F&G (FG) Q4 2025 Earnings Call Transcript

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DATE

Friday, Feb. 20, 2026 at 9 a.m. ET

CALL PARTICIPANTS

  • Chief Executive Officer — Christopher Blunt
  • President — Conor Ernan Murphy
  • Operator — [Operator] (Q&A moderation only; no substantive company commentary)

TAKEAWAYS

  • Assets Under Management (AUM) Before Flow Reinsurance -- $73.1 billion, up 12% year over year, driven by $14.6 billion in gross sales.
  • Record Retained AUM -- $57.6 billion, reflecting 7% year-over-year growth.
  • Gross Sales -- $14.6 billion for the full year, with $3.4 billion in the fourth quarter, marking the second-highest year on record.
  • Core Sales -- $9.0 billion for the year, including indexed annuities ($6.7 billion, flat year over year), indexed universal life ($190 million, up 14%), and pension risk transfer ($2.1 billion, three consecutive years at or above $2.0 billion).
  • Opportunistic Sales -- $5.6 billion for the year, including funding agreements ($1.8 billion, up nearly 80%) and multiyear guaranteed annuities ($3.8 billion, down from $5.1 billion).
  • Net Sales Retained -- $10.0 billion, a decrease from $10.6 billion.
  • Investment Portfolio Quality -- 97% of fixed maturities rated investment grade; private asset origination comprises 20% ($11.0 billion) of retained portfolio with 92% investment grade.
  • Annualized Fixed Income Yield -- 4.65% in Q4, up by six basis points.
  • Alternative Investment Return -- Approximately 7% annualized in Q4, below the 10% long-term target; $11.0 billion in alternative assets, with 40% ($4.0 billion) in equity interests and 60% ($7.0 billion) to be reclassified as fixed income.
  • Variable Investment Income -- $7.0 million in Q4 prepayment fees, totaling $56.0 million for the year, matching the previous year's level.
  • Adjusted Net Earnings -- $123 million ($0.91 per share) for Q4 and $482 million ($3.64 per share) for the full year; $30 million ($0.22 per share) of favorable significant items included.
  • Fee Income from Flow Reinsurance -- $56.0 million, up 37% over $41.0 million.
  • Fee Income from Owned Distribution -- $47.0 million, up 2% over $46.0 million.
  • Fee-Based Earnings Contribution -- 15% of adjusted net earnings (excluding significant items), with a management goal to grow this to approximately 25% by year-end 2028.
  • Operating Expense Ratio to AUM (before Flow Reinsurance) -- 50 basis points, down from 60 basis points, meeting the company's target; management expects further improvement to 45 basis points by year-end 2027.
  • Risk-Based Capital (RBC) Ratio -- Estimated at 430%, above the 400% target, reflecting capital returned from the Bermuda entity recapture.
  • Public Float -- Increased from 18% to 30% due to FNF's December 31 distribution of 12% of outstanding shares.
  • Book Value Per Share (Excluding AOCI) -- $44.43, a 62% increase since the 2020 acquisition.
  • Dividend -- Quarterly common stock dividend increased by 14% in Q4; $137 million of capital returned to shareholders through common and preferred dividends during the year.
  • Bermuda Entity Sale -- Announced sale of F&G Life Re Limited to Ancient Financial Holdings LP, with net proceeds of $300 million expected (including a $200 million dividend), AUM to decrease by $1.9 billion post-transaction, and annual adjusted net earnings to decline by approximately $10 million per quarter before redeployment of proceeds.
  • Debt to Capitalization Ratio Target -- 25% (excluding AOCI), with a stated expectation of natural deleveraging.
  • Annualized Interest Expense -- $165 million, about 7% blended yield on $2.3 billion of total debt.

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RISKS

  • Conor Ernan Murphy said, "we would expect that the volume of surrenders, and therefore the related surrender fee income, to be lower in 2026 than 2025," implying a potential reduction in non-recurring earnings contribution.
  • Conor Ernan Murphy noted that "investment income was $65,000,000 or $0.047 per share below management's long-term expected return for the quarter," and this underperformance could continue if market conditions do not improve.
  • Management cited that a decrease in annuity terminations may reduce near-term earnings, as incremental surrender charge fee income would fall if terminations revert from current elevated levels.
  • Quarterly variability in investment income and surrender-related fees may occur, depending on market conditions and customer behavior, which could introduce earnings volatility in 2026.

SUMMARY

F&G Annuities & Life (NYSE:FG) reported significant year-over-year growth in assets under management and public float, supported by disciplined capital management and expense reductions, while advancing its transition toward higher fee-based earnings. The company completed the planned sale of its Bermuda legal entity, which streamlines its reinsurance strategy and releases capital for redeployment. Management introduced expanded disclosures and a reclassification of alternative assets to enhance transparency regarding fee and spread components, addressing investor scrutiny of the business mix.

  • The sale of F&G Life Re Limited is expected to provide counterparty diversification for MYGA flow reinsurance and will not affect the company's U.S. domicile or tax status.
  • Management emphasized that current operations are self-funded and future growth is not dependent on additional equity raises, describing the company as capital independent.
  • Fee-based strategies, including flow reinsurance and owned distribution, are projected to comprise a larger share of earnings as the company pivots its business model.
  • Conor Ernan Murphy stated that the blended annualized investment yield remains stable, and executives reiterated that, from a planning perspective, they are preparing for continued mediocre returns as a prudent approach amid market uncertainties.
  • Management addressed market skepticism regarding asset quality and alternative investment exposure, highlighting that 97% of fixed maturities are investment grade and credit impairments remain well below pricing assumptions.
  • Improvements in the operating expense ratio resulted from actions to keep overall expenses flat year over year, while pursuing AUM growth and fixed cost reductions.

INDUSTRY GLOSSARY

  • AUM (Assets Under Management): The total market value of assets that an investment company manages on behalf of investors, both before and after adjusting for flow reinsurance.
  • MYGA (Multi-Year Guaranteed Annuities): Fixed annuity products offering a guaranteed interest rate for a specified multi-year period.
  • FIA (Fixed Indexed Annuity): An annuity product that credits interest based on the performance of a specified market index, while protecting principal from losses.
  • IUL (Indexed Universal Life): Life insurance that provides a death benefit and cash value growth linked to a market index.
  • PRT (Pension Risk Transfer): A transaction in which a pension plan sponsor transfers some or all of their pension liabilities to an insurer, often via group annuity contracts.
  • FABN (Funding Agreement-Backed Notes): Debt securities backed by funding agreements issued by an insurance company to raise capital.
  • AOCI (Accumulated Other Comprehensive Income): An accounting item representing unrealized gains and losses excluded from net income, commonly arising from changes in the value of certain assets and liabilities.
  • IMO (Independent Marketing Organization): A firm that supports insurance agents and agencies in distribution, often acting as an intermediary between insurers and producers.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Christopher Blunt: Good morning, and thanks for joining today's call. We delivered a strong finish to an outstanding year.

Christopher Blunt: Through disciplined growth and the proven ability and flexibility of our business model, as we transition to be more fee-based, higher margin, and less capital intensive. And we remain focused on creating long-term shareholder value. We are executing on our strategy and made further progress toward our 2023 Investor Day targets, as we achieved record AUM before flow reinsurance fueled by one of our best years of sales. Excellent performance in our high-quality diversified investment portfolio, strong performance across our business balanced with diligent expense management, and a healthy financial and capital position. I would especially like to thank our employees.

Their hard work and dedication are truly the foundation of everything we achieve for our business, and for our customers. Now looking at our results more closely, we achieved record AUM before flow reinsurance of $73,100,000,000, up 12% over year-end 2024, as well as record retained AUM of $57,600,000,000, up 7% over year-end 2024. This record AUM was driven by $14,600,000,000 of gross sales, our second highest year on record. 2025 demonstrated our commitment to manage growth for the long term, as we prioritize pricing discipline and capital allocation to the highest return opportunities.

Christopher Blunt: For the full year, we delivered $9,000,000,000 of core sales including indexed annuities, indexed universal life, and pension risk transfer, and $5,600,000,000 of opportunistic sales, including MYGA and funding agreements. Conor will provide more details on sales later in the call. Next, turning to the investment portfolio. Our high-quality diversified portfolio is performing very well. The retained portfolio is high quality with 97% of fixed maturities being investment grade at year end. Since 2020, we have selectively repositioned over $2,000,000,000 of assets to optimize, derisk, and position the portfolio to perform in varying market conditions while also improving credit quality. Credit-related impairments have remained stable at eight basis points in 2025, well below our pricing assumption.

This brings our five-year average since 2021 to basis points, which is exceptionally low. Our fixed income yield was 4.65% in the fourth quarter, up six basis points over the 2024. As a reminder, our fixed income yield excludes alternative investment income as well as variable investment income, which we define as prepayment fees. Looking at our alternative investment portfolio, our annualized return was approximately 7% in the fourth quarter, as compared to our 10% long-term expected return. At year end, approximately 40% or $4,000,000,000 of our $11,000,000,000 alternative investment portfolio was comprised of equity interests, including limited partnerships, with the remaining 60% being investment-grade fixed income debt with more predictable levels of investment income.

Starting in the 2026, we are updating our long-term expected return for alternative investments to reflect only the 40% or $4,000,000,000 of equity interests. We will reclassify the remaining 60% or nearly $7,000,000,000 into our fixed income yield and AUM as shown in the investment income and yield table on Page 8 in our financial supplement. We believe this will more appropriately delineate between the fixed income portfolio and alternative investments while also improving comparability to others in the industry. Industry. This disclosure refinement will not have any impact to adjusted net earnings on an as-reported basis. We are often asked about the effect of short-term interest rates on our business following the recent Fed rate cuts.

Given the nature of our spread-based business, longer-term rates and the shape of the yield curve are more significant to us than short-term interest rates. We do not have significant exposure to changes in short-term interest rates, as we have hedged the majority of our floating rate portfolio to lock in higher rates over the past couple of years. Our floating rate exposure is now only $2,800,000,000 or approximately 5% of our total portfolio net of hedging. Another consideration is variable investment income. We reported $7,000,000 of pretax prepayment fees in the fourth quarter. This brought the full year to $56,000,000 in line with full year 2024.

As a reminder, prepayments fluctuate quarter to quarter and present a headwind in 2026, if bond prepayments vary from 2025 levels depending on market conditions. As far as our asset managers go, we really think we have the best of both worlds in terms of our competitive positioning and flexibility. We are now in the ninth year of our strong and seasoned relationship with a world-class manager in Blackstone. And we have the flexibility to work with other asset managers whether for flow reinsurance or specialty asset classes that complement Blackstone's capabilities. Blackstone employs a robust and thorough underwriting approach by developing its own forecast based on conservative macroeconomic views and historical sector performance.

Christopher Blunt: Next, turning to private asset origination, which is a key component of our investment strategy, and represents 20% or $11,000,000,000 of our retained portfolio. Here, we utilize Blackstone's best-in-class origination, underwriting, and structuring teams to source high-quality pools of physical and financial assets. These include corporate and commercial lending, consumer loans, real estate, and other real asset exposures. When it comes to private asset origination, most of these directly originated asset classes have been in existence for decades within the bank channel and have long performance histories over multiple market cycles, providing observable data for thorough underwriting. Private asset originations allow us to mitigate our credit risk in a couple of ways.

They provide diversification to investments that we can access through public markets, and the bilateral nature of these private origination transactions allow us to perform comprehensive analysis on an asset-by-asset basis and incorporate stronger covenant protections relative to the public markets. From a ratings perspective, our private asset origination portfolio has a strong credit profile. Approximately 92% of the private origination debt portfolio is investment grade, and included within the 97% investment grade for our total fixed income portfolio. We primarily use the top five nationally recognized statistical rating organizations.

Approximately 90% of the private origination debt portfolio and 94% of our total fixed income portfolio are rated by a combination of the top five agencies, including Moody's, S&P, Fitch, Kroll, and DBRS. Egan-Jones ratings are de minimis at less than 1% of our total retained portfolio. And private letter ratings account for approximately 17% of our total retained portfolio, and undergo the same analytical rigor as public ratings.

The combination of Blackstone's structuring talent, our ability to complement Blackstone's ability with other asset managers, the track record of these assets, and our thorough due diligence has helped generate attractive risk-adjusted returns for F&G Annuities & Life, Inc. that have performed very well to date and through stress environments like the COVID pandemic. We have refreshed our annual portfolio stress test which is conservative and assumes no management action. Once again, the stress test has confirmed that our portfolio is well positioned to withstand a sharp downturn in the economy. In summary, we feel comfortable and confident in the credit soundness of our investment portfolio. Please see our Winter 2025 investor presentation for further details on our stress test.

Next, I would like to provide an update on our strong progress toward our 2023 Investor Day medium-term financial targets now that we are at the midpoint of our five-year horizon.

Christopher Blunt: We have grown AUM before flow reinsurance, from the $51,000,000,000 baseline to $73,000,000,000 at year-end 2025, a 44% increase at the midpoint mark as compared to our target of 50% in five years. We have expanded ROA excluding significant items from the 110 basis point baseline and made significant progress toward the lower end of the 133 to 155 basis point targeted range. And we have increased ROE excluding AOCI and significant items from the 10% baseline and are closing in on the lower end of the 13% to 14% targeted range.

The preferred stock investment from FNF in 2024, combined with our own internal capital generation, enable us to grow significantly faster than originally projected when we set our Investor Day targets. On December 31, FNF completed the distribution of approximately 12% of the outstanding shares of F&G Annuities & Life, Inc.'s common stock to FNF shareholders. Following the distribution, FNF retains control and a majority ownership with approximately 70% of the outstanding shares in F&G Annuities & Life, Inc. This has increased F&G Annuities & Life, Inc.'s public float from approximately 18% to approximately 30% after the distribution, strengthening F&G Annuities & Life, Inc.'s positioning within the equity markets and facilitating greater institutional ownership.

This distribution reflects FNF's confidence in F&G Annuities & Life, Inc.'s long-term prospects and is intended to unlock shareholder value by enhancing market liquidity and broadening investor access to F&G Annuities & Life, Inc.'s shares. On a stand-alone basis, we reported GAAP common equity, excluding AOCI, of $6,000,000,000 at year end, and we have grown book value per share excluding AOCI to $44.43, up 62% since the 2020 acquisition. In summary, F&G Annuities & Life, Inc. finished the year strong. I am excited about the future, and our ability to continue to deliver long-term shareholder value.

Christopher Blunt: Looking ahead, F&G Annuities & Life, Inc. has differentiated capabilities and is uniquely positioned in the industry. We have made significant progress executing on our strategy, leveraging the strength of our distribution partners to continue to grow our spread-based business alongside our growing sources of fee-based, higher margin, and less capital intensive earnings through our flow reinsurance, middle market life insurance, and owned distribution strategies, all of which is showing up in our results as expected. I will now turn the call over to Conor to provide further details on F&G Annuities & Life, Inc.'s fourth quarter and full year highlights.

Conor Ernan Murphy: Thank you, Chris. This morning, I will provide some additional details of our sales, fourth quarter and full year earnings and performance drivers, and our strong capital position. Starting with sales, as Chris mentioned at the beginning of the call, we generated $14,600,000,000 of gross sales for the full year, including $3,400,000,000 in the fourth quarter. We had $9,000,000,000 of gross sales of our core products, including indexed annuity, indexed universal life, and pension risk transfer. For the full year, this was our second year of more than $9,000,000,000 in core sales. This includes $2,800,000,000 of core sales in the quarter, in line with the 2024 and up 27% over the sequential third quarter.

To provide a few highlights of our core sales, indexed annuities were $6,700,000,000 for the full year which was in line with full year 2024 and included $1,900,000,000 of indexed annuities in the quarter, up 12% over the 2024. This is a strong result in a competitive environment and coming off a record 2024 for fixed index annuities sales for both F&G Annuities & Life, Inc. and the industry. FIA is our largest contributor to indexed annuity sales and progressively increased during 2025, with modest but increasing Rilla sales throughout the year. IUL sales were a $190,000,000 for the full year, including over $50,000,000 in the quarter, and reflect a 14% increase over full year 2024.

Our life insurance solutions are meeting the needs of the underserved, multi middle market which is driving continued steady growth. ERT sales were $2,100,000,000 for the full year, including over $800,000,000 in the quarter. This result marks our third consecutive year attaining $2,000,000,000 or more in PRT sales and landed squarely in our $1,500,000,000 to $2,500,000,000 targeted annual range. We continue to see a robust PRT pipeline for midsized deals up to 500,000,000 where F&G Annuities & Life, Inc. competes well. Gross sales of our opportunistic products including funding agreements and multiyear guaranteed annuities were $5,600,000,000 for the full year, including over $600,000,000 in the fourth quarter. Opportunistic sales volumes fluctuate quarter to quarter depending on economics and market opportunity.

To provide a few highlights, funding agreements were $1,800,000,000 for the full year, up nearly 80% over the $1,000,000,000 in full year 2024. This included nearly $300,000,000 of funding agreements in the quarter, as compared to no funding agreements in the 2024. As we enter 2026, we took advantage of an attractive market window and successfully executed a $750,000,000 FABN issuance in early January as we continue to expand our high-quality investor base. MYGA sales were $3,800,000,000 for the full year, including over $350,000,000 in the quarter, as compared to $5,100,000,000 in 2024 including nearly $650,000,000 in the 2024.

We have intentionally moderated MYGA volumes from the prior year level given market condition, competitive dynamics, and flow reinsurance optimization as we continue pricing discipline and allocating capital to the highest return opportunities throughout the year. F&G Annuities & Life, Inc.'s net sales retained were $10,000,000,000 for the full year 2025, as compared to $10,600,000,000 in full year 2024. This included $2,300,000,000 of net sales in the quarter, down slightly from the 2024. Stepping back, 2025 showcased the diversity of our new business engines, attractive liabilities allowing us to flex across our products and channels to source the most in a given environment.

We are also uniquely positioned with our third-party MYGA flow reinsurance partners to dynamically adjust volumes up and down as the market economics change. This is not supplemented by a reinsurance sidecar and we expect our mix of sales to shift more toward FIA over time. As one of the industry's largest sellers of annuities and life insurance, our model is sustainable and allows us to optimize and position the business for long-term success. This aligns our interest well with the continued strong secular demand by consumers and financial advisers for retirement savings solutions, including our core indexed annuity and indexed life products.

Conor Ernan Murphy: Turning to earnings. On a reported basis, adjusted net earnings were $123,000,000 or $0.91 per share in the fourth quarter. Alternative investment income was $65,000,000 or $0.047 per share below management's long-term expected return for the quarter. For the full year, on a reported basis, adjusted net earnings were $482,000,000 or $3.64 per share. Alternative investment income was $278,000,000 or $2.03 per share below management's long-term expected return for the year. Full year adjusted net earnings included three favorable significant items totaling $30,000,000 or $0.22 per share which are detailed in our financial supplement.

Overall, as compared to the prior year, adjusted net earnings reflect asset growth, growing fees from accretive flow reinsurance, steady owned distribution margin, and operating expense discipline driving scale benefit. As Chris mentioned, our results have generated sustainable returns. Our fee income from accretive flow reinsurance has grown to $56,000,000 for the full year 2025, up 37% over $41,000,000 in 2024. Our fee income from owned distribution margin contributed $47,000,000 for the full year 2025, up 2% over $46,000,000 in 2024. Our fee-based strategies, including flow reinsurance fee and owned distribution margin, together with steadily growing IUL product fees, have contributed approximately 15% of F&G Annuities & Life, Inc.'s adjusted net earnings, excluding significant items, for the full year 2025.

As we continue to execute on our strategy, we expect our share of fee-based earnings to grow to approximately 25% of our total earnings by year-end 2028. From a flow reinsurance perspective, we continue to expect to reinsure the vast majority of MYGA sales depending on economics, and as discussed on last quarter's call, with the reinsurance sidecar, we expect to evolve towards 50/50 retained versus flow for FIA sales. Importantly, we will continue to grow retained AUM, as we balance retaining business versus optimizing flow reinsurance and preserving capital flexibility. Our owned distribution portfolio is performing well and creating value.

We have invested nearly $700,000,000 in our four owned distribution investments, and generated $80,000,000 of EBITDA for the full year 2025. Our holdings are diversified by product and market and reflect growing businesses with strong leadership. Two of our holdings are life IMOs that produced about 30% of F&G Annuities & Life, Inc.'s IUL sales in full year 2025. The other two holdings are annuity IMOs that produced approximately 10% of F&G Annuities & Life, Inc.'s total annuity sales the full year. In the future, we have opportunities to expand the value of owned distribution through our existing holdings.

As F&G Annuities & Life, Inc. grows, we are benefiting from increased scale, as our ratio of operating expense to AUM before flow reinsurance decreased to 50 basis points at year-end 2025, down from 60 basis points at the 2024, meeting our target through a combination of growth in AUM and expense actions we have taken. As AUM grows and we continue to manage expenses, we expect the operating expense ratio to improve to approximately 45 basis points by year-end 2027 for a cumulative 15 basis points or 25% improvement over the three-year period.

F&G Annuities & Life, Inc. is uniquely positioned in the industry with a profitable and growing $57,000,000,000 in-force block that does not contain any problematic legacy business. Our asset and liability cash flows are well matched. Our retail fixed annuities are 92% surrender protected, and non-surrenderable liabilities include funding agreements, pension risk transfer, and immediate annuities. Over the past couple of years, both F&G Annuities & Life, Inc. and the industry have seen elevated terminations on annuities, which provide a boost to earnings from higher surrender charge fees when they occur. Beyond that initial benefit, terminations can temporarily pressure near-term spreads.

As we move into 2026, this is a potential source of quarterly variability, and we feel that we benefit either way over the long term. If termination flow from the current pace, we forego the incremental surrender charge fee income, but benefit from retention of the underlying retained asset and profitable in-force liability. If terminations hold at the current level, we continue to benefit from higher surrender charge fee income and free up capital to deploy to new business with renewed surrender charges and longer surrender periods resulting in stickier in-force liabilities that generate significant margins over time.

Conor Ernan Murphy: Next, I want to spend a few moments highlighting a capital transaction. We are on track to close a transaction during the first quarter with an investment firm, Ancient Financial Holdings LP, to sell F&G Life Re Limited, our Bermuda-based legal entity with affiliate-only reinsurance, effective March 1. In preparation for the sale, our Iowa operating company recaptured approximately $900,000,000 or one-third of F&G Life Re's affiliated statutory liabilities at year end. Approximately $600,000,000 of this was ceded to an existing third-party reinsurance partner at year end.

We expect to receive net proceeds of approximately $300,000,000 from the sale of the legal entity and the remaining runoff in-force block, including a return of capital in the form of a $200,000,000 dividend of assets at year-end 2025 from our Bermuda entity to our Iowa operating company. Blackstone will retain asset management for the in-force assets and Ancient will manage assets under a new flow reinsurance treaty for MYGA new business. After the transaction closes in the quarter, we expect AUM to decrease by $1,900,000,000. The foregone annual adjusted net earnings are expected to be approximately $10,000,000 per quarter before deployment of proceeds on future flow reinsurance fee income.

The transaction provides a number of benefits to F&G Annuities & Life, Inc., including the transfer of capital through the dividend at year end and the opportunity through F&G Annuities & Life, Inc.'s disciplined execution of risk transfer options to dispose of a valuable asset that we no longer need to support our reinsurance strategy. The transaction also provides counterparty diversification for MYGA flow reinsurance in the future as we are always looking to expand with high-quality flow partners. As a reminder, F&G Annuities & Life, Inc. remains a U.S.-domiciled company. We are a full U.S. taxpayer and all new business is originated in our U.S. subsidiaries.

Turning now to our strong capital position, we remain committed to our long-term target of approximately 25% debt to capitalization excluding AOCI, and we expect that our balance sheet will naturally delever over time. We continue to target holding company cash and invested assets at two times interest coverage. Our annualized interest expense is approximately $165,000,000 or roughly a 7% blended yield on the $2,300,000,000 of total debt outstanding. We ended the year with an estimated company action level risk-based capital, or RBC, ratio of approximately 430% for our primary operating subsidiary, above our 400% target and boosted by the year-end recapture from the Bermuda legal entity.

Importantly, F&G Annuities & Life, Inc. maintained strong capitalization and financial flexibility across all of our statutory balance sheets including our offshore entities, which we conservatively manage to the most stringent capital requirements of our regulators and four rating agencies. From a capital allocation perspective, during 2025, our capitalization supported sustained asset growth, and we returned $137,000,000 of capital to shareholders through common and preferred dividends. Notably, we increased our quarterly common stock dividend by 14% in the fourth quarter as supported by our strong cash generation. To wrap up, as I reflect on the past year, we have extended our proven track record and positioned F&G Annuities & Life, Inc. for long-term growth.

To recap some highlights, we have executed on our strategy as we made continued progress toward our 2023 Investor Day target and improved our operating expense ratio by 10 basis points. Maintained a disciplined focus on our core products including indexed annuities, indexed universal life, and pension risk transfer, allocating capital to the highest return opportunities, significantly expanded in the earnings contribution of our fee-based flow reinsurance, middle market life insurance, and owned distribution strategies alongside continued growth and our spread-based businesses.

Enhanced our strong capital position to fund our organic growth not supplemented by the launch of our sidecar that provides long term on demand capital created flexibility to monetize the intrinsic value in our own distribution strategy in the future, and we expanded our public float from 18% to 30%, enhancing market liquidity and broadening investor access to F&G Annuities & Life, Inc. shares.

As I look ahead to 2026, we remain focused on growing our core business and delivering long-term shareholder value by continuing to increase our assets under management primarily through our core products, generating additional incremental scale benefit, expanding ROE excluding significant items, and moving further toward a more fee-based, higher margin, and less capital intensive business model leveraging our position as one of the industry's largest sellers of annuities and life insurance. This concludes our prepared remarks. We will now open for questions.

Operator: And a confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. It may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. One moment please for our first question. First question comes from the line of John Barnidge with Piper Sandler. Please proceed with your question.

John Barnidge: Good morning. Appreciate the opportunity and hope you are all well. My first question, can you talk about software exposure in the investment portfolio? If you are underexposed to that area, where is some overexposure where you believe there is a strength?

Christopher Blunt: Yeah. Hey, John. It is Chris. Happy to start with that. Yeah. So software exposure for us is quite manageable. It is less than 5% of the total portfolio. If you break that down further, obviously, that is a huge category. We think it is less than 1% that has some potential for disruption or disintermediation risk. Obviously, underwriting for AI risk is not a new topic for Blackstone. They have been on this theme for probably a decade now, and really have been focused on companies with durable use cases, high switching costs, structural moats, etcetera. So we feel really good about that exposure.

Same thing on commercial real estate, where we have, I guess, tenants that you would loosely call software. Tend to be the hyperscalers, and these are long-term leases with cash flows and, you know, low LTVs, etcetera. So we think we are in really good shape there. I do think there is tremendous upside in the private equity portfolio because, again, this is not a new theme. So, you know, disruption cuts both ways. But I would say manageable on the credit side, with some pockets of upside in the private equity portfolio. Thank you for that. My next question, can you maybe talk about your near-term outlook for variable investment income given it kind of underperformed in the quarter?

Conor Ernan Murphy: Yeah. So John, at this point, I would say it is the same. We have a blended rich on the current basis of approximately 10%. And as we mentioned in Chris' prepared remarks, we were in that sort of seven, seven unchanged, seven, seven and a half type range the quarter, seven blended for the year. So it remains the same. We feel very confident in what is in our portfolio.

We, I do not expect we did talk about we are going to do a geographic shift, if you will, in Q1, but I do not anticipate that there would be a commensurate change in the outlook and that should be all that should all that should net out to the same overall blended return. So no real change, and I think there is probably an air of optimism relative to where we are, but we are to be a little careful on that. I think others had maybe similar perspectives with their fourth quarter returns and as they look into the 2026.

Christopher Blunt: Yes. I think Conor hit it. The only thing I would add, John, is that, yeah, from a planning perspective, we plan for, I would say, continued mediocre returns because I think that is the prudent thing for us to do. But there are some encouraging signs. We are starting to see more IPOs, more transaction activity. So, hopefully, that continues, but, you know, our job is to not build a business plan around that.

Conor Ernan Murphy: Yep. It probably would also make sure we, I think as you know, obviously, Blackstone are our partner for this. They have a good history of being a little on the conservative side too and having an increased value upon realization. So as this continues, we still feel very, we still very, still feel very good about our portfolio. Thanks for the answers. If I could ask one more. As I look at your supplement, you have a list of a number of your reinsurance partners. And I see Somerset Re in there who has a relationship with the entity that is acquiring Brighthouse.

Can you talk about your diversified panel, your outlook for continued participation there by the existing partners, and general demand in the market. Thank you.

Christopher Blunt: Yeah. Sure, John. Thank you. Well, let me, of all, say yes. I acknowledge, obviously, the relationship between Somerset and Aquarian. No indication of any kind from Somerset or Aquarian that anything would change with that relationship. So let me be clear on that. But, yeah, we have a suite of partners here in addition, obviously, to the sidecar with Blackstone. We have got another one that we just told you about today with Ancient, so pleased about that. There are others. We have a lot of people who show up at our doorstep and who want to be our reinsurance partners.

And, honestly, individual appetites at these companies ebb and flow, so you have to be prepared with a nice suite of partners. So no concerns at all. In fact, we probably have more partners than we handle at the moment or could have more partners than we could handle. So feeling very good about that, and, obviously, happy to have another significant partner join us here on March 1. Thank you.

Operator: The next question is from the line of Alex Scott with Barclays. Please proceed with your question.

Alex Scott: Hi. For the first one, I was hoping you could talk a little bit more about, you know, the transaction you mentioned. And, you know, I think it sounded like you had already gotten 200 into the stat and from that and maybe another 100 coming. So I just wanted to check to make sure I have that right. And also just get your thoughts on sort of uses of that capital.

Christopher Blunt: Alex, this is Chris. I am just going to start with a little history of, you know, we set this up, I want to say, six, seven years ago. And at the time, we thought we might have a path to be a flow reinsurer ourselves. And so there were some advantages to having a Bermuda operation. Our strategy is our organic business took off. Our PRT business took off. We just did not see that in our future. So it had effectively become just a runoff block of assets. Yet we knew it was a pretty valuable entity. It had a, you know, multiyear track record, audited financials, a team, etcetera.

So, yeah, being approached by, you know, the folks at Ancient who we thought were very credible potential partners. This looked like it is just a good opportunity to jettison an operation that really was not part of our go-forward strategic plans and pick up another partner. But I will let Conor talk about some of the details behind it.

Conor Ernan Murphy: Yeah. Yeah. Just the pieces building towards your question. So we mentioned, we recaptured a third of it, reinsured or reinsured 600 of that 900. We have got $1,900,000,000 of AUM moving across. So proceeds of $300 of which 200 essentially has already been included in that RBC number at the end of the year. So part of why the RBC number is in the 430 range. Last year, we were both sort of 410. So we do not obviously expect to continue to run the company at a 430 range, so that is some capital flexibility. Remaining, therefore, just mathematically proceed to $300, $200 already. So there is another 100 to come.

I would describe that towards general uses: sales, growing the business. Very focused on growing AUM, but I would also take the chance to reiterate we are going to stay very disciplined. So as we, we will write great business when the opportunity arises. If the margins are not there, we will be a little patient, and if that means we have more cash and more capital along the way, then I think that is probably a good thing as well. That is helpful. Thanks. I wanted to also circle back on the crediting rate, or, sorry, the surrender fees and how they are contributing to the crediting rate and just think through that a little.

We have seen this at some other, you know, spread-based companies where there has been a temporary drag of sorts that surprised people. You know, where are the surrender fees, where do you expect them to go to? I just want to make sure I am understanding and incorporated into my estimates enough ROE pressure because I, you know, we are forecasting your ROE is going up because you have this plan to send it off. I just want to understand if that is going to take a little more time because of this dynamic or, you know, can you help us understand that?

Conor Ernan Murphy: Yeah. Yeah. Sure. So there is quite a number of pieces to that. But if I maybe put it into an ROA context or the surrender fee income, we mentioned a little bit of this coming into the call. Obviously, it has been contributing to ROA. But specifically to your question, we would expect that the volume of surrenders, and therefore the related surrender fee income, to be lower in 2026 than 2025. Now from an ROA perspective, there are other components as well. We have highlighted the fact that we expected the investment ratio will continue to improve.

So I think all in all, would imagine in the very term, that is maybe we might be kind of around where we are. We may be in some element of a plateau. But I think you are thinking about it the right way. Right? If surrenders come down, we have more assets, and, honestly, I think we would rather have the assets than, and if that meant a less muted expansion of ROA but higher AUM, we would be good with that. But I think, yeah. I mean, I would argue I think that both the, I would say the prepayment number probably a little higher in 2025 than we might see in 2026, but it is pretty modest.

I would not be surprised if we saw surrenders, surrender-related fees, down, you know, 20% roughly from where they are would be kind of where my head is thinking. But, obviously, a lot of that depends on external factors and rates and suitability rules at other companies and everything like that. So it is hard to tell. But that frames the way we are thinking about it.

Christopher Blunt: Yeah. Alex, the only thing I would add to that, what Conor said, is just to link a couple things. It is hard to isolate just one metric. So there is no doubt ROA has been pumped up a little bit through excess surrender fees. But the same phenomenon that has caused that has also caused muted realizations in the PE portfolio. And means that we have had to operate with significantly less capital, you know, getting 7% versus 10 on $10,000,000,000 of AUM. That goes directly to capital.

So seeing surrender fee income drop off a cliff would probably be driven by a pretty sharp move down in interest rates, which I think would have some offsetting positives for us. So, obviously, it is all linked. Said another way, ROA would undoubtedly be lower if not for all the excess surrender fees, but my guess is AUM would be significantly higher than it is at this point too.

Alex Scott: Got it. That is helpful. I have a couple more, but I will requeue. Thanks.

Operator: Our next question is from the line of Mark Douglas Hughes with Truist Securities. Please proceed with your question.

Mark Douglas Hughes: Conor, the 15 basis points of improvement over three years, will you refresh us on the pieces that are going to, how that is going to break out? What are those specific big contribute to that?

Conor Ernan Murphy: Well, really, it is expense. So it is obviously, ratio is AUM to expenses. But, essentially, what I would say now is that we will keep our overall expenses about, we aim to keep our expenses entirely flat year over year, 2025 into 2026. If you were going to peel into that a little bit between kind of the fixed and variable, I would say that while we continue to grow, we will pull our fixed costs down a few percent in order to fund the variable, you know, the offsetting few percent on the other side.

So I want to make sure I am answering your question, but that is really the overarching way is that we will continue to grow, but we will not grow expenses. We mentioned, you know, getting another, you know, so it is going to be another 10%, another five basis points, you know, we will do everything we can to do that as quickly as we can. Very good. And then, what is the latest thoughts on terms of the trajectory on Rilla sales? I think you are describing a steady improvement still off of a small base. How do you see that over the next couple of years?

Conor Ernan Murphy: Yeah. We feel very good that we combine our Rilla far, we still combine our Rilla with our FIA, but, you know, that is, we talk about a lot of core products, but that might be the most core, if you will, the combination of FIA and Rila. So we are very pleased with Rila, it is off a small base. Right? We have not been in the space that long, and you know from everybody else, it takes a little while to get going. But we are really, really happy with where, echo, really happy with where the Rila is going, and I would maybe just also, like, FIA and IUL are going. PRT, obviously, a bit seasonal.

That is the other core one. You tend to do a lot more in the back half of the year than the front half. And then we will remain opportunistic on FABN and MYGA.

Operator: Appreciate that. Thank you. Thanks, Mark. The next question is coming from the line of Wilma Bernice with Raymond James. Please proceed with your questions.

Wilma Bernice: You saw a little bit lower FABNs quarter over quarter in 4Q. That was pretty similar to other issuers. Maybe just talk a little bit about any causes of the slowdown in the quarter. And what is causing the bounce back in demand so far in Q1 2026? Thanks.

Conor Ernan Murphy: Honestly, I think for us too, that is perfect. That is, to repeat myself a little bit, it is opportunistic for us. So we were very happy with what we wrote in terms of just deploying capital and finding that really just the balance in total between volume and return. And in the third quarter, we had the opportunity to write an FABN where we had, I would say, an increased interest from the big, big asset managers, which helped pull in our credit spread. We were many, many times oversubscribed. And I think it has been a good market in fairness for others as well.

We came into the new year with a view of, well, let us see if that is still good or perhaps even better. And, honestly, it just was. It was a really good time. We keep it right at the beginning of the year, January. So it was a really good time to come into the market. It felt like a nice amount to put to work. We could have written more than the $750,000,000, but you are trying to do the balancing act of getting the price where you want as well. So you want to pull in your spreads, you want to be oversubscribed, and you want even more of the big asset managers.

At this stage, we have essentially them all. So really very pleased with that. And now we sit back. I think you are probably aware, at this stage now, we have to wait until after all the statutory filing stuff is done. So we will not even have an opportunity until late in the second quarter. We will not, it is not something we will do every quarter. We will come in just as we see the prevailing trade winds being very effective. So I would have a reasonable expectation we will do more during the year, but as to exactly which quarter it will fall into, we will be very much market dependent.

Wilma Bernice: Thank you. And then maybe you could talk a little bit about MYGA sales. Seems like there has been a bit of a pivot towards the index products. Is that something you expect to continue to see given the interest rate environment changing a little bit? Maybe just give us a little color there.

Conor Ernan Murphy: Yeah. And look, I will be careful here because each entity, each company has maybe a slightly different view here, and I will speak specifically about ours. We are seeing better relative returns elsewhere. Meaning across the other core products. So, look, we are still in the MYGA business. We will continue to write MYGA, but be a little more selective about it. So we are entirely prepared to write less here, and deploy that capital in other places. There are times, even last year, there was quite a, I think, a significant fluctuation between Q1 and Q2.

We had a quiet first quarter, a big second quarter, and I think the rest of the year were kind of in between those bookends. But, yes, to be even more specific, we continue to view the opportunities as being better in other products even as we head into early 2026 here as well.

Christopher Blunt: The only, Wilma, it is Chris. The only thing I would add to what Conor said is I would not call it a pivot. I think for seven years now, our number one priority has always been grow FIAs. Right? Then we added Rila, PRT. And if the returns are there, MYGA, we reinsure the vast majority of our MYGA out. So if the returns and the demand from the reinsurers are there, we will certainly write it. If there are more attractive places to put capital, we will do that. So it just happened to be that I think FABN in particular was more attractive from a return perspective than writing extra MYGA at the margin. Hopefully, that helps.

That is very good. I mean, we have been seeing, I mean, over the last few years, a top 10 writer in all of these, in FIA, in IUL, in PRT, and in MYGA. So, you know, we will move up and down that scoreboard a little bit or that leaderboard a little bit as the opportunities shift. Thank you.

Operator: As a reminder, to ask a question, you may press star 1 from your telephone keypad. The next question is a follow-up from the line of Alex Scott with Barclays. Please proceed with your question. Hey, thanks for taking the follow-up.

Alex Scott: So I want to ask you a bit about just sort of high-level view on valuation. You know, I heard you on derisking some of the fixed income. I thought that was interesting. I think, you know, one of the things that maybe holds people back from giving you credit for the fee-based business you have is just the sheer magnitude of the net investment income that comes from your alternative investments and the other parts of the nonfixed income portfolio. So do you, is there anything you can do there to sort of ease some of the tension there with shareholders? The way investors are viewing it? I mean, is that something that you guys contemplate?

Christopher Blunt: Yeah. This is Chris. I will start and just say, you know, from a valuation standpoint, we are trading at $0.62 of book value. So you tell me. Like, historically, that is associated with companies with massively toxic liabilities, not a pristine fixed book of surrender charge protected FIAs and non-surrenderable liabilities. So, yeah, it is extreme, the valuation. We have tried to give a lot more disclosure this quarter around credit and specifically what is in the private credit portfolio. So, hopefully, that helps, including refreshed stress test numbers. So, yeah, the stock is trading as though there are billions and billions of credit losses coming. It is pretty inexplicable to me, to be quite honest.

I would say we have two other assets that are quite undervalued. One is our middle market, cultural market life insurance business, which is a quite valuable asset. And then the other is owned distribution, which we spent quite a bit of time on, which I think we have multiple avenues to monetize that business over time. So, yeah, I think it is extreme. I will defer to Conor on alternatives. It is one of the reasons we have split out the equity component because we were sort of capturing and defining alternatives as anything that showed up on a certain schedule. It is not the right way to think about it. You know?

The majority of that portfolio is investment grade and, in most cases, in the vast majority of cases, investment grade fixed income. But Conor, I will defer to you if there is more you want to add to that DII discussion.

Conor Ernan Murphy: Yeah. I will say a couple of things. I mean, broadly speaking across portfolio, I mean, it has been pretty pristine. I have heard others be very proud of their low double-digit impairment-related numbers over the last few years, and, you know, we are half of that. So, you know, I get why people have concerns, but in terms of what is in our portfolio and how well it has been performing, it has been very noteworthy for us. There is definitely an attempt.

I mean, I feel that there is a lowest common denominator, you know, where we viewed props as a single business that is heavily spread rather than kind of component parts like life or owned distribution, etcetera, as Chris alluded to. That was why this was a, there was a significant attempt to help rectify that with this new disclosure around fee versus spread because we wanted to demonstrate that we have actively made a very significant shift here in, we have talked about an expansion from, I think in the disclosures, talked about going from less than 5% to 15.

I would actually argue it is probably closer to, like, zero to 15 because if you did a full attribution of expenses and debt to that, essentially the life business, like, three years ago, it would have been very small. So now that 15% of our earnings are coming from the fee business, and you can see that we have an expectation that will grow to 25 just organically without anything else over the next three years or the three years of the planned cycle. So that is definitely a step in that direction. We are going to continue to talk about it.

We will increase our exposures and perhaps even related educations around those businesses, the owned distribution business, the life business, as we go here. Hopefully, that will help. Obviously, we need, you know, the old portfolio, I think the disclosure changes we will make next quarter will help as well. But at the end of the day, obviously, we, Chris said, we have an expectation, near-term expectation that we are not quite at that, not going to get to that 10% quite yet. But, obviously, that will help a lot. And I guess, Chris, the absolutely pristine set of liabilities. I mean, there is nothing. It is a young, clean book of business.

So there is really nothing to be concerned of there. Very well surrender protected, performing very much in line with our expectations. So we will see.

Alex Scott: Maybe a follow-up to that is, you know, when I think about the last couple years, even the nonfixed income just being closer to 7%, to hit this funding requirements for your growth, you know, I think in both the last two years, there were, you know, things that happened. Right? Like, there is an equity raise one of the years, and then this year, there is the selling of legal entity, which is, you know, it is good to get that tool this year for sure. But, you know, the private equity returns have to be, you know, 10% plus for you guys to be self-funding. Is that an incorrect takeaway from that? Like, how would you describe it?

Conor Ernan Murphy: Alright. I am going to start with thank you. I am actually really glad you asked the question. I will wait, no. So, right. I mean, with the, you tell me, but I have a sense that the equity raise perhaps raised concerns that we either needed to continue to rely on FNF or the equity markets to have the capital to write the business, and that is not the case. And we have done everything we can to allay those in the quarters since then, and I will reiterate today that we are not, we are capital independent. We have the capital we need to continue to grow AUM, continue to write business, etcetera.

So, I mean, at this stage, the book is essentially throwing off all of the capital that we would need to write all the business that, you know, that we would want to write. So that is not the case. And I would also suggest too that, yeah. I mean, we would like, on average over the long term, we expect these returns. If they are delayed in coming, we have been measured in our expectation through the, you know, and even in our plan cycle as well. So in a scenario, like, if the scenario is that it remains at more of a seven-ish range, we are absolutely fine.

We might write at the lower end of our sales target volumes. But, again, I think our sales volumes are going to be tied more to market opportunity and the best uses of capital. So I do not feel that capital is a constraint sitting here with my CFO hat on. I think the constraint a little bit is just what will the earnings opportunity be in the marketplace, and therefore, we will decide how much we want to write and where we want to put the. But, absolutely, from a capital point of view, we are capital self-sufficient, capital independent. We are all good.

Alex Scott: Appreciate it. Bye. Alright. Thanks for all the responses.

Operator: Thanks, Alex. Thank you. And this will conclude our question and answer session. I will now turn the conference back over to CEO, Christopher Blunt, for closing remarks.

Christopher Blunt: Great. Thanks again, everyone, for joining the call this morning. We delivered a strong finish to an outstanding year and continue to execute on our strategy toward a more fee-based, higher margin, and less capital intensive business model. Looking ahead to 2026, we remain focused on continuing to grow our core business and delivering long-term shareholder value. We appreciate your interest in F&G Annuities & Life, Inc. 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.

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