May 2, 2013
Executives
Daniel Kennedy Murphy - Former Senior Vice President of Finance and Investor Relations of Fidelity National Financial William P. Foley - Executive Chairman, Chairman of Executive Committee and Chairman of FNF Holding George P.
Scanlon - Chief Executive Officer Anthony J. Park - Chief Financial Officer, Principal Accounting Officer and Executive Vice President Raymond R.
Quirk - President
Analysts
Mark C. DeVries - Barclays Capital, Research Division Ryan O'Steen - Keefe, Bruyette, & Woods, Inc., Research Division Brett Huff - Stephens Inc., Research Division David McKinley West - Davenport & Company LLC
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Fidelity National Financial First Quarter 2013 Earnings Call.
[Operator Instructions] As a reminder, today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to our host, Mr.
Dan Murphy. Please go ahead.
Daniel Kennedy Murphy
Thanks. Good morning, everyone, and thanks for joining us for this first quarter 2013 earnings conference call.
Joining me today are our Chairman, Bill Foley; George Scanlon, our CEO; Randy Quirk, our President; and Tony Park, our CFO. We'll begin when a brief strategic overview from Bill, a business overview from George, and then Tony will finish with a review of the financial highlights.
We'll then open the call for your questions and finish with some concluding remarks from Bill. This conference call may contain forward-looking statements that involve a number of risks and uncertainties.
Statements that are not historical facts, including statements about our expectations, hopes, intentions or strategies regarding the future are forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements are based on management's beliefs, as well as assumptions made by and information currently available to management.
Because such statements are based on expectations as to future financial and operating results and are not statements of fact, actual results may differ materially from those projected. We undertake no obligation to update any forward-looking statements whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.
The risks and uncertainties, which forward-looking statements are subject to, include but are not limited to the risks and other factors detailed in our press release dated yesterday and in the statement regarding forward-looking information, risk factors and other sections of the company's Form 10-K and other filings with the SEC. This conference call will be available for replay via webcast at our website at fnf.com.
It will also be available through phone replay beginning at 1:00 p.m. Eastern Time today through May 9.
The replay number is (800) 475-6701 and the access code is 287981. Let me now turn the call over to our Chairman, Bill Foley.
William P. Foley
Thanks, Dan. The first quarter was a great start to the year with the continuation of the momentum we built in 2012.
We achieved our strongest first quarter in the title business since 2004, producing pretax earnings of $171 million and a pretax margin of 12.3%. With an improving purchase market, continued low mortgage rates and a stabilizing economy, we are confident in our ability to continue to produce industry-leading earnings in our title business.
Remy continues to make significant investments in global growth strategy that are expected to benefit future performance, including improved coverage in the light-duty aftermarket business and the launch of a new plant and engineering center in Wuhan, China, that recently opened. Additionally, the company secured new business with key Asian customers, launched new products across the globe and continues its operational restructuring efforts.
We believe Remy has positioned itself to take advantage of both an improving global economy and a growing automotive marketplace. Our restaurant operations remain focused on continually improving financial performance, most specifically through the continued integration, redesign and update of the O'Charley's concept.
We have completed 7 full remodels at an average cost of approximately $250,000. These remodeled locations have averaged 17% in increase in sales.
We have also competed 17 exterior-only remodels, at an average cost of $75,000, with those locations averaging a 4% sales increase. We are emphasizing full remodels over exterior-only remodels in the future as we believe that will generate more sustainable improvement in customer counts and sales.
From an earnings perspective, the first quarter was a difficult one for our restaurant business due to extreme weather conditions and the reinstatement of the payroll tax. Additionally, we closed 3 underperforming J.
Alexander's restaurants and 1 Max & Erma location. All of the intended changes were taken -- all the intended charges were taken in the first quarter.
From a capital perspective, we continue to be committed to paying a strong dividend as we increased our dividend to $0.16 per quarter in December 2012, a 14% increase. We also continue to consider periodic share repurchases as a use of capital.
In the first quarter, we repurchased 1.4 million shares for total proceeds of nearly $34 million at an average price just above $24, a small premium to book value. This included a single block of 1 million shares at a price of $23.83.
We continue to look at acquisition opportunities that will complement our existing upscale dining concepts and augment our capabilities in the title and mortgage services. Let me now turn the call over to our CEO, George Scanlon.
George P. Scanlon
Thank you, Bill, and good morning, everybody. As Bill mentioned, we had our best first quarter in the title business since 2004, generating a 12.3% pretax title margin and overall operating EPS of $0.42 per share before the negative $0.01 EPS impact from impairments related to the planned closing of 3 unprofitable J.
Alexander's locations and 1 Max & Ermas location and a negative $0.02 EPS impact from a onetime $7 million executive separation expense at Remy. While we continue to operate in a refinanced-driven marketplace, we are seeing a growing percentage of open orders coming from purchase transactions.
During the first quarter, 38% of total title orders opened were purchase transactions versus 36% in the first quarter of 2012, with purchase mix increasing each month during the first quarter, peaking at nearly 41% of open orders in March. Overall, purchase orders opened and closed per day increased by 7% and 14%, respectively, in the first quarter versus the prior year.
Refinance orders opened per day decreased by 3% while closed refinance orders per day increased 31%. For the month of April, purchase open orders increased by more than 16% over April 2012.
We are seeing increasing purchase activity in most of the markets we serve with prices firming and appraisals becoming less of an issue in closing transactions. Inventory shortages have created a supply-demand imbalance, which is contributing to the price appreciation, as buyers want to take advantage of the low-rate environment.
We welcome the market recovery and the eventual return to a purchase-dominated order mix. Title pretax earnings of $171 million strengthened and grew by $42 million or 33% over the first quarter of 2012.
And our title pretax margin improved by nearly 170 basis points over the prior year period. The commercial title business continued to perform solidly with $88 million in revenue, a 6% increase over the first quarter of 2012, driven by a 16% increase in the commercial fee per file offset by a 9% decline in closed orders.
Open orders declined 6% versus the first quarter of 2012. We continue to expect the commercial business to perform well throughout 2013.
Open order counts remained strong and consistent during the quarter and essentially flat with the prior year. Overall, open orders averaged 10,540 per day for the first quarter with January averaging 10,400; February, nearly 10,700; and March, 10,600.
The month of April averaged more than 11,100 open orders per day with the last week of April hitting nearly 11,800, the strongest weekly per day open order performance of 2013. As I mentioned earlier, the mix shifted toward purchase transactions during the quarter as purchase transactions comprised 35% of open orders in January, 38% in February and nearly 41% in March.
For April, purchasers transactions were nearly 40% of open orders and, as I mentioned, those purchase orders increased more than 16% over April 2012. This positive trend in open orders gives us a strong inventory heading into the second quarter.
The restaurant group produced operating revenue of $356 million and adjusted EBITDA of $19 million for an adjusted EBITDA margin of 5.3%, a 20% -- a 20 basis point sequential improvement from the fourth quarter of 2012 despite a seasonally slow and challenging first quarter. Our upscale concept strengthened during the quarter while the family and casual segment performance was overshadowed by the work in progress at O'Charley's.
Several operational improvements have been implemented and our restaurant renovation program is off to a successful start. We have also made significant progress on the original $20 million synergy target and expect to fully realize those savings by the end of 2013.
We remain confident that we will continue to show improved financial performance in our restaurant operations as we move through 2013. Overall, the restaurant group contributed a pretax loss of $4 million for the first quarter, which includes the $5 million in impairments from the 4 scheduled restaurant closings.
Remy generated operating revenue of $284 million and adjusted EBITDA of $33 million, for an adjusted EBITDA margin of 11.6%. Weakness in heavy-duty OEM sales was partly offset by improvement in the aftermarket business, and margins were impacted by volume and mix as well as continued investment in the new plant in Wuhan, China.
That plant is open and will ramp up production this summer. Overall, Remy produced a pretax loss of $1 million for the first quarter as earnings were negatively impacted by the onetime $7 million executive separation expense.
Our minority-owned investment, Ceridian, generated quarterly revenue of $400 million, essentially flat with the prior year quarter, and EBITDA of nearly $104 million for an EBITDA margin of 26%. Our 33% of Ceridian's quarterly losses was $4 million, primarily the result of a valuation allowance on a deferred tax asset.
Finally, in our first quarter of ownership, Digital Insurance is off to a good start. It generated a revenue of nearly $16 million and EBITDA of $4.4 million, an EBITDA margin of more than 28%.
Net income was just over $1 million. Let me now turn the call over to Tony Park to review the financial highlights.
Tony?
Anthony J. Park
Thank you, George. FNF generated more than $2 billion in revenue in the first quarter compared to $1.2 billion in the first quarter of 2012 as total title revenue grew by $210 million or 18%.
The restaurant group added $351 million in total revenue and Remy added $285 million. Net earnings were $90 million or $0.39 per diluted share and book value per share grew to $20.99 at March 31.
The title segment generated nearly $1.4 billion in operating revenue for the first quarter, a 19% increase from the first quarter of 2012. Direct title premiums grew by more than 17%, driven by a 19% increase in closed orders offset by a 2% decrease in the fee per file.
Agency premiums grew by 27% over the prior year as the agent count has stabilized over the past 12 months. Additionally, agency profitability increased as the first quarter agent split improved by nearly 60 basis points to 75.8%.
Title segment personnel costs increased by $53 million or 13% versus the first quarter of 2012 and other operating expenses grew by $22 million or 8%, both of which are significantly lower than the 17% increase in direct title premiums and the 19% increase in total title operating revenue. This quarter again highlights the operating leverage to improve order counts and the future mix shift toward a more purchase-driven market.
The net effect was a 12.3% pretax title margin, an improvement of nearly 170 basis points versus the first quarter of 2012. Debt outstanding, excluding ABRH and Remy, was $981 million with no FNF maturities until May 2017.
Additionally, there continue to be no borrowings under our $800 million credit facility as of March 31. Remy and the restaurant group had debt of $373 million, with $282 million from Remy and $91 million from the restaurant group.
FNF does not provide any corporate guarantee on the debt of either Remy or the restaurant group. Our debt-to-total-capital ratio was 23% at March 31, including the Remy and the restaurant group debt.
Total title claims paid were $91 million during the first quarter, a decline of $12 million or 12% from the first quarter of 2012. We expect to continue to provide for future claims at a 7% provision level in 2013 and we also expect claims paid to continue to decline in 2013 versus 2012.
Finally, our investment portfolio totaled nearly $5 billion at March 31. From a regulated standpoint, we have nearly $1.8 billion in statutory reserves, $1.6 billion in regulated cash and investments and $500 million in secured trust deposits for a total of more than $3.9 billion in regulated cash and investments.
From an unregulated perspective, we have $380 million in a minority equity investment in Ceridian and approximately $325 million in unregulated cash and investments, for a total of approximately $700 million in unregulated cash and investments. There is also approximately $200 million in consolidated cash at Remy, the restaurant group and other subs that is necessary for their operations and approximately $150 million in cash at subsidiaries that is restricted by minimum working capital or other requirements.
Let me now turn the call back to our operator to allow for any questions.
Operator
[Operator Instructions] And our first question comes from the line of Mark DeVries with Barclays.
Mark C. DeVries - Barclays Capital, Research Division
First question, can you help me understand why the average fee per file was down, granted down marginally but down year-over-year when the mix of purchase was up?
George P. Scanlon
I think the refi closings were higher in Q1 relative to the purchase closings and, as we talked about, the increasing percentage of purchase, which is around 40%, will start to cause that fee per file to grow the balance of the year.
Mark C. DeVries - Barclays Capital, Research Division
Okay, got it. How should we look at the agent premium line now that you've kind of stabilized your agent base and I guess maybe looking to grow that a little bit?
Should we expect agent premiums to edge up over time as a percentage of total premiums?
George P. Scanlon
Well, I think the agents are more weighted toward the purchase market. So as the purchase market continues to improve, the agency revenues will grow.
Our direct revenues will grow, as well. So on a relative basis, I think the proportion should be probably similar.
Anthony J. Park
Yes, and Mark, some of it depends on geography, too. As the West improves, and it's showing real signs of strong improvement on the purchase side, where we don't have much agency business you'll see our direct business grow a lot more.
Whereas when Florida recovers and part of the Eastern Seaboard, where we have a lot more agency business, you'll see the agency business grow there.
Mark C. DeVries - Barclays Capital, Research Division
Okay, that make sense. And then finally, a little more color would be helpful on the commercial business.
I think, George, you mentioned you expect it to do well. Kind of thoughts on both transaction volumes growth there and also premiums, I guess you guys had some larger loan sizes closed this quarter, if that's correct?
George P. Scanlon
Yes, we're encouraged by the start to the year. As you know, we had a record fourth quarter and probably pulled forward deals that otherwise would have come into the first quarter.
But we were ahead of last year. The inventory across the country looks very good.
Randy, you have any color on that?
Raymond R. Quirk
Yes, actually the open order inventory has really held through the last 3 quarters. So there wasn't much of a fall-off at the end of last year in terms of the opening side.
However, the closings did get pulled into the fourth quarter. But what we're seeing, really across the country, is larger transactions, we're seeing growth on the retail side, the energy segment's coming back and there's a lot of multifamily activity.
So we're pretty confident we're on a good run with some good momentum.
Mark C. DeVries - Barclays Capital, Research Division
Okay. Should we look for like maybe mid-single digit, high single-digit growth in volumes and revenues in that business?
George P. Scanlon
Well, I think it could be lumpy. So if you're looking at it for the balance of the year, I think that's probably a reasonable place to be.
We're going to have a big rollover in the fourth quarter, so we've got to make progress over the next couple. But as Randy indicated, the inventory remains strong.
And as rates remain low, there's a lot of refinancing activity that's going on, new investment activity. So I think that's probably a reasonable outlook.
Operator
Our next question is from the line of Bose George with KBW.
Ryan O'Steen - Keefe, Bruyette, & Woods, Inc., Research Division
Actually, this is Ryan O'Steen on for Bose. I was just wondering if you could talk a little bit about -- or potentially quantify the impact that home price appreciation has had on your fee per file in margins?
George P. Scanlon
Ryan, we don't have the ability to track that in our systems and I know some of our competition has reported on that. I would say that what they're experiencing is probably similar to what we're experiencing but our systems just don't have the ability to capture the detail at that level.
Clearly, as prices firm up, as values increase, we're going to benefit from that because our premiums don't go linearly with price increases but they will increase over time as home values improve.
Ryan O'Steen - Keefe, Bruyette, & Woods, Inc., Research Division
Okay. And then second, you mentioned some seasonal weakness in the restaurant business.
Was that just weather related or are there other seasonal factors?
William P. Foley
No, I would say that on the restaurant side, the payroll tax increase or the payroll tax reversal of the tax benefit that had occurred for the previous couple of years had an impact in January, particularly in kind of the family dining segment and the casual dining. So that was -- that we worked our way through during the first there in January and February.
But then the weather was just terrible in the -- really in the East and particularly in the Northeast. And so we have 199 steakhouses up in really Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut and New York and they were actually closed for several days.
So those comps just weren't very good. But we -- and we also closed a Max & Ermas, as George mentioned, and 3 J.
Alexander's, which had been scheduled to close but it was the result of lease negotiations and buyouts and so on. It took us about an extra 60 or 75 days to get those restaurants closed.
So we're actually looking for very, very much improved performance out of the restaurant business beginning in this quarter, April, and continuing on through the balance of the year.
Ryan O'Steen - Keefe, Bruyette, & Woods, Inc., Research Division
That's helpful. Could you just kind of remind us of those targets you have in terms of EBITDA and margins for the restaurant business?
William P. Foley
Well, I mean, our EBITDA target margin for the restaurant business has always been 8.5% to 10%. We're about 5.8% right now.
So there's several percentage points to garner as we move forward through this year. And we continue -- we're continuing to generate synergies, synergy savings out of O'Charley's and also out of J.
Alexander's. And we moved, as you may recall, the 10 Stoney Rivers that were part of O'Charley's over to be managed by J.
Alexander's and there's a lot of progress being made with those restaurants. So we're really -- April came in -- April was very strong for the restaurant business and we're looking for significant improvements as we go through the year.
Operator
The next question is from the line of Brett Huff with Stephens Inc.
Brett Huff - Stephens Inc., Research Division
A quick question. As we look forward to 4Q, that's typically a tough quarter, especially if I think -- as we think that refis will at least taper down a little bit by then.
But I know that it's predicting the future a little bit but what is your thought -- do we -- should we expect such a large drop-off in 4Q as we normally do in a more normal environment that isn't so refi driven or kind of what should we expect for that?
George P. Scanlon
Well, Brett, I think -- and obviously we don't really have any idea as we're sitting here today, but I think the projections are for refi to fall off. We had a very strong refi month in April.
The rates are almost at record lows again and that seems to bring people back into the refinancing mode. So a lot will depend on the length of that.
As you know, the HARP Program has been extended a couple of years. The government is going to work to better promote that, as only about 20% of the eligible people have taken advantage of the program.
So that could give us some more runway, as well. And then finally, as appraisals improve, people who otherwise don't qualify for the HARP Program but didn't have enough equity to refinance may have the opportunity to refinance and take care of the market.
So the falloff in the second half of the year projected by MBA may not be as severe. And depending upon that third quarter will determine the fourth quarter.
Our expectation is that the purchase market will continue to improve. The inventory, in most markets, is lean and so the builders are benefiting from that right now.
But as values firm up, it may encourage more people to become sellers. And therefore, the fourth quarter may not be as bad as projected.
We don't think it's going to be as bad as the MBA outlook.
Brett Huff - Stephens Inc., Research Division
Okay, that's helpful. And then in terms of title staff, did you guys hire or fire?
What was your net number kind of sequentially?
George P. Scanlon
Yes, in the fourth quarter we added 232 employees. We're still working with temps where we can.
As we go into the second quarter, it'll depend on, certainly, on the order volume. When you get more to the purchase side, the transactions get a little bit more complex and laborious.
So we could see some additions in the second quarter, again depending on volume. And then we're also looking to expand our footprint and hire some of the good people into the organization in terms of recruiting so -- but always, the order volume dictates our staffing levels.
Brett Huff - Stephens Inc., Research Division
But -- so you said you added 232 for 4Q. What did you do for 1Q?
George P. Scanlon
I'm sorry, that was for Q1.
Brett Huff - Stephens Inc., Research Division
Okay, I'm sorry. All right.
And then, a question on monetization of the restaurant, Remy, and some of the other assets. Have you guys given any updates on what your thoughts are there based on the trajectory that we're -- the progress we're making on each of those?
William P. Foley
Yes, in terms of the restaurant business, we've now separated them into 2 components. The upscale casual, the J.
Alexander's and Stoney River and then family dining and casual with the balance of the restaurants. We believe that adding 1 or 2 more brands in the upscale casual put us in the position to be able to start taking a serious look at an IPO for that group of restaurants.
And so we're right in the middle of a couple of different transactions that we're negotiating, trying to make sure we don't do anything foolish but have complementary brands that could be merged or could be assimilated into J. Alexander's.
From the O'Charley's standpoint, that's the one where we have to give some time to the restaurant remodelization -- remodel program that's underway. And as I mentioned, it is probably to be -- it is to be expected that, when you just remodel the outside of a restaurant, even if you change the look of the rest of -- the look of the people inside and the service levels and the menus, you really don't get the hit, or the increase in sales.
So we're seeing about a 17% average increase in same-store sales at fully remodeled restaurants but only about 4% in the restaurants that have been remodeled from the exterior only. So we're moving full speed into a full remodel program, trying to go state-by-state.
But again, we will get about 50 or 55 full remodels this year out of the way. And so that means it's really going to take us through 2014 to get up to that 120, 130 fully remodeled restaurants to start getting the real benefit and start showing the power of O'Charley's.
And that would be more of a time frame for the family and upscale casual -- or family and casual would be later in '14 or '15 before there were some sort of monetization event such as an IPO.
Brett Huff - Stephens Inc., Research Division
And then any thought on Remy?
William P. Foley
George, why don't you handle that one?
George P. Scanlon
Yes. Remy, as you know, is now listed on NASDAQ and we have 51% ownership stake in that and continue to work with the management team on growth opportunities.
We see opportunities in the market to complement the existing business and get some top line growth. So we're looking at those, which would be self-funded by Remy.
And ultimately we need to get more liquidity in the stocks. So if a couple of these opportunities materialize, it may give us an opportunity later in the year to do that.
But I think the second half of their year is expected to be better than the first half. And we, as you know, bought that company very well and are very comfortable with our investment level and the earnings potential for the business.
So I wouldn't see anything immediate on the horizon but, again, we're continuing to look at opportunities to grow the business.
Brett Huff - Stephens Inc., Research Division
And then last question for me. In terms of closer home to title and closing services and settlement services, can you just sort of enumerate the kinds of things that you'd like to buy?
George P. Scanlon
Well, I would say as it relates to the title business, we're everywhere we want to be with 1,200 offices. So as we look to our ServiceLink business, we'd like to augment the capabilities that we deliver to major banks and we've got a great business that we built over the last several years and seen strong growth in that business.
We picked up some companies that are more technology-based and that brings us capabilities that we don't have today and we're working on some things that we think can lead to revenue down the road. But I think you'd see that they were more boutiquey-type deals that we would be picking up over time and as any opportunity presents itself in the market that's related to that business, we're obviously very interested in that.
Operator
[Operator Instructions] We will open the line of David West with Davenport & Company.
David McKinley West - Davenport & Company LLC
This quarter, you seemed to really close a much higher percentage of the open orders, I think it was about 75% versus 63% last year. And you mentioned the appraisal process was easier.
Were there any other factors that accounted for that? Is the general credit conditions for mortgages getting a little easier?
George P. Scanlon
Well, I would say the closing percentages can move around and refi transactions will close faster than purchase transactions. So depending upon the mix, that cycle can compress.
But it depends also on the timing in the quarter when the orders were open and so I wouldn't read too much into that. As it relates to credit standards, I don't think they're easing.
I just think more people are coming into the market because they know that the rates will eventually rise. And unlike last year, they're reading in the papers where prices are appreciating.
A year ago everybody was projecting 3% to 4% price declines and, obviously, we're in a market that's inflating. So people have missed the bottom and they want to take advantage of the combined low rates and reasonable valuations.
And I think that's what's driving it. But I do think that the mortgage standards are as stringent as they were a year ago.
Operator
[Operator Instructions] And at this time, there are no other questions in queue. You may continue, Mr.
Foley.
William P. Foley
The first quarter was a great start to the year as we achieved our strongest first quarter in the title business since 2004. With an improving purchase market, low mortgage rates and a stabilizing economy, we are confident in our ability to continue to produce strong earnings in our title business that will lead the industry.
Thank you for joining us today.
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, that does conclude your conference for today. Thank you for your participation and for using AT&T Executive Teleconference service.
You may now disconnect.