That is in line with what we did last year, although on a smaller book and smaller tower, they are proportionately identical to one another.
Alex Scott, Analyst, Barclays: Got it. Okay.
Bruce Lucas, Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer, Slide Insurance Incorporated: Yeah.
Alex Scott, Analyst, Barclays: That makes sense. Just to follow up on the reinsurance costs, I mean, to the extent you have savings, which it sounds like you probably will, and that’s one of your biggest costs. Can you help us think through how that translates to, you know, the loss ratio and a benefit that we’d actually see coming through the underwriting?
Bruce Lucas, Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer, Slide Insurance Incorporated: Yeah. We don’t have an external quota share, so it really shouldn’t have any impact on underlying loss ratio. Yes, you are correct, Alex, that reinsurance is our single largest expense of the organization. A decrease in reinsurance pricing is good for the Florida market and Florida cedents. The underlying loss ratio should be unchanged because our only quota share is internal.
Alex Scott, Analyst, Barclays: Got it. Okay. I’ll re-queue for more questions. Thanks.
Bruce Lucas, Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer, Slide Insurance Incorporated: Thank you.
Operator: Thank you. The next question is from Paul Newsome with Piper Sandler. Please proceed.
Paul Newsome, Analyst, Piper Sandler: Hi, good morning. Thanks for the call. Wanted to ask, kind of a broader question about the Citizens takeouts. There seems to be a pretty wide range of views about whether or not you can take them out, take Citizens takeout today versus in the past, given just how active folks have been. You know, maybe just talk a little bit about why you folks remained confident and if there’s any sort of particular thing that you think you have an advantage over your peers in doing those takeouts.
Bruce Lucas, Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer, Slide Insurance Incorporated: Yeah, it’s a good question, Paul. I mean, obviously the Citizens opportunity is not as robust as it has been in prior years, but every company is different. It depends on your portfolio, where your portfolio is located, how do the Citizens policies fit within that portfolio? Are there reinsurance synergies that are created, or are there debit sets that happen? Every company is going to look at the Citizens portfolio a little differently, and the policies are going to model differently for everyone. We are focused on profitability. Like, our growth has been incredible, and we’re certainly not reliant on Citizens this year. We think voluntary growth in new states is the real story for 2026. If we see opportunities in Citizens to add accretive policies that really fit well within our portfolio, we’re going to do that.
You know, we underwrite with $6 trillion TIV underwriting set. ProCat has been proven 100 times over now. It gives very accurate forward reinsurance costs. We feel like that gives us an advantage to find policies that are accretive to the current portfolio.
Paul Newsome, Analyst, Piper Sandler: Maybe as a second question, could we have a little additional color on the competitive environment? Perhaps the biggest question I get today is, given where you or and other insurers or profitability is, why wouldn’t we see a rush of competitors come into this market? Is there any early evidence that something like that might be happening?
Bruce Lucas, Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer, Slide Insurance Incorporated: Yeah, Paul, we’re not seeing it. We get this question every quarter, and every quarter our answer is the same. While there have been some new entrants to the market, I will note those entrants come in with an extremely small balance sheet. They have to scale, they have to build systems, they have to hire people. It’s a loss lead. Maybe Citizens can be attractive for them, maybe not, but obviously that opportunity is not as robust as it was, say, two years ago. We’re not seeing new capital flow in, and we’re seeing some companies that got conditional approval in Florida, not able to raise the necessary funds to even operate. We’re just not seeing that at this time.
I think the market has been pretty stable, and we’re very happy with how we are positioned in Florida.
Paul Newsome, Analyst, Piper Sandler: Thank you. I appreciate the help as always.
Bruce Lucas, Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer, Slide Insurance Incorporated: Thank you, Paul.
Operator: Once again, ladies and gentlemen, to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. The next question comes from Tommy McJoynt-Griffith with KBW. Please proceed.
Tommy McJoynt-Griffith, Analyst, KBW: Hey, good morning. Thanks for taking our questions. We appreciate you guys giving us the full year guide for net income. To be clear, that guide, I think you’ve said, does not include your assumption for a major cat event in the third quarter, which, you know, we as analysts often, you know, want to bake in. Maybe you can help us frame, you know, what would happen to your net income if a prior event like a Hurricane Helene, Hurricane Milton or Hurricane Ian were to repeat, you know, what would that do to your net income? You know, we understand it’s not as simple as plugging in the full first event retention, just because there’s offsets from claims costs and revenues as well.
Bruce Lucas, Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer, Slide Insurance Incorporated: If it’s an event like Hurricane Helene, there’s virtually zero impact to our earnings. If there’s an event like Hurricane Milton, there’s gonna be a larger impact because it was a Category 4 that hit Tampa, whereas Hurricane Helene was primarily a flood event. We’re still finalizing in the reinsurance tower what our first event retention is going to be. I would say that as a guidepost, we have consistently capped our retention to no more than 25% of pre-tax earnings. Even if you had a full event retention, I would expect pre-tax earnings to go down by about 25% for the year. Maybe we run a 40 ROE. You know, it’s, we’re in a very good spot here. The retention is also spread out across a very large reinsurance tower.
It’s not like, you know, you have a $200 million loss and all of that loss is absorbed by the company. We spread that retention throughout different layers. We call it co-par, and we like to do that just to hedge the risk and show the reinsurers that we have real skin in the game. Any event is not some Armageddon for us. It’s just a ding to earnings for the year, but those earnings will still be incredibly robust.
Tommy McJoynt-Griffith, Analyst, KBW: Thanks. Are there any details that you can share around second and third event loss retentions as well, the sideways protection in the reinsurance tower, or we need to wait for more details on the reinsurance program?
Bruce Lucas, Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer, Slide Insurance Incorporated: Yeah. Good, good question. Expect something similar in terms of structure to what we did last year. You know, we do like to step down retentions on event two. We do buy third event cover. That is a rarity in the Florida market. In fact, I’m unaware of anyone that does that besides us. As we get a higher number of catastrophe events, our retention steps down for each event. We’re still in the process of finalizing what that’ll look like, not dissimilar to last year.
Tommy McJoynt-Griffith, Analyst, KBW: Thanks. Just last one. When we think about the new business, sort of new business that you’re generating both in the voluntary and what I’ll call the Citizens, you know, assumption side, which one of those is a larger contributor to new business growth in 2026? Is it still Citizens takeouts or are the voluntary channels in Florida and in the other states contributing more than that this year?
Bruce Lucas, Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer, Slide Insurance Incorporated: It’s voluntary. That’ll be the larger channel for sure.
Tommy McJoynt-Griffith, Analyst, KBW: Thanks.
Bruce Lucas, Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer, Slide Insurance Incorporated: Thank you.
Operator: The next question comes from Randy Binner with Texas Capital. Please proceed.
Randy Binner, Analyst, Texas Capital: Hey, thanks. Just picking up on that question. The, can you comment on the kind of the pace and the composition of the top line growth for the rest of the year? You know, is it gonna be for the voluntary business or the business in new states? Is it gonna be pretty linear? Is there any seasonality? You know, there’s kind of a tough comp in the fourth quarter. It’d just be helpful to kinda understand how, you know, high level, how you see the rest of the top line coming in for the remaining three quarters in the year.
Bruce Lucas, Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer, Slide Insurance Incorporated: I would expect top line to steadily increase as we move through 2026 with the launch of new products, new states, et cetera. You know, we do have to watch our growth because we’re purchasing a reinsurance tower, and that tower has projections as to what our in-force portfolio will look like at September 30th. You know, we have to kinda navigate within the tower on the top line growth. We did model in some very strong top line growth into the reinsurance purchase. We’re able to kinda go full steam at this point and continue to fill the exposure set within our reinsurance tower. I definitely think you’re going to see an acceleration, particularly in the third and fourth quarters.
Randy Binner, Analyst, Texas Capital: Okay, that’s helpful. Then just one detail question. Was there any PYD or cat in the loss ratio in the quarter?
Bruce Lucas, Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer, Slide Insurance Incorporated: We had some cat in there. We had some relatively minor events in the first quarter, but there’s no PYD. The earnings number that we posted is 100% a quarterly function with no PYD in it.
Randy Binner, Analyst, Texas Capital: Okay. Got it. Just one more, if I could. The cash balance seems high, and I’m a little newer to the story, so maybe I’m, you know, I am not up to speed on this. It seems like some of the cash balance on the balance sheet could shift into investments that could generate a higher yield. Is that the right way to think of how the investment income line might develop over time?
Bruce Lucas, Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer, Slide Insurance Incorporated: I believe yes. You know, the reason the cash balance is so high is because the company keeps crushing its own projections in terms of profitability, and it is meaningfully accretive to our cash balance. As a result of the cash balance, you know, accelerating, particularly over the last 4 quarters, we’ve been able to do things like return $230 million of equity back to shareholders. We still believe that we have more capital on the balance sheet than we need to execute on the business plan. We are working closely with our financial advisors. We are reinvesting those cash proceeds into higher yielding assets. At this point in time, nothing’s a higher yield than just the underwriting.
I mean, when you’re running 55 Combined Ratios, you wanna continue to bolster and increase your underwriting capability. It is a dance, and it takes time to deploy capital in an effective and thoughtful way. It’s a good problem to have, and we expect that problem to get a little bit bigger as we go through the year and we start posting earnings numbers for the rest of the 2026 quarters.
Randy Binner, Analyst, Texas Capital: All right, great. Appreciate it. Thanks.
Bruce Lucas, Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer, Slide Insurance Incorporated: Thank you.
Operator: The next question comes from Matt Carletti with Citizens JMP Securities. Please proceed.
Matt Carletti, Analyst, Citizens JMP Securities: Hey, thanks. Good morning. Bruce.
Bruce Lucas, Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer, Slide Insurance Incorporated: Hi
Matt Carletti, Analyst, Citizens JMP Securities: I was hoping you could just spend a minute. Good morning. Spend a minute talking about some of the new states you talked about, kind of New York, New Jersey, California, so forth. Just help us with kind of which ones you might find most attractive. You know, some of those have been in the news in different ways. You know, obviously, California has a bit of a capacity issue going on with the wildfires. There’s been kind of proposed profit caps in New York, which I know it won’t be a big state for you overnight and maybe a bunch of noise about nothing. Just curious kind of your views as you sit there and think about, you know, kind of where to, you know, put your chips as you kind of expand outside of Florida.
Bruce Lucas, Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer, Slide Insurance Incorporated: It’s a good question, Matthew. I would say number one for us is definitely California. We’ve spent a lot of time developing our California product and partnerships, distribution. That launch is imminent. I mean, it could happen this week. I mean, we’re that close. We’re just putting the finishing touches on systems at this point in time, we expect to launch that product in the near term. We think there’s a tremendous opportunity in California. We also do believe that New York and New Jersey are still very accretive, the primary reason for that is there is a capacity shortfall in both of those markets. There are tremendous reinsurance synergies that we pick up as we scale in the Northeast.
It’s the blueprint and model that I kinda created when I was at Heritage and was very successful, I have a high degree of confidence in that execution strategy. We’ll see what New York does on profit caps. I think that’s going to be a much bigger issue for, say, you know, a company that has 100% of their premium in New York, not a company at the end of the year that’ll have, you know, 4% or 5% of its premium in New York, if that. It’s not really an issue at this point in time. We’re still on track and on schedule to launch all of our new states. You know, we feel pretty bullish about that growth opportunity.
Matt Carletti, Analyst, Citizens JMP Securities: Great. Thanks for the color. Appreciate it.
Bruce Lucas, Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer, Slide Insurance Incorporated: Of course.
Operator: The next question is a follow-up from Alex Scott with Barclays. Please proceed.
Alex Scott, Analyst, Barclays: Hey, thanks for taking the follow-up. I wanted to see if you could comment a little bit more on some of your efforts on distribution in California ahead of the launch. I mean, is building out distribution something that takes a long time, and sort of you have the blueprint and some of the initial foundation laid, but it’ll kinda come in over time, or is a lot of that work been done upfront? I’m just trying to understand how impactful this launch could be on growth for the rest of the year.
Bruce Lucas, Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer, Slide Insurance Incorporated: Alex, good question. All of our distribution is in place. We spent the time on the front end to identify the right distribution partners in a very large and differentiated market. California is huge. It’s not like there’s 2 or 3 markets, there’s probably 20 markets within California. All of that work is done. Really at this point, we’re just fine-tuning some system issues, technical issues. It’ll get launched here in short order. We do think there’s an opportunity to grow top line this year by, you know, $50 million-$100 million just in California, if not more. We’re really chomping at the bit to get the finishing touches on and launch the program.
Alex Scott, Analyst, Barclays: Got it. That’s helpful. follow-up I had is on just the prioritization of capital return. you know, you’re in a unique position where you have enough cash coming in to potentially grow and return capital. I look at my own model even, and, you know, even with a good amount of growth, premium to surplus is coming down in my model, which probably doesn’t make a whole lot of sense. you know, with the stock, you know, trading at, what is it? 5.5 times price to earnings, I mean, a significant discount even to the arguably more volatile, you know, reinsurers and property cat. You know, will you continue to leverage buybacks to, you know, reduce your share count the way you did this quarter until that’s corrected?
Bruce Lucas, Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer, Slide Insurance Incorporated: Yeah, that’s a great question. It’s something that we talk about a lot, is capital management. You’re right, this is a good problem to have, and most companies do not have the problem that we have on profitability and cash. We are always first and foremost looking for the highest Return on Equity for our shareholders. That is our number 1 mission at Slide. It should be everyone’s number 1. The first thing we do is we really pick apart the business plan. We look at the opportunities in front of us, the amount of capital that will be required, what we believe the ROE will be on those opportunities. Once we have that cash position set aside for the growth initiatives, we then start looking at excess cash, what’s the best use of it?
There are definitely instances where you’d wanna have some redundant capital on your balance sheet. I think that is prudent. It, it helps us kinda hedge out any volatility in the portfolio. We have been generating such rapid increases in profitability and free cash that buying back stock at, you know, an average of $17.30 a share, which is less than 2% higher than the IPO price, that’s a no-brainer. We’ll, we’ll take that trade all day. When we went public in June of last year, you know, there were analyst projections that were issued to the street as to what we were going to do in 2025 and 2026.
I think it’s very safe to say that we have absolutely surpassed all of those expectations in a meaningful way, yet the stock had been kind of stuck right around that IPO price. When we see that type of dislocation, we’re a strong and aggressive buyer. As we continue to increase our earnings or increase our top line, you should expect us to be very active in share buybacks as long as the price is not indicative of fair value.
Alex Scott, Analyst, Barclays: Got it. Thank you.
Bruce Lucas, Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer, Slide Insurance Incorporated: Thank you.
Operator: Thank you. At this time, I would like to turn it back over to Mr. Bruce Lucas for closing comments.
Bruce Lucas, Founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer, Slide Insurance Incorporated: I would just like to thank everyone for participating in our first quarter earnings call.
Operator: Thank you. This does conclude today’s teleconference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation, and have a great day.