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Verisk VRSK Q4 2025 Earnings Call Transcript

The Motley FoolFeb 18, 2026 3:20 PM
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Date

Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026 at 8:30 a.m. ET

Call participants

  • Chief Executive Officer — Lee M. Shavel
  • Chief Financial Officer — Elizabeth D. Mann
  • Corporate Vice President, Auto Underwriting — Robert Newbold
  • President, Underwriting Solutions — Saurabh Khemka

Takeaways

  • GAAP revenue -- $779,000,000 for the quarter, increasing 5.9%.
  • GAAP net income -- $197,000,000, representing a 6.2% decrease, attributed to costs related to early debt extinguishment and absence of prior-year investment gains.
  • Diluted GAAP EPS -- $1.42, down 1%.
  • Organic constant currency (OCC) revenue growth -- 5.2% for the quarter, with underwriting up 7.2% and claims up 0.5%.
  • Transactional revenues -- Comprised 16% of total revenue; declined 6.5% on an OCC basis due to lower volumes in Property Estimating Solutions and softness in personal lines auto.
  • Subscription revenues -- Represented 84% of total; grew 7.7% on OCC basis, showing continued business health.
  • Full-year OCC revenue growth -- 6.6%, consistent with long-term targets.
  • OCC adjusted EBITDA growth -- 6.2% for the quarter and 8.5% for the year.
  • Adjusted EBITDA margin -- 56.1% for the quarter (up 200 bps), 56.2% for the year (up 150 bps); normalized 2025 operating margin would have been 55.8% excluding foreign currency benefits.
  • Free cash flow -- Increased 30% year over year to $1,190,000,000 for the full year; fourth quarter free cash flow was $276,000,000.
  • Shareholder returns -- $286,000,000 returned in the fourth quarter through repurchases and dividends; announced $1,500,000,000 accelerated share repurchase (ASR) program and 11% dividend increase to $2 per share annually.
  • 2026 guidance -- Revenue expected between $3,190,000,000 and $3,240,000,000; adjusted EBITDA of $1,790,000,000 to $1,830,000,000; margin 56%-56.5%; capital expenditure $260,000,000-$280,000,000; adjusted EPS $7.45-$7.75; tax rate 23%-26%.
  • Portfolio activity -- Terminated AccuLinks acquisition due to extended FTC review; sold Verisk Marketing Solutions, removing a $68,000,000 revenue contribution.
  • AI and product launches -- Introduced ExactGen, an AI-enabled estimating product following launches of Exact Expert and Exact AI; over 35 AI-powered solutions in production and more planned for 2026.
  • Catastrophe and risk solutions -- Delivered another quarter of double-digit growth driven by contract expansion, renewals, and new clients; strong interest in Verisk Energy Studio.
  • Operating leverage -- Margin improvement derived from sales growth and ongoing cost discipline ( 200 bps quarterly, 150 bps for the year).
  • Client engagement -- Over 600 client engagements in 2025, exceeding module deployment targets with 22 deployed (vs. 20 planned) and 25 more expected in 2026.

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Risks

  • Fourth quarter transactional revenue declined 6.5% on OCC basis, driven by lower Property Estimating Solutions volumes and softness in personal lines auto.
  • First quarter 2026 reported revenue is expected to be lower by a low single-digit percentage as a result of the Verisk Marketing Solutions divestiture, lower weather activity, and a government contract work stoppage.
  • Higher interest expense projected for 2026 ($190,000,000-$200,000,000) due to the ASR funding and debt levels.

Summary

Verisk Analytics (NASDAQ:VRSK) reported fiscal 2025 results featuring modest top-line and margin expansion, led by strong subscription revenue growth and new AI-enabled product launches, while fiscal year net income declined from non-operating items impacting GAAP results. Management executed key portfolio actions, terminating the AccuLinks acquisition and divesting Verisk Marketing Solutions, reshaping the revenue base and enabling a sizeable shareholder return program. Strategic guidance for 2026 targets another year of revenue, EBITDA, and adjusted EPS growth, with operational leverage and innovation sustainably prioritized through increased capital spending and margins above normalized historical baselines.

  • The Board authorized a $2,500,000,000 share repurchase plan, including a $1,500,000,000 accelerated program and an 11% dividend increase to $2 per share annually.
  • Leadership stated over 35 AI-driven initiatives are underway, with ExactGen representing the latest in advanced property estimating, integrating agentic AI, third-party data, and aerial imagery to streamline claims settlement.
  • Catastrophe and risk solutions posted double-digit growth, and several competitive wins were achieved with new and expanded client contracts.
  • Management outlined that, after foreign currency effects, normalized 2025 EBITDA margin was 55.8%, with 2026 guidance implying modest expansion absent discrete FX benefits.
  • The company cited ongoing headwinds from weather-related activity declines, government contract pauses, and personal lines auto softness, particularly affecting transactional revenues early in 2026.

Industry glossary

  • OCC (Organic constant currency): Revenue or profit growth excluding acquisitions, divestitures, and foreign exchange impacts, reflecting core business performance.
  • ASR (Accelerated share repurchase): A method of executing a large stock buyback rapidly by purchasing shares from an investment bank up front.
  • Agentic AI: Artificial intelligence systems capable of autonomous data gathering, synthesis, and action-taking within workflow applications.
  • Coreline Reimagine program: Internal initiative to digitize and upgrade Verisk's core forms, rules, and loss cost content, providing clients with new analytics and workflow modules.
  • ExactGen/Exact AI/Exact Expert: Proprietary AI-enabled solutions for property claims estimation, built on Verisk datasets and integrated into claims processes.

Full Conference Call Transcript

However, we are not able to provide a reconciliation of projected adjusted EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA margin to the most directly comparable expected GAAP results because of the unreasonable effort and high unpredictability of estimating certain items that are excluded from projected non-GAAP adjusted EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA margin, including, for example, tax consequences, acquisition-related costs, gains and losses from dispositions, and other nonrecurring expenses, the effect of which may be significant. And now I would like to turn the call over to Lee M. Shavel. Thanks, Stacey.

Lee M. Shavel: Good morning, and thank you for taking the time to join us this morning. Today, I will provide a broad overview of our fourth quarter and full year 2025 results and portfolio actions as well as our financial and strategic outlook for the year ahead. Elizabeth will give a more detailed view in our financial review. I will also offer recent perspective on our industry engagement including client discussions around current operating environment and developments around the uses of advanced technologies including the evolution of AI. Finally, I will finish with some updates on recent inventions we have introduced into the market to provide some context on how we are leveraging the demand and opportunity. Turning to the results.

I am pleased to share that Verisk Analytics, Inc. delivered solid financial results for 2025 marked by organic constant currency revenue growth of 6.6%, organic constant currency adjusted EBITDA growth of 8.5%, and strong free cash flow growth. This growth was in line with the guidance that we provided at the beginning of the year and was achieved despite some temporary headwinds including a year of very low weather activity. The solid financial results in 2025 close out the three-year period with growth at or above the midpoint of the long-term expectations we set at Investor Day in 2023.

As we look ahead, we continue to have confidence in delivering against our long-term growth targets based on the ongoing adoption of data and technology across the global insurance industry and our opportunity to support the needs of our clients and address their objectives with our distinct capabilities. Before we turn to the strategic discussion, I want to address the two portfolio actions taken at the end of the fourth quarter.

Operator: First,

Lee M. Shavel: we made the difficult decision to terminate the definitive agreement to purchase AccuLinks. We had strong conviction that the acquisition could create substantial value for the insurance ecosystem and would drive growth and generate strong returns on capital for Verisk Analytics, Inc. We went to great lengths and made extensive efforts to address FTC requests. That said, following the notice from the FTC that the review would be extended, the opportunity cost of waiting on the sidelines through a long, uncertain, and costly approval process was too high given the rapidly evolving environment. Second, we sold Verisk Marketing Solutions during the quarter.

This transaction is a demonstration of our ongoing portfolio management and our commitment to focusing on data analytics and technology solutions for the global insurance industry. Turning to 2026, the insurance industry is healthy, coming off a strong 2025 marked by solid mid-single-digit net written premium growth, and consistently better year-over-year combined ratios, reflecting strong overall profitability. This is positive for the industry's interest and capability to adopt and integrate improved data, analytics, and technology into their businesses, particularly at a time when efficiency, better risk selection, and the adoption and integration of new technologies are top of mind.

This is one of the reasons I am so pleased to share that Steve Cotterer has joined Verisk Analytics, Inc. to lead our claims business. Steve brings with him valuable perspective and intensive expertise developed across his three decades of experience working as a consultant at firms including McKinsey,

Operator: Bain,

Lee M. Shavel: and most recently Parthenon. Steve has focused on advising leading global carriers and brokers on transforming insurance industry workflows using data and technology including AI, and will be instrumental in advancing our client engagement and building on our active partnership with the industry. Turning our attention to client engagement, we are in constant dialogue with our clients covering strategic and technological issues and over the last year, I have been part of many C-suite conversations with chief underwriting officers, chief risk officers, and chief claims officers to discuss their AI strategies and how they would like to work with Verisk Analytics, Inc. in adapting our data, analytics, and connectivity to their evolving needs.

There were two common elements in these conversations. One, how can we continue to enhance the critical data that the industry overwhelmingly trusts us to provide and two, how can we help support practical, safe, and regulatorily approved applications of evolving AI technologies with good ROIs. The unique nature of the insurance industry requires a massive amount of specific and representative data in order to ensure rate adequacy, evaluate claims fairly, promote competition and innovation as well as satisfy the needs of regulators. High quality data is critical for accuracy and effectiveness.

And Verisk Analytics, Inc. is in a unique position as one of very few providers who currently aggregate data from multiple sources, organize it, and normalize it, in order to glean insights about risk at a granular level and include that in innovative products and services it files on behalf of our clients. In fact, Verisk Analytics, Inc. submits over 2,000 regulatory product filings each year on behalf of our clients and our government relations teams interact with all 50 state regulators on a daily basis. And it is this data quality, breadth, and organization that is essential to effective AI deployment.

We already have the data infrastructure in place, and, in many instances, have AI tools built into associated workflows to enhance carrier accuracy and efficiency. In fact, we currently have more than 35 AI-powered projects and solutions for both internal and external purposes in use today. And we have plans to introduce many more throughout 2026. In order to illustrate this more concretely, I wanted to share one very specific description of our integration of the evolving range of AI technologies into our products, its adoption by our clients, the unique strengths we bring to that process.

I recently returned from our Elevate conference in Salt Lake City where we bring together key participants in the claims process including carriers, adjusters, contractors, and other ecosystem technology partners to discuss technology development and adoption for this professional community that is dedicated to helping policyholders recover from damage to their property. At the conference, we unveiled the next generation of our AI-enabled estimating products, ExactGen. This product builds on a progression of AI technology that started with Exact Expert which we launched in 2023.

Exact Expert uses rules-based logic and machine learning to assist estimators with identifying discrepancies in their estimates, providing advice on what questions should be asked, and correcting errors based on their employer's established rule set and experience. Exact Expert has been rapidly adopted industry wide including by seven of the top 10 homeowners insurers and now serves tens of thousands of adjusters and estimators. At the conference, a major restoration contractor referred to Exact Expert as, quote, an industry game changer. The rapid adoption of the product relied on trust in our proprietary cost repair data sets that underlies the technology and that estimators rely on for their work, and the common process platform in Xactimate that connects industry professionals.

We expanded our offering of advanced technologies in our property estimating solutions in October 2025 with the launch of Exact AI. Exact AI applies generative AI to the production of initial estimates with content input from the Xactware platform. As part of the conference, I hosted a fireside chat with the CEO of one of the leading adjusting firms, shared his excitement about the AI platform, and shared that they are training thousands of their employees on the technology. Again, this solution builds on our established and proprietary datasets as well as the workflows relied upon by carrier claims professionals, independent adjusters, and contractors to smoothly settle and resolve a claim, ultimately benefiting policyholders.

And now the addition of ExactGen, are adding agentic AI to handle content gathering from many sources, including aerial imagery providers, policyholder photos, and policy information from the carrier, amongst others, to generate near-complete exterior and interior estimates and facilitate settlement and resolution with the involved parties. Not only does ExactGen benefit from the established network of carriers, contractors, and adjusters, but we are integrating data and content from the broader network of technology providers who we have incorporated into our ecosystem. This reduces the burden of on-site professionals because they are spending less time gathering and waiting for information and more time with the affected insured client, accelerating the pace of recovery.

The feedback was enthusiastic about how this could improve efficiency and help reduce resolution times, which have long been challenges for the industry. I could take you through similar examples across our other businesses, but the themes and our competitive advantages would remain the same, namely, one, the critical value of our data sets to AI, two, an established industry process and domain expertise to innovate from, three, the importance of existing connectivity to multiple parties in the ecosystem, and four, the ability to invest in innovation at scale and deliver technology across a large installed base, providing an economic advantage to the client and a stronger return on invested capital.

It is these same competitive advantages that we capitalize upon to create growth and value for the insurance industry through prior technology transformations, including digitization, cloud, and SaaS. As our 2025 results demonstrated, our business and economic model are strong, as we crossed the $3 billion mark in revenue and delivered another year of solid growth and profitability, robust free cash flow generation, and strong returns on invested capital. We are well positioned to benefit from AI, drive new innovation, further connect the insurance ecosystem, and deliver growth in line with our long-term growth targets.

We are energized by the opportunity that lies ahead and are looking forward to speaking about our plans in more detail at our Investor Day on March 5. I will now turn the call over to Elizabeth. Thanks, Lee.

Elizabeth D. Mann: And good day to everyone on the call. On a consolidated and GAAP basis, fourth quarter revenue was $779,000,000, up 5.9% versus the prior year. Net income was $197,000,000, a 6.2% decrease versus the prior year, while diluted GAAP earnings per share were $1.42, down 1% versus the prior year. The decrease in diluted net income and GAAP EPS was due to non-operating items including costs incurred in the current year associated with the early extinguishment of debt, and net gains on the settlement of investments recognized in the prior year.

Moving to our organic constant currency results adjusted for non-operating items, as defined in the non-GAAP financial measures section of our press release, Verisk Analytics, Inc. delivered OCC revenue growth of 5.2%, with growth of 7.2% in underwriting, and 0.5% in claims. This growth compounded from 8.6% growth in the prior year period which included the impact of Hurricane Helene and Milton, and was delivered despite the temporary headwinds we had called out previously, namely a historically low level of weather activity and a reduction in a government contract. Together, those two factors combined for an impact of approximately 1% to overall OCC revenue growth in the quarter.

For the full year 2025, we delivered OCC revenue growth of 6.6%, marking another year of growth in line with our expectations and in line with our long-term targeted growth range. The continued strong growth of our subscription revenues is the clearest demonstration of the ongoing health of our business. Subscription revenues, which comprised 84% of our total revenues in the quarter, grew 7.7% on an OCC basis, compounding from the 11% organic constant currency increase that we delivered in 2024. The drivers of growth in the quarter were consistent with trends we have seen throughout 2025, including strength across our largest subscription businesses, namely forms, rules and loss costs, catastrophe and risk solutions, and antifraud.

Just a quick note, we have officially renamed our Extreme Event Solutions to Catastrophe and Risk Solutions, which we think more accurately describes the breadth of solutions we deliver to the global insurance ecosystem. In forms, rules and loss costs, we continue to execute against and realize the benefits of our Coreline Reimagine program, which is driving strong value realization throughout the renewal process. Throughout 2025, we enhanced our engagement with clients both in terms of frequency of meetings, and seniority of teams we are engaging with.

The net result was over 600 client engagements including deep dives, that have served to help us better understand how our clients are leveraging our innovations, while providing us with feedback on how to continue to enhance our solutions in a rapidly evolving environment. In total, we released 22 customer-facing modules, ahead of our target of 20 for the year, with a further 25 modules planned for release in 2026. Once those modules are introduced this year, we will have delivered upon the original scope of the Reimagine investment program.

We will continue to drive further enhancement of our proprietary content with additional tools and functionality powered by the evolution of AI, enhancing the value for our clients and for Verisk Analytics, Inc. Within catastrophe and risk solutions, we delivered another quarter of double-digit growth driven by the expansion of contracts with existing clients, solid renewal, and the addition of new logos, including competitive wins. We are seeing strong interest in Verisk Energy Studio, and clients are expanding their hosting relationships with Verisk Analytics, Inc. in preparation for the launch of the platform later this year.

Lee M. Shavel: In antifraud,

Elizabeth D. Mann: our ecosystem strategy was further enhanced this year, through the introduction of new partnerships, bringing us to a total of 18 integrations offering new features and functionality to the industry standard ClaimSearch platform. This has helped us drive strong value realization. Additionally, we have continued to drive growth with non-carrier clients including third-party administrators and health care subrogation companies. While we remain in the early stages of commercialization, we are seeing strong interest and uptake in new advanced antifraud inventions, including Claims Coverage Identifier, and Digital Media Forensics. Our transactional revenues, which comprise 16% of total revenues, declined 6.5% on an OCC basis in the fourth quarter.

The primary driver of the transactional revenue decline was lower volume in our Property Estimating Solutions business, resulting from continued low levels of weather activity. As a reminder, 2024 included a transaction benefit of slightly less than 1% of total revenue associated with Hurricanes Helene and Milton. Additionally, as we noted on our prior call, softness in our personal lines auto business also negatively impacted growth. Moving to our adjusted EBITDA results, OCC adjusted EBITDA growth was 6.2% in the quarter, while total adjusted EBITDA margin, which includes both organic and inorganic results, was 56.1%, up 200 basis points from the prior-year period.

This quarter's margin benefited by approximately 50 basis points from favorable foreign currency translation, with the balance driven by leverage on solid sales growth and ongoing cost discipline. For the full year 2025, OCC adjusted EBITDA grew 8.5%, while adjusted EBITDA margins were 56.2%, up 150 basis points year over year. This margin reflects core operating leverage on solid revenue growth and our continued cost discipline, while absorbing the impact of our self-funded investments back into our business to fund future growth. On a full-year basis, foreign currency translation improved margins by 40 basis points. As such, the normalized operating margin would have been 55.8% for 2025.

We do not anticipate large foreign currency impacts on our margins as we move into 2026, as we have taken structural balance sheet actions to reduce volatility going forward. Continuing down the income statement, net interest expense was $57,000,000 compared to $35,000,000 in the prior-year period, due to higher debt balances and interest rates as well as debt issuance costs. This was partially offset by higher interest income on elevated cash balances. On 01/06/2026, we redeemed the $1,500,000,000 in senior notes that were issued in connection with the previously announced planned acquisition of AccuLink. These notes were redeemed following the termination of the definitive agreement to purchase AccuLink in accordance with their special mandatory redemption feature.

Pro forma for the redemption, our leverage would have been at 1.9 times at year end.

Lee M. Shavel: Our reported effective

Elizabeth D. Mann: tax rate was 19.5%, compared to 26% in the prior-year period. The year-over-year decline was primarily due to tax benefits recognized in connection with the sale of Verisk Marketing Solutions, as well as other discrete tax items. On a full-year basis, our tax rate was 22.5% as compared to 22.6% in the prior year. Adjusted net income increased 11.3% to $253,000,000, and diluted adjusted EPS increased 13% for the quarter. The increase was driven by solid revenue growth, strong margin expansion, a lower tax rate, and lower average share count. This was partially offset by higher interest expense.

For the full year, adjusted EPS of $7.16 was up 7.8%, reflecting strong operational results and a lower share count, offset in part by higher interest expense and higher depreciation expense. From a cash flow perspective, on a reported basis, net cash from operating activities increased 34% to $343,000,000, while free cash flow increased to $276,000,000. On a full-year basis, free cash flow increased 30% to $1,190,000,000, reflecting solid operating profit growth and some benefit from the timing of certain cash tax payments and the timing of interest income and interest expense paid. We are committed to a shareholder-centric deployment of that powerful free cash flow generation. During the quarter, we returned $286,000,000 through repurchases and dividends.

Today, I am pleased to announce our intention to execute a $1,500,000,000 accelerated share repurchase program in the coming days, supported by our Board's approval of an increase in our share repurchase authorization to $2,500,000,000 inclusive of the previously remaining authorization amount. After the ASR, we will have a further $1,000,000,000 in authorization, which will provide flexibility for continued open market purchases subject to market conditions. Our Board has also approved an 11% increase to our dividend to $2 per share annually. As we discussed, we enter 2026 with clear strategic momentum, and are capitalizing on the substantial opportunity in a rapidly evolving environment.

To that end, we are pleased to deliver our outlook for 2026 which builds upon the solid performance from 2025. All guidance figures reflect the impact of the sale of Verisk Marketing Solutions, which contributed $68,000,000 in revenue in 2025 and was included in our underwriting subsegment. Our guidance also assumes current foreign currency exchange rates and current interest rates.

Lee M. Shavel: More specifically,

Elizabeth D. Mann: we expect consolidated revenue for 2026 to be in the range of $3,190,000,000 to $3,240,000,000. We expect adjusted EBITDA to be in the range of $1,790,000,000 to $1,830,000,000 and adjusted EBITDA margin in the range of 56% to 56.5%. This margin compares to the normalized baseline of 55.8%, as reported margins in 2025 included a 40 basis point nonrecurring benefit from foreign currency translation that I spoke about earlier. We expect interest expense to be between $190,000,000 and $200,000,000. This level reflects our plan to use some of our excess balance sheet capacity to execute the $1,500,000,000 ASR.

We expect capital expenditure to be within the range of $260,000,000 to $280,000,000 as we continue to prioritize organic investment in our business, our highest return on capital opportunities. We expect our tax rate in 2026 to be in the range of 23% to 26%. This range is slightly above our long-term structural rate, reflecting our expectation of a lower level of stock option exercise activity. This culminates in adjusted earnings per share in the range of $7.45 to $7.75. We would note that the sale of Verisk Marketing Solutions presents an $0.11 headwind to EPS. Specific to the pacing of growth throughout the year, we want to bring a few things to your attention.

First, we have tougher comparisons in the first half of the year as 2025 benefited from a strong subscription renewal cycle across our largest underwriting businesses in particular.

Lee M. Shavel: Second,

Elizabeth D. Mann: because of the low level of weather activity in 2025, we enter the year with a lower run rate of volume in our property repair estimating

Lee M. Shavel: platform.

Elizabeth D. Mann: Especially compared to the prior year, which had carryover impact from the storms in the fourth quarter 2024. And third, there is a work stoppage on a certain government contract that started in the first quarter and will impact revenue growth. Taking all this together, we anticipate first quarter 2026 reported revenue will be lower than reported revenue in 2025 by a low single-digit percentage, given the divestiture of Verisk Marketing Solutions.

Lee M. Shavel: We do expect growth in reported revenue

Elizabeth D. Mann: on a year-over-year basis and on a sequential basis when normalized for the sale of Marketing Solutions. Additionally, we anticipate the first quarter to be the trough both in terms of reported dollars and growth rates. A complete listing of all guidance measures can be found in the earnings slide deck which has been posted to the Investors section of our website, verisk.com. And before I turn the call over to Lee for some closing comments, I would like to remind you that we are looking forward to hosting everyone at our upcoming Investor Day on March 5.

Lee M. Shavel: Thanks, Elizabeth. We are excited about the growth opportunities ahead and have confidence in delivering a year of growth in 2026 that is in line with our long-term growth targets and compounds the solid year in 2025. We continue to appreciate all the support and interest in Verisk Analytics, Inc. Given the large number of analysts we have covering us, we ask that you limit yourself to one question. With that, I will ask the operator to open the line for questions. Thank you.

Operator: We will now begin the question-and-answer session. If you have dialed in and would like to ask a question, please press 1 on your telephone keypad to raise your hand and join the queue. If you would like to withdraw your questions, simply press 1 again. If you are called upon to ask your question and are listening via speakerphone in your device, please pick up your handset to ensure that your phone is not on mute when asking your question. We do request for today's session that you please limit to one question only. Thank you. And our first question comes from the line of Toni Michele Kaplan with Morgan Stanley. Your line is open. Thanks so much.

Lee, you mentioned that you recently had many conversations with your clients. And so I was wondering when you are talking to them, would they prefer to be the ones to use your data to create AI products themselves so they have an advantage versus other insurers, or would they prefer that you create the AI product so that they do not have to spend the capital doing it? And maybe also, are they able to use your data as an input into third-party AI products? Thanks.

Lee M. Shavel: Yeah. Toni, thank you very much for the question. I know it is a great, great question to, I think, frame the conversations. And the answer is both based upon the nature, typically the scale, sometimes the sophistication of the client. But in those conversations, particularly with our largest clients, they want to compare what their objectives are in AI, recognizing that our data is a critical input for that function, and so they first want to have a coordinating or an alignment discussion to make certain that we are delivering the data in a format that can be effectively utilized by AI.

We have been working on establishing model context protocols and MCP servers to be able to meet those needs. But part of that discussion is also look. Here is what we are looking to develop, and what do you have, or how are you integrating AI that may be an efficiency for them so that they can dedicate their dollars to more differentiating, competitively oriented applications. On the smaller side, I think we have a lot of clients that are daunted by the breadth of AI development.

And so in those contexts, there is clearly more interest in how they can get a clearer and stronger return on their investment by testing and utilizing a number of the AI products that we are applying to our existing processes and our products. That was something, as I mentioned in my prepared remarks, where you could see particularly in the contracting firm, the estimating firm, and on the claims professional side, where there is strong adoption of that AI because in many cases, those are smaller midsized companies and we can deploy that are more interested in getting that immediate, immediate benefit. AI across an established process that they are familiar with.

So I think it is both, but the important thing is our data is at the core because that analytics function relies on good quality industry-wide data. And there is a recognition that

Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, this is the operator. I apologize, but there will be a slight delay in the conference, and we will resume shortly.

Lee M. Shavel: Thank you.

Operator: Please stay on the line. Hello there, everyone. This is the operator again. Our speakers are in. Please proceed. Yep. So, Toni, can you let us know where we dropped off

Lee M. Shavel: in terms of the answering? How much of that did you catch?

Operator: Yep. Oh, Toni may have dropped as well. So I am just going to recap

Lee M. Shavel: briefly the question from Toni. Is, you know, to what extent are clients looking to utilize your data and Verisk Analytics, Inc.'s applications relative to their own applications?

And my answer was, there really is a range from our largest, most sophisticated clients who emphasize that they want to use our data, in many cases are looking to develop their own AI applications, also interested in what they can leverage in terms of what they are doing on existing either underwriting or claims applications, and from smaller and midsized there is more of an interest in relying on the AI that we are integrating into our product and process given their scale and desire to achieve a faster return on investment. So, you know, that is in essence, the response to Toni’s question.

Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Manav Shiv Patnaik with Barclays. Your line is open.

Lee M. Shavel: Thank you. Maybe just to follow up on that question to a certain extent. You have talked about the softwareization of

Andrew Owen Nicholas: Verisk Analytics, Inc. over the years. I was just curious how much of the software and analytics that you sell come tied with the data that you have versus separate and, you know, how those relationships and contract structures might change in this new environment?

Lee M. Shavel: Yes. Thanks, Manav. Also a great question. And I think the primary application of software in our context is in the delivery of data and the integration of the ecosystems to deliver the data and the outcomes that facilitate improved efficiency and functionality of those ecosystems. So it is inherently a data delivery device and a data connectivity element that is integral to that core process. And I think we see that in whitespace. We see that in the Core Lines Reimagine upgrades where we have provided new connectivity and deeper connectivity to our data sets. On the claims side, the Xactware function, the antifraud functions are software delivered, but at the core, it is a data and analytics function.

Some of the smaller businesses, like our life business, is going to be a policy administration system, but it is tied to data and is delivering significant economic benefits to participants within the marketplace. But the predominance of our software footprint is related to that data delivery and integration function.

Operator: Next question comes from the line of Faiza Alwy with Deutsche Bank. Your line is open. Yes. Hi. Thank you. So, also wanted to follow up on the same topic. And, you know, I guess I wanted to ask that as you are rolling out these new technologies, do you expect to see sort of better ability to take pricing for the value that you are providing and if there is any differentiation in terms of customer type? And, you know, similarly, what does this mean for margins in terms, you know, cost of innovations versus the efficiencies that you are now able to generate?

Lee M. Shavel: Thank you, Faiza. So all of our businesses are fundamentally value-driven from a pricing standpoint. And I think there are kind of two key elements. One is that are we able to make that investment, monetize it and deliver that functionality at a lower cost relative to what our client is able to deploy, and are we able to find new uses of data that create value through our clients’ utilization of AI. Both of those are going should drive incremental revenues because we are creating value for the client. And as we are with a number of our investments looking to participate in that value creation.

From a margin standpoint, I think the incremental margin on the use of that data, I think there is inherent operating leverage associated with that. That is beneficial. And we are also implementing AI in a variety of contexts that improves the productivity of the functions, whether it is on the coding side or whether it is on the data ingestion or data normalization function, is beneficial from an operational standpoint. And so we do believe that this is supportive of our operating leverage and serves to fund a lot of the investment that we are making in AI.

Operator: Next question comes from the line of Andrew Owen Nicholas with William Blair. Your line is open.

Andrew Owen Nicholas: Hi, good morning. Appreciate you taking my question.

Lee M. Shavel: I wanted to switch gears a little bit and just talk about transactional growth or declines of late. And Elizabeth, if you could speak to the path to recovery there. I appreciate all the commentary on first quarter. But as we think about kind of the acceleration of that line over the course of the year and looking ahead to

Andrew Owen Nicholas: to '27, do you feel like that is a

Lee M. Shavel: line that can grow organically at some point in '26, or what are the different levers there that we should have in mind?

Andrew Owen Nicholas: Thank you.

Elizabeth D. Mann: Yes. Thanks for the question, Andrew. In the let me start with, you know, in the fourth quarter itself, really, the primary contributor to that drop is comparison to the

Charles Gregory Peters: storm in the prior year, and that makes up far the bulk of that decline. There are other areas of tough comps and some of the temporary factors that we talked about. There are also other areas of strength in that underlying that fourth quarter transactional growth, such as the securitization. If you look at it on a three-year basis, it is still a three-year positive CAGR on the transactional side. And there have been a couple different factors that moved through in 2024. There were challenging comps to the double digits in the prior year. There was also the conversion of transactional revenue to subscription, which was kind of throughout some of '24 and some of '25.

And then more recently in '25, we have had some of the tougher comps on weather and lower weather volumes, as well as the auto side. So all those things said, we do expect to work through those through the '25, '26. And do over the long term expect transactional revenue to be a source of strength.

Operator: Next question comes from the line of George Tong with Goldman Sachs. Your line is open. For your guidance for 2026 EBITDA margins, it looks like you are

Alexander Kramm: looking for not a significant amount of margin expansion. Can you discuss some of the puts and takes you are embedding into your margin outlook for the year in terms of balancing investments with cost efficiencies?

Elizabeth D. Mann: Yes. Thanks for the question, George. So first of all, we

Charles Gregory Peters: we look at it, we should look at 2025 on a normalized basis. While the reported margins were 56.2%, we did call out that included 40 basis points of foreign currency translation kind of balance sheet impact that we do not expect to continue. So we view the normalized, the operational baseline, 55.8. The 56 to 56.5 is that guidance is, does show modest but meaningful margin expansion from there, which balances the efficiencies that we are able to get in our business, the operating leverage that we continue to expect, while managing to significantly fund exciting and in some of the AI products that Lee had talked about.

Alexander Kramm: Got it. Thank you.

Operator: Next question comes from the line of Wenting Zhu with Autonomous Research. Your line is open. Hi. Good morning. Thanks for taking my question. Was wondering if you can talk a little bit more about any recent changes to the broader selling environment or sales cycle that you are seeing as P&C insurance industry transitions from hard to soft markets, think the profitability of the carriers should improve and that should translate to better budget environment for data and analytics. So just curious if you are seeing or hearing that from your customers. Thanks a lot.

Lee M. Shavel: Thank you, Kelsey. I am glad to address that. So I would say that cautiously I think we are seeing an improving sales cycle in this. And as you have indicated, as we have seen a normalization in the net written premium growth, there is always a growth motivation from the carriers. There is obviously always a risk and a profitability focus on their part. And in a lower growth environment, I think there is a tendency to look to utilize more tools, whether it is data or analytics, to help them understand where their opportunities for profitable growth are and how their risk assessment can be improved in a more difficult environment.

And so I think that, you know, that, along with the heightened profitability that they have experienced, you give them the resources as well as the motivation to explore more interest in selling. And then that ties into, I think, the opportunity on AI side to see how that is additive to their functions from a process and from an efficiency standpoint. So I would say we view that as a net positive from an environmental standpoint.

Operator: Next question comes from the line of Gregory Peters with Raymond James. Your line is open.

Lee M. Shavel: Good morning, everyone.

Alexander Kramm: I guess I am going to focus my question on the annual price increases in OCC. Lee, you mentioned how you have been talking with your customers and I am curious about the feedback they are providing you on the annual

Lee M. Shavel: price increases that are embedded into your contracts. And maybe, Elizabeth, you can remind us when we think about '26, or '27,

Alexander Kramm: what component of OCC will include or be benefited by the price increases that you expect to get? Yep.

Lee M. Shavel: Thank you. Thanks, Greg. Let me start off, and then Elizabeth will follow up. So I think the general comment that I would make, and it is more than what we are hearing, although hearing what we are hearing from clients has been positive. It is also in terms of what we have been able to achieve in our longer-term multiyear contracts with our largest customers. And so what we are hearing is a clear recognition of the value of the investments that we have made to improve and digitize a lot of those datasets, providing more access, more functionality, more insights onto what we are doing, and more connectivity.

So I will talk about it first on the underwriting side. The ability to provide more frequent updates, for instance, on our loss experience that we are now providing quarterly within that business is a clear value enhancement for our clients to be able to see the trends more accurately. The broader industry insights within lines of business has been well received. And so they have felt as though they are getting more value. They have seen the investments that we have made. And that has translated into strong renewals with, you know, annual increases that reflect the value that our clients are driving. This goes back to the point, you know, all of our growth is value oriented.

And that is what we are hearing, and that is what we are experiencing. You know, similarly, coming off of the Elevate conference in our claims property estimating solutions area, our success in integrating now over 140 ecosystem partners has provided a lot of value and improved connectivity for our clients that has been very well received. It has reduced their costs and effort of purchasing the incremental analytics or functionality that those players provide, which creates value for them, and provides new sources of data to assess their operational performance.

And so similarly, notwithstanding the weather dynamics, you know, we have gotten very positive feedback and engagement from clients around how they see the value, and that naturally supports the pricing environment. So that is the way I would describe it, Greg, and I will turn it over to Elizabeth to add her perspective.

Elizabeth D. Mann: Yeah. I think that is a great perspective. You know, not too much to add because, Greg, we do not give, you know, sort of specific annual price ranges per year. There is a wide range of outcomes for the carriers. I think, in general, we would comment that after three years of historically very strong pricing environment, it may be modestly coming down versus the prior year, but still historically very strong, reflecting the value of the solutions that Lee talked about.

Operator: Next question comes from the line of Scott Wurtzel with Wolfe Research. Your line is open.

Alexander Kramm: Hey. Good morning, guys, and thank you for taking my questions. Just wondering if you can give an update on sort of the competitive dynamics on the kind of auto personal line side of things. I know that has been a little bit of a headwind to growth. But just wondering if you can give an update on some of the maybe actions you are taking to, you know, maybe stem some of those competitive dynamics. Thanks.

Lee M. Shavel: Yeah. Scott, thank you very much for the question. I am going to turn over to my colleague, Robert Newbold, who has responsibility for our auto underwriting business to share some color there. Yeah. Thanks, Lee. So

Andrew Owen Nicholas: as I have looked at the business, we see the challenges in the business come from first, the one-time revenues that peaked in 2024 and is minimal now due to the lack of

Lee M. Shavel: demand for nonrate action products. And then secondly, you know, where we have products that are not differentiated in marketplace, and that is where the competitive challenges come from. And we will work through those challenges through 2026. But where we are focused on is delivering differentiated analytics that drive long-term subscription growth. And to that end, we have launched a new enhancement to our SLAC

Jeffrey Silber: coverage verified product that delivers

Andrew Owen Nicholas: new readable insights at the point of growth.

Jeffrey Silber: Now this is an innovation that is the subject of almost all our client conversations today, and we are encouraged by the interest that they are seeing in this solution. So our focus going forward will be on these differentiated analytics that drive long-term subscription growth.

Operator: Next question comes from the line of Jason Daniel Haas with Wells Fargo. Your line is open.

Andrew Owen Nicholas: Hi, good morning, and thanks for taking my question. I wanted to follow up on some of the margin commentary.

Lee M. Shavel: Correct me if I am wrong, but I was getting about a 60 bps tailwind from the divestiture of VMS. So that would mean that all the

Andrew Owen Nicholas: that is right. That would mean basically, all the margin expansion you are guiding to is coming from that. So can you talk about if that is all correct,

Lee M. Shavel: can you talk about why there is no

Andrew Owen Nicholas: margin expansion X the VMS divestiture for 2026? Is it investment in the business? How should we think about, like, the long-term trajectory of margins going forward? Thank you.

Elizabeth D. Mann: Yeah. Thanks. Thanks, Jason, for the question. I am not

Charles Gregory Peters: sure where you are getting that VMS comment. We can take that offline with you. But there may be other elements in that in some of the M&A line. There are some acquisitions as well. So let us take that offline. We are still exhibiting operating leverage across our businesses to deliver margin expansion.

Operator: Next question comes from the line of David Paige with Rothschild and Company Redburn. Your line is open.

Jeffrey Silber: Yeah. Hi, everyone. Thanks for having me on. We had a follow up on the cross

Saurabh Khemka: sell environment as carriers are improving their profitability. You mentioned module deployment has been very strong, but any incremental color you could give on adoption of these modules would be very helpful. And then as you move past Core Lines Reimagine, how you are thinking about what drives the leg of pricing and the sustainability of those increases?

Lee M. Shavel: Henry. So I will take the first part and then turn it over to Saurabh Khemka on the incremental functionality on the core lines. So in terms of module adoption, I think what we are seeing is that having introduced this, the clients to varying extents have adopted and adjusted that new functionality. But it is a process in some ways of training the clients and their employees on how to utilize it effectively. And so we have been dedicating a lot of time to training for our clients to make certain that they are getting as much value as possible out of those modules.

None of that suggests that the clients do not see the value, and we have heard that repeatedly. In fact, clients have told investors, when asked the question, that they have seen significant productivity gains. But we will continue to work to make sure they are getting as much value of those enhancements as possible. At our upcoming Verisk Insurance Conference, we often couple that with extensive training, opportunities for them to understand what is available to them. So I think we will see continued uptake and continued value realization as our clients become more familiar, and we will continue to enhance that as I am sure Saurabh can describe.

Saurabh Khemka: Yeah. Absolutely. So two things. One, the original scope of Reimagine is what we are talking about in terms of complete. So we will put all our content on this digitized new platform. And the adoption of that platform will continue, and the adoption of these new analytics will continue. The second thing I would say is that we have really created a culture of continuous innovation through Reimagine. So as we now have this platform, we will continuously innovate on the underlying content and put it on the platform that will drive new use cases for our customers like AI. As Lee mentioned, lot of these use cases drive better insights but also drive productivity gains.

So we see continuous opportunities for us to drive value for our customers.

Lee M. Shavel: And let me add to that, Henry. One thing that I have to tie in to tie in the AI component, is we have asked Saurabh and our colleague Tim Rayner who runs our UK businesses in the SBS to partner to think about what our enterprise AI strategy is with an orientation to product implementation and understanding how our clients are working with the technology. So many of the lessons, and the successes that we have had in identifying how we can improve that technology, understand what our clients' needs are, are going to drive that close integration of the AI opportunity as well.

We think will continue to increase the value of what we have done with core lines.

Operator: Next question comes from the line of Jeffrey P. Meuler with JPMorgan. Your line is open.

Jeffrey Silber: Hey, guys. This is Justin on for Andrew. Thanks for taking our

Lee M. Shavel: questions. First, I just wanted to ask, you know, Lee, when you look at Verisk Analytics, Inc.’s most sophisticated clients in terms of willingness to adopt AI, do you think these clients are using more or less Verisk Analytics, Inc. data today, and why? And then if I could just

Jeffrey Silber: follow up quickly on some of the color you provided about the first quarter

Lee M. Shavel: revenue guide. I think you are expecting it to be down low single digits on a sequential basis. Could you just help us think through what that might mean on an organic constant currency basis year over year? Thank you.

Alexander Kramm: Great. Thanks, Justin. I will let

Lee M. Shavel: Elizabeth handle the second part of that on the revenue guide. In terms of your first question, I think the way that we see it and it is very similar to other technology deployments. And if you think about

Saurabh Khemka: what

Lee M. Shavel: the primary driver of our ability to grow at a faster rate than the insurance industry has been the ongoing adoption of technologies that utilize the data sets that we are able to gather and normalize across the industry. And so when we have these AI strategic alignment discussions, it is clearly founded on a recognition that the underlying data that we are able to provide, one that has kind of industry-wide value, two, is more efficiently gathered through a trusted third party, and which can be integrated easily into processes because of our connectivity, that is fundamentally, as valuable in an AI context if not more so.

And that AI is improving the productivity of core underwriting functions, claims functions, risk management functions. And so it becomes an incremental opportunity to use that data set to inform those decisions more effectively. And I think there is an understanding from our clients that will enhance their value. And in fact, we see an opportunity to expand those data sets in a more connected environment.

We have talked in the past about the development of new data sets in the excess and surplus market which I think has been driven by this trend of being better able to connect and associate data sets, leveraging the connectivity that we have with P&C carriers that are writing both admitted lines and excess and surplus lines as well as greater connectivity in the specialty market, where we are beginning to see more requests for data and analytics to support that market.

So I think from our perspective, this clearly is an opportunity to utilize that valuable, more efficiently gathered and connected data set to support the implementation of that technology similar to what we have seen in the past. I will turn it over to Elizabeth to talk about your question on the first quarter revenue guide.

Elizabeth D. Mann: Yes. Thanks, Justin. And your question, Justin, was on the first quarter OCC revenue growth. We do not give that in specific. We do give you a lot of the ingredients necessary. We talked about the Verisk Marketing Solutions business on a full-year basis. And you can think of that as a quite even quarterly spread, if that is helpful. So we were calling out some of the pressures and the headwind from the temporary factors as continuing in the first quarter from the fourth quarter. In addition, there were some areas of, called out some areas of outperformance and strength in the fourth quarter and the first quarter being, facing some tough comps, particularly on the subscription side.

So we just wanted to, between those things, we wanted to call out that we saw the first quarter as the trough from a growth standpoint, with that continuing to improve over the balance of '26.

Operator: And our last question comes from the line of David Paige with RBC Capital Markets. Your line is open.

Jeffrey Silber: Hi. Good morning. Thank you for taking our question. This is David Paige on for Ashish. Maybe just following up on that last question. Can you remind us what percentage of revenues are derived from contributory data sources? And then maybe at a high level, how should we think about the AI moats across your different business segments, particularly as, I guess, investors are concerned about Vibe coding potentially impact vertical software or just

Andrew Owen Nicholas: work?

Jeffrey Silber: Or work solution in general? Thank you.

Elizabeth D. Mann: Yeah. Thanks a bunch for the question, David. And I think this is something also that we will continue the discussion at Investor Day. In terms of, I think Lee talked about the data that is an input really across most of our businesses. To be very concrete on the contributory data, sometimes said, as you look at our revenues, primarily the forms, rules, and loss costs and the antifraud that are built on those industry-wide contributory solutions. Elsewhere in our business, we have some elements potentially of contributory data, and significant proprietary data and analytics. So we think that, really, most of our business has a lot of defensibility to it with those strong data ingredients.

We will talk more about it in a few weeks.

Lee M. Shavel: Yep. And it is both the, apart from the contributory data sets, as Elizabeth was describing, there also is an element of proprietary data sets, for instance, in our property estimating solutions, embedded in the value of what we provide, you know, apart from materials and labor costs, which are, you know, located in, that are identified and utilized kind of specifically for estimates, an understanding of what a repair entails in terms of, you know, materials or labor costs is an aspect of that proprietary nature. And there is also an element of it becomes a reference point that the claims professionals at the carriers, the adjusters, and the contractors use to facilitate resolution of that claim.

So it becomes an established industry standard that has a valuable proprietary content because all participants understand how that is derived and it is kind of been established as a base point. To your question on Vibe coding, it relates in some way to the question around software that we had earlier. And this is where the nature of our software is one for the delivery of the datasets, you know, not so much the underlying software itself, as well as the connectivity that software or that platform provides. And so simply the function of AI-driven or Vibe coding does not, in our view, represent a threat to the fundamental data differentiation and connectivity differentiation that we provide.

We think that is a very different software proposition. In some ways, you know, I kind of liken it to the securities exchanges where they are providing connectivity to a large and complex group of market participants. It is a very similar dynamic within our business. But I will also use this as an opportunity to advertise and increase you all to attend our Investor Day, where we will be going through the business and talking about those components from a data, from a software standpoint, from a competitive differentiation for each of our businesses, to a far greater detail and better texture than we can provide in this call.

Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes the question-and-answer session. Thank you all for joining in. You may now disconnect. Everyone, have a great day.

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