Forgotten Genworth Financial Stock Is Ready To Unlock Value

 | Apr 21, 2021 06:32AM ET

Long-term care and mortgage Insurer Genworth Financial (NYSE:GNW) stock has been trapped in a tight trading range for the past four years under the proposed $5.43 acquisition deal by China Oceanwide (HK:0715). After 17 extensions, Genworth officially announced the termination of the merger agreement on Apr. 6, 2021 and provided strategic alternative plans to trim down debt and potentially spin-off a piece its lucrative U.S. mortgage insurance business via IPO.

Shares initially sold off in this announcement, until the market digested the potential for unlocking shareholder value without a merger price cap chained to the shares. The U.S. housing market has been white hot with demand vastly outpacing supply fueled by rising raw materials costs and pandemic triggered migration to single family homes. The mortgage business and subsequently mortgage insurance business is just as strong fueled by low interest rates. With the China Oceanwide deal behind them, shares of Genworth should buoyant rise in line with its peers. Prudent investors looking for a discounted play on the continued growth of the housing market can monitor shares of Genworth Financial for opportunistic pullback levels.

h2 Q4 2020 Earnings Release /h2

On Feb. 16, 2021, Genworth released Q4 2020 results for the quarter ending in December 2020. The Company reported earnings per share (EPS) of $0.34 excluding non-recurring items, beating consensus analyst estimates of $1.29, by $0.01. Revenues rose 11% year-over-year (YoY) to $2.26 billion, beating analyst estimates for $2.06 billion. U.S. Mortgage Insurance (subsidiary MI) full-year 2020 adjusted operating income was $381 million.

Continued to progress toward long-term-care (LTC) Multi-Year Rate Action Plan (MYRAP) with $344 million incremental annual rate increase was approved in 2020 with an estimated net present value of approximately $2 billion. As of Dec. 31, 2020, the Company holding cash and liquid assets were $1.1 billion with $71 million in restricted cash. The Company paid off its February 2021 debt of $338 million.

h2 Conference Call Takeaways /h2

Genworth Financial CEO, Tom McIerney, set the tone:

“First, as we discussed in January, we remain focused on preparing for a potential partial IPO of U.S. MI, subject to market conditions as well as satisfaction of various conditions and approvals. While we are not permitted to discuss details associated with this transaction due to applicate gun-jumping and related securities laws, I can tell you that we began our preparations for the IPO over a year ago as part of our contingency planning… our intent to pursue a partial U.S. MI, we received multiple expressions of interest from third parties and various transactions involving our U.S. MI business, including a sale of 100% of U.S. MI. The Board and management will consider these proposals, moving forward, as we continue to prepare for an IPO. Our priority in any transaction would be to maximize long-term shareholder value by unlocking value from U.S. MI and further insulating U.S. MI’s ratings.”

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The Company will align its U.S. Life business structure currently serving 3 million customers and committed to improving its U.S. long-term care insurance model. There are no plans to infuse any more capital in that segment as it can sustain itself on the $2.3 billion on consolidated statutory capital.

h2 Share Price Driver/h2

The Company has a $660 million 7.75% unsecured note principal payment due September 2021. The Company is eyeing a partial IPO of its U.S. MI business which has achieved a 27% adjusted income compound annual growth rate (CAGR) since 2014. The Company has improved since the original merger agreement four years ago as it shored up its balance sheet and paid down debt. As the merger agreement is terminated, the move towards an IPO spinoff of its U.S. MI division is a driver for the stock sooner rather than later with its debt payment coming due. Prudent investors seeking exposure can watch for opportunistic pullback levels to scale into a position.