Kingsway Financial is a 20% compounder with no sign of that yet in the financials and a stock price that
doesn’t fully recognize it yet either. Kingsway has been digging out of debt from a near bankruptcy
situation left by prior management who operated insurance operations for growth rather than
profitable underwriting. But while CEO Larry Swets has mostly been playing defense since taking control
in 2010, the deals he and Gordon Pratt have made have been remarkably successful. The problem has
been that a lot of the created value has gone to creditors who were paid in full by an essentially
bankrupt company. With near-term debt maturities now fully paid, the company will be playing offense
going forward and to the benefit of shareholders. Most of KFS investments have been, and will continue
to be in financials, where management’s expertise lies. Financial investments can yield high returns on
equity (as long as you know what you’re doing). Kingsway’s returns will be aided by an $850 million NOL
(20 times bigger than current book value) courtesy of prior management. Larry’s goal is to compound
book value at 20% going forward. Based on recent investment success, I expect that until the NOL’s are
used up he’ll meet or exceed it. Buy and hold investors who tuck a little KFS into their taxable accounts
and forget about it may compound their own money at 20% for the next 20 years.
Kingsway Financial historically was a sizeable insurance company writing well over $2 billion in annual
premiums in 2008. The company's successful core business of non-standard auto insurance was
supplemented with numerous empire building acquisitions of other insurance companies including
trucking insurance, property & liability, commercial auto, and customs, bails, and surety bonds. The
2007-2008 recession made it clear that most of these insurance companies had underwritten bad risks
and the company lost money profusely. Joseph Stillwell of Stillwell Financial bought up shares beginning
in 2008, started a proxy battle, and eventually gained control of the company. Larry Swets took the CEO
role in 2010 and began selling off and shutting down companies as well as using company cash to buy
back their bonds trading at a large discount. Only a few non-standard auto companies remain and they
have shrunk such that they write only approximately $120 million a year in premiums.
Larry Swets notes that after reviewing the operation as CEO in 2010, he assessed the company was
bankrupt. But he pressed on divesting insurance companies, running some off, raising capital through a
rights offering, raising more through a private placement, buying back debt at a discount, and finally
paying off debt as it matured for total debt retirement exceeding $250 million. Larry noted it was worth
the effort to avoid bankruptcy in order to preserve the NOL’s. In the mean time, 1347 advisors was
created as their merchant banking vehicle led by Gordon Pratt. They’ve made a number of deals with
attractive risk reward characteristics in recent years. The outcome of some of the deals is now evident,
rather remarkable, and more deals like these are the reason to invest in KFS going forward. Twenty
percent return on equity is an ambitious goal even when aided by NOL’s, so here’s the investment
record that makes it plausible going forward.
Assigned Risk Solutions: Combination of 2010 acquisition JBA associates and legacy business Northeast
Alliance Insurance Agency. Sold to National General Holdings in 2015. Total money in was $16.3 million
and money out from dividends, sales price, and first earnout payment was $54.2 million with some
earnouts possibly still to come. Not bad.
Atlas Financial Holdings: Formed from a pair of legacy Kingsway taxi insurance companies whose
business was reduced to just $20 million as Kingsway’s financial problems limited underwriting. This
business was saved by injecting some outside capital, spinning it into a Canadian shell initially, and later
a U.S. IPO and listing on NYSE (ticker AFH). This business has fully recovered and grown to a market cap