UNITED STATES

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549

FORM 10-Q

(Mark one)

þ          QUARTERLY REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934.

 

For the quarterly period ended June 30, 2012.

 

¨          TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934.

 

For the transition period from _____________________ to _____________________.

Commission file number 0-4604

 

CINCINNATI FINANCIAL CORPORATION

(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

 

Ohio   31-0746871
(State or other jurisdiction of
incorporation or organization)
(I.R.S. Employer Identification
No.)
     
6200 S. Gilmore Road, Fairfield, Ohio   45014-5141
(Address of principal executive offices)   (Zip code)

 

Registrant’s telephone number, including area code: (513) 870-2000

 

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days.

 

þ Yes ¨ No

 

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has submitted electronically and posted on its corporate website, if any, every Interactive Data File required to be submitted and posted pursuant to Rule 405 of Regulation S-T (§232.405 of this chapter) during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to submit and post such files).

 

þ Yes ¨ No

  

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer or a smaller reporting company. See definition of “large accelerated filer,” “accelerated filer” and “smaller reporting company" in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act.

 

þ Large accelerated filer ¨ Accelerated filer ¨ Non-accelerated filer ¨ Smaller reporting company 

 

(Do not check if a smaller reporting company)

 

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act):

 

¨ Yes þ No

 

As of July 23, 2012, there were 162,521,638 shares of common stock outstanding.

 

Cincinnati Financial Corporation Second-Quarter 2012 10Q

Page 1

 

 

CINCINNATI FINANCIAL CORPORATION

FORM 10-Q FOR THE QUARTER ENDED JUNE 30, 2012

 

TABLE OF CONTENTS

 

Part I – Financial Information   3
         
  Item 1. Financial Statements (unaudited)   3
         
  Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheets   3
       
  Condensed Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Operations   4
       
  Condensed Consolidated Statements of Shareholders’ Equity   5
       
  Condensed Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows   6
       
  Notes to Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements (unaudited)   7
         
  Item 2. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations   22
         
  Safe Harbor Statement   22
       
  Introduction   24
       
  Results of Operations   30
       
  Liquidity and Capital Resources   48
       
  Other Matters   51
         
  Item 3. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk   51
         
  Fixed-Maturity Investments   51
       
  Equity Investments   54
       
  Unrealized Investment Gains and Losses   55
         
  Item 4. Controls and Procedures   57
         
Part II – Other Information   58
         
  Item 1. Legal Proceedings   58
         
  Item 1A. Risk Factors   58
         
  Item 2. Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities and Use of Proceeds   58
         
  Item 3. Defaults upon Senior Securities   58
         
  Item 4. Mine Safety Disclosures   58
         
  Item 5. Other Information   58
         
  Item 6. Exhibits   58

 

Cincinnati Financial Corporation Second-Quarter 2012 10Q

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Part I – Financial Information

 

Item 1. Financial Statements (unaudited)

 

Cincinnati Financial Corporation and Subsidiaries

 

Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheets

 

(In millions except per share data)  June 30,   December 31, 
   2012   2011 
ASSETS          
Investments          
Fixed maturities, at fair value (amortized cost: 2012—$8,252; 2011—$8,084)  $9,025   $8,779 
Equity securities, at fair value (cost: 2012—$2,248; 2011—$2,162)   3,139    2,956 
Other invested assets   67    66 
Total investments   12,231    11,801 
Cash and cash equivalents   263    438 
Investment income receivable   118    119 
Finance receivable   78    76 
Premiums receivable   1,210    1,087 
Reinsurance receivable   575    622 
Prepaid reinsurance premiums   24    24 
Deferred policy acquisition costs   484    477 
Land, building and equipment, net, for company use (accumulated depreciation: 2012—$390; 2011—$376)   229    227 
Other assets   179    93 
Separate accounts   698    671 
Total assets  $16,089   $15,635 
           
LIABILITIES          
Insurance reserves          
Loss and loss expense reserves  $4,396   $4,339 
Life policy and investment contract reserves   2,256    2,214 
Unearned premiums   1,762    1,633 
Other liabilities   539    517 
Deferred income tax   359    303 
Note payable   104    104 
Long-term debt and capital lease obligations   831    821 
Separate accounts   698    671 
Total liabilities   10,945    10,602 
           
Commitments and contingent liabilities (Note 13)        
           
SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY          
Common stock, par value—$2 per share; (authorized: 2012 and 2011—500 million shares; issued and outstanding: 2012—197 million shares and 2011—196 million shares)   393    393 
Paid-in capital   1,106    1,096 
Retained earnings   3,851    3,863 
Accumulated other comprehensive income   1,010    901 
Treasury stock at cost (2012—34 million shares and 2011—34 million shares)   (1,216)   (1,220)
Total shareholders' equity   5,144    5,033 
Total liabilities and shareholders' equity  $16,089   $15,635 

 

Accompanying notes are an integral part of these condensed consolidated financial statements.

 

Cincinnati Financial Corporation Second-Quarter 2012 10Q

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Cincinnati Financial Corporation and Subsidiaries

 

Condensed Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Operations

 

(In millions except per share data)  Three months ended June 30,   Six months ended June 30, 
   2012   2011   2012   2011 
REVENUES                    
Earned premiums  $877   $773   $1,716   $1,555 
Investment income, net of expenses   132    132    263    263 
Total realized investment gains, net   6    67    19    79 
Fee revenues   2    1    3    2 
Other revenues   3    2    5    5 
Total revenues   1,020    975    2,006    1,904 
                     
BENEFITS AND EXPENSES                    
Insurance losses and policyholder benefits   687    801    1,269    1,376 
Underwriting, acquisition and insurance expenses   287    253    561    515 
Interest expense   13    14    27    27 
Other operating expenses   4    6    8    10 
Total benefits and expenses   991    1,074    1,865    1,928 
                     
INCOME (LOSS) BEFORE INCOME TAXES   29    (99)   141    (24)
                     
PROVISION (BENEFIT) FOR INCOME TAXES                    
Current   6    (50)   26    (26)
Deferred   (9)   1    (3)   (9)
Total provision (benefit) for income taxes   (3)   (49)   23    (35)
                     
NET INCOME (LOSS)  $32   $(50)  $118   $11 
                     
PER COMMON SHARE                    
Net income (loss)—basic  $0.20   $(0.31)  $0.73   $0.07 
Net income (loss)—diluted   0.20    (0.31)   0.72    0.07 
                     
NET INCOME (LOSS)  $32   $(50)  $118   $11 
                     
OTHER COMPREHENSIVE INCOME (LOSS), BEFORE TAX                    
Unrealized gains (losses) on investments available-for-sale   (47)   142    194    284 
Reclassification adjustment for (gains) included in net income   (6)   (67)   (19)   (79)
Unrealized (losses) on other   (5)   (2)   (10)   (1)
Unrealized gains (losses) on investments available-for-sale and other   (58)   73    165    204 
Amortization of pension actuarial loss and prior service cost   1    1    3    2 
Less: amortization of pension prior service cost included in net income   -    -    -    - 
Defined benefit pension plan   1    1    3    2 
Other comprehensive income (loss) before tax   (57)   74    168    206 
Income tax expense (benefit) related to items of other comprehensive income   (20)   26    59    72 
Other comprehensive income (loss), net of tax   (37)   48    109    134 
COMPREHENSIVE INCOME (LOSS)  $(5)  $(2)  $227   $145 

 

Accompanying notes are an integral part of these condensed consolidated financial statements.

 

Cincinnati Financial Corporation Second-Quarter 2012 10Q

Page 4

 

 

Cincinnati Financial Corporation and Subsidiaries

 

Condensed Consolidated Statements of Shareholders’ Equity

 

(In millions)                  Accumulated       Total 
   Common Stock           Other       Share- 
   Outstanding       Paid-In   Retained   Comprehensive   Treasury   holders' 
   Shares   Amount   Capital   Earnings   Income   Stock   Equity 
                             
Balance as reported December 31, 2010   163   $393   $1,091   $3,980   $769   $(1,201)  $5,032 
Cumulative effect of a change in accounting for deferred policy acquisition costs, net of tax   -    -    -    (20)   -    -    (20)
Balance as adjusted December 31, 2010   163    393    1,091    3,960    769    (1,201)   5,012 
                                    
Net income   -    -    -    11    -    -    11 
Other comprehensive income, net   -    -    -    -    134    -    134 
Dividends declared   -    -    -    (131)   -    -    (131)
Stock-based awards exercised and vested   -    -    (5)   -    -    3    (2)
Stock-based compensation   -    -    7    -    -    -    7 
Other   -    -    1    -    -    3    4 
Balance June 30, 2011   163   $393   $1,094   $3,840   $903   $(1,195)  $5,035 
                                    
Balance December 31, 2011   162   $393   $1,096   $3,863   $901   $(1,220)  $5,033 
                                    
Net income   -    -    -    118    -    -    118 
Other comprehensive income, net   -    -    -    -    109    -    109 
Dividends declared   -    -    -    (130)   -    -    (130)
Stock-based awards exercised and vested   -    -    1    -    -    1    2 
Stock-based compensation   -    -    8    -    -    -    8 
Other   -    -    1    -    -    3    4 
Balance June 30, 2012   162   $393   $1,106   $3,851   $1,010   $(1,216)  $5,144 

 

Accompanying notes are an integral part of these condensed consolidated financial statements.

 

Cincinnati Financial Corporation Second-Quarter 2012 10Q

Page 5

 

 

Cincinnati Financial Corporation and Subsidiaries

 

Condensed Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows

 

(In millions)  Six months ended June 30, 
   2012   2011 
CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES          
Net income  $118   $11 
Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided by operating activities:          
Depreciation, amortization and other non-cash items   22    23 
Realized gains on investments, net   (19)   (79)
Stock-based compensation   8    7 
Interest credited to contract holders   18    27 
Deferred income tax (benefit) expense   (3)   (9)
Changes in:          
Investment income receivable   1    (1)
Premiums and reinsurance receivable   (76)   (269)
Deferred policy acquisition costs   (26)   (26)
Other assets   (11)   (6)
Loss and loss expense reserves   57    335 
Life policy reserves   33    60 
Unearned premiums   129    77 
Other liabilities   7    (66)
Current income tax receivable/payable   7    (80)
Net cash provided by operating activities   265    4 
CASH FLOWS FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES          
Sale of fixed maturities   28    42 
Call or maturity of fixed maturities   360    391 
Sale of equity securities   124    342 
Purchase of fixed maturities   (603)   (645)
Purchase of equity securities   (210)   (100)
Investment in buildings and equipment, net   (4)   (4)
Investment in finance receivables   (18)   (16)
Collection of finance receivables   16    14 
Change in other invested assets, net   3    2 
Net cash (used in) provided by investing activities   (304)   26 
CASH FLOWS FROM FINANCING ACTIVITIES          
Payment of cash dividends to shareholders   (128)   (127)
Proceeds from stock options exercised   3    1 
Contract holders' funds deposited   56    73 
Contract holders' funds withdrawn   (62)   (44)
Excess tax benefits on share-based compensation   1    2 
Other   (6)   (7)
Net cash used in financing activities   (136)   (102)
Net change in cash and cash equivalents   (175)   (72)
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year   438    385 
Cash and cash equivalents at end of period  $263   $313 
           
Supplemental disclosures of cash flow information:          
Interest paid  $27   $27 
Income taxes paid   19    55 
Non-cash activities:          
Conversion of securities  $13   $- 
Equipment acquired under capital lease obligations   9    20 

 

Accompanying notes are an integral part of these condensed consolidated financial statements.

 

Cincinnati Financial Corporation Second-Quarter 2012 10Q

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Notes to Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements (unaudited)

 

Note 1 — Accounting Policies

 

The condensed consolidated financial statements include the accounts of Cincinnati Financial Corporation and its consolidated subsidiaries, each of which is wholly owned. These statements are presented in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America (GAAP). All intercompany balances and transactions have been eliminated in consolidation.

 

The preparation of financial statements in conformity with GAAP requires us to make estimates and assumptions that affect amounts reported in the financial statements and accompanying notes. Our actual results could differ from those estimates. The December 31, 2011, condensed consolidated balance sheet amounts are derived from the audited financial statements but do not include all disclosures required by GAAP.

 

Our June 30, 2012, condensed consolidated financial statements are unaudited. Certain financial information that is included in annual financial statements prepared in accordance with GAAP is not required for interim reporting and has been condensed or omitted. We believe that we have made all adjustments, consisting only of normal recurring accruals, that are necessary for fair presentation. These condensed consolidated financial statements should be read in conjunction with our consolidated financial statements included in our 2011 Annual Report on Form 10-K. The results of operations for interim periods do not necessarily indicate results to be expected for the full year.

 

Adopted Accounting Updates

 

ASU 2010-26, Accounting for Costs Associated with Acquiring or Renewing Insurance Contracts

 

In October 2010, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) issued Accounting Standards Update (ASU) 2010-26, Accounting for Costs Associated with Acquiring or Renewing Insurance Contracts. ASU 2010-26 modified the definitions of the type of costs incurred by insurance entities that can be capitalized in the successful acquisition of new and renewal contracts. ASU 2010-26 requires incremental direct costs of successful contract acquisition as well as certain costs related to underwriting, policy issuance and processing, medical and inspection and sales force contract selling for successful contract acquisition to be capitalized. These incremental direct costs and other costs are those that are essential to the contract transaction and would not have been incurred had the contract transaction not occurred. We retrospectively adopted ASU 2010-26 on January 1, 2012.

 

The following table illustrates the effect of adopting ASU 2010-26 in the condensed consolidated balance sheets:

 

 

(In millions, except per share amounts)  June 30,   December 31, 
   2012   2011 
       As Reported   As Adjusted   Difference 
Deferred policy acquisition costs  $484   $510   $477   $(33)
Total assets   16,089    15,668    15,635    (33)
Deferred income tax   359    314    303    (11)
Shareholders' equity   5,144    5,055    5,033    (22)
Book value per share   31.66    31.16    31.03    (0.13)

 

 

Cincinnati Financial Corporation Second-Quarter 2012 10Q

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The following table illustrates the effect of adopting ASU 2010-26 in the condensed consolidated statements of comprehensive operations:

 

 

(In millions, except per share amounts)  Three months ended June 30, 
   2012   2011 
       As Reported   As Adjusted   Difference 
Underwriting, acquisition and insurance expenses  $287   $251   $253   $2 
Net income   32    (49)   (50)   (1)
Net income per share:                    
Basic  $0.20   $(0.30)  $(0.31)  $(0.01)
Diluted   0.20    (0.30)   (0.31)   (0.01)

 

 

   Six months ended June 30, 
   2012   2011 
       As Reported   As Adjusted   Difference 
Underwriting, acquisition and insurance expenses  $561   $512   $515   $3 
Net income   118    13    11    (2)
Net income per share:                    
Basic  $0.73   $0.08   $0.07   $(0.01)
Diluted   0.72    0.08    0.07    (0.01)

 

 

ASU 2011-04, Fair Value Measurements, Amendments to Achieve Common Fair Value Measurement and Disclosure Requirements in U.S. GAAP and IFRS

 

In May 2011, the FASB issued ASU 2011-04, Fair Value Measurements, Amendments to Achieve Common Fair Value Measurement and Disclosure Requirements in U.S. GAAP and International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS). The ASU converges fair value measurement and disclosures among U.S. GAAP and IFRS. ASU 2011-04 changes certain fair value measurement principles and expands disclosure requirements. The company adopted ASU 2011-04 during the first quarter of 2012, and it did not have a material impact on our company’s financial position, cash flows or results of operations.

 

ASU 2011-05, Presentation of Comprehensive Income

 

In December 2011, the FASB issued ASU 2011-12, Deferral of the Effective Date for Amendments to the Presentation of Reclassifications of Items Out of Accumulated Other Comprehensive Income in Accounting Standards Update 2011-05, Presentation of Comprehensive Income. ASU 2011-05 requires entities to present the total of comprehensive income, the components of net income and the components of other comprehensive income either in a single, continuous statement of comprehensive income or in two separate but consecutive statements. ASU 2011-12 defers the changes in ASU 2011-05 that relate to the presentation of reclassification adjustments. The deferral of those changes allows the FASB time to redeliberate whether to present on the face of the financial statements the effects of reclassifications out of accumulated other comprehensive income for all periods presented. The company adopted ASU 2011-12 and ASU 2011-05 during the first quarter of 2012, and it did not have a material impact on our company’s financial position, cash flows or results of operations.

 

Note 2 – Segment Information

 

We operate primarily in two industries, property casualty insurance and life insurance. We regularly review our reporting segments to make decisions about allocating resources and assessing performance:

 

·Commercial lines property casualty insurance

 

·Personal lines property casualty insurance

 

·Excess and surplus lines property and casualty insurance

 

·Life insurance

 

·Investments

 

We report as Other the non-investment operations of the parent company and its non-insurer subsidiary, CFC Investment Company. See our 2011 Annual Report on Form 10-K, Item 8, Note 18, Segment Information, Page 136, for a description of revenue, income or loss before income taxes and identifiable assets for each of the five segments.

 

Cincinnati Financial Corporation Second-Quarter 2012 10Q

Page 8

 

 

Segment information is summarized in the following table:

 

 

(In millions)  Three months ended June 30,   Six months ended June 30, 
   2012   2011   2012   2011 
Revenues:                    
Commercial lines insurance                    
Commercial casualty  $191   $180   $372   $352 
Commercial property   134    115    265    241 
Commercial auto   106    96    207    192 
Workers' compensation   85    81    166    157 
Specialty packages   37    27    75    64 
Surety and executive risk   27    25    54    50 
Machinery and equipment   10    9    19    17 
Commercial lines insurance premiums   590    533    1,158    1,073 
Fee revenue   1    -    2    1 
Total commercial lines insurance   591    533    1,160    1,074 
                     
Personal lines insurance                    
Personal auto   100    90    198    179 
Homeowner   87    66    171    142 
Other personal lines   27    24    54    49 
Personal lines insurance premiums   214    180    423    370 
Fee revenue   1    1    1    1 
Total personal lines insurance   215    181    424    371 
                     
Excess and surplus lines insurance   22    17    43    32 
Life insurance   51    43    92    81 
Investment operations   138    199    282    342 
Other   3    2    5    4 
Total revenues  $1,020   $975   $2,006   $1,904 
                     
Income (loss) before income taxes:                    
Insurance underwriting results:                    
Commercial lines insurance  $(20)  $(129)  $14   $(151)
Personal lines insurance   (55)   (142)   (77)   (145)
Excess and surplus lines insurance   (2)   4    (5)   (1)
Life insurance   2    5    (1)   2 
Investment operations   118    179    241    302 
Other   (14)   (16)   (31)   (31)
Total  $29   $(99)  $141   $(24)

 

Identifiable assets:  June 30,   December 31, 
   2012   2011 
Property casualty insurance  $2,274   $2,272 
Life insurance   1,177    1,237 
Investment operations   12,364    11,883 
Other   274    243 
Total  $16,089   $15,635 

 

 

Cincinnati Financial Corporation Second-Quarter 2012 10Q

Page 9

 

 

Note 3 – Investments

 

The following table provides cost or amortized cost, gross unrealized gains, gross unrealized losses and fair value for our invested assets:

 

 

(In millions)  Cost or
amortized
   Gross unrealized   Fair 
At June 30, 2012  cost   gains   losses   value 
Fixed maturities:                    
States, municipalities and political subdivisions  $3,033   $250   $-   $3,283 
Convertibles and bonds with warrants attached   51    -    -    51 
United States government   7    1    -    8 
Government-sponsored enterprises   86    -    -    86 
Foreign government   3    -    -    3 
Corporate securities   5,072    529    7    5,594 
Subtotal   8,252    780    7    9,025 
Equity securities:                    
Common equities   2,149    860    2    3,007 
Preferred equities   99    33    -    132 
Subtotal   2,248    893    2    3,139 
Total  $10,500   $1,673   $9   $12,164 
                     
At December 31, 2011                    
Fixed maturities:                    
States, municipalities and political subdivisions  $3,006   $246   $-   $3,252 
Convertibles and bonds with warrants attached   59    -    -    59 
United States government   6    1    -    7 
Government-sponsored enterprises   159    1    -    160 
Foreign government   3    -    -    3 
Corporate securities   4,851    465    18    5,298 
Subtotal   8,084    713    18    8,779 
Equity securities:                    
Common equities   2,088    801    35    2,854 
Preferred equities   74    28    -    102 
Subtotal   2,162    829    35    2,956 
Total  $10,246   $1,542   $53   $11,735 

 

 

The net unrealized investment gains in our fixed-maturity portfolio are primarily the result of the current low interest rate environment that increased the fair value of our fixed-maturity portfolio. Included in corporate fixed maturities are $13 million of AAA rated commercial mortgage-backed securities. The three largest net unrealized investment gains in our common stock portfolio are from Exxon Mobil Corporation (NYSE:XOM), The Procter & Gamble Company (NYSE:PG) and Chevron Corporation (NYSE:CVX), which had a combined net gain position of $269 million. At June 30, 2012, we had $51 million fair value of hybrid securities included in fixed maturities that follow Accounting Standards Codification (ASC) 815-15-25, Accounting for Certain Hybrid Financial Instruments. The hybrid securities are carried at fair value, and the changes in fair value are included in realized investment gains and losses. At June 30, 2012, and December 31, 2011, there were no other-than-temporary impairments included within accumulated other comprehensive income (AOCI).

 

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The table below provides fair values and unrealized losses by investment category and by the duration of the securities’ continuous unrealized loss position:

 

 

(In millions)  Less than 12 months   12 months or more   Total 
At June 30, 2012  Fair
value
   Unrealized
losses
   Fair
value
   Unrealized
losses
   Fair
value
   Unrealized
losses
 
Fixed maturities:                              
States, municipalities and political subdivisions  $35   $-   $1   $-   $36   $- 
United States government   1    -    -    -    1    - 
Government-sponsored enterprises   25    -    -    -    25    - 
Corporate securities   193    3    59    4    252    7 
Subtotal   254    3    60    4    314    7 
Equity securities:                              
Common equities   67    2    3    -    70    2 
Preferred equities   5    -    4    -    9    - 
Subtotal   72    2    7    -    79    2 
Total  $326   $5   $67   $4   $393   $9 
                               
At December 31, 2011                              
Fixed maturities:                              
States, municipalities and political subdivisions  $-   $-   $12   $-   $12   $- 
United States government   1    -    -    -    1    - 
Government-sponsored enterprises   10    -    -    -    10    - 
Corporate securities   380    13    57    5    437    18 
Subtotal   391    13    69    5    460    18 
Equity securities:                              
Common equities   333    35    -    -    333    35 
Preferred equities   5    -    19    -    24    - 
Subtotal   338    35    19    -    357    35 
Total  $729   $48   $88   $5   $817   $53 

 

 

The following table provides realized investment gains and losses and the change in unrealized investment gains and losses and other items:

 

 

(In millions)  Three months ended June 30,   Six months ended June 30, 
   2012   2011   2012   2011 
Realized investment gains and losses summary:                    
Fixed maturities:                    
Gross realized gains  $13   $4   $16   $7 
Gross realized losses   -    -    -    - 
Other-than-temporary impairments   -    -    -    - 
Equity securities:                    
Gross realized gains   6    79    29    114 
Gross realized losses   (1)   (18)   (1)   (18)
Other-than-temporary impairments   (14)   -    (30)   (30)
Securities with embedded derivatives   1    -    5    4 
Other   1    2    -    2 
Total  $6   $67   $19   $79 
                     
Change in unrealized gains and losses summary:                    
Fixed maturities  $29   $96   $78   $104 
Equity securities   (82)   (21)   97    101 
Adjustment to deferred acquisition costs and life policy reserves   (8)   (4)   (15)   (4)
Amortization of pension actuarial loss and prior service cost   1    1    3    2 
Other   3    2    5    3 
Income taxes on above   20    (26)   (59)   (72)
Total  $(37)  $48   $109   $134 

 

During the three and six months ended June 30, 2012 and 2011, there were no credit losses on fixed-maturity securities for which a portion of other-than-temporary impairment (OTTI) has been recognized in other comprehensive income.

 

During the quarter ended June 30, 2012, we other-than-temporarily impaired four securities. At June 30, 2012, 16 fixed-maturity investments with a total unrealized loss of $4 million had been in an unrealized loss position for 12 months or more. Of that total, no fixed-maturity investments had fair values below 70 percent of amortized cost. Three equity investments with a total unrealized loss of less than $1 million had been in an unrealized loss position for 12 months or more as of June 30, 2012. Of that total, no equity investments were trading below 70 percent of cost.

 

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At December 31, 2011, 20 fixed-maturity investments with a total unrealized loss of $5 million had been in an unrealized loss position for 12 months or more. Of that total, no fixed-maturity investments had fair values below 70 percent of amortized cost. Two equity investments with a total unrealized loss of less than $1 million had been in an unrealized loss position for 12 months or more as of December 31, 2011. Of that total, no equity investments were trading below 70 percent of cost.

 

Note 4 – Fair Value Measurements

 

Fair Value Hierarchy

 

In accordance with accounting guidance for fair value measurements and disclosures, we categorized our financial instruments, based on the priority of the observable and market-based data for the valuation technique used, into a three-level fair value hierarchy. The fair value hierarchy gives the highest priority to quoted prices with readily available independent data in active markets for identical assets or liabilities (Level 1) and the lowest priority to unobservable market inputs (Level 3). When various inputs for measurement fall within different levels of the fair value hierarchy, the lowest observable input that has a significant impact on fair value measurement is used. Our valuation techniques have not changed from those used at December 31, 2011, and ultimately management determines fair value.

 

Financial instruments are categorized based upon the following characteristics or inputs to the valuation techniques:

 

·Level 1 – Financial assets and liabilities for which inputs are observable and are obtained from reliable quoted prices for identical assets or liabilities in active markets. This is the most reliable fair value measurement and includes, for example, active exchange-traded equity securities.

 

·Level 2 – Financial assets and liabilities for which values are based on quoted prices in markets that are not active or for which values are based on similar assets and liabilities that are actively traded. This also includes pricing models for which the inputs are corroborated by market data.

 

·Level 3 – Financial assets and liabilities for which values are based on prices or valuation techniques that require inputs that are both unobservable and significant to the overall fair value measurement. Level 3 inputs include the following:

 

oQuotes from brokers or other external sources that are not considered binding;

 

oQuotes from brokers or other external sources where it cannot be determined that market participants would in fact transact for the asset or liability at the quoted price; or

 

oQuotes from brokers or other external sources where the inputs are not deemed observable.

 

We conduct a thorough review of fair value hierarchy classifications on a quarterly basis. We primarily base fair value for investments in equity and fixed-maturity securities (including redeemable preferred stock and assets held in separate accounts) on quoted market prices or on prices from a nationally recognized pricing vendor, an outside resource that supplies global securities pricing, dividend, corporate action and descriptive information to support fund pricing, securities operations, research and portfolio management. The company obtains and reviews the pricing service’s valuation methodologies and related inputs and validates these prices by replicating a sample across each asset class using a discounted cash flow model. When a price is not available from these sources, as in the case of securities that are not publicly traded, we determine the fair value using various inputs including quotes from independent brokers. We have generally obtained and evaluated two non-binding quotes from brokers, our investment professionals determine our best estimate of fair value. The fair value of investments not priced by a pricing vendor is less than 1 percent of the fair value of our total investment portfolio. Reclassification of certain financial instruments may occur when input observability changes. All reclassifications are reported as transfers in or out of the Level 3 category as of the beginning of the quarter in which the reclassification occurred.

 

The technique used for the Level 2 fixed-maturity securities and taxable fixed maturities in separate accounts is the application of matrix pricing. The inputs used include relevant market information by asset class, trade activity of like securities, yield to maturity and economic events. All of the Level 2 fixed-maturity securities are priced by a nationally recognized pricing vendor.

 

The Level 2 preferred equities technique used is the application of matrix pricing. The inputs used, similar to those used by the pricing vendor for our fixed-maturity securities, include relevant market information, trade activity of like securities, yield to maturity, corporate action notices and economic events. All of the Level 2 preferred equities are priced by a nationally recognized pricing vendor.

 

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Fair Value Disclosures for Assets

 

The following tables illustrate the fair value hierarchy for those assets measured at fair value on a recurring basis at June 30, 2012, and December 31, 2011. We do not have any material liabilities carried at fair value. There were no transfers between Level 1 and Level 2.

 

 

(In millions)  Asset fair value measurements at June 30, 2012 using: 
   Quoted prices in
active markets for
identical assets
(Level 1)
   Significant other
observable inputs
(Level 2)
   Significant
unobservable
inputs
(Level 3)
   Total 
Fixed maturities, available for sale:                    
States, municipalities and political subdivisions  $-   $3,281   $2   $3,283 
Convertibles and bonds with warrants attached   -    51    -    51 
United States government   8    -    -    8 
Government-sponsored enterprises   -    86    -    86 
Foreign government   -    3    -    3 
Corporate securities   -    5,590    4    5,594 
Subtotal   8    9,011    6    9,025 
Common equities, available for sale   3,007    -    -    3,007 
Preferred equities, available for sale   -    125    7    132 
Taxable fixed maturities separate accounts   -    657    -    657 
Top Hat Savings Plan   9    -    -    9 
Total  $3,024   $9,793   $13   $12,830 

 

 

 

(In millions)  Asset fair value measurements at December 31, 2011 using: 
   Quoted prices in
active markets for
identical assets
(Level 1)
   Significant other
observable inputs
(Level 2)
   Significant
unobservable
inputs
(Level 3)
   Total 
Fixed maturities, available for sale:                    
States, municipalities and political subdivisions  $-   $3,249   $3   $3,252 
Convertibles and bonds with warrants attached   -    59    -    59 
United States government   7    -    -    7 
Government-sponsored enterprises   -    160    -    160 
Foreign government   -    3    -    3 
Corporate securities   -    5,280    18    5,298 
Subtotal   7    8,751    21    8,779 
Common equities, available for sale   2,854    -    -    2,854 
Preferred equities, available for sale   -    98    4    102 
Taxable fixed-maturities separate accounts   -    628    -    628 
Top Hat Savings Plan   8    -    -    8 
Total  $2,869   $9,477   $25   $12,371 

 

 

Each financial instrument that was deemed to have significant unobservable inputs when determining valuation is identified in the tables below by security type with a summary of changes in fair value as of June 30, 2012. Total Level 3 assets continue to be less than 1 percent of financial assets measured at fair value in the condensed consolidated balance sheets. Assets presented in the table below were valued based primarily on broker/dealer quotes for which there is a lack of transparency as to inputs used to develop the valuations. The quantitative detail of these unobservable inputs is neither provided nor reasonably available to us.

 

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The following tables provide the change in Level 3 assets for the three months ended June 30:

 

 

(In millions)  Asset fair value measurements using significant unobservable inputs (Level 3) 
   Corporate fixed
maturities
   States,
municipalities
and political
subdivisions
fixed maturities
   Preferred equities   Total 
Beginning balance, March 31, 2012  $16   $2   $7   $25 
Total gains or losses (realized/unrealized):                    
Included in earnings   -    -    -    - 
Included in other comprehensive income   -    -    -    - 
Purchases   -    -    -    - 
Sales   (1)   -    -    (1)
Transfers into Level 3   -    -    -    - 
Transfers out of Level 3   (11)   -    -    (11)
Ending balance, June 30, 2012  $4   $2   $7   $13 
                     
Beginning balance, March 31, 2011  $11   $4   $6   $21 
Total gains or losses (realized/unrealized):                    
Included in earnings   -    -    -    - 
Included in other comprehensive income   -    -    1    1 
Purchases   7    -    -    7 
Sales   -    -    -    - 
Transfers into Level 3   -    -    -    - 
Transfers out of Level 3   (3)   -    -    (3)
Ending balance, June 30, 2011  $15   $4   $7   $26 

 

The following tables provide the change in Level 3 assets for the six months ended June 30:

 

 

(In millions)  Asset fair value measurements using significant unobservable inputs (Level 3) 
   Corporate fixed
maturities
   Taxable fixed
maturities-
separate accounts
   States,
municipalities
and political
subdivisions
fixed maturities
   Preferred
equities
   Total 
Beginning balance, December 31, 2011  $18   $-   $3   $4   $25 
Total gains or losses (realized/unrealized):                         
Included in earnings   -    -    -    -    - 
Included in other comprehensive income   3    -    -    2    5 
Purchases   -    -    -    1    1 
Sales   (4)   -    (1)   -    (5)
Transfers into Level 3   1    -    -    -    1 
Transfers out of Level 3   (14)   -    -    -    (14)
Ending balance, June 30, 2012  $4   $-   $2   $7   $13 
                          
Beginning balance, December 31, 2010  $20   $2   $4   $5   $31 
Total gains or losses (realized/unrealized):                         
Included in earnings   -    -    -    -    - 
Included in other comprehensive income   -    -    -    1    1 
Purchases   7    -    -    -    7 
Sales                       - 
Transfers into Level 3   -    -    -    1    1 
Transfers out of Level 3   (12)   (2)   -    -    (14)
Ending balance, June 30, 2011  $15   $-   $4   $7   $26 

 

With the exception of the Level 3 reconciliation table, additional disclosure for the Level 3 category is not material.

 

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Fair Value Disclosure for Assets and Liabilities Not Carried at Fair Value

 

The disclosures below are presented to provide timely information about the effects of current market conditions on financial instruments that are not reported at fair value in our condensed consolidated financial statements.

 

This table summarizes the amortized cost and principal amounts of our long-term debt:

 

 

(In millions)          Book value   Principal amount 
           June 30,   December 31,   June 30,   December 31, 
Interest rate   Year of issue      2012   2011   2012   2011 
 6.900%   1998   Senior debentures, due 2028  $28   $28   $28   $28 
 6.920%   2005   Senior debentures, due 2028   391    391    391    391 
 6.125%   2004   Senior notes, due 2034   371    371    374    374 
          Total  $790   $790   $793   $793 

 

 

The following table shows fair values of our note payable and long-term debt subject to fair value disclosure requirements:

 

 

(In millions)  Note payable and long-term debt fair value disclosures at June 30, 2012 using: 
   Quoted prices in
active markets for
identical assets
(Level 1)
   Significant other
observable inputs
(Level 2)
   Significant
unobservable
inputs
(Level 3)
   Total 
Note payable  $-   $104   $-   $104 
6.9% senior debentures, due 2028   -    32    -    32 
6.92% senior debentures, due 2028   -    457    -    457 
6.125% senior notes, due 2034   -    410    -    410 
Total  $-   $1,003   $-   $1,003 

 

 

Fair value of the note payable is determined based upon the outstanding balance at June 30, 2012, because it is short term and tied to a variable interest rate. The note payable was classified as Level 2 as a market does not exist.

 

The fair value of our long-term debt approximated $814 million at year-end 2011. Fair value was determined under the fair value measurements and disclosure accounting rules based on market pricing of similar debt instruments that are actively trading. We determine fair value for our debt the same way that corporate fixed-maturities are valued in our investment portfolio. Fair value can vary with macroeconomic conditions. Regardless of the fluctuations in fair value, the outstanding principal amount of our long-term debt is $793 million. None of the long-term debt is encumbered by rating triggers.

 

The following table shows the fair value of our life policy loans, included in other invested assets, subject to fair value disclosure requirements:

 

 

(In millions)  Life insurance assets fair value disclosures at June 30, 2012 using: 
   Quoted prices in
active markets for
identical assets
(Level 1)
   Significant other
observable inputs
(Level 2)
   Significant
unobservable
inputs
(Level 3)
   Total 
Life policy loans  $-   $-   $46   $46 

 

 

The fair value of life policy loans outstanding principal and interest approximated $43 million at December 31, 2011. Outstanding principal and interest for these life policy loans was $36 million and $37 million at June 30, 2012, and December 31, 2011, respectively. To determine the fair value, we make the following significant assumptions: (1) the discount rates used to calculate the present value of expected payments are the risk-free spot rates as non-performance risk is minimal; and (2) the loan repayment rate by which policyholders pay off their loan balances is in line with past experience.

 

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The following table shows fair values of our deferred annuities and structured settlements, included in life policy and investment contract reserves, subject to fair value disclosure requirements:

 

 

(In millions)  Life insurance liabilities fair value disclosures at June 30, 2012 using: 
   Quoted prices in
active markets for
identical assets
(Level 1)
   Significant other
observable inputs
(Level 2)
   Significant
unobservable
inputs
(Level 3)
   Total 
Deferred annuities  $-   $-   $834   $834 
Structured settlements   -    214    -    214 
Total  $-   $214   $834   $1,048 

 

 

The fair value for deferred annuities and structured settlements were $794 million and $208 million, respectively, at December 31, 2011. Recorded reserves for the deferred annuities and structured settlements were $1.039 billion and $1.025 billion at June 30, 2012, and December 31, 2011, respectively.

 

Fair values for deferred annuities are calculated based upon internally developed models because active, observable markets do not exist for those items. To determine the fair value, we make the following significant assumptions: (1) the discount rates used to calculate the present value of expected payments are the risk-free spot rates plus an A3 rated bond spread for financial issuers at June 30, 2012, to account for non-performance risk; (2) the rate of interest credited to policyholders is the portfolio net earned interest rate less a spread for expenses and profit; and (3) additional lapses occur when the credited interest rate is exceeded by an assumed competitor credited rate, which is a function of the risk-free rate of the economic scenario being modeled.

 

Determination of fair value for structured settlements assumes the discount rates used to calculate the present value of expected payments are the risk-free spot rates plus an A3 rated bond spread for financial issuers at June 30, 2012, to account for non-performance risk.

 

Note 5 – Property Casualty Loss and Loss Expenses

 

This table summarizes activity for our consolidated property casualty loss and loss expense reserves:

 

 

(In millions)  Three months ended June 30,   Six months ended June 30, 
   2012   2011   2012   2011 
Gross loss and loss expense reserves, beginning of period  $4,289   $4,179   $4,280   $4,137 
Less reinsurance receivable   352    326    375    326 
Net loss and loss expense reserves, beginning of period   3,937    3,853    3,905    3,811 
Net incurred loss and loss expenses related to:                    
Current accident year   725    853    1,380    1,442 
Prior accident years   (85)   (96)   (201)   (155)
Total incurred   640    757    1,179    1,287 
Net paid loss and loss expenses related to:                    
Current accident year   282    391    414    522 
Prior accident years   290    248    665    608 
Total paid   572    639    1,079    1,130 
                     
Net loss and loss expense reserves, end of period   4,005    3,971    4,005    3,971 
Plus reinsurance receivable   332    508    332    508 
Gross loss and loss expense reserves, end of period  $4,337   $4,479   $4,337   $4,479 

 

 

We use actuarial methods, models and judgment to estimate, as of a financial statement date, the property casualty loss and loss expense reserves required to pay for and settle all outstanding insured claims, including incurred but not reported (IBNR) claims, as of that date. The actuarial estimate is subject to review and adjustment by an inter-departmental committee that includes actuarial management and is familiar with relevant company and industry business, claims and underwriting trends, as well as general economic and legal trends, that could affect future loss and loss expense payments. The amount we will actually have to pay for claims can be highly uncertain. This uncertainty, together with the size of our reserves, makes the loss and loss expense reserves our most significant estimate. The reserve for loss and loss expenses in the condensed consolidated balance sheets also includes $59 million at June 30, 2012, and $56 million at June 30, 2011, for certain life and health loss and loss expense reserves.

 

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During the second quarter of 2012, we experienced $85 million of favorable development on prior accident years. There was $5 million from favorable development of catastrophe losses compared with no favorable development of catastrophe losses at June 30, 2011. Overall favorable development for commercial lines reserves illustrated the potential for revisions inherent in estimating reserves, especially for long-tailed lines such as commercial casualty and workers’ compensation. We recognized favorable reserve development of $56 million for the commercial casualty line and favorable development of $12 million for the workers’ compensation line due to reduced uncertainty of prior accident year loss and loss adjustment expense for these lines.

 

During the first half of 2012, we experienced $201 million of favorable development on prior accident years. There was $27 million from favorable development of catastrophe losses compared with $1 million at June 30, 2011. We recognized favorable reserve development of $104 million for the commercial casualty line and favorable development of $28 million for the workers’ compensation line due to reduced uncertainty of prior accident year loss and loss adjustment expense for these lines.

 

Note 6 – Deferred Acquisition Costs

 

The expenses associated with issuing insurance policies – primarily commissions, premium taxes and underwriting costs – are deferred and amortized over the terms of the policies. We update our acquisition cost assumptions periodically to reflect actual experience, and we evaluate our deferred acquisition costs for recoverability. All acquisition costs reflect ASU 2010-26, Accounting for Costs Associated with Acquiring or Renewing Insurance Contracts, which we adopted on January 1, 2012. The table below shows the deferred policy acquisition costs and asset reconciliation, including the amortized deferred policy acquisition costs.

 

 

(In millions)  Three months ended June 30,   Six months ended June 30, 
   2012   2011   2012   2011 
Deferred policy acquisition costs asset at beginning of period  $483   $472   $477   $458 
Capitalized deferred policy acquisition costs   192    168    362    332 
Amortized deferred policy acquisition costs   (181)   (156)   (337)   (306)
Amortized shadow deferred policy acquisition costs   (10)   (5)   (18)   (5)
Deferred policy acquisition costs asset at end of period   484   $479   $484   $479 

 

 

There were no premium deficiencies recorded in the reported condensed consolidated statements of comprehensive income, as the sum of the anticipated loss and loss adjustment expenses, policyholder dividends and unamortized deferred acquisition expenses did not exceed the related unearned premiums and anticipated investment income.

 

Note 7 – Life Policy and Investment Contract Reserves

 

We establish the reserves for traditional life insurance policies based on expected expenses, mortality, morbidity, withdrawal rates and investment yields, including a provision for uncertainty. Once these assumptions are established, they generally are maintained throughout the lives of the contracts. We use both our own experience and industry experience, adjusted for historical trends, in arriving at our assumptions for expected mortality, morbidity and withdrawal rates as well as for expected expenses. We base our assumptions for expected investment income on our own experience adjusted for current economic conditions.

 

We establish reserves for the company’s universal life, deferred annuity and structured settlement policies equal to the cumulative account balances, which include premium deposits plus credited interest less charges and withdrawals. Some of our universal life policies contain no-lapse guarantee provisions. For these policies, we establish a reserve in addition to the account balance, based on expected no-lapse guarantee benefits and expected policy assessments.

 

 

(In millions)  June 30,   December 31, 
   2012   2011 
Ordinary/traditional life  $719   $691 
Universal life   481    481 
Deferred annuities   842    827 
Structured settlements   197    198 
Other   17    17 
Total gross reserves  $2,256   $2,214 

 

 

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Note 8 – Reinsurance

 

Reinsurance mitigates the risk of highly uncertain exposures and limits the maximum net loss that can arise from large risks or risks concentrated in areas of exposure. Primary components of our property and casualty reinsurance program include a property risk treaty, casualty per occurrence treaty and property catastrophe treaty.

 

Our condensed consolidated statements of comprehensive operations include earned consolidated property casualty insurance premiums on assumed and ceded business:

 

 

(In millions)  Three months ended June 30,   Six months ended June 30, 
   2012   2011   2012   2011 
Direct earned premiums  $868   $807   $1,707   $1,587 
Assumed earned premiums   3    2    6    7 
Ceded earned premiums   (45)   (79)   (89)   (119)
Net earned premiums  $826   $730   $1,624   $1,475 

 

 

The decrease in ceded earned premiums for 2012 compared with 2011 is related to earned reinstatement premiums as a result of the increase in catastrophe losses in the second quarter of 2011.

 

Our condensed consolidated statements of comprehensive income include incurred consolidated property casualty insurance loss and loss expenses on assumed and ceded business:

 

 

(In millions)  Three months ended June 30,   Six months ended June 30, 
   2012   2011   2012   2011 
Direct incurred loss and loss expenses  $647   $981   $1,183   $1,508 
Assumed incurred loss and loss expenses   1    5    6    20 
Ceded incurred loss and loss expenses   (8)   (229)   (10)   (241)
Net incurred loss and loss expenses  $640   $757   $1,179   $1,287 

 

 

The decrease in ceded loss and loss expenses for 2012 compared with 2011 is related to the higher catastrophe losses in the second quarter of 2011.

 

Our life insurance company purchases reinsurance for protection of a portion of the risk that is written. Primary components of our life reinsurance program include individual mortality coverage and aggregate catastrophe and accidental death coverage in excess of certain deductibles. Our condensed consolidated statements of comprehensive operations include earned life insurance premiums on ceded business:

 

 

(In millions)  Three months ended June 30,   Six months ended June 30, 
   2012   2011   2012   2011 
Direct earned premiums  $64   $55   $118   $105 
Assumed earned premiums   -    -    -    - 
Ceded earned premiums   (13)   (12)   (26)   (25)
Net earned premiums  $51   $43   $92   $80 

 

 

Our condensed consolidated statements of comprehensive operations include life insurance contract holders’ benefits incurred on ceded business:

 

 

(In millions)  Three months ended June 30,   Six months ended June 30, 
   2012   2011   2012   2011 
Direct contract holders' benefits incurred  $57   $56   $110   $109 
Assumed contract holders' benefits incurred   -    -    -    - 
Ceded contract holders' benefits incurred   (10)   (12)   (20)   (20)
Net incurred loss and loss expenses  $47   $44   $90   $89 

 

 

Cincinnati Financial Corporation Second-Quarter 2012 10Q

Page 18

 

 

Note 9 – Net Income Per Common Share

 

Basic earnings per share are computed based on the weighted average number of shares outstanding. Diluted earnings per share are computed based on the weighted average number of common and dilutive potential common shares outstanding.

 

Here are calculations for basic and diluted earnings per share:

 

 

(Dollars in millions except share data in thousands)  Three months ended June 30,   Six months ended June 30, 
   2012   2011   2012   2011 
Numerator:                    
Net income (loss)—basic and diluted  $32   $(50)  $118   $11 
                     
Denominator:                    
Weighted-average common shares outstanding   162,425    163,069    162,351    163,005 
Effect of stock-based awards:                    
Nonvested shares   670    -    602    512 
Stock options   419    -    375    168 
Adjusted weighted-average shares   163,514    163,069    163,328    163,685 
                     
Earnings (loss) per share:                    
Basic  $0.20   $(0.31)  $0.73   $0.07 
Diluted   0.20    (0.31)   0.72    0.07 
                     
Number of anti-dilutive stock-based awards   6,059    7,858    6,072    7,853 

 

 

The current sources of dilution of our common shares are certain equity-based awards as discussed in our 2011 Annual Report on Form 10-K, Item 8, Note 17, Stock-Based Associate Compensation Plans, Page 134. The above table shows the number of anti-dilutive stock-based awards for the three and six months ended June 30, 2012 and 2011. We did not include these stock-based awards in the computation of net income per common share (diluted) because their exercise would have anti-dilutive effects. Due to the net loss in the second quarter of 2011, the assumed exercise of certain stock options and nonvested shares were excluded from the computation of diluted loss per share.

 

Note 10 – Employee Retirement Benefits

 

The following summarizes the components of net periodic costs for our qualified and supplemental pension plans:

 

 

(In millions)  Three months ended June 30,   Six months ended June 30, 
   2012   2011   2012   2011 
Service cost  $3   $2   $6   $5 
Interest cost   4    4    7    7 
Expected return on plan assets   (4)   (4)   (8)   (8)
Amortization of actuarial loss and prior service cost   1    1    3    2 
Net periodic benefit cost  $4   $3   $8   $6 

 

 

See our 2011 Annual Report on Form 10-K, Item 8, Note 13, Employee Retirement Benefits, Page 130, for information on our retirement benefits. We made matching contributions of $3 million and $2 million to our 401(k) and Top Hat savings plans during the second quarter of 2012 and 2011 and contributions of $5 million and $4 million for the first halves of 2012 and 2011, respectively.

 

We made no contribution to the pension plan during the first half of 2012. We anticipate contributing $14 million in the third quarter of 2012 to our qualified pension plan as indicated in our 2011 Annual Report on Form 10-K.

 

Note 11 – Stock-Based Compensation Plans

 

We currently have four equity compensation plans that permit us to grant various types of equity awards. We currently grant incentive stock options, non-qualified stock options, service-based restricted stock units and performance-based restricted stock units, including some with market-based performance objectives, under our shareholder-approved plans to associates. We also have a Holiday Stock Plan that permits annual awards of one share of common stock to each full-time associate for each full calendar year of service up to a maximum of 10 shares. One of our equity compensation plans permits us to grant stock to our outside directors as a component of their annual compensation. For additional information about our equity compensation plans, see our 2011 Annual Report on Form 10-K, Item 8, Note 17, Stock-Based Associate Compensation Plans, Page 134.

 

A total of 17.3 million shares are authorized to be granted under the shareholder-approved plans. At June 30, 2012, 9.3 million shares were available for future issuance under the plans.

 

Cincinnati Financial Corporation Second-Quarter 2012 10Q

Page 19

 

 

Stock-Based Awards

 

Stock-based awards were granted to associates during 2012 and are summarized in the tables below. Stock-based compensation cost after tax was $3 million for both the three months ended June 30, 2012 and 2011 and $5 million for both the six months ended June 30, 2012 and 2011, respectively. As of June 30, 2012, $27 million of unrecognized compensation costs related to non-vested awards is expected to be recognized over a weighted-average period of 2.2 years.

 

Here is a summary of option information:

 

 

(Shares in thousands)  Shares   Weighted-
average
exercise price
 
         
Outstanding at January 1, 2012   9,357   $36.71 
Granted   536    35.63 
Exercised   (100)   28.73 
Forfeited or expired   (1,148)   35.50 
Outstanding at June 30, 2012   8,645    36.90 

 

 

Here is a summary of restricted stock unit information:

 

 

(Shares in thousands)  Service-based
shares
   Weighted-average
grant-date fair
value
   Performance-based
shares
   Weighted-average
grant-date fair
value
 
Nonvested at January 1, 2012   563   $26.05    156   $25.86 
Granted   403    31.14    110    34.89 
Vested   (4)   27.23    (53)   22.88 
Forfeited or canceled   (16)   27.76    (4)   30.97 
Nonvested at June 30, 2012   946    28.18    209    31.26 

 

 

Note 12 – Income Taxes

 

As of June 30, 2012, and December 31, 2011, we had no liability for unrecognized tax benefits. Details about our liability for unrecognized tax benefits are found in our 2011 Annual Report on Form 10-K, Item 8, Note 11, Income Taxes, Pages 129 and 130.

 

The differences between the 35 percent statutory income tax rate and our effective income tax rate were as follows:

 

 

(Dollars in millions)  Three months ended June 30,   Six months ended June 30, 
   2012   2011   2012   2011 
Tax at statutory rate  $10    35.0%  $(35)   35.0%  $49    35.0%  $(8)   35.0%
Increase (decrease) resulting from:                                        
Tax-exempt income from municipal bonds   (8)   (27.6)   (9)   9.1    (17)   (12.1)   (17)   70.8 
Dividend received exclusion   (6)   (20.7)   (5)   5.1    (11)   (7.8)   (10)   41.7 
Other   1    3.0    -    0.3    2    1.2    -    (1.7)
Provision (benefit) for income taxes  $(3)   (10.3)%  $(49)   49.5%  $23    16.3%  $(35)   145.8%

 

 

The change in our effective tax rate was primarily due to changes in pretax income from underwriting results and realized investment gains and losses.

 

Note 13 – Commitments and Contingent Liabilities

 

In the ordinary course of conducting business, the company and its subsidiaries are named as defendants in various legal proceedings. Most of these proceedings are claims litigation involving the company’s insurance subsidiaries in which the company is either defending or providing indemnity for third-party claims brought against insureds who are litigating first-party coverage claims. The company accounts for such activity through the establishment of unpaid loss and loss adjustment expense reserves. We believe that the ultimate liability, if any, with respect to such ordinary-course claims litigation, after consideration of provisions made for potential losses and costs of defense, is immaterial to our consolidated financial condition, results of operations and cash flows.

 

Cincinnati Financial Corporation Second-Quarter 2012 10Q

Page 20

 

 

The company and its subsidiaries also are occasionally involved in other legal actions, some of which assert claims for substantial amounts. These actions include, among others, putative class actions seeking certification of a state or national class. Such putative class actions have alleged, for example, breach of an alleged duty to search national data bases to ascertain unreported deaths of insureds under life insurance policies. The company’s insurance subsidiaries also are occasionally parties to individual actions in which extra-contractual damages, punitive damages or penalties are sought, such as claims alleging bad faith in the handling of insurance claims or claims alleging discrimination by former associates.

 

On a quarterly basis, we review these outstanding matters. Under current accounting guidance, we establish accruals when it is probable that a loss has been incurred and we can reasonably estimate its potential exposure. The company accounts for such probable and estimable losses, if any, through the establishment of legal expense reserves. Based on our quarterly review, we believe that our accruals for probable and estimable losses are reasonable and that the amounts accrued do not have a material effect on our consolidated financial condition or results of operations. However, if any one or more of these matters results in a judgment against us or settlement for an amount that is significantly greater than the amount accrued, the resulting liability could have a material effect on the company’s consolidated results of operations or cash flows. Based on our quarterly review, for any other matter for which the risk of loss is more than remote we are unable to reasonably estimate the potential loss or establish a reasonable range of loss.

 

Cincinnati Financial Corporation Second-Quarter 2012 10Q

Page 21

 

 

Item 2.Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations

 

The following discussion highlights significant factors influencing the consolidated results of operations and financial position of Cincinnati Financial Corporation (CFC). It should be read in conjunction with the consolidated financial statements and related notes included in our 2011 Annual Report on Form 10-K. Unless otherwise noted, the industry data is prepared by A.M. Best Co., a leading insurance industry statistical, analytical and financial strength rating organization. Information from A.M. Best is presented on a statutory basis. When we provide our results on a comparable statutory basis, we label it as such; all other company data is presented in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America (GAAP).

 

As discussed in Item 1, Note 1, Accounting Policies, Page 7, effective January 1, 2012, we adopted ASU 2010-26, Accounting for Costs Associated with Acquiring or Renewing Insurance Contracts. We adjusted applicable financial statements. Related financial data shown in Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations also have been adjusted.

 

We present per share data on a diluted basis unless otherwise noted, adjusting those amounts for all stock splits and dividends. Dollar amounts are rounded to millions; calculations of percent changes are based on dollar amounts rounded to the nearest million. Certain percentage changes are identified as not meaningful (nm).

 

Safe Harbor Statement

 

This is our “Safe Harbor” statement under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Our business is subject to certain risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from those suggested by the forward-looking statements in this report. Some of those risks and uncertainties are discussed in our 2011 Annual Report on Form 10-K, Item 1A, Risk Factors, Page 26.

 

Factors that could cause or contribute to such differences include, but are not limited to:

 

·Unusually high levels of catastrophe losses due to risk concentrations, changes in weather patterns, environmental events, terrorism incidents or other causes

 

·Increased frequency and/or severity of claims

 

·Inadequate estimates or assumptions used for critical accounting estimates

 

·Recession or other economic conditions resulting in lower demand for insurance products or increased payment delinquencies

 

·Declines in overall stock market values negatively affecting the company’s equity portfolio and book value

 

·Events resulting in capital market or credit market uncertainty, followed by prolonged periods of economic instability or recession, that lead to:

 

oSignificant or prolonged decline in the value of a particular security or group of securities and impairment of the asset(s)

 

oSignificant decline in investment income due to reduced or eliminated dividend payouts from a particular security or group of securities

 

oSignificant rise in losses from surety and director and officer policies written for financial institutions or other insured entities

 

·Prolonged low interest rate environment or other factors that limit the company’s ability to generate growth in investment income or interest rate fluctuations that result in declining values of fixed-maturity investments, including declines in accounts in which we hold bank-owned life insurance contract assets

 

·Increased competition that could result in a significant reduction in the company’s premium volume

 

·Delays or performance inadequacies from ongoing development and implementation of underwriting and pricing methods or technology projects and enhancements expected to increase our pricing accuracy, underwriting profit and competitiveness

 

·Changing consumer insurance-buying habits and consolidation of independent insurance agencies that could alter our competitive advantages

 

·Inability to obtain adequate reinsurance on acceptable terms, amount of reinsurance purchased, financial strength of reinsurers and the potential for non-payment or delay in payment by reinsurers

 

·Difficulties with technology or data security breaches, including cyber attacks, that could negatively affect our ability to conduct business and our relationships with agents, policyholders and others

 

Cincinnati Financial Corporation Second-Quarter 2012 10Q

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·Inability to defer policy acquisition costs for any business segment if pricing and loss trends would lead management to conclude that segment could not achieve sustainable profitability

 

·Events or conditions that could weaken or harm the company’s relationships with its independent agencies and hamper opportunities to add new agencies, resulting in limitations on the company’s opportunities for growth, such as:

 

oDowngrades of the company’s financial strength ratings

 

oConcerns that doing business with the company is too difficult
   
oPerceptions that the company’s level of service, particularly claims service, is no longer a distinguishing characteristic in the marketplace

 

·Actions of insurance departments, state attorneys general or other regulatory agencies, including a change to a federal system of regulation from a state-based system, that:

 

oImpose new obligations on us that increase our expenses or change the assumptions underlying our critical accounting estimates

 

oPlace the insurance industry under greater regulatory scrutiny or result in new statutes, rules and regulations

 

oRestrict our ability to exit or reduce writings of unprofitable coverages or lines of business

 

oAdd assessments for guaranty funds, other insurance related assessments or mandatory reinsurance arrangements; or that impair our ability to recover such assessments through future surcharges or other rate changes

 

oIncrease our provision for federal income taxes due to changes in tax law

 

oIncrease our other expenses

 

oLimit our ability to set fair, adequate and reasonable rates

 

oPlace us at a disadvantage in the marketplace

 

oRestrict our ability to execute our business model, including the way we compensate agents

 

·Adverse outcomes from litigation or administrative proceedings

 

·Events or actions, including unauthorized intentional circumvention of controls, that reduce the company’s future ability to maintain effective internal control over financial reporting under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002

 

·Unforeseen departure of certain executive officers or other key employees due to retirement, health or other causes that could interrupt progress toward important strategic goals or diminish the effectiveness of certain longstanding relationships with insurance agents and others

 

·Events, such as an epidemic, natural catastrophe or terrorism, that could hamper our ability to assemble our workforce at our headquarters location

 

Further, the company’s insurance businesses are subject to the effects of changing social, economic and regulatory environments. Public and regulatory initiatives have included efforts to adversely influence and restrict premium rates, restrict the ability to cancel policies, impose underwriting standards and expand overall regulation. The company also is subject to public and regulatory initiatives that can affect the market value for its common stock, such as measures affecting corporate financial reporting and governance. The ultimate changes and eventual effects, if any, of these initiatives are uncertain.

 

Cincinnati Financial Corporation Second-Quarter 2012 10Q

Page 23

 

 

Introduction

 

Corporate Financial Highlights

 

Statements of Comprehensive Income and Per Share Data

 

 

(Dollars in millions except share data in thousands)  Three months ended June 30,   Six months ended June 30, 
   2012   2011   Change %   2012   2011   Change % 
Statement of operations data                        
Earned premiums  $877   $773    13   $1,716   $1,555    10 
Investment income, net of expenses (pretax)   132    132    0    263    263    0 
Realized investment gains and losses (pretax)   6    67    (91)   19    79    (76)
Total revenues   1,020    975    5    2,006    1,904    5 
Net income (loss)   32    (50)   nm    118    11    973 
Comprehensive income (loss)   (5)   (2)   (150)   227    145    57 
Per share data                              
Net income (loss) - diluted  $0.20   $(0.31)   nm   $0.72   $0.07    929 
Cash dividends declared   0.4025    0.40    1    0.805    0.80    1 
                               
Weighted average shares outstanding   163,514    163,069    0    163,328    163,685    0 

 

 

Revenues rose for the second quarter and the first six months of 2012 compared with the same periods of 2011, primarily due to growth in earned premiums. Premium and investment revenue trends are discussed further in the respective sections of Results of Operations, Page 30. 

 

Realized investment gains and losses are recognized on the sales of investments or as otherwise required by GAAP. We have substantial discretion in the timing of investment sales, and that timing generally is independent of the insurance underwriting process. GAAP also requires us to recognize in net income the gains or losses from certain changes in fair values of securities even though we continue to hold the securities.

 

Net income for the second quarter of 2012 compared with the 2011 second quarter increased $82 million, reflecting stronger property casualty underwriting income that rose $124 million after taxes. Lower catastrophe losses, mostly weather related, reduced net-of-taxes property casualty underwriting results by $93 million less than the second quarter of 2011, in addition to better underwriting results before catastrophes. After-tax investment income in our investment segment results for the second quarter of 2012 rose $1 million compared with the second quarter of 2011, while life insurance segment results on a pretax basis declined by $3 million. Second-quarter 2012 after-tax net realized investment gains and losses were $40 million lower than a year earlier.

 

For the six-month period ended June 30, 2012, net income increased compared with the same period of 2011, also primarily due to higher property casualty underwriting results that rose $149 million after taxes, including $62 million from lower catastrophe losses. After-tax investment income rose by $1 million while after-tax net realized investment gains and losses were $38 million lower. Life insurance segment results on a pretax basis were $3 million lower.

 

Performance by segment is discussed below in Results of Operations, beginning on Page 30. As discussed in our 2011 Annual Report on Form 10-K, Item 7, Factors Influencing Our Future Performance, Page 41, there are several reasons that our performance during 2012 may be below our long-term targets. In that annual report, as part of Results of Operations, we also discussed the full-year 2012 outlook for each reporting segment.

 

The board of directors is committed to rewarding shareholders directly through cash dividends and through share repurchase authorizations. Through 2011, the company had increased the indicated annual cash dividend rate for 51 consecutive years, a record we believe was matched by only nine other publicly traded companies. Cash dividends declared during the first six months of 2012 increased approximately 1 percent compared with the same period of 2011. Our board regularly evaluates relevant factors in share repurchase- and dividend-related decisions, and the 2011 dividend increase signaled confidence in our strong capital, liquidity and financial flexibility, as well as progress through our initiatives to improve earnings performance.

 

Cincinnati Financial Corporation Second-Quarter 2012 10Q

Page 24

 

 

Balance Sheet Data and Performance Measures

 

 

(Dollars in millions except share data)  At June 30,   At December 31, 
   2012   2011 
Balance sheet data          
Invested assets  $12,231   $11,801 
Total assets   16,089    15,635 
Short-term debt   104    104 
Long-term debt   790    790 
Shareholders' equity   5,144    5,033 
Book value per share   31.66    31.03 
Debt-to-total-capital ratio   14.8%   15.1%

 

 

Total assets increased 3 percent compared with year-end 2011, largely due to growth in invested assets that was driven by additional purchases of securities and to a lesser extent by higher market valuation. Shareholders’ equity rose 2 percent and book value per share was up 2 percent during the first six months of 2012. Our debt-to-total-capital ratio (capital is the sum of debt plus shareholders’ equity) decreased compared with year-end 2011. The value creation ratio, a non-GAAP measure defined below, was higher for the first six months of 2012 compared with 2011, primarily due to growth in unrealized investment gains and net income. The $0.63 increase in book value per share during the first six months of 2012 contributed 2.0 percentage points to the value creation ratio while dividends declared at $0.805 per share during the first six months of 2012 contributed 2.6 points. Value creation ratio trends and a reconciliation of the non-GAAP measure to comparable GAAP measures are shown in the tables below.

 

 

   Three months ended June 30,   Six months ended June 30, 
   2012   2011   2012   2011 
Performance measure                    
Value creation ratio   0.0%   0.1%   4.6%   2.9%

 

(Dollars are per share)  Three months ended June 30,   Six months ended June 30, 
   2012   2011   2012   2011 
Value creation ratio                    
End of period book value  $31.66   $30.88   $31.66   $30.88 
Less beginning of period book value   32.07    31.27    31.03    30.79 
Change in book value   (0.41)   (0.39)   0.63    0.09 
Dividend declared to shareholders   0.40    0.40    0.81    0.80 
Total contribution to value creation ratio  $(0.01)  $0.01   $1.44   $0.89 
                     
Contribution to value creation ratio from change in book value   (1.3)%   (1.2)%   2.0%   0.3%
Contribution to value creation ratio from dividends declared to shareholders   1.3    1.3    2.6    2.6 
Value creation ratio   0.0%   0.1%   4.6%   2.9%

 

 

Progress Toward Long-Term Value Creation

 

Operating through The Cincinnati Insurance Company, Cincinnati Financial Corporation is one of the 25 largest property casualty insurers in the nation, based on 2011 direct written premium volume for approximately 2,000 U.S. stock and mutual insurer groups. We market our insurance products through a select group of independent insurance agencies in 39 states as discussed in our 2011 Annual Report on Form 10-K, Item 1, Our Business and Our Strategy, Page 3.

 

We maintain a long-term perspective that guides us in addressing immediate challenges or opportunities while focusing on the major decisions that best position our company for success through all market cycles. We believe that this forward-looking view has consistently benefited our policyholders, agents, shareholders and associates.

 

To measure our long-term progress in creating shareholder value, we have defined a value creation metric that we believe captures the contribution of our insurance operations, the success of our investment strategy and the importance we place on paying cash dividends to shareholders. This measure, our value creation ratio or VCR, is made up of two primary components: (1) our rate of growth in book value per share plus (2) the ratio of dividends declared per share to beginning book value per share. For the period 2010 through 2014, an annual value creation ratio averaging 12 percent to 15 percent is our primary performance target. Management believes this non-GAAP measure is a useful supplement to GAAP information.

 

Cincinnati Financial Corporation Second-Quarter 2012 10Q

Page 25

 

 

Performance Drivers

 

When looking at our long-term objectives, we see three performance drivers:

 

·Premium growth – We believe over any five-year period our agency relationships and initiatives can lead to a property casualty written premium growth rate that exceeds the industry average. For the first six months of 2012, year-over-year growth of our total property casualty net written premiums was 13 percent. This growth rate compared favorably with A.M. Best’s projection, as of February 2012, of 4 percent full-year growth for the industry excluding the mortgage and financial guaranty lines of business. Our premium growth initiatives are discussed below in Highlights of Our Strategies and Supporting Initiatives, Page 26.

 

·Combined ratio – We believe our underwriting philosophy and initiatives can generate a GAAP combined ratio over any five-year period that is consistently within the range of 95 percent to 100 percent. For the first six months of 2012, our GAAP combined ratio was 104.4 percent and our statutory combined ratio was 103.4 percent, both including 16.2 percentage points of current accident year catastrophe losses partially offset by 12.4 percentage points of favorable loss reserve development on prior accident years. As of February 2012, A.M. Best forecasted the industry’s 2012 statutory combined ratio, excluding the mortgage and financial guaranty lines of business, at approximately 102 percent. Best’s projection included approximately 5 percentage points of catastrophe losses and a favorable impact of approximately 3 percentage points from prior accident year reserve releases. For the commercial lines industry segment, excluding the mortgage and financial guaranty lines of business, A.M. Best projected a full-year 2012 statutory combined ratio at approximately 104 percent, including approximately 4 percentage points of catastrophe losses and a favorable impact of approximately 2 percentage points from prior accident year reserve releases.

 

·Investment contribution – We believe our investment philosophy and initiatives can drive investment income growth and lead to a total return on our equity investment portfolio over a five-year period that exceeds the five-year return of the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index. For the first six months of 2012, pretax investment income was $263 million, flat compared with the same period in 2011. We believe our investment portfolio mix provides an appropriate balance of income stability and growth with capital appreciation potential.

 

Highlights of Our Strategy and Supporting Initiatives

 

Management has worked to identify a strategy that can lead to long-term success, with concurrence by the board of directors. Our strategy is intended to position us to compete successfully in the markets we have targeted while appropriately managing risk. Further description of our long-term, proven strategy can be found in our 2011 Annual Report on Form 10-K, Item 1, Our Business and Our Strategy, Page 3. We believe successful implementation of initiatives that support our strategy, summarized below, will help us better serve our agent customers and reduce variability in our financial results while we also grow earnings and book value over the long term, successfully navigating challenging economic, market or industry pricing cycles.

 

·Improve insurance profitability – Implementation of these initiatives is intended to improve pricing capabilities for our property casualty business and increase our ability to manage our business while also enhancing our efficiency. Improved pricing capabilities through the use of technology and analytics can lead to better profit margins. Improved internal processes with additional performance metrics can help us be more efficient and effective. These initiatives also support the ability of the agencies that represent us to grow profitably by allowing them to serve clients faster and to more efficiently manage agency expenses.

 

·Drive premium growth – Implementation of these initiatives is intended to further penetrate each market we serve through our independent agency network. Strategies aimed at specific market opportunities, along with service enhancements, can help our agents grow and increase our share of their business. Diversified growth also may reduce variability of losses from weather-related catastrophes.

 

We discuss initiatives supporting each of these strategies below, along with metrics we use to assess our progress.

 

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Improve Insurance Profitability

 

The main initiatives to improve our insurance profitability include:

 

·Improve pricing precision using predictive analytics – We continue efforts to expand our pricing capabilities by using predictive analytics and expect cumulative benefits of these efforts to improve loss ratios over time. Expanded capabilities include streamlining and optimizing data to improve accuracy, timeliness and ease of use. Development of additional business data to support accurate underwriting, pricing and other business decisions also continues. A phased project that will continue over the next several years will deploy a full data management program, including a data warehouse for our property casualty and life insurance operations, providing enhanced granularity of pricing data.

 

During the second quarter of 2012, development for our second generation workers’ compensation predictive model was completed. Once further integration with our policy administration systems is complete, all of our commercial lines predictive models will operate on the same platform. Additional integration should enhance the ability of underwriters to target profitability and to discuss pricing impacts with agency personnel. The updated version of the workers’ compensation predictive modeling tool is expected to be deployed to our underwriters for new business and renewal policy processing during the third quarter.

 

In late 2011, we developed tools to improve pricing precision for small business policies written through our new product known as CinciPakTM. Plans to implement these tools for underwriters’ use include rolling them out to eight states by the end of 2012. During the first quarter we began to pilot CinciPak for a few dozen agencies in one state, as scheduled. Progress during the second quarter included introducing CinciPak in two additional states, and introduction in two more states is planned for the third quarter.

 

For our personal lines business, we will continue to enhance our pricing model attributes and expand our pricing points to add more precision during 2012. These enhancements should help us continue to be competitive on the most desirable business and to adapt more rapidly to changes in market conditions. During the first quarter, we completed a homeowner policy rate proposal based on our most recent modeled results. Rate changes based on the proposal will be filed in the majority of our states with effective dates in the fourth quarter of 2012. Progress during the second quarter included completion of a personal auto rate proposal based on recent modeled results. Rate changes based on this proposal will be filed in the majority of our states with effective dates in early 2013.

 

·Improve internal processes – Improved processes support our strategic goals, reducing internal costs and allowing us to focus more resources on providing agency services. Important process improvement efforts include ongoing simplification of new business processing between company and agency management systems, and future processing of some small commercial lines business without intervention by an underwriter. We also are developing additional talent management capabilities to further improve the effectiveness of all associates.

 

Continued development for additional coverages in our commercial lines policy administration system is expected to facilitate important internal process improvement initiatives. Progress during the second quarter included completion of requirements for these coverages and initiation of their development. Delivery of the first iteration to 10 states is expected by the end of 2012, followed by additional states in 2013. In addition, at the beginning of the third quarter of 2012, we launched the system, known as e-CLAS® CPP, in an additional state, the 35th in our 39-state operating territory for commercial lines.

 

For our personal lines business, we have also been developing business rules and parameters to allow future processing of some policies without intervention by an underwriter, for risks that meet qualifying underwriting criteria. The objective is to streamline processing for our agents and associates, permitting more time for risks that need additional service or attention while also reducing internal costs. During the first quarter, we expanded our pilot to automate renewal underwriting into three additional states, for a total of four states. Progress during the second quarter included expansion into two additional states for a total of six states. We also introduced automated processing of certain endorsements.

 

We measure the overall success of our strategy to improve insurance profitability primarily through our GAAP combined ratio for property casualty results, which we believe can be consistently within the range of 95 percent to 100 percent for any five-year period. We also compare our statutory combined ratio to the industry average to gauge our progress, as discussed in the Performance Drivers section above.

 

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In addition, we expect these initiatives to contribute to our rank as the No. 1 or No. 2 carrier based on premium volume in agencies that have represented us for at least five years. In 2011, we again earned that rank in approximately 75 percent of the agencies that have represented Cincinnati Insurance for more than five years, based on 2010 premiums. We are working to increase the percentage of agencies where we achieve that rank.

 

Drive Premium Growth

 

Primary initiatives to drive premium growth include:

 

·Expansion of our marketing capabilities – We continue to enhance our generalist approach to allow our appointed agencies to better compete in the marketplace by providing services agents’ clients want and need. Expansion initiatives include adding field associates for additional agency support in targeted areas, entering new states of operation for personal lines, and further development of targeted marketing activities.

 

During the first quarter we placed two new personal lines field marketing representatives to provide service to additional agencies located in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic areas, for a total of 10 in various parts of our personal lines operating territory.

 

For our excess and surplus lines operation, we have been approved as a non-admitted carrier and brokerage in Delaware and Rhode Island. During the first half of 2012, we expanded our field underwriting presence and now have 10 field underwriting territories. During the first half of 2012, we also introduced a new quick-issue offering for special event policies and began more broadly marketing our expertise in large accounts.

 

Expansion of our personal lines operation is planned for additional states where we currently offer commercial lines products but do not offer personal lines products. We entered the state of New York during the first quarter of 2012. We plan to expand to one additional state by the end of 2012 and another state in the first half of 2013.

 

We also continue to develop and coordinate targeted marketing, including cross-selling opportunities, through our Target Markets department. This area focuses on commercial product development, including identification and promotional support for promising classes of business. We offered nine target markets programs to our agencies by the end of 2011. During the first quarter of 2012, we completed one of the four additional target market programs we plan to launch by the end of the year, with plans to launch our second program early in the third quarter. In each of the first two quarters, we also rolled out additional coverage forms for our existing programs.

 

·New agency appointments – We continue to appoint new agencies to develop additional points of distribution, focusing on areas where our market share is less than 1 percent while also considering economic and catastrophe risk factors. In 2012, we are targeting approximately 130 appointments of independent agencies. During the first six months of 2012, we appointed 93 new agencies that write in aggregate approximately $1.3 billion in property casualty premiums annually with various insurance carriers for an average of nearly $15 million per agency. As of June 30, 2012, a total of 1,375 agency relationships market our standard market insurance products from 1,717 reporting locations.

 

We seek to build a close, long-term relationship with each agency we appoint. We carefully evaluate the marketing reach of each new appointment to ensure the territory can support both current and new agencies. During April 2012, we staffed two new marketing territories for commercial lines. Our 127 commercial lines field marketing territories are staffed by marketing representatives averaging 19 years of industry experience and nearly 10 years as a Cincinnati Insurance field marketing representative. The team of field associates in each territory works together with headquarters support associates to form our agent-centered business model, providing local expertise, helping us better understand the accounts we underwrite and creating market advantages for our agents. We help our agents grow their business by attracting more clients in their communities through unique Cincinnati-style service, and generally have earned a 10 percent share of an agency’s business within 10 years of its appointment.

 

We measure the overall success of our strategy to drive premium growth primarily through changes in net written premiums, as discussed in the Performance Drivers section above. In addition to tracking our progress toward our year-end 2015 direct written premiums target, we believe we can grow faster than the industry average over any five-year period.

 

An important part of our long-term strategy is financial strength, which is described in our 2011 Annual Report on Form 10-K, Item 1, Our Business and Our Strategy, Financial Strength, Page 5. One aspect of our financial strength is prudent use of reinsurance to help manage financial performance variability due to catastrophe loss experience. A description of how we use reinsurance is included in our 2011 Annual Report on Form 10-K, Item 7, Liquidity and Capital Resources, 2012 Reinsurance Programs, Page 98. 

 

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Another aspect is our investment portfolios, which remain well-diversified as discussed in Item 3, Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk, Page 51. We continue to maintain strong parent company liquidity and financial strength that increases our flexibility through all periods to maintain our cash dividend and to continue to invest in and expand our insurance operations. At June 30, 2012, we held $1.025 billion of our cash and invested assets at the parent company level, of which $872 million, or 85.1 percent, was invested in common stocks, and $23 million, or 2.3 percent, was cash or cash equivalents. Our debt-to-total-capital ratio at 14.8 percent remains well below our target limit of 20 percent. Another important indicator of financial strength is our ratio of property casualty net written premiums to statutory surplus, which was 0.9-to-1 for the 12 months ended June 30, 2012, up from 0.8-to-1 at year-end 2011.

 

Our financial strength ratings by independent ratings firms also are important. In addition to rating our parent company’s senior debt, four firms award insurer financial strength ratings to our property casualty insurance companies and three firms rate our life insurance company based on their quantitative and qualitative analyses. These ratings primarily assess an insurer’s ability to meet financial obligations to policyholders and do not necessarily address all of the matters that may be important to investors. Ratings may be subject to revision or withdrawal at any time by the rating agency, and each rating should be evaluated independently of any other rating.

 

As of July 25, 2012, our insurer financial strength ratings were:

 

    Insurer Financial Strength Ratings  
Rating
Agency
  Standard Market Property
Casualty Insurance Subsidiary
  Life Insurance
 Subsidiary
  Excess and Surplus
Insurance
 Subsidiary
  Date of Most Recent
Affirmation or Action
        Rating
Tier
      Rating
Tier
      Rating
Tier
   
A. M. Best Co.   A+ Superior  2 of 16   A Excellent  3 of 16   A Excellent  3 of 16   Stable outlook (12/23/11)
Fitch Ratings   A+ Strong  5 of 21   A+ Strong  5 of 21   - - -   Stable outlook (5/3/12)
Moody's Investors 
Service
  A1 Good  5 of 21   - - -   - - -   Negative outlook (10/21/11)
Standard & Poor's Ratings Services   A Strong  6 of 21   A Strong  6 of 21   - - -   Stable outlook (8/4/11)

 

All of our insurance subsidiaries continue to be highly rated.

 

On May 3, 2012, Fitch Ratings affirmed our ratings that it had assigned in September 2010, continuing its stable outlook. Fitch noted that ratings strengths include conservative capitalization, moderate holding company leverage and strong liquidity. Fitch noted our reserve adequacy and implementation of initiatives anticipated to improve underwriting results. Fitch said rating concerns include challenges from a competitive market and exposure to regional natural catastrophes and weather-related losses.

 

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Results of Operations

 

The consolidated results of operations reflect the operating results of each of our five segments along with the parent company and other activities reported as “Other.” The five segments are:

 

·Commercial lines property casualty insurance

 

·Personal lines property casualty insurance

 

·Excess and surplus lines property casualty insurance

 

·Life insurance

 

·Investments

 

We report as Other the non-investment operations of the parent company and its non-insurer subsidiary, CFC Investment Company. See Item 1, Note 12, Segment Information, Page 20, for discussion of the calculations of segment data. Results of operations for each of the five segments are discussed below.

 

Consolidated Property Casualty Insurance Results of Operations

 

Consolidated property casualty insurance results include premiums and expenses for our standard market insurance (commercial lines and personal lines segments) as well as our surplus lines operations.

 

 

(Dollars in millions)  Three months ended June 30,   Six months ended June 30, 
   2012   2011   Change %   2012   2011   Change % 
Earned premiums  $826   $730    13   $1,624   $1,475    10 
Fee revenues   2    1    100    3    2    50 
Total revenues   828    731    13    1,627    1,477    10 
                               
Loss and loss expenses from:                              
Current accident year before catastrophe losses   573    564    2    1,117    1,110    1 
Current accident year catastrophe losses   152    290    (48)   263    332    (21)
Prior accident years before catastrophe losses   (80)   (95)   16    (174)   (152)   (14)
Prior accident years catastrophe losses   (5)   -    nm    (27)   (1)   nm 
Total loss and loss expenses   640    759    (16)   1,179    1,289    (9)
Underwriting expenses   265    239    11    516    485    6 
Underwriting loss  $(77)  $(267)   71   $(68)  $(297)   77 
                               
Ratios as a percent of earned premiums:            Pt. Change            Pt. Change 
Current accident year before catastrophe losses   69.5%   77.3%   (7.8)   68.8%   75.2%   (6.4)
Current accident year catastrophe losses   18.4    39.7    (21.3)   16.2    22.5    (6.3)
Prior accident years before catastrophe losses   (9.8)   (13.0)   3.2    (10.8)   (10.3)   (0.5)
Prior accident years catastrophe losses   (0.6)   0.1    (0.7)   (1.6)   0.0    (1.6)
Total loss and loss expenses   77.5    104.1    (26.6)   72.6    87.4    (14.8)
Underwriting expenses   32.0    32.6    (0.6)   31.8    32.8    (1.0)
Combined ratio   109.5%   136.7%   (27.2)   104.4%   120.2%   (15.8)
                               
Combined ratio:   109.5%   136.7%   (27.2)   104.4%   120.2%   (15.8)
Contribution from catastrophe losses and prior years reserve development   8.0    26.8    (18.8)   3.8    12.2    (8.4)
Combined ratio before catastrophe losses and prior years reserve development   101.5%   109.9%   (8.4)   100.6%   108.0%   (7.4)

 

 

Our consolidated property casualty insurance operations generated an underwriting loss of $77 million and $68 million for the three and six months ended June 30, 2012, compared with an underwriting loss of $267 million and $297 million for the three and six months ended June 30, 2011. The primary causes of the improved underwriting results were lower losses from natural catastrophes and improving trends in pricing relative to loss costs. We believe the favorable trends for loss experience before catastrophes are in part due to our initiatives to improve pricing precision and loss experience related to claims and to loss control practices. Details of property casualty insurance results are discussed below, including our commercial lines, personal lines and excess and surplus lines segments.

 

We measure and analyze property casualty underwriting results primarily by the combined ratio and its component ratios. The GAAP-basis combined ratio is the percentage of incurred losses plus all expenses per each earned premium dollar – the lower the ratio, the better the performance. An underwriting profit results when the combined ratio is below 100 percent. A combined ratio above 100 percent indicates that an insurance company’s losses and expenses exceeded premiums.

 

The combined ratio can be affected significantly by natural catastrophe losses and other large losses as discussed in detail below. The combined ratio can also be affected by updated estimates of loss and loss expense reserves established for claims that occurred in prior periods, referred to as prior accident years. Net favorable development on prior accident year reserves, including reserves for catastrophe losses, improved the combined ratio by 12.4 percentage points in the first six months of 2012, or 2.1 percentage

 

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points more compared with 10.3 percentage points in the same period of 2011. On a before-catastrophe losses basis, net favorable development on prior accident year reserves for the first six months of 2012 was 0.5 percentage points more. Net favorable development for the first six months of 2012 is discussed in further detail in results of operations by property casualty insurance segment, Pages 34 through 44. 

 

Our consolidated property casualty combined ratio for the second quarter improved 27.2 percentage points, and for the first six months of 2012 it improved 15.8 points, both compared with the same periods of 2011. In addition to catastrophe losses that were 22.0 and 7.9 percentage points lower, the loss and loss expenses ratio before catastrophe losses were 4.6 and 6.9 points lower, together accounting for most of the improvement.

 

The ratio for current accident year loss and loss expenses before catastrophe losses improved. The 68.8 percent ratio for the first six months of 2012 improved 6.4 percentage points compared with the 75.2 percent accident year 2011 ratio measured as of June 30, 2011, in part reflecting recent-year initiatives to improve pricing precision and loss experience related to claims and to loss control practices and improving market conditions. Lower new large losses incurred, shown on the table on Page 32, decreased the 2012 ratio by 2.0 percentage points and were partly responsible for the ratio’s improvement. The effect of the $38 million ceded in 2011 to reinstate coverage layers of our property catastrophe reinsurance treaty increased the 2011 ratio by 1.9 percentage points. We believe the remaining reduction of 2.5 percentage points is largely due to initiatives to improve pricing precision and loss experience related to claims and loss control practices, somewhat offset by normal loss cost inflation.

 

The underwriting expense ratio improved for the second quarter and first six months of 2012 compared with the same periods a year ago, primarily due to higher earned premiums.

 

 

(Dollars in millions)  Three months ended June 30,   Six months ended June 30, 
   2012   2011   Change %   2012   2011   Change % 
Agency renewal written premiums  $798   $717    11   $1,560   $1,425    9 
Agency new business written premiums   131    117    12    239    219    9 
Other written premiums   (26)   (66)   61    (53)   (97)   45 
Net written premiums   903    768    18    1,746    1,547    13 
Unearned premium change   (77)   (38)   (103)   (122)   (72)   (69)
Earned premiums  $826   $730    13   $1,624   $1,475    10 

 

 

The trends in net written premiums and earned premiums summarized in the table above largely reflect the effects of our premium growth strategies, better pricing and the unfavorable effect on 2011 premiums due to additional ceded premiums to reinstate coverage layers of our property catastrophe reinsurance treaty. Reinsurance reinstatement premiums lowered net written and earned premiums by $38 million during the second quarter and first six months of 2011.

 

Consolidated property casualty net written premiums for the three and six months ended June 30, 2012, grew $135 million and $199 million compared with the same periods of 2011. Ceded premiums to reinstate coverage layers of our property catastrophe reinsurance treaty lowered net written and earned premiums by $38 million during the second quarter and first six months of 2011. On a percentage basis, 2011 reinsurance reinstatement premiums accounted for 6 percent and 3 percent of net written premium growth for the three and six months ended June 30, 2012, respectively. Each of our property casualty segments grew during the second quarter and first six months of 2012. Our premium growth initiatives from prior years continue to favorably affect current year growth, particularly as newer agency relationships mature over time. Improving insured exposure-level comparatives reflecting some improving areas of the economy also favorably affected premium growth. We discuss current initiatives in Highlights of Our Strategy and Supporting Initiatives, Page 26. The main drivers of trends for 2012 are discussed by segment on Pages 34, 39 and 43.

 

Consolidated property casualty agency new business written premiums for the three and six months ended June 30, 2012, increased $14 million and $20 million compared with the same periods of 2011. We continued to experience new business growth related to initiatives for geographic expansion into new and underserved areas. Agents appointed during 2011 or 2012 produced an increase in standard lines new business of $18 million for the first six months of 2012 compared with the same period in 2011. As we appoint new agencies that choose to move accounts to us, we report these accounts as new business. While this business is new to us, in many cases it is not new to the agent. We believe these seasoned accounts tend to be priced more accurately than business that may be less familiar to our agent upon obtaining it from a competing agent.

 

Other written premiums – primarily including premiums ceded to our reinsurers as part of our reinsurance program – contributed $40 million and $44 million to net written premium growth for the three and six months ended June 30, 2012, compared with the same periods of 2011. The $38 million unfavorable effect on 2011 premiums from additional ceded premiums to reinstate coverage layers of our

 

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property catastrophe reinsurance treaty accounted for much of the contribution. In addition to lower total ceded written premiums, other written premiums also benefited from a more favorable adjustment, compared with the second quarter of last year, for estimated direct written premiums of policies in effect but not yet processed. The adjustment had an immaterial effect on earned premiums.

 

Catastrophe losses typically have a meaningful effect on property casualty results and can vary significantly from period to period. Losses from natural catastrophes contributed 17.8 and 14.6 percentage points to the combined ratio in the three and six months ended June 30, 2012, compared with 39.8 and 22.5 percentage points in the same periods of 2011. The following table shows catastrophe losses and loss expenses incurred, net of reinsurance, as well as the effect of loss development on prior period catastrophe events. One of the second-quarter 2012 catastrophe events had losses estimated at June 30, 2012, that exceeded our $75 million loss retention for our property catastrophe reinsurance treaty. Terms of the treaty include one automatic reinstatement by layer of reinsurance. The first layer provides recovery of 48.3 percent of per-event losses between $75 million and $100 million. Amounts recovered and reinstatement premiums related to the second quarter of 2012 were immaterial. We individually list catastrophe events for which our incurred losses reached or exceeded $5 million.

 

 

(In millions, net of reinsurance)      Three months ended June 30,   Six months ended June 30, 
       Comm.   Pers.   E&S       Comm.   Pers.   E&S     
Dates Event Region  lines   lines   lines   Total   lines   lines   lines   Total 
2012                                            
Feb. 28 - 29 Hail, wind, tornado Midwest  $(2)  $-   $-   $(2)  $20   $8   $-   $28 
Mar. 2 – 3 Hail, wind, tornado Midwest, South   1    -    -    1    29    45    1    75 
Mar. 18 - 25 Hail, lightning, wind Midwest, South   2    4    -    6    2    4    -    6 
Apr. 28 - 29 Hail, lightning, wind Midwest, South   54    22    -    76    54    22    -    76 
May 2 - 6 Hail, lightning, wind Midwest   5    1    -    6    5    1    -    6 
Jun. 11 - 13 Hail, lightning, wind West, South   6    -    -    6    6    -    -    6 
Jun. 24 - 28 Fire West   8    -    -    8    8    -    -    8 
Jun. 28 - Jun. 30 Hail, lightning, wind Midwest, Northeast, South   3    32    -    35    3    32    -    35 
All other 2012 catastrophes     11    5    -    16    13    10    -    23 
Development on 2011 and prior catastrophes     2    (7)   -    (5)   (11)   (16)   -    (27)
Calendar year incurred total    $90   $57   $-   $147   $129   $106   $1   $236 
                                             
2011                                            
Jan. 31-Feb. 3 Freezing, wind South, Midwest  $-   $-   $-   $-   $5   $5   $-   $10 
Feb. 27-28 Hail, wind, tornado Midwest   -    (1)   -    (1)   5    7    -    12 
Mar. 11 Earthquake Japan   -    -    -    -    8    -    -    8 
Apr. 3-5 Hail, wind, tornado South, Midwest   16    22    -    38    16    22    -    38 
Apr. 8-11 Hail, wind, tornado South, Midwest   11    9    -    20    11    9    -    20 
Apr. 14-16 Hail, wind, tornado South, Midwest   10    4    -    14    10    4    -    14 
Apr. 19-20 Hail, wind South, Midwest   13    13    -    26    13    13    -    26 
Apr. 22-28 Hail, wind, tornado South, Midwest   47    31    -    78    47    31    -    78 
May 20-27 Hail, wind, tornado South, Midwest   45    37    -    82    45    37    -    82 
May 29-Jun. 1 Hail, wind, tornado Northeast, Midwest   4    2    -    6    4    2    -    6 
Jun. 16-22 Hail, wind, tornado South, Midwest   7    10    -    17    7    10    -    17 
All other 2011 catastrophes     4    5    1    10    9    11    1    21 
Development on 2010 and prior catastrophes     -    -    -    -    4    (5)   -    (1)
Calendar year incurred total    $157   $132   $1   $290   $184   $146   $1   $331 

 

  

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The following table includes data for losses incurred of $250,000 or more per claim, net of reinsurance.

 

Consolidated Property Casualty Insurance Losses by Size

 

 

(Dollars in millions)  Three months ended June 30,   Six months ended June 30, 
   2012   2011   Change %   2012   2011   Change % 
New losses greater than $4,000,000  $4   $5    (20)  $15   $16    (6)
New losses $1,000,000-$4,000,000   47    33    42    78    83    (6)
New losses $250,000-$1,000,000   58    52    12    102    106    (4)
Case reserve development above $250,000   55    51    8    122    85    44 
Total large losses incurred   164    141    16    317    290    9 
Other losses excluding catastrophe losses   241    236    2    447    481    (7)
Catastrophe losses   146    289    (49)   233    329    (29)
Total losses incurred  $551   $666    (17)  $997   $1,100    (9)
                               
Ratios as a percent of earned premiums:            Pt. Change             Pt. Change 
New losses greater than $4,000,000   0.5%   0.8%   (0.3)   0.9%   1.1%   (0.2)
New losses $1,000,000-$4,000,000   5.7    4.6    1.1    4.8    5.6    (0.8)
New losses $250,000-$1,000,000   7.1    7.0    0.1    6.2    7.2    (1.0)
Case reserve development above $250,000   6.7    6.9    (0.2)   7.5    5.8    1.7 
Total large loss ratio   20.0    19.3    0.7    19.4    19.7    (0.3)
Other losses excluding catastrophe losses   29.1    32.3    (3.2)   27.5    32.6    (5.1)
Catastrophe losses   17.6    39.6    (22.0)   14.5    22.3    (7.8)
Total loss ratio   66.7%   91.2%   (24.5)   61.4%   74.6%   (13.2)

 

 

We believe the inherent variability of aggregate loss experience for our portfolio of larger policies is greater than that of our portfolio of smaller policies, and we continue to monitor the variability in addition to general inflationary trends in loss costs. Our analysis continues to indicate no unexpected concentration of these large losses and case reserve increases by risk category, geographic region, policy inception, agency or field marketing territory. The second-quarter 2012 property casualty total large losses incurred of $164 million, net of reinsurance, matched the $164 million quarterly average during 2011 and higher than the $141 million for the second quarter of 2011. The ratio for these large losses and case reserve increases was 0.7 percentage points higher compared with last year’s second quarter, with new losses up 0.9 points and case reserve development down 0.2 points. The second-quarter increase in losses added to the ratio for total large losses incurred for the first six months of 2012, which also included a first-quarter 2012 ratio that was 1.0 point lower than the first quarter of 2011. We believe results for the three-month and six-month periods largely reflected normal fluctuations in loss patterns and normal variability in large case reserves for claims above $250,000. Losses by size are discussed in further detail in results of operations by property casualty insurance segment, Pages 34 through 44. 

 

Cincinnati Financial Corporation Second-Quarter 2012 10Q

Page 33

 

 

Commercial Lines Insurance Results of Operations

 

 

(Dollars in millions)  Three months ended June 30,   Six months ended June 30, 
   2012   2011   Change %   2012   2011   Change % 
                         
Earned premiums  $590   $533    11   $1,158   $1,073    8 
Fee revenues   1    -       nm    2    1    100 
Total revenues   591    533    11    1,160    1,074    8 
                               
Loss and loss expenses from:                              
Current accident year before catastrophe losses   396    405    (2)   782    807    (3)
Current accident year catastrophe losses   89    157    (43)   141    180    (22)
Prior accident years before catastrophe losses   (73)   (79)   8    (150)   (134)   (12)
Prior accident years catastrophe losses   1    -       nm    (12)   4    nm 
Total loss and loss expenses   413    483    (14)   761    857    (11)
Underwriting expenses   198    179    11    385    368    5 
Underwriting profit (loss)  $(20)  $(129)   84   $14   $(151)   nm 
                               
Ratios as a percent of earned premiums:            Pt. Change             Pt. Change 
Current accident year before catastrophe losses   67.2%   75.9%   (8.7)   67.5%   75.2%   (7.7)
Current accident year catastrophe losses   15.0    29.5    (14.5)   12.2    16.8    (4.6)
Prior accident years before catastrophe losses   (12.3)   (14.8)   2.5    (13.0)   (12.5)   (0.5)
Prior accident years catastrophe losses   0.2    0.2    0.0    (1.0)   0.4    (1.4)
Total loss and loss expenses   70.1    90.8    (20.7)   65.7    79.9    (14.2)
Underwriting expenses   33.4    33.4    0.0    33.2    34.3    (1.1)
Combined ratio   103.5%   124.2%   (20.7)   98.9%   114.2%   (15.3)
                               
Combined ratio:   103.5%   124.2%   (20.7)   98.9%   114.2%   (15.3)
Contribution from catastrophe losses and prior years reserve development   2.9    14.9    (12.0)   (1.8)   4.7    (6.5)
Combined ratio before catastrophe losses and prior years reserve development   100.6%   109.3%   (8.7)   100.7%   109.5%   (8.8)

 

 

Overview

 

Performance highlights for the commercial lines segment include:

 

·Premiums – Commercial lines earned premiums and net written premiums grew during the second quarter and first half of 2012 primarily due to higher renewal premiums that continued to reflect improved pricing. Ceded premiums to reinstate coverage layers of our property catastrophe reinsurance treaty lowered net written and earned premiums by $23 million during the second quarter and first six months of 2011. Higher new business written premiums reflected better pricing in addition to our premium growth initiatives, also contributing to premium growth. The premiums table below analyzes the primary components of earned premiums.

 

Agency renewal written premiums rose 10 percent and 8 percent for the second quarter and the first six months of 2012, reflecting higher pricing and improving economic conditions. To better manage our business in the highly competitive commercial lines marketplace, we continue to increase our use of predictive analytics tools to improve pricing precision while also leveraging our local relationships with agents through the efforts of our teams that work closely with them. We believe our field focus is unique and has several advantages, including providing us with high-quality intelligence on local market conditions. We seek to maintain appropriate pricing discipline for both new and renewal business as management emphasizes the importance of our agencies and underwriters assessing account quality to make careful decisions on a case-by-case basis whether to write or renew a policy. Rate credits may be used to retain renewals of high-quality business and to earn new business, but we do so selectively in order to avoid commercial accounts that we believe have insufficient profit margins.

 

We measure average changes in commercial lines renewal pricing as the rate of change in renewal premium for the new policy period compared with the premium for the expiring policy period, assuming no change in the level of insured exposures or policy coverage between those periods for respective policies. During the second quarter of 2012, our standard commercial lines policies averaged estimated price change increases in a mid-single-digit range, improving somewhat compared with the first quarter of 2012. Our average commercial lines pricing change includes the flat pricing effect of certain coverages within package policies written for a three-year term that were in force but did not expire during the period being measured. Therefore, the average commercial lines pricing change we report reflects a blend of three-year policies that did not expire and other policies that did expire during the measurement period. For the commercial lines policies that expired and were subsequently renewed during the second quarter of 2012, we estimate that the average pricing

 

Cincinnati Financial Corporation Second-Quarter 2012 10Q

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change was solidly in a mid-single-digit range, with workers’ compensation and commercial property policies experiencing higher than average renewal price increases.

 

Renewal premiums for our commercial casualty and workers’ compensation business include the result of policy audits that adjust initial premium amounts based on differences between estimated and actual sales or payroll related to a specific policy. Net written premiums from audits during the second quarter and the first six months of 2012 netted to positive $9 million and $15 million, respectively. Audits contributed $7 million to the $89 million net increase in net written premiums for the second quarter of 2012 and $16 million to the $127 million net increase in net written premiums for the first six months of 2012, both compared with the same periods a year ago. The $85 million increase in earned premiums during the first six months of 2012, compared with 2011, included a $14 million increase from audit premiums.

 

New business written premiums for commercial lines increased 12 percent and 9 percent during the second quarter and first six months of 2012 compared with the same period last year. The increase was broad-based as nearly two-thirds of the 39 states where we offer standard market commercial lines policies had higher new business written premiums for the first half of 2012 compared with the same period of 2011.

 

Other written premiums included a lower total amount ceded to reinsurers for the first half of 2012 compared with the same period of 2011, because 2011 premiums were reduced by $23 million of additional ceded premiums to reinstate coverage layers of our property catastrophe reinsurance treaty. Other written premiums also included a more favorable adjustment, compared with the first six months of last year, for estimated direct written premiums of policies in effect but not yet processed. The adjustment had an immaterial effect on earned premiums.

 

Commercial Lines Insurance Premiums

 

 

(Dollars in millions)  Three months ended June 30,   Six months ended June 30, 
   2012   2011   Change %   2012   2011   Change % 
Agency renewal written premiums  $552   $500    10   $1,123   $1,042    8 
Agency new business written premiums   91    81    12    166    152    9 
Other written premiums   (17)   (44)   61    (37)   (69)   46 
Net written premiums   626    537    17    1,252    1,125    11 
Unearned premium change   (36)   (4)   nm    (94)   (52)   (81)
Earned premiums  $590   $533    11   $1,158   $1,073    8 

 

 

·Combined ratio – The commercial lines combined ratio for the three and six months ended June 30, 2012, improved compared with the same periods of 2011, primarily due to catastrophe losses that were 14.5 and 6.0 percentage points lower. In addition, the 2012 periods benefited from lower ratios for loss and loss expenses before catastrophes.

 

Catastrophe losses accounted for 15.2 and 11.2 percentage points of the combined ratio for the three and six months ended June 30, 2012, compared with 29.7 and 17.2 percentage points for the same periods last year. The 10-year annual average through 2011 for the commercial lines segment was 3.7 percentage points, and the five-year annual average was 4.3 percentage points.

 

The ratio for current accident year loss and loss expenses before catastrophe losses improved. The 67.5 percent ratio for the first six months of 2012 improved 7.7 percentage points compared with the 75.2 percent accident year 2011 ratio measured as of June 30, 2011, in part reflecting recent-year initiatives to improve pricing precision and loss experience related to claims and to loss control practices and improving market conditions. Lower new large losses incurred, shown on the table on Page 33, decreased the 2012 ratio by 3.0 percentage points and were responsible for some of the ratio’s improvement. The effect of the $23 million ceded to reinstate coverage layers of our property catastrophe reinsurance treaty increased the 2011 ratio by 1.5 percentage points. We believe the remaining reduction of 3.2 percentage points in the first half of 2012 is largely due to initiatives to improve pricing precision and loss experience related to claims and loss control practices, somewhat offset by normal loss cost inflation.

 

The net effect of reserve development on prior accident years during the second quarter and first six months of 2012 was favorable for commercial lines overall by $72 million and $162 million compared with net favorable development of $79 million and $130 million for the same periods in 2011. For the six months ended June 30, 2012, favorable reserve development on prior accident years in the commercial casualty line of business represented 64 percent of the commercial lines favorable development. Workers’ compensation accounted for 17 percent of the favorable development, while most of the remaining commercial lines favorable reserve development for the first six months of 2012 was almost evenly split between the commercial property and commercial auto lines of business. The favorable reserve development recognized during the first six months of

 

Cincinnati Financial Corporation Second-Quarter 2012 10Q

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2012 for commercial lines included approximately 11 percent for accident year 2011 and nearly 50 percent for combined accident years 2009 and 2010, and was primarily due to reduced volatility in paid losses, reduced volatility in projections of future calendar year trends and lower than anticipated loss emergence on known claims. Reserve estimates are inherently uncertain as described in our 2011 Annual Report on Form 10-K, Item 7, Critical Accounting Estimates, Property Casualty Insurance Loss and Loss Expense Reserves, Page 42.

 

The commercial lines underwriting expense ratio for the second quarter of 2012 matches the second quarter of 2011 and the first six months of 2012 improved primarily due to higher earned premiums.

 

Underwriting results and related measures for the combined ratio are summarized in the first table of Commercial Lines Insurance Results of Operations. The tables and discussion below provide additional details for certain primary drivers of underwriting results.

 

Commercial Lines Insurance Losses by Size

 

 

(Dollars in millions)  Three months ended June 30,   Six months ended June 30, 
   2012   2011   Change %   2012   2011   Change % 
New losses greater than $4,000,000  $4   $6    (33)  $15   $16    (6)
New losses $1,000,000-$4,000,000   33    30    10    56    70    (20)
New losses $250,000-$1,000,000   36    39    (8)   68    77    (12)
Case reserve development above $250,000   51    46    11    115    77    49 
Total large losses incurred   124    121    2    254    240    6 
Other losses excluding catastrophe losses   138    135    2    243    290    (16)
Catastrophe losses   89    157    (43)   127    183    (31)
Total losses incurred  $351   $413    (15)  $624   $713    (12)
                               
Ratios as a percent of earned premiums:            Pt. Change             Pt. Change 
New losses greater than $4,000,000   0.7%   1.1%   (0.4)   1.3%   1.5%   (0.2)
New losses $1,000,000-$4,000,000   5.5    5.5    0.0    4.9    6.5    (1.6)
New losses $250,000-$1,000,000   6.2    7.4    (1.2)   5.9    7.1    (1.2)
Case reserve development above $250,000   8.7    8.7    0.0    9.9    7.2    2.7 
Total large loss ratio   21.1    22.7    (1.6)   22.0    22.3    (0.3)
Other losses excluding catastrophe losses   23.4    25.3    (1.9)   21.0    27.0    (6.0)
Catastrophe losses   15.1    29.6    (14.5)   11.0    17.1    (6.1)
Total loss ratio   59.6%   77.6%   (18.0)   54.0%   66.4%   (12.4)

 

 

We continue to monitor new losses and case reserve increases greater than $250,000 for trends in factors such as initial reserve levels, loss cost inflation and claim settlement expenses. Our analysis continues to indicate no unexpected concentration of these large losses and case reserve increases by risk category, geographic region, policy inception, agency or field marketing territory. The second-quarter 2012 commercial lines total large losses incurred of $124 million, net of reinsurance, was lower than the $137 million quarterly average during 2011 and higher than the $121 million for the second quarter of 2011. The ratio for these large losses and case reserve increases was 1.6 percentage points lower compared with last year’s second quarter, as higher earned premiums more than offset higher incurred losses for our commercial auto line of business. The second-quarter increase in losses added to the ratio for total large losses incurred for the first six months of 2012, which also included a higher number of claims and higher incurred losses for our general liability line of business during the first quarter. We believe results for the three-month and six-month periods largely reflected normal fluctuations in loss patterns and normal variability in large case reserves for claims above $250,000.

 

Commercial Lines of Business Analysis

 

Approximately 95 percent of our commercial lines premiums relate to accounts with coverages from more than one of our business lines. As a result, we believe that the commercial lines segment is best measured and evaluated on a segment basis. However, we provide line of business data to summarize premium and loss trends separately for each line. The ratios shown in the table below are components of loss and loss expenses as a percentage of earned premiums.

 

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(Dollars in millions)  Three months ended June 30,   Six months ended June 30, 
   2012   2011   Change %   2012   2011   Change % 
Commercial casualty:                              
Written premiums  $202   $177    14   $404   $366    10 
Earned premiums   191    180    6    372    352    6 
                               
Current accident year before catastrophe losses   67.2%   66.0%        68.7%   72.3%     
Current accident year catastrophe losses   0.0    0.0         0.0    0.0      
Prior accident years before catastrophe losses   (29.2)   (27.2)        (28.0)   (29.7)     
Prior accident years catastrophe losses   0.0    0.0         0.0    0.0      
Total loss and loss expenses ratio   38.0%   38.8%        40.7%   42.6%     
                               
Commercial property:                              
Written premiums  $146   $123    19   $287   $255    13 
Earned premiums   134    115    17    265    241    10 
                               
Current accident year before catastrophe losses   55.3%   76.8%        56.2%   70.5%     
Current accident year catastrophe losses   56.7    78.8         44.3    45.6      
Prior accident years before catastrophe losses   (3.4)   (1.7)        (4.0)   3.4      
Prior accident years catastrophe losses   1.3    1.1         (2.2)   2.3      
Total loss and loss expenses ratio   109.9%   155.0%        94.3%   121.8%     
                               
Commercial auto:                              
Written premiums  $115   $102    13   $229   $209    10 
Earned premiums   106    96    10    207    192    8 
                               
Current accident year before catastrophe losses   71.8%   72.6%        72.8%   74.5%     
Current accident year catastrophe losses   3.2    6.2         2.4    3.3      
Prior accident years before catastrophe losses   (1.8)   (11.0)        (6.8)   (17.6)     
Prior accident years catastrophe losses   (0.3)   (0.1)        (0.4)   (0.2)     
Total loss and loss expenses ratio   72.9%   67.7%        68.0%   60.0%     
                               
Workers' compensation:                              
Written premiums  $86   $73    18   $179   $163    10 
Earned premiums   85    81    5    166    157    6 
                               
Current accident year before catastrophe losses   80.8%   108.5%        81.7%   102.3%     
Current accident year catastrophe losses   0.0    0.0         0.0    0.0      
Prior accident years before catastrophe losses   (14.3)   (28.9)        (16.6)   (16.9)     
Prior accident years catastrophe losses   0.0    0.0         0.0    0.0      
Total loss and loss expenses ratio   66.5%   79.6%        65.1%   85.4%     
                               
Specialty packages:                              
Written premiums  $38   $27    41   $78   $64    22 
Earned premiums   37    27    37    75    64    17 
                               
Current accident year before catastrophe losses   72.8%   93.8%        69.6%   75.7%     
Current accident year catastrophe losses   23.9    223.8         24.4    99.4      
Prior accident years before catastrophe losses   (3.0)   1.8         (8.5)   9.5      
Prior accident years catastrophe losses   (0.2)   (0.7)        (6.5)   (1.1)     
Total loss and loss expenses ratio   93.5%   318.7%        79.0%   183.5%     
                               
Surety and executive risk:                              
Written premiums  $29   $26    12   $56   $50    12 
Earned premiums   27    25    8    54    50    8 
                               
Current accident year before catastrophe losses   72.1%   47.9%        60.9%   51.3%     
Current accident year catastrophe losses   0.0    0.0         0.0    0.0      
Prior accident years before catastrophe losses   10.3    19.4         22.3    30.2      
Prior accident years catastrophe losses   0.0    0.0         0.0    0.0      
Total loss and loss expenses ratio   82.4%   67.3%        83.2%   81.5%     
                               
Machinery and equipment:                              
Written premiums  $10   $9    11   $19   $18    6 
Earned premiums   10    9    11    19    17    12 
                               
Current accident year before catastrophe losses   23.8%   32.0%        29.8%   30.1%     
Current accident year catastrophe losses   0.0    0.2         0.0    0.2      
Prior accident years before catastrophe losses   (2.5)   6.9         0.4    7.7      
Prior accident years catastrophe losses   0.0    0.0         0.0    0.0      
Total loss and loss expenses ratio   21.3%   39.1%        30.2%   38.0%     

 

 

Cincinnati Financial Corporation Second-Quarter 2012 10Q

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As discussed above, the loss and loss expenses ratio component of the combined ratio is an important measure of underwriting profit and performance. Catastrophe losses are volatile and can distort short-term profitability trends, particularly for certain lines of business. Development of loss and loss expense reserves on prior accident years can also distort trends in measures of profitability for recently written business. To illustrate these effects, we separate their impact on the ratios shown in the table above. For the three and six months ended June 30, 2012, the commercial line of business with the most significant profitability challenge was surety and executive risk, assuming future weather-related loss experience for commercial property is at an average level that aligns with premium rates, including pricing increases of recent quarters. As discussed in Commercial Lines Insurance Results of Operations, Overview, Page 34, policies with commercial property coverages experienced higher than average renewal price increases in the second quarter of 2012, consistent with prior discussion for the first quarter. In addition, a multi-department, multi-disciplinary taskforce has been reviewing our property book of business and continues to seek ways to improve profitability, similar to the approach we used to improve workers’ compensation results. Several profit improvement initiatives are already underway, such as increased specialization among selected claims and loss control associates.

 

Our second-quarter and first-half 2012 surety and executive risk results included unfavorable development on prior accident years reserves for director and officer liability related to financial institutions. As discussed in our 2011 Annual Report on Form 10-K, Item 7, Commercial Lines Insurance Results of Operations, Page 67, we have taken steps to actively manage the potentially high risk of writing director and officer liability.

 

Cincinnati Financial Corporation Second-Quarter 2012 10Q

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Personal Lines Insurance Results of Operations

 

 

(Dollars in millions)  Three months ended June 30,   Six months ended June 30, 
   2012   2011   Change %   2012   2011   Change % 
Earned premiums  $214   $180    19   $423   $370    14 
Fee revenues   1    1    0    1    1    0 
Total revenues   215    181    19    424    371    14 
                               
Loss and loss expenses from:                              
Current accident year before catastrophe losses   160    146    10    302    275    10 
Current accident year catastrophe losses   63    132    (52)   121    151    (20)
Prior accident years before catastrophe losses   (7)   (9)   22    (24)   (11)   (118)
Prior accident years catastrophe losses   (6)   -       nm    (15)   (5)   (200)
Total loss and loss expenses   210    269    (22)   384    410    (6)
Underwriting expenses   60    54    11    117    106    10 
Underwriting loss  $(55)  $(142)   61   $(77)  $(145)   47 
                               
Ratios as a percent of earned premiums:            Pt. Change             Pt. Change 
Current accident year before catastrophe losses   75.2%   81.2%   (6.0)   71.6%   74.4%   (2.8)
Current accident year catastrophe losses   29.4    73.5    (44.1)   28.8    40.8    (12.0)
Prior accident years before catastrophe losses   (3.9)   (5.2)   1.3    (5.8)   (3.1)   (2.7)
Prior accident years catastrophe losses   (2.8)   (0.1)   (2.7)   (3.8)   (1.4)   (2.4)
Total loss and loss expenses   97.9    149.4    (51.5)   90.8    110.7    (19.9)
Underwriting expenses   28.2    30.1    (1.9)   27.8    28.7    (0.9)
Combined ratio   126.1%   179.5%   (53.4)   118.6%   139.4%   (20.8)
                               
Combined ratio:   126.1%   179.5%   (53.4)   118.6%   139.4%   (20.8)
Contribution from catastrophe losses and prior years reserve development   22.7    68.2    (45.5)   19.2    36.3    (17.1)
Combined ratio before catastrophe losses and prior years reserve development   103.4%   111.3%   (7.9)   99.4%   103.1%   (3.7)

 

 

 

Overview

 

Performance highlights for the personal lines segment include:

 

·Premiums – Personal lines earned premiums and net written premiums for the three months ended June 30, 2012, continued to grow primarily due to higher renewal premiums. The increase reflected improved pricing and a steady, high level of policy retention. The unfavorable effect on 2011 premiums of additional ceded premiums to reinstate coverage layers of our property catastrophe reinsurance treaty also significantly contributed to the 2012 premium growth rate. Reinsurance reinstatement premiums lowered net written and earned premiums by $15 million during the second quarter and first six months of 2011. The premiums table below analyzes the primary components of earned premiums.

 

Agency renewal written premiums increased 11 percent in both the second quarter and the first six months of 2012 because of rate increases in recent years, ongoing high levels of policy retention, premium growth initiatives and a higher level of insured exposures. In October 2011, we began our third round of increases for the homeowner line of business, averaging approximately 8 percent, with some individual policy rate increases being lower or higher based on attributes of risk that characterize the insured exposure. That followed rate changes averaging approximately 7 percent that were implemented beginning the fourth quarter of 2010 for states representing the majority of our personal lines business. Similar homeowner rate changes averaging approximately 6 percent were implemented beginning October 2009. During the second quarter of 2012, we began implementing rate changes for our personal auto line of business in the majority of the 30 states where we market personal lines policies. The average rate change is an increase in the low-single-digit range, with some individual policies experiencing lower or higher rates based on enhanced pricing precision enabled by predictive models. Rate changes for personal auto implemented beginning the fourth quarter of 2010 also represented an average rate increase in the low-single-digit range.

 

Second-quarter and first-half 2012 personal lines new business written premiums continued to grow, up 12 percent and 10 percent, respectively, compared with the second quarter and first six months of 2011. We continue to believe we are successful in attracting more of our agents’ preferred business that is priced more accurately based on insured exposure. Some of what we report as new business came from accounts that were not new to our agents. We believe our agents’ seasoned accounts tend to be priced more accurately than business that may be less familiar to them.

 

Other written premiums – which primarily include premiums ceded to our reinsurers as part of our reinsurance program – contributed $15 million and $14 million to net written premium growth for the three and six months ended June 30, 2012, compared with the same period of 2011. Other written

 

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premiums included a lower total amount ceded to reinsurers for the first half of 2012 compared with the same period of 2011 because in 2011 we ceded an additional $15 million of premiums to reinstate coverage layers of our property catastrophe reinsurance treaty.

 

We continue to implement strategies discussed in our 2011 Annual Report on Form 10-K, Item 1, Strategic Initiatives, Page 10, to enhance our response to marketplace changes and help achieve our long-term objectives for personal lines growth and profitability. These strategies include plans to expand of our personal lines operation into two new states during 2012 and one in 2013.

 

Personal Lines Insurance Premiums

 

 

(Dollars in millions)  Three months ended June 30,   Six months ended June 30, 
   2012   2011   Change %   2012   2011   Change % 
Agency renewal written premiums  $227   $205    11   $402   $361    11 
Agency new business written premiums   29    26    12    53    48    10 
Other written premiums   (6)   (21)   71    (12)   (26)   54 
Net written premiums   250    210    19    443    383    16 
Unearned premium change   (36)   (30)   (20)   (20)   (13)   (54)
Earned premiums  $214   $180    19   $423   $370    14 

 

 

·Combined ratio – The personal lines combined ratio for the three and six months ended June 30, 2012, improved compared with the same period of 2011, primarily due to weather-related catastrophe losses that were 46.8 and 14.4 percentage points lower.

 

Catastrophe losses accounted for 26.6 and 25.0 percentage points of the combined ratio for the three and six months ended June 30, 2012, compared with 73.4 and 39.4 percentage points for the same periods last year. The 10-year annual average through 2011 catastrophe loss ratio for the personal lines segment was 10.5 percentage points, and the five-year annual average was 12.7 percentage points.

 

The ratios for current accident year loss and loss expenses before catastrophe losses for the three and six months ended June 30, 2012, were lower than the 2011 periods. The 71.6 percent ratio for the first six months of 2012 improved 2.8 percentage points compared with the 74.4 percent accident year 2011 ratio measured as of June 30, 2011, in part reflecting recent-year initiatives to improve pricing precision. Higher new large losses incurred, shown on the table on Page 41, increased the 2012 ratio by 0.9 percentage points, partially offsetting the initiatives’ effect. The effect of the $15 million ceded to reinstate coverage layers of our property catastrophe reinsurance treaty increased the 2011 ratio by 3.0 percentage points. We believe the remaining reduction of 0.7 percentage points reflects initiatives to improve pricing precision, somewhat offset by normal loss cost inflation.

 

In addition to the rate increases discussed above, we continue to refine our pricing to better match premiums to the risk of loss on individual policies. The results of improved pricing per risk and broad-based rate increases are expected to improve the combined ratio over the next several quarters. In addition, greater geographic diversification is expected over time to reduce the volatility of homeowner loss ratios attributable to weather-related catastrophe losses.

 

Personal lines reserve development on prior accident years continued to emerge favorably during the second quarter and first six months of 2012. Favorable reserve development was $23 million higher for the first six months of 2012, compared with the same period of 2011, with catastrophe loss development contributing $10 million of the increase. The remainder was primarily for liability coverages, reflecting reduced volatility in paid losses and reduced volatility in projections of future calendar year trends. Approximately half of the favorable reserve development on prior accident years recognized during the first six months of 2012 occurred in the homeowner line of business and roughly one-third occurred in the personal auto line of business. Approximately half of the personal lines favorable reserve development recognized during the first six months of 2012 was for accident year 2011 and approximately one-third was for accident years 2009 and 2010. Reserve estimates are inherently uncertain as described in our 2011 Annual Report on Form 10-K, Item 7, Property Casualty Insurance Loss and Loss Expense Reserves, Page 42.

 

The underwriting expense ratio was lower for the second quarter and first six months of 2012 compared with the same periods of 2011, as higher premiums and lower technology related costs offset higher agency commissions.

 

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Personal Lines Insurance Losses by Size

 

 

(Dollars in millions)  Three months ended June 30,   Six months ended June 30, 
   2012   2011   Change %   2012   2011   Change % 
New losses greater than $4,000,000  $-   $-    nm   $-   $-    nm 
New losses $1,000,000-$4,000,000   13    3    333    18    13    38 
New losses $250,000-$1,000,000   18    10    80    26    23    13 
Case reserve development above $250,000   3    4    (25)   5    7    (29)
Total large losses incurred   34    17    100    49    43    14 
Other losses excluding catastrophe losses   96    95    1    192    179    7 
Catastrophe losses   56    131    (57)   105    145    (28)
Total losses incurred  $186   $243    (23)  $346   $367    (6)
                               
                               
Ratios as a percent of earned premiums:             Pt. Change              Pt. Change 
New losses greater than $4,000,000   0.0%   0.0%   0.0    0.0%   0.0%   0.0 
New losses $1,000,000-$4,000,000   6.4    2.0    4.4    4.4    3.5    0.9 
New losses $250,000-$1,000,000   8.4    5.4    3.0    6.2    6.2    0.0 
Case reserve development above $250,000   1.2    2.3    (1.1)   1.1    2.0    (0.9)
Total large losses incurred   16.0    9.7    6.3    11.7    11.7    0.0 
Other losses excluding catastrophe losses   45.0    53.0    (8.0)   45.3    48.3    (3.0)
Catastrophe losses   26.2    73.0    (46.8)   24.8    39.2    (14.4)
Total loss ratio   87.2%   135.7%   (48.5)   81.8%   99.2%   (17.4)

 

 

We continue to monitor new losses and case reserve increases greater than $250,000 for trends in factors such as initial reserve levels, loss cost inflation and claim settlement expenses. Our analysis continues to indicate no unexpected concentration of these large losses and case reserve increases by risk category, geographic region, policy inception, agency or field marketing territory. In the second quarter of 2012, the personal lines total ratio for these losses and case reserve increases, net of reinsurance, was 6.3 percentage points higher compared with last year’s second quarter, primarily due to a higher number of homeowner fire claims and incurred losses. The second-quarter increase added to the ratio for total large losses incurred for the first six months of 2012, which also includes an offsetting effect from a lower number of claims and incurred losses for our homeowner line of business during the first quarter. We believe results for the three-month and six-month periods largely reflected normal fluctuations in loss patterns and normal variability in large case reserves for claims above $250,000.

 

Personal Lines of Business Analysis 

 

We prefer to write personal lines coverages on an account basis that includes both auto and homeowner coverages as well as coverages from the other personal business line. As a result, we believe that the personal lines segment is best measured and evaluated on a segment basis. However, we provide the line of business data to summarize premium and loss trends separately for each line. The ratios shown in the table below are components of loss and loss expenses as a percentage of earned premiums.

 

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(Dollars in millions)  Three months ended June 30,   Six months ended June 30, 
   2012   2011   Change %   2012   2011   Change % 
Personal auto:                              
Written premiums  $115   $104    11   $206   $186    11 
Earned premiums   100    90    11    198    179    11 
                               
Current accident year before catastrophe losses   78.0%   67.3%        75.8%   67.7%     
Current accident year catastrophe losses   9.7    10.3         7.4    5.8      
Prior accident years before catastrophe losses   (4.7)   (5.0)        (6.4)   (5.1)     
Prior accident years catastrophe losses   (0.7)   (0.1)        (0.8)   (0.2)     
Total loss and loss expenses ratio   82.3%   72.5%        76.0%   68.2%     

 

Homeowner:                              
Written premiums  $103   $78    32   $180   $146    23 
Earned premiums   87    66    32    171    142    20 
                               
Current accident year before catastrophe losses   74.0%   97.8%        68.6%   83.6%     
Current accident year catastrophe losses   59.2    175.4         59.8    92.7      
Prior accident years before catastrophe losses   (6.0)   (0.5)        (4.5)   1.1      
Prior accident years catastrophe losses   (5.7)   (0.1)        (7.7)   (3.1)     
Total loss and loss expenses ratio   121.5%   272.6%        116.2%   174.3%     

 

Other personal:                              
Written premiums  $32   $28    14   $57   $51    12 
Earned premiums   27    24    13    54    49    10 
                               
Current accident year before catastrophe losses   68.6%   88.2%        65.9%   71.9%     
Current accident year catastrophe losses   6.0    34.5         8.8    19.0      
Prior accident years before catastrophe losses   6.2    (18.4)        (7.8)   (7.9)     
Prior accident years catastrophe losses   (1.2)   (0.5)        (2.1)   (0.6)     
Total loss and loss expenses ratio   79.6%   103.8%        64.8%   82.4%     

 

 

As discussed above, the loss and loss expense ratio component of the combined ratio is an important measure of underwriting profit and performance. Catastrophe losses are volatile and can distort short-term profitability trends, particularly for certain lines of business. Development of loss and loss expense reserves on prior accident years can also distort trends in measures of profitability for recently written business. To illustrate these effects, we separate their impact on the ratios shown in the table above. For the three and six months ended June 30, 2012, the personal line of business with the most significant profitability challenge was homeowner. As discussed in Personal Lines Insurance Results of Operations, Overview, Page 39, above, we continue actions to improve pricing per risk and overall rates, which are expected to improve future profitability for both the homeowner and the personal auto lines of business. In addition, we anticipate that the long-term future average for the catastrophe loss ratio would improve due to gradual geographic diversification into states less prone to catastrophe losses.

 

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Excess And Surplus Lines Insurance Results of Operations

 

(Dollars in millions)  Three months ended June 30,   Six months ended June 30, 
   2012   2011   Change %   2012   2011   Change % 
Earned premiums  $22   $17    29   $43   $32    34 
                               
Loss and loss expenses from:                              
Current accident year before catastrophe losses   17    13    31    33    28    18 
Current accident year catastrophe losses   -    1    (100)   1    1    0 
Prior accident years before catastrophe losses   -    (7)   100    -    (7)   100 
Prior accident years catastrophe losses   -    -    nm    -    -    nm 
Total loss and loss expenses   17    7    143    34    22    55 
Underwriting expenses   7    6    17    14    11    27 
Underwriting (loss) profit  $(2)  $4    nm   $(5)  $(1)   (400)
                               
                               
Ratios as a percent of earned premiums:            Pt. Change              Pt. Change 
Current accident year before catastrophe losses   74.6%   79.0%   (4.4)   76.4%   88.3%   (11.9)
Current accident year catastrophe losses   3.2    4.9    (1.7)   2.8    3.4    (0.6)
Prior accident years before catastrophe losses   0.7    (41.9)   42.6    0.2    (21.6)   21.8 
Prior accident years catastrophe losses   0.3    (0.5)   0.8    0.7    0.2    0.5 
Total loss and loss expenses   78.8    41.5    37.3    80.1    70.3    9.8 
Underwriting expenses   31.9    34.4    (2.5)   32.0    32.3    (0.3)
Combined ratio   110.7%   75.9%   34.8    112.1%   102.6%   9.5 
                               
Combined ratio:   110.7%   75.9%   34.8    112.1%   102.6%   9.5 
Contribution from catastrophe losses and prior years reserve development   4.2    (37.5)   41.7    3.7    (18.0)   21.7 
Combined ratio before catastrophe losses and prior years reserve development   106.5%   113.4%   (6.9)   108.4%   120.6%   (12.2)

 

 

 

Overview

  

Performance highlights for the excess and surplus lines segment include:

 

·Premiums – Excess and surplus lines earned premiums and net written premiums grew for the second quarter and the first six months of 2012. Growth in renewal written premiums contributed most of the increase.

 

Renewal written premiums grew 58 percent and 59 percent for the second quarter and first six months of 2012, compared with the same periods of 2011, reflecting the opportunity to renew many accounts for the first time as well as higher renewal pricing. Renewal pricing change estimated for our excess and surplus lines policies on average continued in a high-single-digit range. We measure average changes in excess and surplus lines renewal pricing as the rate of change in renewal premium for the new policy period compared with the premium for the expiring policy period, assuming no change in the level of insured exposures or policy coverage between those periods for respective policies.

 

New business written premiums increased for the second quarter and the first six months of 2012, compared with the same periods of 2011, reflecting somewhat less activity by standard market insurance companies in the excess and surplus lines market. Some of what we report as new business came from accounts that were not new to our agents. We believe our agents’ seasoned accounts tend to be priced more accurately than business that may be less familiar to them.

 

Excess and Surplus Lines Insurance Premiums

 

(Dollars in millions)  Three months ended June 30,   Six months ended June 30, 
   2012   2011   Change %   2012   2011   Change % 
Renewal written premiums  $19   $12    58   $35   $22    59 
New business written premiums   11    10    10    20    19    5 
Other written premiums   (3)   (1)   (200)   (4)   (2)   (100)
Net written premiums   27    21    29    51    39    31 
Unearned premium change   (5)   (4)   (25)   (8)   (7)   (14)
Earned premiums  $22   $17    29   $43   $32    34 

 

 

·Combined ratio – The excess and surplus lines combined ratio for the three and six months ended June 30, 2012, rose 34.8 and 9.5 percentage points compared with the same periods of 2011, primarily due to unusually large net favorable reserve development on prior accident years during the second quarter of 2011. All of the increase in the six-month total loss and loss expenses ratio was from higher loss expenses, as the loss ratio trended flat.

 

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The 76.4 percent ratio for current accident year loss and loss expenses before catastrophe losses for the first six months of 2012 increased 5.4 percentage points compared with the 71.0 percent full accident year 2011 ratio measured as of December 31, 2011, primarily due to new losses incurred of $250,000 or more that were 6.1 points higher for the first six months of 2012 compared with full-year 2011.

 

Catastrophe losses accounted for 3.5 percentage points of the combined ratio for both the three and six months ended June 30, 2012, compared with 4.4 and 3.6 percentage points in the same periods of 2011.

 

Excess and surplus reserve development on prior accident years was minimal for the first six months of 2012, compared with 21.4 percentage points of favorable reserve development for the same period of 2011. The 2011 favorable development was primarily due to a change toward placing more reliance on claims experience emergence patterns from our historical excess and surplus lines business for IBNR loss and loss expense estimates, while placing relatively less reliance on historical claims experience emergence patterns from similar lines of business included in our standard commercial lines business. The second quarter of 2011 was the first occurrence of a significant effect from this change. Reserve estimates are inherently uncertain as described in our 2011 Annual Report on Form 10-K, Item 7, Property Casualty Insurance Loss and Loss Expense Reserves, Page 42.

 

The underwriting expense ratio for the second quarter and the first six months of 2012 was lower than the same periods of 2011, primarily due to higher earned premiums.

 

Excess and Surplus Lines Insurance Losses by Size

 

(Dollars in millions)  Three months ended June 30,   Six months ended June 30, 
   2012   2011   Change %   2012   2011   Change % 
New losses greater than $4,000,000  $-   $-    nm   $-   $-    nm 
New losses $1,000,000-$4,000,000   1    -    nm    3    -    nm 
New losses $250,000-$1,000,000   4    2    100    8    6    33 
Case reserve development above $250,000   1    1    0    3    1    200 
Total large losses incurred   6    3    100    14    7    100 
Other losses excluding catastrophe losses   7    5    40    12    12    0 
Catastrophe losses   1    1    0    2    1    100 
Total losses incurred  $14   $9    56   $28   $20    40 
                               
                               
Ratios as a percent of earned premiums:             Pt. Change              Pt. Change 
New losses greater than $4,000,000   0.0%   0.0%   0.0    0.0%   0.0%   0.0 
New losses $1,000,000-$4,000,000   4.4    0.0    4.4    7.7    0.0    7.7 
New losses $250,000-$1,000,000   16.5    12.4    4.1    17.1    18.7    (1.6)
Case reserve development above $250,000   6.4    2.4    4.0    6.0    2.6    3.4 
Total large losses incurred   27.3    14.8    12.5    30.8    21.3    9.5 
Other losses excluding catastrophe losses   29.1    30.5    (1.4)   28.4    37.9    (9.5)
Catastrophe losses   3.4    4.2    (0.8)   3.5    3.5    0.0 
Total loss ratio   59.8%   49.5%   10.3    62.7%   62.7%   0.0 

 

 

We continue to monitor new losses and case reserve increases greater than $250,000 for trends in factors such as initial reserve levels, loss cost inflation and claim settlement expenses. Our analysis continues to indicate no unexpected concentration of these large losses and case reserve increases by risk category, geographic region, policy inception, agency or field marketing territory. In the second quarter of 2012, the excess and surplus line total ratio for these losses and case reserve increases, net of reinsurance, was 12.5 percentage points higher compared with last year’s second quarter, largely due to a higher frequency of large losses. The second-quarter increase in losses added to the ratio for total large losses incurred for the first six months of 2012, which also includes a higher number of claims and incurred losses for two $1 million losses during the first quarter. We believe results for the three-month and six-month period ended June 30, 2012, largely reflected normal fluctuations in loss patterns and normal variability in large case reserves for claims above $250,000.

 

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Life Insurance Results of Operations

 

(In millions)  Three months ended June 30,   Six months ended June 30, 
   2012   2011   Change %   2012   2011   Change % 
Earned premiums  $51   $43    19   $92   $80    15 
Separate account investment management fees   -    -    nm    -    1    (100)
Total revenues   51    43    19    92    81    14 
Contract holders' benefits incurred   47    44    7    90    89    1 
Investment interest credited to contract holders   (20)   (20)   0    (41)   (40)   (3)
Operating expenses incurred   22    14    57    44    30    47 
Total benefits and expenses   49    38    29    93    79    18 
Life insurance segment profit (loss)  $2   $5    (60)  $(1)  $2    nm

 

 

Overview

 

Performance highlights for the life insurance segment include:

 

·Revenues – Revenues were higher for the three and six months ended June 30, 2012, primarily due to higher earned premiums from term and universal life insurance products.

 

Gross in-force life insurance policy face amounts increased to $79.560 billion at June 30, 2012, from $77.691 billion at year-end 2011.

 

Fixed annuity deposits received for the three and six months ended June 30, 2012, were $13 million and $30 million compared with $28 million and $89 million for the same periods of 2011. Fixed annuity deposits have a minimal impact to earned premiums because deposits received are initially recorded as liabilities. Profit is earned over time by way of interest rate spreads. We do not write variable or equity annuities and are currently de-emphasizing fixed annuity sales due to the low interest rate environment.

 

Life Insurance Premiums

 

(Dollars in millions)  Three months ended June 30,   Six months ended June 30, 
   2012   2011   Change %   2012   2011   Change % 
Term life insurance  $30   $27    11   $57   $52    10 
Universal life insurance   13    9    44    20    14    43 
Other life insurance, annuity, and disability income products   8    7    14    15    14    7 
Net earned premiums  $51   $43    19   $92   $80    15 

 

 

·Profitability – Our life insurance segment typically reports a small profit or loss on a GAAP basis because profits from investment income spreads are included in our investment segment results. We include only investment income credited to contract holders (including interest assumed in life insurance policy reserve calculations) in our life insurance segment results. A loss of $1 million for our life insurance segment in the first six months of 2012 compared with profit of $2 million for the same period of 2011, primarily due to less favorable mortality experience.

 

Although we report most of our life insurance company investment income in our investments segment results, we recognize that assets under management, capital appreciation and investment income are integral to evaluation of the success of the life insurance segment because of the long duration of life products. On a basis that includes investment income and realized gains or losses from life insurance related invested assets, the life insurance company reported a net profit of $11 million and $18 million in the three and six months ended June 30, 2012, compared with a net profit of $16 million and $4 million for the same periods of 2011. The life insurance company portfolio had after-tax realized investment gains of less than $1 million and $1 million in the three and six months ended June 30, 2012, compared with after-tax realized investment gains of $3 million and after-tax realized investment losses of $16 million for the same periods of 2011.

 

Life segment benefits and expenses consist principally of contract holders’ (policyholders’) benefits incurred related to traditional life and interest-sensitive products and operating expenses incurred, net of deferred acquisition costs. Total benefits increased in the first six months of 2012 due to increased levels of net death claims. Although net death claims increased, they remained within our range of pricing expectations. Operating expenses increased compared with the first six months of 2011 as the amount of expenses deferred to future periods was decreased through a one-time actuarial adjustment and also because of the effects of interest rate compression on deferred acquisition cost amortization.

 

Cincinnati Financial Corporation Second-Quarter 2012 10Q

Page 45

 

 

Investments Results of Operations

 

Overview

 

The investments segment contributes investment income and realized gains and losses to results of operations. Investments traditionally are our primary source of pretax and after-tax profits.

 

Investment Income

 

Pretax investment income for the three months ended June 30, 2012, matched the same period of 2011. Investment income from interest on bonds trended flat as a larger portfolio base of fixed-maturity invested assets offset a slightly lower average yield. Dividend income for the three-month period also matched the year-ago amount. Average yields in the table below are based on the average invested asset and cash amounts indicated in the table, using fixed-maturity securities valued at amortized cost and all other securities at fair value. In our 2011 Annual Report on Form 10-K, Item 1, Investments Segment, Page 20, and Item 7, Investments Outlook, Page 84, we discussed our portfolio strategies. We discuss risks related to our investment income and our fixed-maturity and equity investment portfolios in Item 3, Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk, Page 51. 

 

We continue to position our portfolio with consideration to both the challenges presented by the current low interest rate environment and the risks presented by potential future inflation. As bonds in our generally laddered portfolio mature or are called over the near term, we will be challenged to replace their current yield. Approximately 18 percent of our fixed-maturity investments mature during July 2012 through December 2014 with an average pretax yield-to-amortized cost of 4.9 percent, including 2.9 percent of the portfolio maturing during the last six months of 2012 also yielding 4.9 percent. While our bond portfolio more than covers our insurance reserve liabilities, we believe our diversified common stock portfolio of mainly blue chip, dividend-paying companies represents one of our best investment opportunities for the long term.

 

Investment Results

 

 

(In millions)  Three months ended June 30,   Six months ended June 30, 
   2012   2011   Change %   2012   2011   Change % 
Total investment income, net of expenses, pretax  $132   $132    0   $263   $263    0 
Investment interest credited to contract holders   (20)   (20)   0    (41)   (40)   (3)
Realized investment gains and losses summary:                              
Realized investment gains and losses   19    67    (72)   44    105    (58)
Change in fair value of securities with embedded derivatives   1    -    nm    5    4    25 
Other-than-temporary impairment charges   (14)   -    nm    (30)   (30)   0 
Total realized investment gains and losses   6    67    (91)   19    79    (76)
Investment operations profit  $118   $179    (34)  $241   $302    (20)

 

 

 

(In millions)  Three months ended June 30,   Six months ended June 30, 
   2012   2011   Change %   2012   2011   Change % 
Investment income:                              
Interest  $106   $106    0   $212   $212    0 
Dividends   27    27    0    53    53    0 
Other   1    1    0    2    2    0 
Investment expenses   (2)   (2)   0    (4)   (4)   0 
Total investment income, net of expenses, pretax   132    132    0    263    263    0 
Income taxes   (32)   (33)   3    (64)   (65)   2 
Total investment income, net of expenses, after tax  $100   $99    1   $199   $198    1 
                               
Effective tax rate   24.5%   24.6%        24.4%   24.5%     
                               
Average invested assets plus cash and cash equivalents  $11,777   $11,526        $11,633   $11,435      
                               
Average yield pretax   4.5%   4.6%        4.5%   4.6%     
Average yield after tax   3.4%   3.4%        3.4%   3.5%     
                               
                               
Effective fixed-maturity tax rate   27.0%   26.7%        26.9%   26.6%     
                               
Average fixed-maturity at amortized cost  $8,232   $8,076        $8,168   $8,003      
                               
Average fixed-maturity yield pretax   5.2%   5.3%        5.2%   5.3%     
Average fixed-maturity yield after tax   3.8%   3.8%        3.8%   3.9%     

 

 

 

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Net Realized Gains and Losses

 

We reported net realized investment gains of $6 million and $19 million in the three and six months ended June 30, 2012, as net gains from investment sales and bond calls were partially offset by other-than-temporary impairment (OTTI) charges. OTTI charges during the three-month and six-month periods ended June 30, 2012, were $14 million and $30 million, respectively. We reported net realized investment gains of $67 million and $79 million for the three and six months ended June 30, 2011, as net gains from investment sales and bond calls offset OTTI charges.

 

Investment gains or losses are recognized upon the sales of investments or as otherwise required under GAAP. The timing of realized gains or losses from sales can have a material effect on results in any quarter. However, such gains or losses usually have little, if any, effect on total shareholders’ equity because most equity and fixed-maturity investments are carried at fair value, with the unrealized gain or loss included as a component of other comprehensive income. Accounting requirements for OTTI charges for the fixed-maturity portfolio are disclosed in our 2011 Annual Report on Form 10-K, Item 8, Note 1, Summary of Significant Accounting Policies, Page 117.

 

The total net realized investment gains for the first six months of 2012 include:

 

·$28 million in net gains from the sale of various common stock holdings.
·$16 million in net gains from fixed-maturity security sales and calls.
·$5 million in gains from changes in fair value of securities with embedded derivatives.
·$30 million in OTTI charges to write down holdings of equities and fixed maturities.

 

The $30 million in OTTI charges was nearly all from four common stocks, with less than $1 million from two fixed-maturity securities.

 

Of the 2,776 securities in the portfolio, no securities were trading below 70 percent of amortized cost at June 30, 2012. Our asset impairment committee regularly monitors the portfolio, including a quarterly review of the entire portfolio for potential OTTI charges. We believe that if the improving liquidity in the markets were to reverse, or the economic recovery were to significantly stall, we could experience declines in portfolio values and possible additional OTTI charges.

 

The table below provides additional detail for OTTI charges.

 

 

(In millions)  Three months ended June 30,   Six months ended June 30, 
   2012   2011   2012   2011 
Common equities                    
Financial  $-   $-   $-   $30 
Energy   -    -    1    - 
Industrial   2    -    8    - 
Consumer discretionary   5    -    14    - 
Material   7    -    7    - 
Total common equities  $14   $-   $30   $30 

 

 

Other

 

We report as Other the non-investment operations of the parent company and a non-insurer subsidiary, CFC Investment Company.

 

Losses before income taxes for Other were largely driven by interest expense from debt of the parent company.

 

 

(In millions)  Three months ended June 30,   Six months ended June 30, 
   2012   2011   Change %   2012   2011   Change % 
Interest and fees on loans and leases  $2   $2    0   $4   $4    0 
Other revenues   1    -    nm    1    -    nm 
Total revenues   3    2    50    5    4    25 
Interest expense   13    14    (7)   27    27    0 
Operating expenses   4    4    0    9    8    13 
Total expenses   17    18    (6)   36    35    3 
Other loss  $(14)  $(16)   13   $(31)  $(31)   0 

 

 

Taxes

 

We had an income tax benefit of $3 million in the second quarter and income tax expense of $23 million in the six months ended June 30, 2012, compared with an income tax benefit of $49 million and $35 million for the same periods of 2011. The effective tax rate for the three and six months ended June 30, 2012, was negative 10.3 percent and positive 16.3 percent compared with positive 49.5 percent and 145.8 percent for the same periods last year.

 

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The change in our effective tax rate was primarily due to changes in pretax income from underwriting results and realized investment gains and losses.

 

Historically, we have pursued a strategy of investing some portion of cash flow in tax-advantaged fixed-maturity and equity securities to minimize our overall tax liability and maximize after-tax earnings. See Tax-Exempt Fixed Maturities, Page 53 for further discussion on municipal bond purchases in our fixed-maturity investment portfolio. For our insurance subsidiaries, approximately 85 percent of income from tax-advantaged fixed-maturity investments is exempt from federal tax. Our non-insurance companies own an immaterial amount of tax-advantaged fixed-maturity investments. For our insurance subsidiaries, the dividend received deduction, after the dividend proration of the 1986 Tax Reform Act, exempts approximately 60 percent of dividends from qualified equities from federal tax. For our non-insurance companies, the dividend received deduction exempts 70 percent of dividends from qualified equities. Details about our effective tax rate are found in our 2011 Annual Report on Form 10-K, Item 8, Note 11, Income Taxes, Page 129, and in Item 1, Note 11 – Income Taxes, Page 19.

 

Liquidity and Capital Resources

 

At June 30, 2012, shareholders’ equity was $5.144 billion compared with $5.033 billion at December 31, 2011. Total debt was $894 million at June 30, 2012, and at December 31, 2011. At June 30, 2012, cash and cash equivalents totaled $263 million compared with $438 million at December 31, 2011.

 

Sources of Liquidity

 

Subsidiary Dividends

 

Our lead insurance subsidiary declared dividends of $150 million to the parent company during the first six months of 2012 compared with $60 million for the same period of 2011. For the full-year 2011, subsidiary dividends declared totaled $180 million. State of Ohio regulatory requirements restrict the dividends our insurance subsidiary can pay. During 2012, total dividends that our insurance subsidiary could pay to our parent company without regulatory approval are approximately $375 million.

 

Investing Activities

 

Investment income is a source of liquidity for both the parent company and its insurance subsidiary. We continue to focus on portfolio strategies to balance near-term income generation and long-term book value growth.

 

Parent company obligations can be funded with income on investments held at the parent company level or through sales of securities in that portfolio, although we prefer to follow an investment philosophy seeking to compound cash flows over the long term. These sources of capital can help minimize subsidiary dividends to the parent company, protecting insurance subsidiary capital.

 

We own no European sovereign debt. Our European-based securities held at year-end 2011 are summarized by country in our 2011 Annual Report on Form 10-K, Item 7A, Qualitative and Quantitative Disclosures About Market Risk, Page 102. See our 2011 Annual Report on Form 10-K, Item 1, Investment Segment, Page 20, for a discussion of our historic investment strategy, portfolio allocation and quality.

 

Insurance Underwriting

 

Our property casualty and life insurance underwriting operations provide liquidity because we generally receive premiums before paying losses under the policies purchased with those premiums. After satisfying our cash requirements, we use excess cash flows for investment, increasing future investment income.

 

Historically, cash receipts from property casualty and life insurance premiums, along with investment income, have been more than sufficient to pay claims, operating expenses and dividends to the parent company.

 

The table below shows a summary of cash flow for property casualty insurance (direct method):

 

 

(Dollars in millions)  Three months ended June 30,   Six months ended June 30, 
   2012   2011   2012   2011 
Premiums collected  $869   $748   $1,720   $1,526 
Loss and loss expenses paid   (572)   (639)   (1,079)   (1,130)
Commissions and other underwriting expenses paid   (246)   (228)   (546)   (523)
Insurance subsidiary cash flow from underwriting   51    (119)   95    (127)
Investment income received   88    87    178    179 
Insurance operating cash flow  $139   $(32)  $273   $52 

 

 

Cincinnati Financial Corporation Second-Quarter 2012 10Q

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Collected premiums for property casualty insurance rose $194 million during the first six months of 2012. Loss and loss expenses paid were $51 million lower, largely due to lower catastrophe losses paid.

 

We discuss our future obligations for claims payments and for underwriting expenses in our 2011 Annual Report on Form 10-K, Item 7, Contractual Obligations, Page 87, and Other Commitments, Page 88.

 

Capital Resources

 

At June 30, 2012, our debt-to-total-capital ratio was 14.8 percent, with $790 million in long-term debt and $104 million in borrowing on our revolving short-term line of credit. In May 2012, we executed a new five-year $225 million credit facility, replacing two credit facilities that totaled $225 million. Terms and conditions for the new credit facility were described in a Current Report dated May 31, 2012.There was no change in the amount of the $104 million short-term debt during the first six months of 2012. Based on our present capital requirements, we do not anticipate a material increase in debt levels during the remainder of 2012. As a result, we expect changes in our debt-to-total-capital ratio to continue to be largely a function of the contribution of unrealized investment gains or losses to shareholders’ equity.

 

We provide details of our three long-term notes in our 2011 Annual Report on Form 10-K, Item 8, Note 8, Senior Debt, Page 127. None of the notes are encumbered by rating triggers.

 

Four independent ratings firms also award insurer financial strength ratings to our property casualty insurance companies and three firms rate our life insurance company. Those firms made no changes to our debt ratings occurred during the first six months of 2012. Our debt ratings are discussed in our 2011 Annual Report on Form 10-K, Item 7, Liquidity and Capital Resources, Additional Sources of Liquidity, Page 86.

 

Off-Balance Sheet Arrangements

 

We do not use any special-purpose financing vehicles or have any undisclosed off-balance sheet arrangements (as that term is defined in applicable SEC rules) that are reasonably likely to have a current or future material effect on the company’s financial condition, results of operation, liquidity, capital expenditures or capital resources. Similarly, the company holds no fair-value contracts for which a lack of marketplace quotations would necessitate the use of fair-value techniques.

 

Uses of Liquidity

 

Our parent company and insurance subsidiary have contractual obligations and other commitments. In addition, one of our primary uses of cash is to enhance shareholder return.

 

Contractual Obligations

 

In our 2011 Annual Report on Form 10-K, Item 7, Contractual Obligations, Page 87, we estimated our future contractual obligations as of December 31, 2011. There have been no material changes to our estimates of future contractual obligations.

 

Other Commitments

 

In addition to our contractual obligations, we have other property casualty operational commitments.

 

·Commissions – Commissions paid were $338 million in the first six months of 2012. Commission payments generally track with written premiums, except for annual profit-sharing commissions typically paid during the first quarter of the year.

 

·Other underwriting expenses – Many of our underwriting expenses are not contractual obligations, but reflect the ongoing expenses of our business. Non-commission underwriting expenses paid were $208 million in the first six months of 2012.

 

·In addition to contractual obligations for hardware and software, we anticipate capitalizing approximately $5 million in spending for key technology initiatives in 2012. Capitalized development costs related to key technology initiatives were $2 million in the first six months of 2012. These activities are conducted at our discretion, and we have no material contractual obligations for activities planned as part of these projects.

 

We made no contribution to our qualified pension plan during the first six months of 2012. We anticipate contributing $14 million in the third quarter of 2012.

 

Investing Activities

 

After fulfilling operating requirements, we invest cash flows from underwriting, investment and other corporate activities in fixed-maturity and equity securities on an ongoing basis to help achieve our portfolio objectives. We discuss our investment strategy and certain portfolio attributes in Item 3, Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk, Page 51.

 

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Uses of Capital

 

Uses of cash to enhance shareholder return include dividends to shareholders. In February and May 2012, the board of directors declared a regular quarterly cash dividend of 40.25 cents per share for an indicated annual rate of $1.61 per share. During the first six months of 2012, we used $128 million to pay cash dividends to shareholders.

 

Property Casualty Insurance Reserves

 

For the business lines in the commercial and personal lines insurance segments, and in total for the excess and surplus lines segment, the following table details gross reserves among case, IBNR and loss expense reserves, net of salvage and subrogation reserves. Reserving practices are discussed in our 2011 Annual Report on Form 10-K, Item 7, Property Casualty Insurance Loss and Loss Expense Obligations and Reserves, Page 88.

 

The rise in total gross reserves was primarily due to higher IBNR reserves for our commercial property and homeowner lines of business. Losses from natural catastrophes accounted for most of the increase.

 

Property and Casualty Gross Reserves

 

 

(In millions)  Loss reserves   Loss   Total     
   Case   IBNR   expense   gross   Percent 
   reserves   reserves   reserves   reserves   of total 
At June 30, 2012                         
Commercial lines insurance                         
Commercial casualty  $849   $341   $518   $1,708    39.4%
Commercial property   213    78    35    326    7.5 
Commercial auto   254    30    61    345    8.0 
Workers' compensation   455    460    105    1,020    23.5 
Specialty packages   96    13    31    140    3.2 
Surety and executive risk   125    1    86    212    4.9 
Machinery and equipment   (1)   5    2    6    0.1 
Subtotal   1,991    928    838    3,757    86.6 
                          
Personal lines insurance                         
Personal auto   132    3    53    188    4.4 
Homeowner   91    61    27    179    4.1 
Other personal   41    59    5    105    2.4 
Subtotal   264    123    85    472    10.9 
                          
Excess and surplus lines   56    27    25    108    2.5 
Total  $2,311   $1,078   $948   $4,337    100.0%
At December 31, 2011                         
Commercial lines insurance                         
Commercial casualty  $875   $365   $535   $1,775    41.5%
Commercial property   190    35    36    261    6.1 
Commercial auto   260    30    62    352    8.2 
Workers' compensation   467    464    108    1,039    24.3 
Specialty packages   100    9    32    141    3.3 
Surety and executive risk   126    5    77    208    4.9 
Machinery and equipment   1    3    1    5    0.1 
Subtotal   2,019    911    851    3,781    88.4 
                          
Personal lines insurance                         
Personal auto   129    (3)   52    178    4.2 
Homeowner   76    39    27    142    3.3 
Other personal   41    52    5    98    2.3 
Subtotal   246    88    84    418    9.8 
                          
Excess and surplus lines   43    18    20    81    1.8 
Total  $2,308   $1,017   $955   $4,280    100.0%

 

 

Life Policy and Investment Contract Reserves

 

Gross life policy and investment contract reserves were $2.256 billion at June 30, 2012, compared with $2.214 billion at year-end 2011, reflecting continued growth in life insurance policies in force. We discuss our life insurance reserving practices in our 2011 Annual Report on Form 10-K, Item 7, Life Insurance Policyholder Obligations and Reserves, Page 97.

 

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Other Matters

 

Significant Accounting Policies

 

Our significant accounting policies are discussed in our 2011 Annual Report on Form 10-K, Item 8, Note 1, Summary Of Significant Accounting Policies, Page 114, and updated in Item 1, Note 1, Accounting Policies, beginning on Page 7.

 

In conjunction with those discussions, in the Management’s Discussion and Analysis in the 2011 Annual Report on Form 10-K, management reviewed the estimates and assumptions used to develop reported amounts related to the most significant policies. Management discussed the development and selection of those accounting estimates with the audit committee of the board of directors.

 

Item 3.      Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk

 

Our greatest exposure to market risk is through our investment portfolio. Market risk is the potential for a decrease in securities’ fair value resulting from broad yet uncontrollable forces such as: inflation, economic growth or recession, interest rates, world political conditions or other widespread unpredictable events. It is comprised of many individual risks that, when combined, create a macroeconomic impact.

 

Our view of potential risks and our sensitivity to such risks is discussed in our 2011 Annual Report on Form 10-K, Item 7a, Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk, Page 102.

 

The fair value of our investment portfolio was $12.164 billion at June 30, 2012, compared with $11.735 billion at year-end 2011.

 

 

(In millions)  At June 30, 2012   At December 31, 2011 
   Cost or
amortized cost
   Percent to
total
   Fair value   Percent to
total
   Cost or
amortized cost
   Percent
to total
   Fair value   Percent to
total
 
Taxable fixed maturities  $5,513    52.5%  $6,075    49.9%  $5,369    52.4%  $5,847    49.8%
Tax-exempt fixed maturities   2,739    26.1    2,950    24.3    2,715    26.5    2,932    25.0 
Common equities   2,149    20.5    3,007    24.7    2,088    20.4    2,854    24.3 
Preferred equities   99    0.9    132    1.1    74    0.7    102    0.9 
Total  $10,500    100.0%  $12,164    100.0%  $10,246    100.0%  $11,735    100.0%

 

 

Our consolidated investment portfolio contains $13 million of assets for which values are based on prices or valuation techniques that require significant management judgment (Level 3 assets). We have generally obtained and evaluated two non-binding quotes from brokers, then our investment professionals determine our best estimate of fair value. These investments include private placements, small issues and various thinly traded securities.

 

At June 30, 2012, total Level 3 assets were less than 1 percent of investment portfolio assets measured at fair value. See Item 1, Note 4, Fair Value Measurements, Page 12, for additional discussion of our valuation techniques.

 

In addition to our investment portfolio, the total investments amount reported in our condensed consolidated balance sheets includes Other invested assets. Other invested assets included $36 million of life policy loans and liens plus $31 million of venture capital fund investments at June 30, 2012.

 

Fixed-Maturity Investments

 

By maintaining a well-diversified fixed-maturity portfolio, we attempt to reduce overall risk. We invest new money in the bond market on a regular basis, targeting what we believe to be optimal risk-adjusted after-tax yields. Risk, in this context, includes interest rate, call, reinvestment rate, credit and liquidity risk. We do not make a concerted effort to alter duration on a portfolio basis in response to anticipated movements in interest rates. By regularly investing in the bond market, we build a broad, diversified portfolio that we believe mitigates the impact of adverse economic factors.

 

Our investment portfolio had no European sovereign debt holdings at June 30, 2012. At that time we owned other European-based securities, primarily corporate bonds, totaling less than $500 million in fair value. We discussed our European-based holdings in our 2011 Annual Report on Form 10-K, Item 7a, Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures about Market Risk, Page 103. The composition of our European-based holdings at June 30, 2012, was similar to the composition at year-end 2011.

 

In the first six months of 2012, the increase in fair value of our fixed-maturity portfolio was due to a multitude of factors. In addition to purchases, contributors included tightening credit spreads in the corporate and municipal markets and a general decrease in treasury market yields. At June 30, 2012, our fixed-maturity portfolio was valued at 109.4 percent of its amortized cost, compared with 108.6 percent at December 31, 2011.

 

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Credit ratings at June 30, 2012, compared with December 31, 2011, for the fixed-maturity and short-term portfolios were:

 

 

(In millions)  At June 30, 2012   At December 31, 2011 
   Fair   Percent   Fair   Percent 
   value   to total   value   to total 
Moody's Ratings and Standard & Poor's Ratings combined                    
Aaa, Aa, A, AAA, AA, A  $5,572    61.7%  $5,507    62.7%
Baa, BBB   3,032    33.6    2,842    32.4 
Ba, BB   186    2.1    195    2.2 
B, B   30    0.3    33    0.4 
Caa, CCC   2    0.0    5    0.1 
Daa, Da, D   -    0.0    2    0.0 
Non-rated   203    2.3    195    2.2 
Total  $9,025    100.0%  $8,779    100.0%

 

 

Attributes of the fixed-maturity portfolio include:

 

 

   At June 30,  At December 31,
   2012  2011
Weighted average yield-to-amortized cost   5.1%   5.3%
Weighted average maturity   6.4yrs   6.7yrs
Effective duration   4.3yrs   4.4yrs

 

 

We discuss maturities of our fixed-maturity portfolio in our 2011 Annual Report on Form 10-K, Item 8, Note 2, Investments, Page 121, and Item 2, Investments Results of Operations, Page 46.

 

Taxable Fixed Maturities

 

Our taxable fixed-maturity portfolio, with a fair value of $6.075 billion at June 30, 2012, included:

 

 

(In millions)  At June 30,   At December 31, 
   2012   2011 
Investment-grade corporate  $5,412   $5,100 
States, municipalities and political subdivisions   333    320 
Below investment-grade corporate   182    198 
Government sponsored enterprises   86    160 
Convertibles and bonds with warrants attached   51    59 
United States government   8    7 
Foreign government   3    3 
Total  $6,075   $5,847 

 

 

Our strategy typically is to buy and hold fixed-maturity investments to maturity, but we monitor credit profiles and fair value movements when determining holding periods for individual securities. With the exception of U.S. agency issues that include United States government and government sponsored enterprises, no individual issuer's securities accounted for more than 1.0 percent of the taxable fixed-maturity portfolio at June 30, 2012. Investment grade corporate bonds had an average rating of Baa1 by Moody’s or BBB+ by Standard & Poor’s and represented 88.9 percent of the taxable fixed-maturity portfolio’s fair value at June 30, 2012, compared with 87.2 percent at year-end 2011.

 

The heaviest concentration in our investment-grade corporate bond portfolio, based on fair value at June 30, 2012, is the financial-related sectors – including banking, financial services and insurance – representing 30.5 percent, compared with 29.3 percent at year-end 2011. We believe our weighting in financial-related sectors is below the average for the corporate bond market as a whole.

 

Most of the $333 million of securities issued by states, municipalities and political subdivisions included in our taxable fixed maturity portfolio at June 30, 2012, were Build America Bonds.

 

Our taxable fixed maturity portfolio at June 30, 2012, included $13 million of AAA rated commercial mortgage-backed securities.

 

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Tax-Exempt Fixed Maturities

 

At June 30, 2012, we had $2.950 billion of tax-exempt fixed-maturity securities with an average rating of Aa2/AA by Moody’s and Standard & Poor’s. We traditionally have purchased municipal bonds focusing on general obligation and essential services issues, such as water, waste disposal or others. The portfolio is well diversified among approximately 1,000 municipal bond issuers. No single municipal issuer accounted for more than 0.7 percent of the tax-exempt fixed maturity portfolio at June 30, 2012. The following table shows our municipal bond holdings in our larger states:

 

 

(In millions)

At June 30, 2012
  State issued general
obligation bonds
   Local issued
general obligation
bonds
   Special
revenue bonds
   Total   Percent of
total
 
Texas  $-   $414   $96   $510    17.3%
Indiana   -    14    301    315    10.7 
Michigan   -    263    12    275    9.3 
Illinois   -    228    23    251    8.5 
Ohio   -    134    100    234    7.9 
Washington   3    181    39    223    7.6 
Wisconsin   2    107    26    135    4.6 
Pennsylvania   -    79    9    88    3.0 
Florida   -    21    64    85    2.9 
Arizona   -    52    30    82    2.8 
Colorado   -    44    18    62    2.1 
New Jersey   -    33    17    50    1.7 
Kansas   -    27    20    47    1.5 
New York   -    22    24    46    1.5 
Minnesota   -    34    6    40    1.4 
All other states   1    269    237    507    17.2 
Total  $6   $1,922   $1,022   $2,950    100.0%

 

At December 31, 2011                         
Texas  $-   $425   $99   $524    17.9%
Indiana   -    16    316    332    11.3 
Michigan   -    257    12    269    9.2 
Illinois   -    226    23    249    8.5 
Ohio   -    132    107    239    8.2 
Washington   3    174    39    216    7.4 
Wisconsin   2    115    25    142    4.8 
Pennsylvania   -    76    8    84    2.9 
Florida   -    21    61    82    2.8 
Arizona   -    51    27    78    2.7 
Colorado   -    40    15    55    1.9 
Kansas   -    27    20    47    1.6 
New Jersey   -    30    17    47    1.6 
New York   -    18    24    42    1.4 
Utah   -    21    19    40    1.4 
All other states   1    264    221    486    16.4 
Total  $6   $1,893   $1,033   $2,932    100.0%

 

 

Interest Rate Sensitivity Analysis

 

Because of our strong surplus, long-term investment horizon and ability to hold most fixed-maturity investments until maturity, we believe the company is adequately positioned if interest rates were to rise. Although the fair values of our existing holdings may suffer, a higher rate environment would provide the opportunity to invest cash flow in higher yielding securities, while reducing the likelihood of untimely redemptions of currently callable securities. While higher interest rates would be expected to continue to increase the number of fixed-maturity holdings trading below 100 percent of amortized cost, we believe lower fixed-maturity security values due solely to interest rate changes would not signal a decline in credit quality. We continue to manage the portfolio with an eye toward both meeting current income needs and managing interest rate risk.

 

Our dynamic financial planning model uses analytical tools to assess market risks. As part of this model, the effective duration of the fixed-maturity portfolio is continually monitored by our investment department to evaluate the theoretical impact of interest rate movements.

 

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The table below summarizes the effect of hypothetical changes in interest rates on the fair value of the fixed-maturity portfolio:

 

 

(In millions)  Interest Rate Shift in Basis Points 
   -200   -100   0   100   200 
At June 30, 2012  $9,836   $9,421   $9,025   $8,628   $8,241 
                          
At December 31, 2011  $9,597   $9,179   $8,779   $8,390   $8,008 

 

 

The effective duration of the fixed-maturity portfolio as of June 30, 2012, was 4.3 years, compared with 4.4 years at year-end 2011. The above table is a theoretical presentation showing that an instantaneous, parallel shift in the yield curve of 100 basis points could produce an approximately 4.4 percent change in the fair value of the fixed-maturity portfolio. Generally speaking, the higher a bond is rated, the more directly correlated movements in its fair value are to changes in the general level of interest rates, exclusive of call features. The fair values of average- to lower-rated corporate bonds are additionally influenced by the expansion or contraction of credit spreads.

 

In our dynamic financial planning model, the selected interest rate change of 100 to 200 basis points represents our view of a shift in rates that is quite possible over a one-year period. The rates modeled should not be considered a prediction of future events as interest rates may be much more volatile in the future. The analysis is not intended to provide a precise forecast of the effect of changes in rates on our results or financial condition, nor does it take into account any actions that we might take to reduce exposure to such risks.

 

Equity Investments

 

Our equity investments, with a fair value totaling $3.139 billion at June 30, 2012, include $3.007 billion of common stock securities of companies generally with strong indications of paying and growing their dividends. Other criteria we evaluate include increasing sales and earnings, proven management and a favorable outlook. We believe our equity investment style is an appropriate long-term strategy. While our long-term financial position would be affected by prolonged changes in the market valuation of our investments, we believe our strong surplus position and cash flow provide a cushion against short-term fluctuations in valuation. Continued payment of cash dividends by the issuers of the common equities we hold can provide a floor to their valuation. A $100 million unrealized change in the value of the common stocks owned at period end would cause a change of $65 million, or approximately 40 cents per share, in our shareholders’ equity.

 

At June 30, 2012, our largest holding had a fair value of 4.7 percent of our publicly-traded common stock portfolio. Pepsico Inc. (NYSE:PEP) was our largest single common stock investment, comprising 1.2 percent of the investment portfolio as of the end of the second quarter of 2012.

 

Common Stock Portfolio Industry Sector Distribution

 

 

   Percent of Publicly Traded Common Stock Portfolio 
   At June 30, 2012   At December 31, 2011 
   Cincinnati
 Financial
   S&P 500 Industry
Weightings
   Cincinnati
Financial
   S&P 500 Industry
Weightings
 
Sector:                    
Information technology   17.1%   19.7%   16.9%   19.0%
Energy   12.8    10.8    14.0    12.3 
Healthcare   12.2    12.0    12.0    11.8 
Consumer staples   12.2    11.3    12.3    11.5 
Industrials   12.1    10.5    11.8    10.7 
Financial   9.1    14.4    8.5    13.4 
Consumer discretionary   8.8    11.0    9.4    10.7 
Materials   6.1    3.4    5.7    3.5 
Utilities   5.4    3.7    5.5    3.9 
Telecomm services   4.2    3.2    3.9    3.2 
Total   100.0%   100.0%   100.0%   100.0%

 

 

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Unrealized Investment Gains and Losses

 

At June 30, 2012, unrealized investment gains before taxes for the consolidated investment portfolio totaled $1.673 billion and unrealized investment losses amounted to $9 million.

 

The unrealized investment gains at June 30, 2012, were due to a pretax net gain position in our fixed maturity portfolio of $773 million and a net gain position in our equity portfolio of $891 million. The net gain position in our fixed-maturity portfolio has grown since year-end 2007 due largely to a declining interest rate environment in recent years. The net gain position for our current fixed-maturity holdings will naturally decline over time as individual securities mature. In addition, changes in interest rates can cause rapid, significant changes in fair values of fixed-maturity securities and the net gain position, as discussed on Pages 51 to 54. The three largest contributors to our equity portfolio net gain position were ExxonMobil, Procter & Gamble and Chevron common stocks, which had a combined net gain position of $269 million.

 

Unrealized Investment Losses

 

We expect the number of securities trading below amortized cost to fluctuate as interest rates rise or fall and credit spreads expand or contract due to prevailing economic conditions. Further, amortized costs for some securities are revised through OTTI recognized in prior periods. At June 30, 2012, 106 of the 2,776 securities we owned had fair values below amortized cost compared with 137 of the 2,724 securities we owned at year-end 2011. The 106 holdings with fair values below cost or amortized cost at June 30, 2012, represented 3.2 percent of fair value of our investment portfolio and $9 million in unrealized losses.

 

·98 of these holdings had fair values between 90 percent and 100 percent of amortized cost at June 30, 2012. 13 of these are equity securities that may be subject to OTTI charges taken through earnings should they not recover by the recovery dates we determined. The remaining 85 securities primarily consist of fixed-maturity securities whose current valuation is largely the result of interest rate factors. The fair value of these 98 securities was $369 million, and they accounted for $5 million in unrealized losses.
   
·Eight of these holdings had fair values between 70 percent and 90 percent of amortized cost at June 30, 2012. Three of these are equity securities that may be subject to OTTI should they not recover by the recovery dates we determined. Five are fixed-maturity securities that we believe will continue to pay interest and ultimately principal upon maturity. The issuers of these securities have strong cash flow to service their debt and meet their contractual obligation to make principal payments. The fair value of these eight securities was $24 million, and they accounted for $4 million in unrealized losses.
   
·No securities were trading below 70 percent of amortized cost at June 30, 2012.

 

The table below reviews fair values and unrealized losses by investment category and by the overall duration of the securities’ continuous unrealized loss position.

 

 

(In millions)  Less than 12 months  12 months or more  Total
At June 30, 2012  Fair
value
  Unrealized
losses
  Fair
value
  Unrealized
losses
  Fair
value
  Unrealized
losses
Fixed maturities:                              
States, municipalities and political subdivisions  $35   $-   $1   $-   $36   $- 
United States government   1    -        -    1    - 
Government-sponsored enterprises   25    -        -    25    - 
Corporate securities   193    3    59    4    252    7 
Subtotal   254    3    60    4    314    7 
Equity securities:                              
Common equities   67    2    3    -    70    2 
Preferred equities   5    -    4    -    9    - 
Subtotal   72    2    7    -    79    2 
Total  $326   $5   $67   $4   $393   $9 

 

At December 31, 2011                              
Fixed maturities:                              
States, municipalities and political subdivisions  $-   $-   $12   $-   $12   $- 
United States government   1    -    -    -    1    - 
Government-sponsored enterprises   10    -    -    -    10    - 
Corporate securities   380    13    57    5    437    18 
Subtotal   391    13    69    5    460    18 
Equity securities:                              
Common equities   333    35    -    -    333    35 
Preferred equities   5    -    19    -    24    - 
Subtotal   338    35    19    -    357    35 
Total  $729   $48   $88   $5   $817   $53 

 

 

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At June 30, 2012, 16 fixed-maturity securities with a total unrealized loss of $4 million had been in an unrealized loss position for 12 months or more. Of that total, no fixed-maturity securities had fair values under 70 percent of amortized cost; three fixed-maturity securities with a fair value of $17 million had a fair value from 70 percent to less than 90 percent of amortized cost and accounted for $3 million in unrealized losses; and 13 fixed-maturity securities with a fair value of $43 million had fair values from 90 percent to less than 100 percent of amortized cost and accounted for $1 million in unrealized losses.

 

At June 30, 2012, three equity securities had been in an unrealized loss position for 12 months or more. Of that total, none were trading under 70 percent of cost and none were trading from 70 percent to less than 90 percent of cost; three equity securities with a fair value of $7 million were trading from 90 percent to less than 100 percent of cost and accounted for less than $1 million in unrealized losses.

 

At June 30, 2012, applying our invested asset impairment policy, we determined that the $9 million in total unrealized losses in the table above were not other-than-temporarily impaired.

 

During the second quarter of 2012, four securities were written down through impairment charges, including one new security impairment, for a total of six during the six months ended June 30, 2012. OTTI resulted in pretax, non-cash charges of $14 million and $30 million for the three months and six months ended June 30, 2012. During the same periods of 2011, we wrote down securities resulting in less than $1 million and $30 million in OTTI charges.

 

During full-year 2011, we wrote down 12 securities and recorded $57 million in OTTI charges. At December 31, 2011, 20 fixed-maturity investments with a total unrealized loss of $5 million had been in an unrealized loss position for 12 months or more. Of that total, no fixed-maturity investments had fair values below 70 percent of amortized cost. Two equity investments with a total unrealized loss of less than $1 million had been in an unrealized loss position for 12 months or more as of December 31, 2011. Of that total, no equity investments were trading below 70 percent of amortized cost.

 

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The following table summarizes the investment portfolio by severity of decline:

 

 

(In millions)  Number
of issues
   Cost or
amortized
cost
   Fair
 value
   Gross
unrealized
gain/loss
   Gross
investment
income
 
At June 30, 2012                         
Taxable fixed maturities:                         
Fair valued below 70% of amortized cost   -   $-   $-   $-   $- 
Fair valued at 70% to less than 100% of amortized cost   61    285    278    (7)   5 
Fair valued at 100% and above of amortized cost   1,339    5,228    5,797    569    146 
Securities sold in current year   -    -    -    -    5 
Total   1,400    5,513    6,075    562    156 
                          
Tax-exempt fixed maturities:                         
Fair valued below 70% of amortized cost   -    -    -    -    - 
Fair valued at 70% to less than 100% of amortized cost   29    36    36    -    - 
Fair valued at 100% and above of amortized cost   1,254    2,703    2,914    211    57 
Securities sold in current year   -    -    -    -    - 
Total   1,283    2,739    2,950    211    57 
                          
Common equities:                         
Fair valued below 70% of cost   -    -    -    -    - 
Fair valued at 70% to less than 100% of cost   13    72    70    (2)   1 
Fair valued at 100% and above of cost   58    2,077    2,937    860    48 
Securities sold in current year   -    -    -    -    - 
Total   71    2,149    3,007    858    49 
                          
Preferred equities:                         
Fair valued below 70% of cost   -    -    -    -    - 
Fair valued at 70% to less than 100% of cost   3    9    9    -    - 
Fair valued at 100% and above of cost   19    90    123    33    3 
Securities sold in current year   -    -    -    -    - 
Total   22    99    132    33    3 
                          
Portfolio summary:                         
Fair valued below 70% of cost or amortized cost   -    -    -    -    - 
Fair valued at 70% to less than 100% of cost or amortized cost   106    402    393    (9)   6 
Fair valued at 100% and above of cost or amortized cost   2,670    10,098    11,771    1,673    254 
Investment income on securities sold in current year   -    -    -    -    5 
Total   2,776   $10,500   $12,164   $1,664   $265 
                          
At December 31, 2011                         
Portfolio summary:                         
Fair valued below 70% of cost or amortized cost   1   $1   $1   $-   $- 
Fair valued at 70% to less than 100% of cost or amortized cost   136    869    816    (53)   29 
Fair valued at 100% and above of cost or amortized cost   2,587    9,376    10,918    1,542    472 
Investment income on securities sold in current year   -    -    -    -    27 
Total   2,724   $10,246   $11,735   $1,489   $528 

 

 

See our 2011 Annual Report on Form 10-K, Item 7, Critical Accounting Estimates, Asset Impairment, Page 46.

 

Item 4.          Controls and Procedures

 

Evaluation of Disclosure Controls and Procedures – The company maintains disclosure controls and procedures (as that term is defined in Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (Exchange Act)).

 

Any controls and procedures, no matter how well designed and operated, can provide only reasonable assurance of achieving the desired control objectives. The company’s management, with the participation of the company’s chief executive officer and chief financial officer, has evaluated the effectiveness of the design and operation of the company’s disclosure controls and procedures as of June 30, 2012. Based upon that evaluation, the company’s chief executive officer and chief financial officer concluded that the design and operation of the company’s disclosure controls and procedures provided reasonable assurance that the disclosure controls and procedures are effective to ensure:

 

·that information required to be disclosed in the company’s reports under the Exchange Act is recorded, processed, summarized and reported within the time periods specified in the Securities and Exchange Commission’s rules and forms, and
   
·that such information is accumulated and communicated to the company’s management, including its chief executive officer and chief financial officer, as appropriate, to allow timely decisions regarding required disclosures.

 

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Changes in Internal Control over Financial Reporting – During the three months ended June 30, 2012, there were no changes in our internal controls over financial reporting that have materially affected, or are reasonably likely to materially affect, our internal control over financial reporting.

 

Part II – Other Information

Item 1.          Legal Proceedings

 

Neither the company nor any of our subsidiaries is involved in any litigation believed to be material other than ordinary, routine litigation incidental to the nature of our business.

 

Item 1A.       Risk Factors

 

Our risk factors have not changed materially since they were described in our 2011 Annual Report on Form 10-K filed February 29, 2012.

 

Item 2.         Unregistered Sales of Equity Securities and Use of Proceeds

 

We did not sell any of our shares that were not registered under the Securities Act during the first six months of 2012. The board of directors has authorized share repurchases since 1996. Purchases are expected to be made generally through open market transactions. The board gives management discretion to purchase shares at reasonable prices in light of circumstances at the time of purchase, subject to SEC regulations. On October 24, 2007, the board of directors expanded the existing repurchase authorization to approximately 13 million shares. We did not repurchase any shares during the first six months of 2012. We have 7,438,762 shares available for purchase under our programs at June 30, 2012. We discuss the board authorization in our 2011 Annual Report on Form 10-K, Item 7, Liquidity and Capital Resources, Parent Company Liquidity, Page 85.

 

Item 3.          Defaults upon Senior Securities

 

We have not defaulted on any interest or principal payment, and no arrearage in the payment of dividends has occurred.

 

Item 4.          Mine Safety Disclosures

 

Not applicable.

 

Item 5.          Other Information

 

None.

 

Item 6.          Exhibits

 

Exhibit No.   Exhibit Description
3.1   Amended and Restated Articles of Incorporation of Cincinnati Financial Corporation (incorporated by reference to the company’s 2010 Annual Report on Form 10-K dated February 25, 2011, Exhibit 3.1)
3.2   Regulations of Cincinnati Financial Corporation, as amended through May 1, 2010 (incorporated by reference to the company’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended June 30, 2010, Exhibit 3.2)
10.1   Credit Agreement by and among Cincinnati Financial Corporation, CFC Investment Company, PNC Bank, N.A., as Administrative Agent, PNC Capital Markets, LLC, as Sole Bookrunner and Joint Lead Arranger, Fifth Third Bank, N.A. as Joint Lead Arranger and Syndication Agent, The Huntington National Bank and U.S. Bank, N.A, as Documentation Agents, dated May 31, 2012 (incorporated by reference to the company’s Current Report on Form 8-K dated May 31, 2012, Exhibit 10.1)
31A   Certification pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes Oxley Act of 2002 – Chief Executive Officer
31B   Certification pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes Oxley Act of 2002 – Chief Financial Officer
32   Certification pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes Oxley Act of 2002

 

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Signature

 

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned thereunto duly authorized.

 

CINCINNATI FINANCIAL CORPORATION

Date: July 26, 2012

 

/S/ Eric N. Mathews  
Eric N. Mathews, CPCU, AIAF  
Vice President, Assistant Secretary and Assistant Treasurer  
(Principal Accounting Officer)  

 

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