Mainstream insurers are the large, well-known insurance companies that dominate the market by selling common and easily understood policies to the general public and businesses. Think of the household names that offer auto, home, life, or health insurance. These companies form the bedrock of the insurance industry, focusing on pooling a massive number of similar risks. Their business model is beautifully simple in concept: they collect money upfront in the form of premiums from millions of policyholders. They then invest this large pool of money, known as the float, until it is needed to pay out claims. This creates two potential streams of profit: one from charging more in premiums than they pay out in claims (an underwriting profit), and another from the investment returns earned on the float. For a value investor, a well-run mainstream insurer can be a wonderfully compounding machine, but understanding the quality of its two profit engines is absolutely critical.
Imagine an insurance company as a vehicle with two engines. For the company to be a great long-term investment, both engines need to be running smoothly. If one sputters, the other has to work much harder, and if both fail, the vehicle crashes.
This is the insurer's core business. Underwriting is the disciplined process of assessing the risk of a potential policyholder and deciding how much to charge them in premiums. The goal is to take in more money from premiums than is paid out in claims and operating expenses. The single most important metric for judging this engine's performance is the combined ratio. It's calculated as: (Incurred Losses + Expenses) / Earned Premiums.
A company that consistently maintains a combined ratio under 100% demonstrates discipline and pricing power, which are hallmarks of a superior business.
This is where the magic of insurance really happens. The float is the massive pool of premiums that an insurer holds but does not yet own. It's collected from customers upfront, but claims are paid out later—sometimes much later, as with certain liability policies. In the meantime, the insurer gets to invest this money for its own benefit. Essentially, the float is an interest-free loan from policyholders. And if the company is good at underwriting (i.e., has a combined ratio below 100%), it's even better than an interest-free loan—they are actually being paid to hold and invest other people's money. This is the powerful concept that attracted Warren Buffett to the insurance industry and became the foundation upon which Berkshire Hathaway was built. Mainstream insurers typically manage their investment portfolio conservatively, favoring high-quality bonds and stocks to ensure they can always meet their obligations to policyholders.
From a value investing perspective, insurers are fascinating because their assets are primarily financial. You're not buying factories or machinery; you're buying a collection of promises (policies) and the assets backing them up.
When analyzing a mainstream insurer, a value investor should focus on a few key characteristics:
While attractive, investing in insurers isn't without risk.
Mainstream insurers can be exceptional long-term investments. They operate a business model that, when executed with discipline, generates a powerful, self-funding investment vehicle known as float. For the intelligent investor, the task is to identify those companies that consistently prioritize underwriting profit over reckless growth and maintain a conservative, “fortress-like” financial position. Find one of those, buy it at a reasonable price, and you may have found a wonderful compounder for your portfolio.