FNF February 20, 2026

FNF Q4 2025 Earnings Call - Industry-leading title margins, commercial momentum and tech investments position FNF for a potential 2026 rebound

Summary

FNF closed 2025 with a clean, profitable double act. The title business delivered standout results, producing $401 million of adjusted pre-tax title earnings in Q4 and $1.4 billion for the year, with industry-leading adjusted pre-tax title margins of 17.5% in Q4 and 15.9% for the full year. That outperformance came from a commercial surge, better refinance activity as rates eased, and disciplined expense management, all amplified by scaled technology investments such as the inHere platform and enterprise AI tools.
At the same time F&G meaningfully matured as a capital-producing business. AUM rose to $73.1 billion, book value per share ex-AOCI jumped to $44.43, and FNF completed a 12% distribution of F&G shares while retaining about 70% ownership. The quarter carried a headline accounting wrinkle, a $471 million non-cash deferred tax charge tied to the F&G distribution, which produced a GAAP net loss but left adjusted net earnings at $382 million, up versus prior year. The base case is constructive for 2026, but Q1 seasonality, fee-per-file mix and commercial fee volatility are the real wildcards to watch.

Key Takeaways

  • Title generated adjusted pre-tax earnings of $401 million in Q4 2025, and $1.4 billion for full year 2025, producing adjusted pre-tax title margins of 17.5% in Q4 and 15.9% for the year.
  • Direct commercial revenue totaled nearly $1.5 billion for 2025, with Q4 direct commercial revenue of $479 million, a 27% increase versus Q4 2024; national revenues rose 33% and local revenues rose 20%.
  • Title orders opened averaged 5,300 per day in Q4 2025, with monthly breaks of October 5,700, November 5,600 and December 4,600; January 2026 picked up to 5,900 per day, a 29% increase versus December.
  • Purchase orders opened were 3,200 per day in Q4, flat year-over-year against seasonal expectations; January purchase opens were up 1% year-over-year and up 31% versus December.
  • Refinance orders opened rose to 1,700 per day in Q4, up from 1,600 sequentially, up 38% year-over-year for Q4, with January refinance opens up 75% year-over-year and 28% versus December.
  • Commercial orders opened averaged 815 per day in Q4, up 8% year-over-year, and were up 11% in January versus the prior year; commercial activity is broad-based across industrial, multifamily, affordable housing, retail and energy.
  • Technology is a strategic lever: inHere engaged 80% of residential sale transactions in 2025 and reached nearly 2.8 million unique users; AI tools were deployed enterprise-wide, and curated data and title automation touched over 90% of volume.
  • F&G updates: AUM before flow reinsurance rose to $73.1 billion, up 12% year-over-year; GAAP equity excluding AOCI was about $6.0 billion, and book value per share ex-AOCI reached $44.43, up 62% since acquisition in 2020.
  • FNF completed a distribution of roughly 12% of F&G common shares on December 31, returning about $500 million of tangible value, while retaining approximately 70% ownership and increasing F&G public float to ~30%.
  • The F&G dividend was raised 14% in Q4, and at 70% ownership FNF expects about $112 million per year in common and preferred dividends from F&G.
  • Consolidated Q4 revenue excluding mark-to-market gains/losses was $4.1 billion; GAAP net loss was $117 million, which included $47 million of net recognized losses and a $471 million non-cash deferred tax charge tied to the F&G share distribution.
  • Adjusted net earnings were $382 million or $1.41 per diluted share in Q4, up from $366 million ($1.34) in Q4 2024; Title contributed $306 million, F&G $104 million, Corporate $4 million before elimination items.
  • Title revenues in Q4 were $2.3 billion excluding mark-to-market items, with direct premiums up 21% year-over-year, agency premiums up 7%, and escrow/title-related fees up 9%.
  • Operating cost trends: personnel costs rose 12% and other operating expenses rose 9% in Q4; disciplined expense management still delivered strong incremental margins.
  • Interest and investment income in Title and Corporate was $102 million in Q4, down 6% year-over-year due to Fed cuts; management expects $95 million to $100 million per quarter in 2026 assuming two 25 basis point cuts.
  • Claims and reserving: title claims paid were $80 million in Q4 versus a provision of $72 million; the carried reserve is about $34 million, roughly 2% above the actuary’s central estimate, with provisioning set at 4.5% of total title premiums.
  • Capital allocation: FNF returned approximately $800 million to shareholders in 2025 via dividends ($546 million) and buybacks ($251 million); holding company cash ended 2025 at $659 million versus $786 million at end-2024.
  • 2026 posture: management is constructive, expecting potential upside from lower mortgage rates and stronger refi activity, but flagged Q1 seasonality and fee-per-file mix as key near-term risks.
  • Regulatory and pilot programs: FHFA pilot remains quiet and is set to expire in May, timing and impact remain uncertain; management has not seen material disruption from the pilot to date.

Full Transcript

Operator: Good morning, and welcome to FNF’s fourth quarter and full year 2025 earnings call. During today’s presentation, all callers will be placed in listen-only mode. Following management’s prepared remarks, the conference will be opened for questions with instructions to follow at that time. I would now like to turn the call over to Lisa Foxworthy-Parker, Senior Vice President, Investor and External Relations. Please go ahead.

Lisa Foxworthy-Parker, Senior Vice President, Investor and External Relations, FNF: Thanks, operator, and welcome everyone. I’m joined today by Mike Nolan, CEO, and Tony Park, CFO. We look forward to addressing your questions following our prepared remarks. F&G’s management team, including Chris Blunt, CEO, and Conor Murphy, President and CFO, will also be available for Q&A. Today’s earnings call may include forward-looking statements and projections under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act, which do not guarantee future events or performance. We do not undertake any duty to revise or update such statements to reflect new information, subsequent events, or changes in strategy. Please refer to our most recent quarterly and annual reports and other SEC filings for details on important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied. This morning’s discussion also includes non-GAAP measures, which management believes are relevant in assessing the financial performance of the business.

Non-GAAP measures have been reconciled to GAAP where required and in accordance with SEC rules within our earnings materials available on the company’s investor website. Please note that today’s call is being recorded and will be available for webcast replay. With that, I’ll hand the call over to Mike Nolan.

Mike Nolan, Chief Executive Officer, FNF: Thank you, Lisa, and good morning. The fourth quarter results rounded out an excellent year for our title and F&G businesses, both in terms of results and execution. Our title business delivered outstanding results in the current environment. We had adjusted pre-tax title earnings of $401 million in the fourth quarter and $1.4 billion for the full year. This generated industry-leading adjusted pre-tax title margins of 17.5% in the fourth quarter and 15.9% for the full year. Our fourth quarter results reflect strong performance across the business, highlighted by exceptional strength in our direct commercial business. Additionally, our disciplined expense management drove strong incremental margins. Our achievements are a testament to our employees, the best title professionals in the industry.

I’d like to extend a profound thanks for all that they do to consistently deliver industry-leading results, provide innovative solutions to our customers, and ensure secure and efficient real estate transactions. We have transformed our business through decades of pioneering technology solutions and investments in the business, driving efficiencies and helping FNF maintain a competitive edge. As a result, we’ve expanded our margins over the last 3 years and significantly outperformed prior cyclical lows. 2025 was no exception, and we are excited to further enhance our industry-leading technology capabilities, which I’ll speak to further in a few minutes. Looking at our title results more closely, on the purchase front, we are successfully navigating the low transactional environment with purchase orders open of 3,200 per day in the fourth quarter, in line with the fourth quarter of 2024 and reflecting normal seasonality.

For the month of January, our daily purchase orders opened were up 1% versus the prior year and up 31% versus December. On the refinance front, volumes continue to be responsive as 30-year mortgage rates decreased during the fourth quarter. This generated refinance orders opened of 1,700 per day in the fourth quarter, up from 1,600 in the sequential quarter. Our refinance orders opened per day were up 38% over the fourth quarter of 2024, up 75% for the month of January versus the prior year, and up 28% for the month of January versus December. On the commercial front, we delivered direct commercial revenue of nearly $1.5 billion for the full year, which was our third-best year on record, trailing only the exceptional markets of 2021 and 2022.

For the fourth quarter, direct commercial revenue was $479 million, a 27% increase over the fourth quarter of 2024. This was driven by a 33% increase in national revenues and a 20% increase in local revenues. National daily orders opened were up 9% over the fourth quarter of 2024, and local market daily orders opened were up 8% over the fourth quarter of 2024. Total commercial orders opened were 815 per day, up 8% over the fourth quarter of 2024 and up 11% for the month of January versus the prior year. We continue to see growth in commercial activity driven by a broad set of asset classes, including industrial, multifamily, affordable housing, retail, and energy.

This year’s performance is especially notable given minimal contribution from the office sector, which remains subdued but is showing signs of improvement. We have also seen a 21% increase in commercial refinance orders opened for the full year 2025 over the prior year. Looking ahead, we have entered 2026 with a strong inventory of commercial deals to close, and the office sector is a potential added element as we move throughout the year. Overall, total orders opened averaged 5,300 per day in the fourth quarter, with October at 5,700, November at 5,600, and December at 4,600. For the month of January, total orders opened were 5,900 per day, up 29% over December. Our title business is performing extremely well in what is still a low transactional environment.

The National Association of Realtors, or NAR, has ranked 2025 home sales among the lowest levels since 1995 due to high mortgage rates and a housing shortage. Notably, the U.S. population has grown by over 70 million people over the last 3 decades. According to NAR, home sales have been close to 4 million per year since 2023, well short of the 5.1 million average over the last 30 years. Over the next few years, we anticipate home sales will trend back toward the historical average. We are well-positioned for the current market and poised to benefit from a potential turn in the housing market should mortgage rates drop further in 2026 and beyond. We remain bullish on the long-term prospects for the title insurance business, even in the current environment.

Our disciplined operating model is centered on managing our business to the trend in open orders to deliver industry-leading results. Over the long term, this discipline has generated a steady level of free cash flow, allowing us to continuously invest in our business through attractive acquisitions and technology initiatives. We had a number of accomplishments in 2025 advancing our technology and innovation. To provide a few highlights, our inHere digital transaction platform has scaled to a fully deployed enterprise solution, engaging 80% of our residential sale transactions and reaching nearly 2.8 million unique users throughout 2025, demonstrating deep integration into daily workflows. This foundational technology drives efficiency, transparency, and a superior customer experience in the escrow closing process, with built-in compliance and enhanced fraud protection.

We also expanded our identity, identity verification processes and technology to streamline and secure customer authentication, helping combat the rise in impersonation and wire fraud in property sales. We rolled out AI tools enterprise-wide in 2025, deploying practical tools to enhance productivity and margin efficiency. We’ve made significant progress in building AI literacy across the company, and teams are using AI to streamline workflows, increase efficiency, and unlock new ways to better serve our customers. Finally, our curated data and technology touched over 90% of our total volume, supported by our proprietary title plants and patented title automation that is integrated into our centralized workflows. Our approach of leveraging title automation tools and data at scale has led to significant productivity improvements and been an important driver of our technology strategy.

These successful investments in technology have played a critical role in our ability to maintain our industry-leading position for adjusted pre-tax title margin. Over time, we believe that our ongoing investments in technology, combined with our robust curated data, will lead to increased efficiency and productivity in our operations that will continue to support our market-leading pre-tax title margin. Turning now to our F&G segment. F&G’s assets under management before flow reinsurance have grown to $73.1 billion at year-end, up 12% over the prior year. On a standalone basis, F&G reported GAAP equity, excluding AOCI, of $6 billion at year-end and has grown its book value per share, excluding AOCI, to $44.43, up 62% since the 2020 acquisition.

On December 31, F&G completed the distribution of approximately 12% of the outstanding shares of F&G’s common stock to FNF shareholders, returning approximately $500 million of tangible value to FNF shareholders. Following the distribution, FNF retains control and majority ownership, with approximately 70% of the outstanding shares in F&G. This has increased F&G’s public float from approximately 18% to approximately 30% after the distribution, strengthening F&G’s positioning within the equity markets and facilitating greater institutional ownership. This distribution reflects our confidence in F&G’s long-term prospects and is intended to unlock shareholder value by enhancing market liquidity and broadening investor access to F&G’s shares. F&G has increased its quarterly common stock dividend by 14% in the fourth quarter, supported by its strong and growing cash generation as it transitions to be more fee-based, higher margin, and less capital-intensive.

Going forward, we expect F&G to be a meaningful source of capital to FNF through its $112 million annual common and preferred dividends at the 70% ownership level, which indirectly benefits FNF shareholders. With that, let me now turn the call over to Tony to review FNF’s fourth quarter and full year financial performance and provide additional insights.

Tony Park, Chief Financial Officer, FNF: Thank you, Mike. Starting with our consolidated results, we generated fourth quarter total revenue of $4.1 billion. Excluding net recognized gains and losses, our total revenue was $4.1 billion, as compared with $4 billion in the fourth quarter of 2024. The net recognized gains and losses in each period are primarily due to mark-to-market accounting treatment of equity and preferred stock securities, whether the securities were disposed of in the quarter or continued to be held in our investment portfolio. We reported a fourth quarter net loss of $117 million, including net recognized losses of $47 million, compared with net earnings of $450 million, including net recognized losses of $373 million in the fourth quarter of 2024.

Fourth quarter results include a $471 million non-cash deferred income tax charge resulting from our year-end distribution of F&G shares to FNF shareholders, which reduced our ownership of F&G below 80%. This distribution triggered an accounting requirement to recognize a deferred tax liability on the accumulated difference between our book and tax basis in F&G. This non-cash charge has no impact on our current cash position, operations, or liquidity and represents a potential future tax obligation that would arise only if we were to sell or distribute additional shares of F&G in the future. This item is excluded from adjusted net earnings, along with other mark-to-market effects and non-recurring items.

Adjusted net earnings were $382 million, or $1.41 per diluted share, compared with $366 million, or $1.34 per share, for the fourth quarter of 2024. The Title segment contributed $306 million, the F&G segment contributed $104 million, and the Corporate segment contributed $4 million before eliminating $32 million of dividend income from F&G in the consolidated financial statements. For the full year 2025, we saw strong performance for both the Title segment and the F&G segment, which together generated solid profitability. Total revenue, excluding gains and losses, was $14.5 billion in the full year 2025 and reflects a 7% increase over the full year 2024.

We delivered $1.4 billion in adjusted net earnings, an increase of 7% over $1.3 billion in full year 2024. The Title segment contributed over $1 billion, the F&G segment contributed $412 million, and the Corporate segment contributed $3 million before eliminating $117 million of dividend income from F&G in the consolidated financial statements. Turning to fourth quarter financial highlights specific to the Title segment. The Title segment generated $2.3 billion in total revenue in the fourth quarter, excluding net recognized losses of $58 million, compared with $2.1 billion in the fourth quarter of 2024. Direct premiums increased 21% over the prior year. Agency premiums increased 7%, and escrow, title-related, and other fees increased 9%.

Personnel costs increased 12%, and other operating expenses increased 9%. All in, the Title business generated adjusted pre-tax Title earnings of $401 million, compared with $343 million for the fourth quarter of 2024, and a 17.5% adjusted pre-tax Title margin for the quarter versus 16.6% in the prior year quarter. As Mike said earlier, these results were driven by strong performance across the business as well as disciplined expense management. Our Title and corporate investment portfolio totaled $4.9 billion at December 31. Interest and investment income in the Title and Corporate segments was $102 million, excluding income from F&G dividends to the holding company.

This was down 6% from the prior year quarter due to the impact of the Fed funds rate cut throughout 2024 and 2025. Looking ahead, we expect a range of $95 million-$100 million in interest and investment income per quarter during 2026, assuming two 25 basis point Fed rate cuts during the year. In addition, we expect approximately $112 million of annual common and preferred dividend income from F&G to the Corporate segment.... Our title claims paid of $80 million were $8 million higher than our provision of $72 million for the fourth quarter. The carried reserve for title claim losses is approximately $34 million, or 2% above the actuary’s central estimate. We continue to provide for title claims at 4.5% of total title premiums.

Next, turning to financial highlights specific to the F&G segment. Since F&G hosted its earnings call earlier this morning and provided a thorough update, I will provide a few key highlights. F&G’s AUM before flow reinsurance increased to $73.1 billion at December thirty-first, up 12% over the prior year. This includes retained assets under management of $57.6 billion, up 7% over the prior year. F&G reported gross sales of $14.6 billion for the full year, including $3.4 billion in the fourth quarter. This marks one of our best sales years in history, driven by favorable market conditions and strong demand for retirement savings products.

F&G generated core sales of $9 billion for the full year, which includes indexed annuities, indexed life, and pension risk transfer, and had $5.6 billion of funding agreements and multiyear guaranteed annuities, two products we view as opportunistic, depending on economics and market opportunity. F&G’s net sales were $10 billion for the full year, including $2.3 billion in the fourth quarter. This reflects flow reinsurance at varying ceded amounts in line with capital targets for multiyear guaranteed annuities and fixed indexed annuities. Adjusted net earnings for the F&G segment were $412 million for the full year. This included $104 million of adjusted net earnings for the fourth quarter of 2025. F&G’s operating performance from their underlying spread-based and fee-based businesses continues to be strong.

F&G continues to provide an important complement to our title business. The F&G segment contributed 30% of FNF’s adjusted net earnings for the full year 2025, as compared to 38% in 2024, 30% in 2023, and 23% in 2022. From a capital and liquidity perspective, FNF continues to maintain a strong balance sheet and balanced capital allocation strategy. FNF has returned approximately $800 million of capital to shareholders during the full year of 2025. This reflects common dividends of $546 million for the full year, including $140 million in the fourth quarter, as well as share repurchases of $251 million for the full year, including $30 million in the fourth quarter.

In November, our board of directors approved a 4% increase in the quarterly cash dividend to $0.52 per common share. From a capital allocation perspective, we ended 2024 with $786 million in cash and short-term liquid investments at the holding company. During 2025, the business generated cash to fund our $550 million common dividend paid, $75 million of holding company interest expense, $150 million investment in the F&G common equity raise, and $250 million in share repurchases, all while keeping pace with wage inflation and funding the continued higher spend in risk and technology required in today’s landscape.

We ended the year with $659 million in cash and short-term liquid investments at the holding company, which is about 85% of the amount held at year-end 2024. This concludes our prepared remarks, and let me now turn the call back to our operator for questions.

Operator: Thank you. At this time, we’ll be conducting a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate that your line is in the question queue. You may press star two if you would like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. Once again, to ask a question, press star one on your telephone keypad. One moment please while we pull for questions. Our first question comes from Bose George with KBW. Please state your question.

Bose George, Analyst, KBW: Hey, guys. Good morning. The first question is just on the margin. Obviously, you guys did a great 15.9% margin this year. You know, as you look into 2026, you know, how do you see the margin trending? You know, it looks like your guidance on interest income suggests that won’t be really much of a headwind, and just given what you’re seeing in commercial and residential, just, yeah, thoughts on the margin as we enter 2026.

Tony Park, Chief Financial Officer, FNF: Sure, Bose, it’s Mike, and good morning. You know, I think our outlook on 2026 is certainly more optimistic than when we came into 2025. You know, the base case coming into 2025 was pretty much like 2024, and then we got outperformance in commercial and a little bit in refi and good expense management to drive a nice beat over the prior year.

Mike Nolan, Chief Executive Officer, FNF: ... The positive here is we’re entering a year now where rates are in the low sixes or even six. I think I saw a headline today that said we’re at the lowest rates we’ve had in the last three or four years. And I think that should drive more volume in purchase, which was flat in 2025 over 2024. So we’d expect to see an uptick there. I think MBA and Fannie Mae are estimating about 10% more existing home sales in 2026. And then the refi opportunity should be much better in 2026 as well. And commercial should be as good or better. I think we have a lot of momentum still in commercial, with orders up in the fourth quarter, up in January, and a nice pipeline as we go through the year.

Bose George, Analyst, KBW: Okay, perfect. Thanks. And then, actually, on the agent split, it looks like it, you know, went up a little bit, this quarter, or I guess, you know, declined in, or in favor of the agents. So did that just reflect like a geographic mix or, you know, was there something else to call out there?

Mike Nolan, Chief Executive Officer, FNF: Yeah, I don’t think it moved too much. It was probably just geography there. We’ve been... You know, we watch that pretty closely and actually have been very consistent for several years now. You might note that our agency premiums weren’t up as much as our direct premiums, and that’s really more a function of the mix of business, the fact that we have a very strong commercial presence on the direct side, and we do on the agency side as well. But that delta, if you will, between, I don’t know, a 21% increase in direct premiums and a 7% increase in agency is primarily related to commercial.

Bose George, Analyst, KBW: Okay, great. That’s helpful. Thanks a lot.

Mike Nolan, Chief Executive Officer, FNF: Thanks.

Operator: Your next question comes from Oscar Nieves with Stephens. Please state your question.

Oscar Nieves, Analyst, Stephens: Good morning, and thank you for taking my questions. So sticking with commercial, you previously outlined towards the end of last year about a million- $1.5 billion of commercial revenue for 2026, but you effectively exited 2025 at that level already. How should we think about commercial revenue growth in 2026 versus 2025, and if you could provide a specific growth range?

Mike Nolan, Chief Executive Officer, FNF: Yeah, Oscar, it’s Mike. I don’t, I don’t recall that we specifically had talked about 2026, you know, as, as we went through 2025. I know we had said, you know, as we were going through 2025, that we thought, you know, it could be a, a $1.5 billion in, in direct commercial revenue, which we, we essentially hit. I, I, don’t know that I could give you a range for, for 2026. I think there’s a couple factors to think about. Our trends now would point to more order volume, because in the fourth quarter, our commercial opens were up, 8%, and then they’re up 11% in January. So more activity should lead to more closings and more revenue. The, the, the other factor there is the, the fee per file, and that’s really difficult to estimate.

We had pretty strong fee per file growth in commercial in 2025, and really a big number in the fourth quarter. Some of which was driven by, you know, just larger transactions that you know, I think all participants in the industry have talked about, you know, data centers, energy deals, things like that. And it’s just a little tougher to estimate the impact of that as you go through the year. But again, I would expect, you know, 2026 to be certainly as good, if not better, than 2025 in direct commercial.

Oscar Nieves, Analyst, Stephens: Yeah, that’s super helpful. And one follow-up, this time on the residential side. You alluded to MBA and Fannie Mae’s forecasts, which are effectively calling for existing home sales to be between basically 4.3-4.4 million in 2026, and around 4.5-4.7 in 2027. And obviously, that’s against a historical range closer to 5-5.2 million. What’s your take on that? Do you think that’s conservative to aggressive, and specifically on the path?

Mike Nolan, Chief Executive Officer, FNF: Yeah. It’s Mike again, Oscar. I would say it’s... I think it seems to be a fair estimate. You know, again, it’s, it’s based on where rates are going to be, and I think MBA and Fannie Mae be a little different in their rate assumption, for, for 2026. But let’s, let’s assume rates hold around 6%. To see a 10% lift in, in existing home sales, I think would be a good number. You know, it could be better. I still believe there’s a lot of pent-up demand and, you know, you, you, you got to build your assumptions around sort of other things being equal, right? Probably the area that’s, that’s just got the, the better lift, even though it’s lower fee per file, is just the refinance activity.

and you didn’t ask this directly, but if you look at the ICE Mortgage Monitor report-

Oscar Nieves, Analyst, Stephens: Mm-hmm.

Mike Nolan, Chief Executive Officer, FNF: If you’re familiar with that, they show the sensitivity around mortgages in the money at different rate scenarios. And at 6%, they estimate there are 5.8 million mortgages in the money to refinance. And to give you the difference, at 6.25, it’s 3.5 million.

Oscar Nieves, Analyst, Stephens: Mm-hmm.

Mike Nolan, Chief Executive Officer, FNF: So just a 25 basis point movement, according to ICE, puts 2.3 million more people in the money to refi.

Oscar Nieves, Analyst, Stephens: Yeah.

Mike Nolan, Chief Executive Officer, FNF: We could see a nice refi uptick if rates stay low.

Operator: And to Mike’s point, it, you know, I think home prices have pretty much stabilized at this point. You really don’t see much growth there. And maybe in some markets, you even see some decline. So from an affordability standpoint-

Mike Nolan, Chief Executive Officer, FNF: ... It’s going to be driven primarily by rates. And if you think about the lock-in effect and people with low rates that are kind of built in. As you see rates, if we see them, you know, creep into the fives, not only do you have a refi opportunity that’s pretty staggering, but you also have plenty of people who have probably put off selling homes, and, you know, moving up and moving out because of that lock-in effect, and that would diminish, obviously, with lower rates.

Oscar Nieves, Analyst, Stephens: Yeah. And if I can ask a quick follow-up, since you just mentioned home price growth. Looking again at the forecast from MBA and Fannie Mae, they are quite different, with MBA roughly at 50 basis points and Fannie Mae closer to 2%. What’s your outlook on that? Do you think that 2% is way too high?

Mike Nolan, Chief Executive Officer, FNF: Yeah, I don’t know. We don’t really have anyone who studies that and tries to figure out. We try to rely on others. You know, it’s more anecdotal, what you read, what you see. I mean, if you look at our fee per file trends, they’re pretty modest over the course of the year. I think, if I’m looking at it here, our purchase fee per file is up about 3% versus the fourth quarter of 2024. Our refi fee per file is up about 4%. And so that tells me that home prices have been pretty, you know, pretty stable over the course of the last year. And I would think that that’s going to be pretty stable over the course of the next year as well.

Oscar Nieves, Analyst, Stephens: Thank you. I’ll get back in the queue.

Mike Nolan, Chief Executive Officer, FNF: Thanks.

Operator: Your next question comes from Mark Hughes with Truist Securities. Please state your question.

Mark Hughes, Analyst, Truist Securities: Yeah, thank you. Good afternoon. Good morning.

Mike Nolan, Chief Executive Officer, FNF: Good morning, Mark.

Mark Hughes, Analyst, Truist Securities: In the commercial fee per file in 2026 that you’ve described, do you think it’s as good or better overall for the coming year? Anything about the deal size that you’re seeing in the pipeline that gives you some indication about fee per file?

Mike Nolan, Chief Executive Officer, FNF: Yeah, Mark, it’s Mike. I would say that certainly in the fourth quarter, we saw bigger transactions that closed, maybe vis-a-vis, you know, the fourth quarter of last year, and our national commercial fee per file was up significantly, as you know. I would say we still have nice deals in the pipeline that should generate strong fee per files. I didn’t - I don’t think I said that I expect the commercial fee per file in 2026 to be as good or better. I think I said that that’s a bit more of the wild card because you don’t really know the mix. But there are a lot of good deals in the pipeline.

Mark Hughes, Analyst, Truist Securities: Yeah, understood. I was referring to, I think, your overall guidance was for as good or better in terms of the commercial volume. The inHere platform, you talked about, I think, 80% engagement. That’s been, I think last quarter, might, you might have said 85%, but, you know, assuming kind of relatively stable. Do you think the engagement has kind of stabilized? Anything structural around those engagement numbers we should look for those to hold steady or increase, perhaps?

Mike Nolan, Chief Executive Officer, FNF: Yeah, good question. I would expect them to increase. The engagement’s been great. The goal is really to be over 90%. And, the reason the numbers change around a bit, we were still migrating operations to the SoftPro, SoftPro platform as we went through the year, even through into the fourth quarter. And so as new operations get on, their engagement levels are lower, and then they build up over time. So in the operations that are a bit more mature on the platform, we’re getting engagement plus 90%.

Mark Hughes, Analyst, Truist Securities: Yeah, very good. And then finally, anything new from, on the regulatory front, on pilot program or anything from the FHFA that you’d throw out?

Mike Nolan, Chief Executive Officer, FNF: I would say it’s been quiet. The pilot still exists. I haven’t heard a lot about what the plans are. It’s my understanding it’s set to expire in May. Maybe gets extended. I don’t think we know. But it just doesn’t really seem to have impacted, you know, our deal flow, I would say, on the refi side.

Mark Hughes, Analyst, Truist Securities: Thank you very much.

Mike Nolan, Chief Executive Officer, FNF: Thanks, Mark.

Operator: Reminder to the audience, to ask a question, press star one on your telephone keypad. To remove your question from the queue, you can press star two. Your next question comes from Michael Dunlevy with Deutsche Bank. Please state your question.

Michael Dunlevy, Analyst, Deutsche Bank: Hi, guys. How are you doing?

Mike Nolan, Chief Executive Officer, FNF: Good.

Michael Dunlevy, Analyst, Deutsche Bank: I just wanted to follow up on Bose’s question, hey, on the title margin. You know, just given it ended the year so strong, do you still feel like that 15%-20% normalized range is the right range, you know, even with the AI efficiencies and so in the technology piece? And then it sounds like just given the recent trends, you still think that 26% should continue moving closer towards the midpoint of that range, if we assume Fannie Mae and MBA forecast. Is that right?

Mike Nolan, Chief Executive Officer, FNF: Yeah, Mike, it’s, it’s Mike. So, I would say long term, as we, as we see, you know, the impacts of, of more efficiencies and AI and things like that, that we might, we might or maybe not, not even long term, but we might consider changing the range. Right now, it still seems appropriate because even though we expect the year to be better, it’s still a very volatile environment. I think, as we all know. So, we’re still at existing home sales at 30-year lows for the last three years. So, you know, you’ve got that as a backdrop. With improvement in volumes like the Fannie Mae and MBA forecast and more refi, I do think we could move into more into that middle range of margin.

But remember, you know, we’ve got to get through the first quarter, and that’s the historically soft quarter for the industry. And, that always presents a little bit of a challenge around, you know, just where you can get on your full year margin.

Michael Dunlevy, Analyst, Deutsche Bank: Got it. Thanks. And then, I just wanted to check in on capital real quick as to... So I know you and FG both raised the dividend towards the end of the year. Could you just check back in on how you’re thinking about capital allocation going forward, and the types of businesses you might regularly be looking at from an M&A perspective?

Tony Park, Chief Financial Officer, FNF: Sure, Mike, this is Tony. I’ll start, Mike can pitch in. I mean, capital is, you know, pretty consistent in terms of what our normal capital allocation would be, which is the dividend, which, to your point, we raised it in the fourth quarter, as we typically do. And we expect to spend probably $560 million or so in cash to pay our common dividend. Our interest expense runs about $75 million, so very modest there. Obviously, we’re reinvesting in the business on a regular basis and continue to do that on the technology side and the efficiency side. And that really occurs before we even upstream anything to the holding company. And then beyond that, it becomes more opportunistic.

We look at acquisitions, to your question. We look at stock buybacks. I expect us to be active in both of those areas. I think you’ll see more acquisition activity in 2026 versus what we’ve seen the last few years. I think that our cash flow has been strong. I think there’s probably more opportunities in the title agent space and possibly some other areas as well. And then on the buyback front, we like to have a consistent cadence of buybacks as we work our way through the year when we’re not blacked out. But we’re also opportunistic, and to the extent we see a weakness in the share price, I expect us to be more aggressive like we were back in the second quarter.

I think, overall, I think I mentioned earlier, we returned about $800 million to shareholders in the form of dividends and buybacks in 2025, and I would expect another very strong cash flow generation year in 2026. Mike, I don’t know if you wanted to touch on M&A at all, or are we good?

Mike Nolan, Chief Executive Officer, FNF: I would just agree. I think there’ll be more opportunities in the M&A space as we go into 2026 and beyond, because it’s been fairly quiet, you know, for the past few years, so we’re excited about some opportunities there.

Michael Dunlevy, Analyst, Deutsche Bank: Great. Thanks a lot, guys.

Tony Park, Chief Financial Officer, FNF: Thank you.

Operator: Your next question comes from Jeffrey Dunn with Dowling and Partners. Please state your question.

Jeffrey Dunn, Analyst, Dowling and Partners: Thanks. Morning, guys.

Tony Park, Chief Financial Officer, FNF: Good morning.

Mike Nolan, Chief Executive Officer, FNF: Morning.

Jeffrey Dunn, Analyst, Dowling and Partners: Tony, what are your expectations for dividends up from operations in 2026, both from regulated and unregulated?

Tony Park, Chief Financial Officer, FNF: The regulated number is probably in the $400 million-$450 million range. That one, because it’s related to the prior year results on a statutory basis, that one’s certainly easier to estimate. The other operations is much more difficult. I think last year it was somewhere in the $600 million-$650 million range, and I wouldn’t be surprised to see that number or better in 2026. But again, that’s on real-time results, which obviously we would have to project that out.

Jeffrey Dunn, Analyst, Dowling and Partners: Got it. And then just following up on M&A, I’m curious if there’s any tech initiatives in the market that stand out as a neater opportunity and more attractive to buy than build?

Mike Nolan, Chief Executive Officer, FNF: Good, good question, Jeff. I would say from a tech stack standpoint, we feel comfortable about where we’re at. We will be investing more in our, our SoftPro platform, as we go forward, and obviously, we’ve got the inHere, really rolled out well. But if, if we saw things certainly in the, in the tech space, that would be helpful, we would, we would, we would buy it.

Jeffrey Dunn, Analyst, Dowling and Partners: Does anything particular stand out on the back end?

Tony Park, Chief Financial Officer, FNF: In terms of?

Jeffrey Dunn, Analyst, Dowling and Partners: Any need? I mean, for example, I think you’ve been renting your online notary services. You know, anything like that, that make more and more sense to bring in-house?

Tony Park, Chief Financial Officer, FNF: I don’t really think so. On the notary side, you’ve got, you know, various plugins there that we can take advantage of, and to own a notary company, I don’t think adds a lot of value. And then you’re in some notary businesses typically that aren’t title-related as well, and you got to think about whether you wanna do that. So, no, I think we’re good in that space.

Jeffrey Dunn, Analyst, Dowling and Partners: Okay, thanks.

Tony Park, Chief Financial Officer, FNF: Thanks.

Operator: Thank you, and this will conclude our question and answer session. I will now turn the conference back over to CEO, Mike Nolan, for closing remarks.

Tony Park, Chief Financial Officer, FNF: Thanks for joining our call this morning. We have delivered outstanding performance in 2025, with our complementary businesses executing well in the current market. The title segment is performing well in what is still a low transactional environment and is capitalizing on stronger commercial activity. We are well positioned for the current market and remain poised to benefit from a potential turn in the housing market, should mortgage rates drop further in 2026 and beyond. We remain bullish and continue to invest in the business for the long term while delivering industry-leading margins. Likewise, F&G is executing on its strategy that is focused on balancing continued growth in its spread-based business, alongside the fee-based flow reinsurance, middle market life insurance, and owned distribution strategies, as they focus on delivering long-term shareholder value. Thanks for your time this morning.

We appreciate your interest in FNF and look forward to updating you on our first quarter earnings call.

Operator: Thank you for attending today’s presentation. The conference call has concluded. You may now disconnect.