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Cincinnati Financial Reports Fourth-Quarter and Full-Year 2025 Results

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Cincinnati Financial (Nasdaq: CINF) reported fourth-quarter 2025 net income of $676 million ($4.29/share) and full-year 2025 net income of $2.393 billion ($15.17/share). Book value per share rose to $102.35 at year-end, up 15% from 2024, and full-year non-GAAP operating income was $1.254 billion.

Property casualty combined ratio was 85.2% for Q4 and 94.9% for full-year 2025; net written premiums increased 9% for the year. Parent company cash and marketable securities totaled $5.568 billion at year-end 2025.

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Positive

  • Net income increased to $2.393B for 2025 (+4% year-over-year)
  • Book value per share rose 15% to $102.35 at Dec 31, 2025
  • Full-year non-GAAP operating income of $1.254B (+5% vs. 2024)
  • Net written premiums grew 9%, exceeding $10B for the first time

Negative

  • Full-year property casualty combined ratio widened to 94.9% (up 1.5 pts)
  • Underwriting profit declined $79M year-over-year in property casualty ($501M vs $580M)
  • Agency new business written premiums decreased 4% for the full year

Key Figures

Q4 2025 net income: $676 million ($4.29/share) Full-year 2025 net income: $2.393 billion ($15.17/share) Q4 non-GAAP operating income: $531 million ($3.37/share) +5 more
8 metrics
Q4 2025 net income $676 million ($4.29/share) Vs. $405 million ($2.56) in Q4 2024
Full-year 2025 net income $2.393 billion ($15.17/share) Vs. $2.292 billion ($14.53) in 2024
Q4 non-GAAP operating income $531 million ($3.37/share) Up 7% from $497 million ($3.14) in Q4 2024
Full-year non-GAAP operating income $1.254 billion ($7.95/share) Up 5% from $1.197 billion ($7.58) in 2024
Book value per share $102.35 At Dec 31, 2025, up from $89.11 at year-end 2024
Value creation ratio 18.8% Full-year 2025, vs. 19.8% in 2024
Property casualty combined ratio 94.9% Full-year 2025; long-term goal range 92%-98%
Parent cash & securities $5.568 billion Parent company cash and marketable securities at year-end 2025, up 7%

Market Reality Check

Price: $168.70 Vol: Volume 586,997 is below t...
normal vol
$168.70 Last Close
Volume Volume 586,997 is below the 20-day average of 680,722, suggesting no unusual trading ahead of results. normal
Technical Trading near its 52-week high (within -0.93%) and well above the 200-day MA at 155.02, and about 40.35% above the 52-week low.

Peers on Argus

CINF was up 0.67% while key insurance peers like MKL, WRB, L, HIG, and CNA all t...

CINF was up 0.67% while key insurance peers like MKL, WRB, L, HIG, and CNA all traded lower on the day, indicating a stock-specific reaction rather than a sector-wide move.

Common Catalyst Another major peer, CNA, also reported Q4 and full-year 2025 earnings and dividend actions today, but the broader property & casualty group did not move in sync with CINF.

Historical Context

5 past events · Latest: Jan 30 (Positive)
Pattern 5 events
Date Event Sentiment Move Catalyst
Jan 30 Dividend increase Positive +1.7% Raised regular quarterly dividend to $0.94, extending long growth streak.
Jan 30 Governance update Neutral +1.7% Re-election of directors and new executive appointments across subsidiaries.
Jan 08 Earnings scheduling Neutral +1.3% Announced timing of Q4 and full-year 2025 results webcast.
Nov 14 Dividend declaration Positive -1.3% Declared $0.87 regular quarterly dividend payable January 2026.
Oct 27 Q3 2025 results Positive -3.7% Reported strong Q3 earnings, higher premiums, and best Q3 combined ratio since 2015.
Pattern Detected

Recent dividend and corporate updates have often coincided with modest positive moves, while detailed earnings reports have sometimes seen negative next-day reactions despite fundamentally strong results.

Recent Company History

Over the last few months, CINF has highlighted dividend growth, governance stability, and strong operating performance. A $0.94 quarterly dividend announcement and director promotions at the end of January 2026 coincided with modest share gains. Earlier, Q3 2025 results showed higher net income, improved combined ratio and rising book value, yet the stock fell 3.74%. Today’s full-year 2025 results extend themes of premium growth, underwriting profitability, and record book value.

Market Pulse Summary

This announcement highlighted solid 2025 performance, with Q4 net income of $676 million, full-year ...
Analysis

This announcement highlighted solid 2025 performance, with Q4 net income of $676 million, full-year net income of $2.393 billion, and non-GAAP operating income of $1.254 billion. Book value per share reached $102.35 and the value creation ratio was 18.8%. Investors may track property-casualty combined ratios, catastrophe loss trends, and premium growth across commercial and personal lines to gauge the durability of underwriting profitability and capital strength.

Key Terms

non-gaap operating income, book value per share, combined ratio, catastrophe losses, +2 more
6 terms
non-gaap operating income financial
"$34 million or 7% increase in fourth-quarter 2025 non-GAAP operating income* to $531 million"
Non-GAAP operating income is a measure of a company's profit from its core business activities, calculated by excluding certain expenses or income that are not part of regular operations. It provides a clearer picture of how well the business is performing by focusing on ongoing operations, helping investors compare companies more consistently and make better-informed decisions.
book value per share financial
"$102.35 book value per share at December 31, 2025, up $13.24 since year-end 2024."
Book value per share is a company’s net worth on paper — total assets minus liabilities — divided by the number of outstanding shares, showing the equity value attributable to each share. Investors use it like a per-slice estimate of a company’s underlying value to compare with the market price; if the market price is far above the book value, the stock may be priced for strong future profits, and if it’s below, the stock might look undervalued or reflect asset concerns.
combined ratio financial
"Fourth-quarter 2025 property casualty combined ratio, up from 84.7% for the fourth quarter of 2024."
The combined ratio is a way insurance companies measure how well they are doing by adding up all their costs and claims and comparing them to the money they earn from premiums. If the ratio is below 100%, it means the company is making a profit; if it's above 100%, they are losing money. It helps see if an insurance company is financially healthy or not.
catastrophe losses technical
"current accident year combined ratio before catastrophe losses. That measure improved 0.4 percentage points"
Catastrophe losses are large, unexpected insurance payouts that follow major disasters such as hurricanes, earthquakes, wildfires or pandemics. They matter to investors because they can sharply reduce an insurer’s profits, drain reserves and force special financing or rate increases — much like a sudden flood overwhelming a city’s budget — and can also ripple through markets by affecting reinsurers, bondholders and stock prices.
net written premiums financial
"Full-year 2025 property casualty combined ratio at 94.9%, with net written premiums up 9%."
Net written premiums are the total value of insurance policies an insurer issues during a period, after subtracting the portion it passes on to reinsurers. It shows how much premium income the company is keeping to cover claims and run the business, so investors use it like a revenue-base gauge: rising net written premiums suggest growth or higher risk retention, while declines may signal more reinsurance or shrinking new sales.
underwriting profit financial
"marks 14 consecutive years of achieving an underwriting profit."
Underwriting profit is the money an insurer keeps from its core insurance business after paying claims, covering operating costs, and accounting for reinsurance — essentially premiums collected minus the direct costs of providing coverage. It matters to investors because it shows whether the company’s insurance operations are sustainably profitable on their own, like the margin a store earns on goods sold before counting interest or investment gains.

AI-generated analysis. Not financial advice.

CINCINNATI, Feb. 9, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- Cincinnati Financial Corporation (Nasdaq: CINF) today reported:

  • Fourth-quarter 2025 net income of $676 million, or $4.29 per share, compared with $405 million, or $2.56 per share, in the fourth quarter of 2024, after recognizing a $145 million fourth-quarter 2025 after-tax increase in the fair value of equity securities still held.
  • Full-year 2025 net income of $2.393 billion, or $15.17 per share, compared with $2.292 billion, or $14.53 per share, in 2024.
  • $34 million or 7% increase in fourth-quarter 2025 non-GAAP operating income* to $531 million, or $3.37 per share, compared with $497 million, or $3.14 per share, in the fourth quarter of last year.
  • $57 million or 5% increase in full-year 2025 non-GAAP operating income to $1.254 billion, or $7.95 per share, up from $1.197 billion, or $7.58 per share, with an increase of $112 million in after-tax net investment income partially offset by a decrease of $62 million in after-tax property casualty underwriting profit.
  • $271 million increase in fourth-quarter 2025 net income, compared with fourth-quarter 2024, including the effects of after-tax net increases of $237 million from net investment gains, $21 million from property casualty underwriting profit and $20 million from investment income.
  • $102.35 book value per share at December 31, 2025, up $13.24 since year-end 2024.
  • 18.8% value creation ratio for full-year 2025, compared with 19.8% for 2024.

Financial Highlights


(Dollars in millions except per share data)

Three months ended December 31,

Twelve months ended December 31,



2025


2024


% Change


2025


2024


% Change

Revenue Data













   Earned premiums


$      2,592


$      2,365


10


$      9,983


$      8,889


12

   Investment income, net of expenses


305


280


9


1,165


1,025


14

   Total revenues


3,091


2,538


22


12,631


11,337


11

Income Statement Data













   Net income


$         676


$         405


67


$      2,393


$      2,292


4

   Investment gains and losses, after-tax


145


(92)


nm



1,139


1,095


4

   Non-GAAP operating income*


$         531


$         497


7


$      1,254


$      1,197


5

Per Share Data (diluted)













   Net income


$        4.29


$        2.56


68


$      15.17


$      14.53


4

   Investment gains and losses, after-tax


0.92


(0.58)


nm



7.22


6.95


4

   Non-GAAP operating income*


$        3.37


$        3.14


7


$        7.95


$        7.58


5














   Book value








$    102.35


$      89.11


15

   Cash dividend declared


$        0.87


$        0.81


7


$        3.48


$        3.24


7

   Diluted weighted average shares outstanding


157.5


158.1


0


157.7


157.8


0



*

The Definitions of Non-GAAP Information and Reconciliation to Comparable GAAP Measures defines and reconciles measures presented in this release that are not based on U.S. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles.


Forward-looking statements and related assumptions are subject to the risks outlined in the company's safe harbor statement.

Insurance Operations Highlights

  • 85.2% fourth-quarter 2025 property casualty combined ratio, up from 84.7% for the fourth quarter of 2024. Full-year 2025 property casualty combined ratio at 94.9%, with net written premiums up 9%.
  • 5% growth in fourth-quarter 2025 net written premiums, including price increases, premium growth initiatives and a higher level of insured exposures.
  • $331 million fourth-quarter 2025 property casualty new business written premiums. Agencies appointed since the beginning of 2024 contributed $33 million or 10% of total fourth-quarter new business written premiums.
  • $31 million of fourth-quarter 2025 life insurance subsidiary net income and 3% growth in fourth-quarter 2025 term life insurance earned premiums. Full-year 2025 net income rose 16%.

Investment and Balance Sheet Highlights

  • 9% or $25 million increase in fourth-quarter 2025 pretax investment income, including a 10% increase in bond interest income.
  • 12% full-year increase in fair value of total investments at December 31, 2025, including a 12% increase for the bond portfolio and a 13% increase for the stock portfolio.
  • $5.568 billion parent company cash and marketable securities at year-end 2025, up 7% from a year ago.

Resiliency Led to Insurance Profitability
Stephen M. Spray, president and chief executive officer, commented: "After beginning the year with the worst catastrophe loss in our company's history, it took persistence and focus to record a 4% increase in full-year net income of $2.393 billion and $1.254 billion in full-year 2025 non-GAAP operating income – a 5% increase compared with 2024.

"For the fourth quarter, our insurance operations produced a combined ratio of 85.2% – one of our best fourth quarters in the last decade. On a full-year basis, our combined ratio of 94.9% is comfortably within our long-term annual average goal of 92% to 98% and marks 14 consecutive years of achieving an underwriting profit.

"Importantly, we continued seeing steady progress in our current accident year combined ratio before catastrophe losses. That measure improved 0.4 percentage points to 86.1% for 2025, even with the unfavorable effects of $52 million in reinsurance reinstatement premiums related to the California wildfires. 

"Our life insurance subsidiary also contributed nicely, recording a 16% increase in net income to $106 million."

Balancing Pricing Discipline and Growth
"Total property casualty net written premiums increased 9% for the year, crossing $10 billion for the first time in our company's 75-year history. While new business written premiums slowed in total for the fourth quarter and the full year, our commercial business recorded 4% growth in standard and 17% growth in excess and surplus lines new business over the course of 2025.

"Looking ahead, we know that it will take continued pricing discipline and product innovation – supported by the ongoing appointment of new agencies – to keep up the profitable growth of our insurance business.

"Our 189 commercial lines field marketing representatives work closely with the agencies in their territories, developing a deep understanding of the market conditions unique to that community. Leaning on their colleagues in a variety of disciplines, including excess and surplus lines, management liability, life insurance and loss control – they can craft comprehensive risk management programs enhanced by the ease of doing business through the Cincinnati family of companies.

"We believe that our hallmarks of strong agency relationships and fast, fair and empathetic claims service, will continue to encourage appointed agents to place their high-quality business with Cincinnati Insurance."

Record Book Value
"At December 31, 2025, our book value per share climbed 15% from a year ago, to $102.35, bolstered by a 14% increase in net pretax investment income, reaching nearly $1.2 billion for the year.

"Consolidated cash and total investments reached more than $33 billion. Our ample capital allows us to execute our long-term strategies and, at the same time, continue to pay dividends to shareholders. Our value creation ratio for 2025, which considers the dividends we pay as well as the growth in book value, was 18.8%, ahead of our 10% to 13% average annual target for this measure."

Insurance Operations Highlights


Consolidated Property Casualty Insurance Results

(Dollars in millions)

Three months ended December 31,


Twelve months ended December 31,



2025


2024


% Change


2025


2024


% Change

Earned premiums


$ 2,508


$  2,284


10


$ 9,653


$  8,568


13

Fee revenues


3


3


0


14


12


17

   Total revenues


2,511


2,287


10


9,667


8,580


13














Loss and loss expenses


1,397


1,255


11


6,335


5,436


17

Underwriting expenses


736


680


8


2,831


2,564


10

   Underwriting profit


$     378


$     352


7


$     501


$     580


(14)














Ratios as a percent of earned premiums:






Pt. Change






Pt. Change

     Loss and loss expenses


55.7 %


55.0 %


0.7


65.6 %


63.5 %


2.1

     Underwriting expenses


29.5


29.7


(0.2)


29.3


29.9


(0.6)

           Combined ratio


85.2 %


84.7 %


0.5


94.9 %


93.4 %


1.5




















% Change






% Change

Agency renewal written premiums


$ 1,939


$  1,759


10


$ 8,023


$  7,080


13

Agency new business written premiums


331


382


(13)


1,474


1,541


(4)

Other written premiums


91


102


(11)


585


622


(6)

   Net written premiums


$ 2,361


$  2,243


5


$  10,082


$  9,243


9














Ratios as a percent of earned premiums:






Pt. Change






Pt. Change

     Current accident year before catastrophe losses


55.3 %


51.0 %


4.3


56.8 %


56.6 %


0.2

     Current accident year catastrophe losses


1.2


5.0


(3.8)


10.8


9.6


1.2

     Prior accident years before catastrophe losses


(0.6)


(0.0)


(0.6)


(1.3)


(1.6)


0.3

     Prior accident years catastrophe losses


(0.2)


(1.0)


0.8


(0.7)


(1.1)


0.4

           Loss and loss expense ratio


55.7 %


55.0 %


0.7


65.6 %


63.5 %


2.1














Current accident year combined ratio before 

  catastrophe losses


84.8 %


80.7 %


4.1


86.1 %


86.5 %


(0.4)














  • 5% and 9% growth in fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 property casualty net written premiums, reflecting price increases, premium growth initiatives and a higher level of insured exposures. The contribution to growth from Cincinnati Re® and Cincinnati Global Underwriting Ltd.SM in total was less than 1 percentage point for both the fourth-quarter and full-year.
  • 13% and 4% decrease in fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 new business premiums written by agencies, compared with a year ago. The full-year decrease included an $87 million increase in standard market property casualty production from agencies appointed since the beginning of 2024.
  • 420 new agency appointments in full-year 2025, including 71 that market only our personal lines products.
  • 0.5 percentage-point fourth-quarter 2025 combined ratio increase, compared with 2024, including a decrease of 3.0 points for losses from catastrophes.
  • 1.5 percentage-point full-year 2025 combined ratio increase, including an increase of 1.6 points for losses from catastrophes.
  • 0.4 percentage-point improvement in full-year 2025 current accident year combined ratio before catastrophe losses, including an unfavorable 0.5 points for the net effect of $52 million for reinsurance treaty reinstatement premiums related to the January 2025 wildfires in southern California.
  • 0.8 and 2.0 percentage-point fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 benefit from favorable prior accident year reserve development of $20 million and $196 million, compared with 1.0 points or $25 million for fourth-quarter 2024 and 2.7 points or $236 million of favorable development for full-year 2024.
  • 0.2 percentage-point increase, to 56.8%, for the full-year 2025 ratio of current accident year losses and loss expenses before catastrophes, including an increase of 1.4 points for the portion estimated as reserves for claims incurred but not reported (IBNR) and a decrease of 1.2 points for the case incurred portion.
  • 0.6 percentage-point decrease in full-year 2025 underwriting expense ratio, compared with the same period of 2024, primarily due to growth in earned premiums outpacing growth in various expenses.

Commercial Lines Insurance Results


(Dollars in millions)

Three months ended December 31,


Twelve months ended December 31,



2025


2024


% Change


2025


2024


% Change

Earned premiums


$ 1,243


$  1,160


7


$ 4,863


$  4,486


8

Fee revenues


1


1


0


5


4


25

   Total revenues


1,244


1,161


7


4,868


4,490


8














Loss and loss expenses


721


624


16


2,970


2,795


6

Underwriting expenses


379


356


6


1,459


1,384


5

   Underwriting profit


$     144


$     181


(20)


$     439


$     311


41














Ratios as a percent of earned premiums:






Pt. Change






Pt. Change

     Loss and loss expenses


57.9 %


53.8 %


4.1


61.1 %


62.3 %


(1.2)

     Underwriting expenses


30.5


30.7


(0.2)


30.0


30.9


(0.9)

           Combined ratio


88.4 %


84.5 %


3.9


91.1 %


93.2 %


(2.1)




















% Change






% Change

Agency renewal written premiums


$ 1,039


$  1,001


4


$ 4,350


$  4,087


6

Agency new business written premiums


180


179


1


768


741


4

Other written premiums


(34)


(37)


8


(120)


(138)


13

   Net written premiums


$ 1,185


$  1,143


4


$ 4,998


$  4,690


7














Ratios as a percent of earned premiums:






Pt. Change






Pt. Change

     Current accident year before catastrophe losses


59.6 %


53.8 %


5.8


59.9 %


59.3 %


0.6

     Current accident year catastrophe losses


0.5


1.8


(1.3)


3.9


6.1


(2.2)

     Prior accident years before catastrophe losses


(2.3)


(0.9)


(1.4)


(2.3)


(2.4)


0.1

     Prior accident years catastrophe losses


0.1


(0.9)


1.0


(0.4)


(0.7)


0.3

           Loss and loss expense ratio


57.9 %


53.8 %


4.1


61.1 %


62.3 %


(1.2)














Current accident year combined ratio before

  catastrophe losses


90.1 %


84.5 %


5.6


89.9 %


90.2 %


(0.3)














  • 4% and 7% growth in fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 commercial lines net written premiums, primarily due to higher agency renewal written premiums. Fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 commercial lines average renewal pricing increased in the mid-single-digit percent range.
  • 1% and 4% increase in fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 new business written premiums, as we continue to carefully underwrite each policy in a highly competitive market.
  • 3.9 percentage-point fourth-quarter 2025 combined ratio increase, compared with 2024, including a decrease of 0.3 points for losses from catastrophes.
  • 2.1 percentage-point full-year 2025 combined ratio improvement, including a decrease of 1.9 points for losses from catastrophes.
  • 2.2 and 2.7 percentage-point fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 benefit from favorable prior accident year reserve development of $27 million and $130 million, compared with 1.8 points or $21 million for fourth-quarter 2024 and 3.1 points or $138 million of favorable development for full-year 2024.
  • 0.6 percentage-point increase, to 59.9%, for the full-year 2025 ratio of current accident year losses and loss expenses before catastrophes, including an increase of 0.6 points in the ratio for current accident year losses of $2 million or more per claim.

Personal Lines Insurance Results


(Dollars in millions)

Three months ended December 31,


Twelve months ended December 31,



2025


2024


% Change


2025


2024


% Change

Earned premiums


$     859


$     726


18


$ 3,199


$  2,623


22

Fee revenues


1


1


0


5


5


0

   Total revenues


860


727


18


3,204


2,628


22














Loss and loss expenses


468


374


25


2,419


1,795


35

Underwriting expenses


231


208


11


896


762


18

   Underwriting profit (loss)


$     161


$     145


11


$   (111)


$        71


nm















Ratios as a percent of earned premiums:






Pt. Change






Pt. Change

     Loss and loss expenses


54.6 %


51.5 %


3.1


75.6 %


68.5 %


7.1

     Underwriting expenses


26.9


28.7


(1.8)


28.0


29.0


(1.0)

           Combined ratio


81.5 %


80.2 %


1.3


103.6 %


97.5 %


6.1




















% Change






% Change

Agency renewal written premiums


$     764


$     625


22


$ 3,128


$  2,495


25

Agency new business written premiums


92


154


(40)


476


604


(21)

Other written premiums


(29)


(26)


(12)


(174)


(100)


(74)

   Net written premiums


$     827


$     753


10


$ 3,430


$  2,999


14














Ratios as a percent of earned premiums:






Pt. Change






Pt. Change

     Current accident year before catastrophe losses


50.7 %


49.7 %


1.0


53.6 %


53.9 %


(0.3)

     Current accident year catastrophe losses


1.7


1.8


(0.1)


22.2


15.6


6.6

     Prior accident years before catastrophe losses


2.6


1.6


1.0


1.0


0.7


0.3

     Prior accident years catastrophe losses


(0.4)


(1.6)


1.2


(1.2)


(1.7)


0.5

           Loss and loss expense ratio


54.6 %


51.5 %


3.1


75.6 %


68.5 %


7.1














Current accident year combined ratio before

  catastrophe losses


77.6 %


78.4 %


(0.8)


81.6 %


82.9 %


(1.3)














  • 10% and 14% growth in fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 personal lines net written premiums, including higher renewal written premiums that benefited from rate increases in the high-single-digit percent range.
  • 40% and 21% decrease in fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 new business premiums written by agencies, as we continue to carefully underwrite each policy in a highly competitive market. The fourth quarter decrease included $8 million for California.
  • 1.3 percentage-point fourth-quarter 2025 combined ratio increase, compared with 2024, including an increase of 1.1 points for losses from catastrophes.
  • 6.1 percentage-point full-year 2025 combined ratio increase, including an increase of 7.1 points for losses from catastrophes and an increase in the underwriting expense ratio of 0.5 points for the effect of reinstatement premiums.
  • $20 million of fourth-quarter 2025 unfavorable prior accident year reserve development, primarily from personal umbrella claims, compared with less than $1 million for fourth-quarter 2024.
  • 0.2 percentage-point full-year 2025 benefit from favorable prior accident year reserve development of $4 million, compared to 1.0 points or $26 million for full-year 2024.
  • 0.3 percentage-point improvement, to 53.6%, for the full-year 2025 ratio of current accident year losses and loss expenses before catastrophes, including an increase of 0.5 points in the ratio for current accident year losses of $2 million or more per claim.

Excess and Surplus Lines Insurance Results

(Dollars in millions)

Three months ended December 31,


Twelve months ended December 31,



2025


2024


% Change


2025


2024


% Change

Earned premiums


$     188


$     168


12


$     698


$     615


13

Fee revenues


1


1


0


4


3


33

   Total revenues


189


169


12


702


618


14














Loss and loss expenses


108


112


(4)


425


411


3

Underwriting expenses


51


45


13


192


167


15

   Underwriting profit


$       30


$        12


150


$       85


$        40


113














Ratios as a percent of earned premiums:






Pt. Change






Pt. Change

     Loss and loss expenses


57.5 %


66.5 %


(9.0)


60.9 %


66.9 %


(6.0)

     Underwriting expenses


27.2


26.6


0.6


27.5


27.1


0.4

           Combined ratio


84.7 %


93.1 %


(8.4)


88.4 %


94.0 %


(5.6)




















% Change






% Change

Agency renewal written premiums


$     136


$     133


2


$     545


$     498


9

Agency new business written premiums


59


49


20


230


196


17

Other written premiums


(11)


(11)


0


(46)


(40)


(15)

   Net written premiums


$     184


$     171


8


$     729


$     654


11














Ratios as a percent of earned premiums:






Pt. Change






Pt. Change

     Current accident year before catastrophe losses


58.4 %


63.1 %


(4.7)


63.1 %


64.2 %


(1.1)

     Current accident year catastrophe losses


(0.4)


1.0


(1.4)


0.5


1.3


(0.8)

     Prior accident years before catastrophe losses


(0.3)


2.3


(2.6)


(2.5)


1.4


(3.9)

     Prior accident years catastrophe losses


(0.2)


0.1


(0.3)


(0.2)


0.0


(0.2)

           Loss and loss expense ratio


57.5 %


66.5 %


(9.0)


60.9 %


66.9 %


(6.0)














Current accident year combined ratio before

  catastrophe losses


85.6 %


89.7 %


(4.1)


90.6 %


91.3 %


(0.7)














  • 8% and 11% growth in fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 excess and surplus lines net written premiums, including fourth-quarter 2025 renewal price increases averaging in the mid-single-digit percent range.
  • 20% and 17% increase in fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 new business premiums written by agencies, as we continue to carefully underwrite each policy in a highly competitive market.
  • 8.4 percentage-point fourth-quarter 2025 combined ratio improvement, primarily due to a decrease of 4.7 points from current accident year loss and loss expenses before catastrophes.
  • 5.6 percentage-point full-year 2025 combined ratio improvement, primarily due to a decrease of 3.9 points from prior accident year loss and loss expenses before catastrophes.
  • 0.5 percentage-point fourth-quarter 2025 favorable prior accident year reserve development of $1 million, compared with unfavorable 2.4 points or $3 million for fourth-quarter 2024.
  • 2.7 percentage-point full-year 2025 favorable prior accident year reserve development of $19 million, compared with unfavorable development of 1.4 points or $8 million for full-year 2024.
  • 1.1 percentage-point improvement, to 63.1%, for the full-year 2025 ratio of current accident year losses and loss expenses before catastrophes, including a decrease of 0.4 points in the ratio for current accident year losses of $2 million or more per claim.

Life Insurance Subsidiary Results


(Dollars in millions)

Three months ended December 31,


Twelve months ended December 31,



2025


2024


% Change


2025


2024


% Change

Term life insurance


$           61


$           59


3


$         240


$         233


3

Whole life insurance


14


13


8


54


52


4

Universal life and other


9


9


0


36


36


0

Earned premiums


84


81


4


330


321


3

Investment income, net of expenses


51


48


6


202


190


6

Investment gains and losses, net



2


(100)


(6)


(7)


14

Fee revenues


2


1


100


6


5


20

Total revenues


137


132


4


532


509


5

Contract holders' benefits incurred


75


75


0


305


301


1

Underwriting expenses incurred


23


23


0


93


93


0

Total benefits and expenses


98


98


0


398


394


1

Net income before income tax


39


34


15


134


115


17

Income tax


8


6


33


28


24


17

Net income of the life insurance subsidiary


$           31


$           28


11


$         106


$           91


16














  • $9 million or 3% increase in full-year 2025 earned premiums, including a 3% increase for term life insurance, our largest life insurance product line.
  • $15 million or 16% increase in full-year 2025 life insurance subsidiary net income, primarily due to increases in investment income and earned premiums.
  • $160 million or 12% full-year 2025 increase to $1.467 billion in GAAP shareholders' equity for The Cincinnati Life Insurance Company, primarily from net income and a decrease in unrealized investment losses on fixed-maturity securities.

Investment and Balance Sheet Highlights

Investments Results


(Dollars in millions)


Three months ended December 31,


Twelve months ended December 31,





2025


2024


% Change


2025


2024


% Change

Investment income, net of expenses


$     305


$     280


9


$  1,165


$  1,025


14

Investment interest credited to contract holders


(32)


(31)


(3)


(127)


(125)


(2)

Investment gains and losses, net


183


(116)


nm



1,442


1,391


4

Investments profit


$     456


$     133


243


$  2,480


$  2,291


8














Investment income:













   Interest


$     224


$     204


10


$     875


$     733


19

   Dividends


74


74


0


280


283


(1)

   Other


11


7


57


27


25


8

   Less investment expenses


4


5


(20)


17


16


6

      Investment income, pretax


305


280


9


1,165


1,025


14

      Less income taxes


52


47


11


200


172


16

Total investment income, after-tax


$     253


$     233


9


$     965


$     853


13














Investment returns:













Average invested assets plus cash and cash

   equivalents


$  33,086


$  29,987




$  31,655


$  28,374



Average yield pretax


3.69 %


3.73 %




3.68 %


3.61 %



Average yield after-tax


3.06


3.11




3.05


3.01



Effective tax rate


17.2


17.0




17.2


16.8



Fixed-maturity returns:













Average amortized cost


$  18,224


$  16,554




$  17,743


$  15,697



Average yield pretax


4.92 %


4.93 %




4.93 %


4.67 %



Average yield after-tax


4.02


4.03




4.02


3.83



Effective tax rate


18.3


18.3




18.4


18.0
















  • $25 million or 9% rise in fourth-quarter 2025 pretax investment income, primarily due to a 10% increase in interest income from fixed-maturity securities.
  • $219 million in fourth-quarter and $1.814 billion in full-year 2025 pretax total investment gains, summarized in the table below. Changes in unrealized gains or losses reported in other comprehensive income, in addition to investment gains and losses reported in net income, are useful for evaluating total investment performance over time and are major components of changes in book value and the value creation ratio.

(Dollars in millions)


Three months ended
December 31,


Twelve months ended
December 31,




2025


2024


2025


2024

Investment gains and losses on equity securities sold, net


$                (2)


$                —


$              (13)


$              181

Unrealized gains and losses on equity securities still held, net


183


(136)


1,448


1,275

Investment gains and losses on fixed-maturity securities, net


(12)


(2)


(25)


(116)

Other


14


22


32


51

Subtotal - investment gains and losses reported in net income


183


(116)


1,442


1,391

Change in unrealized investment gains and losses - fixed maturities


36


(350)


372


17

Total


$             219


$           (466)


$          1,814


$          1,408










 

Balance Sheet Highlights


(Dollars in millions except share data)


At December 31,


At December 31,



2025


2024

   Total investments


$               31,783


$                28,378

   Total assets


41,002


36,501

   Short-term debt


25


25

   Long-term debt


790


790

   Shareholders' equity


15,911


13,935

   Book value per share


102.35


89.11

   Debt-to-total-capital ratio


4.9 %


5.5 %

  • $33.214 billion in consolidated cash and invested assets at December 31, 2025, an increase of 13% from $29.361 billion at year-end 2024.
  • $18.123 billion bond portfolio at December 31, 2025, with an average rating of A2/A. Fair value increased $493 million during the fourth quarter of 2025, including $667 million in net purchases of fixed-maturity securities.
  • $12.694 billion equity portfolio was 39.9% of total investments, including $8.539 billion in appreciated value before taxes at December 31, 2025. Fair value increased $147 million during the fourth quarter of 2025, including $44 million in net sales of equity securities.
  • $400 million unsecured revolving credit agreement established during fourth-quarter 2025, enhancing financial flexibility and financial strength.
  • $3.59 fourth-quarter 2025 increase in book value per share, including an addition of $3.42 from net income before investment gains and $1.04 from investment portfolio net investment losses or changes in unrealized gains for fixed-maturity securities that were partially offset by $0.87 from dividends declared to shareholders.
  • Value creation ratio of 18.8% for full-year 2025, including 9.1% from net income before investment gains, which includes underwriting and investment income, 10.2% from investment portfolio net investment gains or changes in unrealized gains for fixed-maturity securities, including 8.2% from our stock portfolio and 2.0% from our bond portfolio, partially offset by 0.5% from other items.

For additional information or to register for our conference call webcast, please visit investors.cinfin.com.

About Cincinnati Financial
Cincinnati Financial Corporation offers primarily business, home and auto insurance through The Cincinnati Insurance Company and its two standard market property casualty companies. The same local independent insurance agencies that market those policies may offer products of our other subsidiaries, including life insurance, fixed annuities and surplus lines property and casualty insurance. For additional information about the company, please visit cinfin.com.

Mailing Address:

Street Address:

P.O. Box 145496

6200 South Gilmore Road

Cincinnati, Ohio 45250-5496

Fairfield, Ohio 45014-5141

Safe Harbor Statement
Our business is subject to certain risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from those suggested by forward-looking statements. Any forward-looking statements contained herein, are based upon our current estimates, assumptions and plans that are subject to uncertainty. These statements are made subject to the safe-harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements can be identified by words like "seek," "expect," "will," "should," "could," "might," "anticipate," "believe," "estimate," "intend," "likely," "future," or other similar expressions. Forward-looking statements speak only as of the date they were made; we assume no obligation to update such statements. Factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed in, or implied by, the forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to:

Insurance-Related Risks

  • Risks and uncertainties associated with our loss reserves or actual claim costs exceeding reserves
  • Increased frequency and/or severity of claims or development of claims that are unforeseen at the time of policy issuance
  • Unusually high levels of catastrophe losses due to risk concentrations or changes in weather patterns, environmental events, war or political unrest, terrorism incidents, cyberattacks, civil unrest or other causes; and our ability to manage catastrophe risk
  • Risks associated with analytical models in key areas such as underwriting, pricing, capital management, reserving, investments, reinsurance, and catastrophe risk management
  • Inadequate estimates or assumptions, or reliance on third-party data used for critical accounting estimates
  • Events or conditions that could weaken or harm our relationships with our independent agencies and hamper opportunities to add new agencies, resulting in limitations on our opportunities for growth
  • Mergers, acquisitions, and other consolidations of agencies that result in a concentration of a significant amount of premium in one agency or agency group and/or alter our competitive advantages
  • Our inability to manage business opportunities, growth prospects, and expenses for our ongoing operations
  • Changing consumer insurance-buying habits
  • The inability to obtain adequate ceded reinsurance on acceptable terms, for acceptable amounts, and from financially strong reinsurers; and the potential for nonpayment or delay in payment by reinsurers
  • Domestic and global events, such as the wars in Ukraine and in the Middle East, future pandemics, inflationary trends, changes in U.S. trade and tariff policy, and disruptions in the banking and financial services industry, resulting in insurance losses, capital market or credit market uncertainty, followed by prolonged periods of economic instability or recession, that lead to:
    • Securities market disruption or volatility and related effects such as decreased economic activity and continued supply chain disruptions that affect our investment portfolio and book value
    • Significant or prolonged decline in the fair value of securities and impairment of the assets
    • Significant decline in investment income due to reduced or eliminated dividend payouts from securities
    • Significant rise in losses from surety or director and officer policies written for financial institutions or other insured entities or in losses from policies written by Cincinnati Re or Cincinnati Global
    • An unusually high level of claims in our insurance or reinsurance operations that increase litigation-related expenses
    • Decreased premium revenue and cash flow from disruption to our distribution channel of independent agents, consumer self-isolation, travel limitations, business restrictions and decreased economic activity
    • The inability of our workforce, agencies, or vendors to perform necessary business functions

Financial, Economic, and Investment Risks 

  • Declines in overall stock market values negatively affecting our equity portfolio and book value
  • Downgrades in our financial strength ratings
  • Interest rate fluctuations or other factors that could significantly affect:
    • Our ability to generate growth in investment income
    • Values of our fixed-maturity investments and accounts in which we hold bank-owned life insurance contract assets
    • Our traditional life policy reserves
  • Economic volatility and illiquidity associated with our alternative investments in private equity, private credit, real property, and limited partnerships
  • Failure to comply with covenants and other requirements under our credit facilities, senior debt, and other debt obligations
  • Recession, prolonged elevated inflation, or other economic conditions resulting in lower demand for insurance products or increased payment delinquencies
  • The inability of our subsidiaries to pay dividends consistent with current or past levels impacting our ability to pay shareholder dividends or repurchase shares

General Business, Technology, and Operational Risks 

  • Ineffective information technology systems or failing to develop and implement improvements in technology
  • Difficulties with technology or data security breaches, including cyberattacks, could negatively affect our, or our agents', ability to conduct business; disrupt our relationships with agents, policyholders, and others; cause reputational damage, mitigation expenses, data loss, and expose us to liability
  • Difficulties with our operations and technology that may negatively impact our ability to conduct business, including cloud-based data information storage, data security, remote working capabilities, and/or outsourcing relationships and third-party operations and data security
  • Disruption of the insurance market caused by technology innovations such as driverless cars that could decrease consumer demand for insurance products
  • Delays, inadequate data developed internally or from third parties, or performance inadequacies from ongoing development and implementation of underwriting and pricing models and methods, including usage-based insurance methods, automation, artificial intelligence, or technology projects and enhancements expected to increase our efficiency, pricing accuracy, underwriting profit, and competitiveness
  • Intense competition, and the impact of innovation, emerging technologies, artificial intelligence and changing customer preferences on the insurance industry and the markets in which we operate, could harm our ability to maintain or increase our business volumes and profitability
  • Inability to defer policy acquisition costs for any business segment if pricing and loss trends would lead management to conclude that the segment could not achieve sustainable profitability
  • Unforeseen departure of certain executive officers or other key employees that could interrupt progress toward important strategic goals or diminish the effectiveness of certain longstanding relationships with insurance agents and others
  • Our inability, or the inability of our independent agents, to attract and retain personnel
  • Events, such as a pandemic, an epidemic, natural catastrophe, or terrorism, which could hamper our ability to assemble our workforce, work effectively in a remote environment, or other failures of business continuity or disaster recovery programs

Regulatory, Compliance, and Legal Risks 

  • 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:
    • Impose new obligations on us that increase our expenses or change the assumptions underlying our critical accounting estimates
    • Place the insurance industry under greater regulatory scrutiny or result in new statutes, rules, and regulations
    • Restrict our ability to exit or reduce writings of unprofitable coverages or lines of business
    • Increase 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
    • Increase our provision for federal income taxes due to changes in tax laws, regulations, or interpretations
    • Increase other expenses
    • Limit our ability to set fair, adequate, and reasonable rates
    • Restrict our ability to cancel policies
    • Impose new underwriting standards
    • Place us at a disadvantage in the marketplace
    • Restrict our ability to execute our business model, including the way we compensate agents
  • Adverse outcomes from litigation, environmental claims, mass torts or administrative proceedings, including effects of social inflation and third-party litigation funding on the size and frequency of litigation awards
  • Events or actions, including unauthorized intentional circumvention of controls, which reduce our future ability to maintain effective internal control over financial reporting under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
  • Effects of changing social, global, economic, and regulatory environments
  • Additional measures affecting corporate financial reporting and governance that can affect the market value of our common stock

Risks and uncertainties are further discussed in other filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including our 2024 Annual Report on Form 10-K, Item 1A, Risk Factors, Page 30.

* * *

Cincinnati Financial Corporation

Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheets (unaudited)


(Dollars in millions except per share data)


December 31,


December 31,



2025


2024

Assets





  Investments





    Fixed maturities, at fair value (amortized cost: 2025—$18,304; 2024—$16,735)


$           18,123


$          16,182

    Equity securities, at fair value (cost: 2025—$4,155; 2024—$3,953)


12,694


11,185

    Short-term investments, at fair value (amortized cost: 2025—$148; 2024—$298)


148


298

    Other invested assets


818


713

Total investments


31,783


28,378

  Cash and cash equivalents


1,431


983

  Investment income receivable


235


222

  Finance receivable


146


120

  Premiums receivable


3,142


2,969

  Reinsurance recoverable


655


523

  Prepaid reinsurance premiums


71


70

  Deferred policy acquisition costs


1,344


1,242

  Land, building and equipment, net, for company use (accumulated depreciation:

     2025—$367; 2024—$347)


219


214

  Other assets


995


828

  Separate accounts


981


952

    Total assets


$           41,002


$          36,501

Liabilities





  Insurance reserves





    Loss and loss expense reserves


$           11,507


$          10,003

    Life policy and investment contract reserves


2,992


2,960

  Unearned premiums


5,254


4,813

  Other liabilities


1,638


1,487

  Deferred income tax


1,833


1,476

  Note payable


25


25

  Long-term debt and lease obligations


861


850

  Separate accounts


981


952

    Total liabilities


25,091


22,566






Shareholders' Equity





  Common stock, par value—$2 per share; (authorized: 2025 and 2024—500 million shares;

    issued: 2025 and 2024—198.3 million shares)


397


397

Paid-in capital


1,561


1,502

Retained earnings


16,719


14,869

Accumulated other comprehensive loss


(34)


(309)

Treasury stock at cost (2025—42.9 million shares and 2024—41.9  million shares)


(2,732)


(2,524)

 Total shareholders' equity


15,911


13,935

 Total liabilities and shareholders' equity


$           41,002


$          36,501






 

Cincinnati Financial Corporation 

Condensed Consolidated Statements of Income (unaudited)



(Dollars in millions except per share data)

Three months ended December 31,


Twelve months ended December 31,


2025


2024


2025


2024

Revenues








   Earned premiums

$                 2,592


$                 2,365


$                 9,983


$                 8,889

   Investment income, net of expenses

305


280


1,165


1,025

   Investment gains and losses, net

183


(116)


1,442


1,391

   Fee revenues

5


4


20


17

   Other revenues

6


5


21


15

      Total revenues

3,091


2,538


12,631


11,337









Benefits and Expenses








   Insurance losses and contract holders' benefits

1,472


1,330


6,640


5,737

   Underwriting, acquisition and insurance expenses

759


703


2,924


2,657

   Interest expense

13


13


53


53

   Other operating expenses

7


13


34


32

      Total benefits and expenses

2,251


2,059


9,651


8,479









Income Before Income Taxes

840


479


2,980


2,858









Provision (Benefit) for Income Taxes








   Current

137


156


304


449

   Deferred

27


(82)


283


117

      Total provision for income taxes

164


74


587


566









Net Income

$                    676


$                    405


$                 2,393


$                 2,292









Per Common Share








   Net income—basic

$                   4.34


$                   2.59


$                 15.32


$                 14.65

   Net income—diluted

4.29


2.56


15.17


14.53

 

Definitions of Non-GAAP Information and Reconciliation to Comparable GAAP Measures
(See attached tables for reconciliations; additional prior-period reconciliations available at investors.cinfin.com.)

Cincinnati Financial Corporation prepares its public financial statements in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America (GAAP). Statutory data is prepared in accordance with statutory accounting rules for insurance company regulation in the United States of America as defined by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners' (NAIC) Accounting Practices and Procedures Manual, and therefore is not reconciled to GAAP data.

Management uses certain non-GAAP financial measures to evaluate its primary business areas – property casualty insurance, life insurance and investments. Management uses these measures when analyzing both GAAP and non-GAAP results to improve its understanding of trends in the underlying business and to help avoid incorrect or misleading assumptions and conclusions about the success or failure of company strategies. Management adjustments to GAAP measures generally: apply to non-recurring events that are unrelated to business performance and distort short-term results; involve values that fluctuate based on events outside of management's control; supplement reporting segment disclosures with disclosures for a subsidiary company or for a combination of subsidiaries or reporting segments; or relate to accounting refinements that affect comparability between periods, creating a need to analyze data on the same basis.

  • Non-GAAP operating income: Non-GAAP operating income is calculated by excluding investment gains and losses (defined as investment gains and losses after applicable federal and state income taxes) and other significant non-recurring items from net income. Management evaluates non-GAAP operating income to measure the success of pricing, rate and underwriting strategies. While investment gains (or losses) are integral to the company's insurance operations over the long term, the determination to realize investment gains or losses on fixed-maturity securities sold in any period may be subject to management's discretion and is independent of the insurance underwriting process. Also, under applicable GAAP accounting requirements, gains and losses are recognized from certain changes in market values of securities without actual realization. Management believes that the level of investment gains or losses for any particular period, while it may be material, may not fully indicate the performance of ongoing underlying business operations in that period.

    For these reasons, many investors and shareholders consider non-GAAP operating income to be one of the more meaningful measures for evaluating insurance company performance. Equity analysts who report on the insurance industry and the company generally focus on this metric in their analyses. The company presents non-GAAP operating income so that all investors have what management believes to be a useful supplement to GAAP information.
  • Consolidated property casualty insurance results: To supplement reporting segment disclosures related to our property casualty insurance operations, we also evaluate results for those operations on a basis that includes results for our property casualty insurance and brokerage services subsidiaries. That is the total of our commercial lines, personal lines and our excess and surplus lines segments plus our reinsurance assumed operations known as Cincinnati Re and our London-based global specialty underwriter known as Cincinnati Global.
  • Life insurance subsidiary results: To supplement life insurance reporting segment disclosures related to our life insurance operation, we also evaluate results for that operation on a basis that includes life insurance subsidiary investment income, or investment income plus investment gains and losses, that are also included in our investments reporting segment. We recognize that assets under management, capital appreciation and investment income are integral to evaluating the success of the life insurance segment because of the long duration of life products.

Cincinnati Financial Corporation


 Net Income Reconciliation


(Dollars in millions except per share data)


Three months ended December 31,


Twelve months ended December 31,



2025


2024


2025


2024

Net income


$                  676


$                  405


$               2,393


$               2,292

Less:









   Investment gains and losses, net


183


(116)


1,442


1,391

   Income tax on investment gains and losses


(38)


24


(303)


(296)

Investment gains and losses, after-tax


145


(92)


1,139


1,095

Non-GAAP operating income


$                  531


$                  497


$               1,254


$               1,197










Diluted per share data:









Net income


$                 4.29


$                 2.56


$               15.17


$               14.53

Less:









   Investment gains and losses, net


1.16


(0.73)


9.14


8.82

   Income tax on investment gains and losses


(0.24)


0.15


(1.92)


(1.87)

Investment gains and losses, after-tax


0.92


(0.58)


7.22


6.95

Non-GAAP operating income


$                 3.37


$                 3.14


$                 7.95


$                 7.58










 

Life Insurance Reconciliation



(Dollars in millions)


Three months ended December 31,


Twelve months ended December 31,



2025


2024


2025


2024

 Net income of life insurance subsidiary


$                    31


$                    28


$                  106


$                    91

   Investment gains and losses, net



2


(6)


(7)

   Income tax on investment gains and losses



1


(1)


(1)

   Non-GAAP operating income


31


27


111


97










Investment income, net of expenses


(51)


(48)


(202)


(190)

Investment income credited to contract holders


32


31


127


125

Income tax excluding tax on investment gains and losses,

  net


8


5


29


25

Life insurance segment profit


$                    20


$                    15


$                    65


$                    57










 

Property Casualty Insurance Reconciliation


(Dollars in millions)

Three months ended December 31, 2025


Consolidated

Commercial

Personal

E&S


Other*

Premiums:















   Net written premiums


$        2,361



$        1,185



$           827



$           184



$           165

   Unearned premiums change


147



58



32



4



53

   Earned premiums


$        2,508



$        1,243



$           859



$           188



$           218
















Underwriting profit


$           378



$           144



$           161



$             30



$             43
















(Dollars in millions)

Twelve months ended December 31, 2025


Consolidated

Commercial

Personal

E&S


Other*

Premiums:















   Net written premiums


$     10,082



$        4,998



$        3,430



$           729



$           925

   Unearned premiums change


(429)



(135)



(231)



(31)



(32)

   Earned premiums


$        9,653



$        4,863



$        3,199



$           698



$           893
















Underwriting profit (loss)


$           501



$           439



$         (111)



$             85



$             88
















(Dollars in millions)

Three months ended December 31, 2024


Consolidated

Commercial

Personal

E&S

Other*

Premiums:















   Net written premiums


$        2,243



$        1,143



$           753



$           171



$           176

   Unearned premiums change


41



17



(27)



(3)



54

   Earned premiums


$        2,284



$        1,160



$           726



$           168



$           230
















Underwriting profit


$           352



$           181



$           145



$             12



$             14
















(Dollars in millions)

Twelve months ended December 31, 2024


Consolidated

Commercial

Personal

E&S

Other*

Premiums:















   Net written premiums


$        9,243



$        4,690



$        2,999



$           654



$           900

   Unearned premiums change


(675)



(204)



(376)



(39)



(56)

   Earned premiums


$        8,568



$        4,486



$        2,623



$           615



$           844
















Underwriting profit


$           580



$           311



$             71



$             40



$           158
















Dollar amounts shown are rounded to millions; certain amounts may not add due to rounding. 

*Included in Other are the results of Cincinnati Re and Cincinnati Global.

 

Cincinnati Financial Corporation

Other Measures

  • Value creation ratio: This is a measure of shareholder value creation that management believes captures the contribution of the company's insurance operations, the success of its investment strategy and the importance placed on paying cash dividends to shareholders. The value creation ratio measure is made up of two primary components: (1) rate of growth in book value per share plus (2) the ratio of dividends declared per share to beginning book value per share. Management believes this measure is useful, providing a meaningful measure of long-term progress in creating shareholder value. It is intended to be all-inclusive regarding changes in book value per share, and uses originally reported book value per share in cases where book value per share has been adjusted, such as adoption of Accounting Standards Updates with a cumulative effect of a change in accounting.
  • Written premium: Under statutory accounting rules in the U.S., property casualty written premium is the amount recorded for policies issued and recognized on an annualized basis at the effective date of the policy. Management analyzes trends in written premium to assess business efforts. The difference between written and earned premium is unearned premium.

Value Creation Ratio Calculations


(Dollars are per share)


Three months ended December 31,


Twelve months ended December 31,



2025


2024


2025


2024

Value creation ratio:









   End of period book value*


$        102.35


$           89.11


$        102.35


$           89.11

   Less beginning of period book value


98.76


88.32


89.11


77.06

   Change in book value


3.59


0.79


13.24


12.05

   Dividend declared to shareholders


0.87


0.81


3.48


3.24

   Total value creation


$            4.46


$             1.60


$          16.72


$           15.29










Value creation ratio from change in book value**


3.6 %


0.9 %


14.9 %


15.6 %

Value creation ratio from dividends declared to

   shareholders***

0.9


0.9


3.9


4.2

Value creation ratio


4.5 %


1.8 %


18.8 %


19.8 %










*     Book value per share is calculated by dividing end of period total shareholders' equity by end of period shares outstanding



**   Change in book value divided by the beginning of period book value



***  Dividend declared to shareholders divided by beginning of period book value



 

Cincinnati Financial Corporation logo. (PRNewsFoto/Cincinnati Financial Corporation) (PRNewsFoto/CINCINNATI FINANCIAL CORPORATION)

 

Cision View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/cincinnati-financial-reports-fourth-quarter-and-full-year-2025-results-302682915.html

SOURCE Cincinnati Financial Corporation

FAQ

What were Cincinnati Financial (CINF) fourth-quarter 2025 earnings per share and net income?

Cincinnati Financial reported Q4 2025 net income of $676 million, or $4.29 per share. According to Cincinnati Financial, results included a $145 million after-tax fair value increase in equity securities that materially boosted quarterly net income.

How did Cincinnati Financial's full-year 2025 book value per share (CINF) change versus 2024?

Book value per share increased to $102.35 at Dec 31, 2025, up 15% from 2024. According to Cincinnati Financial, investment gains and retained earnings were key drivers of the year-over-year book value improvement.

What was Cincinnati Financial's (CINF) full-year combined ratio and what does it indicate?

Cincinnati Financial reported a full-year 2025 property casualty combined ratio of 94.9%, inside its long-term 92%–98% goal. According to Cincinnati Financial, this reflects underwriting profitability despite catastrophe and reinstatement premium impacts.

How much did Cincinnati Financial (CINF) grow net written premiums in 2025 and what drove the growth?

Net written premiums increased 9% for full-year 2025, surpassing $10 billion for the first time. According to Cincinnati Financial, growth came from price increases, premium initiatives and higher insured exposures, partly offset by slower new business.

What were Cincinnati Financial's (CINF) 2025 investment and liquidity highlights?

At year-end 2025, parent company cash and marketable securities totaled $5.568 billion. According to Cincinnati Financial, total investments rose about 12% in fair value, supporting pretax investment income growth near 14%.

Did Cincinnati Financial (CINF) report improvement in non-GAAP operating income for 2025?

Yes, Cincinnati Financial's full-year non-GAAP operating income rose to $1.254 billion, a 5% increase versus 2024. According to Cincinnati Financial, higher after-tax net investment income (+$112M) offset a $62M decrease in after-tax underwriting profit.
Cincinnati Finl Corp

NASDAQ:CINF

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CINF Stock Data

26.94B
153.32M
1.59%
70.32%
1.05%
Insurance - Property & Casualty
Fire, Marine & Casualty Insurance
Link
United States
FAIRFIELD