STOCK TITAN

If You Invested in Everest Re Gp (EG)

Fire, Marine & Casualty Insurance · Insurance - Reinsurance · NYSE
Looking for the live price? See the EG quote & overview
$1,000 invested 1 Year Ago
$1,087
+8.7% total 8.8% CAGR
Bought on Jul 8, 2025 at $341.42
$1,000 invested 5 Years Ago
$1,528
+52.8% total 8.9% CAGR
Bought on Jul 8, 2021 at $242.99

What $1,000 or $10,000 in EG Would Be Worth Today

Real historical value by amount invested and how long ago
If you invested 1 year ago 5 years ago 10 years ago Since Jul 9, 2015
$1,000 $1,087 +9% $1,528 +53% $2,043 +104% $2,009 +101%
$10,000 $10,875 +9% $15,280 +53% $20,432 +104% $20,087 +101%

Based on real historical closing prices through the latest market close. Past performance does not guarantee future results.

Custom Calculation

Choose your own date and amount for EG

$1,000 Investment Over Time

EG vs S&P 500

Year-by-Year Returns

EG annual performance
Year Start Price End Price Annual Return Cumulative
2017 $216.04 $221.26 +2.4% +2.4%
2018 $216.47 $217.76 +0.6% +0.8%
2019 $213.66 $276.84 +29.6% +28.1%
2020 $278.15 $234.09 -15.8% +8.4%
2021 $228.11 $273.92 +20.1% +26.8%
2022 $272.79 $331.27 +21.4% +53.3%
2023 $333.38 $353.58 +6.1% +63.7%
2024 $361.65 $362.46 +0.2% +67.8%
2025 $363.33 $339.35 -6.6% +57.1%
2026 $334.48 $371.29 +11.0% +71.9%

About Everest Re Gp

Fire, Marine & Casualty Insurance · NYSE

Everest Group, Ltd. (NYSE: EG) is a Bermuda-based financial services institution operating in the reinsurance and insurance sectors. The company is described as a global underwriting leader that provides property, casualty, and specialty reinsurance and insurance solutions. Everest focuses on disciplined underwriting, capital and risk management, and operates through global affiliates that serve customers in multiple regions.

According to available information, Everest conducts business through two primary reportable segments: Reinsurance and Insurance. The reinsurance segment centers on property, casualty, and specialty reinsurance, while the insurance segment writes property and casualty insurance. The insurance operation writes business directly and through brokers, surplus lines brokers, and general agents within the U.S., Bermuda, Canada, Europe, and South America.

Everest common stock is listed on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol EG and is a component of the S&P 500 index. The company is incorporated in Bermuda and is part of the finance and insurance sector, with a specific focus on reinsurance carriers and related specialty insurance activities.

Business model and operations

Everest’s business model is built around underwriting property, casualty, and specialty risks through its reinsurance and insurance platforms. The company emphasizes underwriting discipline and risk management, as reflected in repeated references to its track record of underwriting, capital, and risk management over a period of about 50 years. Through its global operating affiliates, Everest aims to address customers’ complex risk challenges with property, casualty, and specialty solutions.

In its insurance operations, Everest writes property and casualty insurance in various markets, working with brokers, surplus lines brokers, and general agents. The company has also highlighted a focus on wholesale and specialty insurance, including excess and surplus market activities, as part of its evolving operating structure. Everest has undertaken transactions to sell renewal rights for a majority of its global retail commercial insurance portfolios, sharpening its focus on its core global reinsurance business and its wholesale and specialty insurance businesses.

Everest has also entered into adverse development reinsurance agreements that provide protection against future adverse reserve development on portions of its North American insurance and other segment liabilities for accident years 2024 and prior. These arrangements are intended to strengthen reserves, manage risk related to prior-year liabilities, and support capital efficiency.

Strategic focus and recent corporate actions

Information from recent news and SEC filings indicates that Everest is concentrating on a more focused, higher-return enterprise anchored in reinsurance and wholesale and specialty insurance. The company agreed to sell renewal rights for a majority of its global retail commercial insurance business to American International Group, Inc. (AIG). Under related master transaction agreements, Everest sellers agreed to transfer renewal rights for certain commercial property and casualty insurance business written in the U.S., the United Kingdom, the European Union, Australia, and Singapore, subject to specified terms and regulatory approvals.

These renewal rights transactions are described as sharpening Everest’s focus on its core global reinsurance business and its global wholesale and specialty insurance businesses. Everest has introduced a new operating structure for its insurance division centered on wholesale and specialty lines, including Everest Global Markets and Everest Evolution™, as well as underwriting programs, credit and political risk, surety, and accident & health business lines.

Everest has also executed an adverse development cover supported by Longtail Re, an affiliate of Stone Ridge Holdings Group. The agreement provides a defined gross limit of protection against future adverse reserve development on substantially all insurance policies written by Everest Insurance’s North American business for specified prior accident years. Separate adverse development reinsurance agreements with State National Insurance Company, Inc. and MS Transverse Insurance Company cover North American Insurance and Other Segment liabilities for premium earned during 2024 and prior years, with Everest retaining co-participation and continuing to manage claims.

Capital management and shareholder profile

Everest’s disclosures highlight an emphasis on capital and risk management, including the use of adverse development covers and renewal rights transactions to manage reserves, reduce volatility in certain portfolios, and release capital over time. The company has reported actions such as entering into reinsurance agreements that transfer portions of reserve risk while retaining claims-handling authority and potential profit commissions on favorable development.

Everest’s board of directors has also declared common share dividends, and the company has discussed the potential to deploy capital toward share repurchases, strategic opportunities, and investments in talent, technology, and data. As an S&P 500 component, Everest is positioned within a widely followed equity index, and its stock is traded on the NYSE under the symbol EG.

Leadership and governance

Everest’s public disclosures and news releases show active management of its leadership team and governance structure. The company has announced appointments to key executive roles, including Group Chief Financial Officer, Group Chief Actuary, Group Chief Risk Officer, Executive Vice President and CEO of Legacy Operations, Executive Vice President and Chief Human Resources Officer, and Executive Vice President and General Counsel. It has also reported the election of an independent director to its board, with committee assignments on the Audit Committee and Risk Committee.

These leadership changes are often described in the context of supporting Everest’s underwriting, risk, finance, and human capital strategies, as well as reinforcing its focus on disciplined execution and long-term value creation. SEC filings detail the terms of certain executive employment and transition agreements, including compensation structures, equity awards, and non-competition provisions.

Everest’s role in the reinsurance and insurance sector

Within the finance and insurance sector, Everest is identified as a global underwriting leader in property, casualty, and specialty reinsurance and insurance. The company’s operations span reinsurance and insurance segments, with a geographic footprint that includes the U.S., Bermuda, Canada, Europe, South America, and other regions through its global operating affiliates.

Everest’s activities include writing property and casualty insurance and providing specialty reinsurance and insurance solutions that address complex risk exposures. The company’s emphasis on underwriting discipline, capital management, risk governance, and actuarial analytics is reflected in its executive appointments and in its use of tools such as adverse development covers and renewal rights transactions.

FAQs about Everest Group, Ltd. (EG)

Market Cap
$14.8B
Current Price
$371.29
EPS
$37.80
Revenue
$17.5B
Net Margin
9.1%
View full EG overview

Frequently Asked Questions

Everest Re Gp investment returns

How much would $1,000 invested in Everest Re Gp be worth today?

If you invested $1,000 in Everest Re Gp (EG) 10 years ago on 2016-07-08, your investment would be worth $2,043 today, representing a +104.3% total return, growing at a compounded rate of 7.4% per year (CAGR).

Has Everest Re Gp outperformed the S&P 500?

Over the past 10 years, EG returned +104.3% compared to +251.6% for the S&P 500, underperforming the benchmark by 147.3 percentage points.

What is Everest Re Gp's average annual return?

The compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of EG over the past 10 years is 7.4%, growing at a compounded rate each year. Individual years vary significantly — EG's best recent year was 2019 (+29.6%) and worst was 2020 (-15.8%).

Your Privacy is Protected

This calculator sends the symbol, date, and amount you enter to our server so we can fetch historical market data and render the result. We do not save those entries as a portfolio or account, but standard web server logs may still record the page request.

Server-Assisted No Saved Calculator Data Historical Market Data

For informational and educational purposes only — not investment advice.